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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1908)
',' ' w ifl m NEWBERG GRAPHIC C.n.WOOOWAMD.1 NEWS OF THE WEEK Senator Borah oppoaea the Aldrioh bill. New York banka have a «orpine orar There ie a great deal of revolutionary agitation In India. The three m iner« entombed at E ly, N ut ., December 4, have been releaaed. Boyer town, Pa., baa burled all of it« dead. The total fatalitiee numbered 173. The United State« has found it necea- to Intarlerà in the Haytian révolu* German acientiate have aooceeded in msoafootnring rabica of remarkable Attorney General Young, c l Mlnne- ia a candidate for the Bepublican ation for goveraor. California ahippere are determined that the Southern Pacifie rebate inves tigation ahall not be a farce. John R . Walah, preaident of the Chicago National bank, haa been found gullty an 64 countc of miaapplication —The minimum penalty la impriaonment fer >70 yeara aad the maximum penalty 640 yeam. The Sovereign bank of Canada haa failed. Four Scranton, Pa., girla od in a factory fire. The United Btataa torpedo flotilla haa arrived at B io Janeiro. The Japan««« premier oonaidera the «m igration problem aettled. Montana mineownere have united to build ft smelter and fight the trout Haytien rebels have captured two towns and the president threatens bom bardment. Pope Pius has the gout, but the alarming rumors about hla health are not justified. A n effort ia being made to keep Eve lyn Thaw from telling nher story a t the trial of Thaw. P L O T IS REVEALED . RUEF FO R FE ITB IM M U N IT Y . Anarchist Conspiracy In M o Janeiro to Blow U p Floot. Olstrtet Attorney Langdon Soya Ne gotiations A re O ver. Bio da Janeiro, Jan. 11.— The Bra- silken police have discovered ai ohistle plot here having as its object the dee traction of part of tha American Heat now lying in the harbor. Tha eon- ■piracy, while centering in B io Janeiro and Petropolle, haa xamificationa in Sao Paulo and Minaa Garses. An Individual named Jean Fedhar, who maided in Petropolia, was tha ohief conspirator hare, although it is understood that foreign anarchists am deeply Involved in the plot. Fedher Is believed to have fled to 8ao Paulo end the police, who know him, have been sent to that place fer the purpose of apprehending him. - One of the detee- tives who waa w e ll acquainted with Fedher, having served on the police fores at Petropolia for some time, re turned from that place today. After having made investigation there end had a long conference with the ohief of polioe at Bio Janeiro, the letter gave it to he understood later that tne Sao Paulo polios are on the track of the arch-conspirator and expect to him soon. Baa Franelaoo, Jan. 30.— I t nounoed lata Saturday night that the graft prosecution has determined to die continue all negotiations with Abraham Raef, tha central figure in the graft cases, In the matter of greeting him immunity. I t was farther stated that today tha prosecution would demand that Ruef be put on trial before Judge Duane on one of the many charges of bribery fur which he has bean Indicted. This determination of tha proseeution cam« at tha and of several days’ fruit less negotiations with B oaf. I t ia said that some time ago the prceeoution promised B eef partial immunity in consideration of bis taking tha witness stand and truthfully testifying in full to all hia transactions with public rorv- ice corporation officials to bis triad on tbe charge of bribery. When the Dlatriet Court of Appeals rendered its deoision declaring void tbe indictments for extortion against erf- Mayor Schmitz, to which Ruef had al ready pleaded guilty, it le charged that Kusf, realizing that the deoision placed him in an advantageous position, de manded fa ll immunity. This the pros ecution would not consent to grant, and th en followed e series of conferences in which Buef endeavored t o secure better M A KE G O O D PR O G RES8. But PhiHppino Delegates Bay It Is T o o Boon fo r Home Rule. San Francisco, Jan. >1.— Spanking of oonditiona in the Philippine«, Benito Lagarda, delegate to eongreaa, who, with hla colleague, Pablo Ooampa, haa arrived here eq route to Waahington, aaid today that hia people had mad« great progreaa updar American rale, and especially aloaig educational lines, and added: “ I t ia useless to talk of Independence now. I want independence, of count, bol hour n a we hove itt— That is the question. I do not care to riak fbe property I own in another civ il war or to anarchy that might follow an at tempt on the part of my countrymen to govern tbemaelvea at present.” I t la aaaerted that hia fallow da would work in harmony w hile in the house of repraeentativsa, hia only aim being to improve the economic condi tions of the islands, worse now than it haa been for SO years. Both delegates want to secure, if possible, the reduc tion of the United States duties dh Philippine auger and tobacoo. Both are greatly interested in the Japanese question. Legarda ia a member of the Progres sive party, w hile Ocampo ia affiliated w ith the National party. K E E PIN G R E S U L T S S E C R E T . of :* Party Returns From Colonel Goathala thinks about $32, Ban Francisco, Jan. 31.