fflE
VOL. III.
HILLSJiOUO, OKEUOX, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1897.
NO. 43.
EVENTS OF THE DAY
Epitome ot the Telegraphic
News of the World.
TSBSB TICKS FROM THE WIRES
An Intonating Collection of JtemeFrota
the Two Hemispheres Presented
la a Oondoueed Form.
The Washington legislature mei
Monday at Olympia, and promptly pro
ceeded to organize. W. II. Pluinmor,
of Spokane, won elected temporary
chalnnun of the senate; Dudley Eshel
man, of Spokane, secretary of the sen
ate. The election of minor employes
vm proceeded with until a number of
places were filled. The . house wan
called to order at noon by Assistant
Chief Clerk Alexander of the hint ses
Htnn. The election of officers and em
ployes followed, and C. E. Clino, of
Whatcom, was chosen speaker, and
Judge Carusi, of Clrtlhira, chief clerk.
A committee was appointed to tent tho
contested places, and the house ad-oWrned.
POWERS BILL BEATEN.
'The nineteenth session of the Ore
gon leigsluture met in Salem Monday
in id failed to ortriuiiso completely be
cause of disagreement between factions 1 of such contests are usually brought to
in the senatorial fight. The evident j a final test More the last parliament-
Hoiim Voted Against Funding tho
Paulflo Kallroad Doht,
Washington, Jan. 13. The Pacific
railroad funding bill went to its doom
in the house today under an adverse
majority of 00. The friends of the
measure, who had predicted its passago
up to the last moment, were surprised
by the decisive character of their de
feat. They had been led to hope from
the votes on the substitute that the bill
had more than an even chance of pas
sage. The Bell substitute provided that if
the Union Pacific and Central Pacific
would clear off the first mortgage and
advance the government lien, the gov
ernment would extend the indebtedness
at 8 per cent. It was defeated, 110 to
150.
The Harrison substitute, providing
for a committee to negotiate a settle
ment of the debt, was rejected by the
house by a vote of 65 to 214.
Many of the members were as much
opposed to tho substitutes as to the
Powers bill. The California and Mid
dle West members voted almost solidly
against them. When the vote came
on the main proiwsition, the whole
house swung into line, and crushed it
by a vote of 102 to 108. The vote was
not taken directly on the passage of the
bill, but upon the preliminary motion
to engross and read the bill a third
time. Bills which become the subject
purpose seemed to be to delay the elec
tion of United States senator for two
weeks and they were successful. Tho
senate organized without friction, but
the house not at nil. A vote for sen
ator can not now bo taken until Tues
day, January 20. Josepfi Simon, of
Multnomah, was hosen president of
the senate without opposition.
The four presidential electors of Ore
gon met in Salem and cast their ballots
for William McKinley and Garret llo
bart;. , Hon. T. T. Qeer was elected
messenger to carry the vote to Wash
fngton. A distmtoh from Nice says that
eighty-two " persons, Including the
mayor aim tno mayor's assistant, lo-jj;
eethor with many prominent citiaw
have been arraignciiIua---
tlie municiP''1 ir
.iiat tho PhilipfrneTnsurgents who
were deported to the Landrane islands,
the Spanish penal settlement in the Pa
cific, recently made a desperate attempt
to escape, but were overpowered by the
garrison and Spanish marines. Eighty
of the convicts were killed and forty
wounded.
A pasBegnor train on the Burlington
jumped a trestle near Omaha, and five
people were Injured, one fatally.
William Dobb's, Qf Union, Or,, has
received the Maul prize for raising tho
largest table beet for 1800. The con
test was open to all growers in the
uimwi otauis anu vunnuit. mjmi.u
consisted of a 50 draft The beet
Weighed seventeen pounds.
Borne boys while hunting -near Peta
luma, Cul., shot a pigeon on a tree,
' and the bird dropped with a broken
wing. A message tied to the bird's
wing proved that it came from Walla
Walla, Wash., four days previous.
The note was addressed to a San Fran
cisco firm.
Important peters showing the
amount due tho Paoifio roads sinking
fund, on account of subsidies paid the
Paoillo Mail Steamship Company, have
apparently been lost. The senate
adopted a resolution calling for them.
The aoting secretary has replied that
they oannot be found.
