The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, November 28, 1895, Image 1

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VOL. 2.
HILLSBOKO, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1895.
SALISBURY TO OLNEY
England's Reply Regarding
Venezuela Ready.
NOTHING OF CONTENTS KNOWN
Mo Confirmation In London of the War-
Ilk Statements Made In the Ta
per or llritlsh Clulana, ,
Loudon, Nov. 37. the Marquis of
Salisbury, it in understood, bug com
pleted hiH reply to Secretary Olney's
note regarding Venezuela. The mar
quia was busily engaged npon it during
the moat of last week, and numerous
papora dealing with the subject were
aeut to the Hatflold house from the for
eign ollioe. It is expected that the an
wer will be delivered to the United
State ambassador, Thoinaa F. Bayard.
No Further Proposals.
London, Nov. 27. Nothing ia known
at the colonial office here of the al
leged statement!) of the administration
of British Guiana that the imperial
government ia preparing to assert its
righta by arms. Newspapors reaching
here BHy the legislature of that oolony
had been acquiescent to the proposals
of the secretary for the oolouies, Mr.
Chamberlain, to increase the colonial
foroe by two inspectors and auothor
Maxim gnu, the legislature also notify
ing the government that it is prepared
to vote anything the ooloniul seoretary
oousidered uooessary for the defense of
the oolony. No further proposal, how
ever, hag beeu made by the imperial
government. There has been no
change in the boundary dispute, and
the government, it is added, will not
tolerate Venezuelan aggression beyond
the Sohouiborgh lino. Otherwise it is
stated that the warlike statements
printed in certain newspapers are not
founded on facts.
ANOTHER HEALER.
AWAITING THE SULTAN'S REPLY
The
Porte Doe Not Consider More
Uuardshlps Necessary.
Constantinople, Nov. 27. The main
question now being discussed between
the porte and representatives of the
powers is the demand of (ireat Britain,
Italy, Russia and Austria for firming
for passage through the Dardanelles of
an extra gunboat to be attached to
their respective embassies. While ad
mitting that the powers possess the
right to have two guard ships each in
the Bosphorous, the porte considers
that the proposed inorease of the num
ber of foreign war vessels there under
present conditions, might excite the
Mussulmans and produce an effect far
from the one dusirod by the powers.
In addition the porte points out that
in view of the measures taken to pre
serve order there, an increase in the
number of guard ships attached to the
embassies is not required. It can be
said opon good authority that this is
the substance of the note the porte has
sent the representatives of the powers. J
As soon as the note shall have been
received and considered at the British
Russian, Italian and Austrian emlias
ties a conference of the representatives
of those powers will be culled and
joint reply may be sent to the porte.
Turkish representatives at Loudon St
Petersburg, Borne and Vienna will bo
instructed to earnestly request the four
powers not to insist on their demand.
In political circles the repugnance of
the porte to grant the firmins applied
lor contributes to the belief said to
exist among the Turkish ministers that
to grant the firming would be a sad
blow to the dignity of the sultan and a
direct proof of the lack of oonfldenoe
npon the part of the powers in his abil
ity to govern and maintain order. Be
hind this, it is claimed, the Turks fear
the demanded inorease in the number
of foreign guardships in the Bosphorus
is really only a cloak for the intention
of the powers to make a naval demon
stration in Turkish waters in case of
new disturbances in Asiatio Turkey,
aaaon Claim to Posses Power Equal
to Thoa or Schlatter.
New York, Nov. 28. H. B. Nasou,
of Woodoliff, N. J., claims to be pos-
sessea ot -healing powers" equal to
the famous Schlatter, who has oreated
suoh a sensation in Colorado. Nason
is a leader of a strange religions sect
in the vicinity of his home, known as
"Angel Danoers," or the "Churohmen
of the Living God." He ia prepared
to assert himself as a healer without
losing his plaoe as the head and center
oi his little band of devout followers.
