IG GRAPHIC ____ Kl IIM H IP T H H O h Tear R 1 T IM ....................................... • i i Month* Three Month*. ....................................... *1 31 ............................ ....... . ••N n rlitlM P ric e P a y a b le a bly la A d v a i M . 7f * la b a r i Ad dross G r a p h ic . N eaocrg. Oregon. CHURCH NOTICES. jlRIENDS’ C H U R C H .-S E R V IC E S EVERY Sunday at 11 a, m. and 8 p. m. and Thurs- ay at 2 p. m. Sabbath school every Sunday at V:4o a. m. Monthly meeting at 8 p. m. the first Tuesday in each month. Quarterly meeting the second Saturday and Sunday in February, May, August and November. Woman's For­ eign Missionary Society meets third Saturday in each month at 3 p. m. J T lA P T IS T CHURCH.—SERVICES, SUNDAY 11 J j a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday school Sun­ days at 10 a. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. NEWBERG GRAPHIC. NEWBERG GRAPHIC. VOL. X. NEW BERG , NEWS OF THE WEEK From all Parts of the New and Old World. B R IE F ANI) IN TE R E STIN G ITEMS RE SBYTERIAN CHURCH.—SERVICES E v ­ ery two weeks as follows: February 7th ’ nd 21st, March 7th and 21st, and April 4th and C o m p r e h e n s iv e R e v i e w o f t h e I m p o r t ­ 18th. J. E. DAY, Pastor. a n t H a p p e n in g , o f t h e C u r­ ree M e t h o d i s t .— p r a y e r m e e t in g r e n t AVeek. every Thursday at 7:30 p. m. Sabbath school every Sunday at 10 a. m. F A French expedition is reported mas­ E. CHURCH.—SERVICES SECOND, TH IR D sacred. • and fourth Sundays o f each month at 11 The Chinese are endeavoring to settle a. m. and 7:3o p. m. Sunday school every Sun­ day lo a. m. At M. E. church, Fafayette, first matters with Germany. aml.fifth Sunday of each month. The Chickasaw and Cherokee Indians GEO. H. BENNETT, Pastor. are to colonize in Mexico. Cl A LV ATI ON A R M Y -M E E T IN G S IN THE O Free Methodist church every Tuesday night. A vessel lias sailed from Portsmouth, N. H ., for the Klondike. The National Guard asks for an ap­ SOCIETY NOTICES. propriation of »3,000,000. OF T H E WORLD.—NE W BEKG C AM P, NO. There is a possibility of a rate war , 118, meets every Monday evening. between Western railroads. \ \ J C. T. U.—BUSINESS MEETING THE SEC- A party has left San Francisco to I I . ond and fourth Wednesday in each month. survey a new route to the Klondike. San Francisco merchants are being O. O. F.—SESSIONS HELD ON TH U RSD AY • evenings in Bank of Newberg building. prosecuted for selling adulterated olive AND L. O PS .—NEWBERG COUNCIL, NO. oil. • 168, meets every Friday evening in Ma­ A t Salinas, Cal., two burglars clever­ sonic hall. ly jailed the jailer and a deputy F. AND A. M.—MEETS E V E R Y 8ATUR- sheriff. • day night in C. V. Bank building. A tremendous rich gold strike is re­ O. C. W — MEETS E V E R Y TUESDAY • evening at 7:30 p. m. in I. O. O. F. Hall. ported on Dog creek, a tributary of the I Yukon. The son of a New York millionaire E A S T A.MD S O U T H died in the county hospital in San Francisco. The Georgia senate wants to send state convicts to Cuba to tight for the insurgents. Senator Perkins has introduced a joint resolution authorizing the presi­ dent to appoint a committee to draft a code of laws for the territory of Alaska. The man who helped hang Frank Butler, the “ murderer of the moun­ tains,’ ’ in Australia, was arrested in San Francisco, accused of larceny of a coat. One of the most horrible lynching, Trains leave and a e due to arrive at Portland: ever known in Nevada has occurred at Genoa, 14 miles from Carson. Aram über, who last week shot and killed f Overland Express.