The Columbia river salmon packers
hold a meeting in Astoria for the pur
pose of fixing tho price to be paid for
ealmon during the coming season. It
was decided to offer 4 cents a pound,
and a communication to that effect was
sent to the Fishermen's Protective
Union. The union met later, but no
action was taken in the matter of tho
canners' proposition,
A thousand warring Poles, in Bay
. . i . .1 i ; l ii. .l Y.l.
Ulty, jyuuu. , wre uuturiinneu unit, x-n-i
ther Bogncki should not officiate as
I their priest. They attacked the par-
- H C3L cs. ' 1 1. .. J
stormed it for over an hour. They de
molished the edifice and one man was
shot and several others wounded with
clubs. Tho priest finally surrendered,
and the police quelled the riot.
A Chioago paper says that President
elect McKinley will select Colonel John
Hay, of Washington, as ambassador to
Great Britain, colonel liny Has neon
seoretary of the legation at Paris,
-Snna and Madrid and was often
charge d'affaires ad interim at each of
these oapitais. in Hayes- aaininstra
tion he was first assistant Beoretary of
. state. Hay was one of President Lin
' clon's secretaries.
' Sir Charles Tupper at a dinner in
Ix)ndon is quoted as saying: "I feel
great admiration for the United States,
but do not desire to possess their insti
tutions. I feel that there is greater
security under British institutions for
life, property and liberty. Canadians
are greatly flattered at the desire of
the United States to possess Canada,
but so deep is their loyalty and so
united are the Canadians that the ques
tion is impossilbe. " The speeoh of the
ex-premier was received with great ap
plause, The Southern Oregon Fair, Associa
tion has filed articles of incorporation
in the office of the senary of state.
The capital named if
into shares of $10 er
be the'principal o:
Frank Hoyt
ed and robbed
Mvrtle Creek li
in Roseburg,
the grand ju
In default f
the county
ary stage is reached. The Keilly Pa
cific funding bill was defeated in the
same manner on the same motion.
This was the fourth funding bill killed
in the house in ten years. An analysis
of the vote today showed that eighty-
six Hppublicans and sixteen Democrats
voted for the hill and ninety-nine Re
publicans, fifty-eight Democrats, six
Populists and five Independents against
it.
After tho bill was disposed of the
army appropriation and several other
bills were passed.
Hundreds of Families Burned
Out by Weyler's Orders.
UNABLE TO SITE AHYfHIKG
the Morementt of Gomei-Leadlng
Dpanlord In Cuba Honored bjr
tk Quaes Kegent.
THE SHORT LINE SOLD
parotic of Valon Paolfle and Iti .
Prtaolpal Branch.
i HEARST ON THE BACK
Bitterly Denounced by
son of California.
John-
Salt Lakt, Jan. 13. The sale of the
Oregoa Short Line & Utah Northern
railway, under the consoldiated mort
gage of August 1, 1889, was made today
under direction of John B. Cleland,
court commissioner. Samuel Carr,
Walter C. Oakman and Henry G.
Nicholls, representing the reorganiza
tion committee, purchased the property
for $5,447,600. The Utah Southern
road was bid in by the same parties foi
1763,000. They also purchased the
Utah Knnthnrn BXti'tiHinn. for tH7B.OOO.
nny west, ria., dan. iz.-uopies oif y. H. Bancroft will be general man
the Vose de Cuba received here show ager 0f the company,
that that newspaper recently published j Tlle transfer of the Oregon Short
an extra, advising all loyal Spaniards T,ln A ntnr. Vm-tWn with nrnwrtv
not to buy the Madrid papers. The ; uta in Ava of the V'pfrtprn statcR wa congress. Jonhnson of California, the
claim is made that the attacks of tlie ' 0f reat interest to railroad men in the only member ot the California delega-
A GREAT IRON PLANT.
IS TUB FUSDISG-BILIj DEBATE
Speech Characterized br Ooopn at
tba Moat Dlagraeerul Attack la
tho HUtory of tho Hon.
Washington, Jan. 11. The second
day's debate on the Pacific railway re
funding bill developed by far the most
sensational incident of this session of
Madrid papers on Weyler have a ten
dency to do him more harm than the
attacks of the Patria and 1 Porveuir,
of New York.
Beveral young men who recently
joined the insurgents at Manzanillo
report the existence of widespread dis
affection among the followers of Babi
and Calixto Garcia.