According to his story he has been
ante, sinoe the beginning of his minis
try to heal those who go to him
through faith, but now he gives a more
general invitation. Nason has been
encouraged to do this through the suo
oess of Schlatter, the Colorado healer,
with whose movements he is entirely
familiar. Nason said the other dav:
"I am willing to heal thoso who
come to me ia faith, and I do so with
out money and without price. I only
trust in the Lord. Schlatter has been
doing a great work. Like me, he does
not sell his God-given gifts, but he
won't stay there, for those people are
driving him away. I tell you. it ain't
no use in trying to trafflo the things of
God, and that's what the people out
there are trying to do. Why. thev will
sell a handkerchief or anything else
that Schlatter takes in his band. Men
who ore standing in line to get to him
will sell their places to anyone willing
to pay a prioe for it. That is the work
of the devil and nothing else. Schlat
ter has God with him mightily, and
won t stand that. That is the reason
ho disappeared last week and went into
the moimtains. It is the Lord who
took him away to rebuke the money
ohangers who defile the temple.
MANY ENTERPRISES
NO. 36.
Development News From Pa
cific Northwest.
SEVERAL PIONEERS ARE DEAD
manufacturing Projects-Water Work
auu Mallroads-A Great Cannery
Syndicate Formed Oregon.
SIGNED . NEW ARTICLES.
Pltzslmmon
to
CORBETT , IS AN ACTOR.
Be
I Disgusted With the King and
Will Never He-enter It.
Lynn, Mass., Nov. 27. James J,
Corbett in an interview today said:
I am disgusted with the entire
business, and henceforth will oonflne
my entire time to the stage. No mat'
ter what the public may say, whether
it be oomplimentary or otherwise, I
oannot be indnoed again to enter the
arena. They may say that when I
whipped Sullivan he was an old man
and that I never whipped a good man
in my career; but I am fully deter
mined in my purpose to quit. I sup
pose the public blames me for not pull
ing off the fight with with Fitzsim
mons. I am not disposed to answer
any oritioism, and will not do so. I
bestowed the championship upon Ma
tter because he is an Irishman, and be
cause I prefer he should defend the title
rather than plaoe it with an Austra
lian or Englishman. Up to the present
I have declined to give my reasons for
recognizing Maher, but you can print
that as coming from me. I consider
him the peer of any man in the ring,
and have no hesitanoy in saying that
he can whip Fitzsimmons. He is a
great man, and he will demonstrate
his right to bear the title of champion
ship of the world. "
Everybody I Helping Cuba.
London, Nov. 27. The Times this
morning publishes a dispatch from
Copenhagen, announcing that the
Spauish government has notified the
' authorities of Denmark that Danish
hips have recently assisted the Cuban
rebels with arms and ammunition.
I'a Again Agreed
. Meet Corbett.
Houston, Tex., Nov. 26. Fitzsim
mons hag signed articles for a fight
with Corbett. The stipulation is for
a fight to a finish, with five ounce
gloves, to be pulled off January "10.
1896, at El Paso. Tex., or elsewhere.
the party of the first part (Dan Stuart)
agreeing to give the winner of the ocn
test a purse of 120,000. Should the
party or tne nrst part fail to pull off
the fight on the date mentioned, he is
to forfeit to Corbett and Fitzsimmons
one-half of the purse, $10,000. Upon
the date that James J. Corbett and W.
A. Bardy agree to sign the artiolos the
parties of the second and third Darts
(ooroett ana n ltzsimmons), are to de
posit eaoh fl2,500. Of this amount
110,000 is to be deposited by eaoh side
as a side bet between the contestants,
and is to go to the winner of the fight.
The other $2,500 deposited by the prin
oipals in the contest is a forfeit to Dan
Stuart, to be paid to him should either
of the principals fail to be at the ring
side on the date selected. Should they
appear at the appointed time, the for
feit is to be returned to them immedi
ately after the contest. Should one
fail to appear the other is to be refund
ed what he has deposited.
The purse money offered is to be de
posited; 10,000 when Corbett signs,
ano fiu.ooo live days previous to the
contest
DEPENDS ON CANADA.
The
raclOo Cable and the Prnnos.ri
steamship Service.
London! Nov. 26. The Times pub
nsnes as artiole on the Pacific oable.
and the proposed steamship service to
uanada. It says the success of the
movement is largely due to Canada.
The government does not intend to sub
sidize the Australian-Paoifio serviae
from Australia to Vancouver. It is
also understood the government will
only subsidize the Atlautio section of
this service on condition that better
time can be made over the Canadian
Pacific railway than is now made. In
both the steamship and the oable
schemes the prinoiple is reoognized that
in order to have British connections
exclusively, the the line must, in the
first instance, be oarried westward
from the oenter. By the acceptance of
this prinoiple, Canada obtains a posi
tion she had never occupied as the
main highway of the British empire.
