BOHEMIA NUGGET
I'ubllitied Every Friday.
Cottage grove Oregon
I NEWS IF THE M
Comnrrhennlve Itovlew of tho Import
nnt Happening of tho Pt Week
Called Fraiu tho Teler-raph Column!
Thn hosDltal-sliin MIsionrI hai ar
fired nt Fortress Monroe iiom Havana,
with 212 sick soldiers.
Ono thousand United States militia
men will take part in the queen's birth
day celebration in Kingston, Ont.
Tho sixth nnnual convention of tho
Association of Railroad Air Brnkemen
is in session in Detroit, with about 100
delegates present.
Tim British house of commons re
jected the bill providing for the com-.
pulsory reinstatement ot Irish tenants
evicted sinco 1879.
A miner has reaohed Dyea, Alaska,
who claims to bo tho survivor ot a
party of three, two of whom were mur
derd by Chilkat Indians near tho vil
lage of Klukwan. The men killed
were Sidney Vanco. an Englishman,
and Chalrcs Ericksen, a Swede.
In tho battle betweon the revolution
ists under Pando and President Alon
to's army, near Oruro, Bolivia, 300
wero killed. General Pando occupied
Ornro without confusion. President
Alonzo, with a small body guard, is a
refugee at Antofagaata. bay of Moreno,
Chile.
Ensign Monaghan, who was brutally
killed at Apia, Samoa, was born at
Chewelah, Wash., in 1873. Ho was
educated in private schools of San
Francisco and Portland, and in Gon
zaga college, a Jesuit institution of
Spokane. His father is now a resident
of the latter city.
Tho Maryland Steel Company at
Sparrows Point, has reoeived an order
for 75,000 tons of 07-pound steel rails,
for the Chinese Eastern railroad. The
mills are working day and night on a
large order of similar rails for the
trans-Siberian road, of which the
Chinese Eastern will be a continuation.
Prospectors who have arrivod from
Alaska bring news that tbeie are at
least 400 prospectors on the Edmonton
trail between Dease lake and the Hud
son's Bay post on the Liaid river, most
of whom nro in destitute circum
stances. Many of the men are said to
be suffering from scurvy and frost
bites. The sick oannot receive proper
medical attendance, and many are
dying.
The Cleveland carpenters' strike was
settled by compromise.
The American Smelting & Refining
Company organized in New York by
electing directors.
The Cuban railway strike has ended.
Trainmen, afraid to loso their jobs,
surrendered without condition.
President Barrows, of Oberlin col
lege, announced the anonymous gift of
$50,000 for building and equipping a
chemical laboratory.
At Bridgeport, Conn., Dr. Nancy A.
Guilford pleaded guilty to man
slaughter, and was sentenced to 10
years' imprisonment.
The ratifications of the peace treaty
have been exchanged. Bellamy Storer,
now minister to Belgium, will be the
new minister to Spain.
The Victoria trades and labor council
protests against the importation of 20
men from Pennsylvania to work on a
steamer at Lake Bennett.
Tho president has appointed Law
rence Townsend, of Pennsylvania, to
succeed Bellamy Storer as United
States minister to Brussels.
In a scuffle for possession of a rifle,
Albert Pemberton, n private of the
Twonty-fifth infatnry, was killed at
Fort Logan by a comrade, Peter Horn.
John E. O'Brien, chief of tho Santa
Fe fire department, was instantly
killed by tho California limited train
as it was passing through tho yards in
Topeka.
! Ex-Secretary Whitney has organized
a trust in New York to control electric
transportation. It is said the trust
will in timo extend its operations to
the WcBtern cities.
Two thousand miners who went out
at Danville, III,, last week, liavo de
cided to lay the matter boforo tho state
arbitration board, and will resume
operations.
Five ohildren of Olo Peterson, ot
"Viborg, Turner county, 8outh Dakota,
wero poisoned by eating wild parsnips.
Two aro dead, one dangerously ill, and
two will rocover.