Advices have been received from
Trinidad that soveral young men who
recently joined the insurgents at ffancti
Bpiritus report that a number of days
since Maximo Gomez was encamped
near La Campania. On the . 1st of
January, it is asserted, the insurgent
leaders, Jose Miguel and Gomez, passed
turn who lavors the lunaine but, in
the course of his remarks toofe occasion
to make a ' remarkable, vituperative
personal attack on Editor Hearst, of
the San Francisco Examiner. He de
scribed Mr. Hearst and Mayor Sutro at
men who were terrorizing the Pacifie
coast members, and made statements
concerning the former which led Coop
er, of Wisconsin to characterize it later
as the "most disgraceful attack in the
Reported to legislative annals of the United
; States."
Washington, Jan. 13. The Indian The members, who had been listen
appropriation bill for the next fiscal 'lDB attentively to Johnson's remarks,
vpur whs nnmnlntml tndav hv thn house as he is always one of the most enter-
intermountain country. The eventj
were the legal forms by which the sub
branches of the Union Pacific trunk
system were foreclosed and bid in by
the holders of liens upon them, and are
to be followed by a reorganization of
the officers and employes of the lines
involved.
INDIAN APPROPRIATIONS.
tho BUI
Gomplotod and
tho Bouoo.
To Bo Bollt at Port AagolM br Kaotora
MHI Woraors.
Now York, Jan. 13. A Braddock,
Pa., special to tho World says: Mill
workers at tho Carneige plants here
and at Homestead, Duqtiesne and Pitts
burg, and employes of the Westing
house works on Tuttle creek and Wil
merding, are forming a joint stock com
pany to build a $2,000,000 iroii and
steel plant at Port Angleles, on Puget
sound. The company has been incor
porated under the Washington laws.
Twelve hundred of the prominent
millworkers of this section have,
in the last fortnight, subscribed about
$1,000,000 worth of stock. The plant
will employ 2,000 men, and will cover
thirty acres of ground. The work on
the mill buildings will be
April, and subscription books will re-
NORTHWEST BREVITIES
Evidence ot Steady Growth
and Enterprise.
ITEXS Or GENERAL INTEREST
from All tho Cltloo and Town of tho
ThrlTlng SJIator State!
Orosoa.
The Tigardville flouring mill, In
Washington county, is running full
time, and is not able to fill all orders.
Professor E. D. Williams, who was
started in : stabbed by Ed Meador, one of his pu
pils, at Praine City, in Grant county,
main open until that time. The com- has since died,
pany has been made great inducements j One firm in Coquille City shipped,
to locate at Port Angeles. Eighty j during December last, 900 dozen of
acres ol land lor a manuarcturing site : eggs. The poultry shipments, too,
and 200 acres for a townsite, with 600
feet of wharf front on Puget sound and
railroad rights of way for proper de
velopment, will compose the bonus.
The iron and steel plant will include
a blast furnace of 800 tons, thirty open
hearth furnaces, bloom and billet mill,
rolling, bar and wire nail, sheet and
tinplate mills, foundry, machine shops,
blacksmith and boiler shops.
were quite large.
The schooner Free Trade was struck
by a heavy sea while crossing the Tilla
mook bar lately. The man at the'
wheel was injured and the steering
gear demolished.
Work on the Bandon woolen mills
warehouse has been stopped for the
present owing to claims on the wharf
Ouba In tho Sonata.
Washington, Jan. 18. The chief
event of today's session of the senate
ioned speech by Mills of
of a resolution intro
declare the recognition
,-"",re'" g,,v'rnment ft congressional
prerogative unit to recognize, me inae
pendence of Cuba and appropriating
$10,000 for the salary of a minister.
In support of the first proposition the
senator quoted a long line of prece
dents, and speaking on the latter ques
tion, he strongly denounced tho admin
istration, charigng it with favoritism
toward 8pain. He spoke contemptuous
ly of Castillane and Weyler and of
Signnr Crispi, because of his declara
tion that Europe could not look without
concern upon the pretensions of the
United States. ' The, Cuban question
was the mercantile spirit of the nation
against its honor, he declared.
