EUGENE CITY GUARD. LbCAXriKUL, rrorteMr. EUGENE CITY. OREGON. The Idaho Mormons Regain the Rights of Citizenship. EXCESSIVE DROUTH IN NEW MEXICO. Hot Water to be Piped Into Every BusL ness Block and Residence of Boise City, Idaho. The Chinese In Idaho propoee to. defy the Six Companlei d, will register. Over 26,000 tow of sugar beets have been harvested at liiiico to iar wjib eon. w..b V... hoan omninpnced Unon I T1UI .-v .. " ' ' new foundry building and a powerhouse lor Btanioro univeriuy. ...ffo.tn.. In tha aniittieutarn iUUUU UMOl.ua - . . portion of New Mexico is reported, caused by the excessive drouth. Heavy swells have washed away the cabin ol the wrecxeu weimnre, aim m vessel now looks from Marshfleld as if he had broken In two. m. ff..,l.nM Tta nnmninv lial fdftfled XI1S UUUWU uv... .... - out iU store at Yale, 11. 0., tlie trade having decreased to such an extent that the store is no longer necessary. -it,..nt tnr nltwrtrie-iiower Iran M. mt Han JnM) have been refusal. nwlna in the objection of the applicants ti nut their wires nnder ground. The old adobe at HanU Barbara, In iWil fc'ramnnt had Ills head- VUlkU v.u... . ... - - - . l.. 1 1. ) wlinn lie, had quvwii im " - -- -- his camo there, was burned the other morn In if. itnnia.n aimmnm. hn lives ton miles from Salem, Or., has grown three acres of cranberries th is year. 1 hey are cnoice, and are said to be fully equal to the Cape Cod variety. Spokane Indians have held a meeting near Spokane. They are willing to go on the Our d'Alene lands, but want money to spend for themselves. There are about one hundred of them, home less and landless vagabonds, but they believe the government will give them all they ask. There Is a dislike at Victoria, B. 0., for the American Consul there. The latest story from Victoria is: "The masters of vessels flying the American flag touching at that port are beginning to complain bitterly over having to sail without proper clearance papers and a bill of health from the American Con sulate." Mongolian pheasants are being killed by the hundreds in Lane county, Or., and few people can be lounu in wai sec tion who have not enjoyed a mess of these fine birds. They are very plenti ful, though they have bwrn introduced but a few years and have been killed right along regardless of the law enacted to protect them. About a mile from Boise City, Idaho, great volumes of boiling water gush out of several artesian wells. The water possesses no medicinal value, and here tofore has been used only for bathing. Now a six-inch pipe will be laid from the springs to the town, and hot water will be conducted iuto nearly every business block and residence. Some brute In human form has been hooting valuable stock oa Willow creek, Crook oonnty, Or. A few weeks ago Joe lllnkle found a line Hereford bull, which had cost him 360, dead In his pasture, with a ritle bullet in his head, and a few days ago Perry Head discovered a thor oughbred Shorthorn belonging to his herd that had been shot and will prob ably die. Colonel L. W. Burr told the Kern County Echo while discussing the scale parasite that there was a time last year when the parasites were not noticeable, but with the return of spring they came out In largely increased numlwra and began their work of destroying the scale. Colonel Burr's theory la that they are hidden away, possibly In the earth near the tree, and that they will be on deck again next spring. Daniel II. Ward, who shot and killed John Looney last July in Ullllam county, Or., has been acquitted. After being out two hours the jury returned a ver dict of "not guilty." The jury really agreed upon this verdict five minute alter retiring to the Jury room, but deemed it better form to deliberate an hour or two before redering the verdict It was proven at the trial that Ward acted in eelf-defense. Frank Leach, a young tailor who mis appropriated a suit of clothes at Weston, completed his sentence In the county jail at Pendleton recently. He wa searched on leaving, when It waa discov ered, almost by chance, that he had taken the mainspring from his watch and left It with the prisoners, to be used as a saw. They were compelled to dis gorge, and Leach was rearrested and wlllsUy in Jail fifty days longer. Prof. Edward 8. Holden has sent an open address to the San Jose Chamber of Commerce In answer to the action of that body in pasting a resolution con demnatory of the Professor's administra tion of the Lick Olaervatory. He says the Chamber should have consulted per sons familiar with the situation of allairs at the observatory and not have relied so much on newspaper reports before charging him with mismanagement. He desires, he says, a full investigation by any competent persons. A rello preserved in Curry count v, Or., Is the skull of the Indian who is sup posed to have murdered the (leisal fam ily at Rogue river. Mrs. Winsor, who was an eye-wltnees of the hanging of this wretch, which occurred In the spring of 18M, says the whites found a tree rear the present graveyard at Hold Beach and placed a rope around the Dig ger's neck. A barrel waa put beneath his feet, which Mrs. Ueisal, now Mr. Kdson of Oold Beach, promptly kicked