John D. Sims and Leonard Hale
were drownod at Shorobar, Cal., on
the north sido of Feather river. They
attempted to cross tho stream in a can
vas boat, which upset.
The private bank of L. P, Hunsnor
and McKInzio, at Alma, Wis., has been
closed by order of the state bank ex
aminer. The bank owes depositors
$60,030, and nas very little cash on
Jiand.
LATER NEWS.
President McKinloy was ontortainod
At a dinner givon by Associato Justlco
Gray, of tho supromo court.
Tho Canndian Pacific lailwny's
roundhouse at Fort William, Manitoba,
was destroyed by firo. Sovon new Mo
jul engine's wero ruined. Total loss
about $80,000.
An order for 87,000 rifles of light
power hos been placod by tho Mexicnn
(jovcrnment in Now York. Tho ordor
is the largest ono in this country by a
foreign power in tho lust 25 years.
Horr Polack, a woll-known engineer
and elottr.'cian, has discovered, sayt
tho Vienna corespondent ot tho London
Chronicle, n means of telegraphing
00,000 words per hour over a single
wiro.
Whilo tho Denver fire department
wns unrkine to extinguish a tire ut the
Pintsch gas woiks, an explosion of gag
occurred iusido of tho building, injur
ing oight men, all connected with the
department.
Tho British houso of commons has
passed to a second reading the bill in
tioduced by Chamberlain, empowering
local authorities to advance money to
enable occupiers to acquire ownership
ot small houses.
Mrs. Catherine Woods, aged 74
years, was burned to death at Sacra
monto, nnd a 4-year-old grandson was
so badly burned that his recovery if
doubtful. Tho child dragged a lighted
lamp from a table.
Walter Grav. aced CO. assistant
bookkeeper in tho subtreasurv at St.
Louis, was arrested for euihezzlinc
$700. He admitted having taken the
money, to get medical attention foi
his crippled child, and intended later
to repay it.
Tho Twenty-first United States in
fantry, tho famous Indian fichtinc regi
ment of early days, and later very ac
tive participants in Uio uuuan cam
paign, have departed from San Fran
cisco fox the Philippines oil tho trans
port Hancock.
Dnrine election riots at Bilhon.
Knnin. 26 ncrsons were wounded. Pop
ular feeling tuns high in Valencia and
surrounding districts. There was a
serious affair in tiie town of Portos,
province of Tarragona, where the ofll
cial candidate being beaton, the munic
ipal officials fired guns at the crowd,
njuring a number oi persons.
A Presbyterian Sunday school has
been established in Havana.
Sarmeinto. a Brazilian village, has
been destroyed by an earthquake.
Three persons perished.
S. W. Ginstead, a Humboldt. Nov.,
bank cashier, committed suicide, il is
accounts were $10,000 short.
Mrs. Ida Ewing, charged with hav
ing murdered her sister-in-law, Mrs.
Lizzie Ewing, was acquitted by a
Maryville, Mo., jury.
The schooner Mary Bidwell, that left
St. Michaels, Alaska, in August last,
for Alaska ports, has been heard from
at Port Clarence, waiting to sail for
the south.
Arrangements have been completed
whereby President MoKinley will
push an electric button which will
start work on the San Pedio break
water. Vice-President Hobart, who is sick
at Washington, is holding the gain
shown last week. Ho is able to par
take of more hearty food, and sits up
about half an hour daily.
Tho Americans plan to trap Agui
naldo by sending troops via tho sea
route to the north of him. Then he
will be between two lines oi Ameri
cans, and it may besult in his capture.
A verdict of $6,000 damages against
T. J. Carson, a Kentucky racehorse
breeder, in favor of W. F. Singleton,
photographer, who was shot by Car
sons, was returned at Lexington.
By the explosion cf a sawmill boilor,
near Chippewa Falls, Wis., Lem Wil
cox, John Brisnois and William Olson
were killed and Engineer P. A. Briggs
and four others were injured.
