NEW BERG G R A P H IC NEW BERG NEWBERG M I'H M C B IP ’r i O * H A T E N t One Year ........... ********....... ...... $15C dix Mouths ............................ *...... 7* Three Mouth«. ............................... * ■aksrrlptlon Price Payable Invarl aiily In Art\anee. Addrjs». O uasuic , Newuerg, Oregon. CHURCH NOTICES. .’ KILN I il Ulti II .—at.KVlCbs K V t llV òuu iHv ai 11 a . w ami a p. m . ami Thuradat at 2 f . m . S.iubath Bchool «very soimlay m y;tL s a m . Monthly meeting at 7 f . m . the tirsi l uesday in each mouth. Quarterly meeting the Betoni Swiiiruay auAPTlBT< HI K« li B1KVK I 8( 81 N DA Y 11 > ii. ami 7 to f . m . Snudar school su days a 10 a . m Prayer meeting W dues lav evening •i 7:30 o clo k. ' K EY. G. F JKK Anp. I > KFsh V I K K IA N CHURCH. — b K K V H fcis every th-rd ^abbaili at 11 a . m . and 7:30 f . »cat Kvange.ical • tiurch. Sabbath school every third Sunuay at 10 a . m UKV. WM. GA Y Pastor. 1 C i H KIS H AN CHUKCH.—Sl. ltVli ES EVERY j second anil fourth Sunday at 10 a . m and _____ M DVEN 1 Si t’ l l l K r i l —P R A Y E R M L E U N U every Wedncs iay evening. Sabbath school every Saturday at IO a . m ., services followiug. \ .1 REE METHODIST — PR A Y I R MESTINO . every Thurstlay at 7:30 r. m . Salibalu school every Smi i ay at lo M.____________________ 1 \\ E. CHURCH SERVICES K V K K T 8 D N D À Y ¿ .il. ut 11 a . M. ami 7 :.;o p. M. Sabbath School ai 10 a . m . Epworth League at C :;0 p. m . Prayer meeting every Thurstlay evening at 7:30 o’clock. _____ KEY. J II W u o D Pastor H A L V i TION I K M Y * M i l I N « » 1 BA K Ì3 ihcks on Main street as follows: Tiicsuay tor soldier converts ami recniiis; Wednesday, pubic; Fritlay, holiness, for Chrisliaus on y; Saturday eve, public; sunti .y, al; ‘ lay, com meucing with 7 a . m ., knee drill; holiness meet mg II a . m .; fam ly gathetiug at 3 p. M. and grand free and easy in the evening. E .erybody nel oine. SOCIETY NOTICES. \Y Ob TH E W —NEWBERti t AMP, :»o. 11 meets every Monday evening. D. T. Ü.—BUSINESS MEETING HIE BEI V oud and fourth Wednesday in each mouth. O. O. F.—SESSIONS HKl.ii ON I Hi RM>.% Ì • evenings in Hank of Newberg building. K A K. OF S.—N K W BEK1 > COUNCIL, NO. , 168, meets every Friday evening in Masonic hail. A. M.—MEETS EVE RY SATURDAY in C. V. Bank building.___________ A F. ,a A night O. U. W - M KI : IS F V E K Y 1 U K -1 » A Y K \ K N A . iug at 7:30 p. . in I. O. O. F. If all. m EAST AND SOU TH —V I A — The Shasta Route -O F TH K - Traius leave and are due to arrive at Portland: FROM JUNE 23, 1895. O v e r la n d E xpress . Salem, Albany, Eug­ ene, Roseb'g. («rant’s Pass, Medford. Ash­ •8:50 P M land, Saerameuto, Og­ den, San Francisco, Mojave, I,os Angeles, I El Paso,New Orleuns, j and East..... •8 30 a . m . Roseberg A way stations • 1:10 r. m I f Via Wood! >iirn fori Daily Daily j • Mt. Angel, Sllvertou, except ] ; West Heio, Browns- J except Sunday. ville, Natron and I Sunday. I l Springfield................ J *4:00 P. M. Salem ami way stations *10:15 a . m 17:30 a . m . Corvallis A way stations p*:20 p. m 11:45 p. m . McMinnville A way stft’sj f8:25 a . m . D in in g Cars oil O g d e n R o u t e . PULLMAN HUFFKT 8LF K P E IIS —AND— SECOND-CLASS S LE E PIN O CARS Attached to all through trains. Through ticket office, 134 Third street, where through tickets to all points in the Eastern states; Canada and Europe ean be obtained at lowest rates from J. B. KI R K LA N D , Tic ket Agent. All above trains arrive ami depart from Graud Central station, Fifth and I streets. Y A M H I L L D IV IS IO N . Passenger depot foot of Jefferson street Airlie mail (tri-weekly). 9:40 a . M l V.... ....Portland..... .....\r. 8:05 p . m . 