Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18??, November 24, 1882, Page 16, Image 16

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On Tuesday afternoon, at Tenino,
inst, at 10:30 o’clock. Everybody is
while
attempting to board the freight
invited to attend and join in thanksgiv­
:
train,
a
man was instantly killed by a
ing for the mercies and favors of the
Portland.
'
f
l
portion of the train passing over lrifc
The roadway to the upper Ash street year.
body.
dock is being laid.
The body of Robert Campbell, lately
racifle Cosisi.
Capt.
James
E.
Denny
has
been
ap-
H
M'
-------
*
-------------------
e
----
from
Vancover was found floating in the
tu'»,-..-.,
_________ ,_______________ taasssaanaaMuma
y iatohuv»
' porntaa~T>yniy~ a 1 rect ur s oTrnKF or t ltrw
f
Tug-boat Company commander of the mill.
-Immigrants are pouring into Olym­
Building
is going on very rapidly in
tug Pioneer. Capt. Denuy is an experi­
pia
faster than adequate accommoda­
enced seaman, and knows the Columbia I Pendleton.
tions
cau be provided forthem.
An $8000 hotel is to be erected in
river bar thoroughly.
Paine’s block, at Wallu Walla, took
The trouble with the Chinese employ­ Pataha City.
fire
on Thursday night last, and was
Grant county has 92,167 sheep, vulucd
es on the Baker City branch of the O.
damaged
to the extent of $5000.
at $80,000.
------- Gfl.,’ a.. JQ ad..luuJ we» ««tiled and ,
Ai rst-
»ethflin returned from
the men have resumed work.
Iowa to
alia on - 111
last week.
Merchants of Yreka, Cal., are consid­
The Dalles is having new water mains companied by 38 persons who contem­
ering the advisability of having their laid in its streets.
plate settling in that section. Among
freight shipped by way of this city and
Columbiu county’s vote numbered the number are Mrs. Cheetham’s father
the O. A C. ll.ll. to Riddle and hauling
and mother.
J
at tho late election,
.
thence over the mohhWns. ThSTMifS' ’ The colony’s mill at WT.atcom is ship­ -—-A
in Oregon are very heavy, but those be­ ping shingles to Seattle.
of the Seattle saw mills of furnishing
tween Redding and Yreka are much
The Hillsboro Tribune has suspended lumber for box and passenger cars for
worse and are now next to impassible publication- Cause, lack Of support.
the railroad. This rolling stock is to be
for freight trains.
The Wasco county court house will be manufactured at Tacoma, where the
lumber is being Bliipped.
The city dredger, which is lying finished in a few days.
<
Thomns Gason, au old resident of
alongside the river bank just below
The Dalles now has one of the hand­
Douglas county, died at his home on
Smith Bros. & Co.’s mill, receiving her somest school houses in Oregon.
Forest
creek, lust week, aged about 50
machinery, is rapidly apprOachlDgeom-'
8. F. .Packwood, of Kittitass Valley,
years.
pletion, and if no unforeseen mishap oc* has cut 27,222 bushels of grain the last
curs will be ready for use at the time season.
Miss Pheebe Grey hasbeen compelled
named in the contract, Dec. 1,’1882.
to
resign her place as teacher in the
A good sample of Sorghum made
X lm ia afl»! l u i ti i r a aa. tliia eitj..an/l...Al- fmm nm.> gm«-» in Wasc o- county has Ashland College, op account of ill health
andTàNtìrèek'tFÌTrrnef
—bina Lus - bo grown within six -months been shown in The Dalles.______
Salem.
that the ferry at Albina is too small to
All the flouring mills in Salem are
accomodate it. The Veto, formerly on running day and night, turning out a
The first frame building put up in
the Vancover route, has been lengthen­ vast amount of flour.
southern Oregon, was the old Faw mill
ed and in «It broader so that it will take
B. Phelps, of Silverton, raised on his bnilt at Ashland, by A. D. Helman and
eight trucks at one load, and will go on hop yuid of
acres this season, over others in the Helman homestead lot at
the Albina route this week.
seven tons of hops.
that place. The old land mark was last
D.
D.
Prettyman,
of
Salem,
has
ship
­
week torn down.
So soon as the ordinance granting to
ped
in
tin
cans
50
bushels
of
seed
wheat
the Transcontinental Street Railway
Warren, a young son of W. A. Moody,
(Taylor. Woodward and associates) the to seed men in Philadelphia.
of Dayton, while handling a pirtol one
right to Third and G streets becomes a
^Tay*TasT^weekT "c’TffiS4‘’n'eff!rmtyBilng"'thlW
law, rails for the road will be ordered the Puyallup river recently a sturgeon third finger of the left hand by the acci­
in New York by telegraph. They will weighing sixty pounds.
dental discharge of the weapon.
Ellensburg has had a heavy growth
be shipped around the Horn in a sailing
vessel, to leave about January 1, 1883. during the past f9W months, and many
Eastern.
Two cars of the Washington Street new buildings have been erected.
By the sinking of a barge in the New
The Klickitat flouring mills will be
line—double enders, like the new ones
York
harbor, (’apt. Taylor’s mother,
in full running order in a few days un­
on Erst street have arrived.
wi
e,
three
of his children and two deck
der charge of an experienced miller.
Monmouth and Vicinity.
The Ellensburg saw mill is now in hands were drowned on the 17th.
A collision on tho Alton railroad
There were good rains the first of the full blast, and cutting lumber for a
week, but it is now fine and clear again. building 28x60 feet to enclose the ma­ twenty miles cast of Kansas City, oc­
curred on the 14th, killing 3 men and
Eld. J. F. Floyd is expected to arrive chinery.
