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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1896)
W A S H IN G T O N THE NEWS OF THE WEEK From All Parts o f the New World and the Old. OF INTEREST TO OUR READERS C om preh en sive R ev iew ant H appenings o f the o f the Im port Fast W eek C a lle d F r o m the T e le g r a p h Columns* A detachment of company I, who were guarding the Brown hoisting works, near Cleveland, O ., fired upon • mob of strikers and wounded one of them. Excitement runs high, and more trouble is feared. A speoial from Madrid says a great Are rages at Rneda de Medina, a town o f about 4,000 inhabitants, twenty-tive m iles sonthwest of Valadolid. Hun dreds of buildings are said to have been destroyed. The inhabitants are report ed as being in a state of panic. The syndicate of foreign bankers w hich oame into existence to check the drain on the United States treasury reserve exerted by Europe has been sig nally successful in its efforts in that direction, but the withdrawls of gold for shipment to Canada continues. James Fulton Shepard, a one-legged boy of Alameda, Cal., saved a 13-year- old lad named Durant from drowning in the tidal canal. Shepard rescued Durant as he was sinking for the last time. The boy had swallowed a quan tity of water, and it required an hour’ s hard work to bring him to. Another rebellion is reported from China. Tw o powerful bandit societies arc in revolt. Several villages have been captured. Helpless inhabitants have been foully murdered and their homes destroyed. Foreign missions have been attacked, and tw o French priests narrowly esoaped w ith their lives. Governor McIntyre, of Colorado, has received a letter purporting to be from W illiam Smeiduth, for the murder of whom Columbus B. Sykes is serving a life sentence. W hat were supposed to be Smeiduth’ s remains were fonnd on his ranch, near Dallas, C olo., March 13, 1894. The chief of police of San Francisco has been requested to find the man claim ing to be Smeiduth, who writes that he is staying at the W hat Cheer house on Saoramento street, San FranciBco. Nothing in years has 'caused such a flurry in commercial oiroles as the ool- lapsn of Moore Bros, in their efforts to maintain oontrol of the Diamond Match Company and the New York Biscuit Company. A striking feature of the failure is the faot that the Chicago stock exchange for the first time in its history adjourned indefinitely without doing a dollar’ s worth of business. The follow in g notioe was posted: "T h e Chicago stock exohange has ad journed, subject to the action of the governing committee. W ilkins, sec retary.’ ’ V ictoria to lletlre. The rumor that ecu Victoria in- feuds to retire in favor of the Prince of Wales is again current in Loudon. It id added that court circles are greatly troubled regarding the condition of the queen's health. Such reports have fre quently appeared recently, only to be semi-officially contradicted later, but it seems that there may be some actual foundation for the statements made, (t is added that her majesty has de cided to spend her time in future at Balmoral or Osborne, and w ill give the Prince aud Princess of Wales the use of Buckingham palace aud W indsor castle. Is l>e»r, D u m b a n d B l i n d . An interesting experiment in educa tion w ill be commenced at the deaf, dumb and blind institution at Berkley, Cal , on the opening of the sohool year in August Grace C. Kperow, aged 10 years, who was been stone blind from childhood and is now almost deaf and dumb, is to be made a special student and educated at the expense of the stste. This child w ill be given a nine years’ course and w ill receive instruc tion from a special teacher employed for that purpose. This w ill be the first attempt to educate a deaf, dumb and blind person und in consequence great interest centers about the case. H r.h ra dpr lu T e x a n . August Shrader, the so-called divine healer, put in an appearance in Dallas, Tex., where he treated 3,000 persons in four days. Some reported they had been cured. He left suddenly, leaving the follow in g note: “ I am called frum