from beneath him, thus ridding the world of a brute who bad made desolate a peaceful and happy borne. Jndge Btockslager of Alturaa count? hat decided that the Idaho test oath law passed in 1800, which forbids the vote of any man who was a member of the Mor mon Church then or before 1888, was in valid and arbitrary, and that only the oath prescribed by the State constitution thou 1.1 be adminis ered to persons who offered to register. This decision will not be appealed by the State, and the Mormons of Idaho will now be privi leged to register and vote in the same manner as members of any other church. There are 2,000 of them, and their vote will be an Important factor in the ap- J .reaching election. The Mormons are abilsnt over their restoration to the rights of citizenship. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. Bureau of Naval Intelligence Preparing a Book Valuable to the Merchant Marine and Navies. The President has recognized Horace O. Piatt as Vice-Consul of Kussia at San Francisco. Tim President has appointed Ambrote II. Hill of Krieondido. Cal.. special agent to make allotments of lands in severalty to the Indians nnder the act of February, 1887. Two uhlni. for which proposals were issued by the Navy Department last week, will contain a new feature in mod ern naval construction. Each vessel will contain three smoke funnels luu fet hlirh. or h Urher bv thirty or lorty feet than any smokestacks on naval or merchant ships, with the exception of the merchant steamer Scot. These stacks, it is thought, will do away with forced draft Tha iHcretarv of the interior has re ceived a letter from Agent Bennet, of Union aeencv. in Indian territory, rela tive to the condition of affairs in the Choctaw nation, which indicates that thAre is likelv to be bloodshed there un less prompt action is taxen to proviue United States troops in sufficient force to suppress any riot that may arise, Hacretarv Noble has asked the secretary of war to immediately send a sufficient force to preserve the peace. Chow Tel and Nip Lung, two Chinese mnrohanti from Chicatro. are in Wash ington City. Their mission relates to tha resistance of the Chinese rcgistra tlnn law. Thev have had an interview with Ho, Secretary of their legation, and one of them said that he told them tlm'. the law was no good and the Chinese government would sustain them in re sisting it. They will consult with Chi nniia there and in Eastern cities with the view of an organized resistance of the law. Surveyor-General Petitt of Idaho has received word from the national capital, ordering him to have the surveys of the ceded portions of the Our d'Alene In dian reservation examined and reported nnnn. Oonaral Petitt will have the ex aminatlon made at once, and settlers upon the land of the reservation will be able to secure titles to their claims much sooner than they expected to. It is cus tomary for special examiners to report upon the surveys, dui in uus caw me department thought that the delay would be very inconvenient w seiners; so General Petitt will be allowed to re port on his own surveys. Secretary Husk has received advices from the consul general at Niievo Laredo, Mexico, continuing the dispatch an nonnitinir the time for the free import tionof corn into Mexico has been ex tended until November 30, and stating further that between December and July 31 next only a fourth of the regular duty, which Is 1 cent per kilo. gro weight, will be collected on Imports. The consul-general adds : "This free Importa tion nntil the end of November and the reduced import duties nntil January 31 have caused a greatly increased demand (or our American corn, particularly in all regions west of the Mississippi." The bureau of naval intelligence has been some months preparing a book soon to be issued to the service, which will be invaluable both to the merchant marine and navies of the world. The book will state in detail the location of the coaling stations of the different governments. shipyards, repair stations, docks, coal capacity of stations, the quality of coal and other matter! relating to the coal supply of vessels bound on long voyages. The book will show conclusively in this respect that the United States is far worce off than any other country pre tending to be a naval power, postepsing as it does, only three coaling stations, viz : in Honolulu. Lapas, Mexico, and Samoa. Great Britain has important stations in all her possessions in many places where coal can be landed from Kngland for the use of her vessels of war as well as her merchant marine. All are strongly for titled and garrisoned. The book will further show that should the United States go to war there would practically be no foreign ports outside of her three stations, all of which are on the Pacific ocean, where she could hope to get coal. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Proposed Building for a Collective Ex hibit by Merchant Tailors at the World's Fair Etc. The International chess tournament to be held at Chicago in connection with the World'! Fair will distribute $7,000 in prizes. Seats for 125,000 people are to be pro vided in the great manufactures build ing at the World's Fair for the dedica tion exercises on October 21. The British building at the World's Fair will have among its decorations Hags bearing the arms of the principal cities of the United Kingdom. A cheese mold seven feet high has lieen shipped to Perth, Ontario, for Prof. Robinson of the Canadian Dairy Com mlss'on. It will lie used in making a monoUir cheese for the World's Fair. The main railway station within the World's Fair grounds, where all excur sion trains will discharge their passen gers, will be a handsome structure, cost ing $225,000, and will accommodate 25, 000 persons at one time. President Blalork expects that the Washington World's Fair building will tie ready for the Washington exhibit by January 1, ISM. The mineral ool.ection, consisting of about forty tons, is being packed by Superintendent Plunder of the mineral department. He considers the collection worth $8,000 or $0,000. The proposed building for a collective exhibit by merchant tailors at the World's Fair will probably be near the fisheries building. As planned, It will be fifty-flve feet square, with a portico extending to the lagoon. The tailors of Chicago have raised $10,000, and $15,000 is expected from members of the trade outside. Persons In Borabav, India, are per suaded that there will be considerable profit in making a varied display at the World's Fair. They propose to send over twelve elephants, so that visitors can take rides " in howdah with ma hout;" to live exhibitions of suttee, cremation, jugglery, nautch, wrestling, etc., and to sell tea at 10 cents a cup. They expect to sell 1,000,000 cup. At a recent meeting of the San Fran ce aco World's Fair Commlaioners Chaa. (J. Yale waa appointed editor-in-chief of a souvenir book of San Fraacisco at a salary not to exceed $75 a month ; he will alio edit a prospectus of the work. E. J. Ellis was appointed superintend ent of the topographical map at a salary of $75 a month. The aalary of Secretary Robinson was fixed at $ W a month. Lucius L. Solomons waa appointed to act with the Ways and Means Commit tee in soliciting a subscription of $2ft,000 from the Board of Supervisors and the Board of Education. Mr. Solomons was appointed to a vacancy on the board caueod by the resignation of Mr. W. H. Kodda, BEYOND HIE ROCKIES Number of Business Failures in the United States. THE AUER INCANDESCENT LIGHT CO. An Attempt Being Made to Reorganize the Iron Hall Order Telephone Girls In Uniform. "Boiled water" ii the popular New York drink. The cholera scare ii abating, ii the re port from every quarter. Phllade ph a get! a premium on a a per cent loan of 11,000,000. Boston Is to have a statue of John Boyle O'Reilly In Copley Square. The estate of the late George William Onrtie amount! to about $70,000. The admiren of Whittier contemplate the erection of a statue In Central Park. Hartford Medical Association has just celebrated its one Dunareum auuior At V. Mississippi engineers recommend oniy one year'! won unuerexisuug atlnnn. Ex-Private Iami of Homestead court martial fame is now a clerk in a Pitts burg store. Oil has been struck near Parkersburg, Ind., at the depth of 100 leet, wnue urn linir for water. An epidemic of diphtheria hae broken out among the Indians at the Wind River Agency. The net cash balance In the Treasury is nearly $3l,000,000or $5,000,000 greater than New York. Philadelphia capitalists are going to construct an underground-trolly street car system in Boston. i Lww in Km York aennitted a man who spat tobaco juice on a $0,000 picture in the Metropolitan museum ui m d. Ti,nm Dlwnn of New York in his Sunday sermon declared the lottery a small evil compared wun mine ratm. Reports from the Southern States are (.at tha li n iron la from 15 to 25 Per cent short and from one to two weeks late. Howard Gould has been elected direc ts, nf tha (1,.IH and Ktock Telegraph Company In place of his father, Jay Uouid. The long distance telephone from Chi in l(natin la nnarlv comnleted, South Bend, Ind., has already talked to Boston. Pruhlnnt Yon nu of the National Base ball League says either salaries must he reduced or protessionai oaseoau wusi go to the wall. Harmony reigns over the disturbed water corporations 01 wenvor, vam., uu Omaha, Neb., and the $20,000,000 law suit is settled. Valuable, discoveries of onyx have been made at Bridgewater, Rockingham county, Va. It ia abundant and of a superior quality. It rained peas at Baltimore the other day. It ia believed that they were scooped up by the wind from truck farma in an adjoining county. The Kiowas and Comanches are ready i. ran. i ill to take lanua in severally, mis wm - ... .. a. -Al il Ain suit in the opening 01 more man e,vju, 000 acres to settlement. W nltiie Bin a n if Riipllnulnn. N. J.. who was supposed to have been lost in the Johnstown noou, nas juei turneu up at Mount Holly to receive his share of a legacy left him by his aunt. In the twenty-eight yean that the .. . . t t? : lirotliernoou oi locomotive .augiueers has had exieteuce Chief Arthur states it lias uiannrseu over j,um',uuu m mo wiu ows and families of deceased engineers. At Puebla, Mexico, an undertaker uilleU the town wun nuge posters, say ing he would