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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1908)
o f th* L m i In t im H n f Events o f the P u t W «*k . New York is overran by handled« of unemployed. The Twenty-fourth Japanese diet has just convened. l-t President Roosevelt is hunting tur keys at Pine Knot, Va. “ State Treasurer Steel, of Oregon, has filed his new bond in the sum of $635,- 000. Hr,: " -* • Cleveland, Ohio, manufacturers plan a resumption of work for fully 10,000 former employes during January Railroads throughout the country have shown the efleet« of the financial panic by a curtailment of order* foe rolling stock. Pi I A t a meeting of' the Pacific Coast Commercial Travelers’ association in San Francisco it was voted to stop gambling among members. A passenger train collided head-on with a freight near Lenox, Mich. Five tra omen met death. A ll escaped with but slight injuries, In a raid on Chinese gambling houses Portland polios secured $10,166.90 in ).U«f O ooin and currency and $4,446.09 of K 6X* ex Hongkong hanks. According to law this mooey may j o into the i Raleigh, N . 0 ., has voted tion. 1 ‘ Dewey baa just celebrated his 7Cth birthday. M l| u 1 ! prohibi the Walls-Fargo Express company with ooucaaling from the public tariff ached' ales that had been filed w ith the Inter state Commerce commission in Wash ington and with tasking unjust and die criminatory rates. The aotual question Involved, however, was whether or not the quantity rate c f 6 cents a pouix I from New York to San Vraoolaco for shipments o f 10,000 to 30,000 pounds applied to bulk or assembled ship ments, gathered and forwarded by forwarding agency to one «m ee m or aaeooiatioo organised for the purpose of getting the lower rate, the shipment ultimately intended for qmnerous con signees who were designated by num bers of the labels to the one consignee The charges of discrimination are based upon the refusal of the oompany to transport a shipment of 16,000 pounds consisting of 443 pack' ages, from New York to the California Commercial association in 8an Flan cisco last August, at the bulk o t quan tlty rate of $8 per hundred pounds, the company charging the regular package rate. I t laaleo alleged that the ex press company charged a higher rate than that published and filed w ith the Interstate Commerce commission, the latter being w ilfully ooneealed and hid den from the poblte. This complaint avers that it is e distinct violation the interstate eommeree set. In answer, the express oompany denies a il the allegations made, an< charges that tbs association resorted to subterfuge in order to extort unjust dis crimination in ita own favor, * and . beset * * * «*«»• «™ ®t a quantity rate upon the shiment in question on the grou nd that, while oonsigned to one consignee, It intended lor more than a score of firms. E X P A T R IA T E S IN C H IN A . County Five t e a r * . Klamath Fall«— Trunk Ira the Enterprise Land A Jnvestm pany has just received reports from tbe department of agriculture relative to samples of sugar beets raised an tbe Enterprise tract. The beets were taken from tbe same tract as were those sent to Profoaasr Knioely some tim e ago, but wer* fo lly aoakured, w hile the others were not. Prof essor K n b ely ’e test siiowed from 17.40 to 19.35 per cent pure sugar, w hile the department teat la on* or two per cent higher, with e very high degree o f purity. These beets produoed 8,186 pounds to the quarter-acre tract, or nearly 17 tone to the sere. The department of agriculture in s letter to M r. W hite says Klamath county's sugar bests are of the moat ex cellent quality and that protyeets are bright for the industry in this eoanty. Pendleton— Umatilla county’s rapid development la shown In the summary of tbs taxable property in tbs county, rsesptly furnished the tary of state by Assessor Strain. This summary, compared with the an* node five years ago, shows the number of tillable aerea as loot eased by 90,000. The total number o f acres of arabi* lend in the county at present Is 46,000. The number o f aerea classified aa non tillable is given a t 566,144. The figures for the latter do not, oT oourae, include the forest reserves and other government land not subject taxation. The amount of nan-tillable land tfi the county ia constantly In creasing, also, by reason of the fact that so much government land ia being taken np and deeded to settler*. The increase in the number o f till able acres is due In large measure to tbe different irrigation projects erhieh are being completed. This is not tbe only sou roe of ine resse, however, os thousands of acres of land in the and southwestern parte of the county are now plowed up