NEWBERG GRAPHIC
C. It. WOOOWAMD. I
N EW BERG ...................
.OREGON
EVENTS OFTHE DAY
Newsy Items Gstetred Iran All
tots ol ttw World.
L o u Important but Not Lasa Inter
acting Happening» from Points
^ Outside the State.
The Indiana legislature has passed a
local option law.
A steamer has arrived at San Fran
cisco with a case of cholera.
Turkey is arranging for its first elec
tion when a parliament will be selected.
The American battleships Maine and
Atlanta have left Naples on their way
home.
English authorities declare the sav
ings banks ia schools o f London have
proven a failure.
The Canadian Pacific is said to have
bought the White Pass railroad, which
runs from Skagway to Whitehorse.
Some o f the railroads are almost short
on rolling stock after months when
there were idle cars on every sidetrack
The eoroner’s jury bold the freight
crew to blame for the wreck on the
Northern Pacific at Youngs Point, Mon
tana.
The first word from Peary has been
received by the Pe-ry Arctie club. He
left North Greenland for the north Au
gust 17.
Miss Katherine Elkins, of West Vir
ginia, will marry an Italian duke. On
their way home the couple will be es
corted by several Italian warships.
IGNORANCE OF SANITATION.
Lower Classes In Russia Refuse
Be Vaccinated.
8t. Petersburg, Sept. 29— Since the
beginning o f the epidemic there have
been 15,083 eases of Asiatic cholera re
ported in Russia and 7,102 deaths.
St. Petersburg aloae, since the presence
o f the disease was officially admitted
September 8, there have been 4,931 cases
and 1,871 deaths reported.
The figures with reference to the in
vasioa of this city by the disease can
not be relied upon as on a number
occasions authoritative sources showed
the number o f eases and deaths in
single day to be far in excess of tha^
announced by the authorities. There
an appreciable betterment of the a m
tary conditions and consequent decrease
in tho disease as shown by the figures
given out Sunday.
For the 24 hours ending at noon the
number o f new eases in the city was
268 and the number of deaths 143,
compared With 312 new eases and 153
deaths for the previous 24 hours.
Difficulty has been experienced
dealing with the workmen of St. Peters
burg, who with their families comprise
three-fifths of the population for they
were unable and unwilling to comply
with the sanitary precautions.
The
ignorance of the lower classes and their
superstition greatly increase the d iffi
culties of the situation. During the
earlier stages of the epidemic few could
be prevailed upon to undergo preventive
inoculation, which is provided free
charge, but latterly the authorities
have made inoculation compulsory
some quarters of th6 city.
SITUATION M O ST SERIOUS.
R U S SIA B E G R U D G E S M O N EY.
U A H ITEMS OF INTEREST
WANT GOOD ROADS.
L O O K F O R IN F L U X .
Enthusiastic Meeting Held at Medford tJumpor Crop in Southern Oregon Is
by Association. •
Bure to Attract People.
Medford.—That the people of Med
ford and vicinity are thoroughly alive
to the good roads campaign was em
phasized last week, and a most en
thusiastic meeting was held. So
thoroughly are Medford citizens inter
ested in the movement that the busi
ness houses were closed in order that
the members might attend the meet
ing.
The meeting convened in the Com
mercial club rooms, and the hall was
crowded. Judge William Colvig. pres
ident of the Commercial club, pre
sided. John H. Scott, president of
the Good Roads association for Ore
gon, spoke of the importance of good
roads and outlined the formation of
associations throughout the state Rp
work for the enactment of legislation
providing for the appointment of state
hghway commissioner, and for appro
priation to construct one or more
continuous lines of road through the
state. He also advocated a state ap
propriation of $10,000 for each o f two
years, with a provision that the coun
ty appropriate a like sum for the pur
pose of constructing a piece o f per
manent road in each county, so that
eventually the roads so constructed in
the various counties would unite and
make some continuous lines of road
throughout the state.
Looking Glass Trail Complatad.