reduce his funeral charges it the cholera Decame epuiemio mere This incited a scare and he waa arrested At Clarksburg, Miss., the negroes were reported to be in insurrection, and had sworn to kill the whites. A sheriff's posse found that two negroes had been killed and several wounded when they reached the scene. Dr.Douglas. the famous throat special 1st who abandoned his practice and de voted his whole time to General Graut for six months during his last illness, died recently at Washington City from the same disease which carried off the old commander. The statistics of the Keeley Institutes are of the most significant kind. There are now eighty-four branches established In this country for the administering of the Keeley remedy tor dipsomania. The certificates of cure each month average between 4,000 and 5,000. The Southern Pacific, It Is reported, proposes to build a railroad Iroin Alon terey. Mexico, to Portland, Tex., where it will connect with the San Antonio and Aransaa Pass line. Such road will be a direct seaport route to Monterey and will shorten the line from New York to the city of Mexico by fully 300 miles. 8omerby, who is trying to reorganise the Iron Hall order, In a speech at Cleve land, declared, with tears in his eyes, that after he had been served with the Injunction in the receivership proceed ings he spent the entire night on his knees in prayer, and that during his prayers the plan of a new order was re vealed to him by a light from heaven. Hii speech did not take well. The theft of $440,000 from the Auer In candescent Light Company by Tyndale Palmer, a former newspaper man, In which he waa joined by a hotel keeper named Freitas of Rio Janeiro, has been brought to light at Philadelphia. Palmer sold the patent rights in Braxll 'or $510, 000 and reported the sale at $80,000. The chief astronomical event of Octo ber will be the eclipse of the sun, which will take place on the 20th, and be visi ble throughout the greater part of North America. All the United States may see It, except the western part of Oregon and California. As it will only be a par tial eclipse, the Western Coat will not be jealous of the Eastern Blope. The Chicago Telephone Company at Chicsgo is going to Issue an order that all the girls in the operating department must wear black nni orms, to give the room an artistic appearance. Two hun dred and fifty girls in the central office have donned the uniform, and, as the idea meet! with success, a general order affecting all offices will soon be issued. Broditrrd't says: During the past nine months the business failure! in the United States Sonth Dakota excluded, owing to the State law practically pro hibiting the collection of statistical in formationwhich have been strictly mercantile or industrial in character, not omitting those of banking institu tions, but eliminating care ally those of all other description!, have aggregated 7,371 EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Education of Russian Children-Entering Class at Union Uolie. .argest In Its History. Old gold Is to be the color of the Uni versity of Chicago. The enrollment of girl student! in tne Harvard Annex tbii year ii over 300. Tt,.. i. wnman in the entering V..V " clasi of forty-six at the Massachusetts Agricultural uiiege tun yer. Yale College for the first time in its til at ir mi It throw onen lta post-graduate course to women in the coming term. The entering clati at Union College, RliAnMtailv- N. Y.. is the largest in the history ol that institution since the war. Baltimore, Md.. has 1,300 teachers, 50,000 pupils, and the school! cost $1, (KX).(XX) a year. The population ii about 500,000. Mrs. Maria R. Towne, who died re cently at Manchester-by-the-Sea. Mass., left $175,000 to the University of Penn sylvania. Prof. Harold M. Fowler of the vener i.ia PhMiina Kxntnr Academy has ac cepted the chair of Greek in the Univer sity ol lexas. "Flower Sunday" Is one of the an nual observances at Welleelev College. It wai instituted by the founder of the college, and forms a delightful opening to the college. Tufts College has begun Its career as a coeducational institution. Women have at last been admitted on an equal footing with men not only in the college of letters, but also in the divinity school. Vasear College had the largest fresh man clans in her history on the opening day, September 23, the whole number of students being about 600. It is hoped that the ball will be ready for use in November. The education of Russian children Is conducted in four languages the native, German, English and French and they grow up masters of theee languages. The Car himself ipeaki English re markably well. Among the women students at Iowa fitate University is Julia Stark Evans of iiomntnn la. Mrs. Evans is the wifeof an active lawyer and the mother of five children, hue is a sinning example m the modern precept, "It is never too late to begin." Now that the manual training Idea is fairly on its leet, a champion is wanted I that nf mrhnnX imrdena in America. Europe is far ahead of the United States in HUB UlHUer. DWBUDU IWUB having 2,000 gardens, one for nearly every recently built rural schoolhouse. Three of the profeswrs of Bowdoin College gave mucn time me paav sum mer to visiting and examining the lab oratories of other colleges, with the view of perfecting their plans for the interior arrangement of the new scientific build ing to be erected as a memorial of Mrs. Mary F. 8. Searles. The architect pro poses, if possible, to lay the foundation this autumn. at which mi oils are allowed to enter and to continue in the public . 