AND SOUND MONEY. VOL. I. CORVAliLIS, BEOTON COUNTY, OEEGON,, FEIDAY, DECEMBEE 10, 1897. NO. 24. TARIFF FOR REVENUE, INCIDENTAL PROTECTION NEWS OF THE WEEK' From all . Parts of the New and Old World. BRIEF AND INTERESTING ITEMS Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Kappenings of the Cur- rent Week A terrible railroad accident has oc curred in Warsaw. While a passenger train was stationary at the terminus, a heavy freight train ran into it, owing to the error of a pointsman. Eleven persona were killed and 22 others were seriously injured. Thereceipts of the customs so far this fiscal year undoubtedly will fall considerably short of estimates made by the managers of the new tariff bill during its pendency in congress. At that time it was estimated that the customs would yield about $180,000, 000 duringhe first year. The indica tions are now said to be that the re ceipts from this eouroe will not aggre gate more than $165,000,000. A plate of armor, representing a lot of 500 tons for the turrets of the battle ships Kearsarge and Kentucky, was tested at the. Indian Head proving grounds Tuesday. s For testing pur poses, two eight-inch shells, one a Car penter projectile and the other a Wheeler sterling, were fired at the plate, one at a high and the other at a low velocity. Neither penetrated nor cracked the plate, but both partially welded themselves into it. Word comes of a wreck on the Santa Fee near Williams, Ariz., in which three men lost their lives and much valuable property was destioyed. After the first section of freight train No. S3 had pulled out of Williams the air that controls the brakes gave out and the train dashed down the steep grade with rapidly increasing velocity. The hand brakes were unavailing to about 10 miles west was reached the train left the track. Two engines were coupled toJthe train, which was a very heavy one.- Engineers Newton and Watsons and Firoman Berry were pin ned under their respective engines and lost their lives, it is said, by being burned to death. The celebration in honor of Oregon's martyred missionary, D . Marcus Whit man, was begun in Walla Wall:, Wash., Monday. Large crowds were in attend ance. The opening address was made by Rev. L. H. Hal lock. A monument is to be erected over the grave of Dr. Whitman. Senator Lodge, of the committee on foreign relations, was at the state de partment early in the week. He would say nothing about the Cuban situation except that the committee' had accom plished a great deal. The first business would be to confirm the annexation of Hawaii, which would be done by rati fying the treaty, or by legislation. ' Asphyxiation .caused the. death of three men in the Grand Trunk railway tunnel at Fort Huron, Mich" The train which was being hauled through to the Canadian side, broke in two. The engine backed down to get the de tached portion of the train, but for hours nothing was heard oi the crew. Finally a searching party found the dead bodies, and also rescued two brake men, in an unconscious condition. Three members of the searohing party were also overcome, but were rescued by another party. The tunnel gas arises from the hard coal used by the locomotives. Colonel Domville, M. P., who went north in the interest of the Klonkide Yukon Stewart Company, of London, says his company will build a wagon road through YVhite pass, placing steel bridges over the canyons,.- Work is to commence immediately, and the road is to be ready by February. They will build steamers to ran from Lake Ben nett to White Horse rapids, around which they will have a tramway. From the end of this trawmay they will have steamers to run direct to Dawson. These steamers, he says, will be ready when the river opens. The wagon road through White pass is to be followed immediately by a railway. One of the bills that will be pushed in the coming session of congress is that introduced by Kepresentative Sha froth, of Colorado, which provides for changing the time when congress shall meet. It is a very sensible bill, and ought to be passed. The first session of congress after ah election would be in the January following the election in November. This session could last as long as would be necessary. The congress elected in November could legislate before another election was on hand. The second session could meet in December previous to the coming congressional election, and the congress would -expire before the election took place. As the matter now stands the first session of congress is given over to politics by