12:30 i*. M. !.v.... .... New b e rg .... ....Lv. 12:30 F. M. ñ: >5 i*. M.| Ar.... ....\irlie.......... ....Lv.¡ 7:;.0 a . m . Sheridan passenger (daily except Siindny). 4:30 !*. m I.v.... ....Portland..... ....A r.j 9:: 0 a M. ft 05 r. M I.v.... ....Newberg..... ....I.v. 7:55 a . M. 7: ¡0 r. M. A r.... ....Sheritlmi.... ....Lv.| 0:20 A. M. *Dañy. tDaily except 8«uday. R. KO K H I.ER. Manager. E. P. ROGERS. Asst. Gen F. At P. Agt.. Poit* land. Or TO THE E A S T GIVE3 THE CHOICE OF TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL R O U T E S VIA GREAT NORTHERN RY. UNION PACIFIC RY, SPOKANE MINNEAPOLIS DENVER OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL KANSAS CITY LOW KATES TO A L L EASTERN CITIES OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 DAYS ___ FOB___ SAN FRANCISCO For fnt! detail« rail on or addresa W. H. HURLBURT. Gen’l fa ri. Afrent, P ortland , O r . O LIVE R A COLCORD, Agenta, X rwbcro , O regon . ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ f VOL. 8* EVENTS OF THE DAT Epitome ot the Telegraphic News of the World. TERSE TIC KS FROM TH E WIRES An I u t e r e « t i n g C o l l e c t i o n o f I t e m s F r o m the T w o Hem ispheres Presented In a C on d en s ed F o r m . GRAPHIC. i g THE PEACE OF EUROPE May Disturbed by Death. F r o m V ie n n a W i t h t h e Czar. A w f u l C r im e o f T h r e e Men. A powder house near Xenia, O ., Three men visited the home of E. V. blew up aud shook the country for Warner, a farmer, of Libertyville, la., miles arouud. Two men were killed. bound and gagged Warner's daughter, A farmer named Silvera, living near Mellie, aged 20, who was alone in the Sauta Kusa, Cal., attempted to poison house. The trio ransacked the house, himself, wife aud family by puttiug but found nothing, and then each man arseuio iu the coffee. A doctor ar­ assaulted the girl. They left her rived in time to save them. bound and gagged. She managed to The looked out meu of the Brown release herself, and went to the house Hoistiug aud Conveyancing Company's of a neighbor, where she fell uncon­ works, at Cleveland, O., have voted scious. She is iu a critical condition. to return to work, and the famous The men have been captured and there strike, productive of several battles aud is strong talk of lynching them. riots, is broken. E a r l L i O u r (¡u p«it. Minister Terrell has notified the The American steamship St. Louis Turkish government that the latter’s from Southampton, having on board answer to the demands of the United Li Hung Chang, the Chinese special States for indemnity for the burning of envoy, aud suite, has arrived in New the American missions at Kharput aud York. On her arrival oft Quarantine Marash are not satisfactory, she was boarded by General Huger, of Hilton, Hughes & Company (once A. the government welcoming officers, T. Stewart & Company), one of New from the cruiser Dolphin, who extend­ York's largest department stores, have ed to the Chinese statesman, iu behalf made an assignment. The assignment of President Cleveland, a welcome to is without preferences. The failure is the United States. due to the gradual decline of business. The civil service commission has is­ D e r a i l e d at a i roRging. sued an order to federal office-holders, A passenger train over the White warning all their employes against Mountain division of the Boston & seeking or making coontributious for Maine railroad was derailed at a street campaign purposes. The order em­ orossing in Concord, N. H. The engine, braces all branches of the government baggage car aud smoker left the rails service. Violators w ill be prosecuted. aud were badly wrecked. Every occu­ In New London, Conn., as an excur­ pant