iv BAS THREE TIKES TEE CISCOLATIOK OP ANT PAPER IN THE COUNTY. THl OFFICIAL AND LEADINO PAPER 07 GILLIAM COUNT!. POBMSHgD BVSHT FRIDAY IT LOAN P. 8HUTT, fcdllar and Preprletor. ADTEBTIBIXQ BATH. Prof h1 anal card. .. XI 00 par month Ou hwi . , 1 oo per monu , 1 (0 set month One-o. nailer column... una-nan column.. , t 00 per month ! 1 .4 . , ,i- On oolnmn..... JO 00 per month. Bualnaaa locals will be charged at 10 oasts pat Una tor I rat lnaartioa and t cant par Una thara alter. Legal adrertlaemenu win In ail eaaat bt eh art ad to th party ordering them, at legal rata, and paid lor before affidavit la fnrniihad ubxirlptloa Hat. . jnl rear fin advance)-.. u...ll W If not paid in edveuu 3 00 kli miiuthi ................. Tnre muthi ....... ingle oodIm.. 10 VOL. VI. CONDON, GILLIAM CO., OREGON, Fill DAY, JANUARY 15, 1897. NO. 44. CONDON GLOBE if Itnturtti a( th PnntojltH at Cntutim, Oregon, at MCiind'Clooi mall matttr orriviAt. imttCUTOIIT. Praaldent ,., VleaPreableut Seorelarr ol Hial nrtry ol TroMiiry. ...... Secretary ol Interior.,,.,.,, eonralary of War teerelnry ol Nary riwtmaaittr-tinuerai , United flUU. ,.,,. HHOVr, C.RVM,AN .A HI. A I K. HlKVHW)K Kll HAHII Ol.HBV JilHX l. CARI.IM.S ... HoK HMITH ....LlANIKt, M. l.AHOKC .Hll.AHV A. IlKRBKKT ..VMl.l.UM l Wlli Attorney Uanural JtllMH II A HMON keuratary of AgrleuHur. ...,J. Htkkmnu Musroa Governor Secretary of Male... .... Treasurer Alloruey-tleneral Rapt, of Publio luatrui tion, Senators......... Oongraumen Printer npreme Jarigei.. lata of Oregon. '. P. Imo H. K. KimcaIii ,1'MII, MKT HAH ...,U, M. iiJi.mAR p. I. H. M. IKWIM 1. H. MwiiliaU. J. N. liol.m. III. HaMHAMM IvV, K, KM.il ...,W. II. I.KKI (!. K. WOLVSHTOa A. MihiRK B. UlAM. IDE Jf IK From All Parts of the New World and the Old. A On OP INTEREST TO OUR READERS evauth Jndlelal IM.trlet. Jlreatt Jndge VY. L. BnnA Precneutlng Attorney A, A Jaymr Mcmlier etei Uuaril.. ...W. C. Vt XUS ' llllllain Oouiitr Joint Heimlnr lor (IlllUm, Hner- mail and naeeo Cuuiilio.. ........ KeiiraeeuUMIv ile. Clark.. J ml Sheriff. Treuurer - tioipmlanloiian.. "' . Jataainr... ' daiywi aniurliihitui. ur yr........ lek lni'(ur ,.K. B. Dun's J, K. lAVID .W.J. Mahihkm ..H. N. FMA1M ...W, 1.. WimjuI ... H. H. Harkrr ....K. M. CI.VHM .....P. M. turn ...M O, t;i.a .K. W. DAiwrrt ..JkriiV Bkowm ..Kku A. Hal O. It. M. Vu. Tim Card. Train arrUe at Arllnir'nn fnllnwat No. 'i-Ki.i -Iki'.iiU. )), Walla Walla, f A. M. ho. l-W.Mb iiiul, Wulla Walla, a.m. TraU N. It leave !) tlxn.l at 7 f. M. No. W. ImiuihI liluhl (anamiKern).7:4a A. M. Nu M K buuiiil f elvlit (MaweiiKra)...lt 1 r. No 'Jl -W. Iiouii'l Iri'iKlit (mmiikt).-:16 - Kii. 21 aittl H (A III Im tirovlfitfcl wllh a CtHMin ami iaKK '"'I 1" connect at Wlllowa Jiiui liiiii wllh ilia llepimnr nam. No. HI will t'Oiinwtat'lh liallim with No. I, h lovul paiieiir Iratti belwevit I'ortiaud auu IbelMll.. raimbr ' out In Hen Fraitelaeo have been re diired "rat ealilli, i2; ateeraae, W, Im lmllii BiexU aud bertlia. lliMiivb llekeia are wlJ lu Arllugtou. f, C. Hl.MJl.B, Ageut. D K. J. i. IIUOAN PHYSICIAN A.NO SURGEON, Coadun Or. Offlrw Orenn av between Catbolle Church and resilience of P. Hhull, W, 0AIU.1N0, Attorney at Law, Notary Public and Conveyancer, Condon, Or. Collection" and Imuran'. Trm reasonable. Olllee lu fear ol poauiniv building. Main atrL JOHN IAONH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Condon Or. All legal work Uurieri to. ptiilalty. promptly and rarelully at- follecilng and Alwtractlug a g A. I). Ol'BI.KV ' Attorn fj and Oonoielor at Lw (J. B. CommlMlonar. NoUry Public. Arllna;tii, Or. Admitted to pmcllce In the conrta of Oregon and Waahlnghin an I lu ilie U. . court. Take Olluga and proola ou laud. g P, 8HUTT, NOTARY PUBLIC Condon, Or. Notarial work en collection! promptly and earelulty attended to. TO THE EAST DIVES THl OHOIOI OP TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL ROUTES GREAT UNION NORTHERN fit : P1CIFIC 11. VIA VIA SPOKANE MINNEAPOLIS DENVER OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL KANSAS CITY UOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES. OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 DAYS . .FOB. . SAN FRANCISCO For full ivtnWn call on O. R. & N, ( Ar;ent, F. C. tllutlle, ArlliiKton, Or. ( on AODHtsa ! . . W. H HURLBUnT, Lun Pits. Agent, fORVLANO, Of Uocnprahanalva Review of th Import ant Happening! of the Fait Weak t olled rroin the Telegraph Column. A pMWogiHT train on the Burlington jmnped a trestle near Omuha, and five people were injnnsd, one futally. William Dbb, of Union, Or., hat received the Maul prize for raining the Urgent table beet for 1806. The oon tent waa