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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1891)
7 . . iJO CENTS A WEEK. ALBANY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JUNE i 189 1 VOL. VI NOT 168 I PPiOES fream Baking Dsed in Millions of Homes Wo are at Our Spring .in I Summer Stock complete o- D3ES3 GO 3D3 Very attr.u:tive lines in new CoIjrilliS it'ld l.lt-St no elites. SPRING & SUMMER JACKETS! I .at -st Styles I Ili'i Novelties! Lidies, Misses & Childien'g. FURNISHING GOODS, velvets, sriA's, sativs np plushes, ladies' and MHSKS SILK NI) KNIT ITX I) KRWRA R, COTTON AND '.VP )L H"SK, EMBROIDERIES, SILK AX 1) LINKS HANDKERCHIEFS. SCARFS, VEILINGS, SHAWLS, ETC. ' BLACK AND IXIUIKKD DRKSS GOODS ! Gr. W. SIMPSON, FIRST ST It EE T, ALBANY, OREGON. 'In Sprintj'Jtlie Jyourig'riian'S fancy Lil itlv Jtu ri is to tUcmnlits of love !"' The wie Viiin4 -nan, the ol 1 in turn th'ir step, when siar.-hing butter, fresh laid H, st iple ami fa grocery store of C E. ine Aiuanv A FULL LIXE OF 'I'M K fAClFiC S L'ArjES SAVING. LOIS & UK 1 -OF SAX .FRANCISCO- Ofe an Absolutely Safe Investment FOR SMALL MONTHLY AMOUNTS. i: W ''i do'.la-s per inuntn will amount to $1000 in seven years, doubling the amount invented in that time. Money loan d on real estate security at 6 per cent. For full particu lars apply to S. X. STEELE & CO.. Local Agents. 40 Years the Standard the Fron l ! will be found larger ami more than ever. WHITE GOODS Anything and everything in li'e assortim-nr and end less variety .J Cr r it r IlilkollllDS (o thoughts of some iSr bins good !o h ik well ! Ul'll Ull II kill ij. tt a- in, the thrifty houaewife, all will for fresh table delicacies, choice icy groceries of all kindsl to the JBrownell. rurmture to. UNDERTAKING. x -4 A A a FOR SALE, WANTS, ETC. II'A.NTED Am room cottage near the If business pjiticn uf the city, Will rent by the ear or take a lean. Call at IlKRALlAlttjCe. WOOJ SAW ISO dme r.n the shortest no-ice. Onle-a 'elt at lr, Jones' will be prompt! attended to. Vt. Ntr-LY WANTKK.--A sitiiatii.il 10 do gineral h uscwoik J. M in K l&il. Aly at ihmothce. WW . ED Airentf t. . a I ohm hoM ar ticle needed i'i ter h- ue: bin money to npht party; 1 aitn le r- n cei.ta, adtlreH. , K. liAHLiNoHoi'SK, t?7ii seveiiih St, 1'ort a. d Oreijo . T."OIl SALK A Kri.d h rse, harre-s and J; bui;vy for ea'e eh ap for cah: a Ikarija'.i. Krquiie at the real ts a e ofl.ie of Iturkhart St heeney. CB. WINN, AOKNT KOK T1IK LEAD irifc fire, life and aceiilent Insurance com oaaitts. 1 Av;KES of bND- All fit for culti 1 OU vation, and an ler fence, for sale at $10 per a re. Within 1 miluB from railroad 4tati in and 20 miles from Albany. Apply at this ottice. . QAN WA has removed h a laundry to the O iron hou the corner of Seiwid and (.yon streets. Kvllcc In DrblorH. AM th indented to the late firm of Thompnon & Overman are requested to cull t onee and liettle the same. rONKY TO LON In lurife or smal LL auiounts, from six mo-itha to five year on Albany, and Linn county real estate. Call on or address W. E. McPherson, real estate broker, opposite iiuas ho ise Land for sale. R. 10, 20, 10, 80 acres, easy tenns, install ment plan the ip and hiifh-prircd. Also I (ew city lots all owned by H. Bryant. t ONEY TO LOAN HOME CAPITAL ON LtL irood real estate security. Kor particu lars enquire of Oeo. Humphrey. I710R SALE-l?iOOt.il.(0 worth of house f h ild furniture in exehaiiKe br improved real estate knqu'reat ottice of Orcvmi Land Company. ZIOi.D KINO. 8 OOl.O I'KNS. t) CDAK T iniiici.'