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About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1903)
DOES LITTLE WORK TREATY IS DEAD. Eugene Weekly Guard. STREET CARS ALL TIED UP. Newark Has th« Greatest Strike In Yea«-« ■nd End Is Nel laL >• HAPPENINGS HERE IN OREGON Newark, N.J., Sept. 26.—The big- state department closed gat strike in Newark in the past 20 years began tonight and extend«! EVENTS OF THE DAY un lice guard. It is expected that by to morrow the strike will have extended to the power houses, including thoa that supply tha lighting circuits. Odd Fallows will erect a 31,000,000 temple in Baltimore. At Sanger, Cal., a clevei thief sub stituted a brick for 31,600 in coin. The gas bouse employe* are ■!«> aid to be ready to go out and complete the tie up. Newark trolley men declared the ■trike will bw general all through Es sex, Hudson, I’asaic and Union coun Turkey has appointed a commission to inaugurate reforma in Macedonia. Receiver Scobey of the Olympia land office is cnarged with being abeent without leave. ties l«efore tomorrow noon. The men have demand«! 22 cents an hour, the abolition of the "sp it runs” system and recognition of the union. President McCarter, ot the public T. Manuel Hermann, biothei of the i service corporation, which controls Oregon congressman has resigned from most ol the trolley iinee, had practi office in the pension service. cally promised that thecompany would . Great pressure is being brought to accede to the men’s demands, but it is , bar to have Lord Milner reconsider understood that tonight there has l>een ' bis refusal tc enter the British cabinet. i objection to this on the part of some of the directors. Up to a late houi to- Premier Balfour holds that the best ; night President McCarter had not solution of the Balkan problem is for definitely informed the employes as to the powers to support a Russo-Austrian what the real attitude of the corpora agroamant. tion ia. The striking carmen at Newark, N. Coming as it did at the busiest J., have returned to work. The com traffic hour of the day, the strike pany has promised to consider the caught thonsaads of working p««ple changa damandod. ■ nd shoppers unprepared. Many of No trace Las been found of the men them were com pel lad to walk mila to who attempted to hold up the O. K. A their homes in the suburbs. N. train nar Portland. The wounded man who was captured continues to improve. Austria fare a Kossuthist revolution in Hungary. Lord Milner ie oelievad to have de clined to enter the British cabinet. In a r« ent battle lietwaen rebels and Turkish troops the latter lost 600 men. WINDFALL FOR AMERICA. British Storms Ruined Fruit Crop, ■nd Imports Were Never so Big. London, Sept. 20.—America ie now raping great benefit from the storms Progress Has Been Made In the Industry. The great progress that has been made in the prune industry in this state in the last few years is indicated by the machinery which has been put in operation at the Willamette Valley Prune Association's warehouse in Salem. In one corner of the ware house stands an old-fashioned hand prune grader, of the back-breaking type It «as capable of handling ten tons of fruit a day if a gang of men could keep it going steadily. In the center of the warehouse la a massive power grader, 42 feet long and ten feet high, the most up-to-date machine for that kind of work. Its capacity is 100 tons a day. In former years the prunes were loaded on trucks, taken up to Ul<‘ second floor on an elevator and emptied into the grader by men who lifted the sa'-ks of prunes to the hopper. Now the grader stands on the third floor. A continuous chain carrying cups runs from the base ment to the top of the grader. On any floor prunes may be dumped into a hopper and they are carried up to the grader without further effort. From the grader the prunes run through a steam process from which they emerge into another hopper and from this they drop into boxes all ready for packing. From start to finish manual labor is reduced to a minimum and nearly all the work is done by machinery. During the pas sage of the prunes through the grader and processor they are cleaned of all dirt, are made uniform in moisture and are placed In the boxes bright and clean. wheat trade at standstill . which made the past summer one of the worst on record in Great Britain and the continent. Thanks to the No Sales Oa the Peadleton Market ■nd No Shipments Io Coast. The Shenango, Pa., tin plate mill, The wheat market of Pendleton ■nd the largest in the world, is to shut ruined home crop, California fruit i* vicinity is at a