San Franelsoo'a Hard Fight.
Athens, O., Nov. 26. General
Charles Grosvenor, member of oon-
gress, in an interview today, proposes
rebelling against the oommittee, should
it seleot San Francisco as the plaoe for
the ooming Bepublioan national con
vention General Grosvenor savs the
offer of San Franoisoo to pay the hotel
bills of delegates is in the nature of a
bribe. He says the expenses to dele
gates going to that oity would be $ 1,.
250,000 more than it would be were
the oonvention east of the Rookies.
Besides, he says, it would accommo
date upward of eighty delegates of the
Paoifio ooast at the great expense of
upward of 720 delegates in the oentral
and Eastern parts of the United States.
ne, therefore, suggests that, in case
San Franoisoo is selected, the delegates
in an me states should meet in their
respective states and veto the action of
the oommittee by seleoting some suit
able place for the oonvention.
Prineville is to have a new nublio
an, wnicn will be erected by a ioint
iocjc company.
Gold Beach is now a thing of the
past, the town having moved across the
river to Wedderhurn.
The town of Adams boasts of beinc
free from indebtedness and having
money in its treasury.
Steamboat navigation has been re
sumed on the upper Willamette, after
four months of low water.
Coos county has manufactured over
20,000,000 feet of lumber during the
past year and mined 50.000 tons of
coal.
The work on the railroad bridae
across young's bay is about to begin
nuu win ue puBnoa to completion as
rapidly as possible.
The whole amount of land owned in
Harney oounty is 610,690 acres. The
property belonging to the Miller & Lux
estate is 83,080 acres.
It is proposed to put a plant in As
toria lor tne manufacture of ootton
rope, twine and netting, tons of which
are used along the Columbia river
every year.
Serious oonoern is felt by the sheep
men ana owners oi stock in the John
Day country at the continuing drouth.
no benefits have been reoeived from the
recent rains.
The Postal Telegraph Company ex
peon to extend tne line down the . ooast
to Tillamook from Astoria at an early
aay. mere is also talk of building
line from Jordan to Woods, extending
u to i uiamooic.
During the onrrent year Josephine
oounty produced 930 bales of hops,
167,400 pounds, whioh have now been
all moved, exoept a few small lota
Owing to several growers holding term
contracts, the average prioe has been
about oents per pound. About
$14,000 will thus be scattered among
me proauoers oi tne county.
BLOW DE1L1
boys of the school.
The National Park Transportation
company is to spend $5,000 over-
unuiiug i m iou coaones and carriages
for next season's travel. I
a block of tioo.ooo of the bonds of Report of the Nicaragua Canal
ine ureal Falls Water Comnanv ha
Commission.
UNLIKE WHAT WAS EXPECTED
Waahlngton.
The Standard Box factory at Tacoma
has been destroyed by fire.
The bureau of immigration at Spo
kane is reorganized and is vigorously
pushing its work.
J. L. Johnson, one of the founders
of Ritzville, well known there and in
Eastern Oregon, is dead.
Aberdeen has succeeded in raisins
enough money by subscription to have
tne city lighted by eleotrioity.
The oontraot has been let for the
erection of a fog signal station at Mar
rowstone Point in Washington. It
win cost a, 140.
Harry Krech, of Tacoma, oonvioted
under the city ordinance for keeping
ma Darner snop open on Sunday, has
appealed to the superior court.
The Smith-Friar mill at Lowell is to
be rebuilt A new company has hold
of the project and Everett gives a land
and money bonus. It will have a ca
paoity of 50,000 feet a day.
The mill of the Pacific Coast Milling
company, wnicn was reoently burned,
is to be reconstructed. Subscriptions
oi oasn, labor and merchandise have
been made to the amount of $1,473.50.
me mill wll be in operation in about
a month.
josnua lsaaos, a pioneer resident of
Walla Walla, is dead. He came to the
Pacific ooast in 1860, engaged in the
mill business at Boise City until 1861,
and men came to Walla Walla and
amassed a fortune in the mill business.
He constructed the first water works in
the town. Jaoob Luoinger. a pioneer
irom walla walla, is also dead.