representatives who wish to be re-elected. The short session is often a discredited and defeated con gress and oftentimes enacts very bad legislation because it will not be called to account before the people. Pos-; sibly, Mr. Shafroth's bill will get a! hearing, though such reforms as this' move very slowly. J Emperor William opened the session I of the German reichstag in person for j the first time since 1894. The cere- mony took place in White hall, in the royal castle. His majesty read the speech from the throne. I The steamer San Bias has arrived in San Francisco from Panama nnrl wav ports. She brings, the news that the Salvador coffee crop for this season I will beone-third larger than ever be-' fore, and will do much toward . makiDg ! tip the loss occasioned by the revolu-j ties . DR. WYMAN'S RIPORT. Danger of the Importation of Asiatio Cholera. Washington, Dec. 7 Surgeon-General Wyman, of the marine hospital service, has submitted his annual re port to Secretary Gage. It shows that during the fiscal year ended June 80, 1897, the total number of patients treated at hospitals and the dispensaries connectetd with the service was 54,477. Although the total number of patients treated was 673in excess of those treat ed during the previous fiscal year, the expenditures were $538,536, which is $21,000 less than the previous year. The number of immigrants inspected by officers of the service at the various ' ports aggregated 232,327. The surgeon general says: . . The necessity of legislation to secure proper shelter for deck cVews on West ern waters, to which my attention was called in the last report, was met by the act of congress requiring every steam boat upon the Mississippi river and its tributaries to furnish a place for the crew with protection from the weather. This subject is one that has long en gaged the attention of the marine hos pital surgeons, who have made frequent reports thereon, and this action of con gress will be productive of much relief, although the acfc-does not take effect until June 30, 1898. To meet the growing demands for the service, new regulations have been prepared, and will shortly be issued. " ..'.. The surgeon-general invites attention to the excellent work by officers of the corps during the recent visitation of yel low fever in the South. Officers were assigned to, infected districts, and, a is though a number of them were not im mune to yellow fever, nevertheless they responded with alacrity and performed their duties with judgment and effi ciency. Three officers contracted yellow fever and one lost his life by accident in the line of duty. ; TROLLEY CARS COLLIDED. Three Persona Killed and a Score In. jured Near Detroit. Detroit, Dec. 7. Two suburban cars, carrying some 20 passengers, and both running at a speed of 25 miles an hour, collided on the Detroit & Oakland elec tric railroad, at 1 o'clock this afternoon. Three men were instantly killed and a score of persons injured, several of them seriously. The dead are: John Savage, superintendent of the road; Charles M. Whitehead, motor man; John Kelly, of Detroit, book agent. A dozen others were more or less seriously injured. The exact cause of the accident is not yeT known. According to the schedule, a car leaves Detroit and Pontiao every hour, and there are three sidings along the road: Today the cars were behind time. The one bound southward for Detroit had passed an outbound car at a switch two miles from Pontiao, the crew apparently being ignorant of the fact that another outbound car was ap proaching them less than two miles away. The weather was foggy and the rails slippery from sleet. The collision occurred near a gravel pit half way be tween Pontiac and Birminghay, at the foot of two steep grades, down which the oars ran at full speed. The cars were driven half through each other, and were crushed to pieces. Had it not been fpr the stout con struction of the cars, both of which were new, it is doubtful whether any of the occupants would have escaped alive. As it was, nearly all of the 14 passen gers in the southbound car suffered some injury. Some of the injured were taken to farmers' houses, others were brought to city hospitals. The Matter Arranged. Washington, Dec 7. It was official ly announced at the White House today, on the return of the president to Wash ington, that Governor John Grigg", of New Jersey, has been tendered aud has accepted the office of attorney-general of the United States, which will be vacated by the nomination of Attorney General McKenna