I
/
NEWBERG GRAPHIC
C. N . WOODWARD, I
NFVBER.G....................
EVENTS OF THE DAT
Newsy Items Gathered from ill
Parts of the World.
Lass Important but Not Loas Ini
••ting Happenings from Points
Outside the Stats.
Heney is now reported out
danger.
o f all
Governor-elect Cosgrove, o f Wash
ington, is much worse.
Kaiser W ilhelm ’s last speech was
prepared by his ministers.
A steamer blew up on the lower Mis
sissippi river, killing 10 men.
Six missing Montana miners were
crushed to death in a mine near Helena.
Harriman is reported to have secured
control of the Wisconsin Central rail
way.
Wreckage from an unknown vessel
is drifting ashore at Vancouver island,
B . C.
Moritz Rosenthal, chief counsel for
the Standard Oil, gets a salary o f $1,-
000 a day.
Admiral Sperry has refused to let the
cews o f the fleet land at Manila be
cause o f the recent outbreak o f cholera.
A t the inquest Mrs. Haas testified
that she did not give her husband the
revolver with which he committed sui
cide and knew nothing about it. ---------
Officials of the Mare Island navy
yard have received orders to repair the
gunboat Bennington.
This is the ves
sel on which the explosion occurred
four years ago when 67 men were
killed.
A gas explosion at Redding, Cal.,
injured four persons and caused an
earthquake panic.
Russia will make an attempt to se
cure rights to make and use the
Wright aeroplane.
Railroads are preparing to substi
tute telephones for telegraph in the
dispatching o f trains.
Los Angeles business men have pe
titioned the president to keep the
battleship fleet in the Pacific.
The inquest on Haas failed to solve
the mystery o f how he got the revol
ver with which he shot himself.
German statesmen are trying to
calm the agitation against the kaiser.
V on Buelow is anxious to retire.
The official returns have just been
compiled in Missouri on the presi
dential vote. Taft received 346,915
and Bryan 345,889.
Judgment has just been given rail
roads against Cook county, Illinois,
for $100,000 damages caused by the
Strike riots o f 1894.
The Iowa supreme court has just
decided that the football year ends
with Thanksgiving. A trainer was
suing for salary on a broken contract,
Pacific coast hopmen want higher
tariff on hops.
English financiers are anxious to
get Philippine railway bonds.
Germany doubts the kaiser’s sincer
ity and the agitation to restrict his
power continues.
The last edict of the dowager em
press o f China was an order for re
forms to continue.
Admiral Evans has become presi
dent o f a new steamship company
with its home office in Los Angeles.
Governor-elect
Shallenberger
of
Nebraska sustained a broken ankle
while being initiated into the Shriners.
Co-education has been condemned
at the university o f Glasgow. There is
too much flirting, say the college of
ficers.
There is a bitter feud on in San
Francisco between the police depart
ment and sheriff’s office over the sui
cide o f Haas.
Warlike Moros are gathering for an
attack on peaceful natives. Five com
panies of infantry have been sent to
disperse them.
A Ruef bribery witness committed
suicide while on his way from France
to Queenstown. He had been in Eu
rope to escape arrest.
Peter von Vlissingen, the Chicago
real estate man who confessed to
forgeries, got away with more than
$2,000,000, according to investigators.
Taft will form an entirely new cab
inet.
Prince and Princess de Sagan deny
they intend to separate.
T w o men lost their lives in Kansas
City by a gas explosion.
Roosevelt gave a dinner to labor
leaders, judges and government o f
ficials.
Heney is improving so rapidly that
he expects to be back at work in a
few weeks.
The new dowager empress of China
has been forced by threats to submit
to the regent.
REGENT FEARS REBELLION.
O P E N S FINE S U B W A Y .
Heavy Guards Placsd at All Gatss o f
City o f Pekin.
Boston Tunnel Cost 9 1 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 and
' Takes Cars O ff Surface.
Pekin, Nov. 24.— While mil is quiet
in Pekin, detachments o f troops guard
the city gates and gendarmes are on
PLAT SM ALL FARM S.