Proctor made a speech in favor of a
constitutional amendment to limit the
president to one-six-year term, and
Allen made an unsuccessful effort to
secure the adoption of the resolution
calling on tho secretary of the navy for
information as to whether contractor's
men in the Brooklyn navy-yard are re
quired to work more than eight hours
per day.
committee on Indian affairs, and re-
by the Mapos plantation, in company ported to the house by Sherman. The
with other Cuban insurgent command-1 bill carries a total of $7,465,000, which
M8, is somewhat less than the appropriation
Over 600 families are reported to for the current year. The allowance
have been burned out of their houses, for schools, however, is increased $20,
owing to the recent orderB to destroy 000, and provision is made for starting
the property, and even the homes of the new schools at Chamberlain and
pacificos. Many of these persons have ' Rapid City, S. D., whose establish
bcen unable to save even their clothing. ment was provided for by the last bill.
Mothers aro carrying their babes In There is an item continuing the
their arms, and are without food and Dawes commission, with special sal
taining speakers in the house, were 1,000 acres of coal land that makes
tv, t,i,i. Rftn t Between the river channel and the
ore land of 69 per cent pure iron, and
place selected for the building.
thunderstruck at the lengths to which
he went. At the last cession Johnson
denounced Hearst, but on that occasion
he was called to order by Magnire of
California. Today he completed' his
philippic without interruption. The
speech created a profound sensation,
which was increased by Cooper'B denun-ciation-of
it as a cowardly attempj" to
blacken the reputation of a man of
"positive genius." Cooper also took
coke equal
ville coal.
to Pennsylvania Connells-
THE TERRIBLE'S TRIAL.
resting places. Old, grayheaded men 1 aries and compensation, and $40,000 occasion to score the gentleman from
i . . . . . , . . - . 1 ' - ni: n i i
anu women are Dareiy aDie to move,
owing to the prolonged period of suffer
ing, and many of theitywill probably
starve to death.
The magnificent sugar estate of Santa
Rosa has been burned by the insurgents.
For soveral days the horizon has been
brilliantly illuminated by the destroy
ing fires. Many of the canefields in
this vicinity are still burning.
HUNGARIAN CHRISTENING.
Jo
J
0, divided
dford will
Wr. cat on Brltlah CoatU.
Loudon, Jan. 18. Tho storm and
fogs continue along the coast, and
wrecks have been reported .at many
points.
A trawler, with six men, has been
lost off Yarmouth.
The steamer Gulf of Slam is ashore
in Moroock bay. Other ships' boats
have been picked up.
The Allan line steamer Lauran
Captain McDonghall, from Po
Mo., on December 81, and If
January 2, for Liverpi stfC
Malin head yesterday
day at Moville with
The crew of the BrY
Strathmore, from Genoa,
haB been taken off that
trawler and landed ay
Strathmore, which was I om
geria to Sunderland, yf 4 "V picked
the North sea on Wt When
it became apparent thatVf was sink
ing, the crew took to the Bridge, and
remained there without food until Sun
day, when they were rescued by a traw
ler.
is given for the expenses of the com
mission of citizens who serve without
compensation. The claims of the old
settlers against Western Cherokee In
dians, which have been a troublesome
Masaaored by Natlvei.
Bonny, Coast of Guinea, Jan. 13.
Consul Phillips, two consular officers,
Locke and Campbell; Major Crawford,
deputy commissioner, and Captains
Boisragen and Maling, officers belong
ing to the Niger coast defense force;
Dr. Elliott and two civilians, with a
number of Kroomen and native car
riers, have been massacred by the
king's people, while on a peaceful
mission to Benin City. The consul's
yacht has just returned here with the
news..
London, Jan. 13. Tho foreign office
lias received private confirmation of
the news from Bonny, on the Guinea
coast, telling of the massacre of Consul
Phillips and his companions while on
a peaceful mission to Benin city. The
object of the murder is not known.
Benin city is within tho Niger protec
torate, and is sixty milos up the river
Benin. .
Liquor Flowed tntiy, and a Stabbing
Match Wat til Keiult
Scranton, Pa., Jan. 12. A Hun
garian christening at Mayfield, this
county, had the usual bloody ending
which attends such affairs, for as a re
sult one man is dead, two are dying
and five others are badly carved.
Strong.. liquor flowed freely at the
christening, and soon many of the men I
were mad with drink. Seven of the
participants in the fracas went to the
house of Lucetz Krutchas. Krutchas
soon had to resent an insult to his
wife, and knives flashed out
Mrs. Krutchas dashed out the light
and fled from the room. A fearful
fight followed in the dark. The dtink
maddened men cut and stabbed each
other and rolled together on the floor
in deadly grapple.
