Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1890)
V NEWBERG GRAPHIC. NEWBERG GRAPHIC NEWBERG GRAPHIC. .T w enty Dollar* Ten Dollar* One 1 »ollar On«- i'o liim n H a lf C o'unm Professional ('ardo H e a d i n s d o t t e r à w i l l he i n s e r t e d t h e r a f e o ! T e u r e a t a p e r L iu s . at e n . in iU T O iV . I n i t r i i M ta tv n . VOL. 2. NEWBERG. YAMIIILL CO., OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1890. ¡IN FOREIGN LANDS. THE PACIFIC CO AST. i EASTERN ! . Benjam in Harrison C H A R L E S S T U A R T P A R N E L L IN A L evi P. Moi ton N E W ROLE. V ice -P resid en t................... rv i. reta-y o f S ta le .............. .. .Jam es U. B laise ------------------ Secretary o f the Treasury .........W in. W indolii j Secretary o f the Interior R ed a i'm V ro^ O T E m p e r o r W i l l i a m R e c o v e r , d - D e a d l y Secretary of W ar R. P. T ra cy i W o r i t o f t h e I n f lu e n z a in P a r l a — 8e< r< tary of the Navy. John W a n ,m a k e r i _ _ , . _ Postm aster-General W . H. H M iller F r e d D o u g l a s s lu T r o u b l e — A ttorn ey Usuerai Secretary of A gricu ltu re .......... Jerem iah Rusk P r l c e o f v\ a l t s . President........................ fe ta le o f O r e g o n . J. H M itchell. J. N. Dolpli ( oiigreBsman ..... .................... R inger Herman ............ Sylvester Pent-oyer Go ver. o r ......... U. W. M cB Lie Secretary o f » tate. Stste T re a s u re r... .........................U W . W ebb K. ( . B a k e r ! State P rin ter......... K . B. M cE lroy Supt o f Schools R . S. Strabali, W . P. Lord. 8 upreme Judges ................ \V. W , Thayer T . 8. Senators C o u n ty o f Y a u ililll J idrfe .............. 8 he ri IT R e co rd e r.............. Supt. o f Schools T reasurer— S u rv ey or.............. C oron er................ Commi-iBioners L. L. Low ery ................. T. J. Harris W yatt Harris . , J. W H obbs L. H. B aker P. P. Oates ................J. C. Cooper .............. K. B. F ellow s B rutscher, K in gery C it y o f X e w b r r g . Pernell is accused of adultery. Major Serpa Pinto has arrived at Mozambique. Siavin is being lionized as the cham pion of England. C A L IF O R N IA R A IL R O A D S BADLY DAMAGED. P o r tla n d H a s 1 0 .0 0 0 S c h o o l C h ild r e n . A L u . k y S a n F r a n c is c o R e p o rte r. The C a m p b e ll - C o r b e tt F ig h t a D r a w . Puget City is starting a boom. C H IC A G O HAS A DESULTORY ITEMS. NEW C H IE F OF P O L IC E The Russian P l - v u e s wet plna Over the Cou nt y — An u p c t » Murderer H a n ged — C acgrssem a n Randall 1 1 Patti has bleached her lu ir. Astoria is to have a $100,000 hstel. Commissioner of Penaious Kuum is New Westminster had a $li',000 blaze. quite ill. The Union Pacific’s net earning» last Portland’s school children number mouth are $1,055,992. ¡ 0 ,0 0 0 . Emin Pasha has had a relapse, and Olympia’s streot cars have commenced great anxiety is felt. running. The wife of Pom Pedro, ex-eraperor of Deep snow is reported in the Siskiyou Brazil, died at Lisbon. mountains. Dr. Fofoster, manager of the Burg The Umatilla Indians are rounding up theater, Vienipi, is dead. < tl.eir si-ck. - Stanley has sailed for Egypt, with 250 San Francisco deaths are two less in followers of Emin Pasha. 1889 than in 18S8. Tnomas Oldham Barlow, R. A., the Chehalis has a First National bank English eugraver, is dead. with a capital of $50,000. Elton Nay, a New York chemist, died from ivcoaiue poisoning. Thirty eases of Russian influenza are reported at Duluth, Minn. IT ' ' a*’ bears beat •Jcwn Western Union rtock.tiv po'etiEWke^uthig Jay. The widow of General Geoorge H. Thomas bus just died in Washington. The republican national league has been sued lor a stationary bill of »11,500. READING. NO. 5. OVER A P R E C IP IC E . M ost S o -C a lle d H e a d in g C o u rs e s a re P re t t y N ea rly P u r e I d io c y . <Mclahoiua F ra n k ’ » Tlit-illiiiic A d v e n tu r e w ith a H erd o f T a tt le . Mr. Halfourhas recently stepped aside from political ways to deliver an address at the openingof a new library, in which ho won the approval of all true book lovers by saving a good word for what is among the so If-elect know n by the con temptuous term of “ desultory reading.