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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1896)
W A S H IN G T O N 1 EVENTS Of THE M Y Epitome of the Telegraphic News o f the World. ■%- OF INTE R EST T O A L L READERS l u i p n h H i l r « K a v la w ' ppt H a p p e n in g * I C a lle d F rom th e o f th e o f th e Frees Im p o r t * l*a et W eeh D is p a tc h e s . Catherine Koschey, an inmate of the insane asylum at Salem, was killed by jumping form a third-story window of the farm building of the asylum. Great excitement has been caused in Redding, Cal., by the receipt of a let ter there containing news of a threat- sued uprising of the Pitt river Indians. The British steamer Santarenz, bound for Para, Brazil, was sunk in a solliaion with the four-masted British ship Dundonald, from San Francisco. No lives were lost. A t G ig Harbor, Wash., the Shingle m ill owned by E. S. Prentiss, together with 1,000,000 newly-made shingles, was destroyed by fire. The loss is 13,500, with no insurance. Tw o young men, named K iley and Young, had a quarrel at Mossy Kook, which ended in Young being struck on the neck and badly out with an ax whioh was manipulated by Kiley. A report from Walla W alla says that the wheat crop in that section, which it was feared had been injured by the hot weather of last week, has not been damaged to any considerable extent, and a full yield is confidently expected. The run of salmon in the Columbia river continues light, no large catches having been made of late by any of the boats. It is thought that small catches w ill be the rule now until the regular July run begins, which w ill be in about a week or ten days. Nathan Phillips, a pawnbroker of Monte Cristo, Wash., was fatally shot by David Leroy, who attempted to rob, Phillips of a satchel full of Jewelry which he was oarrying, and upon be ing resisted, opened fire upon the pawnbroker with the above result. Leroy escaped. As a result of the oonferenoe between the president and Secretary Lamont or ders have been issued by the war de partment for the immediate execution a f the provisions of the river and har bor appropriation bill, with the ex- aeption of those sections providing for the making of contracts for the con tinuation and completion of the work. The opposition has decided to re- guess the Spanish government to in- troduce a b ill providing for sufficient sssouross to proseoute the oampaign In Cuba. Mias Lansing Rowan, an actress, of the Frawley oompany, playing in San Franoisoo, has challenged Champion Corbett to meet her in a scientific spar rin g contest Henry Gardner, a farmer, living near Mount Dale, Washington oounty, Or., was accidentally killed by being struck in the stomach by a falling tree which he had just out down. A cyclone swept a section of oountry four miles south of Clayton, W is., and a number of dwellings and barns were demolished. One man, name un known. was fatally injured. A Constantinople dispatch says dis turbances of a serious character occur red at Van. Many Armenians were killed. Many sought refuge at the British consulate. It is estimated that 400 persons were killed on both sides in the rioting last week. It is now believed that the skeleton recently discovered at Dry oreek, near Pendleton, is that of J. Keith, who, about a year ago started with Ben Bowers to go to the higher mountains and was never seen agaiu, although Bowers soon returned. The two men are known to have had some trouble over a woman. A London paper says that Great Britain and the United States have agreed to publish • imultaneously, within a fortnight, all the arbitration correspondence exchanged between the governments of the two countries. Its publication baa been delayed pending the arrival of Secretary Olney’s latest oommunication. In a collision between Chicago, Minneapolis ft St. Paul and Chioago ft Burlington trains at Davis Junotion, 111., in a deep out, thirty-five cars were piled in a heap and burned fiercely all day. Thomas F. Moran, a fireman, was instantly killed, and Fred Blair, a brakeman, fatally hurt. Engineer Daly was injured. Controller Eckels, a Washington dis patch says, has undertaken an extensive Inquiry to learn the various kinds of credit instruments and money held by a ll the banking institutions in the United States. He