Six hundred has been subscribed bv
the Pioneer Association, of Astoria, on
oondition that a like amount be raised
at Walla Walla for the purpose of im
proving the grounds where the dust of
Whitman and his fellow martyrs rest,
rroiessor .Lyman oontemplates found
ing an arohaeologioal and historical
museum. A very important part of
such a collection would be old letter
and papers from the pioneer epoch.
gust been bought by a Chicago firm.
mis purchase makes a total of 1300.
000 in bonds held by Eastern oanital-
...... .i -
una in Kui company.
Brittah Columbia.
I rail expects to be three times her
present size by spring if she can obtain
all the lumber she wants.
The last stone of the great dome that
is to surmount the new Darliament
Dunaings oi British Columbia has beeu
laid. The copper roofing upward of
nny ieet in height and to he surmount-
ed by a statue of Captain George Van
ouver is all that remains to oom.
plete the exterior of the dome.
Three hundred thousand dollars will
be spent utilizing the water power of
Seymore creek to operate the atreet
railways of Vancouver and Westmin
ster, oesides the electric light system
ana Dranon lines of electric railways.
ine power will be oonentrated at one
point to operate all these undertakings.
Arrangements have been completed, sion. This report is now lvin nn th
. uuucukwu. ior ine purchase bv president s desk, and is hi,ino iyni
an Eastern syndicate of all the canner- ered by him in oonneotion with his an-
ie ior wnicn .turner, Ueeton & Com- nual message to congress.
inevitable Delay and More Thommrh
Investigation of the Entire Subject
Declared to Be Decenary.
new xoric, .Nov. 26. A sneoial to
the Herald from Washington savs a
serious blow has been dealt the Nio
aragua Canal Company's project for
the construction of a waterway across
the Isthmus by the report of the Nica
ragua canal commission. Inevitable
delay and further and more thorough
investigation of the entire subject are
1 ...... .1 . .. V .
u"" iu oe necessary oeiore even
the engineering feasibilty of a canal
across Nicaragua can be deoided upon.
The Herald correspondent is able to
make public the review of the contents
and the teit of the conclusions of the
report of the Nicaragua canal eommis-
ANNUAL RECEIPTS.
were
pany are the agents, as well as several
otner canneries. There are nine in all
including both Northern and Fraser
river oannories. It is said that the
Koyal Canadian Canning Company's
cannery at (Jlaxton, the Balmoral, In
verness and Carlyle canneries are in
eluded in the deal.
Last February there was one loi?
1 .... ... . . . o
nouse on tne site of the mining town
oi tfossiand. Today there are 8,000
people there, and the town has eleotrio
lights, a telephone system, and water
works are now being put in.
land is in the famous Trail creek dis
trict, where the well-known Le Roi
and war iiagle mines are located. It
The report is at such variance with
the numerous rumors and predictions
whioh have, from time to time, been
published concerning it that it will
cause great surprise and disappoint
ment among those who have heretofore
plaoed oredence in the rumors whioh
usually stated that "one in the highest
authority" said the commission favored
the route proposed by the comnanv.
and plaoed the cost of the canal at
about $110,000,000.
The report points out that it is
neither practicable nor advisable to at
tempt the oonstruotion of the Nicar
agua oanal upon the data at present
available, and that the undertaking
is about eight miles from the boundary wo"ld be fraught with hazards too ob
iiue, dm aoout three-fourths of the lu" " disregard.
mining interests there are held bv Sdo- That the necessary knowleade may
kane people. The water will be 1,6 080 of 016 physical and topographi
brought from Stony creek, two and 081 conditions affecting the construo-
one-half miles from here, and will fur- tlon ana maintenance of a canal across
nish 600,000 gallons per day. The en- Nicaragua, npon which to form a final
tire town will be supplied, inoludintr jnagment as to the feasibility, perma-
the bench, commonly known as Knob nency and cost, the commission reoom
Hill, which lies juat north of the busi- mends an appropriation by oongress of
ness portion.
PRESS COMMENTS.
eastern Editors' Opinions on Business
Sentiment and Politic.
Chicago Record.
The reoent performances of the new
battleship Indiana, with the other im
piuveuieuis in ine American navv.
have generated considerable enthusiasm
as to the future of the United States
forces on sea, but this need blind no
one to the urgent need of some reform
m me system under which the service
of our great war vessels is at present
-
oonouoted. There will doubtless be
introduced at the next session of oon
gress a bill to readjust the system of
organization in the naval service, and
tuu,uuu ior extensive additional sur
veys and examinations oovering a per
iod of eighteen months.