* It is the solemn conviction of the GraJ* grinds of the world that K ere is no read ing wh •’h is of any advantage to a man unless lr is arranged in courses and de voted to some specific end; wbnfe equally the true book lover, the man who Ls born with the literary instinct and convic tion, knows beyond ptradventurc this reading which has keen stigmatised as desultory ia the most valuable of all, and that it is only by the good which is won by following it through the wind ing ways in which it leads as through u labyrinth that one is able to get from formal reading any benefit whatever. The first principle of reading should be that one is profoundly interested therein. It is worse than useless to force one’s self, or to force others, to go over the pages of any book whieh does not of itself hold the reader. It may be neces sary now and then to go through a course of reading upon a special subjeot as one does any other mechanical task, but he labors under a complete misunderstand ing who supposes that by so doing he is increasing his intellectual culture. He may fora moment increase the unassim ilated facts in his mind, but this is al ways a hinderanee to mental progress rather than a help. The genuine love of books is perhaps a thing which one must be born with tc enjoy it in its fullness, and it can, after all be largely cultivated. At least, there are few people who can not inter esfc themselves in some sort of reading if they are hut placed in a position tc reach the books which are adapted to their minds, and what is quite as im portant—to their temperaments. What is known as desultory reading is. aftei all, if one only examines the matter a little closely, reading what isaduj ted to the condition of the mind at the mo ment. It is taking the mental food which one can digest, instead of dieting the mind upon those indigestible thing* which have some time and somewhere been supposed to he good for minds of a different sort in a different condition. Most reading courses are pretty nearly pure idiocy; a stringing together of good books into a perfectly arbitrary and un wholesome composition. One might as well weigh out the food to be eaten meal by meal for a year to como. The appetite has more to do with it than theories, and is a better guide unless it has been most fouly dealt with. The way to read is to read, and if a person turned into a library can not bet ter find out what to read than anyiuxiy can tell him, he is either too young tc ho olavn ’vrj-’vjv. > diseased. The mind is its own gatfgo. and if it does not work well it is very seldom that any outside expedient car be made to serve instead, If the at tempt bo made it results in something which is not culture, at least.—Boston Courier. The experienced cow boy knows all the watercourses on the trail, and if the weather is dry he knows which on«» will Is» runniug. Sometimes it is one hundred miles from one river to another and no creeks in between. The herd in this case U driven often as much as two hundred miles up the river until a place Is reached where the distance across to the other river is not so great. Only the trails where the grass grows green est are used, so that the steers will he in good condition when the shipping town, the nearest railway station, is reached. After a day or two spent in town the cowboys return to the ranch and take charge of another herd, and so their life is spent. Oklahoma Frank has been herding cattle for fourteen years. He once had a very narrow escape from death. The herd, frightened at tin* approach of a furious-hail-storm. had stampeded. He was riding at the leader’s head, firing his six-shooter in front of hiiu, and strik ing him w ith his quirt. Suddenly a flash of lightning revealed a ravine just ahead of him, how deep he knew not. Another flash showed a hun dred bristling horns and twice as many gleaming eyes just behind him. To stop was certain death, for almost upon the haunches of his horse he could hear the snorting steers; to ride into the ravine meant death, for the moving herd would bo upon him as soon as he reached the bottom. He decided to keep on and drove the spurs into his mustang's side. The animal leaped forward, stumbled, and over the side of the cliff he went. Frank felt himself going down and gave up ail hop»». After falling twenty-five 'oet the mustang struck the ground, «browing his rider far over his head upon i little elevation. Iu another moment fifty steers thun dered over the brink of the ravine and tumbled headlong to the bottom, where they bellowed and struggled and gored •ach other in their fury. The bruised and bleeding cowboy climbed higher up the opposite side of the ravine and lis tened for hours to the struggling cattle beneath him. He was finally rescued, and when daylight came a number of the steers, whose legs were broken, were butchered for beef. Three-fourths of this herd was lost, and some of the steers that were recov ered w’ere found thirty miles from the place at whieh they stampeded. Atlanta Constitution. Paiis reported 113 deaths in twenty- Edward E. Waite, sou of Chief Jus Theodore Helms, lifteen nnle9 frrm tice Waite, and a Toledo lawyer, is dead, four hours from influenza. Dayton, was killed by a falling tree. in Washington. Nellie Bly has arrived at Hong Kong 8 . Hobson The heaviest snowstorm f >r fourteen . A. T. H aw orth on her homeward journey. Henry W. Grady, Atlanta's gifted years is raging in the Nevada Sierras. I . M . Smith editor, orator and politieiau, died at his f N. C. Maris It is announced that Emperor William E. J. Montgomery was shot at Browns home of pneumonia. I B. (J. Miles has recovered from his illness. 