of the smoking car was more or sion train was just landing its passen­ less seriously injured, aud it is feared The injured gers a boy bent on mischief let loose a that Eeveral w ill die. heavy tramcar on an incline. It dashed number about a dozen. into the crowd killing one woman and I l i a J e w e l s W e r e S e iz e d . seriously injuring several persons. A panic ensued in which several more Michael Barrietti, ragged and dirty, arrived on the last Hatnburg-Amerioan were injured. According to a cablegra., recoived liner in New York. His trunks excit­ in Philadelphia the steamer Laurada ed suspicion, and a search was made has just landed one of the most for­ disclosing false sides in the trunks, midable filibustering expeditions yet which contained 696 pie ces of jewelry, shipped to Cuba. She lauded over 200 consisting of gold and diamond pins, and brooches, men and an immense cargo, which con­ bracelets, earrings sisted of 58,000 pounds of dynamite, worth $60,000. They were all seized eleven field guns, four cannon, seven D u el le d l u t o t h e C r o w d . gatlings, aud a quantity of ammuni­ A t Rushville, lnd., Mamie Wood, a tion. Eire has destroyed the village of On­ race horse, broke away from her driver tonagon, Mich. The large mills of the and dashed into a crowd of spectators, Diamond Match Company were com­ injuring several of them. Great ex­ pletely destroyed. The flames then citement was caused by the runaway, descended into the business and resi­ and tire crowd stamped« d, men, women dence quarter of the city and finally and children making a frantic rush for lodged in 165,000,000 feet of sawed safety. Some of the injured w ill die. lumber on the dock. The destruction A M o th e r ’ « T e r r i b l e Crime. of the village was complete. The loss Mrs. C. W. Green, the w ife of the is nealry $5,000,000. About 1,800 traveling passenger agent of the Big men, women and children are homeless Four railway, of Kansas City, while and in need of clothing and shelter. temporarily insane, killed her three P. O. Minor, a pioneer resh ent of children, aged respectively 13, 6 and 9, San Jose, Cal., a prominent lawyer while they slept and then committed and capitalist, shot and killed him­ suicide. c self in that oity. No cause is assigued. W i l l E xtru d H er Dom ain. United States Marshal Thomaa and The Argentine government proposes deputies killed Bill Doolin, a noted out­ law, iu a battle near Clayton, Payne to annex the Soi.tlr Shetland islands, county, O. T. One deputy was in the South Atlantic, about 100 mile south of Cape Horn, and w ill elispat b wounded. G. M. Schilling, the one-armed an expedition there for that purpose in athlete who has undertaken to walk December. from Pittsburg to San Francisco and T h e I t r o o k l y n 1« S p e e d y . back in ten months, and to return The government’ s new warship, with $1,000 in cash, although restrict­ Brooklyn in her trial trip off the Massa ed from begging or purchasing supplies chusetts’ coast developed the w. nderful en route, has arrived in the latter city, speed of 21:60 knots per hour, thus tweuty-aix days ahead, but $200 be­ winning for her builders a large brnui. hind his schedule. M u t i n y and .Murder. Captain Burnside and twenty-two of The crew of the Portland (Me ) brig the crew of the British tramp steamer Moldaya were picked up at sea in Henry B. Cleaves mutined in the har­ three open boats by the Anchor line bor of St. John, Porto Rico, attacked steamer Circassia, which has just ar­ the captain, overpowered the mate and rived in New York. The Moldava about killed him and inflicted Injuries struck an iceberg in a fog and sunk on the steward which cuased his death giving