PREY TO GAMBLERS.
8PITZUERGFN IN DISPUTE.
Thousand« o f Land Seekers Are Left
Penniless in South Dakota.
Oonforanca to Ba Called to Settfo
Ownership o f Land.
Dallas, S. D., Oct. IS.— It is esti
mated that 1,000 land-seekers who
have come to Dallas and Gregory
have lost their money at gaming ta
bles and are “broke." Many morp
who have lost all their ready cash
have been forced to telegraph for
money.
Nearly 60,000 persons have regis
tered at these two points already and
nearly as many more are expected be
fore the period o f registration closes.
Hundreds return as quick as they have
registered, but thousands have re
mained for the drawing.
Gamblers have operated their games
without restraint and are said to have
made remarkable winnings. They run
pell mell 24 hours a day, with the
games as strong at daybreak as when
the sun sets.
T o be broke in this country means
something to a man, because he is
without friends, generally, and at
a time when it is not easy to make
new ones. Every outgoing train car
ries many men who have lost their
money and risk their lives riding on
brake beams.
N o land opening has ever brought
more people, and they all come with
money. Those who have the gam
bling spirit stick to the roulette and
faro tables, with the result that sev
eral hundred are living on charity
until they can get out ot the country.
Berlin, Oct. II.—An international
conference will be summoned in the
near future to regulate the future of
Spitsbergen, and it is expected that
delegates will attend from Great Brit
ain, the United States, France, Ruasia,
Germany, Sweden and Norway. The
Norwegian government, which has
taken the initiative in proposing the
conference, desires to safeguard the'
rights of the Norwegian fishermen
who work along the coasts of Spits
bergen by an international agreement.
The
Norwegian fishermen and
huntsmen were for a long time undis
puted masters of Spitsbergen and
enjoyed unlimited freedom in follow
ing their occupations. Recently, how
ever, two mining companies, one
financed by British and Norwegian
capital and the other financed by
American and Norwegian capital,
have begun operations in Advent Bay
and both companies have annexed
enormous areas of land, and have
prohibited Norwegian fishermen and
huntsmen from trespassing on these
territories. It is expected that Nor
way will lay claim to the possession
of Spitzbergen by virtue of the prior
rights of Norwegian fishermen and
huntsmen, but in this case it is ex
pected that Sweden will raise a coun
ter claim on the ground that Swedish
scientific
expeditions
have
been
mainly instrumental in opening Spitz
bergen to the outside world.
NEWBERG GRAPHIC
C . H . WOOOWA
EVENTS OFTHE DAY
Nm y Item (¡attend tree All
Pim «I f t ilr ld .
L m i Important but Not Loss Inter
esting Happenings from Points
Outside the 8tate.
A Virginia girl has married a Brit
ish naval officer.
International balloon races are be
ing held near Berlin, Germany.
Britain continues to hold out
. against Austria and defends Turkey.
Senator Beveridge is quite ill and
has been, forced to cancel several
speaking dates.
The Trans-Missisippi Congress has
turned down the parcels post, after a
spirited debate.
Much of the wheat grown in the
province o f Ontario, Canada, is being
moved to tidewater by American
carriers.
A man and woman bonnd together
were found drowned near New York.
Investigation showed that they had
entered into a suicide pact.
A lone robber held up a stage near
Missoula, Mont. From $5 to $25 each
was obtained from the 12 p^sengers.
Hunger was given as an excuse by
the bandit.
The United States circuit court of
appeals at Chicago has modified tho
injunctions against picketing, allow
ing unions to thus fight employers so
long as it is done peaceably.
The battleship fleet has left Manila
for Japan.
The army retiring board declares
Colonel Stewart is disabled.
A British fleet has been sent to
Turkey to keep the country quiet.
A conference of the powers on the
Balkan muddle depends upon Great
Britain.
•
The naval tug Sotoyom o went
aground on Puget Sound during a
heavy fog.
E. A. S. Blake has been found
guilty o f attempting to bribe a pros
pective juror in the Ruef case.
A Russian general was wounded by
his own troops during the army ma
neuvers. Balls became mixed with
the blank shells.