— Hon. Jos 403,863 w ill be needed to curry on the eph Pop«, Canadian secretary of state, and Madam# B. Lemieox, w ife of the The president has decided to lot the Canadian postmaster general, returned 1 troops remain at Goldfield until on the ship Mongolia from Japan, action has been taken by the Ne where Lemieox went to straighten out the difficulties between the two coun vada legislature. tries, which arose over the question of Tha Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul Japanese immigration to Canada, and road intends to have its line finished the consequent riots at Vancouver and into the Northwest In* tim e to handle in other Canadian cities. Lem ieox re a part of tha 1908 crop. turned on a preceding steamer. The largest savings bank in Dallas, The secretary of state, and the post Taxaa, haa suspended. master general were sent to Japan sev Tha .temperature haa reached 6 de- eral months ago with instructions to reach some agreement with the Japan below aero at St. Panl. ese government, whereby (he immigra Japan deniea that there is any secret tion of coolies to Oaaada would be re about the location of her fleet. stricted. W hat success attended the A m ajority of the house committee mission ia very carefully guarded by la opposed to the Seattle fair appropri- Pope. .Madame Lemieox had not been made a confidante by tha government officials. The party w ill leave bare to Tb s National Woolgrowers’ associa day for Ottawa. tion ia opposed to Roosevelt's land poligy. Waters o f Lake A re Biassed. The Kentucky legislature remains 8t. Petersburg, Jan. 21.— The annnal deadlocked on tha senatorial election. ceremony of blessings the waters, dur Governor Beckham still leads. ing which, in 1905, the emperor nar ' T h e'N ew York Federal court ia in rowly escaped assassination by means quiring into Harriman'a stock deals of tne minting cannon, took place at sad haa ordered him to answer quee- Tsarkoe-Belo instead of at tbs waters of the Nova. The imperial blessing was bestowed on the waters of the lake in The enormous expensa« of the Japan the palace park amid the salute o f guns. ese army and navy haa created a deficit After the ceremony the emperor, accom which w ill have to be met by increased panied by hia mother, reviewed the guard regiments. The empress did not The British Columbia legialatre w ill take part in the celebration, as Illness try to impeach Lieutenant Governor still confines her indoors. Dunamuir, for having disallowed Jap anese legislation. Ruef Has Nothing to 8ay. Bon Francisco, Jan. 21.— The case United States secret servioe men have which waa begun against Abraham Ruef discovered a plot in Mexico where Jap yesterday before Judge Lawlor is the anese intended to pinrt peas porta allow one in which Indictments were broaght ing them to come into this oonntry. against him for the Hleged bribery of Taft aays be w ill not resign from the supervisors in connection with a fran cabinet chise of an overhead trolley system for Mach' evidence of Thaw’s insanity is the United Bail roads. Buef refused to make any statement tonight regarding being given at hia second trial. the change in the attitude of the prose Officer« aad map of the battleship cutors, toward him and thsir decision fleet are being royally entertained at not to give him immunity. B io de Janeiro. Would Impeach it to Taft aays the fleet ia being Vaneoaver, B. 0 ., Jen. 21.— W h ile the Pacific to show our naval strength the legislators are gathered at Victoria to Oriental eyes. talking of taking the scalp of Lieuten- Tha California Safe Deposit A Trust ant Governor Punsmulr on the Japan company, of San Francisco, ie In the ese question, some of the astute politi hands of a receiver. cians of the country are endeavoring to il V . Proodfoot, of Iowa, haa figure out by jost wbst method' it is been appointed assistent oommiaaioner proposed to carry out the impeachment. Particular difficulty is being mat o f the general land with in finding In Canadian history a i is a deadlock ia the Kentucky precedent for the official beheading of legislature on the election of n United tha governor. States senator. Governar Beck bam ia l a the lead at present. Glass Taken to Colonel Goethe la places an estimate Ban Francisco, Jan. 21.