complete standstill. being imported in larger quantities down. No sales have been made for nearly than ever tielore. The sales last week Mrs. Jefferson Davis, widow of the a week and no shipments of moment president of the Southern Confederacy, in London marked a record with 25,- ■re being made to the coast. is in Buffalo, seriously ill. 000 boxes of American fruit, represent This state of affairs waa caused by Russia and Austria have again ing about 675,000 pounds weight. The the sudden decline In prices. Club Is warned Turkey and Bulgaria against fruit was sold at a two days' auction in quoted at 67 cents per bushel, while war, and declare massacres must cease. bluestem Is selling at 70 cents. This Cogent Garden Market, the prices aver Is a drop of 5 cents per bushel on both Russian soldiers are persecuting the aging 30 per cent above what has here classes of wheat. Jews of Gomel. The («eople were l«st- The mills had boosted the price. tofore been obtained here. The ala en and their bouses robbed and burned. They were just out of wheat, and If were chiefly of California pears and they had not paid high prices they The hunt for the men who held up plums with a fair consignment of New would have been forced to shut down. the O. K. A N. train nar Portland has Some of the mills Bouth of here had so far failed. No trace whatever can York state Bartlett pears to suspend operations because they There is practically no English fruit be found of the bandits. The wounded did not care to pay such a fancy price. man refuses to give any particulars as obtainable, while France, which usual The mills are now well supplied and ly exports large quantities of pears to are buying but little, only In cases to who hia confederates are. England, is sending none. The Amer where there Is storage room. An Illinois court haa reoognixml a ican section of Covent Garden market The export buyer seems out of the decree of divorce granted in Russia as is now almost the sole source of supply, market. The farmers will not sell at valid. and there are no signs of the demand the present quotations, and the buyers There American apples, which will not offer higher money. Senator 8<ott, of Wat Virginia, con decreasing. would not hie profitably are about 900,000 bushels of unsold tinues to improve, and will be out in hitherto shipped hither till later in the year, wheat in the county. ten days. Never was there such keen activity now have a brisk trade. Foity-two among farmers in storing wheat. The Rural guards have captured Juan thousand barrels of Canadian apples buyers sa ythat about 3000 sacks are lolwz, the leader of the recent Coban are expected in the London market to- arriving in Pendleton dally, which is day, aud record prices are assured. 1000 sacks above the average dally Four tourists who were climbing the delivery. This rush of wnem u> the warehouses is due to farmers fearing Fcaffel mountain, in England, fell CALLS FOR AID INCREASE. - a. a . . . „ a. àì ; . „. a wet nronou, Ml.d nlnu to get this work off their hands so fall seeding Oliver T. Sherwood, the defaulting Sault Ste. Marie la Alao Threatened can be started. By the middle of next With Another Strike. cashier of tha Southport, Conn., Na week all the grain of the country will tional bank, has been sentenced to leu Detroit, Mich., Sept. 26.—An even have been placed under shelter. The years iu prison. ing News special from Balt Ste. Marie weather Is Ideal for the finishing of harvest, Most of the grain which was Honduras continues to threaten to says the situation in the Canadian Soo, standing when the recent rains came Invade Nicaragua unless boundary dis which ie suffering moat from the shut will not be threshed, but will be cut pute over granting of • eoncosion to down of the Coneolidated Luke Superior for feed. Americans is settled. company’s plants ia today the worst The United States squadron under Installing Mining Machinery. Added the command of Rear Admiral Eraos, since the closing of the works. The Crystal Consolidated Mining has arrived at Kiao Chon, the German to the general state of destitution of company is at the present time ener colony on^the east coast of China. the discharged employes comes the an getically placing machinery that has been contracted for some time. They Since the paeage of the Irish land nouncement today that the street car are now installing a 50-horse power act many evicted tenanta now raiding men will strike next Monday unless iKiiler and engine and sawmill. They in ths United States have been making have also placed an order with the they receive their pay in full. anxious