The waterways convention has
passed a resolution asking congress
to open a ship canal from the Great
Lakes to the Gulf, as the railroads
cannot keep pace with the volume of
business.
A Massachusetts school teacher
locked a boy in a closet for punish
ment and forgot him. The boy re
mained in his dungeon two days and
a night ophite the teacher attended a
wedding 20 m ilef away. The teacher
is prostrated and the boy under a
physician's care.
Austria has-sent a warship to _Bel-
i grade and threatens to annex Servia.
More
dependencies
of
Turkey
threaten to-re v o lt and declare their
independence.
Seattle banks will back Alaska-Yu
kon-Pacific exposition bonds to the
amount of $200,000.
A phenomenally rich discovery of
gold has been made in the Sturgeon
Lake district, Canada.
James J. Hill says railroads are be
ing hampered by many laws. He ad
vocates deep waterways.
Delegates to the National Rural
Lettercarriers’ association favor adop
tion of a parcels post law.
An American and two Spaniards
were murdered by Filipinos in one of
the provinces near Manila.
France continues to insist that an
international conference is the only
solution for the Balkan trouble.
Hearst did not appear at Reno with
the Independence speakers, having
been threatened with dynamite.
A pessimistic feeing prevails in
Great Brtain with regard to an early
settlement o f the near Eastern ques
tion.
Registration in Nei^ York has fallen
off greatly from the figures of 1904.
A German millionaire has married a
8t. Louis heiress, after proposing by
cablegram.
Mrs. Jean Dunsmuir, who died re
cently at Yietoria, B. C., left an es
tate of $2,000,000.
Two Iwo school teachers were first
to register at O ’Neill, Neb., for land
in Bosebud reservation.
Iu an attempt to eater a house at
Slobodge, Russia, robbers killed 12 peo
ple. The murderers were arrested.
The jury box for the latest Buef
trial is filled, but six of the 12 men
may be removed by peremptory chal
lenge.
The Japanese government has de
cided to prohibit all gambling on race
tracks and to strietly enforce the laws
governing r. eing.
The National Bnral Lettercarriers’
association is in session at Omaha,
Neb., and an effort is being made to
bold the next convention at Portland.
While Booker T. Washington was
addressing 5,000 colored people ' at
Jackson, Miss., a gallery fell. Over 40
people were injured, some ef them seri
on sly.
Fire at Manila destroyed property
valued at $200,000.
Delegates
egatee are gathering for the
Traas- I M issis* ppi
LONDON CENTER OF INTEREST.
St. Petersburg Watching Outcom e o f
Conference in England.
St. Petersburg, Oct. 13.—The cen
ter o f .interest in the Near East crisis
has been transferred to London, and
the Russian foreign office is marking
time in its negotiations with other
powers concerning the convocation
o f a congress until the outcome o f the
conferences between M. Iswolcky, Sir
Edward Grey and King Edward are
known. *
Emperor Nicholas has decided to
leave the letter o f Emperor Francis
Joseph unanswered until M. Iswolsky
returns to St. Petersburg.
Count
Berchtnold, the Austrian ambassador,
was closeted with M. Tcharykoff, the
acting foreign minister, the entire af
ternoon. At the close o f the inter
view he reiterated the statement that
Austria would refuse to participate in
a congress unless the Bosnia question
was excluded from this program.
The question o f the recognition of
Bulgarian independence has for the
time being dropped out o f sight, but
Russia has assured Bulgaria that she
will support her pretentions before
the congress.
The foreign office has received
from a score o f cities in Turkey tele
grams protesting against the Anstro-
Hungarian-Bulgarian action, which
have been adopted at mass meetings
held under the auspices of the Young
Turks. The telegrams are identical in
text, showing a certain origin.
TWO-THIRDS SOLO.
RECLAIMING ARID LANO.
Hood River Apple Growers* Union
Disposes o f Crop.