has sent out 31.000 letters to national banks, state and pri vate banks and loan and trust com panies asking for information on these points. A year ago the controller made an investigation of this kind, but he oonflned it to the 6,000 national banks The returns w ill be published in his annual report wibch issues in Decern F a r ls A w a r d • • r ip M a d « G ood. A t Baker City Judge Eakin decided that the warrants issued by Baker eouaty were valid, and thus made good about $300,000 worth of oounty scrip. A e c l d « u t t o m M in o r . Andy Benton, a miner, in attempt ing to firs a salute to Colonel Taylor, a mine-ewner, who was passing on a train nsar Glendale, accidentally ex ploded a atiok of giant powder in bis hands and was to badly mangled that he w ill probably not reoover from his Injuries. U n k n ow n F lo a t e r Found. An unknown floater was found near the Morrison street bridge in Portland. The remains were fearfully decom posed, and almost fe ll to pieces as they were being placed in a receiving casket. The body bears the appearancee of having been in the water several months. K « T o l t lu A r m e n ia . Another sanguinary outbreak has oc curred at Van and 400 are reported to have been killed. The Persians are promoting the disturbances and foment ing tha revolt throughout Armenia. Tbs Druses have now received Bedouin support and are driving out the Turks. Diplomatic press is being brought to bear on the porte, increasing the chances of peaoe. W ife - M u r d e r e r H a n g e d . Carl Aubreoht, the wife-murderer, was hanged in the ja il yard at Marsh field, Or. L ife was pronounoed ex tinct within a few seconds after the drop fell. The execution was the first that ever took place in that city, and was witnessed by those legally entitled to be present. Aubrecbt retained his nerve to the last. He left word of good-by to hie friends. A L a d y S u ffo c a t e d In a V a u lt. Miss Rosa Caudill, of Barboursville, K y ., was looked in her father’s vault for fifteen minutes and when taken out was unoouscious, but under the oare of physicians soon recovered. A gentle man friend locked her in for a joke, but not having the combination, was unable to release her until her father was found. His aotion is generally condemned, and he is considered a fit subject for the fool-killer. F a ilu r e , T h e n D e a th . The body of Joseph C. Powell, a atu dent in the Oregon medical oollege, was found floating in the river, oppo site the O. R. & N. freight warehouse, in Portland. A rope was fastened axound the neck, to which was firmly attached a granite rook, weighing •bout 13 pounds. Pow ell was one of a a Van of stndenta in the medioal oollege that was presented for final examinâ tes last Maroh. Hs failed to pais and, is despair, committed the rash act. He bad been missing for three months. A B i s R a i l r o a d D e a l. The Chicago Evening Post has a sensational pisoe of railway news to tha effsot that Henry Villard, backed by European oapitalista, has about completed a deal whioh w ill give them s through line from the Atlantio to the Paoiflo seaboard. The intention of the Villard syndicate is ta buy the North ers Paoiflo road, than the Baltimore & Ohio, at the reoelvera' sales. It is said that the syndioete has already prao tioally obtained control of the Chioago * Great Western road, the connecting link between the Baltimore & Ohio, and the Northern Paoiflo. P h o t o g r a p h y In C o lo r s . Photography in oolors is assured. James W. McDonough, of Chioago, and Professor Joly, of Dublin, who were attempting to aeoure patents, agreed that the snooessful one ahould pay the other a fee, and the capitalists in the undertaking would support the success ful man. MoDonongh won after a con test. A company has now been incor porated in Richmond, V a., with a oapital of $700,000 for the purpose of pushing the new invention. A C lo u d b u r s t In O h io . A cloudburst took plaoe near M ari etta, O. The water covered a wide area of territory and was the most de structive ever known there. Houses were swept away, stock drowned and many persons narrowly escaped death. In some streams the water roee twenty feet in ten minntea. The flood came almost as suddenly as did the Johns town flood. Crops are ruined on the L ittle Muskingum for