and growing wheat that a few years ago were conoid' ered worthless for anything more val cable than range for stock. Much of it was given over entirely to mgebrush and jaoknbbite. The P ilo t Reek and Birch creek countries have experienced the greatest development in this line. Many Make Own Way. , University of Oregon, Eugene A canvass of the students of the Universi ty of Oregon just made shows that be tween 60 and 70 per oeot of the men in the university this year a t* either wholly or paitially making their own wev through ooilege. • The greater pert of the eeuroing la done, o f oourae, daring the summfir. The canvass efaowa that, sinoe the vacation is comparatively abort, tham eo got employ meet la the harvest fields, m ills, ml sea and labor of various kinds paying pood wag««. It Each Farm to tin Named. shows also that the engineering stu Grants Pass— Among dents find no trouble in getting w o r k transacted ______ at the Josephine in tbeir llne^ T h e engineering depart- Fruitgrowers’ ment has a large number o f graduates was the adopting of individual in tbe employ of the Southern Pacific, heads and letter peper, upon which O. R. A N., Northern Pacific and- tbe w ill be designated the name of tbe fruit government reciaaoatkm service, and farm and the brands packed by the the m ajority of the engineering students grower. I t waa thought beet for are engaged before the session closes in member to have some appropriate June. A number of students ere part name for his fruit tract, and by insert ly earning their own way daring tbe ing it upon letter sheets it would alao session.* The university maintain* an give promindnee to individual effect, employment burepu under the direction and at tbe same tim e give the union of the registrar, hot it has not been able greater notice and strength, which this fall to supply a ll calls mad* t a it would more favorably attract the buyer for students to work. to thia locality. Nswtands Thinks Needs Them. Washington, Dae. 30.— Senator New- lands, o f Nevada, k endeavoring td pre vent withdrawal of the government troops from Goldfield until some other means of protection k had. Today he called upon Secretary Tail at the War department and strongly urged that ex ecution of the order issued fay the eecre- taty for the withdrawal of tbe troope be suspended until be has had an opportu nity to oommunicate with Governor Sparks and indue« him to cell the Ne vada legislature together. Mr Taft has been advising with Sec retary Root on this subject and tonight communicated with the president at Pine Knot on the subject. There wee every disposition to refrain from break ing In upon Mr. Roosevelt's privacy at thia time, end the only excuse for do ing so k found in the foot that, unless the original order k modified, the troops must leave Goldfield before the president returns to Washington. . The secretary declined to state what oourae he had recommended in the imtiter, nor would he say whether he bad heard from the president in turn. Becreurfy Lehb raid the W h ite House was entirely without advke from Pine Knot, as the Goldfield question was being bandied by the War department. Administration offlek k feel that the present aituation In tbe metier of Gold- field’s case cannot he continued, in view of the doubt that exists as to the con stitutlonal and legal right of the ex ecutive to employ any part of the regu lar army in Nevada under present con ditioos. .__________ * H EN E Y G IV ES F U L T O N A DIG. Says AN Implicated In Land Frauds A re Senator's Friends. Washington, Dee. SO.— In aa inter view telegraphed from New York, Fran c k J. Honey k quoted as saying: “ I bops to close these Oregon with Mr. Bristol in two or three weeks Inquiry at the Depart meat of Justice foiled to elicit definite information as to whether or not Mr. Bristol would as sist Mr. Heney w ith the proeeoutkm II no new district attorney it appointed by the tim tithe land trials begin, Mr. Bristol may assist M r. Heney, but there appears to be an expectation that a new man w ill be available before then, in whkh oase Mr. Bristol w ill be oat and h a »* nothing to do with the land t r k k . In the same Interview Mr. Heney takes another rap at Senator Fulton. He denies having Implicated M r. Ful ton in tbe land frauds, but adds: “ A ll o f these persona who have, been implicated in organised fond frauds are friends of Senator Fulton. Therefor* it appears whimsical to me that Senator Fulton should, through the power of torial courtesy, be able to defeat the Domination cf Mr. Bristol, who ia capable of making it unpleasant for the yet nneonvktsd land thieve* in Oregon.” K m M Mici CtIM Dpi 1« (U H TI FUSE HU1DE1 ¡HUT Baseless Rumor The* White Wounded Arouses Fury o f White People.