Hood Biver.—By disposing of SO ears
of Spitaenbergs last week the directors
of the Hood Biver Apple Growers’
union have successfully marketed two-
thirds of the erop which will be han
dled by them this year. The gpples
sold are the same sixes that last year
made the world’s record for high
prices, and are said by the directors
to have been again sold this year at
the union’s own figure. The purchasers
are the Steinhart ft Kelley eompaay of
New York, who bought 80 ears in the
first deal, getting all the Newtown*,
and for which it is said they have since
been offered a bonus of $10,000 to turn
over to another firm and have refused
to do so.
The deal was made with the Stein-
hart ft Kelley people by mail, after a
representative of the firm who was
here some time ago reached New York,
and includes all the four-tier Spit/.en-
berga and larger, the four and one-half
tier having been bought by them in a
previo!
d«
revious deal.
Altogether, the union
has no ow sold
•o 140 ears of apples St its
own figu: res,
re the balance o f its part
is Hood
H<
of the
Biver erop amounting to
about 60. ears.
Its disposal of the high prieed Spitz-
enbergs has been watehed with interest
by buyers, who have claimed that they
would not be sold to one firm this year,
and were waiting to tee them split up
and sold in small lots to various firm«
to supply their faney trade in the big
eastern cities. Heretofore the Stein
hart ft Kelley company has bought its
Hood Biver Spitzenbergs in this way,
but this year will be the seller to other
firms instead of the purchaser.
Winter apple picking commenced
Monday, and the largest packing tfens
which have ever been put in the field
here will commence packing the vfruit
for shipment this week.
Irrigation for 0 0 Acres o f Klamath
Foothill Land.
Klamath Falla.—Fred Mell see will
put in a pumping plant to irrigate 90
acres of land on the foothills ess. of
this eity. This land, with 8,000 other
scree, ia above the government canal,
and ia practically worthless, as not a
drop of water can be put on it. With
irrigation it will be the finest fruit
land in the valley, worth over $200 ap
acre.
-
The government has surveyed a ditch
through this hill land, to be used after
its pumping plant is established. Mr.
Melhase will use this survey and later
turn his plant over to the government.
He wilt secure electric power from the
Moore electric plant.
Get Water From McKenzie.
Eugene.— The McKenzie Valley Ir
rigation ft Power company has elected
the following officers: J. A. Youn-
green, president; N. Needham, vice-
president;. H. Phellaplace, secretary,
and W. A. Platt, treasurer. Engineer
McArthur will start the preliminary
survey for the proposed irrigation
canal at once. The water will be taken
from the west side o f the MeKenzie
near Hendrieks’ ferry. At this point
the river is walled with solid rock,
whieh will have to be blasted out. The
eanal will furnish- water to irrigate the
farms between the McKenais and
Willamette rivers west of Sprisgfleld.
Break New Law.
Salem.— A large number of sftte of
ficers and employes were surprised t>
learn that they have violated ths new
corrupt practices set by contributing to
campaign funds. The set was adopted
by the people last June and its terms
were published both before and after
election. Moreover, eopies of that and
all other sets submitted wpre mailed to
all registered voters. But publie o ffi
cers overlooked or forgot the pro *
JAPANESE GREETING WARM.
forbidding them to make contributions
and many of them have “ dug u p " al
Yokohama Turns Out to Do Honor ready ia this campaign.
to San Francisco Business Men.
Will Have Summer H o m e .___
Yokohama, Oct. 13.— Yokohama is
Marshfield.—Bishop Seadding, of the
a blaze o f color with American and Western Oregon diocese of the Epis
Japanese flags flying from every copal church, who has been visiting’ in
l>uilding. in honor o f the delegation Coos Bay, has decided to establish a
summer home at Bandon. He has pur
o f Pacific Coast business men who chased two lots and has given the eon-
arrived at 7 o’clock on the Japanese tract for ereeting a residence. He will
liner Tenyo Maru from San Fran spend four months o f each year at his
cisco. The visitors were greeted at Bandon home doing missionary work
the dock by a crowd which numbered on the coast between Bandon and Gold
hundreds of representative business Beach and will reside in Portland the
men of Japan, assembled from the other eight months of the year.
cities of Tokio, Osaka and Kyoto.
Take Ton Fruit Prizes.
