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About Grant County news. (Canyon City, Or.) 1879-1908 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1880)
The Grant County News. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING AT CANYON CITY, OREGON. 8. H. Shepherd Editor. TELEGMMS. EASTERN. Fast Time from Sydney to London. New York, Oct. 13. The steamship Arizona leaves at noon to-day. bhe takes Australian mails of the 9th ult., received at San Francisco by the steamship City of Sydney, and which were dispatched by special train a thousand miles at a cost of $1000 to overtake the regular tram which left San Francisco on Oct. Gth. I his trail, with the mails, arrived at Jersey City last evening at 10 o'clock. It is expected the Arizona will reach Queenstown in 7 days, making the time from Sydney to London 41 davs. According to the last report of the postmaster general of New Zealand, the average time comsumed in the voy age from Sydney viajian Francisco has been 45 days and about 6 hours, and by way of Suez canal 4b' days and about 4 hours. It will therefore be seen that the City of Sydney has reduced the time of voyage four and one half days. Facta Bearing on the Isthmus CnnnI Pro ject. New York, Oct. 12. The World has the following: The following communi cation is especially interesting in that it meets some of the objections to the inter oceanic canal set forth by Chief Nimmo, chief of the bureau of statistics, in his recent treatise on the subject, and will effectually set at rest all future objections of thai, kind: U. S. IIydrograimiic Ornci:, ) Bureau of Navigation. Washington, Sept. '22, 1SS0. J Rear Admiral Daniel Am men, U. S. N Sir In accordance with your verbal re quest, I have caused to be complied from records of this oflice the information which you desire, in referem e to per centage of calms and variable winds which prevail in the vicinity of Panama and on the coast of Nicaragua respectively. From a total of2353 obrervations in the bay of Panama, and of 1758 observations on the coast of Nicaragua, and in each case cover ing roughly about the same extent of ocean, it appears that calms and variable winds at the former locality amount to 11 per cent, of the whole number of ob servations, while, at the latter they amount to five per cent. In order to reach the region of trade winds, sailing vessels from Panama bound to India, Japan, California or the northwest coast, in coming out of the bay and afterwards making necessary northing, will be obliged to make GOO miles through var iable winds and vexations calms before fixing themselves in as good position to make their westing as vessels leaving the coast of Nicaragua. Very respect fully, J. B. P. DkKrafft, Hydrographer to Bureau of Navigation. Recovery of Bottles. St. Ellaron, Oct. 13. It turns out that only six men are missing by the Fourd pit accident; of these Hugh McKilvie and Merle Benott have been got out alive, though small hope of recovery. They were badly bruised and had their clothes literally torn ofl'them. Two dead bodies, James Conway and Chas. Bourne, were recovered. Up to a late hour lust night no trace of the bodies of James Fraser, erroneously stated found in a previous dispatch, and Jas. Lyon were found. The accident was caused through working too close to the old Bye pit, "abandoned 15 years ago. English. Confident, of Indiana in Novem ber. Indianapolis, Oct. 14. Mr. English pronounces the rumor about his with drawal from the national ticket entirely unfounded. It has never even been mentioned to him, and he knows of no reason who it should be. lie says he confidently expects to be elected, and that Indiana will go for Htncock and English in November. Suicide. Lewis Talleuchet residing at 713 Val encia street blew out his brains with a shot gun this morning. Cause of the act unknown. The .Election in West Virginia. Whekmng, Oct. 14. Indications are that the republicans have reduced demo cratic majorities in a number of counties, but the democratic majority will be not less than S000. The greenbackers, who claimed 25,000 in the state did not poll half that. The republican candidate for governor led his ticket and beats the democratic candidate in ins own hoine. The vote is very large. 