Tho steamship <leo. IF. Elder will wounding 8 others.
from Kansas on Saturday next.
J. B. Tinsley, of Knoxville, Tenn., a
Under the management of Eld. Waller soon go into the dry dock at Hunter’s
stock
trader, presented a fo/ged note to
the prayer meetings are growing in in­ Point and be repaired and repainted.
the
Cleveland,
Tenn., bank on the 16th,
Rees Williams’ hotel at Ilwaco was
terest and attendance.
and when discovered, Bhot himself
Mr. J. L. Murphy, our town marshal, burned Tuesday with most of its con­ through the head, dying instantly.
was out in the mountains hunting last tents. L ohs ¿3400 ; insurance $2300.
The court house at Aderson, Grimes
week and bad the misfortune of being ' Mr. Carkeek, of Seattle, has been county, Texas, was burglarized on the
shot by his brother who mistook l-im awarded the contract of building the 16th. All the election returns were ta-
in the bushes for a deer. The large new bank at Salem.
The Oregon -Slant Line is making ken by unknown parties.
rifle ball (4a calibre Wincbesfor) enter-
At Windom, Minn., two children of
el near the top of the right shoulder preparations to build its bridges across ihe Rev. Mr. Gleason, Methodist minis
ranging down near the spinal column, Snake river near the mouth of Burnt ter, aged 11 and 14 years, were drowned
inflicting a serious, but not dangerous, river.
There are nbont thirty newspapers in the Des Moines river on the 16th, by
wound.
breaking through'the ice while skating.
published in Wellington Territory.
The first term of the College and
The death of Sir Andrew Buchanan,
As high as $21 per ton has been paid
formal school closes to-day. The atten-. Tor baled hay the past week in Vancou­ diplomatist, is announced.
dance has been about 140 with the inter­ ver.
The Chinese minister is visiting At­
est and attendance constantly growing.
torney-General
Ifrewster in Philadel­
Two dogs attacked a band of thirty-
The second term opens on next Monday. two sheep, belonging to Jesse McGee, phia.
It will be an excellent time for new stu­ of Linn county, and killed 6 and wound­
A strike in the Newport rolling mills,
dents to enter.
threatens
to stop all work in them.
ed 13.
Kavanaugh,
whose ntffne became fa­
The new jail is up and the roof on. It
Fully 10,000 acres of land have 1 een
will be finished in a few days more.
taken -up in the northern part of What­ mous in connection^with the seige Luck­
Thanksgiving services will be held in com county during the past month by now is dead.
Burglars entered the residence of W.
ifee College chapel on Thursday, 30 th I actual settlers.
NEWS OF THE WEEK
M
I i
■><
i
.....I
K
.y
M. A. Pool, clerk of the superior court
of Alexander county, N. C., bound and j
gaggod him and made their escape with
■$’00 belonging to the County.
The doad body of Dr. J. G. S. Mohr,
of Chicugo. was found in his office. Ho
had evidently been dead some days.
the cause of his death is not known.
Harry Lockwood Grant, aged 25, old­
est son of tho late Orville Grant, and
nephew of ex President Grant, died on
the 13th. He was employed in the
New York sub-treasury.
iliimliwul Mie iant flint ,»
there are within the city limits of
Providence, R. I., upwards of 2OC0
oases of fever of different forms, vary­
ing from light malarial to malignant
typhoid. Many physicians assert that
"ttlé eOuimWM-
riyer is the cause.
■ ' -
Foreign.
v
No cholera has appeared at Mecca
since the 4th inst.
Chevalier Nigra has been appointed f--
Italian ambassador to England.
The prince of Wales will preside at
the Longfellow meeting at- t ie Lyceum
to be held in January.
Mrs. Mackey, wife of J. W. Mackey,
Aft
month’s dangerous illness io Pana._____
Two pilots were drowned while at­
tempting to reach a distressed vessel on
fire off the Frith of Forth.
President Grevy has beefi seized .with 0
a sudden illness. He had two atttacks •
of rush of blood to the brain which were "
caused by indigestion. The attack was ~
apoplectic in its character._____ .
Railways in Germauy running towards ’
Russia are interrupted by
atzvwtyi a __ _
Buviluu.
y
President Grevy, of France, is urged
to resign, as the only means of prolong-
ing his life.
The Dublin jnry in the Patrick Joyee
case for the murder of the Joyee family
at Cong, returned a verdict of guilty.
Judge Barry sentenced the prisoner to
be hanged December 15.
It is reported Gladstone will resign
the chancellorship of the exchequer.
Also that Sir Hugh Childers will leave
the war office for exchequer, the earl of
Northbrook taking the war office.
’ ’
«
Business Locals.
If you want to get a picture copied or
enlarged or a lot of fine views of Oregon
and Columbia river scenery or a dozen
first-class photographs any size, go to
I. G. Davidson, the busiest and moat
HriccesFfni photographer in Portland. '
Jno. A. MacDonald, of the Salem
Marble and Granite Works, Commer­
cial Street, south of the post office,
manufactures all kinds of monuments:
Italian marble a speciality. Prices re­
duced one-half
N ew Mumgf—Send stamp to Wiley B.
Allen, most popular music dealer, Port­
land, Or., for complete catalogue and
ram pie copy •’ Musical Pastime.** All
orders by mail filled promptly.
0/
The Household Sewing Machine took
the first premium at the great Man­
chester (England) Exposition for the
best family Sewing Machine. John B.
Garrison, general agent, 167 3rd St.,
Portland, Oregon.
f
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