twenty miles, and on many small tribntaries of the Ohio above there. H a W hs h C l e v e r S w i n d l e r . Edward Trask, a former partner of Murderer Holmes, and who was sen tenced to the penitentiary from Chi cago in 1892 for eighteen years for his gigantio real estate swindles, is dead. He succumbed to consumption. Trask was notorious for the daring of his ventures. I.y m a n T r u m b u l l Vs U «m l Ex-United States Senator Lyman Trumbull, the distinguished juiist, died in Chioago. He had been ill a long time, but rallied at intervals, causing hope that he might eventually recover. C rop s ■ F a ilu r e . Reporta from Polk oounty. Or., say that the apple and prune oorpa of that notion are almost a total failure this year, and that there is a large shortage In the yield of other fruits. (T p h a ld . Ban Francisco— The United States sourt of appeals has decided that the Paris award, on matters pertaining to sealing In Behring sea, must be upheld as the supreme law of the land, and that the United States government has no right to make special laws govern ing its oltisens in bunting seal that do not permit them equal privileges with eitisens of foreign countries on the sealing grounds The deoision is im portant. at it defines clearly, for the first time, the restrictions to be placed upon American seal hunters in Behring COUNTY THEY Will USE DYNAMITE Latest Plan o f the Insurgents in tuba. H AVAN A IS TO BE A C ir c u la r M a k in g T h is D is t r ib u t e d at th e B LO W N UP A n n oun cem en t H ouse« o f W e ll- t o - D o P e o p l e In th e C it y o f H a v a n a . Havana, July 1.— The revolutionists have formally served notice on the people of Havana that plana have been completed and w ill be carried into exe cution this summer to wipe out every vestige of the city by means of dyna mite if it be necessary to go to that ex treme, to drive Spain off the island. Copies of a circular oonveyiug this announcement have been left at the houses of well-to-do people of the city. It is entitled “ Dynamite Cironlar to Cuban Fam ilies,” and reads as fo l lows: "T h e summer oampaign ia to be sup ported in large towns by the revolu tionists residing therein, and to this end terrible means mnst be resorted to — the employment of dynamite. “ The inhabitants of Havana are tally aware that theannonnoement of this is no vain threat, as the plans agreed upon for the explosions have already began to materialize. The edifices doomed to be blown np have been se lected and one after another shall fall. The revolutionist party oannot retrace its steps, and i f it is necessary to to tally destroy the city of Havana for the purpose of expelling Spain, it shall be destroyed. “ Therefore, onr compatriots’ families must become fully aware of the im portance of hurriedly abandoning the country, and to those who oannot, we charge them to be ever on the alert and employ oonstant and indefatigable vigilance proper to those who find themselves next to a mine loaded to the utmost.’ ’ A n x io u s t o C o m e Back. Taooma, July 1.— W illiam Hutchin son retnrned today from Cook’s inlet, Alaska, where he spent two months. He came down on the schooner Norma, which left Kodiak June 16,with thirty- two passengers, all she oonld carry, thouKh ninety wanted to oome. Hutch inson says there are 1,750 people on Six M ile creek, and abont as many on Resurrection oreek. About 750 of them are making from $3 to $15 per day at plaoer mining, but the rest, he says, are absolutely helpless and unable to find enough to keep them alive. As a rale, the gold oonsista of such light flakes that a breeze blows them away. Borne of the prospectors, and manv of them are old miners, wonld like to go to the Yukon country. That, however, is 300 miles away, and it is currently reported that the Copper river Indians, who live between, are on the warpath. A B u r g l a r 's C o n fessio n s Colorado Springs, Colo., July 1.