— Hans Anderson in a M illerville saloon, Salem, Albany, Eug­ ene, Roseb’g, Grants was taken by a mob of masked men and j Pats, Med.ord, Ash*> * 6:0 0 p. m. < land, Sacramento,,V * 9:30 a.m. hanged to a cottonwood tree half a Ogden, San Francis- j mile from the jail. When taken from | co, Mojave, Los An- | | his cell, the victim had nothing on hut | gcles, El Paso, New ' 1 (.Orleans, and East.. .. J | This was torn off by the Rose burg A way stations * 4:30 p. m. a shirt. lynchers, and the nude body was left C Via Woodburn, fo r i | Mt. Angel, Sil verton, j Daily Daily dangling in the air for six hours. As except < West Scio, Browns- y\ except the body was being pulled up the mob Sunday. i ville , Natron anti , | Sunday. (.Springfield............... j | When satis­ |7;30 a.m Corvallis A way stutions f 5:50 p. m. riddled it with bullet*. fied that the man was dead the vigil­ antes dispersed and returned to their Express train daily,(except Sunday.) 4:50 p. m. L v ....... Portland......... A rl 8:25 a. m. homes. 7: 0 p. m. A r .... M cM in v ille....... Lv. 5:50 a. m. E. L. Hewes, the Wichita mountain 8: " j*. m. A r... Independence.... Lv.| 4:50 a. m. boomer, who has been at Wichita for A ll above trains arrive and depart from Grand three weeks trying to organize a party, Ventral station, Fifth and Irvin g streets. has left for Olkahotna City without a single follower. A t different times he claimed to have from 600 to 1,000 D in in g Cara on O g d e n R o u te . boomers ready to follow his lead into the country. M w I K A A YAM H ILL D IVISIO N . Passenger depot foot of Jefferson street. A irlie mail (t r i- w e e k ly ).___________________ ~9:40 a. m. L v ....... Portland......... A r 3:05 p. m. 12:50 p. m. Lv....... Newberg......... Lv 12:15 p. m. 5:lUp. m .,Ar....... \irlie .............. Lv 7:W g. a . Sheridan passenger (daily except S u nday)__ . Lv ... ....Ar .Ar! 9:30 a. m. . Lv ... .... Newberg.... ....Lv ■|Ar ........ Sheridan........Lv •Daily. f Daily except Sunday. C. B. FRI8SELL, Agent, Newberg. K. KOEHLER, Manager. C. H. M ARKHAM , Gen. F. A P. Agent, Portland, Or. 0.R.&N. TO THE OIVE8 THE CHOIOE OF T W O TRANSCONTINENTAL R O U TES OREGON GRE1T NORTHERN RY. SNORT LINE. V IA V IA SPOKANE, SALT LAKE» MINNEAPOLIS, DENVER, ST. PAUL OMAHA AND AND CHICAGO. KANSAS CITY. LO W E S T R A T H TO K A 9 T E R .N C I T I E S . ALL Ocean Steamer« Leave Portland E vary 5 Day# ----- roa----- SAN FRANCISCO. Steamers Monthly from Port'and to Yokohama and Hong Kong, via the Northern Pacific Steamship Co., in cen- nection with the O. R. A S. Fo r full Information call on O. R. A X. ***n t, O LIV E R A COLCORD, Ntwacno, On., or address W. H. H U RL8U RT. Gen Pa**. A f t O. R. A X. Co., Portland, Of D H ’ l i N I .^ M K * !> :«* ; • < l i | N e t le e « « r i l l bo la o o rt e tf t b o r a t a o f T o a e o a ta p o r M a o . P Direct connection at San Francisco with Or« cidental and Oriental and Pacific Mail steam­ ship lines for Japan and China. Sailing dates on application. Rates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu­ rope. Also Japan, China, Honolulu and Au­ stralia, can be obtained from J. B. K 1RKLAND, Ticket Agent, 134 Third street, Portland, Ur. O IM One Column............................ .Twenty Dollar« H a lf Column................................. Ton D ollar« Professional Card« ........................One Dollar Toru Hoshi, envoy extradordinary and minister plenipotentiary from Japan to the United States, was a passsenger from the Orient on the City of Peking, which 1 as just arrived in San Fran­ cisco. He will leave for Washington at o n v carrying with him instructions in reference to the Hawaiian treaty of annexation which w ill be considered by the United States senate. When the German reinforcements, consisting of four companies of ma­ rines, numbering 33 officers and 1,200 men, and a company of naval artillery, arrive at Kiao Chau hay, for which point, as already cabled, they w ill soon set out, they w ill bring the German force there up to 4,666 men, the lar­ gest body Germany has ever sent be­ yond Eropean waters. It is understood that the reserves had to be drawn upon. Surgeon-General Wyman, of the marine hospital service, has submitted his annual report to Secretary Gage. It shows that during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1897, the total number of patients treated at hospitals and th. dispensaiies connected with the service was 54,477. Although the total num­ ber of patients treated was 673 in ex­ cess of those treated during the pre­ vious