VOL. XXXII. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY. OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1895. NO. 23. TRANSPORTATION. East and South -VIA- The Shasta Route OF THE Southern Pacific R'y Co. EXPRESS T1AIN3 RUN DAILY. 18 60 p h Leaie 1'ortland Arrive 8:10 am 2 10 P m Leave Albany Arrive I 4:51am lUAb a m Arrive S. Fraticlfco Leave 6:00 r u A ove trains mop at Eaft Portland, Oregon City, vYoudburn, salt-m. Turner, Mar. on, Jeffer son, Vlbtny. I oHiiy Junction, Taug ut,8aedds, lllev, II .rrisburx. Juuction City, Irving, JSu geue, CresWell, Oialnf, and all btations from Itjsebur to Asnlaud, inclusive. KOSKBUBU MAIL DAILY. 8:3 A m 1-eHVO 12. .5 p i ) i.eave 4:2j v m Arrive on land Airvei 4:40 pm Albtuv Arrive 1:1. PM Rosburg Leave I 6:00 a m Pullman B fret uleepen and seoitd-elass sle.vug ars attached to all through tralua. SALEM PASSENGER DAILY. 4:oi) p si j L ave Portland, Arrive 1 10:15 A M 6:li P M I Arr.ve Salem Leave! 8:u0am WEST SI UK HI VISION. Between Portland and Corvallis. daily (except Sunday). Mall train 7-:t0 A H Leave For. land 12:l-i p M i Arrive Corvallls Arrive I 6:40 p M Leave! 1 00 p a At Albany and norviillls connect with trains of i.be Oregon Central St Eastern Ry. EXI'KESsJ TRAINS DAILY (Except Sunday). 4:45 v X Leave Poitland Arrive 1 8:25 A M 7.2j p a Arrive MuMlnnville 1-ea'e 6:i.O a m Tlir .nirli tickets to all oolnia In the Eastern Mater, t an-ila a id Kurotio can be oota ned at loweal rate from A. K. Miller, agent, Corvallls. R. KOEIII.ER, Manager. . T. ROGEUS, A. G. F. Si P. A., Portland, Or. iJXlo E. McNElL, Receiver. TO THE EAST GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL BOUT IE S VIA VIA GREAT UNION NORTHERN RY. PACIFIC RY. SPOKANE DENVER MINNEAPOLIS OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL KANSAS CITI LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 DAYS FOR SAN FRANCISCO For full details call on or address W. H. HURLBURT, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Portland, Ob. OREGON CENTRAL AND EASTERNER. CO. Yaquina Bay Route Connecting at Yaquina Bay with the San Franeiseo & Yaquina Bay STEAMSHIP COMPANY. Steamship "Farallon" A 1 and nrst-cla in every respect. Satis from Yaquina f .r .San Francis-to about every eight dm. P.wsenger ice imnodstlnns unurpSHert. Shortest route between tue Willamette valley and Jal.fornia. Fare From Albany or Points West to Sail Francisco: Tabln 112 Pteenige , Cabin Komi I trip, good for 60 days... For sailing dajs a.ply to ..M .. 18 W. A. CUM MINOS, A cent. Corvallls, Oncon, EDWIN 5TONF, Manager, Corvallls, Oregon. CII .V. CLARK, Sup't, Corvallls, Oregon-. THE NEW w$k 1 1 co;s LI!IES"'T18 m MU To po'nts in WASHINGTON, IDAHO, MONTANA, DAKOTAS, MINNE S0T ""f.w-'L .al to and from CHICAGO." ST. LOUIS. WASHING TON. PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, BOSTON, and ALL POINTS in the United States. Canada and Europe. The tireat Northern Railwav is new transcontinental line. Runs buflet librarv observation cars, palace 'sleeping and dining cars, family tourist sleepers and first and second class coaches. Having a rock-ballast track the Great one of the duel annoyances oi wanecunnueumi u ... . Round trip tickets with stop-over privileges and choice of return routes. f. n.,Ko information ca.ll niOn Or WriteV. C. S. SMITH, C. 0. DONAVAN, Gen'l Agt, 122 Third Street, i-ortuno, vregoa. Only Cure for Pimples is Culicura Soap DR. WILSON Office over First National bank. Residence, two blocks west of courthouse. Office hours, 8 to 10 A. H., 1 to 3 p. M. Sundays and evenings by appointment. DR. L. G. ALTMAN H0M0E0PATHIST Diseases of women and children and general practice. Offica over Allen k Woodward's drug store. Office hours 8 to 12 A. M., and 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M. At residence, corner of 3rd and Harrison after hours and on Mondays. BOWEN LESTER DENTIST Office upstairs over First National Bank. Strictly First-Class Work Guaranteed Corvallis, Oregon F. M. JOHNSON ATTORNEY - AT - LAW COBVALLIB, ObEGON Does a general practice In all the court. Also agent for all the flrst-clau Insurance com panies. NOTARY PUBLIC. JUSTICE PEACE. E. E. WILSON ATTORNEY - AT - LAW Office In Zeiroff building, opposite postofDce. H. 0. WILKINS Stenographer and Notary Public Court recortlne and referee sittings mde specialties, as well as type-writing and other reporting. Office opposite postofflce, Corvallls, Or. E. HOLGATE. Notary Public. H. L. HOLGATE Jastlce of the Peace. HOLGATE & SON ATTOBNEYS-AT-LAW . Corvallis - - - . Oregon J. R. Bbtson W. E. Yatxs J. Fbbd Yam Bryson, Yates dt Yates LAWYERS CORVALLIS OREGON WAY EAST ., , . . . . Northern Railway is free from