open to all growera In the United State and Canada. Tlie prize conniHted of a 150 draft. The beet weighed aeventecn pounds. Borne boya while hunting near Peta lunm, Cul., ahot a pigeon on a tree, fcnd the bird dropped with a broken wing. A meMuige tied to the bird wing proved that it came from Walla Walla, WttHh., lour day previous. The note whh addreKHed to a Ban Fran ciaoo firm. Important pnpera ehowing the amount due the Pucillo roada sinking fund, on aooount of gubaidiea paid the Pacilio Mail Bteanndilp Conipuny, have apparently been lout' The senate adopted a resolution calling for them. Tho atsting aeeretary hag replied that they cannot be found. The Columbia river aalmon puckerg held a meeting in Atoria for the pur pone of fixing the price to be paid for Mtlmon during the coming aeaaon. It Wiia decided to offer 4 cent a pound, and a communication to that effect wan aent to the Fihermen'i Protective Union. The union met later, but no action waa taken in the mutter of the cannerg propowtion. A thousand warring Pole, in Bay City, Miclu, were determined that Fa ther Bogacki hIiouI.I not omciate a their priet They attacked the par nonage of fit. Btaninlaua' church, and atormed it for over an hour. They do molinhcd tho eilitloe and one man waa ahot and aeveral others wounded with clubs. The priest finally surrendered and the police quelled the riot A Chicago paper any that President elect McKinley will select Colonel John Hay, of Washington, as ambassador to Oreat Britain. Colonel Hay has been secretary of the legation at Pans, Vienna and Madrid and waa often charge d'affaires ad interim at each of these capitals. In Hayes' adminstra tion lie was first assistant secretary atate. Hay was one of President Liu clon'g secretaries. Sir Charles Tupper at a dinner in London is Quoted as saving: "I feel great admiration for the United States, but do not desire to possess their insti lutions. I feel that there is greater security under British institutions for life, property and liberty. Canadians are greatly flattered at the desire of the United States to possess Canada but so deep is their loyalty and united are the Canadians that theques tion is impossilbe. " The speech of the ex-premier wag received with great ap plause. . In answer to Senator Mitchell's re so lution on the Yaquina and other im provements in Oregon, the secretary of war has reported that tne matter nau been referred to Captain Fisk, and that considerable correspondence had ensued. Captain Fisk is endeavoring to ascer tain the best method of proceeding with the project. The work on the Willamette river litis been ordered, and the Yamhill locks are in the condition of the Yaquina project. Evidently there has been delay in the matter, which may be continued for some time. The Pacific cable conference will meet within a fortnight in London to sign the report already agreed upon. It is semi-oflloially stated that the report unanimously recommends that a cable be built, as it is practically feasible and commercially and politically neces. sary. There is some difference of opin ion regarding the relative share of ex pense to be borne by Great Britain and the colonies concerned, but the del egates have agreed finally to recommend that less be paid by Ureat lintnm ami more by the colonies than originally considered necessary. The sum nHked from Great Britain is understood to be eonsidored financially feasible by Secre tary Chamberlain. A band of masked regulators went to the house of C. W. Reddick, a few miles west of Newport, Idaho, and called him to the door. They seized him, dragged him outside, took him a short distance from the house and gave him a terrible beating with horsewhips and switches. His condition is critical The alleged offense of Reddick was im proper attentions to a married woman of the neighborhood. It is stated that O. P. Huntington has a corns of engineers in the field making a preliminary survey for a rail road from Port Alvarado, south of Vera Cruz, to the port of Salina Cruz on the Pacific, and that, if he can secure advantageous routes, he will ask the government for a concession for the purpose of operating the line in oon neotion with Pacific Mail steamers, do in( away with the Panama route. WORSE THAN REPORTED. rlbl Atroeltle, la Oaaaabaeos. New York, Jan. XI. Antonio Aguierro, a member of the Havana pro- dune exchange, arrived here on the steamer Orizaba, from Havana. He was a resident of Guanabaooa.where.ao cording to recent reports from Havana, atrocities were commiteed by the Span ish troops under Colonel Fondeveua. Senor Aguierro when seen last night said: 'The reports which reach the United