X
duty at the approaches to the foreign
legations.
The government has not Hugs Enterprise Launched at Albany
ceased to take precautionary meas
by Deal dust Consummated.
ures, for revolutionaries are spreading
Albany— The largest land »ale ever
all kinds o f reports, which might act made in Oregon of fruit, dairy and ag
like firebrands to the spirit of uneasi ricultural land has just been closed in
ness underlying present conditions in the sale of 30,000 acres in Benton and
Lincoln counties to Minneapolis pso
China.
There have been rumors of an insur pie. The sale was made through Fish
rectionary movement in the South, but & Hodges, of this city.
A new company, the Yaquina Valley
this has proved to be only a minor out
break among the artillery and cavalry Fruit & Land company, will, through
its western representatives, heve tUeS'
stationed at Nankia.
lands platted into 10, 20 and 40-aeiv
Nevertheless, it has been thought tracts and sold for fruit, nut and dairy
advisable to post a guard at each of purposes. Literature for'extensive ad
the gates o f Pekin, and half compan vertising of this part of Oregon is be
ies of Chinese regulars are now under ing prepared. The head office will be
arms at these points.
in Minneapolis, with a branch in Port
It was owing to one o f these disturb land, but the business will all g»
ances that the edict o f November 20 through this city.
Those back of the enterprise are J.
was issued, in which it was pointed
out that lawless conspirators had tried B. 8treeter & Co., George W. Taylor,
to invade the interior, and all officials George £. Adams, of Minneapolis, and
several others.
were ordered to arrest and summarily
At the present time there are about
behead them wherever found.
300 families around St. Louis preparing
Stringent measures have been taken to come to Oregon and take hold of
here to suppress any sign of conspiracy, some of this land.
and the government has ordered an in
vestigation of the governor o f Nang
Dirt Soon to Fly.
Puei province, on acount o f a slight up
Klamath
Falls.— Dump cars and en
rising that took place there.
H O LD S T O W N A T BAY.
Four Men Shot in Effort to Capture
Mexican Hold-Up Man.
Reno, N ev., Nov. 24.— Detected as
he was holding up the Court saloon in
Battle Mountain late last night, a
Mexican broke through the door and,
running into Night Policeman. Coon,
shot the officer in the ja w ; then held
up the gathering crowd as it collected
at the scene.
Cowboys and miners
called for assistance, and rushing the
robber, were repulsed by his fire.
Deputy Sheriff Titsworth was hit in
the groin, and two others were slightly
injured.
The Mexican backed down the street,
forcing everybody in sight to follow
him. When he drew away from the
saloons he ducked into the darkness. A
suspect, seen by Deputy Sheriff Hasp,
was caught when boarding a freight
train early this morning.
The deputy
sheriff called to the man to halt, but
getting no response, shot the fellow in
the leg. The town, aroused by the out
rages, started on a man hunt; and
farmers, hearing the shooting, came
into town with their lanterns.
They
carried these lights about with them
seeking the robber, and several times
shot at each other when they thought
they had “ flushed” the dare-devil Mex
ican.
____________________
CABLE U SED FOR MAN H U N T .
Eagle Valley Lands Booming.
Richland— Land buyers from all parts
of Oregon and Washington have been in
Eagle valley during the last few days
looking for farms. Few sales have been
made, but it is expected that several
will be completed soon. No land is of
fered. for less than $100 an acre, and
the better quality is held at $200 and
$300. These figures are rather small
than large. The railroad which is be
ing built down the Snake river is the
principal factor in causing the rush for
land in this section.
Ashland for Good Roads.
Ashland.—Judge John H. Scott,
president of the State Good Roads
league, will hold a good roads con
vention at Ashland on Tuesday, No
vember 23. R. P. Neil is chairman,
and H. F. Pohland, secretary, of a
permanent good roads organization
in this city. The executive committee
in charge of the arrangements for the
coming convention is composed of
Benton Bowers, L. L. Mulit, F. D.
Wagner, J. P. .Dodge and G. W.
Dunn.