dust, Occidental Hotel, Corvallis, Oregon, or FIRES IN THE FORESTS Still Raging Throughout the Sound Country. MUCH TIMBER BEING DESTROYED All Game Driven From the Hills to the Water Courses, and Deer Are Almost Domesticated. Seattle, August 20. Settlers along Lake Samish report that there is an unbroken line of forest fires from Bel fast to the lake, destroying large as well as small timber, and rendering the atmosphere almost suffocating. All game is being driven from the hills to the lakes and water courses, and deer are almost domesticated. ' A settler last week met two cougars near his house. Ashe was unarmed, he had to give them the road. Mothers dare not let their children get out of their sight, and there is much alarm throughout the community. The Smoke in California. San Francisco, August 20. The cily was overcast yesterday with a bluisn haze mixed with fog. Most people thought it was just plain fog, but Weather Observer Hammon says it was smoke from the forest firest around Puget sound. North winds have been blowing up there for days, and the smoke from the big smudges in the Coast mountains has been carried di rectly southward. This course carried it out to sea from where the coast .line bends to the east. For days the north winds spun out a lengthening banner from the smoky mass on the Sound, and it was trailed over the sea for hundreds of miles. Day before yesterday a northwest wind which fol lowed the coast line struck Point Reyes, and in this the great pennant of smoke floated near the California shore. The northwest wind struck the hills south of the Golden Gate and was deflected through the gap, as usuaL So the northwest wind became south west wind about the city, and so it ripped an edge from the long pennant of smoke at sea and dragged it into the bay. That is the peculiar way in which smoke from Pugat sound reached San Francisco yesterday. It is not an . un usual thing for smoke to travel that distance from widespread forest fires, for smoke from Minnesota forests has been carried southward beyond St. Louis, but it is rarely that smoke from Washington dims the sunshine of Cen tral California, and it is not known that the winds, the sea and the hills ever before got it here by such an in genious process of spinning. A TALK WITH CROKER. The Ii-Tammany Boss Would Say Lit tle to the Interviewer. London, August 20. A representa tive of the Pros found Richard Croker at Newmarket today, and accompanied him back to London, seeking to secure from him an interview on political affairs in New York. No amount of persuasion, however, could induce him to talk about James G. Martin's as sumption of the leadership of Tam many. "I have nothing to say," was his re peated reply. He showed surprise, however, at the news, and finally observed: 'Whoever takes the Tammany leader ship now has a big job on his hands. " Mr. Croker was then asked about the course of the board of police com missioners in New York, and in reply said: "It would not be fair to criticise them at this distance, but, judging from the amount of space New York correspondents of the London papers are giving them, they must be raising Cain." A prominent New York Democrat who is here says James G. Martin's re lations with Bourke Cockran are too intimate to suit Croker. G.R.FARRAJ. D. Office in Farra fc Allen's brick, on the corner of Second and Ad ma. Residence on Third street in front 01 conn- hnntie. Office hoars 8 to 9 A. M ., and l to z ana 7 to B p. x. All cals atteudea promptly. Josiph H. Wilson. Thomas E. Wilsom WILSON & WILSON ATTORNEYS -AT-LAW Office over First National Bank, Corrallls, Or Will practice in all the state and federal courts Abstracting, collections. Notary public. Con veyancing. BENTON COUNTY ABSTRACT : COMPANY Complete Set of Abstracts -of Benton County. Conveyancingand Perfecting Titles a Specialty. Money to Loan on Improved City and uountry x'roperty. J. B. MARKLEY & CO., Proprietors Main Street, Corvallis. GERMANS CELEBRATE. Yesterday the Anniversary of the Battle of Gravelotte. Berlin, August 20. There has been splendid weather today, which is the 25th anniversary of the battle of Grav elotte, and which had so great an in fluence on the Franco-Prussian war. The annivesary was signalized here by the layiug of the foundation-stone of the monument of the Late Emperor William I by his grandson, William II, in the presence of many German sovereigns and other dignitaries. The proceedings opened at 8 o clock this morning. The colors .and stand ards of the various regiments, crowned with oak leaves, were brought on the ground, and a richly decorated imper ial standard displayed in the center of the group. All the houses in the neigh