States of the state of affairs in Guanabacoa are far from telling the whole truth. Colonel Fondeveila has instituted a reign of terror at the place. His name is well known to the Araeri- . , i a i J can press as tnat oi ine mosi oiooa- thirsty officer of General Weyler's com mand. He is a favorite of the captain general and has been appointed military commander of Guanabacoa, just across the bay from Havnaa. "Fully 600 families have leit the town and moved into Havana since his taking charge. People are taken from their homes and killed with machetes in the outskirts of the town. The world is then made to believe that such people were leaving their homes to join the rebles, who swarm in the neigh borhood. I know of thirty-nine persons who have thus been done away with, Even honest Spaniards are shocked at Fondeveila's acts. One of the honest Spaniards warned me that my name was on the list with more than 200 more kept by Fondeveila as men marked by him for secret execution as rebel sympathizers. Being a thorough ly neutral man and having good mends among the Cubans and Spaniards anae, I! II I (ME II Senate Canvassed on Interj national Conference. CAUCUS WILL BE HELD SOON I managed to obtain my passport for the United States. I owe my escape from Fondeveila's clutches to my8pan. ish friends, toward whom- I feel the greatest gratitude. " THE FUNDING BILL. Debate Opened by Repreaantatlve Pow er feature of the Bleaaure. Washington, Jan. 11. The Pacifio railroads funding bill, which is con sidered the most important piece of legislation which will come before con gress at this session, came up today in the house, under a special order, which allows two days for general debate and one day for amendments and debate under the five-minute rule, win pro vision for a final vote within fonr days. There was a great deal of in terest in the measure, and the members jave all the speakers close attention. A huge map of the roads, with their feed ers, was hung on a frame erected in the area in front of the speaker's ros trum, and served to illustrate many of the points made. There were only four peakers today Powers of Vermont the chairman of the Pacifio railroads commission, who opened with an ex haustive two hours' argument in sup port of the bill; Hubbard of Missouri, the minority member of the committee, w ho has charge of the opposition, and Grow and Bell, who spoke respectively for and against the measure. The Senate' Action, Washington, Jan. 11. The Repub lican and Democratic steering com mittee today decided to make the Pa citio railroads funding bill the order of business in the senate after the free- homestead bill. The Republican com mittee. with Senator Allison, its chair man. present, was in session for an hour, w hen Senators Gorman and Cock- rell were called in as representatives of the Democratic committee. There was no opposition in either committee to the proposition to give the bill considera tion, and to place the time for hearing at as early a date as practicable. - The agreemet was made only conditional upon the passage of the bill through the house. If it fails there, it will not be considered in the senate. No at tempt will be made to provide for the consideration of any other bilL The Mora Claim. t Washington, Jan. 11. The senate, in executive session, has adopted a reso lution instructing the committee on foreign relations to investigate the pay ment of the Moar claims. The reso lution was introduced by Senator Chandler, and instructs the committee to ascertain, among .other things, whether the settlement, providing for the payment of $1,800,000 on aooount of the claim, was a fair one. It also directs the committee to ascertain whethor the payment of the claim in volves any issuance from this govern ment as to the attitude this country would maintain in the Cuban insurrec tion. Alrehlp Invented In Plttabarg. Pittsburg, Jan. 11. Charles D. De forest, a Pittsburg inventor, who has been interested in the stories about the alleged California airship, says he has a flying machine that will fly. Yester day he exihibted a model which flew across a field. He believed the airship should be built on the principle of a ; bird's flight, and his model, looks like a large hawk or eagle. He was oareful , Jo arrange it so that the body of the bird woum lioid sumoient gas 10 mane Tbs afeaaure Provld That the free , Idenf, Shall Appoint five or Rtor. PeUgat Compensation 100,00ft. Washington, Jan. 1 1 Senator Chand ler baa practioally made a canvass of the senate on the proposition of an in ternational conference on silver, and concludes that there will be no opposi tion worth the