Pendleton.— Of deep interest to
stockmen using'the Wenaha national
forest grazing privileges is the an
nouncement by J. M. Schmitz, the
supervising forester in charge, that
the Looking Glass trail has been com
pleted. This trail extends from the
Tollgate to Motett meadows, through
12 miles of as rough country as is to
be found, in that part of the Blue
mountains, and its construction will
result in a great saving of time and
expense to the stockmen, who have
been compelled to drive their flocks
across that section of country in get
ting access to their allotments of
range. He also reports the comple
tion of two rangers’ cabins, one at
Tollgate and one on the Umatilla
river.
Bureaucracy Weighs Dollars Heavier
. Than Human Ufa.
8t. Petersburg, Sept. 28__ The bu
reaueracy of St. Petersburg is weighing
dollars against human life, and as a re
sult Russia is today threatened with
one of tho gravest eholera eeourgea ia
the history of the empire.
Premier Stolypin, into whose hands
the work of enforcing imperative sani
tary. reform* waa recently placed, ia
moeting with discouragement from those
la authority on every hand. They are
protesting vigorously against the enor
mous expense involved in eleaning np
the eity, and as a result o f their oppo
sition the work will probably be only
half done.
One of Premier Stolypin’a proposal*
it a complete new system o f sewerage,
the estimated cost of whieh is $40,000
000.
It is being pleaded that the advent
of eold weather will put an end to the
cholera spread, whereas the history of
all eholera plagues has been that cold
weather is but a temporary ehoek, being
followed in the ensuing spring by a re
currence of tho scourge.
Bad as conditions are in St. Peters
burg, they are hardly to be compared
with the menacing aspect of the dis
ease in other parts of the empire. In
scores o f towns the wretched poverty of
the people, covered with the ignore nee
and superstition against remedial meas
ures, makes the work of guarding
against the fearful outbreak ia the
spring an utter impossibility.
Doctors are appalled at Ihe prospect
and say that whatever the outcome in
8t. Petersburg, there is no hope of im
provement elsewhere.
It ia estimated that throughout Rus
sia there have already been 18,000
deaths from eholera. In many towns
75 per eent of the eases have terminated
fatally,
Myrtle Creek.— The farmers in this
and other localities through this coun
ty are in the midst of the harvest of
the large crop of prunes. The con
tinued dry weather has brought the
crop earlier than usual, and the fruit
driers are taxetj to the limit.
The price paid to the farmers this
season adds evidence to the ever-
increasing possibilities of Oregon,
some o f the growers receiving as high
as 5i cents per pound for their crop
of prunes, this being the basis price
paid for the 30 to 35 size, and 4c less
per pound for each five prunes to the
pound smaller.
A representative o f one of the large
nurseries o f the state has sold several
thousand fruit trees for the fall plant
ing. Apples ^re to be extensively
planted, as alsd prunes, plums, cher
ries, peaches and a great variety ol
the small fruits and berries to which
Oregon is so well adapted.
During the past three months no
less than 20 new families (people who
have been attracted to Oregon from
the east by the many resources) have
bought farms and settled in this one
small community. A great many of
the people coming to Oregon have
come through the influence of friends
already here, but more have been at
tracted by the flood o f literature
which is scattered daily by the com
mercial clubs, citizens’ leagues and
similar organizations throughout the
state.
With the bumper crons raised in
southern Oregon this year, it is to be
ABOLISH COLONIST RATES.
expected that the population increase
during the com ing year will break
Plan Almost Unanimously Approved
all records.
by Western Railroads.
$ 4 ,0 0 0 to the Ton.