inquiria regarding the pussi* Union Iron Works, of San Francisco, The officials had previously eta ted for a stamp mill, This will soon be bility of reacquiring their former hold that the |>ay day which had been an completed and will he on the ground ings. The company Is nounced for Monday had l>een declared early next month, Annie R. Sharpley, who caused the off. The men on the street care in the also building a wagon road from the postotfice authorities much trouble road to the American Soo are also getting restless, new Champion Creek Mountain Lion claim, a distance of through her swindling operations in as are tlie men on the ferries across the 7500 feet, the coat of this road will be raising the figures on postal money or river Itetween the two Koos. Requests nl>out $4000. This company has a ders in many cities, has been sentenced for aid from the town are increasing. large amount of ore In sight and will to two years in prison in Pennsylvania. Many of them come from men who run the mill continuously during the The fishing tug Silver Spray, which have pay checks in their possession winter months. had an exciting brush August 12 with that they cannot cash. the Canadian patrol teat Petrel, has State Veterinary Board. again narrowly escaped capture. Ac Argument of America. The members of the Oregon state cording to the captain, he waa out look London, Hept. M.—The presence of ing for lost nets and might have lieen several American women brightened veterinary board, created at the last in Canadian waters. He immediately the procedings of the Alaskan Iron nd ary session of the Oregon legislature, will be named by Governor Chameblain in ordered his engineer to give the tug a commission today. David T. Watson, full head of steam, and after a brief of Pittaburg, <*ontirued his presenta a few days The board will consist of five competent practitioners of veter chase the Silver Spray eacaped. tion of tne American case, and ex- inary medicine and surgery. Two of Sir Thomas Liptun is fast regaining pected to conclude his arguments to the men to be appointed will serve night. Mr. Watson devoted the morn for a term of two years and three for his health. ing to an examination of Rnreia'a title, a term of four years and after the John Mitchell is relied upon to avert pointing out that everything in the flrst two years the term of office of a labor war against Roosevelt for his all members will be four years The Rusao-British negotiations showed that action in the Miller case. members serve without compensation, Russia’s demand for a boundary in hut receive theft traveling ami ether A New York philanthropist will take volved the exclusive possession of ali expenses. 1,000 of the poor of that city to Mon tlie coast line. tana and establish a colony. No Mouldy Hops Picked. Austen Chamberlain will be made chancellor of the exchequer in the Brit ish cabinet and either terd telborne or Lord Milnei colonial secretary. Robbers knocked nnconacion an ex- pros messenger at Chicago and rifled two safes. Very little was secured as the money they were after waa not in the car. Tntkey has appointed the former vali of Beirut as vali of Bruaa, which is rally a promotion. The action has ■roused much indignation as it is re garded as a challenge to the powers. Rear Admiral Evans criticisa the action of the board which at in the cna of Paymaster Nicbolaon. While in China Nicholaon beam« Intoxicated and lust an elderly man. The Itoard reduced him flee numbers in bis grate. Tha admiral hold* that he should havs been disrniaaed from the service. Affairs at Beirut continue quiet. A collision on thel llinols Central in the suburbs of Chicago resulted in the injury of 12 women. W. Pmith W’ooiey, ef Pocatello, has been appoint*! aaaayer at the Boia United State» assay office. Premier Balfour, of England, haa ban roundly scored because he pla.wd i a price upon his fi«al policy pamphlet. B. H. Pllea, of King connty. Wash- in«ton. baa announced himalf a candi-4 data for Foster's sat in the Unit*i Btata anato. yesterday at on 2 lb LJ^> Pr«sldcat of R.publk Necessity (or Clvg^te DAWES’ INDIAN COMMISSION RE G ARDED AS A LUXURY TO NATION. Santiago De Cuba a. ~ »•« today 4 o’clock it was agreed that the Pana MODERN PRUNE GRADINO. A BID SHEEP CENTER. til at midnight not a single street rail way car waa running, except under po Panama Canal H<M Up by Colombia Un til Time Expires. Washington, Sept. 23.—When the ► alma Thousands are Loaded at Pendleton for All Parts of th* Wcat. Pendleton is one of the greatest sheep shipping centers of the Pacific slope, railroad . men say. About 100.