With the date at hand, however, the
commission makes a provisional esti
ujoto ui me oobi, f iaa,4(a,8a, or
nearly double that of the Maritime Ca
nal Company's unconditional estimate
of $69,893,660. The commission makes
its estimate "provisional." The com
missioners say the existing data are in-
adequate as a basis for estimatinsr the
cost of many structures. Some portions
oi ine work may cost more: others less.
ihe report further says the official
estimate by the oompany of $69,893,
oou is insufficient for the work: that
in several important oases the anan
nues must be greatly increased, and
if the ships are to have capable officers
Importation of Britiah Ore.
Boise, Idaho, Nov. 27 Senator
Shoup left for Washington today. He
reoently returned from a trip through
Northern Idaho, where he made an in
vestigation, particularly of the impor
tation of ores from British Columbia,
with a view of obtaining information
to be used in connection with the lead
tariff and the problem of samnlina im-
ported ores. He found it would take
some time to gather all the statistics
neoessary to make the information
thorough, and left the matter in oom-
petent hands, with instructions to send
him everything bearing upon the sub-jeot.
Idaho.
The new hospital at Wardnerisoom
pleted.
Ti 1 . a a
noise nas carried her proposition to
issue bonds for the purpose of building
mere is a body of fine cedar timber
in the valley of the Upper Clearwater
in the Nez Perce reservation, which
has just been thrown open to settle
ment. A large nrst-olass hotel is to be
erected at Kayserville by Henry Kay
ser. He also intends to put in a well
equipped stage line and in the spring
he will build a railroad from Hailey
to Kavserville.
The navigation of the Clearwater up
to the junotion of the Middle and South
Fork is now an assured thing. Ar
ticles of incorporation were filed with
the oounty auditor of Nez Perce oounty
last week for the Clearwater Naviga
tion Company. Their first vessel will
be in operation in the early spring,
and will probably be built at Celilo.
The capital stook is $25,000 in 250
shares of $100 each.
Montana.
The new building of the reform
sohool at Miles City is almost complet
ed. Most of the work was done by
to man them
made too soon.
the change oannot be
Abandonment of Agriculture.
Philadelphia Times.
The faot that agriculture is in pro
cess of gradual abandonment in Great
Britain may account in part for the
great inorease in immigation from that
oountry, the number of arrivals since
August aggregating 238.000. It evi
dently does not pay the British farmer
to raise wheat on high-priced British
land, ihe next problem is to make
wis iniiu uruniame in some otner wav. I uu" u m ooaiuany ueoiaea to re
The decline in wheat aoreage this year I buila at onoe nd say they will double
is so per cent less than 1894. This in- luo "Pc"y or uneir plant. Watch
not make proper allowance for the dif
ierence in cost of work between the
United States and Nioaragua."
ine general trend of the entire re
pom is certainly very unfavorable to
the canal company.
St. Louis Shovel Company Burned (Int.
St Lonis, Nov. 26. Fire gutted the
mam ouiiding of the St. Louis Shovel
Company's extensive plant in this oity
i. 3 mi i . . .
i.uuy. iue loss is estimated to be be
tween $80,000 and $100,000. and is
nearly oovered by insuranoe. The
dioates that upwards of 200,000 acres
of land have failed of cultivation be
cause agriculture no longer pays.
. The Cuban Inaurrection.
New York Times.
ihere seems to be no doubt that the
patriot army in Cuba has been re-en-forced.
Almost fifty men from some-
man John JLawlor thinks the fire was
caused by the electrical converter.
Secretary-Treasurer Holton attributes
it to hot cinders in the blacksmith
shop. ,...-"
Freight Depot and Car Burned.
St Joseph, Mo., Nov, 26. This
morninir a fira hrnlrA nnt in
where or other, possibly from America. Hannihal A Sr. .Tnumh f.ii,
. - ' " vvuvru MU1KUV UDUUIli
have landed on the island and enrolled on Seventh and Olive street. Th
themselves under the standard of re- structure, whinh wan ann w r
volt This, of course, will foroe the was soon consumed, along with eleven
royalists to import at least 50,000 more cars of the Missouri Pacific maH .nri
conscripts, and will delay aotive opera- seven oars of the Burlington. A large
tions on the part of Campos even amount of goods in the cars and in the
longer than the reoent thunder shower struoture was destroyed. The loss to
did. It does seem as if the extermi- thn MiaannH Pnnifta k. i i c
Decreaie of Pearly Four Million In the
Internal Revenue.