Chicago, 8ept. 28.— The colonization
Burns.— Intense excitement prevails o f the western country is going to be
here as the result of a rich strike
made by O. J. Darst, who has been materially retarded if railroads be
prospecting in Gold gulch for several tween Chicago and the Paeifle Coast
years. He has discovered a ledge carry out a plan which has been ad
which assays from $4000 to $4500 a vanced by executive officials. A prop
ton. The ore contains both gold and osition has reeeived the approval of
silver. The ledge upon which the nearly every railroad in the Western
strike was made is located about 150 Passenger association to abolish all low
miles from the railroad. It is now or reduced rate* after January 1, 1909
This determination has been reached
planned to stage the rock to Austin
or Vale, where it will be shipped to beeause of the alarm felt over the re
the smelters at either Boise or Salt dnetion in net passenger revenues of
western roads. This reduction is laid at
Lake City.
the door of reduced rates, and genuine
alarm is felt for the future. Railroad
Estimate Water Cost.
officials declare that with the 2-eent
Klamath Falls.—The cost o f the rate generally there ean be no reduced
water under the Klamath project is rate without passing the margin of
profit.
now being determined upon by
It is estimated that western roads
board of recantation engineers in ses
sion in this city, and it wifi be made have lost this season several millions
public in a short time. The cost of of dollars in passenger revenues, com
irrigation per acre will not be uni pared with what hey would have en
form over the territory embraced in joyed bad they maintained a minimum
the project, but will vary according 2-eent rate west of Chicago. This con
to the ease with which water is put clusion is based upon eareful statistics
upon the lands, it being more difficult prepared by the Alton and other rail
roads, which show that railroads have
in some sections.
carried more passengers than ever, bat
at a lees net revenue than accrued Tram
Will Contest Claims.
a smaller movement. This ean mean
Pendleton.— Claiming that he
only on* thing, it is said, and that
the original discoverer, A. H. Andcr the return of a minimum 2-eent rate
son, an old Alaska prospector, will everywhere.
contest the locations made by James
It is not expected that this change
Conlan on what is declared to be rich can be brought about until the first of
placer ground, last located in Juniper the year, but it now seems certain that
canyon. Anderson says Conlan was if the public desires reduced rates, they
employed by him as a driver on his can be had only by a return to the
prospecting trip, and located the claim 3 cent basis.
while the discoverer was nursing a
rattlesnake bite, from which he is
CHINESE AVOID HEAD TAX.
just recovering.
WRECK IN MONTANA
Fast Pateenger Train Crashes
Into Standing Freight.
TWENTY PERSONS LOSE LIVES
Dead Nearly All in Ona Gar—Blinding
Snow Storm Prevented En-
ginaar Seeing Ahead.
Butte, Mont.. Sept. 86.— In the
worst wreck in the history o f the
Northern Pacific Railroad, 20 persona
were killed, 10 seriously injured, sev
eral fatally and about 30 more or leas
injured in a collision between passen
ger train No. 16, knows as the east-
bound Burlington flyer, and a west
bound freight train, at 8:10 o ’clock
yesterday morning, at a siding known
as Youngs Point, about thirty miles
west of Billings. The faat traveling
passenger train crashed into tho
freight just entering on the siding dur
ing a blinding anow storm, the en
gineer o f the passenger failing to see
the signal flag o f the brakeman o f the
freight train in time to avert tbe
crash.
A heavy, wet «now which was fall
ing at the time prevented the wreck
from catching fire, and undoubtedly
held the death list down to the figures
given. Every effort is being made by
the division forces, aided by volun
teers from Livingston and Billings, t o
clear the wreck, and so far they are
able to prevent further loss o f life;
None of the passengers from the
sleeping cars was injured. The train
was made up o f an engine, baggage
car, smoker, a day coach and tw o
Pullman sleepers.
Tbe efforts to prevent fire were suc
cessful and that horror waa saved the
wrecked passengers. On the arrival
o f the relief train the injured were
transferred around the wreck and
taken to Billings.
The express car was raised over the
platform o f the smoker, and swept
superstructure, seats and passengers
off. Not a passenger in this car es
caped death or injury. The other pas
sengers escaped with cuts and bruises.
The scenes around the smoker were
beyond description, heads, bodies, legs
and arms being interwoven with
broken seats and equipment. In one
place five bodies were packed on top
of each other. In another seven had
to be pulled apart. It was almost im
possible to succor the injured without
trampling on the dead.