Finally a constable and possejuoke
into the house and when a light was
had a ghastly picture was presented.
The furniture was battered and broken
and blood was everywhere, and
stretched on the floor were eight ap
parently dead and dying men, groaning
and cursing. A physician was hastily
summoned. Krutchas was so terribly
cut that he died in a short time. The
injuries of the other men show the sav
age nature of the fight.
Ileatrn and Kubbed br Thuii.
Chimm. .Tun. 12. Mr. f'h.ii-li.a
4pBouchzein, of 47 Clark street, was at
Stacked hv two hk'liwuvmfin at . Kitnia
and West Water streets last night and
dragged from tho cab in which she was
riding and robbed.
About 10 o'clock a cab was driven to
her home and a note was handed her
puprorting to have been Bigned by a
-Wend, asking her to take the cab to
N home at once. Mrsi Bouchzein
ooUy dressed and departed in the
! .Fater .street is a dark thor-N
,! no tl, J.I. 1 J
north'ttto it two men ran out from the
shadow of a building and appoared at
the door of the vehicle.
One of tho men threw red peppor
into the eyes of the woman to blind
her. She was then beaten with a re
volver until she was unconscious. Her
assailants robbed her of her jewelry,
valued at $1,500, and her pocketbook,
which contained $400. She was dragged
into the street and her assailants es
caped in the same cab. Her injuires
are said to be dangerous.
California roundly for his attitude to
ward the bill. Johnson made no at
tempt to reply to Cooper.
This incident -completely overshad
owed the interest in the debate on the
question for years, are settled by a lunaing dim, ana mereaiier 11 pro
clause directing the secretary of the ceeded quietly to the hour when Tecess
interior to pay f 86,200 on proper requi- was taken. The general debate closed
sition. : today.
Three bills tor the ratification of Hiison -otice of a substitute
the treaties to secure Indian lands are he shvj l -lo provide for a com-
incroporated in the bill. One ie mission to consist of the secretary of
Flynn's bill to ratify the agrement the treasury, secretary of the interior
with the Comanche, Kiowa and Apache and the attorney-general, to negotiate
tribes of Oklahoma, bv which the eov- the settlement of the debt.
ernment is to secure their reservations
for $2,000,000. The second is for
ratification of the treaty of 1892 with
the Turtle Mountain Chippewas, of
North Dakota, for their lands. Repre
sentative Mondell's project for making
a government reservation of the Hot
Springs on the Shoshone reservation,
in Wyoming, for which a treaty has
been made with the Indians, is includ
ed. One of the most important features of
the bill is the incorporation in it of a
bill recently introduced by Sherman of
MURDER OF PACIFICOS.
Great SpMd Made br log-land'a Now
Wanklp.
Loiidon, Jan. 12. H. M. S. Terrible,
the new first-class cruiser, had her trial
over a thirty-two mile course oft the
Cornish coast Saturday. The speed
developed showed an average ot 2 14
knots an hour, beating, it is claimed
here, the record of every war vessel
afloat
' The Terrible was launched at Glas
gow in 1895, and she is equipped with
forty-eight boilers of the Bellville wa-ter-tube
type. This great ship is
built of sheathed steel, and is of 14,200
tons displacement Her length is 600
feet, and her beam 71 feet, while the
maximum draught is 27 feet She has j
twin screw propellers, and has an in-
dicated horsepower of 25,000. She is
The logging cump of Nixon Bros. ,
near Peoria, in Linn county, burned
last week and all of the property in it
The Nixon Bros, were getting ont logs
for the O. R. & N. wharf in Corvallis.
The mail-carrier, while crossing
Warm Springs reservation with a buck
board and four horses, mired down and
had to get out with the mail for Prine
ville on a pack animal on a recent trip.
H. Clay, of Alrington, who has
7,000 sheep that are being fed in Min
nesota for the Chicago market, says
that there are 80,000 head ot sheep
near bis place that are being fattened
for market .
