Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, April 18, 1902, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    N EW BERG GRAPHIC.
N E W B E R G G R A P H I C .1
▲ D Y H T I S I N O
NEWBERG GRAPHIC.
»A T «».
>* C o lu m n
-------------------------- Tw e n ty Dollar«
»11 Co lum n ................... ...................... T # » DoKart
E
ofasaloaal Card*...............................Oa* Dollar
S U B S C R IP T IO N
i M i t i l N a tl* * * W i l l B * lB**rt*d a t Ik *
R a t * o f Tmm C n u F a r L in o .
adr*rtlatng Bill* Collected Maathly
One Year» in advance.........................$1.00
VOL
NEWBERG,
X IV .
BY J. M ACLAREN COBBAN.
I went in the morning and discovered
how tiie strange tints of the water were
produced. The pond was fed by a run­
let, which flowed at the bottom of the
bank on one side of the lane called by
the name of Lacroix. This lane, I had
already learned, had lieen in other days
the private carriage drive of the first
lacroix (before a Steinhardt had been
heard .ft from his f,..^ .............. ... his
dye works and his model farm.
The
mansion, with its noble rookery, had
long ago become the prey of the omniv­
orous speculative builder; the model
farm had disappeared, all but the farm
house which, squeezed into a sordid
corner of the spreading village, was now
let out in tenements; a Steinhardt now
reigned in the Lacriox dye works and,
in his scorn of the past, was in the
habit of “ tipping” his aniline refuse
down amohg tlie tree roots of the cher­
ished avenue, narrowing more and
more the already constricted channel of
the little stream, and poisoning and
discoloring the once clear flow of water
in the whole neighborhood.
This it
was which washed color into the pond
and gave it its varying tints.
I 8too.I thus in some doubt and great
indignation— doubt whether Miss La­
croix’s dr, ijn might not after all be
capable of as simple an explanation as
I had found for the tints of the pond,
and indignation at what I saw around
me. I had never before ventured into
Lacroix lane; I now passed under its
wretched dying trees, along the brink
of its cinder mud, ploughed a foot deep
into ruts by lumbering coal carts and
wagons, and fancied it metamorphosed
back into the private, shady, well-kept
avenue of the first Lacroix.
I had
walked almost the whole length of the
lane when I met Mr. Birley, Mrs.
Steinhardt’ s brother “ J im .’ ’
‘ Ah, there you are,” he called cheer­
ily, when he espied me, “ I was just
coming to look you up and take you
round a bit; there’ s not much ‘ biz’ do­
ing, and so I ’ ve taken a holiday.”
After greeting I gave vent to the in­
dignation of which I was full. We re­
turned along the lane.
" W e ll,” said he, laying his hand on
my shoulder, “ it’ s not nice of course,”
— standing and surveying the lane.
“ Hut it’ s uo* for you or me to mend it;
though I’ m joint guardian with ’ Man­
uel of Paul’ s g irl” (he meant Miss La­
croix), “ I ’ ve nothing to do with the
property, and ’ Manuel, you see, can’ t
bear to spend the brass, and doesn't
care a— well, a button— for Paul's fam-
Poor Pauli lie was a good
IjifgHpose the name Lacroix is
i-’TaKie JacUtuid it lias lieen what you
lows would call historical.”
,asi«d what he meant. He stopped
jointed,lip the lane, away from
viey.;
.
Irtiglffin't believe it,” said lie,
jnj. foHow this lane right out to
« l i ( j p * ^ y y u ’'mM?vt to the Bastille.”
^ (T lw ile a r old gentleman called it
. ‘ 'B a s t W '1')
* -tfo o k e d at him ; I failed to compre­
hend.
“ You don’ t mean,” I said, “ the
famous French Bastille?— the fortress
prison of Paris?”
“ That’ s it,” said he. “ You’ veread,
I suppose, in your history books of the
taking of the Bastille, and the man
that was governor at that time, De
Lacroix;— that’s the family. The poor
old fellow was killed in the streets, I
believe.”
Thus lie went on, with much fullness
of irrelevant detail. I gathered these
feats of consequence which I here set
dow n:—At the time of the great emi­
gration of French nobility to this coun­
try, a member of the De Lacroix family
found his way to (.aneashire with one
or two dependents, a packet of jewels,
and some scientific learning, and with­
out his aristocratic prefix " d e .”
He
prospected about a little, and at length
invested the money he got for his jew­
els in the Turkey red and Indigo dye
works of Timperley.
