Five Alillio is lor a Detail. In the June installment of "Frenzied Finance," in Everybody's Magazine, Thomas W. Lawson tella the story, im patiently awaited by the public, of the first great crime of Amalgamated. "An iron-bound contract held the Amalgamated Company and the Na tional City Bank over the signatures of a Rogers, a Rockefeller, and a Stillman to allow the public to subscribe for $75,000,000 of stock," says Mr. Law son, "and the terms were that every subscription must be in the bank at noon, May 4th, and that each subscrip tion must be accompanied by a certified check of $5 for every share nominated. As we had agreed that the public should be sold but five millions of stock, that meant that we proposed to retain seventy millions of it ourselves, but to obtain this allotment legally, we must comnlv with the conditions of the ad- ' vertisement exactly as outsiders had So it was necessary that we have a bid in before noon on Thursday for our -seventy millions, accompanied by a check for $3,600,000, which would se cure us our quota provided the public 8'jbscription was no more than five mil lions. If the public subscription ran over five millions, then the bank mu3t throw out all additional subscriptions over that amount, for the advertised contract specifically declared that all accepted subscriptions would be allotted pro rata. By my suppression of the usual condition that the Bank reserve the right to reject any part of any sub scription, it was absolutely precluded from the common method of dealing with such an emergency. There was a way out without practising fraud. If at noon on Thursday the public had subscribed ten or fifteen millions, then the insidersjnust put in bids of $140, Fires in Eugene continue to be an nounced by the antiquated general bell alarm. But it has a state university with $50,000 a year with it, and what's the odds. The size of a city is often judged by the amount of gossip in it. If this is a good criterion it hardly speaks for Alb any, for there is decidedly too much gossip here. People know too much about their neighbor s business. If the people of Portland get a chance under the referendum to vote on the saloons at the Lewis and Clark gate they will knock them out with a rush and with a majority to spare. This is something that strikes their pride. But really isn't their pride of very nar row gauge? Mayor Williams and Dr. Harry Lane are telling each other not to throw stones. There is a good deal more than throwing stones in the truths being told about Mayor Williams. But the stone throwing accusation works on some people who have a horror of such business. ' Frissel, who won the meet for the U. of O. at Eugene last Saturday, is tho man imported from the University of Nevada. It is claimed that he has not been in the college sufficient length of time to lawfully permit him to enter a contest. It made a good deal of dif ference Saturday, but it will not make so much when the O. A. C. team is faced, for that college has men who can beat him. There is a principle, though, which should be observed, and, it is entirely right for colleges to de mand the observance of rules requiring the entrance of only students of the roper standing. A HORR1BL CRIME By an Insane Los Angeles man. San Raeael, May 24. Becoming suddenly insane this morning over bus iness worries, J. C. Stephens, a rancher near Kenlifield, shot and killed his wife and three chiluren and fatally wounded two other children, then killed himself. His wife and children were in bed. He placed the gun to his wife's head 'and killed her, then shot one after another, his five children. I j Memory nt, J idue Bellinger. At the session of the circuit court this afternoon the following resolutions were unanimously passed as a tribute to the late Judge Bellinger: May It Please The Court And Gentle men Of The Bar: The undersigned committee hereto fore appointed by the Judge of this iourt, Judge Galloway, to prepare and submit a suitable testimonial on the death of Hon. C. B. Bellinger, late Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon, beg to submit the following: Hon. C. B. Bellinger was born on the 21st day of November, 1839, at Maquon, Illinois, and died on the 12th day of May, 1905, at Portland, Oregon.' With his parents he crossed the plains in 1847 when but eight years of age. His first attendance at school was in a rude school house near the North Santiam River. Some years later he attended UrilloT.a(-ra Tint.. .'I.. .J 4-1 M . 