Naval orders posted at Washington
announce tho promotion to the rank of
rear-admiral of Sampson, Sctiley and
Farquahar, tho latter commandant of
tho Norfolk navy-yard.
Tho Madrid official gazette con
tains a royal decree appointing the
Duko do Arcos to bo Spanish envoy ex
traordinary and minister plenipoten
tiary to tho United States.
Tho United States consul-general at
Berlin, Frank Mason, has revised fig
ures showing that in tho last three
months there was an increase of
$4,807,034 in tho exportation to the
United States from Germany.
The 20th annual meeting of the na
tional conference of charities and cor
rections will bo held in Cincinnati
May 17 to 23. Every stato in the
Union will bo represented oxcopt per
haps Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah
and Washington.
In ordor to controvort tho claim ot
tho Washington agricultural depart
ment that Gorman toys contain certain
poisonous dyes and paints, tho German
minister of corarnorco has ordered an
investigation to bo made in all tho toy
making centers of Gormany with a
view of gathoring ovldonco to tho contrary.
Ill
J I
XPEDITION
Returns From Its Sortio Into
tho Country.
NOW QUARTERED IN MANILA
FUlplnoi In Lake Klnn Oet Tiilr
of American rower- Lawltin Declare.
That 100,000 Men An Needed.
Manila, April 18. Major-Genoral
Lawton'B expedition to tho Laguna dc
Bay district re-ombarekd Inst ovening,
anchored for tho night at tho head of
tho rlvor Pasig and xeachod Manila
litis morning, bringing all tho men and
tho captured Insurgent boats, its ob
jects, namely tho capture of tho Insui
gents' boats and tho distribution of tho
proclamation, omphasizod by a losson
of American power throughout thn lako
region, have been attained. General
Lawton Immediately began prepara
tions for an impoitant oxpodltlon on
land. Thoro has been no lighting on
the lake for three dure.
Lawton returned to Manila according
to orders from Otis. Lawton dooluros
that America needs 100,000 men to
pacify tho Philippines. Ho says that
with tho present forco ho could go
through all Luzon, but to maintain
government tho United States must gar
rison all tho towns. It haB not tho
men, therefore tho need ot a largo
at my.
All tho towns in tho La Gnnda hoy
district captured must bo abandoned,
ruuoh to Lawton 's regret. Thoy In
clude Peate. Santa Cruz, Longos, Lum
ban, Pngasajan. A second campaign Is
to bo mado in this country In the rainy
season, when boats of greater draught
can operate- in tho lake owing to higher
water, thus giving tho boats a chance
to help tho army. Lawton's troops
will ho used in the operations north
ward, and may bo sent around by boat
to tho north of Agulnaldo to out him
off and force him betweon two lines.
With Lawton one side and MacArthur
at Calumpit on tho other.
THE RALEIGH WELCOMED.
Grout Enthuelaim at Now York Over
the Cruller.
New York, April 18. The celebra
tion attending the return of the United
States cruieer Raleigh from Manila,
which had to bo postponed yesterday
owing to the worship's late arrival, oc
curred today. Tho Raleigh, accom
panied by two small war vessels, cap
tured from tho Spaniards last summer,
and a fleet of about 25 excursion
steamers and tugboats, paraded from
Tompkinsvllle to Grant's tomb and
from there back to anchorage in the
North river, off Thirty-fourth street.
A steady downpour of rain fell from
noon on. Tho air was raw, and the.
officers and-mon of the Raleigh stood
upon the decks three hours drenched to
the skin and shivering with cold.
Great crowds assembled in Riverside
Park, overlooking tho Hudson, and
men, women and children stood there
for hours under umbrellas watching tho
vessels on their way up the river and,
on their rotnrn. By far the greatest
t . . i i . .i ... I. '
garnering oi people w.ib in mo vicinity
of Grant's tomb, which was tho turn
ing point oi tho paiade. A national
saluto was fired thoro by the Raleigh, 1
and also by the captuiod Spanish
prizes, and the scene was rendeied a
memorable one by tho shrieking of n
hundred steam whistles from excursion
bouts and locomotives and choors from
thousands of people on shore, and
the vessels m tho river.