1 Ml IL. schools Hitlers greaiiy. ui wie .orvj nine States and Territories six admit iiitmiti vpara of aire, nineteen at 5. twenty at 0, three at 7 and one at 8. The Htates admitting tnem ai are mame, Connecticut, Florida and Montana. The rlinnla of Alahama and North and South Dakota do not receive them till they are 7, and those ol reias exciuue lueui mi they are 8. PURELY PERSONAL Vice-President Morton Said to be a Prac tical and Common-Sense Farmer -The Duke of Norfolk. Vice-President Morton is said to be a practical and common-sense farmer, who goes into the business in a large way in order to make money out of it rather than to drop it into it. In China a wife is never spoken of by her husband in a plain and straightfor ward way. Such piaynu terms as my thorn In the nhs " and " my uuu con panion " are more usual. The Duke of Norfolk, Premier of Great Britain, is about to make another pii irrimage to Lourdes in the hope of niiti gating the condition of his son and heir, the Earl of Arundel and Surrey, who is blind, deaf and dumb. The late Prince Victor of Hohenlohe saved Wobeiey's life during the Crimean war. He was declared dead and about to be carried off, when the Prince no ticed a twitching of the young man's face, and, applying restoratives, revived him. Mrs. Henrv White, wife of the Secre tary of the United States Legation, who has been stopping at Braemar, England, for the benefit of her health, had the honor of dining with the Queen recent ly, Mrs. White has much improved in health lately. Dr. Daniel Denison Slade is one of the few surviving eye-witnesses of the first capital operation under the innuence oi ether at the MasHachusetts general hos pital November 7. 1840, when the dis covery of Dr. Morton stood the test which revolutionised surgery. George William Curtis suffered great ly from stage fright on the occasion of his nrst lecture, and oegan uy saying : " Ladies and gentlemen, the pitomless bolt," with a solemnity which was changed to confusion when he perceived his error. Of course, he had meant to make an .illusion to the bottomless pit. Mrs. Mary Green, aged 84 years, of Scarboro, Me., has during the past six months " spun thirty-two skeins of yarn, knitted five pairs of stockings, picked three bushels of blueberries and tended large flocks of chickens and ducks, be sides doing much general housework." Dr. Sufan Janeway Coltman of Ger mantown, Pa., owns a unique collection of cats, which she values at $5,000. There are twenty-two of her pets, and among them are included Skye, Zami bar and feather-tailed Turkish cats, tail less Manx pusie, white Ma'tese, yellow Persian and English tiger cats. M. Thlhant, the French actor, who died in Paris recently, was born in Nantes May 7, 1837. He was the son of a merchant, and went to Paris at the age of 40. He made his debut at the Moll ere. He was subsequently at the Mont niartre and other theaters, and later ap peered in London and Brussels. Finally he was eng'ged by Offenbach at the loutte-Pari"ens and R 'naiseance. He it was who originated the catch phrae, "V'ttt immtntt!" which waa a "go" from the start and for a long time pop ular. Hon. Julius Sterling Morton, once Governor and now the Democratic can didate for Governor of Nebraska, ia sometimes called the father of Arbir day. It is very largely owing to his ex ertions that Nebraska advanced so rap idly in the establishment ot artificial iroves, now having a boat 50,000 acres of growing fowls and some 800,000 planted trees, beside a vatt area of fruit treee, grape vines, bushes and minor plants. 11 was born in New York State in 1832. and waa graduated from Union College in 1S54. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS Emperor William Appoints a Jew on His Own Staff. SHAH ADVISED PRINCE OF WALES. Emperor Francis Joseph Says the Conduct of Anti-Semitic Members Can not be Tolerated. The olive crop of Spain is a failurs this year, but the vintage is in a promising condition. Anti-Semitic disturbances are in pro gress on the Island of Marmora. The municipal elections of Berlin have resulted in complete triumph of the So cial Democrats. On Bali, an Inland in the Indian Archi pelago, eiit of Java, the burning of wid ows still goes on. A new triple alliance of France, Rus sia and Turkey is said to be greatly fav ored by the Pope. The Ciar has excused all his French cooks and scullions from becoming na turalized Russians. Several great drapery firms In London are totter. ng nnder the severe general business depression in Great Britain. The announcement is made of the death of Hugo Franz Brachelle, the Ana- tnail Slucsucian, in uib uiiymuiu jour, More than $10,000 his been subscribe 1 for the memorial of Adam Smith, to be set up in his native town of Kirkcaldy. Bremen