here, and obey my Father’ s w ill. ” 8 u c c « * * * fi > l F i l i b u s t e r * . Passengers from Havana, arrived in Key West by the steamer Masoott re port a rumor of the successful landing of a filibustering expedition in the v i cinity of Cienfuegos. The expedition is believed to be under the command of Captain Cabrera. O r e g o n ’* S c h o o l Census. The state school census, which has just been completed bv Superintendent Irwin, at Salem, shows that there are in Oregon at present 139,633 cihldreu of school age. R e p u b l i c a n (State C o n v e n t i o n . The Republican state committee of Washington decided to hold the state convention at Tacoma on August 36. The convention w ill be attended by 436 delegates. J u d g e Carpenter Dead. W ord comes from Holland by cable that Judge George M. Carpenter, of the United States district court for the dis trict of Rhode Island, died of paralysis of the heart. K p ld e n iic o f Suicide*. Driven to despair by different causes, six people attempted to end their own lives by suioide, in Chicago in one day. COUNTY ELECTION I RESCUE I I FRENCH LINER SAVES 12 LIVES Rescue Wan IN at S ea-T h e A ccom p liM h ed by a K re u ch C rew D u r in g a H e a v y Sturm. »•«“ “ Montgomery, Ala , Aug. •> The size of the Democratic majority seems all that remains in doubt, with regard to the result of today’ s election. Be cause of the slow counting uuder the new ballot law, returns are necessarily slow in coming in, but there is no doubt of a complete Democratic vic tory. Incomplete returns from about half the counties so fur received indi cate Democratic gains in all hut Mo bile and aMacon. In the former, the Democrats appear to have lost some 500 votes bv stay-at-home*, but the county is still in the Democratic col umn by 500 majority. In Macon county, which gave Oates a majority of 800 in 1894, the result is close aud doubtful. The Populists, on the other hand, have carried Tuscaloosa county by 1,000 majority. It gave Kolb 200 ma- jority two years ago. Marshall county, which went for Kolb by 600, is close, and probably Democratic. Lee county, which had a Populist majority of 500, is like Marshall. Chambers county, with 400 majority for Kolb in 1894, is in the Democratic column. Talla poosa county, with 600 majority for K olb at the last election, is close, and may be Democratic. Fayette, another Populist county, is in the doubtful column, as are also Coosa and DeKalb. In the counties which Governor Oates carried two years ago, there have been increased majorities in all so far heard from, except two. New York, Aug. 5.— Tw elve dis tressed mariners, whose rescue in m id ocean last Tuesday from a water logged and slow ly sinking wreck, formed a dramatio incident of La Bour gogne’ s voyage to this port from Havre, arrived here today on board that steam ship. Their own vessel, the German bark Ernst, from Wales for New Brus- wick, has gone the way of the storm oonqoered. The resoue was made daring the height of a heavy gale, and under cir cumstances which severely tried the courage and seamanship of the rescuers. It was witnessed by 350 passengers of the big liner, who clnng a to reeling taffrail, and heedless of the fearful rolling of the ship and the storm’ s spray, w hich dashed in their faces, watched with blanched oheeks the straggle of the life-savers to reach the wreck. The bark signaled for assistance and Captain Le Boenf ordered the launch lowered, with Lieutenant Lotay in com mand. W ithin a moment it was over N O B O D Y IN N E E D O F WORK turned and its crew thrown into the water. They were saved with life Th ® A . t u r i i t H o a d C o n t r a c t o r . C on w ot lines, and then nobly volunteered a seo- tin t K l . o u g h M e n . ond attempt, which was successful, the Portland, Or., Aug. 5.