the crew barely time to provi­ The steward, Antonio F. Beira, was sion the lifeboats and lower them. struck over the head with a belaying pin and thrown headforemost into thi A ll bands were saved. The wedding of Miss Gertrude Van­ hold. Iu wantonness the murder com- derbilt, the eldest daughter of Mr. aud pares with the triple murder on ini- Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, to Mr. Herbert Fuller. Harry Payne Whitney, the eldest son La Bourgogne Fxoneratrd. of former Secretary of the Navy W. C. The maritime court, at Cherbourg, Whitney, took place at “ The Break­ has decided that the French steamship ers," Newport, H. I. The affair was La Bourgogne is not to blame for the somewhat of a disappointment to so­ collision which occurred in a f< g he ciety owing to its simplicity. Only tween herself and the Atlas line steam­ fifty persons were present. ship Ailsa, both outward bound, near The sultan of Zanzibar, Haraed Bin Port Hamilton, New York bay, on Thwain Bin Said, is dead. He was February 29, which resulted in the about 40 years of age, a nephew of sinking of the Ailsa. the late sultan, A ll Kbalif, and Bur- S h e l l e d t h e 1'alace. gash, and succeeded to the sultanate on A Zanzibar dispatch says the pal -ce the death of Sultan A li, March 5, 1803. He was odc of a number of claimants, of the sultan has been bombard'd by and was selected as the most fitting English warships anchored in that port The by the British government, which ex­ and is now a mass of ruins. ercises a protectorate over the sultan­ usurping chieftain. Paid Khalid, and the commander of his forces, Paid ate. Feeling against the Southern Pacific Pales, escaped to the German consul­ Company is intensifying among the ate, where they remain under the pro­ 15.000 wheelmen of San Francisco and tection of the German flag. 40.000 wheelmen in the state, over the M o r e i d l e Men. recent decision of that company to Workmen employed in the Illinois charge 25 cents for carrying a bicycle between any two points, and for tax Steel Company’s plant at Hammond, ing bicyclists who cross the bay 10 lnd., have beeD informed that the fur- cents for each wheel. A boycott has nice fires are to be drawn, when the concern w ill cl< se for an indefinite been declared on the Southern Pacific period. This w ill throw 400 men out by a large number of wheelmen and the others, it is said, w ill doubtless of employment. Depresaion in busi­ ness is one of the causes assigned. take the same course. It is reported that the Northern Pa­ A B o y I rush d t o D«*nth, cific is about to enter upon the work of Ten-year-old KhiDer Moyer was i d - reducing many of its grades, with the •tauty killed while playing in a box­ view of decreasing the cost of operat­ car, at Telford, Pa. The rar was ing the road. By lesreniug the grades shifted while the boy was looking out it w ill be possible for the road to haul the door, and struck another car • n the train loads very much larger than at same track, the force of the shock preseDt. It is said that the Great causing the door of the car to close Northern hauls trains 50 per ceDt larg­ suddenly, crushing Moyer's skull be­ er than those on the Northern Pacific tween the frame of the car and the and the Northern Pacific proposes to so door. improve its property that it w ill be on Germany loves botanical gardens a level with ita competitor in the near and has thirty-five of them. future. London, Sept. 1 — A dispatch to the Telegraph from Kloff says that Prince Lobanoff-Rostovsky, Russian minister of foreign affairs, died suddenly while traveling from Vienna to that plaoe. The prince was in the company of the czar at the time of his V.asl" aud hia