pluck has made the Weeer river navigable by big steamships from Bremorhaven, at a coat of 30,000,000 marks. The Salvat:on Army poke bonnet has heen replaced in England bv a broad- brimmed straw bat, trimmed with stalks oi corn. The recent addition to the family of Kaiser Wilhelm is said to be the first daughter born to a King of Prussia for eighty-four years. Emperor Alexander has freed the Kal mucks of Astrakhan from serfdom. These roving people are Buddhists, and they number lo0,0UO souls. One hundred and fifty persons have been arrested at Palermo. Sicily, and its environs, suspected of being members of a band to waylay travelers. Recent French staiistics Bhow that there Is a continued decrease in the nuuv ber of marriages and births in that coun try In proportion to population. The news from Rome that Jean d' Arc's canonization is on the eve of comple tion has revived more than ever the pop ular cult of that national heroine. Social Democrats of London have gained a victory over the government and compelled recognition olthair right to hold public meetings in Trafalgar fequare. Cotton yarn is imported into China in ImmenRe quantities from Bombay, and it is said that yarn-spinning will soon de velop into a very large industry in Shanghai. The London Society for the Prevent tion of Crueity to Children states in its annual report that cases have been investigated, involving many instances ol diabolical cruelty. Princess Marie Bilesco, a young lady of about twenty-four years of age, has just accomplished the remarkable feat of Bwimming across the Hellespont, from the European to the Asiatic shore. The Empress Elizabeth of Austria has ordered 5,t 00 mora trees to be planted around the statue of her favorite poet, Heine, that is Bhortly to be erected in the grounds of her palace at Corfu. An old woman named Fort has just been murdered near Bordeaux by peasant who thought she had cast an evil eye upon him. She had long had the local reputation of being a witch. A society has been organized in Eng. land to buy land, build cottages and set necessitous epileptic at work in market gardening, carpentering, shoemaking, tailoring and other indoor occupations, Russia has concluded a treaty with China, according to which she will es tablish Consulates in Central China, Manchuria and Mongolia for the purpose ot opening markets lor Kussian manu factures. Wallis Brooke, a writer in the London Times, is of the opinion "we shall icon see milk imported from Anstralia in frozen blocks and retailed in London streets, It can b done as easily .as importing butter and apples." The annual report of the London Po lice Department says that "there were something over two thousand burgling and housebreaking cases there last year, and the average amount secured by the uurgiar was less man o." The Russians have become so alive to the value of women physicians that the Imperial government has granted $20.).- 000 for a medical school for women, to be established at St. Petersburg. The site has been given by the city. Mr. Chamberlain and Sir John Lub bock are advocating an early closing movement for England. A committee repotted to the House of Commons in 1800 that the average hours of shop as- A syndicate has been formed in Lon don to explore the Transvaal and Ma shonaland. l-ord Randolph Churchill, who takes 11,000 shares, and Colonel North and C. 8. Goldman, who take 1,000 shares each, are the first directors, Emperor William of Germany has ap pointed Colonel Rosser, who is one of the few Jews in the Germany Army, an , i . aiu uo-camp on ms own sun, as an in timation of his disapproval of the perse cutions to which that race is subjected in the Kaiser's own realm as well as elsewhere in Europe. Emperor Francis Joseph, in an address to Austrian and Hungarian delegations. said the recent conduct of the anti-Semitic members of the Lower Houte of the Austrican Diet was a scandal and a shame in the eyes of the world. He de clared that such proceedings as they in dulged in could no longer be tolerated. It is said that when the Shah ot Persia visited England some years ago he was enteriaine i at Manord House, the town residence of the Duke of Sutherland So impressed was the Oriental visitor with the magnificence of his host's snr ronndings that he afterward privatelv a.lvised the Prince of Wales to have the Duke quietly strangled and confiscate his estates. TV T 1 1 - T" 1 , . i j. lyriBDuer, r inlander, w no was in Finland at the time Mrs. Aino Sainio poisoned her husband, aavi that the Irightlnl sentence paused upon the women is merely a matter of form and tnul it ion, and that she will not be be headed, but imprisoned for life. He as serts that no crime baa ben pnniahed by execution in Finland since that coun try separated from Sweden in IS03. PORTLAND MARKET. FrodaMe Frolle V.llev. I1.22U (31.25; Walla Walia, $1.1691.17,', per cental. . . u-.il Fwcb Standard, ij.o j ; ' -- 13.66: Graham. $3.15; fcuperdne, $-.60 S-New, -.0(3430 per byj-f tfl.50(utf.75 per barrel; $o.5J2 6.75 per bag; $3.75 per case. HAT-$ll'ti3perton. MiLUTurrs-Bran, $6; ihorts, $19, ground barley, $ich!