borhood were tastefully decorated, the windows and balconies showing streams of bunting, while the streets were crowded with gaily attired spec tators. At 9 o'clock a flourish of trumpets announced the arrival of Em peror William, who was received by Chancellor von Hohenlohe. The em peror deposited under the foundation- stone of the monument to his grand father a memorial document, in which he referred to the enthusiastic uprising of the German nation under his grand father, Emperor William the Great who had restored the Germans to their ardently desired unity and had suc ceeded in securing for the newly arisen empire its proper weight in the system of states. The emperor then read aloud from the document to be deposit ed in the foundation stone: "The self -sacrificing record -of the German princes, the wise counsel and energetic support of Von Bismarck, the consummate strategy and genius of Von Moltke, the unequaled courage and ability of the commanders of the army, and before all that of Crown Prince Frederick William, the devoted fidelity of the Field Marshal von Roon and the discipline of the people, ren dered success certain. But also in the direction of works of peace, the emper or was untiring to his last breath in aotive futheranoe of the welfare of the working classes. The statue of Will iam the Great should form a testimony of the inextinguishable gratitude of the princes and people of Germany." At this point Count von Lerchfeld, the Bavarian envoy plenipotentiary, handed Emperor William a trowel, re questisng that his majesty would lay the foundation of a memorial which would remind Germany of the greatest period of her history, and which the entire nation desired to erect to the founder of the German empire. ABOUT THE" RAILROADS. Great Improvement Shown in the Net Earnings for the Fiscal Year. New York, August 20. Greatly im proved net railway earnings are shown in a carefully prepared special report to Bradstreet's, an abstract of which is as follows: The gross earnings of 145 railroad companies for the first six months of 1895 aggregate 1349,099,773, a gain of 3.6 per cent over the corresponding period of 1894, which in turn, showed a decrease from 1893 of 16.4 per cent. The net earningss of the same roads for this year aggregate $102,767,786, a gain over last year of 8. 1 per cent, and following a decrease of 1894 from 1893 of 18.8 per cent Divided into groups, a striking uni formity is noted in the increases and de creases in the gross and net Of the 126 railroad systems comprising 145 roads, which make up the appended table, two-thirds show decreanes. The figures show the percentage of increase or decrease. Those marked with an asterisk indicate a decrease: Or -s. Ne'. Granger. -.1.1 8 4 Trunk line 6.9 8.1 Central Western 9.8 2.0 Eatem JUi. -a z Coal ............. - 6.3 1.0 Southern 4 7.l South wet tern 2.8 16.0 Facile -. s.l Total increase ...... 3.3 23.0 There are some decreases in gross earnings this year from last, notably the Southern and granger roads, . but there are also notably large increases in nealry all the other groups,- where last year the dead level of decrease was without relief. When the net earnings figures this year are considered, the showing is still better. The decrease in the grangers and Southwestern roads is still notable, but the gams showed in the other group of ' roads are sufficient to more than counterbalance this falling-off, and the result is a very satisfactory gain over a year ago. That Benedictine Brewery. Washington, August 20. It is un derstood that Monsignore Satolli is riving his attention to the question raised by the petition to him for the suppression of the brewery conducted by the Benedictine monks at Keatty, Pa., with a view to harmonizing the difference so as to placate the com plaints, and at the same time not deal harshly with the ecclesiasts who con duct the brewery. He is giving atten tion to the petition not only from the point of view of the petitioners, but also considers the fact that the monks are native Germans, who cannot e the harm in drinking beer made after the manner pursued in the Fatherland. The effort will be made to settle the dispute without any formal decision. A Dastardly Crime. Guthrie, O. T., August 20. Daniel R. Brown, a merchant, from the Semi nole reservation, brings information of a daatardlv crime committed near Ar- beoh. A gang of Creek Indians and negroes and several white outlaws raided Samuel Norfod's store, and after completely gutting the plaoe, assaulted and otherwise mistreated five women in the neighborhood, two of whom will Oil, NORTH PACIFIC NEWS Happenings of Interest in the Progressive Northwest. BRIEF REPORTS OF LATE