— A oonfession has been made by Patriok Coyne, a pal of W illiam H. Clark, the man who killed Officer Bish, and then [ committed suicide in order to avoid arrest. Coyne says that he and Clark started ont for the purpose of commit ting burglary, and while examining the rear entrance to W ilber’ s dry goods store were accosted by Officer Bisb, who ordered them to surrender. Bish dis armed Coyne, but failed to get Clark’ s gnn. Jnst as the officer ordered the prisoners to start for the police station, Clark shot Bish. Coyne said that he and Clark ran in different directions, he going home and to bed, expecting momentarily that his partner wonld ar- | rive. Clark and Coyne were regarded as honest laborers, bnt Coyne' admits that they had served terms in prison. N o T r o u b l e A n t lc ip a t e d . Madrid, Jnly 1.— The statement con tained in the Daily Mail telegram to the effect that the platform adopted by the St. Lonia convention canses uneasi ness in Spain, and that it ia feared that a conflict with the United States has now almost a Uxed date, is misleading. ! W h ile there does exist a certain feeling of nnrest, on account of the declaration of the convention touching the Cuban question, it mnst not lie imagined that it is dictated by fear, but rather springs from a very natural desire to know the worst at once. A m e r lr »n B ic y c le « . London, June 80.— The Field this week publishes a long comment article on the wheels manufactured by some of the leading American mannfactnrera. Land and Water expresses regret at the fact that English manufacturers allowed foreign competition to step in, saying: “ For weeks past it has been impossi ble to get a bioycle or even c iv il treat ment from any English dealers. Some of the worst trash ever produced was put on the market. The Americans have opened a vigorous campaign, and one new arrival advertises a consign ment of a thousand machines, offers to supply anything required within four teen days, and promises there shall be no more waiting for machines to be b u ilt In prioe and finish the Am eri cans are quite on a par with onr beat, and in weight they out us dreadfolly. ” N o W a r s h ip A v a i l a b l e . r i g h t W i t h Dru se s. Philadelphia, Pa., July 1.— Tw o let Constantinople.— A dispatch from ters from the secretary of the navy have Beyrout, Syria says that during the been received by Profeeor Theo Search, recent fight between the Turka and in of the National Association of Manu surgent Druses in the Haurso district, facturers, concerning the trip of the former lost fifty-five men killed. American manufacturers to South A meric*. Referring to the suggestion In ju r e d b y D y n s m its . that a United Slates man-of-war should Tom Strang, the son of R. L Strang, be plaoed at their disposal, Secretary of Woodburn, Or., was playing with a Herbert expresses hit regret that there piece of dynamite one day recently is no ship in the navy that has accom when the stick exploded, badly burning modations for so many persons, on ao- the yonng man'* face, and causing oouDt of the cramped quarters of the both of his eyes to he tightly cloeed fot officers and crows on board the modern war vessels. mveral days. A HATCHET. RESERVATION WEIDLER'S TRAGEDY. mill F i r e D e s t r o y , t h e G re et l , T w o M u rd e rs and » S u ic id e th e K e iu lt o f h B la c k o o t A ffa ir . ll.hiueut la FortUe*^ Portland, Or., Juna J» A Resume of Events in the plant of the Willamette Lumbering ft Manufacturimre Northwest. better known as Weidler', ‘ destroyed by fire yesterday The loss ia approximately e v id e n c e o f s t e a d y g r o w t h and ia oovered by iusutJ, amount of $40,000, distribute policies among several loci*1 N.w. G a th e r e d lu All Town, of The origin of the fire was, O u r N e ig h b o r in g S ta te . - Im p r o v e - and, owing to the extreme!, meut Noted in All Industrie* Oregon- dltion of the m ill and yard7 was so rapid that nothi^'11 The Dalles Chronicle says that a set saved. Robert Mays, »„ * tlement has been effected with the Mo- the m ill, has not been Coy ditch laborers for 50 oenta on the tire started, and it is belies dollar. fellow-workmen that he The Southern Paoiflo Company has whilo endeavoring to put in electric lights at its plant at and baa been burned to destb, Latham, and now runs the ereosotiug A scene of indesoribabl* works day and night. confusion followed the breakiiu The bicyole track north of the town the fire. Almost instantly it, of Coquille City has just been com enveloped the buildings, 1»-■ pleted. The track is five laps to the roof to roof and from one 1M mile, and is an excellent racing course. to another so rapidly that « There are two companies engaged in possible to follow them, fl egg gathering near Port Orford, and employed in and about the „ the rocks are being hunted very closely, rowly escaped suffocation over 1,000 dozen having already been oould reaoh the free »ir. Keene, a saw tiler, »h o w », gathered. a Bhop near the rear of the Millions of young grasshoppers have imprisoned there by the made their appearance on Tygh ridge, when finally resoued by and farmers in that section fear they his mustache was completely D e a th C a u sed b y a S c o r c h e r. w ill do considerable damage to grow- Chicago, June 30.