« 000 sheep have been shipped from and through that point this season. A 1 great many more will be shipped Is tore the winter season comes on, as the fall movement has just become es- tablished. The O. R. * N. reports that 300 cars had been shipped from and through that point, while It was ascertained that the W. & C. R had handled 200 cars. The cars, as a rule, are loaded with about 240 sheep each. These shipments are much heavier now than they were last year at this time. The shipments of the entire country will greatly exceed the ship ments of last season, for the reason that there are more sheep in the country, and feed is exceptionally scarce and sheep raisers are forced to sell. The season is now fairly opened and heavy shipments will con tinue for the next month or so. Most of the sheep have been ship ped to Portland on the coast and Seat tle and other Sound points Some have been shipped as far east as St. Paul. Heavy shipments have been made to California points. No res son is assigned for this extraordinary activity, beyond the fact that a scarc ity of mutton prevails in ths Utah section. Many sheep of Montana, this year, have been killed by sevare storms, and there is not the usual sup ply there. ma canal eight treaty waa dead, although hours yet remained within which the Colombian congress might take affirmative action upon it. Noth ing, however, had been received during the day, either from Minister Beaupre at Bogota or from Mr. Herran, the Co lombian charge here, which gave the slightest hope of a favorable issue. A report is current here that the Co lombian congress, in secret session, lias clothed President Marroquin with full power to negotiate a treaty. If this re port should turn out to be true, Presi des. Marroquin, who is counted a friend of the treaty, could proceed un trammeled by the fear of future reckon ing with his congress. In any event. President Roosevelt must now take the next step. He can elect to proceed under the S[>ooner act and take up the Nicaraguan route, or be can allow the matter to drift for the present in the hope that a way may yet 1« found to straighten out the present difficulty in the path of the Panama route. Contrary to his custom during the summer, Acting Secretary of the State Department Odell remained in the city yesterday in order tc be on hand to act promptly on any information which might come from Mr. Beaupre regard ing canal matters at Bogota. Up to 9:30o’clock, however, nothing had been received. Dr. Herran. the Colombian charge, also waited anxiously for news from his government, but likewise was disappointed. Colombia, it is known, ie anxious to keep alive the canal ne THROWS THE LAND OPEN. gotiations. One interesting feature in connection Effect of Ruling Relating to Timber and with the legislative situation in Colom bia ia the fact that the terms of one- Stone Entries. The ruling by the department to third of the members in the seriate, construe strictly the testimony taken numbering nine, will expire on the in timber and stone entries in regard 20th of next July, when the life of the These nine to speculation will have the effect of . present congress will end. throwing open again a greater part senators, it is said, are averse to the of the timber land which has been en canal treaty. The hope of the advo tered upon under the act of June 3. cates of the treaty will be to elect sen 1878, and for which patents have not ators in their places who are favorable been Issued. There would be no pos sible way to enter the land then ex to the convention. cept by those who have forest reserve lieu land script to place, and this would have the effect of throwing the best lands of the public domain into the hands of corporations which have bought up all available scrip to us« for good timber lands. This is the exact result congress most desired to avoid. Only a small percentage of the entries under this act have been made by adjacent homesteaders, who enter such lands to reserve to them- relves and successors woodland for the future. Pokegma ■ Village of Tents. Southeastern Oregon can boast of city built entirely of tents. Pokeg ma is the name of this unique village, which is located among the towering pines near the summit of a mountain range It is the terminus of the Klam ath River railroad, a branch of the Southern Pacific The branch Is con structed for a distance of 25 miles and was laid for the purpose of tap ping the timber belt of this section. People have rushed in to secure land and nun.