Railroad men, while refusing to be
quoted officially or allowing their
names to be used because o f tbe reg
ulations of_ the road in connection
with publicity as to wrecks, intimate
that the freight train was stealing
time, that it had no orders to proceea
to Youngs Point and should have
waited at Park City, about aix miles
from the scene o f the wreck, for the
passenger train. This is supposed to
explain why the Burlington train was
traveling about 30 miles an hour past
the siding.
Leslie Carter, one-time capitalist Unbroken Drouth in East Is Raising
Havoc With Industries.
and promoter of Chicago, is dead.
Pittsburg,
Sept. 29.—With losses ag
Cholera in Manila will prevent the
reception to the fleet as planned.
gregating several million dollars from
Fire at Oakland, Cal., destroyed al forest fires, and heavy damage to crops
most an entire block, entailing a loss and livestock, and the reported loss of
o f $100,000.
a number of lives due to fighting tim
The wimPhas died down and dan ber fires; the enforced idleness of thou
ger from the Eureka, Cal., forest fires sands of workmen owing to suspensions
has greatly abated.
because of lack of water; the authori
.... J . E. W. Clark, an Alaskan, is on a ties anticipating serious epidemics of
visit to Pacific coast cities and has
contagious diseases, and many small
just seen his first trolley car.
streams dried up and practically obTit
The epidemic o f cholera at Manila
seems to be under control. The daily erated, the drouth'of 1908, which has
average o f new cases has fallen be held western Pennsylvania, eastern
After Big Contract.
low 30.
Ohio and West Virginia for two months,
Roosevelt has refused to grant a remains unbroken. While in the Pitts
Portland.— Several Portland firms
petition to stop Sunday baseball in the burg district the water supply ia suffi have made bids on a $500,000 gov
army, declaring that the game is fine cient to carry on all business, the low
ernment contract for hay and oats
exercise for the men.
stage o f the rivers has caused a eon for the Philippines, which will be let
A combination has'been formed by gestion o f much coal in this vicinity
by the quartermaster’s department
Pacific and Atlantic steamship com
panies to secure European trade in Every available barge and float has October 5. The contract is the larg
competition with the transcontinental been loaded with coal, and at present est one o f the kind ever placed on tk ?
railroads.
there are almost 20,000,000 bushels in Pacific coast. In the specifications
issued by the quartermaster, bids were
Representatives from the principal the Pittsburg harbor.
asked
on 10,000 tons of hay and 9 009
cities o f the Pacific coast have started
About 15,000 miners employed in the
on a trip to Japan to cultivate the river mines along the MonoAgahela val tons of oats. Delivery rfiust be made
in the Philippines within the next six
friendly relations of tlie- brown bus-
months. William Albers, o f Albers
iness men and offset anti-Japanese ley are out of work.
Bros. Milling company, has just re
In
all
sections
of
the
dry
zone
pray
sentiment.
— --------------------
turned from Seattle, where he has
ers
are
offered
up
daily
and
these
pray
Thaw has been summoned to Pitts
been looking after the bid made by
burg for contempt in connection with ers will continue until they are an his firm. Allen & Lewis, o f Portland,
his bankruptcy proceedings. This is swered with rain.
are also preparing to bid on the mam
said to be a part of the scheme to
moth contract.
WOULO KILL R 0 0 8 E V E L T .
liberate him.
STUDENTS FIGHT DISEASE.
Charges o f Excessivs Rates.
Charges of bribery are being made
Several Plots Uncovered in Different
in Indiana’s local option fight.
Salem.— Representative B. J. Jones,
Parts o f Europe.
Drafted
in
Manila
to
Battle
With
Epi
of Polk county, has filed two com
Rockefeller had a narrow escape
demic o f Cholera.
from injury in an automobile acci
Bayonne.
France, Sept. 26— Evi
plaints with the railroad commission,
dence
of
an
anarchistic plot against
Hundreds
Admitted
Into
Canada
on
dent.
Manila, 8ept. 29.— There were 14 new in which he asks for hearings to sub
Begin Seeding at Athena.
President Roosevelt o f the United
False
Statement.