'
FARMERS W A N T S T A T IO N .
be found anywhere in the
Gilliam
San Francisco, Nov. 24.— A man
hunt, extending half way around the
world, which was conducted by cable
dispatches, came to an end today when
local detectives boarded the steamer
Mongolia and arrested L. E. Knollins,
whose description is said to tally with
that of L. E. Hancock, wanted by the
authorities of North Carolina on a
charge o f embezzlement.
Hancock sailed from here Several
weeks ago and orders for his arrest
were cabled to Nagasaki. He left the
ship at Honolulu, however, and return
ed to this city on the steamer Mongolia,
which arrived today.
Knollins denies that he is Hancock,
and says he is a member of the broker
age firm of Courtland, Babcock & Co.,
of 44 Pine street, New York. He was
taken to the city prison pending the
arrival o f an officer from North Caro
lina.
Condon.—The Gilliam County Im
provement association held its first
meeting last week, in this city. The
body has been organized for the pur
pose of securing the location of the
experimental farm station in Gilliam
county, and to further the interests of
the county.
The following persons were named as
a committee to draw up the by-laws
of the association: Hon. W. J. Mariner,
George B. Dukek, A. Meresse, H. A.
Thiessen, D. B. Thomas and M. Fitz-
maurice, with J. A. Smith as chairman.
Men from every section of the county
were present to discuss the question of
the experimental station in this county
as proposed by President Kerr, of the
Oregon Agricultural college. All were
heartily in favor of securing the 300 or
400 acres necessary for the state au
thorities, and proposed that the land
either should be rented or bought and
given to the state to conduct the sta
tion.
To carry the work to completion the
following persons were placed on the
executive committee: D. B. Thomas, of
Condon precinct; J. B. Goff, Lone Rock;
W. S. Wade, Rock Creek; W. J. Mar
iner, Blalock; Oscar Matey, Ferry Can
yon ; George B. Dukek, Mayville, and
J. L. Blalock, of Arlington, with the
following officers: George B. Dukek.
president; Charles H. Horner, secretary,
and D. B. Thomas, treasurer.
In order to be able to lease or buy
the land necessary for the station, the
organization will be incorporated under
the state laws.
O R EG O N SH EEP CLEAN.
Inspectors Fail to Find Any Scabbies
or Other Diseases.
Pendleton.—After two weeks’ work
11 inspectors under the direction of
Dr. S. W. McClure, of the federal
bureau of animal industry, report
that not one case of scabbies or other
disease has been found among Ore
gon sheep. Though not a single dis
eased sheep has been found so far,
the work o f inspection will be con
tinued until every band in the state
has been subjected to an examination.
It is believed, however, that no scab
by sheep will be found, though early
in the summer there were a few iso
lated cases in Lake and Douglas
counties. These were treated as soon
as discovered.
Though Oregon sheep were prob
ably the worst infested with scabbies
of any state in the Union two years
ago, Dr. McClure stated at that time
that he would clean up the sheep of
the state within two years, and this
inspection seems to indicate that he
has kept his promise.
Will Fortify Honolulu.
Honolulu, Nov. 24.— A detachment
o f United States engineers, under Ma
jor Winslow, which arrived recently
on the transport Sheridan, has com
menced the work of fortifying the
island. The first work to be done is
the preparation o f military maps. The
dredging for the large drydock to be
built at Pearl harbor and the deepen
ing o f the channel also will begin in
the near future.
Several local con
tractors have departed for Washington
where the bids for the dredging con
tracts will be opened in December.
Kills Roosevelt Turkey.
Westerly,
R. I ., Nov. 24.— The
Rhode Island turkey which Horace Voz
will send to the president, according
to his annual custom, to grace the
table of the White House on Thanks
giving day, went to the execution
block today and will be shipped to
Washington tomorrow. It is the best
o f a lot of chestnut fed birds, which
have been selected and especially
reared as candidates for the distinc
tion, and weighs 26 pounds.
watches from Portland car men Ss
pay for their latest act.
Servians Lose Seventeen.
The famous old Lookout inn, on
Paris, Nov. 24.— A dispatch from
the crest of Lookout mountain, Ten Vienna says that a band o f Servians,
nessee, has been destroyed by fire.
while crossing the Bosnian frontier,
near Sevomik, was repulsed by Aus
trian troops.