« tourer locations have el ready been made. In fact all the best of the land has been taken. Polk County First. Polk county has been awarded first place 1 nthe county exhibit competi tion at the state fair, and consequent ly claims to be the banner agricultur al county of Oregon A woman. Mrs. F. A. Wolf, of Falls City, prepared and arranged the exhibit, assisted by her daughter. Miss Belle Wolf. Polk county led only by a scratch, Ljnn county coming a close second and Washington a close third. Marion dropped a little further hack as fourth and Lane still further back as fifth. Yamhill gets sixth place. Douglas would have had the seventh premium, but that exhibit was not entered TRAIN IS HELD UP. Masked Men Blow Open Safe But Oet Little Beodle. St. Joseph, Mo., Sept. 24.—Four masked men, at 10 o’clock tonight, held np west bound Burlington A Mis souri River train No. 41, five miles north of this city. The safe in the ex press car was dynamited and the car wrecked. Officials of the road say tne safe contained but little money. Other reporte say it contained 35,000 to 310,- 000 in money. Everything in the safe was taken and the men escaped in the darkness with horses. A posse was’or- ganixed and is in pursuit of the banits. Not a single shot was fired. The train was stopped by means of a red light. The engine and express car were uncoupled from the remainder of the train and backed half a mile furth er on where it was dynamited. The train was in charge of Conductor Har vey, who hurried to the city and gave the alarm. The officers lost no time in organiizng and making a start. It was necessary for the entire train to be brought back bn the city and a new train made up which left at 1 o’clock. According to the meager reports re ceived from the scene of the hold up at midnight, the instant the train was stopped, two of the robbers climbed in to the engine, and with drawn weapons compelled the engineer a.id fireman to obey orders. One of the men un coupled the engine and express car from the remainder of the train, The party then climbed into the cab and the engine and car were run up the track. The explosion followed, Aa soon as the safe was dynamited, the men dashed to the wrecked car. It is asserted that they did not get a cent as a result. The train was loaded with passengers for the West and the hold up created a panic. As soon as the conductor saw the robliers, he ran back down the track and secured a hand car on which he came to St. Joseph and notified the officers. th. Americans and th» sJ/ Secretary Hitchcock Says Uoxarameat Can III Afford It—la Backed Up by Representative Burton of Ohio—This ident Palm. urg«dth. guard the ideals they **» mean, oi inter,ention Branch Is Shown to Afford Soft The presidential n»«. Places for Many. Mtically received on thj,,’*" ** Caney. The Alcalde*fnM| that thegathermg .^'^ Washintgon, Sept. 28.—Representa tive Burton, of Ohio, who made a gen eran. Present P.lJ^a he wanted to 0»,^ eral assault on the Indian appropria that ly a. anybody, J?”*5 tion bill during the last seaion of eon- grew, brought to light some general was not only an act of lacta which would seem to justify the necessary to th. recoi'? country. Nobody ^**4 1 opinion held by Secretary Hitchcock that the Dawes commission, now under prodaca mor, than hi«^* tire in the Indian Territory, ie an ex the president. The only way to sacrifi« n. pensive and unjustifiable luxury, which He would be to bring ,bS U "» the government can ill afford. Repre sentative Sherman, who had the bill in He believed there wa! ; charge, had just concluded an earnest in. thousand who plea for further appropriations for the mamtain the honor of ex’*» Dawes commission when Mr. Button the extent of forfeitin, ?■*'» PM. The Cubans, hXil"^ was recongized. Among other things Lnit*l States intervsntor* ‘t** he eaid, refening to this commission: “The government has been expend of ending their troubi* "'M ing enormous sums, to be counted by an obligation to folio, thL 2-* millions, for allotments ot the lands prove themselves « «Peaking of th.Xi^* and settling the rights of the respective bond of insurrectioniXX?^ Indians. The total expense of the service for alloting, appraising, divid- I resident Palma condemn * ing, acting as mediator and judge in all den instigators of the the various claraes of. disputes among Alcalde declared that no the Indians is paid by the United two)leagues of El C.n.yhad;oi^ States. In view of the immense value of these lands divided among them for their benefit, the very large exy-endi ODD FELLOWS MEET tures incurred prove that our country has been more than fair to these tribes. Sovereign Grand Lodte Op,,, . ”1 think, further, that the expendi more With Large tures of this commission are open to Baltimore, Sept. 23.