-j, t very ifood handkerchiefs, all jeiit ti:m a-i'ires ro inirouuce my in a line of k-i'hIs, for 10 cts J S. Simmons, t'ailiz O. Limit Murvrylnit. I 1AKTI1W DIWiaiNa SUkVBYlMS DON I CAN OB- L lain -iruratc nd prompt work by callinz upon ux-oonntv surviyoi r, I. I ristier. lie has complete . opiee of field notes and town ihip ;m'.s and is prepare) to do siirveviiiK iu any pat-i f.f Linn county. Postortiee adtlresa, Mill.rv sta'ion. Linn con itv.Orceon. llfOOll S.VWIMS -A. H. Irvird htv'.lu pur. hascd the Or l M Jonei ojd taw inh'(iiint, is now lewly t hi l ordjrs. Leave tdeis at resi.leil e. o-n-l'f S. con I an-' -'. aixioia s'rt-etF, or Deywe A: !' nim's. Il'.lMSIIKD liOO?.H In ' o the ' i v n r t I i itics n h-; itv to rei.t, I' r pi-tie ar-i i qurie at M-is . fh e. qt her Tobaceo . (a p aTcKe inCmos t) -convtTvient JJpacKagcs. Important Notice. From and after this dato I will sell my dry goods for 50 cents on tne dollar. My gents furnishing stock will be sold at. greatly re duced rates, such as 75 cent neck ties for 50 cents ; $1.60 underwear for $1.00 per suit, $; 00 underwear for $2.50 per suit ; $0.00 silk shirts for $4.7") ; $4,50 black silk shirts for $,5.o0, and everything in pro portion. My large stock of oboes at reduced rates to reduce stock before removal. E. C. Skaules. June 3, 1891. A SIKOSIIL nOKKKKS. Work cannot be successfully continued unless there is an active mental interest in it. If the mind is not clear, bright and buoyant, then the wfrk is drudgery and the worker is a machine. An occasional dose of Moore's Re vealed Remedy will put the body and mind in such harmony that the hardest tasks will seem as play. KMkLEV AttXMA SALVE. The best salve in the world for CuU. Bruises, So.es, Ulcers, Salt Kheum, Fever sores. Tetter, Chapped Hand, Chilblains. Corns, and skin Eruptions, and pos tively cures Piles, or l.o pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money re funded. Price 'i5 cents per box. Fcr sale by Foshwy & Mason Notice. All persons indebted to E. C. Searls are requested to call and settle at once as all accounts must be closed by the 20th of June. E. C. Searla. June 8th 189L Do you want to be happy and make those about you pleased, if so eo and get one of those lovely toned piano's at Mrs. Hymana. THE PI LI'IT AX STAGE. Rev. F. M. Shrout.rastor United Brethren Church, Blue Mound, Kan., says : "I feel it my duty to tell what wonders Dr. King's New Discovery has done for me. My Lungs were badly diseased, and my parishioners thought I could live only a few weeks. I took five bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery and am sound and well, gaining 20 lbs. in weight." Arthur Love, Manager Love's Funny Folks Combination, writes : 'After a thorough tr.al and con vincing evidence, I am confident Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, beats 'em all. and cures when everything else fails. The greatest kindness I can do my many thousand friends is to uge them to try it.' Free trial bottes at roshay & Mason, Drug Ftore Regular sizes 50c. and $1 00. HEIGHT OF 4KIELTV. Nervous women seldom recei re the sympathy they deserve. WhLe often the pictures of health, th y are constantly ailing, lo with hold sympathy from these unf r tunates is the height of cruelty. They have a weak heart, causii.q shortness of breath, flutterir z, pain in side, weak and hung y spells, and finally swelling f ankles, oppression, ehokinr, smothering and dropsy. Dr. Miles' Xew Heart Cure is just ti e thing for them. For their ner vousness, headache, weakness, etc., his Restorative Nervine ii unequaled. Fine treatise en "Heart and t Nervous Diseases" ane marvelous testimonials fit e sold and guaranteed by Stanard k Cusick. TO UttOD TEMPLARS. Do vou know that Moore's lt) vealed Remedy is the only patent medicine in the world that does not contain a drop of alcohol ; thr.t the mode of preparing it is known only to its discoverer; that it is an advance in the science of medicine without a parallel in the nine teenth century ; that its proprietoi s olfer to forfeit $1,000 for any caee of dyspepsia it will not cure ! SPECIMEN CASES. S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Xeuralgia j'.nd and Rheumatism, his Stomach as disordered, his Liver was affected to and alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly re duced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of J'jlectric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Ilarrisbzrg, III., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. U3ed