The Servians lost 17
men killed and the Austrians three
killed.
corporated with a capital stock of
$300,000, has bought a tract of timber
of about 3000 acres in Tillamook
county. It is understood, however,
that the timber will not be cut for
the present, but held as an invest
ment. The incorporators of the com
pany are R. V. Jones, E. B. Clark and
Wallace McCamant. The headquar
ters of the company will be in Port
land.
ters of an acre to stock carrots, and
is delivering hi’s crop to the W ald
port market this week. The present
price is $12 per ton. and there are 14
tons from the patch. The carrots
have attained immense growth; and
were planted so close to the river
bank that they were tossed into a
scow as they were pulled, thus sav
ing ¿onsiderable labor and expense
in getting them to market.
Loan Fund Increased.
New Road Pleases Stockmen.
Baker City __ Stockmen of the John
University o f Oregon, Eugene.—
Through the efforts of State Senator R Day and Burns country are pleased with
A. Booth, of Eugene, $525 has been the arrangement of the Sumpter Valley
added to the student loan fund, increas railroad, which permits stock to b
ing it to about $2,200. This fund is shipped over that line in the future
loaned to deserving students at a low ¡The first stock train was run from Aus
rate of interest, and is often the means'tin to Baker this evening. Yards of
of keeping a needy student in the uni ¡considerable size have been built a
versity. The donors were prominent Austin and will accommodate the larg
business men of Portland, who did not, herds raised in the interior,
desire to have their names mentioned.
PORTLAND M A R K E TS.
Natural Gas in Baker.
world
has
Oitixsns Organize to 8ecurs just been completed in this city, and
will be opened for use during the week.
Experimental Farm.
New Firm Buys Timber.
Heavy Carrot Profits.
Man Chased Half Around World by
Waldport.—James Monroe, of Tide
Portland.— The Michigan - Oregon
Dispatches is Caught.
Logging company, which has been in water, last spring planted three-quar
Fails in Record Flight.
London, Nov. 24.— Word has been
received here that the balloon owned
by the Daily Graphic, which ascended
from this city Wednesday morning last
in an attempt to reach Siberia and
break the long-distance record, was
Claus A. Spreckles advocated free compelled to descend in a gale on
sugar before the house committee on Thursday night near Novo Alexand-
revision of the tariff.
rovsk, Russia, after having traveled
Street car robbers got $25 and two about 1,350 miles.
f
A government warehouse at New
York caught fire and fully $50.000
worth of tents, blankets and other
supplies were destroyed.
gines have arrived in Klamath Falls
and are being taken to the railroad
camp on the Hot Springs addition.
They are to be used in making the
fill over the government canal and
at'the station grounds. A large force
of men will be employed all winter
on the cut and fill, as several acres
of yards and switching grounds are
to be filled and made ready for track
laying. Tw o steam shovels are now
working within sight of this city.
Boston, Mass., Nov. 2 3 .— W hat is
claimed to the the most ccomplete and
perfect tunnel for passenger traffic to
It ijrknown as the Washington street
tunnel and is designed to relieve the
congestion of the narrow and crooked
streets of Boston’s business section.
The tunnel will be UBed to carry the
trains of the Boston Elevated railway
company through the downtown sec
KILLED IN EXPLOSION
Twenry-FIve Workingmen Caught
In Deep Hole In Brooklyn.