REBELS TALK PEACE
c..ni..i wm . .;;''"'' ,oWon
S "wiiini. i. Mii o
uii oli to.l to conlor with Oeiwinl Otis
to tho anil of securing .wrtco. according
o Gene Tl, A1"lc!,n,
LowoTcr bollero this comnili-loii.
I, ch will number a score or moio of
! ! Ul, Vlllplm..,rnt to Piotoet tho ,
property rather than end tho war.
The object of tho rebel comm "hjn,
is said to bo to secure " '
of solf-gcvornniont n possible, Ismaii
that all the oflkt-s bo rciorvod for 1 ill
nlnos and Americans, ami roitoro
RIS. One of Agulnaldo'. Into chief.
Manila declares the rebel chief
would now bo glad toicoelvo overtures,
and would lgn a ponce treaty.
Agulnaldo is inid to hove moved his
headquarters to Turland, far to tho
northward. At Calumpit the force, of
tho Americans hove boon largely aug
mented, Iterell f I.awtnrt.
Now York. April 10.-A unrelnl lo
tho Herald from Washington ny:
When shown a dispatch announcing
tho recall of Ooni'ial Lawton, Hrlga-diet-Genural
Hohwan, acting adjutant
goimral, said It was in acoordancti with
the understanding at tho war depart
input as to the purpoio of General
Lawton's campaign.
"General Otis sent this expedition
to Southern Luzon," ho continued,
"for the purpoo of destroying any in
.urgent forces that might bo found
there, to make a careful reconnols
sanoo of tho territory and to spread
broadcast the recent proclamation of
tho Philippine commission, suiting
forth tho purposes of this Kornrrunorit
with respect to thu Islands. I expect
he will clear all tho prisoners ho ha.
taken, and thoy will bo sent to their
homes. By this action it i. 1ioh.mI ho
will provo to the FUlplnoi that tho
Americans aro not ns barbarous as thu
insuigents pretend wo aro and that wa
proixuo to treat tho Filipinos hu
manely." "Why is General Lawton needed at
Manila?''
"Genoral Otis has not communicated
his plans to the department, thu mat
tor boing left entirely to hi. discretion.
Tho insurgent leader ha. establi.hod
his headquarters at San Fernndo, to the
iinrlliwi-dt of M:ilulox. and I surinosu
General Otis contemplates a movement
against that city. General Lawton had
only 1,600 men under his command,
and it was of courso impoiiibla for
him to divido his forco by stationing
detachments in every village captured.
His command will bo useful, howovor,
in assisting in tho advance on Mnlolos,
or In reinforcing tho lino about tho city
of Manila. It is pom i bio that when
tho lako rises, General Otis will to
sume the campaign in the southern
part of tho island."
GERMAN KING IN CHINA.
on
SOLDIERS IN A RIOT.
Kuril a Saloon Yl'lirrn a Comrade Had
lleen Mletreutnil.
San Francisco. April 18. Tonight
800 United States soldiors aro undor
arrest on tho Presidio reservation. They
aro encamped on tho open, and are
guarded by cavalry and tho Twenty
fourth infantry regiment, colored, the
force boing in charge of Adjutant Lieu
tenant Harris. Tho offense of tho men
was tho burning of a saloon just out
side of the reservation lines, in whioh
Private Charles L. King, company G,
Twenty-third infantry, was brutally
beaten last night.
Prlvato Stark, of company F, also
of tho Twenty-third regiment, Is In the
guardhouse, charged with the assault,
hut the soldiers assort that tho saloon
people are responsible, and claim that
tho proprietor, A. L. Rehfeld, was the
ohief assailant of the injured man. A
report being oiroulated today that
King was dead, tho place was set on
fire tonight and dostroyod as an uot of
ietribbution.