three bottles of Electric Bit'.ers and seven boxs of Bucklen's Salve, and bis leg is sound i.rydy wen. Jonn r-peatcer, uaiawua, v., had live large Fever sores on hia leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold by Fosbay & Mason, Drug store. A MtrfTEKl El PLUS Ell The papers contain freq aynt notices of rich, pretty and eauc ted girls eloping with negroes, tra aps and coachmen. The well-kn wn specialist, Dr. Franklyn MI. 39' says all such girls are more or! 3ss hysterical, nervous, very iu: il- sive, unbalanced; usually sulj ct to headache, neuralgia, sleep! !3- ness, immoderate crying or lai 2 ing. These show a weak ner- is system for which there is jo remedy equal to Restorative I! Ir vine. Trial bottles and a le book, containing many marvel- is cures, free at Stanard A Cusi k, who also sell, and guarantee I ;r. Miles' celebrated New Heart Cu 3, the finest of heart tonics. Cu. 3s fluttering, short breath, etc. MIL'S SEBVE Jt LITER PILLS. Act on a new principle regula ting the liver, stomach and bowels through the nerves. A new dii- covery. l)r. Miles' fills speedily cure biliousness, bad taste, torpi 1 liver, piles, constipation r Un equaled for men, women, children. Smallest, mildest, surest ! 60 dose 3 for 25 ceuts. Samples ee, at Stanard & Cusick. The Celebrated French CURE Warranted to or money refunded cure BEFORE the generative organs of either sex whether arising from the excesshe use of stimulants, tobacco or opium, or thr mgh J nuthful indis cretion, over indulgence, etc., such as loss of Brain Pcwer, Wakefu'ness, Bearing Down pains in the Back, Seminal Weakness, Hys teria, Ner "OU si ration. Nocturnal Omis Bions, Leucorrhoe Dizziness, Weak Memory, lnssoi rower ana impoteny wnicn u neg lected often lead to premature old age and insanity. Price $1 a box; 8 boxeS fcr $6.00. Sent by mail on receipt of price. A TJKII IW VVAKAftTEE is given with every 6 order received, to refund the money if a Permanent cure is noteffected. We have thousands of testimonials from old and young, of both sexes, who have been permanently cured by the use of Aphroditin Circular free. Address THE APHKO MEDICINE CO. Western Branch, Box, 27. Portland, Oregon. For sale by Foshay & Mason, who esale and etail drugitists, Albatiy, Oregon. DOWN TO DEATH An Excursion Train Goes Through a Bridge. SOME ONE BLUNDERED, And a riurrlble lias. acre is tho Result - Heart tending Scenes Are Euacted. Beusb, June 15. The total number of people who lost their lives yesterday by the collapse ol the Milrt ad bridge on the Moen chen, Stein & Bale railroad is now plowed at 120, with hundreds more or less Sdjured. Another account of the disaster saya filty-seven bodies are already recovered, and that forty persons are severely wounded. It is feared manv others are dead whose bodies have not been found. The victims were mostly leading citizens of Bale and it9 neighborhood. Scenes which are heart rending were witnessed in Uale to-uay when the bodies of a large number of victims were taken there by sorrowing relatives, and represen tatives of a majority of the best families of Bale are among the killed and injured. Several fami lies are practically wiped out of existence by the disaster, the full extent ol which is not known even at this hour. Bale is now a scene of bitter desolation and mourning. Nearly every family in the city may be said to have been touched by the calamity, for those who have not actually lost one of their members have dear friends or ac quain'atii't'S either among the dead or among those who are mourning the loss of rvi.ttives. Those who were wounded include so many serious injuries that almost each hour records another death or another case in which the physi cians give up all hopes of saving the patient's life. Everything the local and municipal authorities can do to help the wounded, re cover the dead or assist those in distress is being done. Clergymen, priests and physicians and a large lorce of troops and firemen and scores of vehicles to be