Eastern Oregon has had its first eases of eholera and three deaths re stantiate charges o f alleged excessive
Athena.—The first rain of the sea
States was yesterday made public by
snow. Only a flurry lasting a few ported for the 24 honrs ending at 8 rates exacted by both the express son has fallen here. It was accom
Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 28— A seheme has the secret police of several European
companies
operating
in
Oregon.
Sep
minutes fell.
'
o ’clock yesterday morning. Practically arate complaints are brought against panied by a severe electric storm, just been laid bare by the controller of countries.
Spanish secret service agents dis
Portland is to close up its red light the entire staffs of the bureau of sci the Pacific Express company, which which destroyed telephone communi Chinese immigration at Ottawa, whieh
district, and extra police have been ences and the local medical schools have operates on the O. R. & N., and the cations for an hour or two. The deep is believed to be the most elaborately covered traces of the plot while exam
dust along the roads was suddenly conceived fraudulent device for effeet ining Canatrava, the famous Spanish
provided for the purpose.
been drafted into the service to fight Wells-Fargo. Jones alleges that the converted into mud, and the summer ing the Chinese “ invasion” of Canada anarchist, in an effort to connect him
A fire believed to be of incendiary the disease. The two senior classes of rates charged by these companies are fallow in the fields was made ready ever perpetrated.
wilh the suspected plot against the
unreasonable, unjust and unlawful, for seed. The farmers are rejoicing
origin destroyed $100,000 worth of
By means of this device hundreds of life of the king of Spain.
the
medical
schools
are
acting
as
nurses.
and
wishes
the
railroad
commission
property at Redding, Cal.
over the rain, and fall seeding will be young Celestials have been flocking in
Papers were also found on two Ital
A serious situation is caused by the to adjust them or establish new rates, gin within the next few days.
at the eastern ports of the Dominion ian anarchists arrested at Sessa. Swit
Wu Ting Fang. Chinese minister
as the commission has authority to do
supply
of
disinfectants
running
very
and escaping the $500 head tax by zerland. Wednesday, containing the
to the United States, is to be replaced
under the law, if the rates are found
passing themselves off as merchants or most definite information possible re
in November. Chung Men Yew ts to low. The bureau of sciences is experi unreasonable.
P O R TLA N D M A R K E T S .
other privileged clamea. Canada has garding Roosevelt’s African trip.
be his successor.
menting with electricity and sea water
Barley— Feed, $26 ‘ per ton; rolled thns been victimized through honoring They are now being held at Geneva in
The French bark Vendee, from to produce ehlorine for use nntil the
Light from Waste Waters.
certificates of the charge d ’affaires ad an effort to obtain further informa
$27.50@28.ii0;
brewing, $26.50.
Portland for the United Kingdom, new supplies of disinfectants arrive.
interim and consul general at the im tion against them.
Pendleton.— Hermiston, Echo and
Oats—
No.
1
white,
830
per
ton
has gone ashore off the California Enormous quantities of disinfectants
perial Chinese legation in Mexico.
There has been much activity noted
gray.
$29.
Umatilla
are
to
be
supplied
with
elec
coast, and may be a total loss. She
Statistics in the trade and commerce among the anarchists of Europe dur
Wheat— Club, 89c per bushel; forfy-
have been used in vigorous efforts to tric lights within a year if the prom
carried wheat.
fold, 92c; turkey red, 92c; fife, 89c department here show that 280 Chinese ing the past few weeks, but this is the
eleanse the entire city.
ises made by a company which has bluestCm, 93c; valley, 81c.
immigrants were admitted into Canada first definite iniormation that has been
General Bell, while in the Yellow
completed its organization nre ful
stone park, rode 300 miles on horse
Hay—Timothy, Willamette Val’ev recentlv at the ports of Montreal and secured as to the nature of their plans.
filled. Drainage water from the gov $14 per ton; Willamette Valley ordi Halifax alone, without paying the head
New Party in Cuba.
back. averaging 100 miles a day, thus
proving his fitness, according to the
Havana, Cuba, Sept. 29.— That the ernment reclamation projects is to be nary, $11; Eastern Oregon, $16.50; tax and thht not fnore than 15 Chinese
Hops to Save Stranded Cruiser
utilized to develop horsepower suf
should have been so favored.