— Louis Glam, o f $360,000,000 as the ooet of the Pan former vies president and general man- ama «anal. This does not include the agef of the Pacific Telephons A Tele $40,000,000 paid for the work already graph company, who was recently con dona nor tha $10,000,000 afterward victed of bribery and sentenced to five paid to tha government of PtoMma years' imprisonment, was transferred Th e B o rn a Catholic ehorch w ill Ê l ' from the county jail tonight In the ital, he being quita 111 with G R A F T O L D TR E E S. T A L K S R R A Y A N D PR U N IN G . Diseased Orchards In Valley A ro to Bo Laid L ow . County Frultman Man M are Frequent Mae tings. Corvallis— A movement is being Salem— The Marion County Hortl launched here lor a great campaign fog cultural society baa decided to hold either weekly or bi-weekly meetings tile renovation of old orchard« In ! thto remainder of the winter for the W illam ette valley and other parts special purpose of spreading Informa Oregon. President Newell, of the atete tion concerning the proper pruning and spraying o f trait trees. I f board o f horticulture, Mr. L o found 1 that at on« meeting the tim e ia Mr. Reid, and a large number of so short that ell the sub jeon In which fruit inspectors of the various _ _ are on the ground and ere identified fruitgrowers are interested cannot be itfa the plan. ' The first gun in the satisfactorily discussed, and that as a campaign waa fired by M. O. Lownadale result the growers get partial informa in an addreaa before the visiting horti tion, which ia of little practical use to culturists and other winter short oooise them. A t tha weekly as bi-weekly students in college chapel. The ad meetings, special subjects w ill ba tak< dress met with e hearty indonemeat, up, varying according to the particular and aroused much enthusiasm. The portion of their work the growers era Agricultural college authorities w ill about to perform. Thus the subject of join in the plan, and la an »ducaltonal pruning w ill De one of the first consid way and otherwise eo-opermte to the ut ered for the reason that tha pruning most extent in furthering the move season la now on. A fter that spraying w ill be- the subject of lectures and ment. Urn of fertilisers, It Is mid that within three to fivo demonstrations. years a complete near orchard can be methods and tim e of cultivation, thin made out of the old one, and a profit of ning fruit, etc., w ill ba taken up i $6 to $10 per treo be realised. This occasion seams to demand. was the assertion of Mr. Lownsdale In Filing on Hamoy Lands. his address. ' H e says he hds accom Borne— The business of the United plished this result with old trees on his farm, and that it can be dona by aay Stales lend office In this city iqr the farmer who can do grafting or have it quarter ending December 31, 1907, makes an excellent showing fee this dona. country, the tote! entries and proofs The thing to do, mys M r. Lownadale, for the period oovering 61,300.69 acres le to oat down the old tram. The and the payments, fees and commis plan is to cut them close to the sions amounting to $66,944.84. The leaving the roots intact. This th< month o f December brought In $39,000 be done by the 1st of March. The n e a t( season, from the 10th to tha 16th of °* this sum. Whan it la considered anelai pan:o held business May, such varieties as are beet fos the *"• * financial in suspense a good part of the quarter, olimaie and «•«» f t u s » - w H l he seen that tha oovaaoant for should be grafted on ut Harney UM roulement of ooonty and eon- beat sprouts. This is the malest and i DViliviuom moat oertain plan. Two feat of tha old tiguooa country is a determined one and cannot be stopped. trank may be left and the graft app! J R U SSIA N F O L L O W S F L E E T . O fficer o f tho C zar Watching Every Movement. 8L Petersburg, Jan. 30.— Th* Im portance attached by tbe Bneaian ad miralty to the lessons to ba learned from the vaoyage of the American bat tleship fleet under Bear Admiral $vaas ---- « D in t J lied officer, Commander A lexis Diatebkoff, ia following the fleet around tbe Horn, W traveling from port to port by any to it the first year, and a year ol tim e Welcom e to New Industry. sans be can obtain. He adopted this in reproducing the orchard Is ptined, Oregon City— Nothing in reoent years ooorse only aftei hia repeated requests bat this requires an expert at grafting « i haa broaght so much estisfatoion to the for permission to join tha ships had in order to be successful i people of Oregon City aa the announce plan the trees w ill