used as ambulances have been dispatched to the scene of the wreck. roopsand firemen are busily engaged in removing the wreck, recovering the bodies of the dead, and transporting the wounded to their homes or to hospitals. Phy sicians i.nd ministers of the gospel are doing noble work in adminis tering to the wounded and com forting the bereaved. The neigh borhood of the collapsed bridge now resembles in many features the after episodes of a battle or the closing acts in some warlike struggle. Still more so was this the case last night, when the river banks were illuminated by huge tires, the troops and Gremeu work ing unceasingly, dragging the river for the dead, nursing the wounded aud keeping guard around the spot9 where it was not ttiought advisable to admit the crowds of people who had flocked to-the scene -from every village in the canton. The work of the soldiers in dragging the river is gre::t'y impeded by the fact that in stream is considerably swollen by the melting snow, llins th waters carried away many bodie . and several days' dragging will I. required be'ore the soldiers' wiui, will be completed. That "some lody" is to blame for the accident nobody doubts, but the petiole are so taken 4ip with present duty that the question of blame is postponed for the preseut from any ollicial consideration. IT COST HIM HI4 LIKE. That Wan the Trice An Austrian Officer Gave Kor His Temerity. Vienna, June 15. A member of the Austrian nobility, a cavalry officer, some time ago entered the Turkish army, and, the better to secure his advancement in the service of the sultan, embraced the Mohammedan religion. As another bid for promotion be wrote a book on tactics, which was really a val uable resume of the military prac tice of various nations.with special reference to the necessities of the Turkish army. The superior offi cers oi the diligent Austrian, how ever, through jealousy, or some other motive, relused to approve the work, and put a veto upon the expressed intention of the writer to present the brochure to the sultan. The author seized an oc casion when hia duties brought him near the sultan and made an attempt to hand the book to the miirhtv potentate, lie was imme diately arrested aud hurried away, the impression being created among those who witnessed the episode that he was regarded as an assassin.' Hia fate is unknown, but the Austrian embassy has caused inquiries to be inatiluted tl rough the regular diplomatic channels as to the caae. The fact that the unlucky officer had be come a Mussulman may be used as a bar to the successful prosecution of inquiry. If is thought the vic tim has been bow-stringed before this time. A WONDERFUL EXHIBIT. l Display Relating to Pre-Hlstorle Man at the Work 's Fair. Chicago. June 15. All possible liases of pre-historic man in Pi America and the life of the abori gines at the time of the landing of Columbus will be illustrated at the World's Columbia Exposition by the department of arclneology and ethnology, l'rof. F. W. l'mnam, of Harvard University, is the chief of this department, anil is pro nounced the most competent m:in in America for the position. He has been granted $10.000 for imme diate work in his department, and has already begun wiih great en thusiasm the task of collectingand preparing a most extensive exhib it. He has arranged with the I'erry expedition to (ireenland to get models of E-kimos an.l their huts Hild equipments. A similar collection will be made from a tribe of Aieuts. lie has planned to reproduce portions of the cele brated stone ruins in i ucatan. For several weeks, under l'rof. I'utuam's dired i ui, excavations have been progressing in the vicin ity of Fort Ancient, Ohio, the greatest known earth works of the mound-builders. A large number of skeletons, some of them iu a good state of preservation, hrs been exhumed, and numerous stone u eiihiN aii'l va ics -rm-ments found. The grave.