to be associate jus tice of the United States supreme court. It has not yet been settled when Gov ernor Griggs shall assume his new office, but it is probable that the date will be about the beginning of the new year. Will Give Spain a Trial. New York, Dec. 7. A special to the Herald from Washington says that con gress will concur with the wishes of President McKinley and give a trial to Spain's new scheme of autonomy. The Herald poll of the senate and house shows the following results: Senators against action; 42; senators who favor, but do not expect action, 24; senators for immediate action, 9; sena tors noncommittal or not seen, 14; rep resentatives against actios, 178; repre sentatives for action, 159; representa tives noncommittal or not seen, 18. Burned to the Water Line. Chicago, Dec. 7. The steamer George VV. Morley, of Cleveland, was burned to the water's edge on the beach at Evanston tonight. Her crew of 13 men got ashore without trouble. The Morley was boand from Milwaukee to Chicago without cargo, and when off Evanston a lamp exploded in the engine room. Before the pumps could be started the fire was beyond control, and the boat was beached, the crew wading ashore. The Morley was a wooden steamer, and was valued at $35,000. Ardmore, I. T., Dec. 7. At the close of the performance of "Sam'lof Posen" by the Curtis company tonight, Nellie H. Fillmore, the cashier, disappeared with the evening's receipts Later she was arrested and released on bond. Miss Fillmore claims that Curtis owed her, and that she took this means of paying herself. The convicts with a good record in the Kansas state penitentiary now wear nits of cadet gray instead of striped uits. BRINK OF A CIVIL WAR Austria and Hungary Appar ently Drifting Apart. CZECHS PROPOSE TRIPLE EMPIRE Faction Drawing Up for a Great Strag gle Can the Kinporer. Bring Order Out of Chaoa? London, Dec. 7. International ques tions have been temporarily, over shadowed by the gravity of the' situa tion in Austria, where things are as gloomy as imaginable. In addition to the imminence of a civil war, the next few hours may possibly witness a revo lution in the relations between Austria" and Hungary, which might mesk the reconstruction of the map of Europe. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that the factions are drawing up like con tending armies. The Germans have appealed to their compatriots on both sides of the frontier, and have appar ently prepared U run all .risks to keep the hated Czechs ,in subjection. The Czechs make no secret of the fact that their finaraim is to abolish the dual empire, and to make it a triple empire by placing Bohemia on an equal footing with Austria and Hungary. To grant these demands would set Hungary on' fire and destroy the foundation of the present imperial system. It looks as . though the employment of force is the only solution of the question, but against which faction wili it be used? The question of the provisional aus glich bill (or agreement to prolong for a year,, instead of 10 years, the compact between Austria and Hungary, pending arrangements for a longer compact), is, if possible, more grave than the threat ened civil war. The Hungarian diet has given Baron von Gautsche von Frankenthurn, the Austrian premier, till Monday next in which to state whether he can reasonably expect the ausglich bill to pass, and, failing a de cisive answer, Baron Banffy, the Hun garian premier, will introduce Monday a bill whereby Hungary will act inde pendently as regards the duties to be levieU, continuance of commercial rela tions with Austria and the charter of the Austro-Hnngarian bank. This compact between the two portions of the dual state may be maintained tem porarily. ' Hungary will establish her caim to the right of independently disposing of these questions. It is easy to see that victory will only whet the Hungarian appetite, and that it will be a short step to the dissolution of Austria, wbichf in turn, will hurl Europe into a furnace of terrible possi bilities. Apparently the only hope of escape is that the personal ascendancy of the old emperor will once again enable him to solve an apparently impossible situ ation. Failing in this, the reichsrath will be dissolved and a reign of abso lutism will begin in Austria, and, tech nically, Hungary will have resumed her independence, the first step toward a federation, as distinguished from - a dual Austro-Hungarian monarchy. lUoting in Bohemia. . Prague, Dec. 7. At Taber last night Czechs attacked the houses of Hebrews