The officially prepared program of
entertainment for the Americans com
Grants Pass.— Josephine eounty fruit
menced as soon as they stepped growers are highly pleased over receiv
ashore, and every day of their stay ing the news from the fair in Medford
in Japan will be completely filled with that this connty had taken ten prises
receptions and sightseeing trips ar upon npples ont of an exhibit of eleven
ranged by their Japanese hosts. On varieties, seven of which were first pre
Thursday the Americans will be the miums. Of this last class the following
guests o f Count Komura, minister of sre Spitzenberg, Baldwin, Rome Beau
foreign affairs, at a luncheon in honor ty, Arkansas Black, King, Lawyer and
o f the visitors.
Ben Davis. It Ts also reported that
The Tenyo Maru had an excellent first prize was swarded for best dis
trip across the Pacific.
play of Tokay grapes.
Chicago Air Very. Dirty.
Chicago, Oct. 13.—The health de
partment, in a report just ¡¿Sued,
states that the dust and soot in the
atmosnhere of Chicago, as shown by
tests just taken, is three times as
reat as that in the atmosphere of
ondon. Samples of the air taken at
a height o f 40 feet above the street
level at four points of the city were
subjected to analysis.
The report
says: “ This excess may be partly at
tributed to the long continued drouth.
The dirt had not been washed out of
the air for some time previous to the
collection of specimens.”
f
Find What O. R. & N. Cost.
Salem.— The Oregon railroad commis
sion has fixed October 23 at 10 A. M.
as the time for conducting an invest!
gation as to the original cost and the
cost of reproduction of the main line
of the O. R. ft N. The investigation
will be conducted in the auditorium of
the Portland Chamber of Commerce.
The commission ia making this invest!
gation for the purpose of forming the
basis for regulation of freight rates in
this state.
Plans Walnut Institute.
McMinnville.— The W *'“ 0! Club, of
McMinnville* held a business meeting
last week, and decided to hold a wal
nut institute in this eity during the
early winter, at whieh lectures would
be given relative to walnut cultare,
harvesting and marketing, and a gen
eral school of instruction inaugurated
during the three or four days of the
exhibit.
_________
Bank Cashier is Accused.
Denver, Oct. 13.— Charged with a
shortage of $80,000 and with having
received deposits when he knew his
bank was insolvent, Aaron G. Pratt,
cashier of the Hammondsport State
Bank, o f Hammondsport, N. Y., left
Denver for the east in custody of
Sheriff H. W . Billington and Deputy
K. C. Bennett, of Hammondsport. He
Scores o f Men Put to Work.
was arrested at Longmont, Colo.,
Oregon City,— After a shutdown of
where he was interested in irrigation
enterprises, and he waived extradi six weeks, the fonr paper machiaea in
Mill C, of the Willamette Palp ft
tion proceedings.
Paper company, have been started, pro
viding employment to scores o f men
Austria Still Reaching Out.
who have boen idle. The machines
London, Oct. 13.—The Daily Mail’s
Belgrade correspondent says that the were in need o f extensivs repairs and
fall o f the Servian ministry is immi the water has been low, so that the
nent. and that a voalition cabinet will power from the falls was insufflsisnL
be formed
He also states that the
Sends Nina to College.
Austrians are preparing to seize two
islands in the Drina river on the
Hood River.— Hood River this year
Servo-Bosnian frontier. Rumors of will send nine high school graduates
war, he says, have caused a run on to the higher educational institattoae
of the state.
the Belgrade banks.
KING ISJORNEKED
Servi» People Demand War With
Aestrla or Abdication.
EMrEtOt JOSEPH IS PIEPARED
Could Place One Hundred and Fifty
Thousand Man In Sarvia in
Twanty-Four Hours.
London, Oct. 10.— In spite of warn
ings to King Peter from Great Brit
ain and France that thie people o f
Servia be kept in check, the populace
of Belgrade held demonstration! yes
terday and demanded the resignation
of the cabinet and also the abdication
of King Peter unless he declared war
against Austria-Hungary, which has
refused to accept Servia’s protest
against the annexation o f Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
T w o thousand Austro-Hungarian
troops are garrisoned along the.