^ Lethbridge ,\ Alberta, Dee. 23.— Be cause they believed that a prominent citiaen had been murdered in a Chinese restaurant, 1,500 men raided the Ori ental quarter k te ket night and left a wreck behind. Restaurants and kun- driaa were smashed, doors and window* and entire fronts of buildings being re duced to epllntare. The regular police of the town were powerless and a bri gade of mounted police had to be called out to quell tbe riot. I t was just after 9 o'clock that the mob began to form. The story bad got abroad that Harry Smith, on* of the beet known ranobere of the cattle dis trict of which thk olfy k the' center, bed been ia tally wounded in a restau rant. Curiously enough, neither Bm th nOr any one ek e bad been hurt, hut even the polio* wer* m iekd by the tala and two Orientals were placed under arrest, charged with hie murder. An Indignant mob gathered oppoirte th* eating bones and there was talk of lynching. Suddenly someone threw a rock, which emaabed a front window, aad in a moment the crowd was beyond oontrol. Bricks and stones were need and, whec tbe door* bad been broken, tbe tablee end ch ain and dtebee were emaabed. Th * Colombia and Alberta restaurants were literally wreaked. W hat could not be eonvediently broken by the few men who could get ineid* waa passed out to the «treat to the mob la waiting, and there demolished. At 10 o’clock a detachment of mount ed police appeared and th * crowd scattered. Hundreds of the rioters merely shifted pillag- enuted the eoeee scene of their tbeir pillag ing. Three blocks .away, opposite the Arlington hotel, tn ly cleaned out an other Chinese restaurant and badly handled two Orientals who w er* cap tured within. Mayor Galbraith, who had rushed t o the teens whan the mounted polka were first called, delivered a speech asking good citissue to disperse. The crowd listened to him and to M agktrat* Townsend, who epojfe later. A ll possi ble damage having been dona, kb* crowd want ham*. > Five of the rioters have bean arrest ed, but it k doubtful if they w ill ha proseouted. Officers and crews of the big fleet are Judge Wilfley W arts C ongress to Maks enjoying life at Trinidad. Laws fo r Th u n . Heney says special privilege la the San Frandaoo, d e l.. Dee. 3— Judge root of political corruption. L . B. W ilfley, of the United States whom Reports o f New York banka show a court at Shanghai, • against charges of improper oondoct of his recovery frosn the money o rk k . Wheat T ra d * Salem Hopgrowere Sign court have been preferred at Washing Accused members of t i » first-Russian ton, arived in San Franckoc this morn- Pendleton— Buaiaeas is dull In the Salem— Thirty-seven out of the 42 douma deny they advised rebellion teg on the Pacific Mail liner Manchuria local wheat market, the price being hopgrowere who attended the meeting Indiana Republicans hate formally from tfae Orient, and after a stay of two down, and the formats are no willing of growers hare la s t' week signed the indorsed Fairbanks as their candidate days in this city w ill proceed to the na to part with the holdings at e figure by-laws, prepared for e Pacific Coast tiooal capital. On - board the Man that is 10 oaota lower than what they Hopgrowere’ union. Those growers rep- for president. oh aria with Judge W ilfley was F. M. could have second early in the foil. t about 800 acres oi hops. A It is m id a dark horse has been se Brooks, a lawyer, who has filed an ac Until recently the local quotation on local oiganintion was formed with J. lected to fill Bristol’s piaoe as United tion for $50,000 damages at Hono olub has been 67e, but another drop of H . Fletcher aa chairman and James •fates attorney for Oregon. However, wheat W inetanky as secretary. Attorney A . lulu, charging the bead of the coart in a cent has occurred. Burning snowsheda near Traokee, the Far East, together with his olerk, is said to be worth 68c in Pendleton, L . 8hinn, of Sacramento, explained the Cal., has greatly delayed Southern Pa L . R. Hickel, with oonstpiraoy in sto{ - end at least one buyer is offering that plan and- purposes of the proposed or ping the practice of Brook« in Shanghai figure. Others declare they are optyof ganisation to tbe meeting. cific trains between Portland and U T E 8 RAID S O U T H E R N U TA H Judge W ilfley denied that he was go the market for the tim e being. O LD D O O U M IN T S F O U N D . — Railroad Buys LateHaw. ing to Washington to meet the charges developments In the row be Up Cowboys and Band o f C attk River Apple C rop. Laid law— The rumor has been rifo in preferred against him. ns val factions faring* oat the Papers Taken From Lieutenant Pike In Canyon. " I am going to Washington,” he Hood R iver— Complete returns from this community for some time that (he foot that It is over ranking o f offleers. Com e to Light. said, “ to sid in drawing an act that Hood R iver’ s 1907 apple crop show Laidlaw townsite had been sold to tbe Salt Lake City, Dec. 80.