demise was wholly without warning. The news of the death of Prince Lo- banoft-Rostovsky, according to the dis­ patch, caused great excitement through­ out Russia, where the personality of the minister of foreign affairs was con­ sidered to be second only to the czar himself. Prince Lohanoff-Rostovsky exercised a storng foreign policy— a policy which was regarded in some quarters as tiireateniug the peace of the world. Besides his presont work, Prince Lo banoff-Rostovsky devotod his leisure hours to the study of aud to the w rit­ ing of works on Russian history. The tour he had planned to take with the czar through the countries of Western Europe was expected to be most far- reaching iu results affecting the settle­ ment of the Eastern question. Francis Joseph paid Prince Lohanoff- Rostovsky the highest honors during the recent visit of the czar to Vienna, and his death at the present juncture is regarded as a moat dramatic and important event, upsetting as it does all possibilities of conferences between the foreign ministers of the great powers aud compelling the ezar to change his plans concerning his tour through Germany, Franco aud Eng­ land. LEAVENWORTH TRAGEDY. M j s t e i - y o f t h e S u ic id e a nd A t t e m p t e d . M u rd e r Keveuled. Leavenworth, Kan., Sept. 1.—The mystery of the National hotel tragedy was cleared away today when relatives came here to care for the young girl iu her dyiug moments aud to take away the dead body of the man with whom she sought to die. The girl is still alive, hut has not regaiued conscious­ ness, and cannot live. The story revealed is one of innocent love, poverty and the si king of death to overcome troubles that were by no means serious. John Hartig, the dead man, was but 21 years of age, the sou of a poor farmer of Conner station. Mary Bush, barely 19 years of age, aud quite pretty, is the daughter of a poor seo- tiou hand who works on the Missouri Pacifia at Pomeroy. The country youth and maiden had met aud loved, hut when they proposed marriage the g ir l’s father objeoted, though her mother bade her do as she wished. Hartig was without means, and met with lit ­ tle encouragement in his matrimonial aspirations from his parents aud brothers. Today's developments show that the young lovers discussed their poverty, the parental opposition to thiir mar­ riage, and what seemed to them theii dark prospects, until death seemed pre­ ferable to life. Their journey to this city Sunday n'ght, and the tragedy which w ill un­ doubtedly result in the death of both, was the result. From the train they went direct to the National hotel. When safely looked in thiir room, preparations for death seemed to have been immediately begun. The men who broke into their room found both bodies lying across the bed, both dressed as the young people had come in from the street. Their hats lay side by side on the table, together with the notes stating their determination to die, and requesting that their bodies be buried together. One Column....................... .Twenty Dollar« Half Column— .................. Ten Dollar« Profesaionai Card«...................... One Dollar F t» *« O v e r a Ca n in e C orpse. F i r « L 'a ii « e «f b y L i g h t n i n g . HIE FALL OF TURKEY Sultan’s Government on the Eve of an Overturning. The N e w « ' » « ! ! » S t r ik e Kuderi. San Francisco, Aug. 31.