I SPARK IGNITES ESCAPING GAS
Water
Main
Breaks
From Force ot
Concussion, Adding to Horror
— Traffic Suspended.
tion of the city. The old tunnel, known
as the Tremont street subway, which
New York, Nov. 21.—Twenty-five
was the first to be built in America, persons are believed to have lost their
will be employed exclusively for the lives in an explosion of gas which
tore up a great section of Gold street.
socalled surface car traffic. W ith both Brooklyn, yesterday. It is definitely
tunnels in use the downtown streets known that 15 persons were buried
will be practically relieved o f all street under the hundreds of tons of earth
and timber thrown into the air; and
cars.
ten more are reported missing. The
The new tunnel is 5,676 feet long.
exact number of dead cannot be de
It is fireproof throughout
A ll the
termined until those working to re
steel construction is protected by con cover
the entombed bodies dig
crete from rust or fire. A ll the doors through 50 feet of dirt, rock and a
and ticket booths and escalator balus tangle o f pipes and timber.
trades are escased in sheet bronze
The explosion occurred in a 50-foot
The telephone offices and package rooms deep excavation that had been made
and electricians’ rooms have tiled walls in Gold street, between York and
of masonry. The Bigns are o f metal Front streets, where a water main was
and the seats and benches o f cement being laid. The gas main sprang a
There is not a bit o f wood throughout leak recently, and in a manner un
known a spark came into contact with
the completely fireproof structure.
the escaping gas. Immediately there
The tunnel was begun and finished
was a terrific explosion, which lifted
with no disturbance to the traffic over the surface for half a block in both
head.
directions, and shot dirt, paving stones
To insure against the cutting off of and debris into the air.
the current at any time and thereby
When the smoke and dust cleared
plunging the stations into darkness, away it was seen that the street had
three different sources of supply are been opened from doorstep to door
arranged for, each independent o f the step over an area of nearly a block.
other, and all so arranged that should The loosened earth and debris had
the current he shut offTrom one source fatten into the excavation, buryinR the
it is instantly supplied from another score of laborers who were at work;
when the accident occurred. Great
source automatically by an arrange
tongues of flame shot out of the crev
ment of the main switches.
ices. and beside them geysers of water
The tunnel was built by the Boston leaped into the air from a water main
Transit commission and leased to the that had been shattered.
#
Boston Elevated Railway company for
25 years from the beginning of its use
N O T IN S H O E .
It is built through that section of Bos
ton which contains the highest priced
land, with due regard for the best feas Expert Gunsmith Says Hass Did N ot
Have Gun Long.
ible grade and alignment with respect
to the narrowness and crookedness of
San Francisco, Nov. 21.— Chief o f
the streets. Its cuet, together with Police Biggy, whose resignation from
the cost o f its approaches and equip the department may follow the out
ment, is estimated at over $10,000,000. come o f the coroner’s inquest into the
W H ITE MAN UN SAFE.
Ex-Naval Official Makes a Startling
Statement on Japan.
Ottawa. OnL, Nov. 23.— “ There is
no law for the white man In Japan.
The treaty made between Japan and
Great Britain counts for practically
nothing since the time of the school
trouble in San Francisco.”
This strong and amazing statement
was made by an ex-officer o f the Brit
ish royal navy, who has been employed
for some years as s civil engineer by
the Japanese government and who has
just passed through this city on his
way home to England.
The information which this gentle
man has to give with regard to the in
dignities and inconveniences that he
says are heaped upon white men in the
mikado’s kingdom should prove a sur
prise to those who have been accus
tomed of late years, at least, to regard
the Japanese people as being possessed
of most friendly feelings toward the
people o f Great Britain. According
to the information he is able to fur
nish at first hand, no white man is at
all safe in the ownership of any prop
erty in Japan unless he becomes a nat
uralized citizen of that country.
BIG PLANT R E SU M ES.
Huge Steel W orks in Chicago to Re
Open in Full Blast.
suicide of Morris Haas, who shot him
self in his cell at the county jail while
guarded by several policemen, was
shown yesterday to have been in per
sonal command of the men w ho
searched Haas.
According to Patrolman Charles F.
Groat, who took the stand yesterday
in the second day’s session of the in
quest, he rode to the jail handcuffed
to Haas, in Chief Biggy’s automobile
with the chief and several detectives.
There Biggy directed the search o f
the prisoner.
Should the jury find that Haas had
the little derringer with which he
committed suicide, in his shoe when
searched, the fact will be taken as
ev'dence to support charges of inef
ficiency which Detective William J.-
Burns declares will be brought against
Biggy,______
_____ _ _ _ _ _
,___
Captain Thomas S. Duke, who rmde
the first search of Haas in the court
room, produced Otto A. Bremer, a
gunsmith, as an expert to prove that
Haas did not have the weapon in his.
shoe when he shot Francis J. Heney.