1 U. Pettyjohn ville, Or., while interfering with a mar C ouncilm an Clii.ago's chief ot police Hubbard lias • j H. C ooper Von Alweno, vice-president of the shal. , J. H obson been superceded by Ex-United States Bavarian chamber of representatives, is IN . Heater The reward for the murderer of the Marshal F. H. Marsh. dead. Southern Pacific trackwalker Cain is It is denied that C. C. Washburn’s I Boulanger denies that he has been en- now $10.0 C H IK 1 H \ O lK H . Miuneatiolis flouring mills are atiout to I gaged to deliver lectures in the United The unfinished blood horse races at he sold to an English syndi- ate. P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H . -S ervices will States. e held at Jones’ Hail on the second and fourth San Francisco have been declared off tor Nahdiezaz. an Apache murderer, was um lays o f the m onth, at 4 p. m. by the R ev. I School-boys in Gautemala hauged a the seuson. W illiam T ra vis o f Lafayette. S abbath school teacher who was chastising one of their hauged at Globe, Ar zona. He killed every Sunday at 3 p. in. Heavy rains washed out the California Lieutenant Mott three years ago. I number. Southern’s track at .Moreno, Sorrento Secretary Nobles’ latest decision en The unsettled condi.ion of affairs in ami Delmar. forces tbe right of a guardian to perfect a a. m Hubijath school every Sunday at 10 a. m. i Bruzd is interfering with the gathering San Franciscans pay $5700 extra on title when the original goes insane. M onthly m eeting at 10 a. m. the ilrat< Saturday o f rubber. in each m onth. Quarterly m eeting the secoud their meat bill every day, m consequence bat'n dav and Sunday in February. M ay, A u A family named Wilhelm, cosisting of Verdi is spending the winter in a of the floods. gust and N ovem ber. a man, wife and child, were exphyxiated iiotel at Milan, engaged in making notea A hundred head of stock of various by gas from a coal stove at Akron, O E V A N G E L IC A L C H U R C H . R egular ser for a new opera. kinds mired in quicksand near Calusa v ic e first ana third Sundays of each month at At Brooklyn, N. Y., Frank Remick, a C. Charles Mackay, LL. D , the well and were lost. 10 a m.; second and fourth S undays at 7 p. m. banker, killed his mother and shot him Sabbath school every Sunday at 11 a. m. known London author and journalist, is James B. Henche, a Tacoma lumber self fatally, while temporarily insane. U N IO N C H U R C H .—U nion service is held in dead, aged 76 years. man, is in jail for ravishing his 13-year- the New berg school house every Sunday at 11 At Fort Worth, Tex., recently, a eotton Pauius, the famous ainger who started old daughter. a. m. S abbath school every Sunday at 10a. m, compress w ith ten carloads of cotton on Boulanger, has been singing lately in Fairhaven’s electric light contract lias the platform was burned. Loss $150,000. Vienna with great success. been let, and the water works one is be HOI I E T Y K O T H Bto. Alexander Williams, a Tuscorora In The university at Olossa is closed, ing iigured on. dian, was murdered at Hiagard falls. Y . M. O. A . - D evotional services every Sun owing to the uiscovery that a number of It is claimed in Tacoma that the He is the brother of the sachem of the day evening. Y ou ng men earnestly requested the students are active nihilists. Union Pacific is securing terminal tribe. to attend. | The strike of coal miners in the Char grounds there. I. O. O. F .—Sessions held Saturday evenlDg leroi i district, Belgium, is spreading. Asa Upton, a hurse-thiei, Was shot and In the room s over M oore’s Drug store. The first and second mates of the ill- killed at Winslow, Ariz , by Deputy The strikers now number 10,4 0. fated ship Durham were drowned in San Sheriff John Francis, while resisting Y. W . ( ’. T. U .—Business m eeting the second Major Serpa Pinto telegraphs from Francisco bay. S O M E N A T I O N A L P E R IL S . Saturday in every month. arrest. Mozambique that be lias committed no l l o w Kven th e S im p le r Q u e s t io n * ol Ma Ta Bou, a Chinese peddler, fell (4. A. It. -S ession s held first and third T h u rs act of hostility against the E ii'lisu . Officials of the Wisconsin Central I, A i n e r i r a n l*olitl«*M a r e ( 'o m p li e n t e t l . day even ing in each month. I lo in a M m Francisco streetcar, fatally road and directors of the Northern Pa Were the nation homogeneous, were All the vessels comprising the Amori- fracturing IDs skull, cific deny that the lines v fbl be consoli- W . C. T. U .