-l. - (tzz per ton : wnoio icon ---. midIings. tm& P' tt j bTw!!i barley, $1.10(11.15 per cental; chicken wheat, $1.20 per cental, n 1.: i w.in fani creftinerv. 30(3 32Hc; fancy dairy, 27X3Jc; fair to gOOd, Z',(S-OCi lJ'U'"u", California, 38. Wc per roll. Ciikkhe uregon, nwii America, 12c per pound. Eoos-Oregon. 27kc; Eastern, 25c per dozen. ... . . . M. Poultry Old tjwexens, i nOf.vi rn- durka. 15.50(36.50: uruiioio, i-pwisw . i f ' : geese, nominal, &.uuis.w v" uu" turkeys, 13(3 15c per pound. VEoaTABLxs t;aouage, m yvi i n.inn. 7Ri.l Ik) iwr cental: pota- toes, 809jc per cental; Oregon cu cumbers, 10(315c per dozen ; tomatoes, 35c per box; uregon luruipn, 4u dozen; young carrots, 15c per dozen; beets, 15c per dozen; sweet potatoes, $1.50 per sacx; uregou bunuii"v (d $1.00 per dozen ; celery, 90c per dozen. Fbditb Oregon peaciies, fi.ivisii.u lmnons. 19.60: Call- I.mnm 17 IKirtM.()() per box: cantaloups, $1.50 1.76 per dozen ; water melons, S1.j(!?i.ou peruo7.ou j vniuiui grapes, $1.00(1.25 per box; Oregon grpaes, 6085c per box; pineapples, 3.00 per dozen ; plums, 76(3'J0c per box ; Oregon Italian prunes, coisoju f" ii.vJiiil.50 per box: ba nanas, $3.00(34.00 per bunch; quinces, $1.60 per box; orangeB, ta.w per uu, cranberries, $10.00 per box. gtaple Orooerias. HoNir Choice comb, 1517c per pound. SALT-Liverpool, $14.50(317.00; stock, $10.5011.60 per ton. RicK-Island, $5.00(35.50 ; Japan, $4.85 per cental. Dkibd Fbcitd Petite prunes, 9c; sil ver, 10(5 He; Italian, 10(3 He; German, 8c; plums, 6(36c; apples, 4,(tfttc; evaporated apricots, 15(3 10c; peaches, 12 16c; pears, 78c per pound. CorFK Costa Rica, 21 c ; Rio, 20'gC ; Salvador, 20c; Mocha, 27 30c; Java, 27(330c; Arbuckle'! 100-pound cases, 22 17-20c per pound. Bxanh Small white, 3c; pink, 3c; bayos.3ic; butter, 8sc; limas, Sc per pound. Bvrup Eastern, in barrels, 40355c; half-barrels, 42i57c; in cases, 36(3 80c per gallon ; $2.25 per keg. California in barrels, 20(34Oc per gallon; $1.75 per keg. Sugar- Net prices : D, 5c ; Golden C, 5c; extra C, 6c; Magnolia A, bc; granulated, 6c; cube crushed and pow dered. B-'gC; confectioners' A, 6c per pound ; maple sugar, 15d l'ic per pound. Canned Goods Table fruits, assorted quoted $1.75(31.90; peaches, $1.5(32.10; Bart lett pears, $1.75(3 1.80 ; plums, $1.37)4 (1.50; strawberries, $2.25; cherries, $2.00(32.25; blackberries, $1.85(31.90; raspberries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.25(3 2.80; apricots, $1.05(31.75. Pie fruit: Assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.25; plums, $1.00(31.10; blackberries, $1.25(3 1.40 per dozen. Vegetables : corn, $1.40 (31.85; tomatoes, 96c (3 $1.00; sugar peas, 95c(3$1.00; String beans, 90 (3 95c per dozen. Meats : Corned beef, Is, $1.25 ; 2s, $1.85; chipped beef, $2.10; lunch tongue, Is, $3.10 ; 2s, $5.6 " ; deviled ham, $1.50ftr2.75 per dnrpp. Fish: Sardines, 76c(31.65; lobsters, $2.30(33.60; salmon, tin, 1-1 b. talis, $1.25(31.60; flats, $1.75; 2 lbs., $2.25(32.50; bbl., $5.50. Mlsoellmnoa. Nah Base quotations : Iron, $3.00 ; steel, $3.00; wire, $3.50 per keg Iron Bar, 2J0 per pound; pig Iron, $24(327 per ton. Stkio lOo per pound. Tin I. C. charcoal, 14x20, prime qual ity, $8.25(38.75 per box ; for crosses, $2 extra per box; roofing, 14x20, prime quality, $6.62,(36.75 per box; I. C. coke plates, 14x20, prime quality, $7.508.00 per box. Lead 4c per pound ; bar, 6Vc Shot $1.80 per sack. HORHBBHOEB $5. Naval Storks Oakum, $4.505 per bale; rosin, $4.805 per 480 pounds; tar, Stockholm, $13.00; Carolina, $9.00 per barrel ; pitch, $0.00 per barrel ; turpen tine, 65c per gallon in carload lota. Hlriei, Wool and Bopi. Hides Dry hides, selected prime, 1 8c; lsc less for culls; green, selected, over 55 pounds. 4c; nnder 55 pounds, 3c; sheep pelts, short wool, 30(350c; me dium, 6080c; long, 90c (3 $1.26; shear ings, 10(320c; tallow, good to choice, 3 34c per pound. Wool Dmpqua Valley, lfi19c; fall clip, 13(315H,c; Willamette Valley, 16(3 18c, according to quality ; Eastern Ore gon, 10(3 10c per pound, according to condition. Hops 15(3 17c. Th Meat Market. Beef Live, l2c; dressed, 4 5c. Mutton Live, 33c; dressed, 7c; lambs, live, 8(330; dressed, 8c Hoos Live, 6$c; dressed, 8c. Veal 4atic per pound. Smoked Meats Large ham, 13.(3 HV. medium ham,14144C; breakfast bacon, 13(3 16c; dry salt Bides, 10c; smoked sides, 1213c per pound. Lad Compound, in tins, 9c; pure, in tins. 12k, (3 13c: Orm?on. llWOli.c per pound. Vfhalinc la Dangeroni. It is the whalers who encounter most serious perils in the Arctic ocean. Hardly a year passes when some whaling vessels are not lost In 1S71 only three ships were saved out of a fleet of twenty-two. No lives were lost, but the natives on shore have been using chronometer cases for brass kettles ever since, Chicago Herald. Safe from Entry. First Burglar Th' paper says th'locla on th' government vaults at Washington is so weak thet any burgler cud pick 'em! Second burglar Huh! Who wants them big theatre hat silver dollars! Xew York Weekly. The oldest pensioners on the rolls of the Xew York pension office and two of the oldest in the United States, although pensioners are proverbially long lived, are General Tupner and (ienoral rwtw They are veterans of 1812. The city of Paris haa 87.053 trees in ita streets, and each tree represents a mat tA thm o.tw -.