Washington, Nov. 23. The annual
report of the commissioner of internal
revenue, as issued today, shows the re
ceipts from different sources during the
usual year as ioiiows:
Spirits, $79,862,620; decrease, $5,
896,624; tobacco, $29,704,907; increase,
1,087,009; fermented liquors, $31,640,
717; increase, $225,829; income tax,
$77,139; oleomargarine, $1,409,211;
decrease. $314,268; miscellaneous,
$551,583; decrease, $390,654; total
from all sources, $143,246,077: de
crease, $3,922,371.
The total cost of collectinir the rev-
enue during the year was $4,129,601.
a per centage as compared to revenue
of 2.88 per cent, against 2.70 per cent
for the previous year.
During the year 3.309 violations of
the internal revenue laws were report
ed by revenue airents: 789 persons
nave Deen arrested; property valued at
$340,905 has been reported for seiznm.
and $139,650 for assessment for unpaid
taxes and penalties. During the same
period 1,727 stills were seized; 147
suns removed; 871 persons arrested;
i omoer killed and 8 others
wounded.
commissioner Miller estimates that
the revenues for the present fiscal year
win aggregate f 185,000,000. He rec
ommends amendments to existing laws
as follows:
Provision for an allowance for losses
in transportation of spirits to a general
bonded warehouse; that a general
bonded warehouse shall be only for
storage of spirits removed from distill
ing warehouses, or from other general
bonded warehouses in the same dis.
tricts, and for a charge of 25 cents for
eacn package, or suoh sum as may be
neoessary to cover the expense of gaug
ing; legislation to enable distillers or
owners of spirits in distillery ware
houses to bottle the same for export in
bond or for domestic use under govern
ment supervision, after payment of tax
thereon; that collectors of internal rev
enue be authorized by law to keep rec
ords of the ownership of distilled spir
its in internal revenue bonded ware
houses, such ownership to riA fivi.
denoed by warehouse receipts or by the
judgments of courts.of oompetent juris
diction; also that such law be passed
as will enable owners of distilled spir
its in a distillery warehouse or bonded
warehouse to withdraw the same upon
payment of tax xr for any purpose au
thorized by law, and, in oase of dis
pute, as to ownership or unadjusted
olaims, on account of storage or other
charges, upon the giving of an indem
nity bond by the party other than the
distiller applying to withdraw; an
amendment allowing the use of fruits
other than apples, peaches and grapes
for distillation; also, a provision that
fermenters not in use at distilleries
may be closed and fastened in such
manner as prescribed by the commis
sioner of internal revenue; also a pro
vision that storekeepers and gangers,
who are assigned to distilleries whose
registered capcity is twenty bushels or
less, shall receive such compensation
as may be prescribed by the commis
sioner of internal revenue, not to ex
ceed $4 per day; that bakers and man
ufacturers of yeast may make and have
on hand mash, wort or wash fit for
distillation in conduct of these indus
tries, the quality of suoh mash, wort
or wash to be fixed and the purpose for
which it is to be used to be strictly de
fined; that section 61 of the aot of Au
gust 28, 1894, allowing the use of al
cohol by manufacturers, exoeot under
certain conditions, be repealed.
ORCHARD AND FARM
Budget ot General News for
Progressive Farmers.
RAISING OF ENGLISH WALNUTS
The Best Method for Keeping Fruit In
Winter How to Overcome the Dir.
Acuities in Raiang Bee.
Walnuts are being profitably grown
in Olympia and in Whatcom oounty,
Wash. It is said that the I Ani..
variety is a failure in the Nerth. It is
not hardy, but the Sarotinas, Mayette
and Franquette seem mmoniuii.
- - wjwvwiaii
adapted. As few varieties Will limvA
true to seed only trees from sraf ted
ones, or so-called second generation
udot mat are grown irom the nut of
the original grafted stook, should be
planted. A yearling tree is the best to
irauspiant ihe top ia then from nine
to twelve inches high, with a tap root
double that length. This tap root
should not be cut off, as it will ma.
terially check, if not kill, the tree.