—Business m eeting held the third can e’ olutiou squadron are now at Lis it composed simply * later generations Saturday afternoon in each month. J tted. Thomas Boardman, of San Pablo, bon, the Y o «town having just arriv d. of the same stock bv vhich our institu Cal., was run over and killed bv a train New York sailors a$*d firen,an demand tions were planted, few adjustments ot Four ironclads have left Malta, under at Vallejo Junction. a material increase of J* .W s , and ask b r the old machinery of our politics would. a confereuco with .. Jmmittee of shit - B U S I N K N * I f r l l t K C T O K Y O K T H K orders to proceed to Lisbon, to Ite -resent ,H . J. Hcstoni a Tacoma attorney, *p u-> '. ¡’ i -V., vin i t "she ex Ct tjic l.crcin fm y o f Ml* proclejQiotion o f « * ; t v o r ^ w : r s . y . v*- * j v - ufed irorn “ ttte Tetiecls OI a date” seed igencies o f^ o w th . But every added ele Ring Charles I. lodged in the boweis. Joim R. Byrne, of JjtlBburg, charged, Depot P. & W . V'. On M ain street north of ment of variety, particularly every added Boulanger and Tonseca, the chief of Flr»t. M . S. Garvin, agent. clement of foreign variety, complicates The Baker City hoard of trade has re together with PowderlyV" ith -onsp racy Tile M ill—On the Da>ton road, west o f the Brazil’s new provisional government, against Edward Callaghan lias been even the simpler question of polities. A ca d em y. Reese & Hunt. | have been exchanging messages of mu solved in favor of the free and unre arrested. N. stricted coinage of silver. The dangers attending that variety P ublic S c h o o l-I n Central addition north o f tual congratulation. First street. K. H. W oodw ard, pres, o f board. Charles Gillman, a ranclter neai Salt which is heterogenity in so vast an The Santa Fe road loses $200,000 by Dalian anarchists have posted placards D rug S to r e -O n Main street south o f the de Lake, shot and killed a sheeplnrder, organism as ours are, of course, the the recent California flood, and the pot. H. C. Hald. in Lagana, Switzerland, calling on Italians Joseph Walkey, who was also shooling dangers of disintegration nothing less; Dry G oods and Groceriea--O n M ain street to fol.ow the example of Brazil and over Southern Pacific $150,000. at Gillman. R A I L R O A D S IN C H I N A . and it is unwise to think these dangers aoutu of the depot. J. D. Carter. throw the monarchy. Ward Douglas, a Walla Walla insur Pioneer L ivery S table—C orner First and M er A boiler in Neff Brothers’ mill, Ed- T h e G r o w t h o f M o d e r n I m p r o v e m e n t s In iHmote and merely contingent because idian streets. J. R. Smith. Madame Bonnemain, an enthusiastic ance agent, is under arrest for criminal more, Mich , exploded Thursday, killing t h e C elestia l E m p ire . they are not as yet pressing. Wo are J. B. Moore, M . D. -O ffice at residence on the supporter ot General Boulanger, lias just assault upon Nannie Turner. The news from Poking is that the Em conscious of oneness as a nation, of the foreman, F. Stranman, anil injuring oorn er o f ( ’enter an t Third. inherited $1,500,000, the hulk of which The Campbell-Corbett fight at Port three others. peror of China has issued an ('diet w hich vitality, of strength, of progress, hut A rlington H .tel -O n M ain street near P. Jc she will devote to the General's cause. land turns out to have been only an ex authorizes the building of the projected are we often conscious of common W . V. R ailw ay. John A tkinson. Christ llatz, a worthless character, hibition to draw gate receipts. railroad between Peking and Hankow. thought in the concrete things of Na B arborS h op 1 0 Main street. Fine olgars A revolution has broken out in the de killed his wife and then commited sui and tobacco. Smith & Myers. partment of Cuscatan, San Salvador. It Six hundred men for a wepk is the cide, in a fit of drunken rage, at Owa- A previous edict of rocentdate had given tional policy? Does not our legislation Dry G oods and G roceries - Corner First and is headed by ex-Commandant General work the recent floods made the South authority for the construction ofanothei wear the features of a vast conglomer tonna, Minn. Center street«. Morris, M iles & Co. Ervas, who had a strong force under ern Pacific in Soledad canyon. line, and there are a number of othei ate? Are we conscious of any National Furniture Corner First and Main streets, There have been listed in the New railroad projects that are now awaiting leadership? Ar»» we not. rather, dimly him. opposite Jones’ H all. (4. \V. W ym a n . A rich silver strike twenty miles from York Stock Exchange $234,000 in new B ak ery—On Main street north from First. J. The decree relating to Dorn Podrc, Ore Grande, Southern California, causes O. R & N. Co. con*olidated mortgage 5 the imperial sanction. It is reported conscious of being pulh'd in a score of I>. W ilson. that the well-known promoter, Chang directions by a score of crossing influ- besides suppressing his allowance, orders great excitement in mining circles. percent, bonds. W illamette R eal Estate A g en oy —Offlcs on Chi Tung, will carry out the Peking- ences and contending forces? the confiscation of his property and foi- Main street. S carce 8t W right. The Charleston has gone into commis The Kaw-iins and White River stage, Hankow scheme, and that the Marqub This vast and miseellaneousdenusrraey M illinery—Main street south o f the depot. hids the return of the imperial family to sion at S.m Francisco, hut will not lie in Wyoming, was held up by t .vo masked Tseng has been appointed General I)i of ours must he led; its giant fa culties Brazil for