fiscal year, the exjienditnrcs were »538,536, which is »21,000 less than the previous year. The annual report of James H. Ecklea, controller of the currency, for the year ended October 31, 1897, opens with • brief resume of the history of the legis­ lation which constitutes the present National-bank act, and invites the at­ tention of congress to amendments to the law recommended in former report», without specifically repealing them. The controller renews his recommend­ ation of last year, urging that national bank examiners he paid an annual sal­ ary instead of fees, as now. Further information from Washing­ ton respecting the proposed canal and locks for the channel at the dalles is to the effect that it i. proposed to pash the work with a deal of rapidity. The contract syatem and modern methods of excavation and building have made it clear that years need not be spent upon a work of this character. If the con­ tract for improving the Columbia by a small channel at the dalles is adopted it will no doubt he stipulated that tbe work must be done with rapidity. MRS. The Y A M IIIL L M ’K IN LEY C O U N T Y , OREGON, F R ID A Y , DEAD. P r e s id e n t a n d O t h e r M e m b e r « o f t h e F a m ily a t t h e D e a th b e d . Canton, O.. Dec. 14. — Mrs. Nancy Allison McKinlby passed from this life at a few minutes past 3 this morning, with all her children and other imme­ diate relatives at her bedside. She did not suffer any in her last hours, hut gradually passed from the deep, palsied sleep, in which she had rested almost constantly for the past 10 days, into the sleep of death. No word could be secured from the house for some hours before dissolu­ tion. A t 2:35 an undertaker was sum­ moned and the first publicity was given of the death. The end was almost beautiful in its peacefulness. She seemed to sleep so soundly that it was difficult to tell whether she had yet breathed her last. Tiiis condition continued for half an hour. The president and all ole the family were by her side. There was no recognition, however. Her last consciousness was hours before her final taking away. The tenth day of Mrs. McKinley’s illness was marked by a number of material changes such as improved the condition of the patient, and as dark­ ness approached it was felt by those around her that she had finished the last «lay of her life’ s journey. She was resting comparatively easy at that time, bnt was a great deal weaker. A t the dawn of day it was felt that tiie end was at hand, for about that time site experienced one of the sinking spells common to the illness, and for a long time seemed so nearly inanimate that it was thought no rally was possi­ ble; hut the rally came, and with it a small amount of liquid nourishment, the first sli/3 had taken since Monday. This was followed by such peaceful re­ pose as to revive the hope, which tvas realized, that she would live through the day. In the afternoon another period of anxiety was experienced by the watch­ ers. Another sinking spell came, and for a time it seemed as though it would he the last. After that, she continued weak and low. The doctor called at 5:30 o’clock and reported that he found a material change for the worse, such as he regard­ ed as certain to bring about final disso­ lution during the night. He hail not even a faint iiope that she could live until morning. AN IM P R O M P T U COURT. Tryin g; to F ix t h « R e s p o n s ib it y Sm ith M u rd e r». fo r the TIIE ROOT OF TUE EVII A M ex lra n B ie rn tlo n . JL RIVERA A FR EE T h « C u b »n P a t r io t R e le a s e d b a n a s F o rtre s s . 17, 181)7. MAN. F rom Ca­ Havana, Dec. 13.— General Rivera, the insurgent leailer, who was capture«! in March last in Pinar del Rio by the Spanish troops under General Hernando ile Velaseo, and who was recently par­ doned by royal decree, lias been release«! PROMINENT MEN SIGN THE CALL from Cabanas fortress, where he has been imprisoned for several months, an«) sailed toilay by the steamer Colon C o n fe r e n c e W i l l B e H e ld In N e w Y o r k for Cadiz, his home. In t h e M id d le o f J a n u a r y — E f ­ Tiie Colon also carries hack to Spain 800 sick, wounded and otherwise in- fe c t on S ta te L e g is la t u r e ». j capacitate«! soldier . New York, Dec. 14.