Roosevelt test.
Liberal party will lose the entire negro ficient to furnish the towns named mixed, $13; clover, $9; alfalfa, $11; al
Newport, R. I., Sept. 26—The work
As special officers were about to vote in the coming election seems as with light and also to make possible falfa meal. $20.
of extricating the United States
Land Grab Thwarted.
Fruit— Apples, new, 50c($$1.25 per
raid a counterfeiter’s den near Seattle, sured.'as the result of an attack made the operation of a small electric sys
cruiser Yankee from her position on
box
;
peaches,
25@65c
per
box;
pears,
San
Francisco,
Sept.
28__
8tate
Min
on
a
mass
meeting
of
negroes
by
a
mob
the building took fire and burned.
tern in the heart of the irrigation belt. 20c@ $l per box; plums. 50c@$l per
eralogist Aubnry after a long fight hat Spindle Rock, where she struck dur
One man was caught with bar metal of Liberals. The fact that the negro
box ; grapes, 40c@$l 25 per crate;
element
proposed
to
form
a
national
ing a fog on Wednesday, was cen
on his person.
Land Board Approves Loans.
Concords. 20c per basket; hucklebcr compelled H. H. Yard k Co,, speculators
party angered the Liberals, as they saw
associated with the Western Pacific, to tered yesterday in the construction o f
By the explosion of a gun at Tou that such a party would draw more from
Salem. — Applications for loans ries, 8@ l0 c per pound.
lon 13 French sailors were killed and their ranks than from the Conserva amounting to $46.625 were approved
Potatoes — 85@90 per hundred; release their hold on 13,000 acres of rich a wooden coffer-dam abolit the ves
sel. It is believed it will take almost
a cruiser badly damaged.
tives. General Estenoz, leader o f the by the land board at its last meeting sweet potatoes, 2c per pound.
mineral land in Plumas and Bntte coun a week to erect the same, and it may
Melons—Cantaloupes,
50(@)75c
per
At
the
first
o
f
the
month
a
similar
negroes,
has
announced
that
his
party
ties.
This
land
was
located
by
Yard
Hearst may run for governor of
be a week or more before the vessel
New York on the Independent ticket. is a certainty, as his followers cannot amount was approved, making the crate; watermelons, ! @ l c per pound; and his associates some years ago. Later is finally freed. Should the seas con
casabas,
$2@2.25
per
dozen.
Aubnry filed an action in the lsnd of
hope to secure their rights without a total for September over $90,000. The
Vegetables— Turnips, $1 50 per sack; fice on the ground that while it had tinue smooth during that time it is an
number of applications during the last
Authorities believe that the vigor party of their own.
ticipated that the work will progress
few weeks has increased heavily, and carrots, $1.75; parsnips, $1.75; beets been taken as'mineral land and was without serious danger to the cruiser.
ous methods employed have checked
$1.50;
artichokes.
65c
per
doz.;
beans
the land board was compelled to re
known to contain minerals, the land
the spread o f cholera in the Philip
New Road to Peace River.
duce each individual loan below the 3@4c per pound; cabbage, 2c per was desired for railroad pnrposes. The
pines.
•
Vancouver, B. C., Sept. 29.—A special amount asked by the applicant.
Pauper’s Grave for a Gould.
pound; cauliflower. $1.25 dozen; cel land office has now cancelled the filing.
Los Angeles. Sept. 26— Officials o f
ery, 75C@$1 per dozen; corn, 75c(n'$l
Fire destroyed the plant of the dispatch from Winnipeg says: The Ca
•he county hospital are awaiting the
per sack; cucumbers, 30($40c per box;
Portland Mill & Fixture company at nadian Pacific is rushing its sur
Band Seed Grain to Canada.