two years. M rs. Enos Hanson. ready for sea for a mouth or more. from the passengers and men, took $l->0 rector of all railroads in China. must be schooled and dir«'»?t»'d. Leader Newbe'-g H ouse—The only hotel on First st. Dr. Damaschino, a leading physician of O. C. W right. Wong All Hing a Chinaman who mur all the registered mail. These edicts indicate the triumph ol ship can not h»»long to thf< multitude; Paris, is dead. His death is d ie to in Laundry—N ear the T ile Mill on the Dayton dered hia uncle, has lieen senten- od to he The main building of the Western Viceroy Li and the other progressive ! masses of m»m can not be self-directed, fluenza and weekness of the heart. This road. Sam Kee. ha: ged at San Francisco February 14. college, Toledo, O , was horned Thurs leaders who, amid many discourage | neither can groups of com muni tie«. We E vangelical C hurch—On Third street east of is the fifth death from influenza since the the A ca d em y. R ev. Beaumont, pastor. outbreak of the epidemic. John Scroggins, a woodehopper, living day. Loss, $1 0,000; insurance »mail. inents, have striven to establish a policy j speak of the sovereignty of the people, by which the Chinese empire may be i hut that sovereignty, w«» know very Barber S hop—Corner Third and ( ’ enter sts. on the river eight miles alejve Sacra It will be rebuilt at o»ee. King Humbert has given up smokii g. Cigars and toba cco. Lutner Hill, manager. provided with a comprehensive railroad j well, is of a peculiar sort; quit»» unlike mento, was drowned front a small l>oat. New Years passed off very well in He used to smoke all dav long and got a Public Hall—Corner First and M ain streets. Jones Brothers. disorder of the bronchial tube« in conse Burglars and bunko me t are having Washington without wine at official re system, against the protests and conjura ih»» sovereignty of a king or of a small Claret only was used, and tions of the censors and astrologers. easily concerting group of <»onfid»'nt Meat M arket--O n Center street betw een First quence. He now sucks to jtbpicks rilled quite a carnival in Po tlsud and ti e ceptions These powerful persons have carried on men. It is judicial, merely, not creative. an d tiecond. Austin 8c W ilson . with camphor and is said to enjov them. police administration is iicing sharply that in very rare instances. a desperate struggle' against this policy, It passes judgment or gives sanction, G roceries—On ( ’ enter street betw een First criticized. The Itest strike of natural gas in Month Three Franciscan nuns at Dachan, and Second. Parker 8c Nicholson. on the ground that its adoption would but it can not direct, or suggest. It fur Dakota has just been made at Rcatield, D ry er--F iiv t street a t the end o f the bridge. near Munich, have been sentenced to A Chinaman working on the Central mark the beginning of an era in which nishes standards, not policies. Ques P. F. B radford. Spink county. The pressure is so great imprisonment for short terms for practic Pacific railroad was buried in snow from the ancient institutions and customs ol tions of government are infinitely com that it carries standard gravel sixty feet ing upon the credulity of a girl pupil and a passing snowplow. When dug out he Shue Shop—Center street betw een First and China must be wholly destroyed. It wa* plex »jiH'Mtions, and no multitude can of into the air. Sec >ni. A . M. Hoskins. deceiving her by various illusions ol a was dead. reported from Peking last January that themselves form clear-cut, comprehen Livery Stable— Near P. & W . V . R ailroad. pretended supernatural character. Congressman Randall's death is hourly the conservative leader, the uncle of James Douglass, fireman of steamer Main street. G eorge Grayson. sive, consistent conclusions, without expected. He is sai I to Ire living by Fred Douglass is not at all happy in Jueintoon the Sacramento river, dropped Board o f Im m lgrti jii —Office on east side of Yet without such He is the young Emperor, Kwang Hsu, had touching them. Hayti. He is tabooed by the represen dead of heart disease, while working sheer exercise ot h B w ill power. C e lor street. M arls 8c Oliver, m anagers. dreadfully emaciated and looks very hag obtained full control of the whole busi conclusions, without single and prompt M illinery—Center street betw een First and tatives of other foreign governments and on the boat. ness, and the imperial action at that purposes, government »ran not be S econd. A nna Rees. gard. His malady is cancer. in many respects is made to leel that he time appeared to give confirmation to carri»?d on. The San Francisco Press Club, which Neither legislation nor Fruit Dryer—N ear railroad track east o f de is not a welcome guest in Hippolyte’s Irving M. Mcott is in Washington and pot. Aaron Bray. capital. As a result he will probably re now has a membership of lt>5, lias lias expressed an intention of bidding on this report But the recent reversal of administration can I»«» done at the Lum ber Y a rd —Main street north o f depot. opened a restaurant in its rooms for the that action shows that by some mean? sign. R . H. Rogers. all three of the big government cruisers, the great Viceroy Li has regained his hallot-box. The people can only ac benefit of memtiers. cept the governing act of represents* Drug Store—C orner o f Center and S econd 3500, 5300 and 7500 ton ones. He pro The Prince of Wales is suffering mani •tre ts. C. F. M ore. Four sailors from the Albatross were mises to build them all at Man Francisco former ascendancy in the palace. J!