10 P. M. Only a few counties in this state have reported. No reports of any conseqnence have been received from the great ICaiiawaha valley region, where the greenback vote is principally located. The result of the vote in the state is therefore the merest guesswork. If the greenback vote in the state does not no 75,000, Jackson's (democrat) plurality for governor will be about 10,0U0. The democrats here are claiming (he state bv from 12,000, to 15,000, and the chairman of the republican committee concedes it by S000. In 1S7 the demo cratic majority in the state was upward of 14,000, and as returns from most of the counties thus iar heard, show a republi can gain in th majority this year, it is but natural to suppose it will fall consider able below these figures. Amendments to the constitution are adopted by a large majority. The legislature will be demo cratic iii both branches. The Ohio ."linjorlty. Cou'MRfs, Oct. 15. Townsend's major ity will be about 151,000 and others on the ticket about 22,000 Those are the exact figures predicted by Foster on Tuesday evening. Townsend ran behind his ticket because of the opposition of liquor men and because he was traded. A Narrow Escape. Nkw York, Oct. lo.-The Herald's Paris special says Hartmann, the nihilist, tele graphs to the InteiansifieanUo-daj' a full description ot a mine, wnicu was iu naj blown up the imperial train of Alexander. He explains that the plot failed because an hour before the passage of the train a carriage came along the line and cut the wires connecting the dynamite with the battery. Hartmann asserts there are lo, 000,000 organized radica's in Russia. Registration in New ork. New York, Oct. 13. Registration to-day 72,627, total for two days, 145,270, against 80,054 the first t wo days last year. There were 13 arrests of persons attempting to register on 1SGS papers. riie Polygamy Q,uetion in the ISpiscopal Convention. New York, Oct. 1G. The house of de puties of the Episcopal convention re ceived a resolution from the committee on the state ol the church, and placed it on the calendar, which recites that the cause of Christ is impeded in Utah by polygamy recognized as a religious insti tution: that polygamy is contrary to the law of God aud io the law of the United States, and that it was the duty of every christian and citizen of this republic to use his influence with the government to bring about as speedily as possible the enforcement of this law, desoite the many peculiar difficulties in the way thereof. The Fast Horse's Time. Brooklyn, Oct. 10. At Trospect Park yesterday St. J ulien started on his trial to beat his own record at 3:30 i m. He trotted the first quarter in 37 seconds; half-mile in 1:12:; three-quarters, in 1:40, and one mile in 2:23. St..Tulien Against Himself. New Yoiik, Ort. 10. There is an im mense r.rmvd : r Prosni'fit Park to witness St. Julien's efl' ri for a puree of $2300 i i i . ; against ins ow u u:ne. The .New YovR " on the Southern Outlook. Nkw York. Ort. 10. The Sun's Indian apolis special says the nomination of English, so far as u was intended by the the unwise men who made it, to operate henefieiallv on Indiana, has turned out to be worse than a mistake. This has been an open .secret for a long time past. In the next breath the Sun says: Indiana was carried by the republicans by fraud and corruption. Of Virginia politics and the south it s:ivs: The real position of Mahone ought to be understood by the 1 a t r a a. . i l- 1 i aemocrats. lie is not to ue irusieo ior he has no political principles. He will ' - j i - i trade with the .-ide which he thinks will win. Virginia democrats know tins and rennhlicins al.-u know it. There is no doubt that lame sums of money are to be sent into those states, especially in Flor ida, where republicans are anxious to secure a succosMii to Senator Jones, whose term expires next .March. Agents have already been sent to Florida and to North Carolina. 10 Virginia, the republicans expect to make a bargain with Mahone. PACIFIC COAST . The Steamer "Daltotn." San Francisco, Oct. 13. It is reported that the steamer Dakota has been sold to the Pacific: Coast Navigation Co., and that she will continue in the British Columbia trade. Shooting and Mining. Tucson, Oct. 12 Thomas F. Brit ton was shot at llarshaw last Thursday by a man named MePhune. He died in six hours, A man named Merritt was shot last night at Charleston. He died Im mediately. To-day New York parties purchased the Belmont & San Antonio mines for $300,000, and the Washington Pool for $200,000, all of 11 ai shaw district. The 17 1 e : enervation. The secretary of the interior has decided that no claim will be recognized by any miner or settler to any mineral or other land upon the Ute reservation which is based upon settlement or occupation pre vious to formal opening to that reserva tion. Arrests for Fale Registration. San Francisco, Oct. 10. Warrants are being issued by hundreds for the an est of persons charged with frauds in registra tion, but hardly more than live per cent are followed by ar rists, as most of them prove to be founded on errors or frivolous grounds. Where any evidence of fraudu lent intent is manifest proceedings