He prospered.
He was one of the first to apply chem­
ical science to the manufacture of dyes.
He made a large fortune, and became
the great man of the neighborhood.
He had, however, a family of four sons
who gave him great trouble.
They
almost ruined their father and quite
broke his heart before their several
courses of extravagance anil debauchery
came to an end.
The eldest, Paul’ s
father, drew up just in time, married
and settled down to the business;
another broke his neck in a steeple
chase; the third died of delirium trem­
ens, or worse and the fourth still ex­
isted, for he could scarcely be said to
Jive: he wa» the tongue and limb-tied
paralytic, known as old Jaques, who in­
habited the little octagonal house near
the pond, which had been the lodge of
his father's model farm.
Paul had
wished him to make his house his
home, bat he insisted on settling down
there.
Thi» sad and fateful story lay heavy-
on my mind and heart for the rest of
the day. In the evening I took down
the first volnme of Carlyle's French
Revolution, and read with new interest
the wonderful pa-sages in which he de­
scribes the taking of the Bastille by the
mob, and the part which the old officer
of the fortress played in its hopeless
defence.
Alter that I sat down and wrote to a
pair of London friends, asking them to
make certain inquiries concerning Mr.
Lacroix.
three weeks. But I had little time for
rumination and no time at ail for visits
to Tipmerley Hall until Whitsuntide
was past.
Whitsuntide is the great
festival in the Lancashire calendar.
Then mills and pits are idle for a
week, and the work people have a spell
of serious enjoyment, and wearing of
new summer clothing, fur which money
has been saved from ChristuiaBtide or
earlier. Some go on jaunts to the sea­
side for tli» week of for a day or two;
hut the recreations and dissi|>atioii8 of
the multitude are those connected with
the Sunday schools, which are gigantic
and popular institutions; the time and
attention (often to little purpose) that
clergymen are expected to give to them
can hardly be conceived by those who
hold cures in the south. One day there
is a grand procession round the parish
of scholars and their friends arrayed
in tlieir new finery, accompanied by
flaunting banners and a blatant brass
band, and headed by tlieir clergyman.
The procession halts at fixed points,
forms into mass and sings hymns, led
by the brass band, while the banners
take up positions to display their hide­
ous devices and pictures. For another
day a short excursion in wagons, with
tea or milk and buns, and games are
arranged for the benefit «specially of
the younger scholars; and for a third
day a long railway excursion for the
others. All these arrangements I had
to undertake (some of them much
against the grain, I confess; for I pre­
fer to go through the parish as through
life, unaccompanied by instruments of
brass)— to undertake alone, along with
all the duties more properly parochial
and clerical; for the rector was still too
ill to attend to anything.
For three weeks or so, therefore, I
had no time to rumintae upon extrane­
ous matters, and no time to spend at
Timperlev Hall. But I then made an
acquaintance that considerably influ­
enced the later events of my story— Mr.
Freeman, the minister of a quaint lit­
tle Dissenting Chapel in the village.
We encountered first on the day of the
procession in the Lacroix lane.
He
was marching along from the opposite
direction to us at the head of his mod­
est and silent troop; the lane was nar­
row; he halted, took off liis hat, and
smiled (while I could do no less in re­
turn), and he and his pooplo (some of
them w ith reluctance, I have no doubt)
stood aside to let our noisier and more
imposing procession pass.
That was
our introduction. When the Whitsun­
tide matters were all disposed of, he
called on me one evening to ask me to
be chairman at a lecture lie was about
to deliver in the little public hall of the
village on some point of the land ques­
tion. I was somewhat taken aback by
his request, and I suppose I showed
that I was.
“ You are surprised, I daresay, Mr.
Unwin,” said he, with a little con­
strained laugh (he was a bright, genial
little man, with a big, red beard). “ I
I will explain why I ask you?— because,
I understand, you, like myself, come
from the south, where pure streams,
and clear skies, and healthy trees may
he seen, but especially because I be­
lieve you are the only man in the
neighborhood who holds sometliig like
the same opinions as I do; my friend,
Mr. Birley, has told me of the talks he
has had with you about the way our
Lancashire friends treat nature."
“ Your friend, Mr. Birley,” I ex­
claimed.
“ Yes,” said he, with a comical twin­
kle in his eye, “ Mr. Birley and I meet
not on theological, hut on simply
human common ground, and he is the
friend of everyone who knows his good
heart.”