and broke the windows of a synagogue. Several rioters were arrested. -The local force of gendarmes were called upon to assist in restoring order. A mob of over 1,000 persons at Brannau last evening attacked ' the bouses of Czechs, and in spite of the efforts of the gendarmes smashed the windows and did other damage. Quiet was not res io red until midnight. In Prague I the military patrol was fired upon, but uone oi me pauoi was wouuueu. THE GREAT TYPHOON. Kurt her Particulars of the Disaster in the Philippines. Seattle, Dec. 7. The steamer Kago- shima Maru arrived here today, 16 days from Yokohama, bringing Orien- I tal advices up to November 19. The following additional particulars have . been received of the terrible typhoon which swept over the Philippine islands October 6, devastating the prov ince of Leyte, Manilla, and causing ihe death of several hundred persons. ' About 250 Europeans are reported to have perished, and the number of na tive victims is put at from 400 to 500. The typhoon seems to have done its worst damage at Tacloban, the capital of Leyte, where the whole town was converted into a mass of ruins. The bodies of 120 Europeans were recov- . ered. The government house, treas- ' ury, barracks, etc., were destroyed. The coast is strewn With the wreckage of vessels torn to pieces by the hurri cane. It was reported that the town of Hemoni, 6,000 inhabitants, had disap peared. : Assaulted With a Ball Bat. Junction City, Kan., Dec. 7. Cor poral Fennell, battery B, Fourth artil lery, at Fort Riley, died last' night. Fennell was one of the two victims whom Private Leach, of the same bat tery, some days ago, endeavored to kill with a ball bat, attacking them while they slept. Fennell's skull was broken. Private Riley had his jaw fractured, but will recover. The tragedy is the outcome of a drunken quarrel. " Dark Palouse Crime. Palouse, Wash., Dec. 7. An un known man was found dead yesterday on the track of the Northern Pacific, one mile south. The body was mangled beyond recognition. The man was 5 feet 8 inches, dresesed in a blue checked suit, sack coat and brown overcoat. The coroner's jury returned a verdict that the man came to his death by hav ing his throat cut, but whether by his own hand or the hand of another they could not say. ', TO BE A SEAT OF WAR. The Strangle for Supremacy In Asia la ; Waxing Warm. ' San Francisco, Deo. 6. The Call says: The report that the RnRsian gov ernment is buying large quantities f ' army supplies in the United States haB j been verified. Cable messages from i Vladiovstock asking merchants to bid on large lots are frequently received. J Yesterday Dodge, Sweeney & Co., of I this city, received a Vladivostock cable to figure on 1,200 tons of supplies. Travelers arriving from Asia report I that the garrison at Vladivostock has ' been largely reinforced by the arrival of troops on steamers and sailing ves sels from the Black sea. j The concentration of .Russian troops at that-point and the haste that Japan 'is making to increase her power on the sea leads some of our merchants to predict that the impending conflict be tween Russia and Japan may open as early as next summer. The recent heavy orders for army supplies to be forwarded to Vladivostock are regarded as significant of important movements - in the Orient. j It is believed the completion of the trans-Siberian railroad with its ter minus at Vladivostock will largely in crease the trade of San Francisco, and there is talk of establishing a line of steamers to that . place, touching at Alaskan ports. A local subsidy of $35,000 a month has already been sub scribed for an Alaskan line. WORK ON PANAMA CANAL. the Ditch la Said to Finished. Be One-Third Washington, Dec.-6. Consul-General Gudger, at Panama, has made a report to the state department on the condition of the Panama canal. He says it is whispered that England is doing all in her power to obtain control of the canal. France may not push the work forward, but some other na tion or some other company will surely do so if those in charge forfeit their rights. , The canal, when completed, will ex tend from Colon, on the Atlantic, to Panama, on the Pacific, 54 miles. All along the route are sheds full of new and costly machinery. It is estimated the latter has cost $100,000,000, and there has been expended on the canal a total of $275,000,000. A conservative estimate is that the canal is about one third finished, but with the 'new ma chinery on hand, it is said the remain der of the work can be completed