will be had. Murderous Chlnaincn. Tucson, Oct. 10. This morning, as the train for Tucson was pulling out of San Simon, a large number of Chinamen boarded it. They had no passes and offered no mouev,bnt demanded passage. Mr. Martin, this conductor; demanded their fare, when they turned on him with clubs and he was forced to draw his revol ver. At the first fire he killed a China man. No arrests so far, as the act is believed to have been in self defense. FOREIGN. "Wants mi Army Corps. Constantinople, Oct. 14. The shah of Persia telegrapns the sultan, demanding that a Tuikish army corps be sent to the frontier to assist in quelling the Kurds. American (: rain in JSurope. Berlin, Oct. 10. It is reported that in the next session f the Iteiehstag, a mo tion will be introduced tor the reduction of duty on grain by about six cents. A report'on the S.vKs grain trade. states that the presence of huge imports or Ameri can grain and fmur received by way of Rotterdam a.Ml Antwerp had a very re assuring effect . An expert in tiie oil boring business was sent to tin's State by California capi talists to make search for indications. He went in various directions and made close examinations without success, until striking the coal, gold and limestone re gions of Butte creek in Clackamas county, where excellent indications were found. It is probable a well will be bored to the depth of about 1200 feet as an experiment. That is a mineral sec sion of the State, as soda and sulphur springs abound. Coal, limestone, gold, marble, etc., are also found in limited quantities. Sclnvatka's Search. The graphic accounts given by your correspondent, dated Hudson's bay, rel ative to the Schwatka search, have true points of value. In the first place they confirm the report hitherto made as to the fate of the memorable Franklin expedi tion, and in the second place show that the last season has not materially dif fered from previous seasons, and exhibit nothing, therefore, but what is favorable to the success of the American expedi tion now in the Arctic waters. The lowest temperature recorded by the Schwatka party, as leported by your correspon dent, was 71 degrees below zero a tem perature not unusual in the experience of other Arctic explorers. Dr. Kane, for instance, encountered even a lower tem ature ; so did Capt. Parry and several Russian explorers, and, without serious inconvenience, I have traveled at 70 be low. 1 allude to this merely to counter act a suggestion I have met that the winter has been exceptionally severe, and that the Jeannette was consequently in excentional dauerer. The truth is that.1 the Arctic seas are uncertain, like all others, but not in a general way more perilous. The expedition of Sir John Franklin stands altogether alone and and would long since have been forgot ten had it net been for the peculiarly romantic circumstances attending the fate of himself and crew. The expedition was sent out in May, 1845, with two ships, theUrebns and the Terror to ac-! comulish a northwest passage to the i Pacific ocean the last of many similar attempts in the interest of commerce, and certaiulv in that interest the last that will ever be made. We know enough of its historv to show that the two vessels. after passing through Baffin bay entered Barrow strait, wintered atBeechy island, ssiilnd imrHi throntrh AYelllllKtOll Cliail nel nearly to latitude 77 degrees, thence south toward the American coast (doubt less in consequence of their meeting impenetrable ice) with the evident expectation of finding there along the American shore, a passage from ocean to ocean, similar to that which Nordeusjold has recently found by the shore of Asia. In its southerly course the Franklin expedition reached latitude 70 degrees, where, within a hundred miles, or in deed perhaps less, of water that had been j previously navigated by Arctic explorers j in boats, such as Franklin nimsen, Jjease and Simnson, Back, Rae.liichawlsonanci 0ffected in their case by the call for a others, the two ships were beset in the penkmfe This was used to loosen the ice and there frozen fast at the close of bodv-armor, when a loud explosion took the season of 18-iG. From that time un-1 j,lJej followed by a deep sigh and a til the spring of 18-18 the ice never broke Speeiv r0Coverv of the patient. So up, but they drifted south about twenty . f.lshi0nablo was fainting or hysterics in miles, and in April, 18-18, the vessels were I t.lur(.1 that J. have a lively remembrance abandoned when about fifteen miles from 0f a y0ung lady who had a weekly land, the crews reduced by death mean- attack, and was often carried out by a while from 12S to 105, betaking thein- gCntkman in the next pew. As these solves to the ice, dragged the ships boats j two Were afterward married, I apprehend mounted on sleds, to King William tnat was one mode of courtship. I Land, an island about two hundred miles 'am oniy too thankful to think, for the long, the coast line of which they fol- j pea(.e 0f other people, that this method lowed, or the low lands of which they j ot- forci11Cr matrimony has gone out. crossed, with the expectation of reaching - i chamber's Journal. finally at or about the month of Great! Fish or Back's river, near latitude 08 de- Love SToniES.