be in good ment that a new paper m ill is to be t ia reported hare that Diatohkoff in from three to five yean, and a constructed at Oregon City on the East succeeded in getting on board one of nue of $6 to $10 each be realised. side of Wllam m ette Falls, fronting the the American warships at Bio Janeiro, basin, w ith the installation of two ma and tha entire incident of this offiear’s Shlngte Mill fo r ANseny. chines of the largest capacity at the activities had been a source of some Albany— A shingle m ill, with s outset Not lass than 300 men w ill be friction between the Bosnian foreign paeity of 60,000 shingles dally, w ill be furnished employment, and this mem minister here and the admiralty. Whan established in Albany this winter by that from 400 to 600 people w ill be Baron Boaen, the Russian hints E. A . Thompson and Elm er Crew added to the population of Oregon City to the United States, was instructed to former employes of the Curtiss Lumber within a year, and that there w ill be a ask for a permit tor Diatebkoff to join company in its big plant at M ill City. corresponding increase in the industry Admiral Evans, he declined on the W ork w ill begin on the new m ill aa and business o f the town. grounds that be knew hie request would soon as a satisfactory location Is found. be unfavorably received at Waahington. Rood Will G o Under tho The two men have secured the shingle Thereupon tbe Samian admlraltv, manufacturing machinery of the M ill Albany— The real property of the after farther oarreependenoe with the City m ills, and have also acquired the Corvallis A Eastern Railroad company Foreign offioe, instructed Diatohkoff to ownership of a large body of sprues situated in Linn ooonty Is to be sold tply personally to Beerotary Matealf. A majority of This the offioer did, but In vain. He timber, and propose to make the in for delinquent taxes. dustry a large one. ; the stock la now owned by the Henri- m therefore ordered to follow the man interests. Sheriff Smith haa be fleet as eloseiy aa he could, gan the advertisement of the property of private steamers. Factory fo r Eugene. Eugene— Eugene bids fair to have a for public sale February 17. The prop glass factory in the near future. Gus erty advertised includes the roadbed PR O G R E SS IS B LO W . tave Mathisen, an expert glass blower, and fight of way of tha company in who was one of the promoters of the this oounty, the roundhouse and ma factory at Coburg, in this county, offers chine shops at this city end some Hall-Mays Trial at Portland May Taka to put up a plant costing $50,000 if the tracts of real estate adjoining Albany, W eak« to End. citiaena of this city take stock in a com Portland, Jan: 20.— Neither Prose Wants N ew Library. pany to be organised to the amount of The Dalles— Renewed interest in the cutor Heney nor tbe lawyers far tbs de $5,000. Mathisen claims to be backed by ample capital. The matter w ill at Carnegie library to ba built here has fendants w ill hasard a prediction aa to onoe be taken np by the Commercial some ainoe the forwarding of the archi the time that w ill web required to con clnb and it is probable lhat some action tect’s plan to Andrew Carnegie’s secre tary for approval. The ediflee w ill be elude the Hall-Mays conspiracy trial w ill be taken immediately. erected in the city pgrk and w ill ooat One week already has been oonanmed $10,000. The city council haa voted to and the government has scarcely made Mills Reopen. Ablany— A fter being closed for three meet the maintenance expenses and a beginning, only one of He many im weeks, the Lebanon paper m ill haa re appropriate $1,000 annually. In fact portent witnesses having been examin sumed work and 60 men temporarily this waa necessary to meet the condi ed. More than 70 witoeesea for tbe idle are again in employment. The re tions as presented by the steel magnate government are In tbe city, summoned to testify against one or more or tbe 12 cent flood piled so many logs in tha and library bnilder. defendants named In tbe Indictment, Bantiam canal that the m ill could not bat sines tbe prosecution If as decided PO R TLAN D M ARKETS. get a supply of fuel wood for the regu to try only Hall and Mays at this time, lar consumption of 30 cords daily. Fruits— Apples, 75cd$2.26 per box; Mr. Heney says be may not eall all of Though this was the cause of the shut peaches, 76cB$l per crate; pears, tbe government’s witnesses . down, some feared It might be doe to $1.2801.76 per box; cranberries, $9.50 in this way the trial may be shorten the financial stringency, but tha @$12 per barrel. ed somewhat, but if all of the witnesses prompt resumption of work has re Vegetables— Turnips, 