— Three-year-old ing crops before the “ critters wings are off. Another employe named Ernest Schlickwein, the son of Frana sufficiently large to carry them out of endeavorod to escape through! ing m ill, and, his clothes tab Srhhekwein, a German truck farmer, { the country. he was obliged to jump in the livin g abont four miles southeast of Joseph Adams, a son of John Ad- Hinsdale, met his death in a manner j ams, an Indian living on the Siletz, save himself. In the eaeh hitherto unheard of. He was following ! was one of the graduates of the Carlisle factory the workmen fire* „ his mother along a path beside the Indian school this spring. Mr. Adams to save their tools, but soon a roadway which fronts their home, has graduated as a full-fledged doctor to leave everything and get when they were passed by a wheelman of medicine, and w ill practice his pro whole skins. About 200 men were empoyi iid in g at his best speed. fession in the East. oompany, and the monthly pi Shortly afterwards Mrs. Schlickwein An old soldier tramped through The over $7,000. These employee missed her son. Hastening back she discovered him prostrate in the path, Dalles last week, hound for the Soldiers’ represent that number of fan: Home at Kansas City. He was old and the destruction of the mill I while an ugly wound in his left temple was bleeding profusely. A physician feeble, but was neatly dressed, and day's fire w ill work no inar was summoned, but the child died be wore a pair of new, but cheap shoes. hardship among these people fore he arrived. A jagged stone weigh He proposes to walk the enire distance, nearly all dependent on theJ mgs of their bread winnsn. ing abont four ounces, lying at the unless invited to ride. The lessees of the plant and placer point where he had fallen told the t 'o r n e l l W o n Easily, story. It had been snapped from nnder mines of the Siskiyou Gold Mining Poughkeepsie, Jane 39.— the wheel of the scorching bicyclist Company, on Elliott creek, commonly with sufficient force to cause death. called the “ Joe Bar diggings,” have vard-Cornell-Colnmbia-Penniy The wheelman, who was of course en ' fully completed the opening and equip miles straightaway on the H tirely ignorant of the accident, passed ment of them, and are piping day and day was won by Cornell in on, and no clew to his identity re night with assuranoes of an uninter- nomenal time of 19:29, H* ond, Pennsylvania third, u mains. Mrs. Sohlickwein is prostrated rnpted water supply. fourth. and may not recover. The sales of cattle from the Eagle Cornell w o d th e freshmen valley range have been quite active re A S o ld ie r ’ s R e v e n g e . da ys a go , in w h io h the order d cently, and upwards of 1,800 head w ill Valentine, Neb., June 80.— Fort ing was s tr a n g e ly the same. Niobrara was the scene of a murder, be delivered in Baker City daring the The race today was a hard and the almost instant execution of the next few days for shipment to Montana two miles, bnt after that C ob mnrderer nnder military ordera today. and Wyoming. The sales amount to Its own way. Harvard tried Private Weaver shot and instantly about $15,000, a very neat aum in the scheme of tiring ont Cornell killed First Sergeant Livingstone, of hands of the stockraiserB of one local •tart, bnt failed. Cornell . oompany D, who was passing along the ity- clean raoe, without a break Assessor Cowan, of Union county, is kind. roadway in front of oompany C's quar Pennsylvania aplaiM ters. When the sergeant dropped, four assessing all property in the oounty be rowed badly, and Columbia, 1» men ran and picked him up, when longing to religioua organizations and unknown reason, was not in Weaver fired