With the right varieties and proper
culture, the growing of English wal
nuts may become a profitable feature of
the horticlutural industry of the evnr.
green state.
Earning Capacity of the Cow.
The following statement i intuit
ing as showing the earning oapacity of
uu- " i taken irom the books of
the Cloverdale creamery, at rii..
burg, Wash., and is a record of month
ly settlements with Mr. Adav w r.
ens for milk supplied from August 1
1894, to July 81, 1895. During the
period Mr. Stevens sent the milk of
eleven oows and half the milk of one
cow to the creamery, so this is the
record of eleven and one-half cow. In
this statement no credit U CM van
skim milk or buttermilk, all of whioh"
was returned to Mr. Stevens and used
by him for his hogs.
Pounds
Millr Tamt
ABgUSt, 1891 S.7(U A i
OBp.., JO. 4,Hi
JS4 8o;9
Kov.,18 tm
en.. 1894 Rma
in-. 1895 t,i80
Feb , lNj....m 6,042
ilareh, 1895 t,619
Apnl, 1896 7,1,62
May. 18 6 fi sja
June, 18 id '.(,,a,7
July, i89" 6,842
Totils 74,642
Pound
Butter.
308,586
SSS.577
ai;n
8,4,20'
846,846
,6.0
295 377
8.8,941)
162,940
868 61U
828,920
8n,670
4,1.9,5 9 1742.88
This gives for eaoh
of 6,490 pounds of milk, 865,179
pounds of butter and 164.59 in m.h
In addition to this eaoh oow raised a
calf.
IMPRISONMENT ENDED.
Term
nating would never begin.
Protection for the Negro.
(Minneapolis Trlbnno.
The supreme court of Kentucky has
decided that negroes are entitled to
protection from intrusion by white peo
ple into the separate oars set apart for
tneir use, and a colored woman reoent'
ly reoovered damages from a railroad
oompany because the conductor per
mitted a white man to enter theoolored
ooaoh to speak to an old friend. Whil
in the oar the white man insulted s
colored woman, hence the suit.
000, and to the Burlington, $10,000,
partly covered by insurance.
Lord Sholto Douglas.
(rndlanoplls Journal.
When Lord Sholto Douglas married
a California variety actress it was ex
plained that the brido was descended
through her mother from the British
nobility, and was, therefore, her hus
band a equal. The coarseness and vul-
garity displayed bj the mother in her
threat to publioly horsewhip her son-in-law
go to sustain the olaims.
On the Boad to Bankruptcy.
Now York Son.
Ridiculous as it sounds for the
United States at this period of their ex
istence, we are on the straight road to
bankruptcy. The situation is suoh
that with congress in Republican con
trol, a president of the opposition must
accept the revenue bill whioh is laid
before him. There is deficiency in the
national revenue, and we must have
money. It is a oondition whioh con
fronts us, not a theory.
Moonshiners in Virginia.
Lexington, Ky., Nov. 22. United
States Marshal Kilbourne and his dep
uties made an extensive raid, on moon
shiners yesterday in Wise oounty. Vir
ginia, just over the Kentnoky line, de
stroying a dozen illicit stills with a ca
pacity of 2,000 gallons. In the fight
three moonshiners were seriously
wounded, and one offloer reoeived a
painful shot in the mouth.
Carl Stelsfelman, the Explorer.
Shelby ville, Ind., Nov. 26. News
has reached here that Carl Stekelman,
the renowned South Afrioan explorer,
was drowned August 28. For ten
years he had been the agent of Tomlin
son & Co., of Liverpool, England, in
the South Afrioan trade, and for sev
eral years correspondent of the New
York Herald from the oountries of Af
rica explored by him.
Eugene V. Debs Has Served His
and Is Now a Free Han.
Chicago, Nov. 28. Eugene V. Debs
became a free man again at 12 o'clock
tonight. His term of six months' im
prisonment in the Woodstock jail came
to an end at that time. A party of
800 admirers and friends will go out
to Woodstock tomorrow afternoon to
greet the labor leader on his release.
A party composed of representatives of
all the central labor bodies and of the
several local unions will be among the
first to greet Debs. Debs will receive
them at the jail and will then march
around the publio square with the
party to the music of a brass band and
drum oorps. A delegate of the trades
assemblies of Cincinnati and of the
American Railway Union of Cleveland
will arrive tomorrow morning to take
part in the general jubilee which will
be held in battery D in the evening.