-; ai d skeletons within ihi m .V. be shown at the exposition in (-racily the same state,except iur the earth covering them, in which they have existed for thousands of vears. KiMhoh'h Latent. New Yokk, June 15. Edion's latest production, an elect rii-al fan for office ventilation, like all of Edison's invent ions, has taken re markably well with the general pub'ic. Contrary to the usual run of new inventions, the manufac turets have placed it on the mar ket at a-wry teasonable (ianre ($22), the rts-ilt being lhat the Edison Company has 1 ni unable to Duet the di Hiatal f.n tl.t m. MOKE TRAIN WRECKS AN EXI'ltKSS COLLIDES WITH A FREIGHT. Smashed Up Locomotives -Several Train Men Killed Passengers Escape With Slight Injuries. Sax Fkan'cisco, .Iimic 15. The north-bound Los Angeles express, due in this city at 1 1 :45 this fore noon, collided with a freight train in the switching yarJs at Fort Costa shoitly lie fore 10 o'clock. The crash was a very serious one. the ergiiies of both trains being badly smashed, and the mail and express cars of the I s Angeles train telescoped. A brakeinan named Jordan, on the freight train was killed, and engineers Moore and Abbo't both injured, and both firemen hmt. It is reported a number of passengers were injured but no -letails are obtainable. The wreck recurred south of Port Costa, in the switching vard. and while the Los Angeles tiain was approaching tne station. A gravel train consisting of liftv cars was on the main tnuk ami the r. 8senger train crashed inti it while moving at a hiu'li rate of speed, though an attempt was nade to stop the train by airbrakes. Two uie i are reported ki!led, Laih rain men, and five or six passen-.-ra wounded. Wouleu Mill for Mil Ion. Pendleton East Oregon iau : The gentleman who made proi osition to build and operate a woolen mill in Pendleton with a capital of $50, 000, subscribing to half the stock if the citizens and property-owners would subscribe to the balance, is on his way to Milton from the East having received a proposition from the people of that place. It is probable, since he received no substantial encouragement here, that he will locate in Miltm and have a woolen mill in operation inside of ninety days, the first to be established in Eastern Oregon. A woolen mill will undoubtedly pay at Milton, yet Milton is not so near the raw material nor has she as good transportation facilities as Pendleton, but Milton people know the value of manufacturing enter prises, and if they keep up their energies Milton stands a first rate show of being the largest town in Eastern Oregon in ten years. It takes live people to build a town, and Milton's pejple have shown themselves to be alive in this woolen mill project What Fruit Sells For iu New York. The Albany, N. Y., Telegram of Jupe 7th contains the following quotations: Strawberries were, sold yesterday at from twelve tj fifteen ceuts a quart. The berries are from Delawace and Xew Jersey and are not so plent'ful as usual. The local berries are expected in market the latter part of the com ing week. Small quantises of bananas are coming, pud the red rariety is very scarce. The best grades are sold at forty cents a dozen. The local trade is reljing upon the south for vegetables. The market yesterday displayed a large quantity of cucumbers which we.'e retailed at five cents a piece. Peas were sold f jr eighty cents a peck and new Bermuda and Charleston potatoes were meeting a gxd de mand at the same price. Postage on Three Love Letters A damsel of Grand Rapids, Mich., who sued for $15,000 for a breach of promise got a verdict of 6 cents and costs. STATE AND COAST. The AU Popu'ar and Important Base Ball Game, tlltClIT COURT AT SALEM. A Neighborhood Quarrel- It Results in the Serious Injo'y of Two Persons Penitentiary Arrivals. Salem, June 15. Baseball inter est is growing. A picked nine. with Salems battery, defeated the Salems yesterday afternoon, in a twelve inning game. Score 14 to 10. The Capital Adventure company nine defeated the Baker A Strang team also, in a score of 27 to 26. Ciicuit court adjourned this evening until Saturday, the most important cases yet unheard, being continued to next term. There was a neighborhood quar rel this morning out in the Dick uian neighborhood near Buena Vista. Dickman and son are Ger mans, ar.d the quarrel was with John Whitemanand John Dornan. Young Dickman came to Salem and.it is said, in the liht he was badly bruised up and his father nearly killed. No arrests have yet been made. 