— Colorado Two constructions of the revised stat w ill extend to Americans In China a that the growers w ill reoeive In round Mount Hood Railroad oompany, but .U t» Indiana are traveling in bands in Mexico City, Deo. 26.— What k con utes is passible and each faction claims more complete body cf laws than they numbers $200,000 for tbeir product, until now these rumors could not be Southern Utah, raiding sheep and cat sidered ■ very important historical die- It is right. now have. The laws now in force com notwithstanding tbe money trouble, car verified. The verification comes from tlemen, according to a report received very hae resulted from the efforts of Five men were killed w hile working prise little more than Is embodied in shortage and reduced crop. This la ap the fact that the abstract* of title are by Governor John O. Cutler. Accord Dr. Hoerbert B. Belton, th* American in a Paris subway. the oommon law and are so Indefinite proximately what the Hood River crop now being prepared at Prinevilie pre ing to thia report, a email band of In- historian, who is bare engaged in re as to be absolutely-uaeleas. It w ill be brooght last year when it was In the para tor to a formal transfer of the prop dkne attacked three eoa boys near Ven search work under the auspice« of the St. Joseph, Mo., has started s crusade suggested to congress that the Califor neighborhood of 20,000 boxes more, erty to the purchasing oompany. dale, San Juan county, on Deoember Carnegie institute of Washington. The against loan sharks. ——,X..... nia code of laws be loads to extend to and is accounted for by tbe fact that 28, and at the m au ls of rifles com dieoovery consists in tbe unearthing in The New York Republican club has China, wherein such laws are applica the apples brought a much larger aver T o Indict Nevada Sheepmen. pelled them to drive tbe cattle back thia eity of 18 of the 21 documents tak declared for Hughes for president. Pendleton— Through tbe efforts of into the canyon from which they were ble. / age price. The entire crop is now en from the pneeceeion of Lieutenant Dr. W . H. Lytle, state sheep inspector, trailing onto the winter range, threat “ In addition to this matter, I am placed at 110,000 boxes. A ll signs of yellow fever has been Zebu Ion N. Pike, of the United States indictments w ill be returned against P. journeying East that oongreas may be ening to kill them nnleee they did eo. srmy, by Bpanieh soldiers in 1806, driven from the Pan am canal sons. f M ors Traveling Libraries. Anderson, a m illionaire sheepman of Cowboys and cattk are etili confined to ashed for an appropriation for a proper when he wee captured while making Puget sound steamboat men w ill eat Federal building at Shanghai, where Salem— The Oregon Library com Nevada, for bringing flocks over the the canyon. h k famous trip np the Arkansas end the pay of their engineers January 1. the American consulate and courts may mission held its regular session last state line into Oregon without first The governor will,take up the mat Miseouri.rivere, vk itln g the Oeeg* end giving notice to the state sheep inspec week at the commissione’ i rooms in ter with the author it 1 m at Washington Comanche Indians, st the 1 « ^ « « o f Lawson says only the re-election of be under one roof.*' the state house. W. B. Ayer and Miss tor. aa according to a ruling of the commis General Jams* Wilkinson, then govern Bousevelt can avert a national disaster. ---------- / Isom, members of the commission, sioner of Indkn affairs tbe Colorado or or of Louisiana. Becked by Wealthy Men. V A severe sleet storm has demoralised S PO RTLAND M ARKETS. Southern Utes are foebiddan to enter s in attendance, besides the gover New York, Dee 81.— United States The whereabout* of Die other three- ■ telegraphic communication around Chi- Utah. _________________ _ District Attorney Stlmson said today nor. I t was decided to buy 26 more documents cannot be learned. Bo im - ■* Wheat— Club, 82o; blueetem, 84c: that he had been served with the pa- traveling libraries, making 90 in si), poriant k tbe discovery considered in Attack on W ells-Fargo. The bead of the Methodist Book ooo- p en filed in the United States District that w ill be placed in circulation as a valley, 82c; red, 80c. th* United States that Secretary B o o t.' oern calls labor unions the worst of ty court by counsel for Oscar W . Reid, San Francisco, Dec. 80.