Russia Seizes Yankee Gold
decision of George, Howard and
egg plant. S0c@$1.25 per crate; let
Portland, entailing a loss of $35,000. vey through from si point near Atha
McMinnville.— A. M. Warren, a tuce, head, 15c per dozen; parsley,
Nome. Alaska, Sept. 25.—Apparent Helen Gould and the Princess De
The legislative halls of _ Indiana basca leading to Grand Prairie, north farmer living near town, has made a lflc per dozen; peas, 6c per pound; ly without warrant and with no ex Sagen as to whether their cousin. Mel
was the scene o f a small riot until of Edmonton. Alberta. From there the shipment of gray winter oats to the peppers, 8@10c per pound; pumpkins planation given, the gunboat Chilka vin A. Gould, shall be buried in the
police intefferred. Local option was main line is being extended to .Pi»" Canadian Pacific Development com l@ l| c per pound; radishes, I2}c per
potters’ field. Gould died Thursday
Pass. The company is concentrating its pany, at Alberta, Canada, to be used
belonging to the Russian government, night at the age of 71. He had been
the trouble.
efforts on a survey through Pine Pass for seed and experimental purposes. dozen; spinach, 2c per pound; sprouts. with the Russian governor aboard
an invalid seven years and had a hard
A thousand small fires surround and from that point tre line will be ex Other shipments of seed grain from 10c per pound; squash, 40c per dozen; seized $ 10,000 from American miners
fight to support himself. He appealed
tomatoes,
17i<g>2flc.
Lakes Superior and Huron and the tended through Rritish Columbia to a this county to the Canadian northwest
Butter— Extras, 34c per pound; who had been working in Anadir, Si to his relatives, but they refused help.
northern part o f Lake Michigan. point north of Prince Rupert.
will be made during the next two fancy, 32|c; choice, 30c; store, 18c.
beria, on September 15. The miners Two weeks ago he was compelled to
months.
Many settlements are cut off from
E g g s - Oregon, extras. 39@30c; were working under an agreemeni enter the county hospital.
*
—— - - sr .
communication and their fate is in
New Coal Field Found.
firsts, 27<$28c; seconds, 23@36c; East made bv John Rofene, of the North
east Siberia company, with Czar
doubt.
Monro« Cannery Operating.
Victoria, B. C., Sept. 29.— A rich find
ern. 26i(ii27c per dozen.
Ruef Jury Half Completed.
Poultry— Fancy hens. 134c; spring, Nicholas II.
Monroe.—The Monroe cannery is
Charles Oliver, special detective, o f good coal with a seam eight feet in
San Francisco, Sept. 26.— After a
width
has
been
located
as
a
result
of
in operation, and is putting out a fine 144c; ducks, old. 12@124c; spring, 14
has been sent to jail for two days for
month spent in examining talesmen,
Work
for
Young
Teddy.
half of thl jury necessary to try Abra--
approaching a juror in one o f the the boring at Deep Bay, Vancouver Is lot of fruit Blackberries, pears and @ 15c; geese, old, 9c; young, 1 0 @ llc;
land, about three miles south of Union plums will be the larger bulk "of its turkeys, old, 17<3l8c; young, 20c.
Hartford. Conn., Sept. 28.—Theodore ham Ruef, on the'charge of bribery,
Ruef cases.
Bay, by the Wellington Colliery com >roducts this season, but efforts are
Veal— Extra, - 8@ 8}e per pound; Roosevelt. Jr., is to begin service with has been secured. After three peremp
the Hartford Carpet Works at Tbomp- tory challenges had been used on each
Germany objects to France receiv- pany of R. Dunsmuir’s Sons. The seam >eing made to have large crops of ordinary, 7@74c; heavy, 5c.
Pork— Fancy, 8|c per lb.; ordinary, sonville today- It is thought ha will side yesterday six jurors were ac
ing t preference over any other power will be worked as soon as arrangements ness beans and tomatoes for next
ean be made to sink on it.
year’# work.
6c; Urge, 5c.
enter the operating department.
Moroccan affairs.
cepted and sworn.
' t