— The groat Newcastle coal strike is ended. The decision of the strikers, according to Australian mail advioes received, was made July 21, when a majority of the lodges decided to accept the master’s terms. The miners appeal to have sub­ mitted to the inevitable, and at last accounts work was being fully re­ sumed. AT G R A N I ’S V iceroy TOMB LI H u n g l i n i n g tlie D ay. l*a««ed New York, Sept. 1, — Li Hung Chang spent today quietly at the Waldorf. In the morning he received h.s old frienel, Cede. m l Foster, and afterwards a dele­ gation of Mott street merchants paid their respects to the viceroy. In the afternoon Li Huug Chang visited Grant's tomb, on which lie laid a wreath of flowers, winding up the day by a visit to the house of Colonel Fred Grant, where he had tea and remained for an hour, Li Hung Chang w ill leave tomorrow, A BAD MAN’ S CRIME. on the dispatch boat Dolphin, for We st Point. He w ill be accompanied by the W ithout A n y P r o v o c a t i o n Sh ot an«/ me-mhers of his retinue aud the eifficers W o i i i h I c «! H i « D a u g h t e r . of the United States government, who Columbia, Mo., Hept 1.— A brutal are attending him during bis stay in and perhaps successful atiempt at this country. murder occurred here last night at the THE LEADVILLE STRIKE. home of John Hunt, wi n has borne a bad reputation for y - - Hunt went home drunk aud in an ugly mood. His tins A i r a d y L o s t T w o M i l l i o n D o l l a r . Kiwi H e t t l e u ie n t N o t In Might. daughter came from the house to miet Leadville, Colo , Hept. 1.—-This is him. Without provocation Hunt drew a revolver and opened fire on the girl, the seventy-fifth day of the strike, aud who, after receiving a bullet in her tnatks the inception of the most import­ right side, just above the hip, fled to ant action taken on either siele, as for the house. Hunt then began firing at the first time since long before the his wife, who escaped without injury. strike began, the great pumps in two of The frenzied husband then ran to the the leading mines, the Bona uiii 1 s , 4c; do, veal, 10 to 14 pounds, 5c; elo, calf, under 10 pounds, 6®6c; gtcen (nn- salted), lc per pound less; culls (balls, stags, motii-eaten, badly cut, se'oreel, hair slipped, weather-beaten or grubby) one-third less. B eeswax —20®22 per pound. T allow — Prime, per pound, 3(a2'ac; Nc. 2 and grease, 2Qc. Msrchkiidlss Marks*. S almon —Columbia, river No. 1. tails, $1.25® 1.60; No. 2. tabs. $2.26®2.60; fancy, No. 1, flats, $1.75® 1.85: Alaska. No. 1, tails, $1.20® 1.30; No. 2, tails, $1.90 ®2.26. C ordage — Manilla rope, IQ-inch, is quoted at 8c; White sisal, bant twisted: Rope, I 1.,-in. eir. anil upward, 6Qc; rope, 12-tbreaii, 6 '4c. S u g a r —Golden 0 , 43gc; extra C, 4>^c; dry granulateel, 6c; cutie crusiied and powdereel, tie- perpounel; Qc per pound discount oil all grades lor prompt cash ; half barrels, Qc more than barrels; luv >le sugar. 15®16i' per ;>ound. I'e ir r u —Mocha, 27®31c per pouml; Java, fancy, 2l®29c; Costa Kira, 20® 23Qe; Caracal, 22'a®26c; Salvae'or, 19 W 22c ; Arbiie kle, $19.15; Lion, $19.15; Columbia, $P».65 per case. K iez— Island, $3.50®4 per sack; Ja­ pan, $3.75® 4. C oal O il — Cnses, 20i-; barrels, 17Qc; tanks, 15't c per gallon. W heat K ao » —Calcutta, $4.25®4.37Q for July and August eleliveries, M m I M a rk »* . Bszr—Gross, top steers, $2.40; rosi, $1.75®2.00; dressed beef, 3Q®4Qc per pouml. M utton —Groes, lieet sheep, wethers. $1.76; ewes, $1.60; dressed mutton, 3lf lee 4 Qc per pound. V ia l —Gross, sm all, 4Qc; large, 3® 3Qc per poumL Iloos—Groes, choice, heavy, $3.00® 3.26; light and feeders, $2 76, dressed, 3Q®4c per pound. SAN F R AN CIS CO MARKETS. P otatoes — Garnet Chile, 50®6')c; Salinas Burbanks, to®90c : harlv Rose, 25® 40c; River Burbanks, 26ea40c; sweets, 1® l '» c per pouml. K nions — 30'.» UK- p ersa k for yelle>w, SOdttiO fo r pu-kle. C hbbsb — Fancy, mild, new, HQ®9c; fa.r to fooet, 'Q ® 8 't c; Youna Anie ica, Pea 10c; hastern. 12®)3 per pound. Hors — 2(4 Ic per pound fur old.