Cut worms are doing considerable
damage to fall grain in the vicinity of
Oak Grove, in Wasco county. The cold
spell in November did some damage to
grain in that part of the county, but
the injury was not great
The Uamtilla county assessor has just
completed the military roll, which has
been turned over to the county clerk.
rated as a protected cruiser, her wmama auout i.ouu names,
armored deck extending over the whole ?n? 18 Wled alphabetically, so that
length of the ship. In its thickest part u 18 a simPle ma"er J ascertain whose
it is four inches and tinr to three i names are nPO hese are not
present commissioner and deputy com
missioner. One of the three is to be
an army officer, and the office of deputy
commissioner is to be done away with.
tally assault-
pengarner, at
has beon tried
bound over to
sum 01 fi,uuu.
ysmen he is now in
Yokohama, Jan. 13t The greatest
excitement prevails in diplomatic and
other circles at Tokio and in this city,
owing to a seeming outrage committed
by tho German minister to Japan,
Baron von Gutshmidt. It appears that
while the minister was out driving, he
Jushed across the face a Japanese stu
dent, who had in 110 way provoked
him. The newspapers demanded the
recall of the baron, and the matter
has been taken up by the Japanese for
eign office '1
Bvidonooo Accumulating of Awful Span
1Mb. Batchorlea at Omnabacoa
New York, Jan. 11. A Key West
dispatch to the World says: - ;
Evidences of awful butcheries at
Guamabacoa accumulate daily. Ad
vices from Havana report that a great
pit filled with corpses and human frag
ments was discovered in a canefleld,
not more than a mile from that place.
A careful investigation revealed at
New York, which provides for three least twenty whole bodiea and many
Indian commissioners to succeed the more leSs and arms other Prts of the
dismembered bodies being mieeing.
Of the bodies remaining entire, four
were thtise of women, three of young
misses, one of a girl not more than ten
years old, four of boys, and the rest of
Durrant May Get a Now Trial. men.
San Francisco, Jan. 12. It is re-! Permission to bury the remains was
ported in legal circles that the supreme brutally refused, with a threat that if
court may send the Durrant case back this slaughter was complained of many
for retrial. At least one of the jus- more would be added to what the Span
tices iB said to have openly said the evi- ish off.oials called the "Cuban diet"
dence against Durrant for the murder pile.
of Blanche Lamont was insufficient to The edict refusing permission to re
convict. He believes Durrant was move furniture and other things unless
found guilty to satisfy the popular asked fdr twenty-four hours previously
clamor, and if -Je can influence the is taken advantage of by the Spanish
othervjustices to the same view, a new soldiers to wreck buildings and revile
trial may be ordered, as was in the and insult, if not kill, persons suspeot
case of Dr. Milton Bowers, who now ed of Cuban leanings,
walks the streets a free man. Although Some families in the poorer sections
the Durrant case is now under submis- of the city, who did not know of the
edict, started to move Sunday night
After they had loaded their furniture
on wagons, the police and soldiers fired
on them, killing eight persons, includ
ing several innocent passers-hy. In
the official report it was stated that the
troops had been attacked and several
rebels had been killed.
A girls' school near the center of the
town was entered by troops one day
last week, and the principal, an elder
ly Cuban-born woman, very prominent,
was compelled to kneel to the officer in
beg pardon for . using
text-books printed in
inches at the ends. Her coal capacity
is SO, COO tons. The complement of
officers and men provided is 840.
" . .. The Steel Bnard.
Washington, Jan. 12. The navy de
partment is carrying out the plans pro
jected by Secretary Herbert . for the
prevention of further defects in Bteel
supplied for the construction of battle
ships. Having ascertained through an
investigation, made by a special board,
the extent of the defects in the plate
already supplied, the next step has been ; mas day.
The people of Arlington had an ex
tra dish of entertainment served Christ
mas night in tho way of an Indian
dance, given by about thirty of the Co-,
lumiba Indians. The Indians hired
the hall and charged an admission.
Nearly every one went to see them and
hear the mnsio they furnished on such
occasions. Like many other ballroom
celebrities, they were painted in the
loudest colors. - i i . , .
The Indians had a big time at Thorn
Hollow, in Umatilla county, on Christ-
There took part in the fes-
Aooklenti on the Great Northern.
, Butte, Mont., Jan. 12. While a
gang of workmen were employed in re
pairing the trestle on the Great North
ran road, just outside of town today, a
big iron truss which was being put in
position slipped, carrying down with it
Peter Hishon and John Council. The
latter was killed outright Hishon
lived an hour. The men were members
of a bridge crew brought here from Chi
cago recently. Dr. I. S. Freund, the
company physician, was on his way to
the scene of the accident on a switch
engine when a collision occurred with
a freight engine. The doctor .was
thrown off, sustaining serious injuries.