« lives. But the size of th»» modern de festly from a great depression of spirits. has maintained for many years that the mocracy necessitates the exercise of p»»r B lacksm ith—Corner First and M eridian sts. He talks constantly of his failing health, drowned in an attempt to go from Msre if he can get tne contract«. — A. B. George. establishment of a railway system is suasive power by dominant minds in the and, although he battles bravely against Islam! to Vallejo in an open boat when .Xavier Francois Picanez, a French necessary to the development of Chinese shaping of popular judgments in a very H arnessm aker—Center street betw een First increasing weakness, he is said to be “ an the tide was strong. burglar and murderer, who fl-d to this Bee v d. C. Marls. entirely different man from what he was Captain P. H. Whitelaw has gone to country four years ago, was arrested in resources and the advancemont of (’hi- different way from that in which it wa- Jail In center o f block bounded by First, twelve months since.” Puget Sound, to work on the iron ship the Pardee coal mines, Pennsylvania, n«)se prosperity; and the victory he has exercised in former times. -Woodrow Second, M eridian and Center streets. Barnar I Castle, wliieh was wrecked nearly a mile un lergr mnd, by a detec won over the censors and astrologers Wilson, in Atlantic. L um ber—First street between M eridian and The ceremony of proclaiming h's about three year« ago near Kace rock. gives evidence that practical statesman tive, and is now held for extradition. ( enter. M itchell 8c Brown. I . lv ln it o n llr«*R<l h im ! M i l k . majesty Carlos I. as Ping of Portugal and ship may yet overcome the greatest ob P hotographs—Over M oore's Drug Store on Algerve took place at I.isboo. Mra. Christophei Buckley, a late wife Trie You never will find in all your travel« Senator Mtantord has gone to New stacles in China. Ceuter stieet. S. Hobeoi . weather was cloudy but had no effect of the leader of the San Francisco dem England to attend a conference with F louring M ill— On the Dayton road at Cheha Not long ago Li overcame the con a character more unhju»» or interesting upon the crowds ot enthusiastic people ocracy, was buried from St. Dominic's lemling educators there with a view of m creek. I arra i t A Bon. than the subject of this sketch. I)r. Isaa» who thronged the streeta through which Catholic church, the funeral being largely selecting a prt Bident lor his university servative opposition to the introduction Bartlett, of Hope. Me. # * * 11» rs Po-u office-- At M oore’s Drug Store on ( enter of the telegra| h system, which is now attended. the king passed on his way to the palat e. This puts forest the report that the sena stieet. i*. F. Moore, postmaster. growing so rapidly that many thousands is a man who has nearly lived his three California's traveling exhibit is at New tor intended to occupy this position N ursery—On the Da) ton road west o f the Tile The new water works ars completed of miles of wire are already radiating score years and ten. a medical do»*tor, himself. M ill. C ooper 8c Son. at Gugaquil, Ecuador, ami the city is Orleans. The exhibit showed at Kl Paso through the Chinese empire. The evils too. on one particular diet, namely, At San Brick Y a rd —At the west end o f Third street. now assured of a plentiful supplt of and was visited by 2000 people. In the last three weeks the president which, as the astrologer« predicted, were bread and milk, not perhaps from any Jam es Hamm ett. fresh water. That, it is believed, will Antonio 8000 people visited the cars in sent to tiie senate 1429 messages <ontain- to he created by the use of electricity, particular virtue in his own right, but two »lays. D ry G oods and G roceries—Corner F i n l a n d have an excellent effect upon the general ing the nominations, including army and more properly speaking because he Main «tree's. Joseph Everest. navy apt o ntments, of alsrut 1 ti*M> per have not been realized, and the ad was born with a liking for bread Meat Market —Main street near Jones' hall. health of the people, ami au increase in The Walla Walla land office receipts vantage« it has conferred are palpable liotli population and commerce ia looked for 1H 8O were $48,000 One thousand sons. When the senate adjourn* d there Frank Jones. and milk, and a taste, or appetite, bad been made public confirmations of even to the official mi«d. with slight exceptions, for noother kind VVmrehoue—On I*. & W . V. railroad ora r da* for. two hundred anc. fiftv-one entree« ___ • „. „ ____ r . . | aliout lOOt) of these nominations, the | The aged Viceroy Li has always pre pot. C hrist uaon Hru,. of f»Msi; a man who has never eaten an Two thousand delegates attended ths the yea?. dicted the suceei s of hi« railroad policy, " ° * «teat majority being postmaatm. ounce of meat in all his life, wh»» has Fruit Dryer—Corner o f Wi lam ette and W y- first meeting of India’s national con n oo.n l streets. W ood* A Hall. I C. P. Huntington is going to build a and he has freely given hi« opinion that never taken a t'»a.sp«»on/iil of intoxicating gress. Sir William Wedderbum pre R iack'tnith sh op near O r m ilo » , Stable. At W aitsburg, John Turner, while in- | York residence at Filth avenue and it would bring about an industrial trans liquors of any nind, who has never used Fra.1 lien '. sided. The congress condemned the toxmated, fell from the balcony of a , Fifty-seventh street. It is to be built of formation of irryxirtance to the whole tobacco, tea or ciiffee, except in the case Indian bureauocracy and claimad forth« Dry Goode A G ro re rie -- C om er Canter and of coffee once or twice, but very weak, people of India the same control over hotel, a distance of fifteen feet, injuring j granite, hrirk and iron. The foundation world. Within half a decade the prog- and a man, too, who is hale an»f hearty, Flret streets. J. T. biniti.. him severely internally. His life is <te- takes 1,000,090 bricks, bung built down ie«s of China in the use of machinery their government that the people of Eng Millinery In J. T. Smith s store on Canter ■paired of. j ¡tl tj,e ground upon the underlying and in the adoption of modern methods bright and active for a man of his age, land possess over theirs. s rent. Smith A Haskins. ... , .. . . . . . i rocks. A carriage way extends into the of manufacturing has added largely to and w ho tips the beam at 240 pounds.- Camden (Me.) Cor. Boston Globe. Shoe S to p o n First street e e e t from Main. Articles of incorporation o the A la .* . hoaM an<1 paat t7,e landing. Tiie influenza is rampant in Paris. the previous productive force of theHOO,- G. Londenehi ,uaea. Coal Company have file<l with the * Undertakers are overworked, and many San Kimncitro county clerk, to mine and , Seventy-five settlers attempted to ea* 000,000 of her population: and now — ‘ •I)o you happen to have a cigarette H ardw art 1"3 Main street south o f the depot of their employes are down. In conse tV. C. Kruger. deal in • oal and other fuel, e t c .; cai»iul taMi»h a town ait* on fo r t Pierre reser- again, through the service of the tele about you?’ sai»! one traveling man to quence of the increase in the number of another. “ No, bu., my brother has a six K W Carman. M D —Office on cerner of stock, $2,000,000. |\a?ion, South I>akota. The half-breed* graph and the railroad there in assurance funerals the system of draping the Main and First -ta. Jiseovered them at their work, and of its further increase to an extent that shooter that he will doubtless loan you, there’s a dvnamite factory just out of Hardwar* — t enter treet betw een First and churches with enormous hanging« of W . J. Brough, a reporter on a San owoop d down 111>o!i tt.cru with guns, scond J. H M ount he city limits, and a drug store where black and an expensive parade of various Francisco weekly turf paper, has re- j pistols and laeeoes. The would-be eet- can not be computed.—N. Y. Sun. you can buy arsenic just round the cor F rien d , Pa-.ifl A ca d em y —C or Third and emblems of woe have l>een abandoned chived information that by the death of a . tiers fled precipitately, and got safe’ y —Some men can get along on their ner. Maybe you can find something E d u a rd s eta h d w i., M orrison. Principal. There|ortfor the week tpves 200 more . relative in England he has fallen heir to across the river. The Indian« then set individual merits, but the oarsman must that would do iuat as well.” —Merchant E . H. B -llln g er —ltta l hetate on Cantar s t deaths than for the preceding week. ' a sum of over $*> 0u,0iJ 0. fire to the lam tier, etc., and Mimed it up. always b« “ » man with a null.”—Ruck. Traveler. i>. P g iration . M anager M ayor ........................... It carder T rea su rer......... — M arshall Street C om m issioner $1 30 73 30 ■ ■ b M r l p l I t a P riv e P aya b le l a r a r i , a b ly la A d r a a e a . A d vertisin g Bills C o lle c t«! Monthly* o m M lH M t’K I P T I O * R A T I » : i One Year His Monlha ! Three Months. F. A. M orris J. T . Smith ) A ddr*w . O h a p h ic . Newberg. Oregon. T H E C O M M IT T E E M ET. tn«l Two MtHulior» of It Settled Every Thing to Their Own Satisfaction. “ if I mistake not, Laura,” said the young man, as he drummed absent- mindedly on the drawing-room table with his fingers, “ you are one of the com- mittee to select headquarters for our jlub.” “ Yes, I am one of the committee.” “ I am another, and Prof. McGoozle is the third. There is a