-It ys, we think, with grees, as the evidence proves, the main-, "Jane. Eyre that it began to be sup F -i ' r k mi. u woo 1 nosed that the hot encounter of two lov- lanu oi AUienuu. xnuw, n "o nun o -i-Mi j t Ati'o I'.nir nniiintiTiv evident purpose to ascend Back's river, i ers, , wim anuieir juxiupoait un uuu an and then strike the outposts of the Hud- j their a uarrels heats and coolnesses was - mi.. -i: .i. 4. ip nn v nliincr, nt tn'hmi n. (lieastrous i im 1 1 iii M i , j - - - that was traversed by the party in . cuscovery wnici has aone muie uumugo their retreat could have been as shown by, m the world than many a more im the records of the Schwatka expedition, ' portant mistake. Taking Shakespeare s hardly more than two hundred and fifty ; example, nowever, wu miles, and yet during that distance every J story winch is pure love and f n.An,.tv irisliod sin d pvm-v ! must end in a catastrophe. lilUIil l fJ L Jl LllU I -Mil. KJ ajwv, record of the vovage was blotted out; uue-i.iuiu uu ,u 4umu,u u save a few buttons, spoons, coins, and the great maps of human beings who are other relics easily identified scattered not in love; and its stuldemiess and the along the shore or in possession of the overpowering brief current of its pe nalises. The first of these relics were iency, the pi y of the strange and tragic found bv Dr. Bae in 1851, and the Gov-; conclusion, the bitter sweet of that union eminent award of .10,000 was accorded ( which is ending, arc component parts of him for having solved the mystery. Dr. ' its power over us, and justify its accept Riie's journey was made in the same gen- auce as the supreme romance, the one eral direction as that of Lieut, typical tale oi youth i and passion lhere Schwatka twenty-six years later, though is no looking behmct or alter m that suu uot over the same course. A great many i len rapture it is all concentrated in the relics were found by Dr. Bae, which are ! moment, the hour, the one point of now in the British Museum; but Lady j everlasting duration, which to ordinary Franklin not content with the reports 1 mortals is beat out upon the clock in the that he made nor satisfied with the de-1 shortest spell of time. But when the . . -.-i i i ii . "m i I vmitlifni nnir nr'nnnv nimv vrnl uncifirm cisions reaeneu, sent out me uv, uimi;r.Ju"'","r'; ,iiy 'v.. w..... Capt. (new Admiral Sir Francis Leo pold) McClintock, who found, in 1858, the only written record ever yet dis covered. This record showed that Frank lie died June 11, 1817, probably, on ship board, and thereafter the struggle for the release from the ' thick-ribbed ice" devolved upon Capt. Crozior, who was Franklin's second in command. As to the fate of the expedition, a wide gap for inquiry lay between the points reached bv Dr. Bae (from the mainland of Amer ica on the south) and by Capt. McClin tock, who had come around by Barrow Strait and thence descended from the north through Victoria strait toward the American coast. This extensive gap was somewhat filled in hv mir oonntrvman. Capt. Hall, but it has now been completely covered by the spirited efforts of Lieut. Schwat ka and his resolute companions. This ; expedition, although founded upon in correct information at the outset, as would appear by the evidence furnished by your correspondent, has really per formed an unparalled journey, as to time and distance, in the history of arctic travel. The peculiar feature of the journev was that the party subsisted by the way. obtaining abundant supplies of food, such as reindeer, musk oxen, etc. Although they did not obtain the records nf wh t h thev were in searen search, valu-T thev have secured most able information, not only as concerns the Franklin expedition, but geographi cally. They have traversed regions en tirely unknown, trusting to fortune for their daily supplies, which seem never to have failed them during almost a year of exposure through all the vicissitudes of a rigorous climate. A singular feature of their journey would appear tol)e that a no inconsiderable part of it was made along shores nnd over lands traversed by Franklin's men, the latter dying from want, the former living in plenty. Per haps this