'I he latest ariivals at the state penitentiary are John Devlin, one year for larceny ; Oscar Wilde and 11.11. Snow, each two years for burglary; Geo. Williams and Thos. Martin, each two years for the same crime, and J. Birch, one year for larceny. SEAL FISHERIES. The Agreement Between the Two Countries. Washington, June 15. The president to-dp issued a procla mation stating that the agreement lor the modus Vivendi between the government of the United states and the government of her Uritapnic majesty, in relation to iur seal fisheries in Behiing eea, was concluded on the loth day of last June. It reads : "For the purpo e of avoiding ir ritating differences and with a view to promot ? a f-iendly settle ment of the questions pending be tween the two governments, touch ing tneir respective rights in Beh ringsea a id for preservation of seal species, the following agree ment is made wi'hout prejudice to the rights or claims of either patty. Ilermajestv's government wiil prohibit until May next seal killing in that part of Beluitrr sea lying eastward of a line of demark atkm described in Article Xo. 1 of i he treaty of 1807, between the United Mates and Rustia, and will promptly use its beet eff jrts 'o insure the observance of this piohibitiou by British subjects and ves eis. "Second The United Mates government will prohibit seal kill- ng-lor the same period in the e.une part of lSeliring sea, and on the shores and islands thereof the properly of the United States, in excess of 7500 to be taken on the island for ubsisteice and care of the natives, and will promot'y use ita best etlorta to insure the ob servance of this prohibition by L nited States citizens and vessels. "Third Every vessel or person offend'ig against this prohibition in said waters of Behring sea out sidethe ordinary territorial limits of the United States may lie seized ind detained by naval or other duly commissioned officers oi either high contracting parties, but they shall be handed over as soon as practicable to the authorities of the nation to which they respect ively belong, who shall alone have jurisdiction to try the offense and impose the penalty for the same. Witnesses and proofs necessary to establish the offense shad also be sent wiih them. "J n order to facilitate such proper inquiries as her majesty's government may desire to make, with a view to the presentation of the case that an agreement for arbitration mav be arrived at, it is :greed that suitable peisons. designated by Great Britain, will be permitted at any time, upon application to visit or remain upon the seal islands during the present sea'ing season for that purpose. "Mgned and sealed in duplicate at Washington this 15th day of June, lS'Jl, in behalf of their re sjiective governments by William b. Whartox, Acting secretary of the United States. Jt man Pacncbfote, Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. "Xow, therefore, be it known, I, Benjamin Harrison, president of the United States of America, have caused said agreement to be made public t the end that the same, and every part thereof, may ue observed and luitiited with good faith by the United States of America and citizens thereof. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set mv hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed." The Airship Will Fly. Bl RLlNfiTON. Ia.. June l.r The Burlincton Airsh n eomnanv with a canital of tin Ot in fx 10 n ith i . 