name. Still, the bill will not be introduced in the senate until it is accepted by the Republican caucus, as the committee was instruct ed to report to the caucus. The lan guage of the bill is substantially as fol lows: ; . "Tli at whenever the president shall, after March 4, 1897, determine that the United States should be represented at any international conference, called either by the United States or the gov ernment of some other country, with i view of securing internationally a fix. ity of relative yalue between gold and silver, by means of a common ratio be tween those metals, with free mintage at such ratio, the United States shall be represented at such conference by five or more delegates, to be selected by the president. For the compensa tion of said delegates, together with all reasonable expenses connected there with, to be approved by the secretary of state, including the proportion to be paid by the United States of the joint expenses ol such conference, the sum of $100,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated. It is understood that the Republican caucus to formally decide upon the bill will be held next week. A NEGRO MONSTER. Caapar, SEVEN NUNS PERISHED. Barnlag a lot Their Live In the Convent. Ottawa, Jan. 8. The convent of the Ursuline nuns at Roberval, on Lake St John, about 130 miles north of Quebec, was destroyed by fire, which broke oat at 6 o'olock this morning, and seven Sisters are known to have perished in the flames, while about fifty inmates had very narrow escapes. Were it not that most of the students of the con vent had gone home for the holidays, the loss of life might have been greater. The students were to have re turned tomorrow. Ordinarily there are about thirty inmates in the institution. and about fifty pupils. The village has no water works, and the work of saving the contents was therefore made difficult, while the flames had made such heavy headway that their extinguishment was an im possibility. Many of the nuns and pupils slept in a dormitory on the fourth floor. There is a fireproof tower near this, but the rapidity with which the flames spread prevented the nuns from reaching it. They were smoth ered by the smoke. Several nuns were badly burned in trying to extinguish the fire. The convent and the school are nothing but a mass of ruins. Just how the fire started is not known certainly, but this being the Feast of Epiphany, it is sup posed that a lighted candle near the cradle of the infant Jesus ignited the draperies and floral ornamentations. The fact that all parts of the convent were uncompleted caused the fire to spread more rapidly. The convent was a stone building, five stories high, and of 120 feet frontage, and was built eight years ago. The Ursuline nuns of Quebec,' by whom it was first con trolled, are the oldest order in Canada, and it was in a cavity made by the bursting of a shell within their oonvent at Quebeo that General Montcalm was buried after his death upon the Plains of Abraham. THE LOUD POSTAL BILL. li Resume of Events in Northwest. the EVIDENCE OF 8TEADY GROWTH tho Ontlaw. Add rear Mur der ta Bis Record. Mayesville, S. C, Jan. 11. Simon Cooper, the negro outlaw who shot and killed another negro and wounded seV' eral others at Magnolia a few days ago, and for whom there is a reward of $100 offered by the governor, added more murders to his record this morning, near Magnolia. Cooper entered the house of Ben Wilson about sunrise, and demanded the nse of Wilson's buggy, which was refused. The monster then picked up an ax and split Wilson' head open. He attacked Wesley Wit son, the son, and murdered him in a like manner. Cooper then murdered Mrs, Wesley Wilson with the same weapon, after which he struck down negro who had approached on hearing the noise, and left the ax sticking in the negro's head. As soon as the news of the shocking tragedy reached Sumter, the sheriff organised a posse of men, chartered a special car -and came to Mayesville, where reinforcements from this town and the surrounding country awaited. Word reached the sheriff here that Cooper had been seen within two miles of Sumter. The sheriff divided the volunteers into several posses and sent them in different directions, but Cooper was not found. t The Wilsons were white people of high standing in their community. Ben Wilson was about 80 years old, his son 40 and Mrs. Wesley Wilson 85. Two children have been left orphans. Up to this hour the murderer has not been captured, but it is almost impos sible for him to escape. If captured his fate will be a most terrible one. Embalmed In WhUhy. Cynthiana, Ky., Jan. 11. Charles Bramlett, aged 