EVENTS A Budget of Items Gathered From All Parts of Oregon, Wash ington and Idaho. It is said that 20,000 trout are an nually caught from Trout .Lake in Klickitat county, Wash. A good many Whatcom, Wash., ladies have been made quite ill by the heat and smoke from the near-by forest fires. The Whatcom county, Wash., bank has paid a dividend of 3 per cent, ag gregating $6,000. The bank failed early in the year. Another dividend will soon follow. A controversy is raging in the valley papers as to the champion hiccougher. George W. Harris, of Albany, Or., ap pears to be entitled to the belt, with a record of nine days and nights. The Gold Beach, Or. , Gazette is be ing moved across the river to Wedder- burn, Mr. Hume's new town. The building is put . on wheels and rolled onto a scow, then towed across. The next session of the Wallowa county, Or. , circuit court begins Sep tember 16. The docket is unusually long, and includes several criminal oases. J! our prisoners are in jail, and others out on bonds. The G. A. R. of Port Townsend, Wash., proposes to have an encamp ment at the grounds of the abandoned military station in September, and G. R. posts throughout the state are to be invited to participate. The proposed soldiers' and sailors' encampment, to be held at Old Port Townsend, Wash., the week of Sep tember 3, seems to be a "go". Several organizations of Western Washington have proimsed to attend. State Senator D. E. Lesch, of the Yakima and Kittitas district, who is manager of the famous Moxee farm, on which 130 acres are planted in hops, says the hop crop in Yakima valley, Wash., promises better than last year, but growers are discouraged at the prospective low prices. China Jim," the venerable "dad dy" of the Chinese oolony at Gold Beach, Or., left on the schooner Ber wick Tuesday, bound for China. He is over 70 years of age, and has been away from China just forty-four years. With tears streaming down his cheeks, he said he was going back to die in his native land. The machinery for the new salmon cannery for the Siletz has been pur chased in Astoria, and the materials for the buildings, along with the ma chinery, will be loaded on the steam schooner and taken to the Silez in a few days. The cannery will furnish employment to many of the Indians who would not work at any other em ployment Oscar Tom, of Alsea, Or., the king beeraiser of Benton county, has thirty three stands of bees, and the honey produced is as fine as is made. Mr. Tom is also a grower of goats, and has a band of 260 of them. His band this season averaged 4 1-2 pounds, and the wool shipped netted him 30 cents per pound, or $1.35 per head. He feeds his goats but little, and besides clear ing up his land they improve the pas ture and range. The Pacific Coast Elevator Com pany is making extensive improve ments upon its buildings throughout Whitman county. Wash., They are also building some new structures. They recently completed a 150x40-foot addition to the Guy elevator, from which little town there is a large amount of grain shipped. The Pull man elevator has been renovated and put into shape for handling a large amount of grain this season. At Glenn- wood there is being constructed a 12 Ox 40-foot addition. In fact every eleva tor in the county has been put in read iness to handle a big amount of grain, and an enormous crop is expected. To go South a as missionary vessel is tne object of a small craft wnicn lies at a Seattle wharf. The boat is to receive general repairs, and carry a crew of Christian workers, who will act upon the plan of the old steamer Evangel, which cruised the Sound, her owners holding meetings and spread ing the gospel among the loggers and millmen of early days, Charles Fri ars is in charge of the present expedi tion, and with his wife, will go down on the Mexican coast and carry sup plies for the missionries, besides him self doing whatever is in his power to teach Christian principles among the people of the Pacifio islands. The ves sel has no name, and the owner has no special creed of Christianity. Judge Eakin, of Union, Or., of the circuit court, has issued an order tem porarily enjoining the Oradell Canal Company, the Peoples' Irrigation Com pany, City of La Grand and a number of private citizens from using the wa ters of Grand Ronde river in the west ern part of the valley. The order was issued at the instance of the Island City Mercantile & Milling Company, which claims to have enjoyed the first and exclusive right to the use of the waters of the river for the past thirty years, and it is further claimed that at the ordinary season of the year, there are 25,000 inches of water in the stream, but owing to the water