$ 1 - ryv : w i4 trout's. ion. makee in round numbers $3,000,000 T wM V UCW ill UltJ tUVVlalk) THE FARM AND Cite Plymouth Rock Leads Other lk in waking weight A POT-POURRI OF POULTRY HOTEL Fowls That Have the Run of i Do Not Need Much Grain .The Crossing of Breeds. Choose clean meat for the h.. chirks when buvinv. " Do not keep ducks in the nm i with chickens, nor in the cabhL. One trouble with both tnii away from home and often i.x. come back. Fowls that have therunoftt.f I At Tint. flAAtl mni'h rrrnin Ti . , "WII . . - ms nn... I ,rv. ,,u up ieui .il. t h a rt I a MM ril IT (UC piwvv wa vi The Canadian experiment fira i found that the Plymouth l;xk !! I ntrinr nreAfia in tnuirin.. . w.uw. ifCIUUL I,- given amount of food. A flock of 100 hens, pronerU v,.j. fin nnl ATiwt mnra Ihan ti.;.. ' I .r:r..-c " ".:::u, ""t If vnn cxn (ret Dm liana t from November to Marcli, yon will Z plenty of satisfaction in the tin L ness. A warm house, vood ventilsui plenty of sunshine and good food uuc poiaunucia iur bum. It Is perhaps someth'nz enriom IL an uuu-suvwug iicua jay P(EJ( that k Tinro m-hitA In lYilnr TL. L tuuio uuu. luo .arpn A8IBUC brM thouxh thee(?t;8 from Wyandottes Iw .Kan. and Plomnt.tK U L . ' annua .uu ii;iuvuiu J..ui;fcB STQ Q. what dark. If late chicks do not grow, rr cheap lean meat or liver, boil y after chopping it fine thicken the itr and chopped meat with middlinm m ing the whole as bread. It will bt'WK eagerly, and will show a marked tJv on the chicks. Don't worry, if breeding pnre bfo. if the newly hatched cliicki m , prite winners when taken from tht 1 ne cuor oi oeaic ana leg will AttA very materially ; while not nntil tUM molt, arjout tne lourtti or fifth mot' can the quality De determined. In Holland farms devoted mMr.l tne raiBing ol geese are not a rarity, j is a recognized and profitable brut i small farming. The fact that then sist so largely on grass and can be k died in large flocks should lead to J extension of the industry here ii A own country. Dark Brahma hens make an eirei cross with Langshan cockerel. E.i well as beautiful table poultry, are tain to do tne result. 1 be brown Lit horn cock is often used with Lic.J pullet! with equally good results. I: run a medium-sued (owl, and byiu:4 are preferred to large fowli. Whn you begin to sell off yonr y:f males do not be tempted to retail ;J large, heavy ones, but select the it I and vigorous birds. Those that kj the smallest combs, which form ? the widest area, and which are quid i all their movements, will prove .tea serviceable the next season. But few will boldly cull oat the ill nor members of the nick. TitK dencv is to keep all the pullets, vteH gooa or oaa, nu in inaiwayiuatain. The best pullets will grow (mhj sooner and give a larger profit il it are allowed the room and food tint given those that are inferior andior. I . t a 1 .L.. I I less. Regularity Kntltl. W. H. Gilbert before Xew York lalrjSH lion J Feed regularly, and milk until larlv. The davs of milking at one t to-day and another to-morrow, wittra thrice to-day and once to-morroi.u gone by except with tne oiu-ntw dairyman, who must either le'ont: methods or fail in the dairy bom We should aim to keep our cow dividend-paying basis ana i worm ly the year through, and tbey eu kept so by proper care and feed. the cow quiet ; a very nine e will reduce her flow of milk ind tlit ...I nf ( n 1. I Hiinlr IL them' WHIN VI 1 1, 1 U AV, .".- adviiiahln to have the same milker tha Rama nnnr rsmfltnntlv. I S6t the twice a dir. better results than from feedingtta four times; but my cows are gij they will eat and digest; a cow tw will lie down when her wants in fled, chew the cud of contentnw- axrarn millr Thn milker! IDOlU " ihotild h thoroughly and da' brushed before beginning to "J" Tha annm nnw should be miliw same hour, dividing the tM hours equally. Do not mux ";; to-night and 7 o'clock to-morroi rw and remember that a change of w :n .1 mornmnUtYl1 i a! tha milk, fiarrv the mill stable as soon as you have ilk: and then there will be nodM U.mL 'alntoH frnm anTW" iZ uA After it W aerated aet the milk as nearij temperature as yon can get n, " about 98 degrees, and in so do thermometer; don't daese ; 'lt4 oi B lew aegrees win profit, because the cream win up. ... ...... i . ,. niardrnlif1 Some recently pnb,li8hed;(sf it . il a nL.rttrir IT a' seem to indicate mai profitably employed lor purposes. We are informed fcngnsn marset garueiic. r electric light in a gigantic i gla. devoted to the forcing of P : By a 2,000-candle power t' ..1. , . j hsinnerf"'' leuuee was ubbicucu j - . the actual gain hae r'(1 hJ With an actual gain i of ' flv. t crop, me msiuii. ctl,ri days during the winter. The s J the vegetables is saia w - The quesUon, however, .1.- . nude practical for common purp" i increased earlinees ol new .J vegetables will mane loe r- A rr..prr Ar!-"1 . Mrs. Bimro-See, dear: J : lovelv white Tests I bone" . town'toJay. OriyMr?" Mr. Bingo-W ny . (-.I ww some paper coiiars o Qothier and Furnisher. Iiplanatl- Agnee-Oh.dear! Why" so many do? days? . v. Laura-Well, every J . youkno.and there are dogs. Munsey's Wettlj-