I began to like my visitor, I agreed
to act as his chairman, and we t hen
settled down to talk.
On the evening of the lecture I took
my place on the platform in a consid­
erable flutter of nervousness.
There
was a large attendance of work folk,
with a fair sprinkling of well-to-do peo­
ple from the neighborhood, brought to­
gether, I suppose, as much by curiosity
to see two parsons of conflicting creeds
together as by interest in the subject
of the lecture. I observed on a hack
seat Mrs. Steinhardt and Frank, Miss
Lacroix and our friend, Mr. Birley.
Steinhardt himself was not there. On
rising I was astonished to find myself
greeted with rounds of applause, and
on explaining in a few words how I
came to be where I was, I was cheered
with such hearty vociferation, that I
concluded I had become, without know­
ing it, a popular personage. I accepted
the explantion Mr. Freeman gave me
afterward:— “ It was a brave and risky
thing to do, you know, to appear with
me; and these Lancashire folk above
all things admire a bit of pluck against
odds.”
_________
Y A M IIIL L
I starco n speechless surprise— lesr
at the actual question than at its dic­
tatorial tone.
11 is complexion was
usually very ruddy; it now became a
curious purplish red, even to his eyes
and his bald crown, as if lie had been
dipped in a vat of liis choicest dye.
“ You mustn’ t do that kind of thing,
you know, you’ ll spoil your chances in
the church; and, more than that, I
can’ t have you and him disturbing my
workpeople, and setting them against
me. I can’ t say anything to him, but
I must tell you I can’ t have it; it won’ t
do at a ll."
“ I don’ t know,” I answered, “ what
right you have, Mr. Steinhardt, to talk
to me in this fashion.”
I was angry. He moved about the
glasses and decanters near him.
“ What right? Your salary comes
out of my pocket; your rector can’ t pay
it.”
“ That,” said I, “ is a matter between
you and the rector, sir.”
“ Perhaps it is. But I want to tell
you that I must be master in this vil­
lage; and if you are bent upon interfer­
ing with me, or between me and the
people, you shall go away— that’ s all.
You keep to your preachings, and your
visitings, and your tea meetings,” he
continued, in a tone, doubtless, meant
to be placatory, “ and you will do very
w ell.”
“ I take it to he my duty, Mr. Stein-
hardt,” I replied ,“ to concern myself
with whatever affects the welfare of the
people; and, to my mind, the dreadful
condition of the valley, and— ”
“ Oh,— d—d sentimental nonpenso!”
lie exclaimed. “ The valley is here for
us to make money out of the best way we
can.”
“ It is, of course, of no consequence
that I don’ t agree with you,” said I ;
“ but as to what I shall think or say on
these or any other matters, I can cer­
tainly take no orders from you, sit.
You must excuse me saying it.”
“ Very w ell.”
He sat a moment in
silence, fingering his glass; he seemed
not to have expected this conclusion.
Then he rose and said, as if he wore
quite unconscious of having treated me
with rudeness. “ Wo had better join
the ladies.”
“ If you w ill excuse me,” said I, “ I
think I must say good night.”
“ Eh?”
He looked at me in some
surprise. “ Oh, you should talk to the
women a little while at any rate. But
just as you please.”
The invitation was exasperatingly
unconcerned, but, thinking this was
hut his haliituanlly churlish Teutonic
way, and that if I did not appear in the
drawing room the ladies might lie dis­
tressed, I accompanied him. Both of
the ladies glanced at me rathor curi­
ously; probably I showed signs of dis­
composure. Boon Mr. Steinhardt with­
drew to liis study and his pipe.
“ You’ ve been having words with
Emmanuel, Mr. U n w in ," said Mrs.
Bteinhardt, almost as soon as her hus­
band was gone. “ It’ s all about that
dreadful lecture affair, I suppose. He
thinks you've gone against him in it,
and Emmanuel can’ t bear to be gone
against.” (The good lady always pro­
nounced her husband's name with a
lofty sense of its scriptural prestige.)
“ I do not see” said I, still rather
sore, “ that Mr. Bteinhardt should ex­
pect to have his own way everywhere
and in everything, any more than an­
other man.”