- the accusation of extravagance. I find exercises of the anDusi coo,J? in the report of 1901 a list of the em the sovereign grand lodge ofOdd^u ployes. There appear in that report began here at 9 o’clock this nxn. 19 surveyors and 57 appraisers. It in Ford’s opera house. ™nl, seems to me that pioportion of three to The condition of the order«, one ie dangerously like that of three close of 1902 is shown by nJ., grown persons who have to escort one follows Subordinate lodge boy to the circus. It would look to an ship, December 31, 1902/ limsa outsider as if there were a surplus of encampment memberihip, appraisers. Rebekah membership, broth* j "On page 449 it will appear that 195, sisters 259,850; Patriarrtu there ie one clerk in charge of the Unt membership, 17,754. land offices, and there are some 32 sub The total membership of tbs t* ordinates. One clerk in charge at 3150 which includes the subordimtiZ a month; one clerk at 3125 a month; membership and the iUtentalya eight clerks at 3100 a month ; one con Rebekah lodge membenhip, it 13. test clerk at 3100 a month : eihgt clerks . 956. The encampment meat» at 3'5 a month; two interpreter« at 360 and the brothers of the Rsbsuhii a month; five stenographers at 3100 a are not included in this total, as month; four stenographers at 375 a ■re subordinate lodge metoben. month; one marshal at 360 a month Revenue, relief and invsstedl and one messenger at 340 a month, are indicated as ffilowi: two janitors at 330 a month; ■nd offi- receipts in 1902: Sobordiniti 1« ce rent, etc.” 310,214,000; encampments,|?U, Rebekah lodges, 3626,743; totsi 1 FREIOHT RATES TO OO UP. nue, 311,553,905, an increinoli: 343 over the preceding ystr. Railroads of the Country Are Planning a Relief expended in 1902: E«ik General Advance. lodges, 33,559,794; rslief by ae Chicago, Sept. 28. — The Record- ments, 3265,617; relief by M lodges, 367,808; total relief, |i, Herald tomorrow will say : A movement is on foot by the rail 220. Total relief, as shown by a roads of the entire country to bring about a general advance in freight since 1830 to 1902, incluaive, |N,l rates, the general reason assigned being 425. the increase in the wages of all classes of labor and in the price of all materi AMERICA URGED TO ACT. als used by the railroads. A similar advance was made a year ago for the Strong Pressure Is Btlnf Bmpl same reasons, and went into effect Jan Bear on State Depsrtaot uary 1 last. At that time shippers Washington, Sept. 23 -Coass generally protested, and it is under tions have reached the etata JepM stood the various manufacturing and urging the government W aj • industrial associations will combine to something that will pat a atop a prevent further advances. atrocities in Turkey. It ia stated this pressure does not emuis DEATH IN ROAD. the missionaries. Officuliiitki department are reticent about IM I Hold-Up Men Blow Up a Buggy by Means ability of the United States pH of Dynamite. preeeion to the feeling with ’hk Washington, Sept. 28.—A murder alleged atrocities in Turkey» ” and robbery occurred this afternoon on by the people of the United Stitt the Middletown road about 15 miles they said that reporte fa» & from here. Samuel T. Ferguson, of the ■bow that the deede dniiw 1*1* Fergue-n construction company, of in sections of that country«« Pittsbug, was inetant'y killed and 8. a character as to ehock civiiaaf1* Martin, of Cincinnati, fatally injured. necessarily are of deep concert » The two men were driving along the United States. State Normal School Open. The etale department tod»» * road in a buggy carrying 33,600 in cash The work at the State Normal at a cablegram from MiaiBerl* with which to pay some of their men Monmouth has begun Many students employed on construction work along at Constantinople, but non.« are in attendance and the work of get ting located is being rapidly pushed the line of the Wabash road when sud given out regarding it except ta An unusually large number of new denly an explosion of dynamite in the contained no alarming nen* faces are appearing and the addition roadway literally tore their rig to partly concerned with routine ba al facilities for the accommodation of Withdrawal of the Amer«*’ pieces, killing Ferguson outright and students provided in anticipation of ron at Beirut, it ie eaid, b* threw Martin 200 feet, tearing his left an increase will be fully required. As been determined upon, eu arm almost from the socket. the real work of the state normal is cation has l«een received I« ' Turkey Mavlng to Avert War. better understood, the new students Bay as to the president ! represent many who have had much London, Sept. 24.