for. $170,000,000. Wreck in Minnesota. Fergus Falls, Minn., Dec. 6. Aooast train on the Great Northern, west bound, was wrecked near Barnesville last night. A switch engine at Barnes ville was pushing a couple of carloads of coal up a chute. In some way the engine refused to stop and the cars be gan to go over the trestle,' dropping 25 feet. The engine was reversed and the engineer and fireman jumped, and just as the engine reached the dropping-off place the coupling broke and it backed down onto the track. It then went west at a furious speed for two miles, where it struck the coast train, whose engineer Fred Griswold, and Fireman j Carter jumped, and were badly injured. ' The engines' came together with ter rific force, demolishing both and throw ing five cars off the track,. - The dam age will reach $15,000. Luetgert Juror Under Suspicion. Chicago, Deo. 6. One of the ftmr men selected as jurors in the Luetgert trial is under suspicion- Reports have come to Mr. TJeneen which imply that the man is interested in the de fense, as he has for 20 years been a friend of the sausage-maker, and has declared his belief that Luetgert is in- nocent. Tonight Mr. Deneen had two : of Inspector -Schaack's trusted men as I signed to him and placed the investiga ' tion in their hands. A report is ex pected tomorrow, and it may result in the discbarge of the juror and proceed ings against him. No additional jurors were secured touay. The Alasba Boundary. Ottawa, Dec. 6. Hon. Clifton Sif ton, minister of the interior, has re turned from an extended trip to the Klondike. Speaking of the Alaska boundary question, he said: "There are certain phases which have to be looked carefully over, and Mr. King, our chief astronomer, went out with me for that purpose. ' As to whether there will be a commission to settle the question appointed by the United States and ourselves, I do not know. The subject is a very grave one." Sifton will cause the mounted police force in the district to be increased. China Declines to Yield. London, Dec. 6. A special dispatch, from Shanghai announces that the em peror of China has declared he would rather forfeit his crown than agree to the conditions demanded by Germany as redress for the murder of the two German missionaries, Nees and Henle, and the destruction of German property in the province of Shan Tung. Admiral Deidrach, the German com mander of Kiao Chou Bay, the dispatch further states, has proclaimed martial law in the district around Kiao Chou. China, the dispatch concludes, asks that her dispute with Germany be sub mitted to arbitrators appointed by Hol land and Belgium. Russia on Her Guard. St. Petersburg, Dec. 6. Great re ticence is observed in official circles re garding the political situation in the far East. The opinion prevails that Germany will not permanently occupy Kaio Chan .bay. Russian newspapers protest against the occupation, as being calculated to injure the interests of the Russians in the far East, and they say that the Russian government ought to demand its evacuation or else its equiv lent. GENERAL PANDO SHOT Spaniards Discredit It in the Absense of Proofs. SPANISH DEFEAT AT MATANZAS Santa Clara the Reported Scene of Pan do's Last Fight Smallpox in San Domingo. , New York, Deo. 6. A Herald dis patch from Havana says: A report that General Pando, who was placed in charge of military operations in Cuba by General Blanco, has been killed in an engagement' with insurgents '. in Santa Clara province, has just reached Havana. This has caused the utmost excitement in palace and social circles, and every effort is being made to get news from General Pando's force- to verify the startling news. No details of the killing of the com mander have been received, but the statement is that he was, shot in a bat tle with insurgents while on the march from Sagua la Grande to the southern coast of Santa Clara, where he was to take a ship for Manzanillo. ' Officers at the palace declare that the story must be thoroughly confirmed be fore they will believe it. General Pando's plan was to march right through the heart of the territory where General Gomez' forces are said to have control. Simultaneously with the report of Pando's death comes news of a battle near Matanzas in which the Spanish forces were driven from the field. This engagement was bitterly fought, and it is asserted that the losses of the Spaniards was very heavy, v The same report says the Cubans will not allow any cane grinding, and also that the Spanish towns do not fa vor grinding, because