“ Mr. Bteinhardt,” said Miss Lacroix,
“ is now alone in liis authority, now
that father is gone, and he is by his
nature what you would say a despot —
oh, yes, dear Mrs. Steinhardt, he is— if
any one is not obedient to him he is
not nice at all. He said hard, rude,
cruel things to voti, Mr. Unwin— in­
deed, yes,” said she in answer to my
look of surprise, “ I know lie did ; I folt
him saying them all the tim e —and lie-
sides, I saw him saying them with his
eyes ail dinner time. But you must
not trouble about his words; they come
from his nature, which he cannot help,
I suppose.”
“ What things, to be sure, you do
say, Louise!” exclaimed Mrs. Btein­
hardt. “ ami what eyes you have got!
My w ord!”
I HERR STEINHARDTS NEMESIS
CIIAPTE'R II—Continued.
R ATH .
O n « Y « « r ...... ........................... ............. .............. ft m
S i x M onth« ................. ..
..... .....^rri . f - T
If
T h r « « M o n th «_____________ ______ ---------------
m
(T o be con tinu ed)
Would Accept Mrs. Davis' Offer.
The Mobile (Ala.) Register advises
the leji-Iature of Mississippi to accept
Mrs. Davis’ offet and buy Beauvoir,
Jefferson Davis’ late home. The house
and grounds have, it is said, been ne­
glected and ill-kept, only a custodian
residing upon the premises and gather­
ing what fees he can from chance vis­
itors.
__________________
COUNTY,
OREGON,
F R ID A Y , A P R IL
HINTS OF THE DAY
FROM THE FOUR QUARTERS OF
THE WORLD.
A Comprehensive Review of the Important
Happenings of the Put Week, Presented
In ■ Condensed Foim, Which Is Most
Likely to Prove of Interest to Our Many
Readers.
General Miles will be forced to retire
at an early date.
The cholera situation
worse in the Philippines.
is growing
Fire in a Louisville, K y., lumberyard
destroyed $70,000 worth of property.
The house has passed the bill grant­
ing Mrs. McKinley a pension of $5,000
a year.
Major Waller has been acquitted of
the charge of killing natives of Samar
without trial.
Rioting continues in the cities of
Belgium. Martial law will be declared
throuhgout*the country
A new independent steel company is
to be incorporated in Sew Jersey with
a capital of $200,000,000.
England is very hopeful over the
prosjiects of peace. The Boer leaders
have been in communication with Loid
Kitchener.
Burglars entered an Indiana hank
and blew open the safe, lint the ex­
plosion awoke citizens and no money
was secured. Tiie damage by the ex­
plosion was $12,000.
The revolutionary movement io Bel­
gium appears to lie spreading.
Wade Hampton, the famous South­
ern general, is dead. He was 84 years
of age.
Sir Hiram Maxim, an English capi­
talist, offers $250,000 for a successful
airship that is not a balloon.
The Spanish commission which is to
value artillery remaining in the West
Indies, has sailed for its destination.
Colombian rebels continue to harrass
the government troops. They are re­
ceiving arms from the United States.
The Boers have not yet accepted the
British terms of peace Conferences be­
tween the leaders are still in progress.
John D. Rockefeller has given n
Brooklyn school $125,000 provided that
friends of tiie institution raise an equal
amount within one year.
Unconfirmed statements are in circu­
lation in London to the effect that the
Boer leaders have accepted the British
terms of peace.
The body of Cecil Rhodes has oeen
placed in its last resting place.
Fire at Columbus, Ga., destroyed
property valued at $250,000.
Rear Admiral Norman R. Farquhar
has retired. His retirement promotes
Captains Joseph B. Coghlan and James
H. Sands to be rear admirals.
18,
1902.
S O U T H C H I C A G O FIREBUG.
Seventeen Incendiary Firti were Started Dur­
ing One Night
Chicago, April 15.— Alter extinguish­
ing 10 fires yesterday, most of them
close together, and apparently of in­
cendiary origin, the firemen of South
Chicago at daybreak today were railed
upon to coutend with the most serious
of the long string of blazes.
The first of this morning's fires con­
sumed a ham containing several horses.
St. Patrick’ s church came next, and
was destroyed before the firemen could
reach it. Scarcely had they reached
the church w hen they were recalled to
fight a dangerous looking fire at W il­
lard Sons hell forge works. After a
hard fight here the flames were checked.
Means bile the warehouse of the Wash­
ington Ice Company had caught fire,
and before tiie flames were subdued
$5,000 damage »had been done.
The
Calumet theater came next, sustaining
$10,000 damage before the fire was ex­
tinguished. A four story structure,
haviug a feed store on the ground Moor,
and dwellings above, was discovered to
he burning before the theater fire was
put out.