— Before In hae just sent Dr. lklton h k congratula result of tbe commission’s flrft V W s Oats— No. 1 white, $28: gray, $28. rants. Barky— Feed, $27; brewing, $81; tentate Commerce Commissioner F. K tions. member of the battalion of the Twenty- work. I t was decided to establish an Lena tomorrow chargee of illegal rate exchange station for Eastern Oregon at rolled, $30. fifth infkntry. The plaintiff sued the The Benk of Calistoga, Oslistoga, making made against the Wella-Fargo Corn— Whole, $32; eracked, $3$. Find Bodies by Hundred. Cal., has closed. Officers o f the Insti government to recover pay loot through Baker City. Hay— V a lle f timothy, No. 1 ,' $16; Express company by tbe California his discharge from thy army, but the Jaofae Creek, Pe., Dee. 28.— Rapid tution m y it w ill reopen. Fall Pack Poor. Eastern Oregon timothy, $20023; clo Commerce association w ill be heard progress is being made in the removal attorneys in the case have admitted - Heney is in Washington arranging that they were retained by “ wealthy Astoria— During the fall fishing sea ver. $16; cheat, $15; grain bay, $150 The Commerce association, composed of bodies from the Derr mine. A ll o f with Attorney General Bonaparte for gentlemen of New England,” whose son there were six cold storage plants $16; alfalfa, $15; vetch, $14. prominent drygoods houses in the city, the entries, except No. 27, have been the Oregon lend fraud trial«, which w ill real object is to determine the legality and 11 canneries in operation on the Butter— Fancy creamery, 8 5 0 8 7 ){e alleges that tbe express oompany has cleared and a total of 124 bodice- begin at Portland January 13. violated the interstate commerce k w of brought from the mine. A number o f of the president’s action. various streams along tbe Oregon coast. per pound. 1906 in charging mòra than the pub other bodies have been located and it ia Veal— 75 to 125 pounds, 8 ^ 0 6 c ; The Meson there as at nearly all other A detachment of 900 Chinese soldier* points w*s a comparatively poor one. 125 to 160 ponnda, 7o* 160 to 200 lished rate, and that it baa kept the expeoted that they w ill be brought t o Reises Rent o f Hot Springs. in Manchuria murdered their officers rates filed with the commission hidden the surface during the night. In entry and pillaged the aeighboriug villages. Chicago, Dep. 41.— A dispatch to the The total pack of pickled fish put up'pounds, 506)50. about! Puik— Block, 75 to 150 pounds, 6 0 from the public, contrary to the law Cavalry has been sent after them. No. 29, where the explosion apparently Tribune from Hot Springs, Ark., says: by the cold storage plants 880 tierces, w h ile tbe total output of 6 * e ; packers, 8 0 6 * c . took place, numerous bodies were found. Announcement was made yesterday Philadelphia la facing a street ear Will Liquidate Whh Profit. Poultry — Average old bans, lOe be pi The pit care were blown to piece*. Ik- that the United States would double canned salmon packed by the canneries 10c; New Orleans, Deo. 80.— “ A ll holders \wA fully . . 100 . bodies - J M w P ill M be H removed MM the price for its healing hot waters was about 104,600 cases, “ as they par pound; mixed chickens, spring chickens, 10c; roosters, 8e; of stock in the State National bank from entry No. 27, as yet unexplored. • The first woman jury In Colorado after the first of the year, and that all run.” dressed chickens, 12018c; turkeys, w ill reoeive from $160 to 3200 per has decided against a woman. bathhouse leases also would be doubled liv e . 15a; dressed, choice, 18019 b ; ■hare for their stock and all depositors T o Attend Scientists Meet. Turkey May Have Famine. Secretary Taft says self government A protest w ill be sent at once to Wash geese, live, 80 9s: ducks, 1 2 X 0 1 8 k o ; w ill be paid in. fa ll,” w m the official Corvallis— A . L. Knissly, Federal Is succeeding very well in the P h ilip ington. The hot water now is dis Boston, Dec. 28. — The American announcement today of W . Bparkareon, board of oomoeheionen foe foreign mis pensed by the government at $80 per chemist/for Oregon, expects to start pigeons, $101.66; squabs, $203. pines. Eggs— Fresh ranch, candled, S5o per counsel for the institution, whose di sions bee received advices from the in East immed lately after Christmas, to New York bank statements show a annum for each tub supplied. The rectors have called a stockholder« terior of Turkey showing unusually ■*. attend the midwinter meeting of the bathhouse owners state they are unable complete reoovery from the financial Fruit*— Apple*, 75*039 per box; meeting to decide whether the bank ver* famine conditions. Association for the Advancement of Sci to meet the raise. Bread in aringency. ence and the American Chemical socie peaches, 75c61$I per crate; pearar $1.26 ■hall go out of buainem. H ie bank hae doobk ita former price and other neces Goldfield mine owner* are trying to «1 .7 6 per box; eranberrka, $9.60012 been declared solvent by National Bank sities ero four or five times higher than ty at Chicago. He aleo expecte to vieit Headquarter* A re Secured prevail on the president to allow the Examiner Cooper. the Chicago, New York and Washing per barrel. 