they hold the zones of cultivation and grow tobacco with cheap labor, which they would lose if the reconcentrados return to work on the estates. A letter received by a local paper from a correspondent in the East gives news of big fighting last week near Bayamo between the rebel Chief Rabi and General Linares. General Rabi had only 500 men when General Lin ares had two columns. No details of the fight are at hand, but the Spanish loss is said to have been heavy, one col umn being nearly destroyed. . A force of 1,000 Spaniards, with ar tillery, have forced the rebels into the hills of Pinar del Rio. They must re main there or come out and fight, a thing the Spanish commanders think they are not likely to do. Small bands are still moving about with great cau tion. Reports of the condition and move ments of rebels in the east are most conflicting. It is said that Gomez is coming west with 40,000 men, but it is also said that Gomez is still at the camp where he has been for the last 10 months, and is being attended by Dr. Candea, staff surgeon. Smallpox in San Domingo. Havana, Dec. 6. The deplorable condition of the country grows more and more apparent. Refugees and re concentrados are growing more and more miserable. According to reports from San Domingo smallpox is making terrible ravages among the concentrados. Since April last more than 4.000 have died in the city alone, to say nothing of the suburban towns, which are like wise affected. The local authorities take no steps whatever to check the mortality. The streets of the city are thronged with famine stricken wretches, who succumb to disease under perhaps some lonely porch, and sometimes fall dead in the gutter, where they remain. DUE TO THE KLONDIKE RUSH. Big War In Passenger rive Soon. Bates to A r- Milwaukee, Dec. 2. The war in pas senger rates between Chicago. Milwau kee and St. Paul is likely to continue, and railroad men look for the liveliest kind of cutting in rates further west, owing to the big rush to the Klondike. A well-known railroad man said today that since the rate dropped to $7, reduc tions in fares will likely result as far west as Portland. The nominal rate is $49.70 second-class on the St. Paul road, and $59. 70 first-class. With $7 from Chicago to St. Paul as a basis, the fare will probably be changed to $47 second class and $57 first-class. He added that this was merely a preliminary for the establishment of an entirely new sched ule of rates to the West January 1, which will be much lower. All the roads are preparing to make special rates to the points nearest the Klondike region, and each road is after all there is in it. Outlawa Were Frustrated. St. Louis, Mo., Dec. 6. A special to the Post-Dispatcn from San Antonio, Tex., says: "Advices were received here this morning of an attempt to hold up and rob a passenger train on the Mexican National Mon- rai i rnad naa rvi rn terey, Mexico, by ; mQCwi ,i well-armed Mexicans. The passengers made resistance, and the outlaws were unsuccessful. They are being pursued by soldiers, and if captured will be shot. Killed Her Babies. Philadelphia, Dec. 6. Anna Nig gle, the young wife of S. Niggle, a pic ture frame dealer, living at 738 Jackson street, tonight killed her two babies, one aged 3 years, and one aged 6 months, by smothering them with illu minating gas. The woman attempted to committ suicide in the same man ner, and the returning husband found bis children dead and his wife in an unconscious condition. She may re. cover. - OREGON STATE NEWS. Brief RaVlew of the Week Throughout . the State. Salem has at last a chamber of com merce organized and in working order. The government improvement work at Bandon has stopped, the appropria tion having been fully expended. An old-fashioned freight train ar rived in Lakeview from the south last week. It consisted of 10 wagons and 32 horses. ' The entrance to Coos bay harbor is marked lay a new whistling buoy placed there by the lighthouse tender Manzanita last week. During the recent heavy storms the oyster beds at Willapa harbor were buried in drifting sands until at least half the crop will be lost. The Baker-Canyon Telephone Com pany now has the long-distance line between Baker City and the Grant county town in forking order. Lyons' broomhandle factory, in Coos county, shipped 40,000 of its best product to San Francisco last week. A portion of the consignment will be forwarded to Australia. - . Captain Berry, the aged lighthouse keeper at Port Angeles, died in the Sisters' hospital at Port