Two families escaped in
tlieir night clothes. The building was
destroyed. Meanwhile a saloon had
burned down.
The total loss of this m orning's fires
is put at $50,000. As the buildings
were not near each other, the firemen
declare that the fires were the work of
an incendiary. The people of Boutli
Chicago were greatly alarmed by tiie
rapid work of the firebug.
The financial loss in the fires yester­
day amounted to $00,000. Evidence
of incendiarism was so convincing,
however, that citizens joined the police
in patrolling tiie streets in an effort to
guard property and capture the incen­
diary or incendiaries. In spite of the
extra precautions, however, today’s
fires were started. Citizens were le-
wildered at the attack, and daylight
was welcomed with great relief.
M E A T FAMIN E IN E N G L A N D .
Retailer« Determined that Comumcri Shall be
Made to Suffer.
London, April 15.— The so-called
meat famine, which has lieen exploited
throughout the Ilriti-h press, has be­
come a matter of keen interest to Lon­
doners, who hitherto have not been
affected by the prevailing scarcity. A
careful canvass of London shows that
the retailers at tiie present time are tiie
sole sufferers by the advance in the
wholesale price, which amounts to a
penny |ier pound on all grades or meat.
Since January, the majority of the re
tailers have lieen running tlieir busi­
ness without profit, liecause lack of or­
ganization prevented a uniform in
crease of prices. A meeting, however,
has been called, which undoubtedly
will result in a uniform increase in the
price of meat on the part of retailers
throughout Iyondon.
O F F I C E FOR T H E PRESIDENT.
W hile at tiie Charleston exposition New Seven Mlllion-Dollar Building Planned
the president declared his intention of
for Waihlngton.
visiting the Northwest at an early date.
Washington, A piil 15. — Senator
Dr. Talmage is much worse.
He is Fairbanks, chairman of the senate com ­
now troubled with congestion of the mittee on buildings, has reported favor­
brain.
ably a hill providing for a building for
Socialists mobbed King Leopold, of the executive, the department of state
Belgium, and he had a difficult time in and the department of justice. Senator
Fairbanks consulted I’ resident Roose­
escaping.
velt before the report was made, and
The Danish landsthing, or upper found him agreeable to having the ex­
house, voted in favor of selling tiie ecutive offii-es in the new building.
West Indies to the United States. The
The proposed building is to he erected
treaty will now go to the lower house. north o f the present state, war and
Cholera is increasing in the Philip­ navy building. It is estimated ttiat
the new building and site will cost
pines.
$7,000,000. Senator Fairbanks sub­
The Manchurian treaty has been mitted an elaliorate report upon the
signed at Pekin.
hill, allowing tiie necessity of relieving
Fire in New York destroyed a six tiie White House of the executive offices
and the need of more room for the
story building. Lose, $150,000.
other departments. The building is to
Fighting between Christians and lie constructed undor the direction of
Turks is reported in Northern Turkey. the secretary of state and attorney gen­
President Roosevelt received a hearty eral, with tiie approval of the presi­
welcome at the Charleston exposition dent.
The house's first vote on Cuban reci­
procity showed both parties to lie
divided.
Major General W. R. Bliafter, United
States army (retired), is a candidate for
governor of California.
Helen Gould’« Gift to be Dedicated.
New York,
April 15.— 'The new
$100,000 building for the naval branch
of tiie Young Men's Christian Associa­
tion, near the Brooklyn navy yard,
built with funds contributed by Miss
Helen Gould, is so nearly complete«)
that it is expected the work of the
branch can lie transferred to it within
two weeks. The formal dedication will
take plain on May ¡15. Secretary Long
will make an address.
The building
has five stories, a basement and a roof
garden, and is in the architectural style
of the F'rench renaissance.
NO.
22.
▲ddr«««, • l i m e , if« w t o r t . O n
NEWS OF THE STATE
IT E M S O F IN T E R E S T FROM ALL
P A R T S O F O REG ON .
Commercial and Financial Happening« of Im­
portance—A Brief Review of the Growth
end Improvement« of the Many Induitries
Throughout Our I hriving Commonwealth
—LaUit Market Report.
Polk county is now"practicaIIy out «1
debt.
The postoffice at Mabel, Lane county,
has been moved one-half mile to the
south.
The poetoffice at Ridge, Umatilla
county has been moved half a mile to
the southwest,
i « i
.