80 years, died January 4. He owned several plantations in Harrison county, and had been a pros perous man all his life. At a low esti mate he was worth $100,000. He was peculiar in nothing but ideas of his own burial. He was a great reader, and perhaps drew his notions of his own interment from the histories of ancient Egypt. About fifteen years ago he hired a stonemason to make him a sarcophagus of blue Kentucky limestone, whioh is more durable than the hardest marble. At the same time he bought a barrel of the best old Bourbon the state could produce and ordered that at his death the whisky should be poured upon his body, after it was placed in the stone coffin. The sarcophagus was then to be hermetically sealed and placed i n a grave near his residenoe. All his directions have been followed and he was buried today. It required a number of strong horses to carry the body in its heavy receptacle. d the Days ol Powerful "X" Ray Machine. Pittsburg, Jan. 11. The powerful "X" ray machine constructed by Pro lessor R. A. Fessenden, of the Western university, was exhibited tonight be fore the Academy of sciences and arts, at Carnegie hall. Professor James Keoler, of the Allegheny observatory. the machine buoyant enough to elevate 'in .telling of the wonderful tests to ...! i..i i.. a which the machine has been put, said filling the model with gas he attached a rope to it. As soon as he released the model it started skyward until the put, it had already thrown a ray of light through four inches of solid iron, and he thinks later it will be developed so end of the rope was readied. Deforest " win pierce six or eigni inonea, uu tama tnat u gave way aiwgeiner yes has made a number of publio tests of ! intimated strongly that it may be util- terday, and her eondition is said to be hit model mi all were suooeisful I inspestion of armor-plate, i hopeless. Ban After Tarn Spirited Debate. Washington, Jan. 8. The Loud bill to amend the law relating to second class mail matter was passed by the house today, after two days' of debate, by a vote of 144 to 105. The opposi tion to the bill made a strong fight against it. The most important provi sion of the bill denies to serial publi cations admission to the mails at one cent per pound rates. The provision is as follows: "Thift nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to admit to the second-class rate publications purport ing to be issued periodically and to subscribers, but which are merely books or reprints of books, whether they be issued complete or in parts; whether they be bound or unbound; whether they be sold by subscription or other wise, or whether they purport to be premiums or supplements or parts of regular newspapers or periodicals." The bill also denies to newspapei s the "sample-copy" privilege, and the privilege enjoyed by news dealers of returning unsold publications at the second-class rate. The only other important change in the present law provides that publish' era whose publications are admitted at second-class matter shall be required, before depositing such mail matter in the poetoffioe, to separate the same into United States mail sacks or bundles by states, cities, towns or counties, as the postmaster-general shall direct Cnbn In the Benata. Washington, Jan. 8. The speech of Call' on Cuba in the senate today served as the medium ior making puouo a letter, giving a graphic description of the Cabanas fortress at Havana and the surroundings of the American citi zens imprisoned there. The circum stances surrounding the letter attracted marked interest to it, as Call said it came from a public man of high stand ing in the United States, who would shortly occupy a place in the legisla tive branch of the government The letter dealt with the immediate pres ent, and described a visit made by the writer and General Lee to Cabanas fortress only seven days ago. It told of the pitiful condition of the prison ers, some of them Americans, includ ing Julio Sanguilly, and a young man who was the companion of Charles Govin, the American newspaper corre spondent, killed in Cuba. The recital of these prisoners was given in full. During the day the senate passed house bills amending the laws relating to timber culture and authorising bre vets to acting or retired officers of the army or navy. The joint resolution requesting the British government to pardon Mrs. Maybrick was indefinitely postponed. The bill exempting set tlers on publio lands from paying the original government price fixed on the lands was debated. Pettigrew and Car ter spoke in its .favor, but a final vote was not reaohed. Th Fright Craied Her. Oakland, Cal., Jan. 