Townsend Sunday. He has been keeper of the iight at Angeles for the past 20 years. The farmers who supply the Coquille creamery received 26 cents a pound for butter fat, delivered during Ooto ber. Two thousand dollars was dis tributed among those who supplied the creamery. A Polk county farmer has been ex perimenting with tobacco culture, and has been so successful that cigars made with tobacco grown- by him are said to be as good as the average cigar smoked in Oregon. '. It is said that the next grand jury in Curry county will not meet until Sep tember next. If this is the case, it is apt to be a long time before the Van Pelts will have to answer the charge of killing A. Coolidge, A drove of about 125 nice trim young mules, which had been bought in Lake county, were secured at the low average price of $15 per head. They will be taken to Huntington and then shipped to the Eastern market. Joe Siver, who is making a tour of the United States from New York and return on a bicycle, was fined $10 in Harrisburg for riding on the sidewalk. He was allowed to go on condition of his leaving the city at once. The checks for the second dividend declared by the controller,, of the cur rency in favor of the creditors of The Dalles National bank have been re ceived by Receiver Wilson, and are ready for delivery to the owners. The Albany iron works is a very busy place these days.. The company shipped out 10 tons of machinery last Friday, including a quartz mill manu factured for Southern Oregon mines, and machinery for the state pumping station at Salem. One hundred and forty-four bales of hops, aggregating over 27,000 pounds, belonging to five, growers in the vicinity of Laurel, were sold Monday for 18 cents per pound. Tuesday 43 bales, aggregating over 8,500 pounds, were sold to . J. M. Russell & Co., for 11 cents per pound. The grain acreage in Jackson county for the coming year will in all likeli hood suprass in extent any year in the history of Rogue river valley, and if conditions prove favorable, the greatest number of bushels of grain in the his tory of the county will be harvested in 1898. This, says the Tidings, is the opinion of well-informed persons. During the last few months a Crook county firm has purchased 16,000 head of sheep, and are now handling about 22,000 head. They are all in their winter range, and each flock is within convenient distance of big stacks of hay, more than sufficient to carry them through the hardest winter. The sheep are all reported- to be in fine con-' ditien and thriving. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Albert celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in Salem Monday. They were married at .Wheeling, W. Va., in 1837. Mr. Albert is 82 years old, and Mrs. Albert 81. A reception was he'd at their home and a large number of friends paid respects to the venerable couple. The guests included seven children, be sides grandchildren and great grand children. The controversy between two quarrel some members oi tno VernOnia churcn was submitted to a jury, or committee, of church members. One of the mem bers was expelled. The other was cen sured and reduoed from full member ship to six months probation. It was ruled by the committee that no one in the Nehalem valley is entitled to church membership unless he is imbued with love and righteousness. The Eastern Oregon Sheep Associa tion of Baker City offers a reward of $1,000 for information that will lead to the arrest and conviction of any per son or persons found guilty of wilfully injuring tlie sheep or property of any member of the association. And a fur ther reward of $250 for information that will lead to the arrest and convic tion of any person or persons gulity of robbing sheep camps the property of the members of the association. Messrs. Rice, Flint & Co. have struck a vein in their Black Repub lican tunnel, in Michael creek mining district in Southern Oregon, showing very promising ore containing pold and copper. No assays from this lowest level has been made. The third tun nel is in 210 feet, and. will be pushed some 50 feet further to crosscut this and another parallel vein further in. Promising ledges are being uncovered in the district. A number of placers are running light. UNDER MARTIAL LAW German Schools In Prague Attacked by Rioters. TWENTY-FIVE PERSONS KILLED Incendiary Firea Started In All Parts 'of the City Ten Thousand Sol diers Now on the Scene. Prague, Bohemia, Dec. 6. A procla mation establishing martial law was made in all parts of the city