MISTAKES IN LU ZO N .
H»r»h Treatment of Native! in Some Provu
Hu Bad ElfecL
Washington, April 12.— When the
senate committee on Philippines met
today Senator Lodge, the chairman,
laid before the committee the report of
Major Cornelius Gardener, civil gov­
ernor of the Philippine province of
Tayahas, to which reference was made
by General Miles in his correspondence
with Secretary Root. This repott
ad
been withheld, and this caused the
adoption of a resolution at the last
meeting ol the committee requesting
the secretary of war to send the report
to the committee. The report is dated
December 18, 1901, and la largely a re­
view of conditions in the province. In
the coarse of the report the governor
says:
A poetoffice haa been established at
“ A vigorona campaign waa at once
Drew, Douglas county. The office will
be supplied with special service from organized against insurgents in arms,
with the troops acting under positive
Perdue.
orders to shoot no unarmed nativea and
Fruitmen of Polk county predict an to hum no houses except barracks.
immense crop this year.
The con­ I-outing was prohibited under the strict­
tinued cold, backward spring weather est penalties.
Company and other
has retarded the development of Imds commanders were ordered to pay for
which are not affected by the present everything taken for neceesity or bunght
severe cold and chilling rains.
from nativea.”
The governor in detail tells about
Considerable anxiety lias been ex­
what lias lieen done, and then recom­
pressed by fruitgrowers in tiie Hood
mends that the operations against the
river valley concerning the probable
insurgents should he by a force of na­
damage to fruit by the severe freeze in
tives
He has traveled all over the
January and F'ebruary. F'rom present
province, with no other escirt than na­
indications, however, the yield will be
tives. In another recommendation, he
average, unless some further damage says:
occurs.
“ As civil governor, I feel it my dnty
The Polk county Mohair Association to say that it is my firm conviction
has sold its pool of 3ti,000 pounds at 25 that the United States troops should at
the earliet opportunity be concentrated
cents per pound.
in one or two garrisons, if it is thonght
Mrs. Flliza Jane Wrisley, an Oregon desirable that the good sentiment and
pioneer of 1852, has passed away at her loyalty that formerly existed towards
home in Medford. Deceased was horn the United States among the people of
in 1828.
this province should be conserved and
encouraged. Being in close touch with
City elections were held in many
the people, having visited all the
towns throughout the state this week,
pueblos one or more times, having lived
i’arty lines were observed in but a very
witli them in their homes, I know that
few cases.
such sentiment once exi-ted.
“ Of late, by reason of the conduct of
A railroad is to lie built in Southern
tlio
troops, such as the extensive burn­
Oregon from Grants Pass to Crescent
City. It will he known as the Oregon ing of the barrios in trying to lay waste
the country so that the insurgents can­
A Pacific Railway.
not occupy it, the torturing of nativea
Superintendent of Public In-trnction by tiie so-called water cure, and other
Ackerman states that after six months method«, in order to obtain informa­
of use the new Oregon text hooks have tion, the harsh treatment of the nativea
generally, am) the failure of inexperi­
proven satisfactory.
enced, lately appointed lieutenants
The fishing season on the Columbia commanding po-ts to distinguish be­
river opens April 15.
The proape. t- tween those wl are friendly a id those
are more favorable for a large pack than unfriendly and to treat every native as
if lie were, whether or no, an insurgent
at this time last year.
at heart, this fsvorHhlesentiment above
March customs receipt* at Portland referred to is being fa-t destroyed snd
were $77,212.09.
The larger piaa> t of a deep hatred towards us engendered.
tlieso receipts were from duties paid on If these things need lie done, they had
best be done hy native troops, so that
inward cargoes from the Orient.
the people of the Pnifed States will not
Tiie Columbia River Fishermen’ s tie credited therewith”
Protective Union, at a meeting in
Astoria, fixed the price of salmon for
O REGON D E M O C R A TS .
the coming season as follow s;
Six
cents per pound for fish weighing 25
Full State Ticket Placed In the Field, with
pounds or over, and 6>4 cents for
Chamberlain for Governor.
smaller fish. No price for steelliead*
or bluebacka was mentioned.
Portland, April 11.— The Democratic
state convention met yesterday in Cath­
olic F'ore-ter»’ hall, nominated George
FL Chsmlierlsin for governor, named a
central committee, with Sam W hite, of
Baker county, as chairman; made dis­
trict legislative nominations, adopted a
platform and adjourned for the day.