Drina river between Bosnia and
Servia, ready for eventualities, and
it is said 150,000 men can be thrown
into Servian territory in 24 hours.
M. Iswolsky, the Russian minister
of foreign affairs, arrived in London
last.night and will have a conference
today with Sir Edward Grey, British
secretary for foreign affairs, concern
ing the calling together of the pow
ers signatory to tne treaty o f Berlin
in an endeavor to bring about order
in the Balkans.
Prince Ferdinand, czar o f Bulgaria,
entered Philippopolis yesterday and
received an enthusiastic greeting at
the hands o f the troops and the popu
lace.
At Candia, the largeat city in Crete,
the militia yesterday followed the
example o f their compatriots et
Canea, the capital, and took the oath
o f loyalty to Greece.
A British fleet of two battleships,
two cruisers and two torpedoboat de
stroyers is today well on its way from
Malta to the Aegean sea.
The forts on the Bosphorus yes
terday fired blanlf shots across the
bows of a steamer flying the new
Bulgarian royal flag aa it attempted
to pass them.
A remarkable feature o f the situa
tion is the self-control o f the Turks,
who are acting practically under the
direction o f $ir Edward Grey, the
British secretary o f foreign affairs,
who is supposed to have written their
note to Austria-Hungary, which was
published today.
Eastland Sacuras Scholarship.
University of Oregon, Eugene— Her
bert Eastland, a university graduate of
’05, has been granted the fall scholar
ship offered by the University of Ore
gon medical college in Portland to the
graduates o f the University of Oregon.
Eastland took his major work under
Professor Sweeter in the biologieal de
partment. The scholarship amounts to
PUT POACHERS TO DEATH.
all the tuition and fees that are charged
at the medical school. No decisions
have yet been made in regard to the Russians Maka Short Work o f Jap*
two half scholarships awarded each
anssa Seal Butchers.
year.
_________
San Francisco, Oct. 12.—The United
Revive Malheur Project.
States gunboat Yorktown, which has
Ontario.—A mooting of the Ontario arrived here after a cruise in Alaskan
Commercial club was held recently to waters, confirms the news of the sum
take action looking to the revival of mary execution of several Japanese
the Malheur project. It ie known that seal poachers by the Russian authori
the reclamation department is now ties . on the Komandorsky islands.
looking for an irrigation propeet in After a speedy trial on charges of
this state, and that there is money
available for that purpose. The Mal piracy, the men were convicted and
heur project wag considered one of the put to death.
Tw o Japanese schooners, with their
most feasible in the state of Oregon,
and if the matter is brought before the crews, found sealing within the three-
government properly it is thought fa mile limit by the revenue cutter Bear,
were taken to Valdez. Following the
vorable action will be taken.
custom of previous seasons, it is
thought the men will be allowed to
Tasting Oysters at C oos.
go free.
University of Oregon, Eugene— The
Lieutenant-Commander Pollock, of
biologieal department is gathering sta the Yorktown, which has been doing
tistics from the Coos Bay country with police duty around the Pribilof islands,
states that the rookeries there are
a view to raining oysters for commercial covered with dead and dying pups.
purposes. Professor Sweeter and the Their mothers had been killed at sea
members of his department have done and the young left to perish.
considerable work along this line dur
During the season the Yorktown
ing the summer, and if the statistics encountered 11 Japanese sealers, but
obtained prove the raising of oysters none was within the three-mile limit-
is possible and a paying proposition,
While off Cape St. Elias the York
BATTLE T O RAGE.
oyster beds will probably be installed town was in a terrific gale, and was
at various points on the coast within compelled to heave to for 36 hours.
the next four years.
The gunboat was washed from stem Trans-Misaisslppi Congress May Fight
to stern, and one of her lifeboats
Roosevelt's Policy.
was carried away. This was the same
Asks Engineer’ s Removal.