Bremer testified that if the derringer
had been carried for any length o f
time in Haas' shoe the barrel would
show rust. The derringer showed no
sign of rust, and Bremer declared it
could not have been carried next to
the s k i n . ___________ _____
M AK ES IMMENSE PR OFIT.
Standard Oil Earnings Amounted to
• 8 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 in 1607.
New York. Nov.-21.— For over five
hours yesterday John D Rockefeller,
witness for the defense in the govern
ment suit to dissolve the Standard Oil
company, faced an unceasing fire o f
questions from the federal counsel.
Frank B. Kellogg, and when adjourn
ment was taken until Monday the
head of the oil combine was still be-
in«» cross-examined on the charge that
the company in its early days accept
ed rebates to the disadvantage of its
rivals.
Mr. Rockefeller’s cross-examination
will probably not be concluded until
late Tuesday, as Mr. Kellogg made it
known that he would question Mr.
Rockefeller on every detail of the
company’s business.
The enormous earning power of the
oil combination was sharply brought
out in yesterday's hearing, when Mr
Rockefeller, after stating that the
Standard had paid dividends amount
ing to $40,000.000 in 1907, said it had
earned as much more, and that this
was added to the company’s surplus,
which was stated by the government’s
counsel to be $300.000,000. It was
further declared by Mr. Kellogg that
the company within the last eight
years has earned nearly half a billion
dollars.
Wheat— Bluestem, 95c; club. 9tc;
Chicago, Nov. 23.— All is joy in
fife, 90c; red Russian, 88c; 40-fold,
91c; valley 91r
South Chicago. The army o f workers
Barley— Feed, $26 per ton; brew in the big mills of the Illinois Steel
ing. $27.
company is to have a real Christmas
Oats— No. 1 white, $30(8)31 per ton; this year.
gray, $29 i 8'30
The exuberant and unrestrained glee
Hay—Timothy, Willamette Valley, and thankfulness were caused by an
$14 per ton; Willamette Valley, ordi
nary. $lt; Eastern Oregon. $16.50(8) announcement today by officials of the
17.50; mixed, $13; clover, $9; alfalfa, company, which employes a large ma
jority of the inhabitants of the town,
O . R. & N. Construction Cost.
$14; alfalfa meal, $19
Fruit—Apples, 65c<8)$3 per box; that the shops would be running in full
Portland.—According to the current
issue of the Railroad Age Gazette, the pears, $1(8)1.25 per box; grapes, $1.40 blast by December 1. By that time it
Oregon railroad commission, which lias (8)1.65 per crate; quinces, $1(8)1 25 per is expected 12,000 men will be work
been at work investigating the original box; cranberries, $10.50(8)12 50 per ing in many departments o f the im
cost of the O. R. & N. and the Corvallis barrel; cassavas, 2i per pound; Span mense plant.
& Eastern, has completed its work, and ish Malaga grapes, $7(8)7.50 per barrel
About half of the workers in the
Potatoes—80<a!90c per cwt.; sweet mills have been unemployed for more
finds that the O. R. & N. cost $33,297,*
potatoes,
lf(8)2jc
per
pound.
828, and the Corvallis & Eastern $4,-
than a year, since many of the depart
Onions—$1(8)1.10 per 100 lbs
250,000.
_________
Vegetables — Turnips, $1.25 per ments. shut down on account of scarcity
Find 7 0 0 Lost Sneep.
sack; carrots, $1; parsnips, $1.25; o f orders for steel rails and other pro
Many of the
Pendleton.— Seven hundred head of beets, $1.25; horseradish, 10c per ducts of the company.
ownerless sheep, valued approximate pound; artichokes, 90c(8)$l per dozen; others employed since a partial reopen
ly at $2000, have been found by E. B. beans. 10(8)llc per pound; cabbage. ing last summer have been working on
Carlile, of Unity, Baker county, and l(8)lic ner pound; cauliflower, 50c(8) a short schedule.