—Turkey ia show France to Aid of Sultan. experience tn teaching and who come ing signs of yielding to the Bulgarian Berlin, Sept. 28.— According to the the matter. for special training. demands, ana and n it is is evident evident from uemanus, from the the National Zeitung, an international Test of tbs Drtdr« <** daily meetings of the council of minis- agreement ie likely to lie reached, At State Agricultural College. San Francisco, Sept. ’’ ters at > lldiz Kiosk that some sort of whereby France willeupportthesul- Registration has been In progress at the Agricultural college today. The negotiations are in progress with the Un of Morocco in suppressing the Grant ie in drydock st total has reached 250. The total at object of avoiding war. According to a troubles withia his dominions and will the last touches. Tbs d*« _ the close of the first day last year lispati h to the Daily Mad from Con- assume a protectorate over the country; north ie not fixed, bot was 327. There is a vast contingent 2*"linopfe’these connmls concern two Italy will give up any claims she may unique test of the large ’’*• of new students, and it is certain now possibilities—either to make an ar- have in Morocco in return for a free on the Grant was that the freshman class will be larger rangement satisfactory to the Macedon- : hand in Tripoli. Great Britain’s pos- While on keel block! tii«P „ l *-- t ------------- ........ ... .I.puu, urrai ornain 8 ixia- than usual. grMt power8 'Wl8ion °f Egypt will be recognized; lasing the materia! pt.^ ornniiw« _ i •_ _ ... promisee nf of nwiifralifu neutrality it if it is found ini-1 I z-» Germany , J will receive satisfaction in eels while dr»ignW poeaible U y aroid a war. 1 i the ‘ shape of the open door in these ter- water tight, fromiib» RNtTLANi MttlTL dock. Between 2000 ' ritories. water was then pumped WW Want« Navy to Buy Land. Wheat — Walla Walia, T4«; bl Treasure Ship Is Found. Hopmen In the vicinity of Eugene bin for a test to discow i«s*. Washington, Sept. 24. — Secretary Wants American Fleet to (Jo. Jacksonville, Fla., Sept. 26.—Ru are much provoked about a report that stea, 73c; vallsg, 73s. No lake were found. Fleur—Valley, 33 <»•« «» per bar. Moody will tomorrow discuss with Mr. mors of the finding of a treasure ship has been sent out charging them with Constantinople, Sept. 28.—The porte Bremer, the founder of the town of rel; hard what straight«, 33.75ft4.10; drying and baling moldy hops. They were confirmed today when Captain Bust of victoria protest that the greatest care Is ever hard what, pa teats, 34 19ft 1.39; Bremerton, Wash., the latter’s propo- has expressed a wish for the withdraw Jennings and three of the crew of the clsed regarding the quality of the out grab an», 38.9»ft3.75; whole wheat, sition to sell to the government a large al of the American warships now off London. Sept 23 wrecking schooner Osceo filed a libel put and declare that the report of bal tract adjoining the Puget sound navy Beirut, “so that the settlement of the church of Crathie. « 'rt*-!. against the cargo of a sunken ship, in ing rotten hops Is absolutely false, 33 66ft 4.00: rye wbat, 34.50. Barley—Feed, 319.00«>0 00 per tea; yard, the purchase of which has been questions pending between the United mile from Balmort- . ’ the United States court here today. ’.resides the damage it will do in cast recommended by Commandant Barclay States and Turkey can be proceeded attorni«! by Queen With the assistance of a chart in his ing the reflection npon all hops from brawl ag, 321; rolled. 311ft21.IO. Onto—No. 1 white. 31.1»; gray, on the ground that additional land is with ” It is thought here that the ward, in the P^n.1* Jl poaaosion, Captain Jennings has been this all . Atat 1 A _ _ »■••» locality. itnssuv/. The a »•<- growers there » hviv mi . -sc- , r”‘'*“*ry fe accommodato the growing I nited States will not consent to with Princess of « ale*. r tnke the greatest pains to guard the | ’ J * eoatjaL # I rearch ing for this vesal from time to of I>. nmark, D’1’ ,(| and- var'’- If »&* secretary approves the Mi listate— » 1 Braa, 311 _ per »oa; __ ,____ " “ ■•«n-»-«- If a moldy time for many years. It is supposed quality of their product draw her ships. Minister Leishman dilaga, 336; shorts. Iti; ehop, gig; purchase he will have to a tire the snsdo»ne. "th*r to have gone ashore in 1835, loaded hill is found It is left unpicked, and has arranged for a conference with the sanction of congress before a purchase a distinguished with ore from the Mexican mines. Ex nothing but first-class hops are put liaseed dairy food, 31*. foreign minister, Tewfik Pasha, today. Into the bale Hay — Timothy, 114.90 p«r oa; can b) made. amination confirmed the belief. 