San
Francisco,
Oct. 10.—The ses
gale
in
which
the
bark
Star
o
f
Bengal
Klamath Falls.—The directors of the
was wrecked on Coronation island, sion of the Trans-Mississippi Com
Klamath Water Users’ association have
mercial Congress held yesterday was
with the loss of 111 men.
asked the secretary of the interior for
devoted largely to addresses covering
a wide variety o f subjects, to the de
the removal of D. W. Murphy, project
TRY WIRELE88 TELEPHONY.
liberations of the committee on reso
engineer, in charge of the Klamath
lutions, which took action upon m "
reclamation project. The action of the
board is a surprise to many landown Apparatus to Connect Admiralty O f number o f important questions, and
to entertainmeni jpf the delegates in
Little i nformation is available
fice With Ships at 8 «a .
the form o f automobile tours of the
as to the charge« outside of those
London, Oct. 12.—The De Forest city.
eited in the letter to the interior de
Practically all of the contests be
partment— lack of economy in construc system of wireless telephony is short
tion and lack of administrative ability ly to be put to the test by the ad fore the committee on resolutions af
fect. directly or indirectly, the ex
BiiraJty, who wUl endeavor to .cpntr pressed policy o f the national admin
Postal Racaipts Increase.
municate by wireless telephone with istration upon matters relating to
Albany.— Albany postoffice receipts the channel fleet from the admiralty conservation of resources and in some
daring the past quarter ehow a big
instances it is expected that the con
offices in St. James »Park.
gain over the similar period last year.
The experiments, which may extend troversies will be carried to the floor
The reeeipte for the quarter ending over some weeks, are expected to o f the congress this morning, when
September 30 were $3313.03, while the demonstrate the possibility of the o f the delayed report of the committee
same period in 1907 yielded only ficials in London keeping in touch is presented for consideration.
$2719.74, s gain of $593.29.
One o f the most important of these
with the warships at sea and also of
■ •,
a
the ships - communicating with the related to the disposal of water
rights suitable for power develop
land station.
PORTLAND MARKET8.
Wireless telephony over long dis ment, -and a resolution introduced by
Wheat—Bluestem, 93c; club, 88c; tances has already been shown to be Frank Short, of Fresno, dealing with
fife, 88e; red Russian, 86e; 40-fold, possible by the invention of Mr. Poul- the subject, was so amended before
sen, the famous Danish inventor. By the committee as to defeat a pro
91c; Valley, 90c.
Barley—Feed, $26 per ton; rolled, means of powerful arc lamps of a spe posal to grant to the originators o f
cial form continuous electrical waves power projects the rights and priv
$27.50(6)28.50; brewing, $26.50.
Oata— No. 1 white, $31(331.50 per can be sent from one place to another ileges that are now accorded irriga-
Ex-Governor George C.
impressed with the effects of speech tionists.
ton; gray, $30(330.50.
Hay—Timothv, Willamete Yalley, in such a way that these impressions Pardee, of California, a member o f
$14 per ton; Willamette Valley, ordi can be reconverted into speech at the the national coiflmission on conser
vation of resources, opposed Mr.
nary, $11'; * Eastern Oregon, $16.50; receiving station.
The electrical waves are bent out of Short in the hearing, and it was
mixed, $13; elover, $9; alfalfa, $11;
shape so to speak, by the telephone agreed that the resolution should not
alfalfa meal, $20.
Fruit— Apple*, new, 60c@$1.50 per connected with the transmitting ap indorse the granting of perpetual
box; peaches, 65@85c, per box; pears paratus, and these modified waves are rights, whether located in or out o f
50c^$1.25 per box; plants, 50e@$l per capable of carrying the impression to forest reserves, and should not con
fer the right of disposal upon the
box; grapes, 50c@$1.25 per crate; Con the receiving apparatus.
state in which they were located.
cords, 20(322 %e per basket; htickle
berries, 9(310e per lb.; quinces, $1.25
Not Aggressive, Says 8«rvia.
per box; cranberries, $10 per barrel;
John Bull 8tands Alone.
Budapest, Oct. 12.—Servia has re
prunes, 2c per lb.