18 yean ago. The British consul a t Denver, Dec. S I.— The headquarters troops to remain. Vegetable*— Turnip*, 76e per sac ton pore food laboratories before com B ltlk reports that several hundred per- of the Democratic National convention Redtcal Decision In Hamburg. Work is prograssing slowly at tbs w ill be at the Brown Palace hotel, ing back to Portland, which w ill b* his carrots, 65c per eack; beets, $1 per la th e Mouth Month plain nlain and B R ukrik n l.rit ■ark; beans, 7« 9 c per pound; cabhege, Hamburg, Dec. 80.— Th* suit of the districts probably w ill starve during th * Darr mine, Jacobs Creek, P*. # Only I t which has registered a request from headquarters. le per pound; cauliflower, 75c0$l per harbor authoritlee against the Port- winter on lees relieved toon. bodies have been recovered. Chairman Tom Taggart, o f tbs commit Select by C o r van Hone. doeen; celery, $8 .2 5 0 M O per crate; where’ union, growing out of the 're The Hamilton Powder works at tee, tbruogh Secretary M ills, of the Salem— In answer to an inquiry Iron onions, per doeen; parsley» 20c cent dock strike, bee resulted in a de Nanaimo, B. C., blew *p, shaking the Convention league of Denver, to re Telephones fo r Submarines. ■unrounding oountxy badly, but no one serve 50 additional rooms, besides those Chairman G. A . Westgate, of the Re per doses; peas, l i e per pound; pep cision of the widest importance against Parle, Dec. 26.— Following ekborate publican state central committee, A t per*, 8017* per pound; pumkpine, 10 the latter. The union k forbidden in era* hurt. already reserved. As soon as these torney General Crawford has rendered l j g c par pound; radkbes, 20c par doe the future to interfere with the intro expérimente to prevent the recurrence of accidents to submarine veeeela, th * »»serrations are made the other hotels I * an address at Chisago Attorney an opinion in which he rays that dele en; «pinaoh, 6e per pound; apronte, 8c duction of strike breakers, end a penal minister of tb* n a vyh a e keoed orders of the eity w ill beigo to maki General Bonaparte mid all the rich te tbe national conventions and per pound; squish, 101 l i e per pound; ty of 1.600 mark* k provided for each Y**1 »H »ubmarinee be fitted out with law breakers seemed to think the law Mono. candidates for presidential elector moat tomatoes, $1.60 per bos. instance in whkh a oonviotion is ob detaohabkxtekphon* buoy«, which, in exempted them and they should be im- be chosen at conventions and not under Onions— $1.7501.55 per hundred. tained on the charge. The union hae ease of accident w ill permit of commu Garnets In New Y ork Bodrock- the direct primary. Potatoes— 50066c per hundred, de entered an appeal. nication with the surface. Now York, Dec. 31__ That New York livered Portland; sweet potatoes, $2.75 A Hawaiian official has written an City nate on • vast mass of garnets is S ty * Down on Kano Canal. N egroes Begin Suits. 0 8 nor hundred. angry loiter to the Japanese con n i, Triumph * f fiooteveK. * discovery of Ralph B. Morgan, an Klamath F a lk — Tbe reclamation ser Hope— 1907, 5 0 7c per pound; olds, New York, Dec. 80.— Papera in a •eying among other things that the London, Deo. 28.—The Times in an English mineralogist, now visiting vice has dosed down on the Kano canal 109c. cao* to test th* legality of thedieeharg* editorial thk morning dti mikado’s subjects era nuisances wher m. Ia a mass of rock thrown ap on account o f the wet weather, k e o p i^ the W ool— B eaten Oregon average bee it tbe private of ooin pan ke B, 0 and D inspect o* peeoe in Cent: ever they #*- The tael m> a fcubway excavation, be discov only the derrick gang and tbe engi- ugL 1302Oo per peemd, according to Shrink- of the 26th United 8tatae infantry (col resultili« Oft from the dmoo ered a large garnet. On ths dumping ncering corps. Tbe shutdown was m iade age; S ilk y , 16020c, according to fine- ored), following the disorders in the M L . I held I The toF arop eh a s ground at ffbeepshed bey he found a necessary on ecotount of the held at Washington, whkh it regards wet earn; mohair, choke, 29030s per ■tratta cf Brownsville a year age, have as a g irabar of tfrather. been prepared by a law finn of tb k e ity . » velt’e diplomacy' 160200