1 1 fficial circles take a calmer view of morning unTe,’?d A«“ svi ’ slower, asmiaal; graia, 310; chat, the late Queen ' >• t”r“’ „1 the Balkan situation. Selling OH Range Cattle. aemiaal. let*, in memory of President Oro wing Fat. Hotel Fir* Costs Lives. Some cattlemen of southeastern Bettor—Faacy creamery, 26ft37Se Edinburgh and top’** Washington, Sept. 24__ \ Rochester, N. Y., Sept. 2ti.—At Oregon say the range thia season is per pound; dairy, 11«20«. «tore, 15 private Gold From the North. letter roeived in Washington fJm,' least four lives were lost in the fire the shortest In many years J C • Ite. Neattie, Sept. 28.—Seattle's gold re Germany. Oyster Bay say« President Rocsevalt which destroyed the Hotel Rrnnswica I Franks, superintendent for J D Carr, Poultry—Chickens, mixed, 11« on the scales was surprised to see he ceipts from the north today amounted Valuable Hors«« early today. The bodies were taken;”*** of the cattle kings of the coast to 31,256.000. This great treasure 19he per pound; spring, 14«l4^e; ‘irpwl the lam 220 pounds. More- Sattle. Wa’l‘”)X^ from the thin! floor and are not identi J says they arc reducing the herds on hoas, llgllc; broilers, 33 M per ow, it is an indication of still further shipment came from Nome and the i tha Carr ranges as fast as they can fied. Abont 40 guests, most of them British Yukon on the steamers Ohio, four horse- ^^1^ dean ; turkeys, live, ItNgifr p.. find sale for the cattle They have visitors to the ananal connty fair here, already disposed of many hundreds. ■ pound ;drase.i,14« 15c; ducks, 34314^66 increase in his weight. The president Senator ami Dolphin. These three vee- which eonae h, nr 1W« ■*2 is aoinswhat concerned at his growth were in the building when the fire and there are many more to be sold, per daen; gam. 35ft*.50. «els hronght 820 i-assengers. The Dol at an early •xf 910.00®- as he feels it interferes with his out- broke out abont 1 o’clock. It ia be notwithstanding that the management Ì phin had the Klondike, or British Yu loss will e«<8 8.1 wereH«*;, Egge—Orogen ranch, 24«. ifeor ttercias, of which he is » fond lieved that tha remains of other goats baa purchased range lands during thel kon, shipment of 3500,000. It came con animals burr Potatone—Oregon, *A«75r per mck in M P"*Mem, signed to the Seattle assay office and pacing recoi- , ««iS, net a, •>unte<l 1er will be found in the present year costing about 350.teO,1 •wat potataa, 3 Sc per ponnd. Kooeerelt welghed 18.5 pounds. j dl ruins. the (snadian Bank of Commerce Conwav, •' ..,1 1 two What Seeks—In lots of 100. 5\c. .rmac*. »*¿1 by John Mc( Slaughter of Pheasants. this city from the Daweon branch. Raf — Groa stare. 33.75ft4.25 I rark People Fla. First Sale I nder Irish Land Bill. There la urgent need for vigorous dresewi. 6ft 7c pot pound. 31500 each. ( mit Nelson, B. C., Sept. 24.-Paaenie1 e med b» Ihiblin, Hept. 26. —The negotiationa enforcement of the game laws of the Veal—BH« P»r pannd. Agrees to Settlement With American. , kill»! were I r otpf **• arriving tonight over the Crow e Neet for the tirsi land ale under the new state, so far as they are designed for Molten—Groea. |S; d-eseod, 3ft La Li hertad, San Salvador, Sept. 28. the others ben report that another immense slide oc- the preservation of the Chinese pheas- land act have Ireen complete! between 5He; lombo, gran. 31.M; dreesed. 9«. L ongrees has approved the agreement •nrred this mormng at Turtle moun For the past five weeks these — High Speed •• the Dkuè of Leinster and the tenants llt Hoge-Gras, |6 »Ofti 7|; dree^ been killed in countless tain. near Frank. Alberta. As far as made by tenor Ixtpet. the Salvadorean birds have Berlin, ” ■ ’t - ’ of his átate in the Athy and May- number» In the Willamette valley, al- tc. £o?° w** b* •'! th. minister to the United States, to pay nootb districts oí Connty Kildare. The Hope—1*03 crop, lie per pen ad A ired H. Barrell 35,000 gold monthly at the rate f though the season for killing of thia People of Frank have deserted the tenants are given a 15-year purchase. game does not open until Thursday, Wai —VaOoy, 17ftUc; Fatare during eight years aa eompenation for rea bed — »own aga;r. being taken on t0 Blair Die trauact ions involves 3*,254),000. Oregon. 12ft 15c. mohair, »«W^s. October 1. sod other town,. '*lr th«- Salvadorean government's treat line, but over "ha , c’.ood. The engtb ment to the Trionfo company.