— Mr. Hugh smallboat having been in like manner launched, they went in company to the Glenn, of the contracting firm of Ernst, but ow ing to the high seas it Honeyman, DeHart 5c Glenn, who iB was impossible to get nearer than 100 constructing a portion of the Astoria- Goble railroad, is at the St. Charles. feet of her. The wreck was only 200 yards away, He hae just returned from Seattle, but it took the boat nearly an hour to where he went to employ laborers. He traverse that distance. The little boat wants 300 more men, principally ax- stood on end at times, then was flung nien and station men, but finds it hard skyward on a boiling crest, and at in to secure them. " I have advertised for men,” he tervals would disappear for so long a time that those who watched them said, "a n d pay them |1.50 per day, feared they had been swamped outright. which is ten oents more than paid by Finally they showed close under the the railroad companies and other con leeward of the sinking bark, which tractors for the same class of work: yet seemed just able to keep her drowning it seems impossible to get them. " I t is our purpose to give everything decks above water. One by one the crew of the Ernst jumped overboard possible to Portland, and we still hope and were picked up by the life-savers to get men here, and on the Sound, in and taken into the boats. A ll but three stead of having to go to San Fran were rescued in this way. They re cisco. ” The firm yesterday chartored the fused to trust themselves to the sea on the chance of being saved by the boats, steamboat Kehani for nine months, to and after vain expostulations and many be used in the transportation of sup nrgings by the tw o French officers, the plies and camp equipage. Two other boats put back to La Bourgogne, leav boats are similarly employed. ing the three men behind. A H O T FIG H T. The excited passengers watched their progress w ith breathless interest, and many w illin g hands were ready to as T h e C u b a n * T h o r o u g h l y W h i p p e d t he Hpanlfcli T r o o p * . sist the rescued on board. Havana, Aug. 5.— A hot engagement A dozen times the first boat tried to get alongside, and as many times it is reported to have occurred between was swept away by the big seas. The Guayamas and Mclones, in the district steamship had swung into the trough of Manzanillo, in the province of San of the sea and every wave that swelled tiago de Cuba, in which the loss suf against her railing came nearly flush fered by the Spanish troops was exceed with the sea. Then would follow the ingly heavy. The official report gives w ild, windward roll, and a score of the number o f Spaniards as 100 pitted feet of her sheating would be hove into against 1,000 insurgents. view. Boarding a vessel under these The official report further states that circumstances is a perilous undertak Lieutenant Gonzales and Pintados, of ing, but good seamanship finally pre the Spanish forces, were killed, to vailed and the men were taken on gether with fifty privates. board, exhausted aud wet and trem Colonel Marco has had a fight with bling from their exertions and the the band of Sanguilly on the planta perils they had escaped. tion of Condesa, province of Matanzas. LieatenaDt Notay was washed over- The insurgents lost eleven ki led and board again while tryiug to clim b a took many side arms. The troops had sea ladder, but a line was thrown to two officers and nine soldiers wounded, him and for the second time he was The insurgents have burned the plan- resoued. But there were still three tation of San Joaquin, at Abanose, in lives in danger. It would not do to Matanzas, causing a damage estimated abandon the men who had been left at |400,000. The insurgent bands are on the hark, and after another effort, concentrating near the southern portioo in which the boatswain of the Ernst o f the trocha, and it ia reported that took a prominent part, all three were they intend to attack it before loug. rescued. --------------------------- Captain Pahrens was master of the WRECK ON THE SANTA FE wrecked bark. To Captain Le Boeuf he said he had sailed in ballast from T h e E n g i n e e r K i l l e d e n d E i g h t P a s s e n - Carnarvon, Wales, June 30, bound for ger* Injured. Shedlac, N. B. He met a succession of Topeka, Kan., Aug. 5.—Santa Fe gales from the start, and fifteen days passenger train No. 1, which was due out from port sprung a dangerons leak. in this city at 4:27 this afternooon, col Tne pumps were kept going night and lided with east-bound local passenger Robert Stark and Abe Tinkev, the >.