Flottlng Afalnit the Sultan.
Brussels, Jan. 13. The Turkish Re
form League has issued from Brussels
an appeal to the people of Europe, de
claring that the sultan has planned a
massacre to take place during the ap
proaching famazan fasts, and imploring
the powers to interfere, depose the sul
tan and proclaim Beichad Effcndi,
younger brother ot the sultan, and heir
presumtive, his successor, with a coun
cil of state made up of equal number!
of Moslems, Christians and European!.
sion, Attorney-General Fitzgerald hae
not filed his brief in reply to the de
fendant's brief. When that is filed
there will be a defendant's briof in re
turn. Two months may elapse before
the all-important decision of the su
preme court is handed down.
Heait-Enrt Colllelon.
Fort Worth, Tex., Jan. 12. A head
end collision ocurred today between
two freight trains on the Gulf, Colo
rado & Santa Fe road at llazlott, two
miles north of here. One train was command and
standing on the main line waiting for translations of
taken by the reorganization of the eteel tivities 100 Umatilla Indians, five Po-
board. This has been done upon the catcllos and tour Nea Peroes. One of
lines sutreested bv the chief construct- the Nez Perce Indians was found with
or, JVlr. Hichborne, namely,, to make
the majority of the board experts. Cap
tain Day, the present head of the
board, will be succeeded in that place
by Cummander Coquin, and Lieutenant
Everett has been succeeded by Con
structor Dashiel. Chief Engineer Free
man will be retained on the board,
consisting of one line officer and two
staff officers, the latter mechanical ex
perts. This reconstructed board is
about to undertake a revision of the
a bottle of whisky in his possession.
This was promptly taken from him by
the Indian police, who poured out the
contents. Two other Indians got some
what hilarious and were pnt in irons.
Washington.
The population of Chehalis county is
10,473, an increase of 1,400 in two
yean, ".
The Electric Light &ffJwer Com
pany is planting maple trees and other-
specifications, under which ship steel iB wise improving the Tumwater park.
made, guided by the experience ac
quired by the special board.
Drowned In Colrlllo Lake.
Sprague, Wash., Jan. 12. Two boys,
Fritz and Con Veyen, aged respectively
19 and 17 years, were drowned yester
day in Colville lake, two miles east of
this place. They left home in the af
ternoon, telling their mother they were
going on a fishing expedition. They
near Olympia.
Judge Hume, in Seattle, has fixed
March 28, 1897, as the date upon which
William Carey, convicted of murder,
will be hanged.
It is thought that a new
found for the black beachsal
harbor, that it will prove
the iron that is in it
In Kittitas county all approved bills
up to January 1, 1896, have been paid.
had not returned at a late hour and a
searching party set out The body of The last payment before this oleaned
the younger was brought to the surface ' P all warrants issued prior to April,
100 yards from shore; that of the older j 1896.
boy was not recovered. They went out .It f said that a measure will be
on the lake in a sailboat, and the boat presented to the coming state legisla
was evidently overturned by the wind, ture to re-enact the beet-sugar bounty
The father is employed in the railroad law passed in 1893, which has now be-
the other to take the siding. The en
gineer of the south-bound train pre
sumed that ' the switch had been
thrown, and came ahead at a lively
speed and crashed into the north-bound
engine. Joe Haggerty, of Gainseville,
engineer of the south-bound, and E. AV.
Palushall, brakeman, were killed.
George Coombs, of Gainseville, the
the United States.. The girl pupils
were insulted and rudely treated until
the school was broken up in disorder.
A complaint to the commandantj only
excited laughter that "such a little
thing" was complained of.
Havana is much agitated hy rumors
of victories by Gomez's troops; of the
successful crossing of the trocha into
and several rout! of
shops in Spokane.
other engineer, had an arm broken, and pinar del Rio,
a man named Morris was badly injured. Spanish troops.