and sub urbs today. Detachments of soldiers, beaded by an officer and a police com missioner, marched from point to' point. After tatoo on the drums the commissioner read aloud the imperial decree ordering a military government. By evening "order had been restored, which has not been broken since. .. Throughout the early morning anarchy reigned. The window smashing and looting was varied with constant fights between the rioters and troops and po lice. The shops of the principal Ger man jewelers were plundered. The rioters drank their fill in German wine cellars and then let the contents of the caskets run out. Incendiary fires were started in many directions, and the fire brigade was ptept galloping from one end of the city to the other for hours. When the firemen arrived at the scene of a - fire, the mob would drive them back. ' ' In some cases the rioters wrecked the railroad engines. During the day spe cial trains were employed carrying re inforcements to the scene. There are now 10,000 soldiers here, fully equip ped for along campaign. Official returns for the 24 hours pre ceding show that four persons were killed and 150 dangerously wounded. Three hundred and fifty received lesser injuries. Twenty shops were burned out. The authorities are not confident of the continuance of order, the . appe tite of the mob having been whetted by successful plundering which has been directed in a systematic way by the leaders of secret societies. Some Jews saved their premises by placing cruci fixes between lighted candles in their shop windows. . . ." An Exciting Day. Prague, Bohemia, Dec 6. This afternoon a mob attacked the German schools. The infantry fired four vol leys. One report says 25 persons were killed and scores were wounded. The city is in a panic and many are fleeing. Nearly 3,000 reinforcements left Vi enna for this city tonight. CHARLES YERKES SCHEME. jrroposes to 1 urn me vnicago i&iver in to a Boulevard. . - Chicago, Dec. 6. Twenty miles of docks on the lake front and the trans formation of the Chicago river into a boulevard by covering it with a oulvert from end in find in what Pharlns TV Yerkes proposes for Chicago. The street-car magnate appeared be fore the city council today and vigorous ly opposed the proposed deepening of nels. He urged that the city should grant the land front it owns between -Randolph street and Park row to a cor- , poration with $50,000,000 cash to mi lid vii rinnlra an a mil ltna whtort at the end of 50 years will revert to " the city at the bare cost of construe-' tion. "Build them of stone," said be, "and Chicago will have the finest docks in the world, not excepting those at Liverpool." Mr. xerKes trankiy declared it to te his opinion that money spent to Veauti. fy the lake front is merely thrwnl away. If his lake front harbor pianf- was carried out, he suggested .that the ' river be covered with culverts and made into a boulevard, extending from the mouth to the ends of the North and South branches, making, the speaker said, the most magnificent boulevard in the world. 1 - BURNED TO DEATH The Sad Fate of a Child Takima. Near North North Yakima, Wash., Dec. 6. The home of State Senator Lesh, a few miles from this city,' was totally de stroyed by fire last night. Mr. Lesh's 1 J-year-old child was burned to death. The child's nurse had a very narrow escape. The fire originated in an air tight stove in the nursery. Mr. Lesh's wife died 15 months ago in giving birth to twin .girls, one of whom died three months ago, the other being the. vic tim of last night's fire. The remains of the little one were recovered today, and the funeral will be held Saturday. Senator Lesh started home today from Washington, where he has been for sev eral weeks in consultation with Gard ner Hubbard, president of the Moxee Company, for which Lesh is local manager. - The dwelling burned was the property of the Moxee Company, and cost $11. nnft. Th contents were insured for $1,500 in two companies, but one policy for $1,000 expired a few days ago. -j Horseless carriages have been Intro- duced in the fire-department of Paris. Life-Savers Drowned. Margate, England, Dec. 6. JL Volun- teer lifeboat casized this morning off Naylad rock. Of 14 men comprising her crew, 10 were drowned. When the accident occurred, the' lifeboat was on her way to the rescue of the orew of the Persian Empire'. Later in the . day the Persian Empire was taken in tow for London. The Carlisle City, with which steamer the Persian Em pire had been in collision, proceeded on, her voyage,