-.v, and by strenuous efforts the leak No. 18, near Bean Lake, Mo., shortly E. L. Moody, a logger, made a cow ardly attempt to murder Mrs. H. J. former a merchant, the latter post was kept from gaining. Jnly 26 the before noon today. Fred Heady, of Bnnn in a hotel kept by the woman's master at Sequim, W ash., attempted pumps became choked with sand, and Topeka, engineer on train No. 1, was husband at Elma, V ash. Moody to acquire a cheap jag on wood alcohol. there was ten feet of water in the hold killed. Eight were injured. stabbed his victim in the wrist and in The effect was suoh that w ithin a few when La Bourgogne was sighted. The No. 1 was ordered to wait at Beau the right breast with a knife, and then honrs after drinking the fiery decoc crew of the Ernst was sent to Ellis Lake lor the Kansas City local, but, island, and w ill be turned over to the fled, leaving Mrs. Bnnn seriously If not tion both men died. instead, proceeded to Bosworth. Thé German consul. fatally wounded. Moody is still at collision occurred about half way be I t * G l o r y H a* D e p a r t e d . large. tween the two places. The dead and L a r g e s t L o c k in t h e W o r l d O p e n e d . The great auditorium in which the A Havana dispatch says the police Republicans and Popnlists held their Sanlt Ste. Marie, M ich., Aug. 5.— injured were brought to Topeka to- have captured a collection of maps of national conventions in St. Louis, w ill The new 800-foot look was officially “ I*!1*’ TThe if i aries of -loseph Hickey, the island, highly colored, showing the he turned into a Madison square garden opened this afternoon at 1:80, when a* « J i / ’ a™ ,no* not so serious serious as as supposed insurgent headquarters I d for horse shows, bioyole meets and the revenue cutter Andrew Johnson brat thought. His collar-bone ia C ubitus, the rebel flag and picturing other great indoor sporting enterprises and the river and harbor improvement ra° °*® .’ ,,ETes8 ^ P88enger Bulway various chiefs of the insurrection. The the com ing fall and winter. steamer Hanoock were locked through. ®anDO tTe' The collision threw both maps bear the imprint of a Barcelona No official programme marked the 0®°™0 ,” re8 from the track, and they firm. The Havana stationer, Don Fer H e a v y D a m a g e In S o u t h D a k o t a . opening of the largest lock in the r° e 0 ln*° *be ditch. The smok- nandez, in whose possession they were Dispatches from Melitte and other world, and the completion of one of } ? f n2 a , l ! >. - ! i 0-h *U the Pa,senKers fonnd, was arrested. points in 8outh Dakota state that a hail the greatest engineering feats in the express car. ^ The two daring navigators who left storm devastated a stretch o f oonntry history of the country. The lock was New York June 38, in a sailboat hut sixty miles long and five or six miles commenced in 1889. It is 800 feet in I>e. M o l l i e s D i v e r O v e r f l o w e d . The damage amonnts to hun length between gates;* 1,100 feet in eighteen feet long, to cross the Atlan wide. Des Moines, Ang. 5.— Due to recent tic, are all right. They were sighted dreds of thousands of dollars. length over all; 43 feet high; 100 feet heavy rains, rivers here have risen on July 19 in latitude 53. longitude wide, and w ill accommodate boats A Terrific E x p lo s io n . from four to seven feet. The Des 31.53, by the Am erican liner Indiana drawing 31 feet of water. A speoial from Vienna says an ex Moines is going over its banks, destroy- and asked to be reported. They ap plosion in a powder magaxine at Fuen- ing many fields. Parts of the Keokuk peared to be in the best of spirits and fkirchen resulted in the death of five required no assistance whatever from persons, injuring eighty others and the Indiana, although provisions and wrecking the town hall. pUc? wlU woj k « t once, nlK„ t. T d l north " ‘h . ‘ ‘.V * T od a o ys rains are ex- water were offered them. giving employment to about 2,000 men pected to increase the flood. W h ile an attorney was looking over Not r a i d to D o C a m p a ig n D uty. A D ru n k e n Brule K ille d . _ „ — the papers of the late Eugene Wilhelm Poetmaster-General W ilson has is Baltimore, Ang. 5.