London, Oct. 10.—The Near East
plied to the Austro-Hungarian de
Potatoes — 80(390« per hundred;
mand for an explanation of her pur ern situation is in a position of sus
sweet potatoes, 2c per lb.
pose in summoning the reserves to pended animation, pending the con
Melons—Cantaloupes, $1(3)1.50 per
the colors by granting that this step
crate; watermelons, le per lb.; essa has no aggressive character. Speak ference between M. Iswolsky, the
Russian minister of foreign affairs,
bas. $1.75(®2 per doz.
ing at Saturday's session of the Aus
Vegetables— Turnips, $1.25 per sack; tro-Hungarian delegation, Foreign and Sir Edward Gray, the British
carrots, 85c; parsnips, $1.25; beets, Minister von Aehrenthal expressed foreign secretary. The Russian min
$1 .25; artichokes, 65c per doz.; beans the belief that he would be able to ister arrived here from Paris yester
5(310c per lb.; cabbage, 2@2^4e per carry through the annexation of Bos day afternoon and will discuss with
lb.; cauliflower, 50e(3$1.25 per doz.; nia and Herzegovina peacefully. He Sir Edward today the question of a
Great
eelery, 75(385c per dos.; corn, 90c(3 said that already he was negotiating conference of tne powers.
$1.15 per sack; cucumbers, 15(320c per with some of the powers with the Britain is still of the opinion that it
would be better for Turkey if the
doz.; egg plant, $1.25 per crate; let' view of smoothing out difficulties.
matter were settled without a meet
tuce, 75c<3$l per box; parsley, 15c per
ing of the powers.
doz.; peas' 6c per lb.; peppers, 8@10c
Austria's Patience Strained.
per lb.; pumpkins, 1(31 A4e per lb.;
Fira on Bulgarian Flag.
Paris. Oct. 12.—Official advices re
radishes, 12%c per doe.;, spinach, 2c
Constantinople, Oct. 10,-iOne o f
per lb.; sprouts, 9c per lb.: squash, ceived here represented the situation
between Servia and Austria-Hungary the boats of a Bulgarian company
l% e per lb.; tomatoes, 50(360e.
Butter—City creamery, extras, 8214 as extremely critical. Austria-Hungary which runs a steamship line between
(334c; fancy outside creamery, 30(3 has served notice that she will not Constantinople and Varna narrowly
tolerate farther provocation and that escaped serious trouble yesterday as
3214c P«r ll>.; store, 18c.
Eggs — Oregon extras. 81@3214c; she is prepared for eventualities a result of flying the new Bulgarian
firsts, 27(5)30e; seconds, 23@26c; East should the Skupschitina declare war royal flag, which is unknown ajnong
or make an aggressive move. The the nations of the world. The steam
era, 25@28c per doz.
Poultry—Hens, 11(312« per lb.; fifteenth Austro - Hungarian army er attempted to enter the Bosphorus
spring, ll(312e> dneka, old, 12@1214c; corps occupied the frontier along the and the observers in the forts, not
spring, 14(315e; geese, old, 9e; yonng. Danube, and river gunboat* are con knowing her natfonality, fired two
blank shots across her bows. There
10(311«; turkeys, old, 17@18e; young, centrating at Scmlin.
....\ ----------------
upon the steamer turned anddeparted
20c.
Acquits Mob Laader.
Veal—Extra, 9c per lb.; ordinary,
Sought Triple Alliance.
7(9714«; heavy, 5c.
Soringfield, 111., Oct. 12.—The jury
Pork—Fancy, 814c per lb.;, ordinary, in the case of Ernest Humphrey, one
Hongkong, Oct. 10.— It ia learned
8c; large, 5e.
of the alleged mob leaders indicted here from reliable. sources that the
Hops—Oregon. 1908, 7(3714e per lb.; for malicious destruction of property real reason of Sir Robert Hart's re
1$07, 9%<34e; 1906, 114<®1%«.
on August IS last, has returned a ver cent visit to England was to bring
Wool— Eastern Oregon, average best, dict ot not guilty. Thia is the third about an alliance between China, the
10r316%e per Ih., according to shrink- case growing out of the recent race United States and Great Britain to
valley, 16(31514«-
riot in which a verdict o f not guilty conserve the interest« of the three
oh air—Choice, 18@1814< P * lb.
ia* been returned.
nations in the Far East