four shots at them, forc not used exclusively for worship: that after the first quarter of a mile ing them to drop the sergeant and ran ia, only ohurob buildings and the lots vard rowed plnokily, but for shelter. Weaver then fired several upon which they stand are exempt. classed. shota, aiming at anyone who happened Heretofore all property belonging to F ilib u s t e r * Sells*. to come within range of his rifle, bnt the churoh, including hoases, school without effect. Then First Lieutenant buildings, town bnildings, town lots Key West, Fla., June !lj Clark ordered Private Strine to shoot and farms, nave been exempt. Private Bteamer City of Key Weal, »F Weaver, which he did, the ball strik school bnildings and property w ill also here Wednesday with a 811» ing Weaver’s rifle near the butt, shat he assessed. expedition and arms and tering it and afterwards entering his snppoaedly for Cuba, arrived W a s h in g to n . body, from which he died within an night in charge of Lieutenail President Cleveland has been asked the revenue cotter Wmom hour. to pardon Mrs. Morrison, convicted of been captured off the Florida M c K in le y F o r m a l l y N o t lffe d . smuggling opium in the federal court Winona also captured the Canton, O., July 1.— Ex Governor at Seattle. Three Friends, which ii not M cKinley was officially notified today A t Barlow Pass, the buildings are way here. The oargo and of his nomination by the Republican board the steamer Key Weal party for the office of president of the being put in order as rapidly as pos sible to accommodate the traffic to the have been transferred to lb United States of America. Friends. Her arrival created The notification speech was made by Great Lake mines, and supplies are coming by every train. citement. A n immense crovd Senator Thurston, who was wildly ap The diploma and medals awarded the the wharf. pended during the course of his re marks by the vast crowd which had Seattle school exhibit at the world’s H pn ln R a is in g Monty. gathered from far and near to do honor fair have been received. The exhibit is Havana, June 29.—A royal to Ohio’s favorite son upon this, the now at the Philadelphia educational has been issued authorizing k occasion of the greatest triumph of his museum, and has led to many inquiries ish bank here to emit $12,00H life. Governor McKinley, in an able for information of the city superin gold bills, in denomination! speech, responded to Senator Thurston’ s tendent. $5, $8, $1, and in fractional address, and heartily thanked the noti Elder Van Dusen, of Spokane, who tions of 50, 20, 10 and 6 cenll fication committee and the constituents has been visiting Lewiston, says that above sum to be delivered by of the Republican party at lar.e for in driving along any road out of Lewis treasury in payment of curretl tha gracious honor tendered him. ton to the reservation, prairie schooners tions. The government will and other vehicles can be passed, all the vaults of the bank $3, F e l l F r o m a B a llo o n . Grand Rapids, Mich., Jnly 1 .__ loaded to the guards, and all bound for silver, besides a part of the the reservation. collected by it. The gov Hiram H. Cole, 26 years old, a profes Mr. Wooten, of Starbuck, says that authorized to enforce tbs sional aeronaut, livin g in Big Rapids, Mich., fell thirty feet from his balloon he has discovered a new variety of win of these notes. while making an ascension last night ter apple in his orchard, which he W a s h in g t o n M lllt ls B«lk and died shortly afterward. A high thinks is going to take the lead in the Olympia, June 29 .—Adjt wind blew him against a building, Northwest It is a large, red apple severing his trapeze ropes and letting fine flavored and a good keeper. He eral Bontelle today wired him fall. He leaves a wife and 8- planted the seed five years ago. Last ams, at Ilwaoo, to relieve ob year the tree bore 150 pounds of apples. and nineteen enlisted men u* months'-old baby. to Seattle. The remainder w S everH l I ’ e rs o n s D r o w n e d . A conference of commercial bodies, litia w ill be relieved in > Boston, July 1.