I'orto Blco r,uri.
San Juan do Porto Rico, April 18.
Tho following genoral orders from tho
headquarters of tho department of
Porto Rloo wero issued today:
Tho war department having forbid
den tho issue of rations to Porto
Rioans, commanding officers of posts
aro authorized, to prevent suffering
among the people in their respoctivo
localities, to purchase necessary ar
ticles of food at a rate not to oxceod 10
contavos a day for each needy person
and to send tho bill tor snmo to this
offloe for paymont from tho moneys ot
the Island, as dirooted by the authori
ties ot Washington.
Ileporl of I'rlnre llenrj'e Ambition Not
Credited.
Washington, April 18. Official Oor
man circles hero are not a little amused
at the latent Chinese news, which aa
ciibes to Emperor William tho inten
tion to niaku his brother Henry a Ger
man king on Chinese soil. Tho state
ment is characterized n. n wilil nml
baseless invention, and tho same, It is
announced on tho highest authority,
can bo said of tho alleged interview
published by the Paris Soir and cabled
to sonio American newspapers, quoting
the first secretary of tho Gorman em
bassy in PariB as saying that the
Americans must tako tho responsibility
for alt that has happened In Samoa and
that tllOV. intoxicated III tlmir vifMnrlim
ovei the Spaniards, consider themselves
a military nation of tho first rank.
The Alaaka llounilarr.
Toronto, Ont., April 18. An Ot
tawa dispatch to the Gloho says: The
government has had under discussion
tho suggestion of tho Washington
authorities of a tentative settlement of
the Southorn Alaska boundary ques
tion, and an ordor in council has boon
passed agreeing in tho main to the
United States suggestion for tho adop
tion of a modus vivondl, but stipulat
ing in tortus the determination of tho
government of Canada to consont to no
suoh arrangement unless It is agreed by
tho United States that thoro shall he
taken speedily stops to have tho bound
ary sottlcd finally.
The Daaf Hear.
Mobile, Ala., April 18. Reose
Hutohinson, a young electrician gradn
nto of Auburn colloge, Alabama, is ox
hibiting horo his apparatus for making
tho deaf hear. Ho augments vibration
nnd enables deaf mutes to hoar words
spokon In ordinary tonoa. Tho nppar
otus is tho sizo of a pocket-book, nnd Is
connected by wires with an nudlphono,
which is hold at tho oar. Two totally
deaf men wcio experimented with.
Thoy stood 60 foot from tho plnno and
marked the timo of tho music, laughing
with delight over tho novel oxporlonco.
In the Maw of tho Trust.
Donver, April 18,-Tbo Globo Bmol
tor has been turnod over to tho now
combine, tho Amorican 8moltlng& R0.
fining Company. Intimation has boon
givon to tho workmen that tholr wagoa
will bo roduced provldod tho now
eight-hour law is obsorvod. Tho
Omaha & Grant smoltor will bo tranB
forred to tho trust May I, and the Arco
will follow
n n 1 1 m ..
Mill ill
Thn Rnhnlo .
uurmun Hnrilor,
SWORN EVIDENCE
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Continuing, Mi. Ilrixleikk
tolcgraphlo reports rccclrt- ?
afford sufTlctuiit Uniterm! fremt
ties, but so fat a. iccilalnl.:i.
tion of tho Unlttxl Slalf. aril T
rmtnl commnndor. was caoe!b
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paK.T on tho .object."
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Gcoigo J. Gonchcn. on Uinf
Honed leipocting th luUldititi
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cumpanirfl, in urucr iu ii m
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dotting tho subsidy policy
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iuuib nuu a smnu iiotu",,,vv ..,(
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advance tomorrow.
a ..mT
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u u a u uuiriiniiiiiiuniiL u in ,.An
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oi mo amcor or Aigiiaiim." - , j
lot mlBsod tho nmoor and wouna
Aiguan gonoral standing