1 i - v v Y , 000.000 paid, was organized and ine papera ol incorporation taken OUt in this citv Sntnrilotr Tina organizat ion ia the outcome of a A 1 f . . - ten uayu conierence between j Pennington, the invntor of Pen nington's airship, and a number of Burlington capitalists. The proposition of the incorporators ia to at once remove the businees and construct on plant from Mount Cprmel and St. Louis to Burling ton. The ship will carry forty passeugrs, and will attempt to rl y from Burlington to Xew l ork. The incorporators are all reliable Buriipgton capitalists who seem to mean business. The expected initial flight will take place on July 4. More Floods. ArkansasCitv, Kan., June 15. A gentleman just arrived from Geer county, in the extreme south western part of Indian territory, says the Red river and ita north fork have been out of their banka for over a week, completely hem ming the people in and cutting of all communication with the out side world. People everywhere are suffering. One-half the wheat crop is entirely ruined, and corn and oats are nearly all killed. A cloudburst inundated Fraser.rnin ingevery merchant's stock of goods and compelling the people t? llee for their lives. Two persona .were drowned in town and three in the country along Turkey creek and Salt Fork. A dozen or more houses were washed away. The damage done in that county alone will ex ceed $500,000. Th a Anaconda Mine Sold. Chicago, June 15. A special dispatch from Butte, Mont., saya August Belmont, as agent of the Rothschilds, has been instructed to close a deal by which the latter will. Septemlier next, take posaes- sion of the great Anaconda copper mines. The price to be paid ia stated at $20,000,000 and $25,C00, 000. The pui chase by the Roths childs is said to be for a loreign syndicate. PORTLAND ELECTION HARDLY CONTESTED FIGHT ON ALL SIDES. Deep Demonstration Itut No Dis turbanceEvery Man Work With a Determination to Win. Porti XD,June 15. The contest being waged to-day is a bitterly fought one, and the count ing oi the ballots can only show the result3. Though close observers throughout the day considered that the consolidation ticket was taking the lead. I p to 1 :30 the count had pro ressed far enough to show that the consolidation tiaket was elec ted by about 1CJ0 majority. 1 tie ticket elected is as loilows: Mavor W. S. Mason. City attorney W. T. Muir. Police judge Charles H.Carey. Auditor and clerk Win. T. Cranih. Assessor James Flower. Superintendent of streets Douglas V. Taylor. Overseer street cleaning depart ment Chris. Bomberger. City surveyor T. M. Hurlburt. Police commissioner Frank Logan. Fire commissioner J.II.Sieffen. The following are the council- men First ward D. W. Crowley. Fourth ward J. Frank Watson, II. B. Nicholas. Fifth ward Peter Ilobkirk, Eugene Shelby. Sixth ward Wm. I lent, John Myers. Seventh ward II. Hansen, W. II. Merrick. Eighth ward John Parker, Ja cob 1 ittenger. Sam Small's Side to the Story. Philadelphia, June 15. With reference to the report telegraphed from Denver on Friday last, Rev. Sam Small says the Colorado con ference was misrepresented and himself damaged by the incorrect report that it dismissed or ex pelled him from the Methodist ministry. He says that, having resigned the presidency of the Utah university, lie asked to be rejwrted to the Colorado confer ence and there be discontinued from further connection. The vote in the matter was purely formal, and in no sense penal or condemnatory. Relieving Her Feting. ' Mrs. Brown (at Mrs. Smith's tea) ''Oh, dear, that dreadful Miss Smith ia singing again. I wonder what started her." Tom Brown (aged 7) "I dropped a nick'e down her back when she wasn't looking," No Doubt She Will. Old Bachelor "Do you expect to marry, or do you prefer to keep your liberty, Miss Van Sand?" Miss Van Sand "What a funny question, I intend to do both." Call and see the new line of gingham wrappers just received at the Ladies Bazaar. The Ladies Bazaar lias etill a cood selection of millinery ffbich they are selling at greatly reduced rates. If you need a hat give them a call. Thomas Brink has received a stock of baby carriages which he ia offering at prices as low as the lowest, and they are first-class goods.