being diverted by various defendants to the suit, the water is entirely gone, de priving the plaintiff of its use for ir rigation purposes and for operating the Mercantile & Milling Company's flour mill at Island City, Or. THE HYPNOTIC CRAZE. Extreme to Which It Was Carried at Richfield Springs. New York, August 19. A special to the Herald from Richfield Springs, N. Y., says: At the first grand ball of this season in the Arlington hotel, Miss Abigail Spates, the daughter of a wealthy farmer of East Springfield township, had an experience which tragically illustrates the hypnotic craze. The wealth and fashion of half a dozen great cities were represented at this ball, but matrons and debu tantes wero all eclipsed by the magnifi cent appearance of Miss Spates, who was not known to the committee, con sisting of the leaders of society. As the musio fell into a minor key and the strains of "An Claire de la Lune" eohoed plaintively down the hall, the unknown uttered a piercing shriek and fell full length on the ballroom floor. In an instant all was confusion and her apparently lifeless body was borne away. Dr. Bor was called and diag nosed the case as catalepsy. Inquiry, however, developed the fact that the girl was the victim of hypnotic sugges tion; that she had never read Trilby; had never been to a ball before, and actually had never waltzed before in her life. She was introduced to Storr Kellen, her escort, by a young man whose name is not given because crim inal proceedings are to be instituted against him. He hypnotized the girl early in the evening, drove her to the hotel in a closed carriage and borrowed the finery in which she was dressed. CANNED HORSEMEAT. Foreign Consuls Protest Against Its Shipment From Chicago. Chicago, August 19. Horsemeat has been and is being sold on the drainage canal to laborers. This meat has come from diseased and broken down animals unfit for labor, and pur chased by men engaged in the nefar ious traffic at $1.50 'to $2 per horse. This sale has been without the knowl edge of the sanitary inspector of the canal, Dr. Martin, who said the sale of horsemeat on the canal had never come to his knowledge. So serious has the situation become on the canal, and the exportation of large quantities of it as canned goods to foreing countries, that complaint was made by foreign con suls today to Dr. F. W. Reilly, of the city health department Charles Hen- rotin, consul for Belgium, and Dr. B. Bopp, consul for Germany, were the foreing representatives who called on Dr. Reilly today. They laid before him the facts which they had collected in regard to the canning of horsemeat for exportation to nations of Europe. The French consul has intimated that if the authorities do not aotr, his gov eminent would take steps which might seriously affect the legitimate ship ments of dressed and canned meat from this country. Huntington's Guatemala Road. San Francisco, August 17. Ricardo EL F. Von Winckler, who is superin tending the construction of C. P. Huntington's new railroad lines in Guatemala, arrived in this city on the steamship Colon. He says Huntington is putting a great deal of money into the new road and that it is rapidly de veloping into an immensely valuable property, as it is pushed through the heart of the richest coffee and cane section of Guatemala. He says 600 men are working on the road. The new line is completed from a point on the Guatemala Central road nine miles below Escuintla to Santa Lnoia, and is now building to Panlun, with pros pects that it will be extended through the mountains to Metzatlango as rapid ly as the work can be pushed. Over twenty miles of the road is now in op eration. France and Brazil's Differences. New York, August 19. The Herald correspondent in Rio Janeiro tele graphs that the French charge d'af faires and the Brazilian minister of foreign affairs have signed a protocol agreeing to submit the question of the ownership of the territory of Amapa to arbitration, with the king of Sweden as referee. Each country is to be al lowed until April, 1896, to submit its claims. The inquiry into the impris onment of Brazilians and the trials of the late governor of French Guiana and the commander of the gunboat Bengali will be suspended pending the decision of the king of Sweden, after which they will be subjects for diplo matic negotiations. Paper Suppressed and Editor Banished. , Guthrie, O. T.f August 17. The Wah Shah She News, published at Pawhuska, vOsage nation, was sup pressed today by Colonel H. B. Free man, acting agent of the Osage nation, and its editor, J. F. Palmer, was ban ished from the nation. The News al leged that Freeman was heaping all kinds of indignities on the Indians, and Freeman obtained from Com missioner Browning an order giving him power to suppress the News and banish Editor Palmer. The excitement is intense and threats are made to tar and feather Freeman. United States Commissioner F. Leahy protested against Freeman's actions, and Free man has tried to have him banished, but without success. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report FEARS FOR AMERICANS Missionaries in Asia Minor in Serious Danger. TWO PROFESSORS CONDEMN ED This Is Because of the Armenian Cam paign Against Their Compatriots Suspected of Being Spies. - Constantinople, August 17. Anxi ety prevails here for the Amerioan mis sionaries at Marsovan, a small town twenty-four miles northwest of Ama- sia, in the vilayet of Sivas, Asia Minor, on account of the Armenian campaign against those of their com patriots who are thought to be spies. An Armenian priest, suspected of spy ing, was recently murdered at Scutari, just opposite Constantinople, by the incensed Armenians, as a result of which many Armenians in Scutari and other suburbs of Constantinople have been imprisoned. Thirteen students of the American college were expelled last year because their fathers were thought to have been mixed up in the Armenian move ment, suspicion having fallen on the college, and among the list of persons condemned by the Armenian committee are five professors of the college, two being Americans. The governor is do ing his utmost to investigate the mat ter, and to prevent an outbreak or dis orders. Details have been reoeived of the at taok on the American missionary school at Tarsus, and the maltreat ment of students and threats made against the missionaries, which was mentioned in a press dispatch August 9. It is learned about twenty Mus sulmans attacked and beat a srevant of the Rev. Mr. Christie, director of the college at Tarsus. Some of his scholars at Namroun, a summer resi dence near Tarsus, the night of Thurs day, August 11, also threatened to kill Mr. Christie. DISEASED HORSE MEAT. Consuls Are Endeavoring to Prevent Its Exportation. Chioago, August 16. It now ap pears that the horse-meat packing house, a mile from the southwestern portion of this oity, may possibly be the cause of international complica tions. Richard Martin, owner of the packing-house, and who ships quanti ties of the meat to Paris, Antwerp and Berlin for food, is to receive some dis tinguished visitors. - It is probable that tomorrow M. Veilhomme, the French consul; Charles Henrotin, the Belgian consul, and F. Bopp, the vice-Geriniin consul, accompanied by a city meat in spector and one or two policemen, will call on Mr. Martin to see if he is ship ping diseased horse meat to their le speotive countries as has been reported. They have no thought of attempting to interfere with Martin's business, but only of warning the authorities abroad against receiving it Consul Veil holmme said: "This is a subject in which my gov ernment feels a deep interest. It will be inconvenient for me to go so far as to inspeot Martin's premises, but under the circumstances I shall surely do so. I am surprised that there is no law in this country by which to take hold of him, but the least I can do is to ascer tain the facts and put the authorities in France on their guard. I think it might be well for the three consuls most nearly interested to go down to gether." Bicycle Railroad in California. San Francisco, August 17. San Francisco and Saata Cruz will soon be connected by a bicycle railroad, and articles of incorporation of the Shore Line Bicycle Railroad Company have been filed. It is said that a number of Eastern capitalists are behind the project The promoters of the road are said to have constructed a similar line on Long Island. The Westing house Electrical Manufacturing Com pany and the Baldwin locomotive works are also said to be interested in the road, which its promoters hope eventually to extend to Los Angeles. The distance to Santa Cruz is ninety miles, and the company expects to run trains at the rate of 100 miles an hour. Trouble in the Kreling- Estate. San Francisco, August 17. The affairs of F. W. Kreling & Sons, furni ture manufacturers, are said to be in volved. The firm was attached for $2,000 today by the First National bank. The trouble is in connection with the probate proceedings over the estate of the late William Kreling, senior member of the firm. Bleb Find of Lead Ore. Madison, Wis., August 17. Mike Moran and Chris Simons have discov ered what promises to be a very rich find of lead ore one and one-half miles west of Verona, this county. A shaft is to be sunk at onoe, and mining will be begun as soon as possible. Mum s