The Willamette Pulp A Paper Com­
pany, which employs over 500 men in
Oregon City, haa made a voluntary ad-
vam-e in the wages of about 300 of its
employes. All the men who have been
receiving $1.50 |>er day w ill In future
get $1.75, and all of the $1.75 per day
men w ill get en advance of 10 per cent.
The Second Day.
Portland, April 12.— The adjourned
meeting of the Demociatic state conven­
tion was called to order at 10 o'clock
yesterday morning and the state ticket
completed as follows:
Supreme judge, B. F. Bonham, Mar­
ion county.
Secretary of state, D. W. Rears, Polk
county.
State treasurer, Henry Blackman,
Morrow county.
Attorney general, J. H. Raley, Uma­
tilla county.
State printer, J. E. Godfrey, Marion
county.
Superintendent of public instruction,
W. A. Waun, Lane county.
Congressman First diatrict, J. K.
Weatherford, Linn county.
Congressman Second district, W. F.
Butcher, Baker county.
C. E. 8. Wood, Multnomah county,
was endorsed for United States senator.
PORTLAND MARKETS.
W heat— Walla W alla, B4<8)64Xc:
blneetem, A6(366)4c; Valley, 84(386c.
Barley— Feed, $ 2 0 0 2 1 .;
brewing,
$21(321.50 per ton.
Oats— No. I white, $1.15(31.22)4 ;
gray, $ 1 . 10 ( 3 1 . 20 .
Flonr— Beet grades, $2.86(03.40 per
barrel; graham, $2.60(02.80.
MlllstiifTs— Bran, $18 per ton; mid­
dlings, $20;
aborts,
$20;
chop,
$18.50,
Hay — Timothy, $ 1 2 0 1 3 ;
clover,
$ 7 .5 0 0 8 ; Oregon wild hay, $ 6 08 per
ton.
Potatoes— Best Bnrhanks, $1.1001-25
per rental; ordinary, 70080c per cen­
tal; Early Rose, $1.260160 per cen­
tal, growers’ price« ¡sweet«, $2.2602.60
per cental.
Bntter— Creamery, 22>40 2 6 c ; dairy,
18O20c; store, 1 3 0 15c.
Eggs— 1 3 0 14c for Oregon.
C h eese— Full cream, twins, 130
13)4c; Yonng America, 14015c; fac­
tory prices, lO l> 4 c less.
Poultry— Chickens, mixed, $3.500
4.50; hens, $4.50(36.60 per dozen, 11(0
l l X r per pound ; springs, 11(311 )4c per
pnnnd $3(34 per dozen ; ducka, $5(37
per dozen; tnrkeya, live, 12(313c,
dressed, 14(318c per pound; geeee, $8)4
<37 per dozen.
Mutton— Grose, 4c per pound; dress­
ed, 7<07)4c per ponnd.
Hogs— Gross, 6J4c; dressed, 6 )» <3 7c
per pound.
Veal— 7*< 3 8 for small; 8 H («7 for
large.
Beef— Groea, cows, 3%Qic\ steers,
4(34 t^c; dressed , A>¿<37He per ponnd.
Hope— 128113c per pound.
Wool— Valley, 13<3l5c; Eastern Ore­
gon, 8(012)4c; mohair, 21(021 )4c per
pound.
Rioting students at Moscow, Russia,
Tht Platform.
set fire to a prison whero a number of
The platfom adopted condemns the
their comrades were confined. The
Zest for Sewring.
present state government as extrava-
English women have taken np the leaders were severely beaten by the
I gant, and promises an economical ad-
“ charity sewing clubs" with renewed police.
m inistration; favors expansion of pub-
zest since the return of the Dnchess of
Colonel John McKee, of Philadel­
j lie ownership of public utilities; de-
York from her tour of the British co- phia, who is thought to be the wealth­
; mands that valuable franchises shall not
lonial possessions. The Ophtr brought iest colored man in the co ntry, is
lie granted except upon the basis o f «
home an astonishing number of frocks, dead. His estate is estimated at about
fair pavment therefor; favors placing
flannel petticoats and wraps that the $1,500,000.