— James M. Deets Philadelphia * A „ j " '- ’ " n i, at his home near Nebraska City. Neb., sued an order to the railway mail bur! textile K ® ~ Rhod«8 & an ezprern order was found for 11,800, clerks directing them not to take an oame home drank last night and abused Bros h i. w ife Annie, who, becoming fright- or£ k ‘ j ° D Ch" t*T w hich had been issued in 1853 at aotive interest in the political cam ened, ran into the street and called for n — ’ u , 7 DIUl fPr ,ber notice. Over 600 hands' are affected. Plaeerville. Cal., sent by W ilhelm to paign such as would be involved in at The assistance. An engineer named A n his w ife, Martha W ilhelm , and payable tending political conventions as dele assigned is depression in the tei drews went with the woman to her sause Hie trade. !«■ to her order. W hy the order was gates or making political speeches. honse, and in an altercation with the nevercashed. Mrs. W ilhelm , w ho is an The postmaster-genera I s oiroular ex drunken husband stabbed him, killing P r i n t W o r k . S t a r t I p. old woman, is unable to explain. The pressly slate* that he doea not desire to him instantly. Providence. Aug. 5.- A l l e n ’ , print head o f the company in New York has control their opinions on poliitoal mat The Iowa state senate defeated a res work, » , the north end of the c.tv been notified that the order has been ters, bat they must refrain from tak «tarted up today, after a three weeks’ placed In the bank at Nebraaka City ing an active part in political mattere. olution giving women the right to vote at all elections. •huGdown. The concern em ploy, 300 for collection. DevaHtated b y th e Storm . The most destructive storm in the history of Sunday Creek valley oc curred at Gloucester, a m ining town twelve miles north of Athens, O., re sulting in the almost total destruction of one of the principal thoroughfares of the town. The fury of the wind is I Storms in West Virginia Have cre almost indescribable. Buildings were ated great havoc and railway traffic toppled over, trees torn from their roots, has been suspended. and the town is a scene of desolation. The members of a camping party Nearly every building in the town is near Oakland, Cal., were forced to damaged. To add to the horror, Sun clim b trees, w hile a madened bull de day creek is a sweeping, raging torrent. stroyed their camp. Several houses have been washed away, * E. L. Harrison, who was formerly and word was received that the list of traveling auditor for the Northern dead w ill reach fifteen. Pacific railroad, committed suicide in M ine B u rn e d b y Strikers. Tacoma, by shooting himself in the The mine of the old Pittsburg Coal mouth, the bullet from bis revolver penetrating to the brain and killing Company, at Hymean, Sullivan county. Ind., has been burned. A committee him almost instantly. from the miners' organization visited A freight train on the Vandalia rail the mine and sought to induce the road ran through a bridge near Craw- miners to quit work. The watchman fordsville, lud , killing Conductor was captured, curried some distance McKenzie and Fireman John Herber and the works burned. The loss is and seriously injuring Roadmaster J. ♦25,000. S. Brothers and Engineer Bowman. Ita lia n W u m liip D estroyed . The wreck was caused by washouts. The Italian armored wraship Rola, Rev. Geo. P. Knapp, who w a s’ ar rested in Bitlis, Eastern Turkey, on the of abont 5,800 tons displacement, was The oharge of oonapiring against the Tnrk- struck by lightning near Rome. iah government, and who was onoe lib flames spread rapidly threatening to erated, but refused to leave the country reach the magazine. It was found ne before his innocence was established, cessary to sink the ship by discharg has again been airested and w ill be ing torpedoes. tried on a charge of inciting riot. B oth A re Dead. m PACIFIC COAST NEWS ALABAMA. T h e Stats Carried by «hr I sual cratle M ajority. A