fact indicates a change of climate. There may have been at that particular period an unusual accumula tion of ice in that quarter, where is gen erally -imposed to lie the pole of greatest cold, it may be that the party had be come reduced in strength by sickness and over exposure; but it does soem strange, after reading the account of your correspondent, that one hundred and five men should, on comparatively so short a march, have been swept out of existence and left no trace b which the history of their expedition can be read. All who have taken an interest in this re markable incident in the history of moderen maritime discovery will thank Lieut Schwatka and his courageous fol lowers for the contribution they have made toward the final solutiou of a ques tion which has for so long a time ab sorbed the sympathies of the civilized world. fN. Y. Herald. iiy.Meria Hysteria is by no means confined to Avomen, for one of the worst attacks which I ever witnessed occurred in a man. This gentleman one day found he had lost his all", and on returning home, he became, the victim of laughing and crying, until sheer exhaustion brought an end to the attack. This was quite in voluntary. But it might be remarked that even in hysteria such a thing as fashion prevails, showing that a certain power of restraint may be used. "When I was a boy, hysteria was the fashion; and if during conversation any remark ivn wiidn fo ton eh :l ladv's sensibilities. gj10 w01lu cilich her hands, make a wry I face; her eyelids would undergo a rapid vibration, she would five a sob or two j and sink from her chair. The cure was accomplished by throwing cold water over her face; and if this encroached on her neck or wetted her dress, the cure was very sud den and complete. During church service, it was the usual practice to have a young ladv carried out: but I think as a rule she belonged to an interior class, whose kind of work during the week did not alIow them f 0 p (lres ..j-g with themselves on a Sui dress-making undav; for if j remember rightly if T remember riirhtlv the cure was ... . . , ... . - i 1 mi) uuii it nothing else It is an in- '. ' A-l 1.1 i i. i- 4 1 . r..,,., 1... in a real world, the interest of their story not only gives zest to the study of more ordinary existence, but it gives the in dispensabhj composition, the necessary beginning and ending which every tale requires. Blackwood's Magazine. The United States Fish Commissioner furnishes the following list, comprising thirty-three varieties, of the different species of fish obserrcd in the waters of the Columbia and at its mouth: Spring salmon, blue back, silver side, huinp back, brook trout, steel head, red spotted trout, silver smelt, eulachun, anchovy, shad, herring, flounder, sole, eel, 1am frey, sturgeon, greon sturgeon, porgy, chub, minnow, ieker, sculpin, torn cod and ling cod. Several of the above spe cies are sub-divided into other species discernible only by the long Latin names given by the naturalist. The showing is an important one in its line, adding its quota to the exhibit which makes Oregon renowned for her varied resources. A Baltimore heiress fixed herself up as a homely woman of middle age, and got into a street-ear in which were four of her suitors. As one of them wanted to get off, he got up and let her hare his seat. She supposed that he went to ride upon the platform, and of course accept ed him when he uronosod. Some men born to luck . . A man at Kansas City could not win the girl whom he wanted, and therefore married her sister. The wife soon learned the truth, and advised that the mis take bo rectified. The sister assented, and a divorce, followed by a marriage ceremony, has apparently settled matters to the satisfaction of all parties. "rearls of Thought." A German author has made a collec tion of mixed metaphors, which he calls pearls of thought. Some of them aro worth quoting, if only as a warning to-high-flown orators not to allow their magniloquence to fly away with them altogether. "We will," cried an inspired Democrat, "burn all our ships, and with every sail unfurled, steer boldly out into the ocean of freedom!" Even that flight is surpassed by an effort of Justice Min ister Hye, who, in 1818, in a speech to the Vienna students, impressively de clared: "The chariot of the Revolution is rolling along and gnashing its teeth as it rolls." A pan-Gerinanist Mayor ot a Rhinoland corporation rose still higher in an address to the Emperor. He said: "No Austria, no Prussia, one only Ger many, such were the words the mouth of your Imperial Majesty has always had in its eve." We have heard of the mouth having an eye tooth, but never before of the mouth's eye. But there are even literary men who