8. Sheer fright deprived Jennie Jurgensen of her rea son and she was brought here for treat ment Miss Jurgensen was scared by some friends the other day in the carry ing out of a joke, and it so affected her Ma a Gathered In AU the Town ef Onr Neighboring Stmt ImprT-i mantKoted la All Indnatrlaa Oregon. The John Day flouring mill, having ground up all the wheat in sight, is now Idle. Marion county's assessment for 1898 has already cost $7,000, and the end is not yet, says the Statesman. A colony of Illinois people will leave that state in March or April, to settle in the southern part of Yamhill county and the southern part of Polk county. Fred Kemper, of Pendleton, who won a eaynse at a raffle the other day, gave the beast back to its original owner and treated him for taking the eaynse off bis hands. Engineer Dillman, of the Astoria railway, ssys that there are 400 men at work near Rainier and the Clats kanie, and that two big dredgers are being run night and day. Henry Boccbolz, a prominent citizen of Tamarack, Uamtilla county, is burn ing cbatooaL It takes five days to . burn a pit and be has to watch it day and night, and camps by the pit The Wallowa stage waa wrecked last week by an accident on Wallowa bilL There were three passengers that day, but they got out to walk lost be fore the stage started down the hill, so that nobody was injured. G. W. MoKinney, of Brownsville, last week butchered a hog that dressed 823 pounds, from whioh be rendered 150 pounds of lard, and the Browns ville Times asks if any Willamette farmer can beat the reeord. Mrs. James Crosby, of Monmouth, Or., has a family Bible, printed in Edinburgh, Sootland, that has been banded down in the family for several generations; crossed the ocean to America, and now lies on the center table of Mrs. Crosby. It is prized very highly, end is still in a state of good preservation. The body of a white man washed ashore on the beaoh about half a mile south of the month of Hunter'g creek, in Curry eounty reoently. The ooro ner's jury waa unable to identify the body, and found a verdiot of death by drowning. The body waa that of a man about six feet tall, with very small hands and feet, and weighing about 180 pounds. During the storm in November, Otto Kohler shipped 8,600 sheep from The Dalles to Columbus, Neb., and arrived there in due time, losing only four sheep on the trip. Mr. Kohler writes baok that he is feeding his sheep at the farm of Nio Blazer, an nncle of John Blazer, of The Dalles, near Co lumbus, where he gets shelled corn for twelve oents a bushel, and other feed at corresponding low prioes. Washington. Jabes Cowlea, an old oitisen of Clark county, died at hia home near Wood land last week. The Ellensburg city council has made a reduotion in the salaries of city officials that will amount to $30. The 8pokane street oar company's receipts during the year have averaged $30 a day more than last year, says the Spokane Chronicle. A farmer of Cow City lost 4,000 bushels of potatoes by the November freeze, and a Toledo man lost 1,000 bushels. There seems to .have been a heavy loss all over Lewis oounty. Blackleg is making its appearanoe among the cattle in Kittitas eounty. Mr. Otis Hyer, stockman and farmer, says that three of his neighbors bsve lost from six to ten head of cattle, eaoh caused by this disease. The state treasurer haa Issued a oall for state warrants on the general fund, numbered 13,491 to 13,785 inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to $31, 651.49. Interest on these warrants will cease after January 7, 1897. The Washington State Historical So ciety at Taooma has filed articles of in corporation. Their purpose is the col lection snd preservation in substantial form of objects of traditional and his torical interest to the state. Their main headquaters will be in Taooma. Alfred Snyder, 70 years of age, and one of Seattle's pioneer residents, died the other night at Port Blakely, where he went some time ago to act as tallyman at the big milL Mr. Snyder has always been held in high esteem by the older residents who knew him well, and his death is muoh regretted. Harry Parlin, a brakeman on the O. R. St N., was taken to the hospital at Walla Walla last week, suffering from a scalp wound infiioted by a coupling pin. He was standing beside the drew head when the cars oame together in such a manner as to throw the pin in the air with great force. The pin struck him a glancing blow on the head, and bounded ten feet higher. Had it struok him squarely it probably would have killed him instantly. 'i 1 i ..' 'i i '"! 1 I j M': i: ; i "" '4': I : 1 1 ' ;": '!t:'; v i :: I 3 It 2 I "1