house down on I’huggle avenue that I think will suit us exactly, but if w»* get it we’ll have to go and make the arrangement this after noon, for there are other persons after it. 1 suggested to the Professor,” con- tinu»»d the young man, with some con fusion in his manner and a bright ma genta flush careering madly over his face, “ that we should meet at that house ihis afternoon, it is only a few blocks away. Can you go now as well as at any other time?” “ 1 can.” A few minutes later George Fergusou and Laura Kajonea, members of the Keewaygooster Literary Club, were on their way to Chuggle avenue, the young man nervously consulting his watch at frequent intervals, as if he were some how afraid thoy would not meet the Professor unless they hurrii'd. But George Ferguson w asn’t afraid of any such thing. The reader need feel no hesitation in accepting this state- ment as true. The narrator of the facta has investigated the whom business and knows what he is talking about. George was not laboring under any serious ap- prehension lest he should fail to meet Prof. McGoozle. “ This is the—the house,” he said, as he stopped in front of a modern struc ture, built in a style combining the Gothic and seriocom ic orders of archi tecture in a wonderful manner, with larg»», aggressive bay-window and ornate cobblestone front. “ This!” exclaimed tbe young woman. “ Why. this looks like r------ ” “ It’s all right—it’s all right!” pro- tested George. “ We’ll go in. The Pro fessor is waiting—that is, he may be waiting for us.” They went to the door and rang the bell. A dark and discreet person of middle age admitted them. “ We have come to see the house, Mrs. Olekentuck,” said the young man. “ For the land’s sak««, Mr. Ferguson,” replied the dark person, in surprise, “ what’s tub hinder yuh f’m lookin’ at “ “ As I said." hastily interposed George, “ we have come to look at the house. This, Miss Laura,” he con tinued, opening the sliding doors on the right of th»» hall, “ is the front parlor. Hero is the------” “ But----- ” “ And this is the back parlor. Hero on the left is the library, and-----” “ 1 don't under----- ” i • M'-i-t*. y **» {»v !•> a spacltAT* ittnlug-' room, and just beyond----- ” “ But where is Prof. McGoosle?” “ Never mind Prof. McGoozle, we’re a majority of this committee. Let me call your attention, Laura, to this next room. It is the coziest little boudoir that, you ever—just sit down on that divan. Isn’t it luxurious?” “ Haven’t you made a mistake, Geo«*go? The Keewaygooster Club surely does not not'd----- ” “ Never mind the need of the Koeway- gooster Club, Laura.” He sat down by her side, and went on: “ When I pick out a building I want it complote. Do you see any thing wrong with this?” “ <>. no. It is perfectly elegant. It Is furnished in lovely style, but it seems to me too large and fine for a club head- q uartors." “ Why, Laura, you haven’ t seen the half of it yet. There’s the kitchen, and the laundry, anil— ^ h e r e he (Consulted his watch, “ but we can look at all these later. Do you see any thing wrong with this place for a—fora h<»ad<|uarterM, you know a home for the—for the Keeway gooster Club, or any thing of that kind?” “ How strangely you talk, George!” “ Building and furniture all O. K., ar«»n’t they?” “ Perfectly splendid, but----- ” “ Don’t see any thing lacking?” “ Nurelv not. But, tell me, whose lov»»ly house is it, and how does it hap pen to be for rent?” “ See the wide lawn in front? Ob serve the spacious backyard, and those neat stables and carriage-house? Notice anything la»!king, Laura?” “ O, no!” “ Well, I do!” exclaimed George, with great positiveness. “ It needs—a—er— didn’t you ask me a minute ago whose it is, Laura?” “ Ye«.” “ It belongs to—you're sure you like it? We’re a majority of the committee, vou know. You don’t find any fault .th it, Laura?” “ No, no.” “ Well, it belongs to George Ferguson, Esq. He liought it and fitted it up with out f,elling anybody. And it needs*— ” “ Don’t. George!” “ It needs or George needs—a darling little woman to he-----” “ Don’t George!” “ To take it off his hands. Will you have it, Laura, with the Ferguson in cumbrances thrown in?” •‘O, George!” “ George, dear, what will Prof. Mc- Goozle say?” “ Pr»»fessor,” remarked George se verely, “ you are one hour late. It now four o’clock. We have been here sin»;e three.” “ Four o ’clock, Mr. Ferguson,” replied Prof. McGoosle, with equal severity, was the exa«'t hour at which you sug gested we should meet.” “ The h»»u«e, I—er regret to say. Professor,” rejoined the young man, loftily ignoring the discrepancy in the statements concerning the hour ap pointed for the meeting, “ is not exactly suitable for the headquarters of the Kee- waygooflter Literary Club. A majority of the committee, Professor, have met and so decided, and the meeting has ad journed. The house will be occupied from snd after the first day of next May by shall I tell the Profi'saor. I»aura?” “ If you wish.” “ By a majority of the committee, Pro feasor.” —Chicago Tribune.