76c per sack; take the stand, the case w ill drag along stored confidence. carrots, 66c par sack; beets, $1 per for weexs. There is little doubt that sack; beans, 20c per pound; cabbage, between two and three weeks more at Large Timber Land Bala. lc per pound; cauliflower, $202.26 Oregon City— The transfer of 1,860 per dosen; celery, $3.60 per crate; the least w ill be required to complete the introduction of testimony and sub acres of timbered lands on the Upper onions, 16020c per dosen; parsley, 20c mit the ease to the jury. Thus for tbe Molalla river in Clackamas county has per dosen; peas, 10e per pound; pep testimony has not been damaging to just been made pnblio, through a deed pers, 8017c per pound; pumpkins, 1 0 H ail or Mays. filed in the office of Connty Recorder l)4 e per pound; radishes, JOc per dos Rams by. The price stated in the deed en; spinach, 6c per pound; sprouts. 8e Harvester Trust is Fined. is $81,000 or about $44 per acre. The per pound'; eqoash, 1013*c per pound; Topska, Kan., Jan. 20.— Judge Dana, purchaser is the Molalla Lomber com tomatoes, $2 per box. in the Shawnee County District oonrt pany, a W est Virginia corporation, Onions— $1.8602 per hundred. here today, ««reseed a fine of $12,600 which purchased the property from the Potatoes— Delivered Portland, 60 # Cornwell Lumber company, of Saginaw, 76c per hundred; sweet potatoes, $8 against tbe International • Harvester company, which the oourt found guilty M ich. per ewt. Wheat— Club, 86c; blocetcm, 87c; on 43 count« of violating tha Kansas anti-trust law. The maximum 8ne is Corporations Arm Dissolved. valley, 86c; red, 88e. Salem— Governor Chamberlain haa Oats— No. 1 white, $27.60028; gray, $1,000 a count, and the minimum $100. The criminal suit was died a year ago Issued a proclamation dissolving 800 $27.60028. corporations which have failed to pay Barley— Feed, $27A 0 per ton; brow by Attorney General Coleman, who contended that tbe harvester oompany their Hcensa tax«« for 1907. In the ing, $82; foiled, $29030. list are many concerns which In all Corn — Whole, $82A 0 ; cracked, was being operated In Kansas in viola tion of tbe anti-trust laws. An appeal probability w ill wish to continus busi $82.60. ness and which have neglected to pay May— V alley timothy, No. 1, $8 per w ill ba taken. the iieenae fee. These concerns can se Ion; Eastern Oregon timothy, $210 Fatal Wrack on Seaboard Lina. cure restoration of their oorporate pow- 32; clover, $16; cheat, $16; grain hay, Raleigh, N. C., Jan. 20.— As tha re ■ by paying np delinquencies within $16016; alfalfa, $16; vetch, $14. 80 days. The complet« Hat w ill be Batter— Fancy creamery, 80086c per sult of a head-on collision at Cameron, 66 mile# south of Baleigh, between a published In a few days. pound. Popltry— Average old hens. 12c per Seaboard A fr U na freisht and a north Change In Blue Mountain R pound; mixed chickens. 1134012 c; bound test passenger train, early today, Washington— The president has jost spring chicken«, llJ fid lS e ; roosters, two men were killed and >0 injured, me aertously. Engineer E. H. signed s proclamation which elim i 8010c; dressed chickens, 14c; turkeys, nates 131,643 acres of the Bine Moun live, 16c: dreseed, choice, 18c; geese, Vaughan and a negro fireman, both of tain forest reserve, aa recommended by live, 901Oo; docks, 16017e; pigeons, the passenger train, were killed. Tbe oollision ia attributed to trouble with the forest service. The greeter pert of 7 6 e0 $ l; squabs, $1AQ02. ■Fresh ranch, sand led, 30c per tbe air brakes on ths freight train and the ares eliminated consists of open to complicated train orders. grass lands. Tha beundary haa also been changed to exclude some heavily V e a l - 76 to 125 pounds, 9 0 9 H *. Judge timbered land, title to which has passed 128 to 160 pounds, 7«; 160 to 200 from the government. Cleveland, Jan. 20.— Judge George 8. pounds; 808 ) 40 . Fork— Block, 76 to 160 pounds, 6 » Addam, o f tha Juvenile oonrt, today received in his mail a »tick of what ap to Resume in 7e; packers, 8 0 7 «. Hope— 1907, prime sad choice, 6 0 pears to dynamite or solidified nltro Baker City— The annual meeting o- the Highland Gold Mines oompany oon- 7)|e; pet pound; olde, lffi2o par pound. glyclerine, six inobes in length. There Wool— Eastern Oregon, average heet, was no mechanism to detonate the ax- ■utned a two-days’ session. I t waa def lost re. Judge Addam opened the tabs elded to rasarne work in the mines in 180200 psrlpound, aeoordlnr to ih rin F the’ conrt room, without having an ths spring, my having been pledged age; rolley, 18020s, seaordieg to ~ m as its contents. by the and Bon them 1st araste. *T C DEFENSEISFIGHTiNG Rill t o Mays Trial Häkle« M Uttli Praptu. HEMET IS MANS VITI CMITIM Largely Given Up to o f Lottare Sold to Oonsptreey. Portland, Jan. 18.