' General Weyler is execrated on every
Dr.Ig.d to Death. I hand, but, on account of the severe
Modesto, Cal., Jan. 12. Yesterday censorship and Weyler's system of
Blakely, son of T. K. Wallis, aged 17, Bpie8( no one divres 8ily a WOrd aloud,
was dragged to death at his home on Every one thinks his neighbor a spy,
the San Joaquin river, eighteen miles and little can learned from anyone,
south of Modesto. He was driving a gpies by the hundred attend the open
team hitched to a scraper, when he air concerts, and the least dissatisfao
was caught in the spring and the team tion expres8ed is used as a pretext and
ran away. For over 200 yards he was the victim ia thrust into Cabanas or
hit on the head by the blade of the Mor0 ca8tlei moat iikeiy never to be
scraper as it bumped along the field. Been again by friends or kindred.
His head was badly lacerated, and he Scarceiy a night passes but ten to
remained unconscious ror six nours, ,w raf.i J!mnnr. ot,
when he died.
Ellen Terry'a Poor Dreeilng.
Paris, Jan. 13. It is reported
that
one knows what that means.
every
the Uisino at Monte Carlo recently re- reached here today of a disastrous
iusea acuiKfj", v:s uuen xerry, on tne
ground thai she was too ill-dressed.
Spaniards Defeated I urgent!.
Madrid, Jan. 12. Advices received
from Manila are to the effect that the
Spaniards have again defeated the in
surgents at Montabatan. Suty-one of camPl Bnd many mliSt
the Spaniards are reported to nave been on this store
killed in the engagement aions.
Fire In a Minlna; Town.
Kendriok, Idaho, Jan. 11. News
firs
at Pierce City, the historic old placer
camp of North Idaho. A number of
landmarks that were built back in the
'60s were destroyed. The heaviest loss
ivas suffered by a Chinese merohant,
who lost a $5, COO stock goods. The
fire will prove a myh J. ' a to the
x!ts rlAnanriori
lor their winter provi-
H'l Attempt! Were Failures.
Fon Du Lac, WiB., Jan. 12. Owen
Ferguson, clerk of Fond du Lac county,
shot himself last night twice, each
time too high to hit the heart. About
a year ago his wife died. At the last
election he was defeated. A few
months ago he broke a leg, and before
that he was a cripple. It was reported
that he was short in his accounts. He
is still alive.
A Hunter's Awfnl Death.
Atlantic, la., Jan. 11. Fred
Foulk
come inoperative by limitation.
The Spokane Reform leange will con
tinue in its work of trying to close the
saloons in that city Sunday, and has
engaged an attorney to assist in prose
cuting the cases that are expected to
arise. ;
Mr. Dunham, one of the oldest set
tlers of Gig Harbor, in Pierce county,
died last week at the age of OS years.
He was the first man to settle at Gig
Harbor, and lived there during the lat
ter years of his life.
During 1896, the Eev. John F. Da
mon, of Seattle, married 153 couples.
was attacked and killed by hogs in the lbt olae8t toom 60 Tear 01
heavy timber about fifteen miles and the oldest bride 64. The youngest
northeast of here. Foulk was hunting groom 01 me year was no years 01a,
rabbits, and aooiden tally wounded one nd tne youngest bride 18.
of the hogs. Its ories attracted several There is a movement afoot in the
other hogs, and they attacked him and southern part of Stevens county to di
literally ohewed him to death. The vide the county on a line running east
hogs had escaped from farmers living and west, about half way between Col
in that locality, and were virtually ville and Chewelah. There are about
wild. f. 12,000 inhabitants in the county.
Costly Tobacco r'aeiVr Fire. There is a large quantity of old bill
Danville, Vs., Jan. 12.-Fire broke ftt the caPito1 in Olympia that will
out today in the big leaf kVcco factory have to be destroyed. Two years ago
nf the American Tobacco Comranv. the Schools found these of Value to Use
The building, with all Its contents, was
entirely consumed. Valuable ma
chinery and 1,000,000 pounds of leaf
tobacco are a total loss. The insurance
as scratch paper. The school pupils
gathered them, but many were scat
tered about the streets. They may be
had this year, if the matter is looked '
is $120,000. The company will rebuild, i after T the teachers and assurance
given uiai uiey win not ue useu w iiv
Harher, the great authority on fish,
says that every square mile of the sea
is inhabited by 120,000,000 finny crea
tares.
ter the streets.
Ealama hopes to have two wood
working factories in operation - by
March 1 next.
A
t nfon.oe.. y.
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