The re-employment of thousands of
are being held for the owner. So far $1 per dozen; celery, 40(8)75c per doz.;
no woolgrower in this vicinity can be cucumbers, $2 per box; eggplant. 15c men means much also to the merchants
found who has missed that many per pound; lettuce, 75c@$l per box; of the suburb.
parsley, 15c per dozen; peas, 10c per
animals.
_________
ootind; propers, 10c per pound; pump
Czar Nicholas Walks Abroad.
Strangle From Sm oke.
Cannery’ s Pack 1 0 ,0 0 0 Cases.
kips, l(S>lic per pound; radishes. I2jc
Butte, Mont., Nov. 21.—Three stran
Bandon__ Timmons’ salmon, cannery per dozen; spinach, 2c per pound; St. Petersburg, Nov. 23.— Czar Nich
has closed for the season, having canned sprouts, 9j(8)10c per pound; squash olas Saturday made his first appearance gled to death by smoke and flames
about 10.000 cases this fall. The total 1(8)1 Jc per pound; tomatoes. 50c(8)$l afoot in the streets of his capital since six missing, without the slightest
output of the plant is nearly twice what
Butter— City creamery, extras, 35(8) his coronation. The occasion was the hope of escape, and a property loss
it was a year ago, and this in the face 36c; fancy outside creamery, 32i@35c funeral of Grand Duke Alexis. The which will reach into the thousands is
the gruesome record of a terrific fire
of the fact that there was a strike of per pound; store, 17(8)20c.
czar, dressed in full uniform as an ad
the fishermen in the early part of the
Eggs—Oregon selects, 37}c; East miral of the Russian navy, walked im which started from lights on miners’
caps at 10 o ’clock yesterday morning
season.
ern, 27(8)32}c per dozen.
mediately behind the royal casket, ap and
swept with savage rapidity
Poultry— Hens, 12j(8)13c per pound;
Buys 1 .0 0 0 Acres.
spring,
12(q)12k;
ducks,
14(8)15c; parently indifferent to danger. The through the fourth drift east from
Philomath.—A Portland firm has geese, 10(8)10ic; turkeys, 17@18c; streets through which the funeral cor No. 2 slope in the Northwestern Im
tege passed were lined with a double provement company’s coal mine at
nurchased 1000 acres of timber on dressed turkeys, 20(8)21c.
Red Lodge.
Woods creek, and intends to erect s
Veal— Extra, 8}(8)9c per pound; or file of tioips.
large sawmill and flume to connect dinary, 7(8)7}c; heavy, 5c.
with the C. & E. railroad, about one
Simon Leads Revolt.
Pork—Fancy, 7c per pound; large.
Shots Fired by Servians.
mile west of Philomath.
5}@6c.
Paris, Nov. 21.— A revolution has
Budapest, Nov. 2 3 .— The Austro-
Hops—1908, choice, 8 @ 8 k ; prime,
Hungarian patrols on the Servian fron broken out in Southern Hayti. Gen
Find Bog Iron Near Salem.
7<S?7ic; medium, 5i(S)flc per pound
tier are being strengthened in conse eral Simon, ex-commander of the
Salem.—What is declared to he the 1907. 3<8)4c; 1906, l(8)lic.
troops in the southern department,
first discovery of bog iron in the United
W ool — Eastern Oregon, average quence of reports that Servian troops has seized the city of I.es Cayes and
States has been made on the Wilson best, 10(S)14c per pouild, according to recently fired across the Danube at a the adjacent region. The telegraph
po'nt near Zemedria on a party o f Aus line has been cut and government
farm, near here. There is said to be shrinkage; valley, 15@16c.
trians.
an immense ledge, of great value.
Mohair— Choice. 18c per pound.
troops are surrounded by rebels.
Baker City.— A report reached here
from Durkee of the discovery of natural
gas while boring an artesian well for
water, a half-mile above Durkee, on
Albert Hindman’s property. Albert
Hindman is now sinking a well on his
home place, and is down 300 feet. It
is claimed that there are oil indications
in a field a quarter of a mile from his
place.