Dramatic Incident in Steamship Voyage. A B ritish S h ip A b a n d o n e d H A T C H KT A Resume of Events in the Northwest. EVIDENCE OF S T E A D Y G R O W T H N a», (lath .red In Our N eigh boring All Of the T o w n . State. - linp rn vn- . . . . . . t N ot ed In A l l I n d u . t r i e . - O r e g o n . Forest fires are said to be raging throughout the Nehulem oouutry. tax Curry county's delinquent amounts to about ♦O.OOO this year. Seventeen boxes of peaob plums, the first of the season, were shipped from The Dalles last week. ‘ , . . Of the 361 studenti graduated from the state normal school at Mouumouth, ¡¡no are at present teachers. The Empire cannery, on Coos bay, will run through this fishing season. Preparations are being made to start up next month. The board of equalization for Coos county w ill meet in Empire August 31, aud will continue in session until Sep tember 5, 1896. The Oregon Central & Eastern R a il road Company will probably be a bid der for the government work to be done on Yaquina bay. Citizens of Coquille are making great preparations for the soldiers and pio neers' leuuion that w ill be held there August 13, 14 and 15. The county court of Carry oounty has directed the county treasurer to pay state taxes out of the county funds here after and to use no school funds for that purpose. John Durbin will celebrate his 102d birthday at the home of his sou, Isaao, on Howoll prairie, September 13, and every immigrant of 1845 in the state iB invited to be present. The postal department has disap proved of the proposition to establish a mail line from Klamath agency to S il ver lake, and to increase service on the route frum Silver lake to Prineville. The grain crop in Lane oounty has proven to be much better than was anticipated a few weeks ago. Some fields of grain are very light, but the yield in most cases w ill be very good, and much better than was expected. Smoke from fires in the Cascade mountains has been blown by western winds acorss the valleys aud plains un til it is thick and blue in Grant county, nearly obscuring the sun, and im pair ing the usefulness of the moon, says the Canoyn City News. Reports from Sherman oounty are to the effect that wheat is suffering from the continued hot weather, and farmers do not expect the average yield of the connty w ill be more than 13' 2 bushels to the acre. A month ago they expect ed the average yield would be twenty- five buhsels. Mrs. Mary Henkle, who died recently in Independence, was born in Green connty, Kentucky, July 29, 1817. She crossed the plains with her husband in 1866, to California, and they came to Oregon in 1867, locating two and one- half miles south of Philomath. She was the mother of fourteen children, nine of whom survive; thirty-nine grand-children, tbirty-one of whom survive, and thirteen great grandchil dren, twelve of whom survive. W ashington. The newspaper men of Seattle have formed a press club. Grasshoppers are eating the potato plants in the vicinity of Spragne. A schoolhonse is to be built in the Pleasant valley district, in Whatcom county. Harvest has begun in Whitman county, several headers having started in within the week. The warehouses at Garfield are all being put in condition to receive this season’s grain crop. In the Steilacooin, Wash., insane asy lum there are at present - 673 patients, 2 0 0 of whom are women. Ounrded Cleveland V’ ’ A o « 4 .- iv nation in this oily j, j, I» city One hundred aud fifty * u w ent to work at the a works this morning, companies of m iliti,,.,” *1' of police. A big crowd were present, hut no »Ubati red. The polio, .„ ï u n i v i .« . , A a 8Jm _ ¿ ‘ö *' strikers moving. 'C threatened ever since the Brown company's work, weeks ago, was inaugWaJ , ing. Eighty-seven raen,._ 1 the Van Wagner l’» » y . hardware timuu(, c, K down their tools and Ho ld at Auction Seattle, Aug, ...