Revolt In the Congo.
state officer* on salaries alone, allowing
future queen had taken the time to cut
Paris, April 15.—The minister of the
no fees or perquisites; opposes leasing
The shah of Persia will visit Emperor
1 and make during her trip, assisted by
colonies ban ordered that reinforce­
public domains fc* any purpose whatso­
William.
j tier ladies in waiting.
ments lie sent to the scene of the
ever; advocates preparing the natives
The house has passed the Chinese
troubles in the F'rench Congo, as the
of the Philippines for self government,
Hundreds of Pope».
exclusion bill.
result of the dispatches he received
and when prepared to grant them their
There have lieen 253 popes from St.
Venezuela rebels are gaining ground yesterday confirming the report of a
independence; favor* the speedy con­
i Peter to Leo X III, inclusive. One of
and the government ia in a bad way.
struction of the Nicaragua canal, the
revolt of native* in the Bangha district.
CHAPTER IV .
them, Adrian IV (1154), was an Eng­
pending Chinese exclusion bill, the
Striking miners in
Pennsylvania The Paris manager of the Bangha Com­
This adventure with Sir. Freeman lishman, Nicholas Breakesbeare, who
election of United States senators by
pany attribute- the outbreak to the fact
was
born
a
beggar,
bnt
lived
to
crown
have
rejected
the
offer
of
the
m
in
«ow
n­
had results that I had not foreseen; hut
that the fanaticism of the natives has
direct vote, the enactment of an eight
that I might have guessed had I con­ the German Emperor Barbarossa, and ers.
hour day law for all public work, the
been aroused by hnman sacrifices which
sidered sufficiently the situation in died the most powerful potentate on
A third attempt ha* been made to were i-elebrated recently.
irrigation ol arid lands by the govern­
He adds
which I had placed myself— results earth. Six have been Germans. Near­ I assassinate the Moscow prefect of that the natives are well armed with
ment. and the improvement of the Co­
ly
all
the
rest
have
been
Italians.
which at the time caused me some
police.
lumbia and Willamette river*.
modern rifle*.
anxiety, yet which, in the end, proved
Peculirity of a Family
much to my advantage.
Mr. ¡stein­
Brigand« Exterminated
A silken thread ia three times as
Of the 20 tobacco factories in France |
Transport Hancock Run« A(round.
Mrs. Susan Holloway, a resident of
hardt, of course, heard of it, and took
Constantinople, April 15.— A hand strong aa a flaxen one of the same
3
are
in
Paria.
an early opportunity of calling me to Cicinnati, has three brothers and two
Manila,
April 12— The United State«
of seven Bulgarian brigands haa been thickness.
task with charaoteri-tic German— I may -isters, and ail of them have six fingers
army transport
Hancock has run
South Africa has ostrich farms cot
exterminated in the Vilayet of Mon-
perhaps say, Bi-marrkian — bmsqnerie. on each hand. Mrs. Holloway has just
Bookseller* who supply English aground in the mttd near Iha, Znmhalee
a*tir,
in
Macedonia,
by
Turkish
troop«.
I had been asked to dine at Timperley given birth to a baby girl who has a taining over 300,000 birds.
The brigands raptured the tower of the schools report that there has been in province, about 100 miles north of here.
Hall. He said little during dinner, similar redundancy. Mrs. Holloway’ s
In New York city alone there ai
village of Kadi Koi and then fortified recent years a very great increase in the She is not believed to he in danger.
hut I found his eye on me several times. mother and grandmother were ai«o dec­
Tugs have been sent to her assistance.
themselves.
The troope surrounded demand lor German school books.
now ahont 400,000 German».
When the lsdies withdrew from the orated in the »ante way, as ia her broth­
the place and demanded the surrender
Since
the
announcement
of
the
war
table, he sent Frank after them. Then er’ s infant son.
Transvaal Gold Outpot
The governor of Finland has ordered of the brigands, who replied with a In Booth Africa, Scotland has sent to
he opened npon me at once.
the prosecution of the Lutheran paiitora fusillade, which was returned by the the front 15,600 noo-commiaslom d
Johanneaburg, April 14.—The output
CHAPTER U L
“ What the deuc«. Mr. Unwin, is this
John Deniell, a New York merchant, wbo refute to read the new K u^ian Turks until all the occnpanta
of the officer* and men and 8S0 officer*; total, of fine fo ld for March waa 104,127
I had io all this abundant food for you’ ve been doing with that ass, Free­ kept bia marriage a secret for 34 years. army regulation* ia their churches.^ k j tower were dead.
ounce«.
116,830.
Ilia will revealed it.
roaunatwa daring the next two or man?”
j
J