Mr. Debs has already laid plans whioh
will keep him very muoh before the
publio. He said last night that he had
arranged to visit all prinoipal cities,
primarily in the interest of the Ameri
can Railway Union, but direoting his
efforts also to bring organized labor
into a defensive alliance.
A New Separator.
We are advised of the successful
trial, covering quite a period of time,
of a new separator. This new maohine
is a radical departure from old styles,
the bowl being but two inches in di
ameter, inside measurement, and about
four feet long. It runs at a speed of
60,000 revolutions per minute, skims
twelve thousand pounds per hour and
eats up the milk so fast that it has to
uo luruen in with a steam pump. This
is what the creamery men have been
looking for and if it fullfills olaims.
vuo uiauumo win , ao ior an
county. American Creamery.
average
No Contraband Goods Aboard.
Lewes, Del., Nov. 26. The sohoon
er John W. Foster, under tow, arrived
at the Delaware breakwater tonight in
charge of customhouse officials. Noth
ing had been found to show any irreg
ularity in her business. Captain
Wheaton declares that tomorrow he
will give up his vessel to the oare of
the government and go personally to
Wilmington and Philadelphia to begin
suit against the government for dam
ages for detention.
Not Enough Marines.
Washington, Nov. 22. Colonel
Charles Heywood, commanding the
marine oorps, in his annual report to
the seoretary of the navy, makes a
strong appeal for an inorease in the en
listed strength of the oorps to meet the
additional duties imposed upon it by
the increase of the navy. Colonel Hey
wood estimates that 1,500 marines on
shore are needed for the protection of
million of dollars worth of orovnrn-
ment property in their charge, a num
ber 800 in excess of the marines now
engaged in that duty. In addition to
this it is estimated that about 460
more men will be required for the new
vessels now under oonstruotioa
The New Chinese Loan.
London, Nov. 26. A dispatch to the
times irom Benin aonnrms the report
that China is negotiating with a Ger
man syndioate for a new loan for the
purpose of securing funds with whioh
to pay a portion of the indemnity
pledged to the Japanese at the conclu
sion of the reoent war.
To Keep Fruit in Winter.
To keep fruit in winter the Culti
vator, of Albany, says: First, keep the
temperature within a few degrees of
the freezing point. Seoond, let it be
as uniform as possible, as an occasional
warm draught hastens decay. Third,
exclude air currents not required to
maintain ventilation and uniform cold.
Fourth, keep all odors away from the
fruit. Some additional observations
may be necessary under these different
heads. Under the first rule it would
be important to secure a fruit room
wnere ine temperature oan be oom
pletely controlled by windows, and one
or more thermometers must be used for
maintaining the right temperature.
Under the seoond rule, examine the
plaoe daily and see that it is all right.
Under the third, the advantage of
drawers and oovered boxes to exolude
air currents will be obvious; and more
perfect exolusion is effected by placing
the fruit in alternating layers with
chaff, bran, dry moss and dry sand.
The importance of keeping bad odora
from the fruit inoludes the prompt re
moval of all decaying speoimens,
which, if allowed to remain, will
spread the spores of rotting fruit
Difficulties in Bee-Keeplng.
Modern bee-keeping at first repels
beginners, beoause it is made to look
like a diffloult and unprofitable pur
suit, with a great probability of a phy
sical discomfort from stings. We have
found, whenever the subjeot has been
brought up, the first objection to be:
"I don't like the stings;" the next,
"There is too muoh trouble about
bees. ' If you were intending to make
bee-keeping your business, then it
would be well to oonsider these objec
tions and show how tender handling,
an intelligent study of methods, large
and convenient hives, the most ap
proved locations and the most suitable
protective bee veils, have rendered
these objections of no foroe. But for
bees on the farm, to gather the sweets
whioh are now going to waste, we need
only say, the frame hives with sections
for honey, and a few swarms of bees,
will not involve either difficulty or
damage to any, and will afford for the
table a delioaoy whioh both old and
young will appreciate. Besides, the
oases of being stung may be said to be
ii rare occurrence and if yon obanoe to
be a subjeot of stinging it will soon be
f little consequence, as many testify
that it becomes soon of no greater In
convenience man tne tnte of t
quite.