—All0f,k,J th. the Pacific 11 . .,,1 ’aiafic » rail state of Washington, 902 sections of patented and, Ulte quantity of K|d today a( pubu^ * G M g, ter Alfred L under decree of the United 3 cuit court of the eastern J Wisconsin. The property,. j n by Edwin W. Winter lot^l ern Pacific Railway Conn which he is president, for(r O a k l a n d l lu l l .l l u , c „ Oakland, Cal., Aug. buildin g on Seventh and Ck™ collapsed last night, aud s,| occupying the house bid 1 capes from death. The : of the house gave way short^l m idnight, and the buildia>]B feet with a crash The trail. standing, but the first »ind w ill topple it over. U «aA___ years ago, aud is one of t b t b S 1 6 : ni t V o f the oity. lider T h re e Were Murtlerefl Three r-up. Providence, N. Y., Aug ii Clay, eight miles west of I Brown, a farmer, 30 yean 0 ered his w ife, mother-in-livJ last night. Brown comeiofi minded family. l l u i l c l l n g H i s Own San Franoisoo, Aug. 4 V ictor Morgan, pastor Christian church societyofilj building a meeting housevri sistauoe o f several member)il gregation. In laborer’i gifil coat off, hiB sleeves rolled ■ straw hat on the back of hiilf Rev. Morgan may be seen di the saw and hammer in the| tion of a house of worship. “ I have always been tools and 1 am not afraid l| said the Rev. Mr. Morgan, upon myself t<j superinteaij struction of onr little meebg am being assisted by some 1 my oongegation. This itnJ be nsed for a church only Inside of a year we expect 1 church edifice and then thil| w ill be moved back and I the roar and used as a Smi room. I think 1 am doingf for the Lord in this way. ions we should have a honu’l Tuesday, Septom’ ier 16, has been set laud commission forb ear- mg testimony concerning conflicting applications to purchase tide lands in Lhehalis connty. erument haa been | purchase of two lroncum. declined t0 sel1 t0 '“l a Uarihaldi- on ,he ' *| tina has a prior right “ The committee of one hundred, whose aDf' er' the “ ‘ “i J T i S ok it was to find nut I T .u consequence send a com®» task out __ „ in „ Tacoma UUU111 has 1* * the * Tal officers to Glasgow » ' ballot | boxes h i.“ Vsk” Yaked the purchase of two iroDCi* judges of the snpenor"coun to at call a a session session of the grand jury to in” C a rr i e d Off » call vestigate the crime. Clinton, Mo., Anf ^ Treasurer Lewis, of Chehalis connty, months ago Jim ha. reunited to the several towns tax Iowa and made bii collections as follows: Aberdeen, uncle, W. S. Carey. fo io . 9 j , Montesano, 1 100.05; Ho- During the latter a quiam, $246 31; Cosmonnli.” “* .«> Mrs “ra re v eloped Wi,b "* iEE™*' |9.|4; Ocosta, 112.71 and to nBphew, taking her t*. the state treasurer, 1 1 4 , 1 3 1 . 1 4 warrant has been More net stealing than ever was thought they bave tk" ° la n Iu ,h® hls" " 7 of the river is L o s A n g e le * Chi'-’ l Urn«8!? “ ® tbl' *e'“ on’ "HT* the Cath- Los Angeles, Aug. M W e i. r et,eV 8° me claim lone of the most J there is « gasoline boat which ia mg a business of staaling web. mak- ential Chinese in tbs the bottom *? U newi,hona. 1 u . r th e le a d s n d o - k The Charles Frank, an Indian from the & S £ a r R -s .ï; horse and ridden off, but it w *. *°r'the Íédl.ñ ," to a * y irs’ A n d r e e Del»7*t j Stockholm, Aug. 4.—So received from Spitzbergen I fessor 8. A. Andree’s ba!)oa| filled and that he was July 25. The Virgo, will I Andree, his two compaii® apparatus on board, sailed“ soe June 15. Since June ^ dition had been estabUtedl house, in the northern W l Mpitzbergen, opposite Dimf The stores and equipment! > been disembarked and thepT sidered very favorable. Ai* had planned that hi! would all be completed and^ filled by the first week I seems probable that wnM obstacle was met in cO»l^ preparations. ___ A convention of the various church s P»ln M" y ,v*r’ hlp‘ ?°ciet' eB of Lincoln connty w ill be held Madrid, Aug. 4.—Tb« in Davenport, Thursday, August 20. at Genoa, with whom (be by the state 8 La Crosse, Wis., Aug. boating last evening HenrrsJ sou, Anna Aniarud and J stadt, three La Crosse yon were drowned in the Minis just below the city. have been arre**«* G ow , one o f the be the man who Aid A Reward t " 1 Havana, Ang. 4 .-1*1 zette publishes a ward of ♦ 2 4 , 0 0 0 1° • the Spanish cruisw* are o f filibustering ing a further reward person enabling *6» ” capture filibuster!»! over 205 tons. ♦5.1 I the r H i.ooo f Y-F<