cannot open their mouths "without put ting their foot in it." Professor Johan nes Scherr is an example of such. In a criticism on Lenau's lyrics he writes: 'Out of the dark regions of philosophi cal problems the poet suddenly lets swarm&of songs dive up carrying far flashii pearls of thought in their beaks." Songs and beaks are certainly related to one another, but were never seen in that incongruous connection be fore. A German preacher, speaking of a repentant girl, said: "She knelt in the terople of her interior and prayed fer vently," a feat no India-rubber doll could imitate. The German parliament ary oratory of the present day affords many examples of metaphor mixture; but two 'must suffice. Count Frankenberg is the author of them. A few years ago he pointed out to his country men the necessity of "seizing the stream of Time by the forelock;" and in the last session he" told the Minister of War that if he really thought the French were se riously attached ro peace, he had better resign office and "return to his naternal oxen." The Count had no doubt the po et's patenm rura in his mind at the time. But none of these pearls of thought and expression in Fatherland surpass the speech of the immortal Joseph Prudhomme on being presented with a sword of honor by the company he commanded in the National Guard of France. "Gentlemen," said he, "this sword is the brightest day of my life?" The Press In France. The peculiar position of the press on the other sidn of the Channel is, says the 1 'Ml Mnll (IfiziiU, being illustrated by fiesh legal eccentricities. An individual having been convicted of defamation be fore a correctional tribuual, the court ordered i he sentence to be published in three journals which were named. The conductors of one of these journals re fused on the ground, among others, that they could not be compelled to ex ecute a judicial decision in which they were no.t concerned, and that in any case publication ought to be paid ior. Next day came a "semination" ftom the Proeureur General, ordering the free publication of the sentence under one of the articles of a decree of 18V2, by which it is laid down that the managers of newspapers are bound to publish at the bead of the paper, and free of charge, all notices of authentic infor mation sent to them by the depositaries of public authority. Again there a re fusal, and the managers were summoned before the correctional tribunal. The case being dismissed, it was carried to the court of appeals, which confirmed the decision give in the court below. A further appeal to the court of cassation however, has resulted in the expression of an opinion that the journal in ques tion was bound to muke the insertion demanded, and that the depositaries of public authority were, by the decree of 1852, put. in possession of a right of the mode of exercising which they are the soh judges. As iy pointed out by more than one Parisian journal, if this prin ciple is to be definitely accepted, the press will be more than ever at the mercy of an arbitrary administration. 1'he meaning and intention of the de cree of 1S-32, it is contended, was to give the depositaries of public authority the right of contradicting an erroneous re port tn rough the columns of the journal by which that report was originally circulated. As the law has been now interpreted, however, the way has been opened for most monstrous abuses. It would be possible to fill the front pagft of a journal day by day with ''ofliciaL prose," and ruin it both as a commercial speculation and as apolitical organ. The Female Novelist's Hero. In tho old times when literature was chiefly in the hands of men, women were elevated to a visionary pinnacle; but now it is the turn of the stronger sex, and there are few things wliich more surprise the male reader than the flattering picture which he finds presented to him of his own species in the shape of heroes who to him are very questionable S2)ecimens of the race. Once more we repeat there is nothing so inscrutable as a wo man's hero. Boing perfect as he is, he wsiv conduct himself like the basest hound, and nobody thinks any worse of him. He remains to all parties as high souled and magnanimous a boing as ever, even after this extremely silly and futile attempt to lead the conscientious little heroine astray. This uncon scious homage ought to soften the gen tlemen of the newspapers; but here, we fear another principle comes m, and your critic, who feels himself in every way a more desirable specimen of humanity than the muoh lauded hero, but who knows that no such appreciation awaits him, becomes jealous of his imag inary brother. -Blackwood's Magazine . Sin may be clasped so close we can not gee its face.