— The following In the skirmishes of tiie last ten days call was given out tonight by Ralph M. the insurgents have lost 113 killed and Easley, secretary of the Civic Federa­ 1,000 prisoners. Eight chiefs and offi­ tion of Chicago, who has been acting cers am! 53 armed privates have surren- for a committee on reforms of quasi dereif to tiie Spanish. The Spanish political organizations for tiie past column, in tiie same period, has lost three weeks: live officers and 22 soldiers killed, with “ Tiie object of this conference is to i 11 officers and 110 soldiers wounded. bring together men with practical ideas Juan Cossio, who was in charge of from all the large cities, and especially tiie insurgent dynamite corps in the from state, in which substantial pro­ province of Puerto Principe, is dead at gress lias been made in reform. The ! the insurgent camp. He was a cousin programme w ill include speeches made of Evangel iua Cossio. by men of national reputation in hot!) Tiie insurgents fired a cannon shot political parties, as well as reports into the machinery of tho plantation of from practical men as to the working Mr. Rigby, an American, in tiie Man­ of the various laws now governing pri­ zanillo «¡¡strict, destroying tiie ma­ mary election caucuses. Considerable chinery. Tiie insurgents have forbid­ attention will be given to tiie question den grinding in that neighborhood, ‘How to get voters out to tiie primaries,’ under threat of burning the fields. after fair laws are secured. Special in­ T h e F i g h t in P i n a r d e l K l o . terest w ill be taken in reports from New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Havana, Dec. 13.— Latest reports of Illinois, New Jersey and Ohio, where tiie late fight in Pinar del Rio province legislatures will be in session. Head­ show tiie Spanish loss was more than quarters will be opened at tiie Hotel claimed. The dead or wounded include Manhattan, New York, December 27, one colonel, one major, seven captains, 1897. 11 subordinate officers anil 74 privates. “ Believing that our oaucuses or pri­ Moat of tiie wounded will «lie. Tiie mary election customs or laws lie at the rebel loss was 14. Tho rebels used ex­ very root and source of our entire elec­ plosive bullets. tive franchise system and that tiie re­ W a n t D e L o m e K o m i led. sults in our larger cities are due in a New York, Deo. 13.— The Spanish large measure to the defects in such practices and customs, it, therefore, colony in this city lias been «livided by follows that to purify this system is to a petition sent to Madrid at the time take a long step in tiie direction of hon­ of tiie assassination of Premier Canovas, esty, economy and efficiency in every asking for the appointment of a stmng brand) of the public service; and fur­ successor to Senor de Lome. According ther believing that tiie enactment of to the World tho petition was drawn so laws to prevent corrupt practices an«l as to attack Senor de Lome without throw the safeguards of a regular elec­ mentioning his name, and among the tion around the caucus or primary will 40 prominent Spaniard, who signeil it encourage many good citizens to take were several friends of tiie minister part therein, we, the undersigned, tor who did not ace any attack upon him the purpose of discussing and discover­ in the apparently harmless recom­ ing, as far as possible, tiie precise de­ mendation. Tho result is a bitterness fects in the various systems which now among tiie factions almost as strong as Tiie peti­ obtain, and tho remedies, and take their hatred of tiie Cubans. such action as may seem necessary in tion says: “ For Spain to succeed in her rela­ tiie premises, do hereby join in calling a conference of persons interested in tions with the Uniteil States flie must said questions to convene in the city of have in Washington a representative ol New York, on the 15tli dav of January, ability and firmness, whose lioart will beat with the pulsations of our mother 1898. “ We deem it desirable that the con­ country, hiu I witli a head balanced to ference be made up from men of all huso all his diplomatic relations on an parts of the country and without regard indisputable right, and not allow the right to bo curtailed in tiie least by un­ to party or factional aifiiations. ’ ’ The call is signed by prominent men founded demumls or unjust pretensions from tiie opisising party.’ ’ from all sections of the Union. Convention to Consider Pri* mary Election Reforms. Hazelhurst, Miss., Dec. 14.— In an open field, without a house in sight, on a high hillside, with a crowd of eager men waiting to avenge the terrible murder that lias taken place in Law­ rence county, in case a conviction was reached by the impromptu court, the scene lighteil by flaring pine-knot torches held aloft in the hands of the waiting mob, the three negroes, Giles Berry, W ill Powell ami Tom Wallen, INDIAN T E R R I T O R Y Q U E S T I O N were standing trial for their life last C c n g r e a i W i l l S e tt le I t In a G e n e r a l night at Bankstone Ferry. B ill. The negroes were arrested with Lewie, who was lynched Friilay, at the ! Washington, Deo. 14.— The indica­ place of the original crime, but were tions are that this congress will pass a released on their promising to appear general hill for the entire rehabilitation next morning as witnesses. They did of Indian territory. The measure as not put in an appearance when ths now planed is to make it embrace trial was ready to begin. Search was everything that has been sought to be made for them by the mob, and the accomplished in the past by tiie Dawes negroes were caught ami brought baca. Indian commission,which is still nego­ Then the suspicion that they were im- tiating with tiie five civilized tribes, plicate«! in the original crime arose. but which w ill be here next week to According to their own story, thet report tiie discouraging existing condi­ weie with Lewis the night before. Thr tions. Tiie hill covers all thequestions three men testified that they slept in a of citizenship, allotments of lands, dis­ cottonliouse a mile ami a half from the positions of townsites, mineral lands, Smith house, where the terrible butch jurisdiction of tiie United States courts ery took place, ami that Lewis wai over tiie present reservations and other with them all night; at least he war matters hearing on the extinguishment there when they went to sleep and wa of tribal organization. Tiie first steps there when they awoke the next morn in tiie matter have been taken by tiie Indian committees of both tiie senate ing. There are about 200 men in the mol and house. constituting a committee of the wiiolt It is understood that in a few days for the trial. Reliable reports today there will he a session of tho commit­ from a messenger who was at the sceno tees at which these matters will he say that the mob is very moderate in gone over and steps taken in tiie way its acts, and has cooled down consider­ of settling tiie problems by congres­ ably. Berry and Wallen, though badly sional enactment. In view of the large scared, maintain their denial of any amount of work necessary to be done, however, it is not probable that any complicity in the crime. A telephone message from Hon. W al­ bill can be passe«) till well toward tiie ter Caterings, of Geogetown.Btates that end of the session. two other negroes have been arrested I)a strikes being maile on the Hootalimjua or tributaries, hut a man named Davis washed »1,600 from the river bars lust summer. Hepburn believes that rioh strikes will be made on the ilootalin- qua this winter. A t Tagish house, the weather was bitterly cold, the thermometer regis­ tering 42 degrees below. People were met making their way down all along the route to head of Lake Bennett. Among the goldseekers was a woman, who was ptiiling her sle«i all alone, ami she was making fair time. Lake Bennett was still open 15 miles from the foot, on November 17, am) (lie mercury sto«j