— The small steam at Tacoma, accepted the offer of a Phil’ days. A ll trouble with *1» ferry-boat plying between Marine Park adelphia museum for a display of the fishermen is over, and only 1 and Governor's island struck an ob state's resources. A committee of feeling of apprehension struction today and capsized. Several three, one from Seattle, another from the strikers’ movements yonng people drowned. Tacom, and a third from Gray’s har- troops are removed. Tbs A M ob ’s W ork. i ^ >r’ WiU be "PP°lnted by President connty w ill probably be abb * Baltimore, June 30.—Joseph Cock Mottet to prepare a lumber exhibit tain order.__________ ing, of Hilltop, Charles county, await Another committee will be appointed B lo w n to fis c s * ing trial on a charge of murdering his to prepare a general exhibit. Helena, Mont., June M-— w ife and her sister, Miss Daisy Miller, The injunction which waa asked was on April 28, was taken from the old denied and the work on the reservation were blown almost to piece* ja il at Port Tobacco last night and ditch near North Yakima w ill now go noon in the coal mine at explosion of giant powder, ** lynched by about twenty-five men. 1 n Z H a" the application, so badly injured that he is •*' Judge Hanford stated that the netil F r a n c W i l l A d m it C o ra . ed to live. The dead are Job* tionera were not entitled to come into Paris, June 80.— M. Meline, the pre and Jacob Wirule. Tbs is lA lt“ \8mUCh D0 on’ them mier, speaking at Soissons on the dis Showed a claim of $2,000. Judge Han- is John H o y t The men turbance of the world's markets by the ford . 1.0 said that he knew of no case ished d rillin g soms newbol* monev crisis, announced that measures in which an Indian had been allowed in the set of charging them would shortly be taken for the tempor of the men dropped a at**- ary free admission into France of corn. w h k * was l £ ■ guardian. * * " “ * *he « 0Ter“ “ eut, went off, exploding the W which his terrific force. _______ Ranrhrr Killed by a Farmhand i“ i0ner ° f the (lener» 1 M in e r s W i l l N o t C*I«r Port Townsend. Wash., June 30 .— Offl~n7 Office Lamoreaux says that the north alf of the Colville reservation w ill Fred Miller, a rancher near Duckabuck, Colnmbua, O ., June on Hood canal, waa sbox and instantly be thrown open to settlement within mittee in charge of theloea^ killed last night by John Marinbuck, a forty days. It i. probable that a force of the Fourth of July W farmhand. The men quarreled about of surveyors w ill b* p „ ,o work on for 100 minera from a woman. reservation within a few daya. march in the parade in M oney F o r R H in fn . The lowering of the water, in the outfits and with their 19W, Washington, June 28 — Strp* hare Davenport creek d i d , » « ,he fa, t , £ * hats, bnt President been taken by the bureau of Indian a large number of big trout found there United Mine Workers of * vised them no» to do it " affair* to make the payment of $|68,. WP. ,h® Mre* m during high-tide 604, dne the Cherokee Pawnee Indiana Which find the waters too ah.llow tai doing this they wonld town boy’ iro selves bénéficiaires of the from the Cherokee nation, as their comfort now. snd fishing «f,e r them with .tick, with of Independence. whelSS* •hare of the Cherokee grass money pretty good r e c c e « Wltb mere serfs and would in I lia. Helena, Mom., Jane 30.— Two men and one woman dead and a man under arrest as accessory to the murder, is the result of a woman’s unfaithfullness and a man’ s perfidy. The dead are. Paul Vinette. a half-breed: his wife, and Took-a-Fiue-Gun, a full-blooded Indian. The man under arrest is Makes-the-Fire, a brother of the dead Indian. The scene of the murder was the Blakfoot reservation. Took-a-Fine* Gnn had been paying attention to Vinette’s wife, in spite of Vinette s protests. Friday, he caught the couple together, and took a shot at the Indian, who escaped uninjured, vowing ven geance. Next day, Vinette mounted his horse to hunt for missing cattle. He had not proceeded far when two shots were heard, and Vinette’s horse came back riderless. Took-a-Fine-Gun and Makes-the-Fire rode up, saying they had killed Vinette. Then, with Mis. Vinette, the trio rode away. Mounted police followed, and the next morning two shots were heard in a clamp of boshes. An investigation re vealed the bodies of Mrs. Vinette and Took-a-Fine Gun. He had killed her by shooting her through the head, and then committed suicide in a like man ner. Makes-the-Fire was captured later. \ l m Zl V