— The government yssterday continued laying the foanda- f t h s e case iÉ Ü É Í 8 W tion o fIh against John H . H a ll and Edwin Mays. Heney introduced some 80 letters, written from June, 1900, to Septem ber, 1902., by H all, Maya, Loomis, Stratford and Putnam. More sueh fet ters w ill follow today. H all objected seriously to only one letter, written by Secretary Hitchcock to Special Inspector A . B. Greens, di recting Greene to invest l ^ t o tha femes. Heney* purpose ia.. to show that this investigation was prompted by asttlers, who had appealed vainly to H all to set against the fences. H all objects to tbe letter because a copy and not tha original latter has been offered and because it la irrelevant. Judge Hunt w ill decide the questions this morning. Unlike Hall, Mays raised numerous objection« to the course of the day. The steps In the government's evi dence of oonsplmcy w ill ba «boat aa follows: First—To prove H ell and M ays, hud frequent knowledge from protesting Bet- tiers of tbe fenoes as early as Marsh, -AXW hflh............ Jtv w . . . . . ... - — ... Second— That Stelwer, Zachary and Hendricks osnasd various paroopa to flia on land for their oompany, in order to complete the company’s enclosure c f public land. Third— That H all and Mays took no step« to prosecute the offenders, though they had full knowledge of the fencing and the conspiracy for mare than thro« .yeara. A t this stage, Bteiwer is expected to testify «boat tbe alleged understanding by which H all end Mays were not t o proeeeuto him and his associates. One o f tbe terms o f this alleged ag reement Setiwer's vote for Fniton. George Brownell le expected to testify that Hall promised him immunity from lead frond proeaeution for hia w ith drawal from the contest for H a ll’s ottee. T E N A N T S IN R IO T S . O bject to Paring M arc Than Rato They Fix Themselves New York, Jan. 18.— Foroibla resist ance by tenants whom an Upper Beat Side landlord was trying to evict result ed yesterday in tbe gathering of a crowd of two thousand or mote sympathisers in tha neighborhood, who mad« ao> much trouble for tbe police that tha product reserves were called out. Dur ing the rioting four women and a num ber of men were taken Into Custody. The riotous deroonat ration began whan a city marshal and about 26 as sistants visited the block on the Wrath side of East One Hundred and Fourth street, between First and Second ave nues, with 80 dispossess warrants fo r families who had unitedly demanded redactions in rents of a dollar a month and had refused to pay the landlord’» collector more than the new rote they had fixed. The taking out of the forn- itnreJrom the rooms of the first fam ily visited was tbs signal for an attack on the marshal and hia man by toores o f tenants. Angry women sarrennded a patrol man who had gone to the marshal’s as sistance and had half torn hie ooat from bis back when assistance arrived. Ha arrested four women. Several demon strative-men were also sent to the sta tion house. Tha police were by this time straggling with little encoe»« to disperse an increasing crowd of angry demonstrators, hot other arreeta by tha officers finally had the effect of putting a stop to the trouble. The Immediate purpose of the dem onstration was affected, the marshal deciding not to attempt the serving o f rpore dispossess warrants at the time. Is in Revolution. Port A a Prince, Heyti, Jan. 18.— The first actual operation of a revolu tionary movement against the present government of Hayti took p'ace yeater- * 7 , and so for has been successful. An expedition composed of Heytiens, wl a have been In exile, under the,command of Jean Juneau, effected a landing not for from Gonaivea, 66 miles northwest of here, and oocnplad that town. Tha government is taking measures to resist the movement. The revolutionary fonsss also occupied St. M an , soma 18 miles from Gonaivea. Deny Sulphur Injures Fruit. San Franciaoo, Jan ..18.— A t the state convention of Galifornia fruit growers today a committee of seven was appoint ed to go to Washington to protest against and saoors a modification of tha rule oovering the use of enlphar in bleaching and drying traits. In resolu tion* and speeches It was stated Utah the yae of sulphur was not deleterious to the public health and that tha dry ing of frails by artificial heat and evap oration was Impracticable in this state. Warships Ball San Diego, 0*1., Jan. 18.— A ll that was left hero of the Pacifie squadron sal lad this morning tor Magdalena, to ramala for six or seven weeks, lng in