1. iiiaiusbba J ill V(31Elljr aiiu I11C11 LUUH , - - , - ... . up the study of the law and was ad- Ttl nutted to the bar in 1863, his tutor be- ( 8um 0t money, which was to be kept on ing tion. a. t . The Ru.nclin Case. Portland, Or. May 24. As an out come of the failure of the jury in the case against Councilman C. E. Rumelin to return a verdict, startling charges have been made before the grand jury that money was paid to one of the jurymen trying Rumelin. The charges are that before ex-city engineer William C. Elliott went on the witness stand to tell of the offering to him of a bribe by Mr. Kumehn, someone in the interest Bohham, now of Salem, For brief periods of time after this he was engaged in editing the Arena, the then representative democratic paper of the state, the Salem Review, the Albany Democrat and the Portland News. He began the practice of the law in 1863, being associated with John C. condition that the jurymen would Stand nrmiy against conviction A Rich Strike. Portland, Or. May 24. -A rich strike is reported in the Opp mine near .Taeksnnvillp. A ntrpnV nf wirpornlrl urna Cartwright. In about the year 1866 he 'uncovered which appears to be a con located at Monoe in Benton County, i 'tfS where he engaged in the mercantile eon. The nay rock is a ledire about 12 inches in width and it is impossible yet to determine the length of the chute. It looks like a strong ore body and After some delay the RussiansJ'and Japs are again at it on land. 3 They business and in 1868 he was elected to tie, lower house of the legislature. From 1847 to 1878 he was Clerk of tho Supreme Court of the state, and in the latter part of the year 1878 he was ap- rich specimen ore was taken out in one pMnted Judge of the Fourth Judicial aav- ft on tne succeeding day more District of the state. Dr. J. F- Reddy who came here lThe duties of this office were per- recently from Spokane, Wash., is the firmed with such exceptional ability owner of t,he mine, on which he recent- ' 000,000 to;$210,000,000, in which event have had sufficient time to makeJ pre each subscriber would bo allotted one . parations for some very bloody contests share for every two or three sub- in which both sides will bo slaughtered scribed. . , . , in a manner to please the most con- "I presumed then that , some such firmed imperialist. In the meantime method would be followed.N It surprised ! the navies of the two countries are ire at the time that Mr. Rogers should getting together, and then there will hav') given so little attention to so vital b3 some more things doing of a bloody a part of our program, for he is in the ' character, but unfortunately for the habit of thumbing over just such de- up-to-date barbarians liking warfare tails to avoid slip-ups, but the idea that ( there are only twenty or thirty thous our subscription would run into un- and men on a side, perhaps less, who wieldy amounts never occurred to him, J can be slaughtered. There is a possi- and so he lot things run, trusting tj bility, though, that some of the battle- that Mr. Bellinger at once took rank as XJ erected a ten-stamp mill, MISFITS, Wer'e long on roses and short on strawberries this year. The retirement of Jim Jeffries con tinues to be a bunch of ???? . The air is full of college orations in preparation for commencement. The O. A. C. have the game up their sleeves, Frizzle or no Frizzle. Tom Lawson is now getting in some heavy whacks with the figures back of them. It is making a desperate effort to make up an eight inch shortage of rain before June 1. , Water seeks its level in Oregon. A short rainfall at one time means a long one at another. A painter named Sherry was arrested at Salem for being drunk. Who says there is nothing in a name. The wild snake girl is a very mild appearing young man when he is known in his every day clothes. Look before you leap, in this matter, of insurance. Dont' take every man's word, nor squads of men. It is proposed to bring eastern people up the valley to see the greatness of this garden spot of the world anyway. Jack Rummell, of Jackson county, has killed seventv-eizht bears, and is should it prove so the yield will ' be entitled to a place in the President's enormous. More than $7000 worth of cabinet. The Portland Journal speaks in high terms of Chas. J. Reed, successor of W. F. Mathews, and refers to him as a man of good deeds. A BATTLE RAGING. Railroad Cut, luck and 'Standard Oil's' motto 'To Holl with tho people anyway,' to ad .. just the matter at the last moment. To-day Henry, H. Rogers, James Still :.man, and William Rockefeller would p each give flvolmlllions from his private fortune if this seemingly unimportant ...rlnln.'l UnA .-,.) Tl- uoiuu uuu moil UCCil fJlUVlUCU 11,3 . neglect is the bloody finger-print on , the knife handle of the murderer, it is ' .the burglars footprint in the snow. In this case it furnishes the evidence of tho crime of Amalgamated." Mr. Lawson describes the interview , in which Mr. Rogers tried to force him to assume legal rejponsibility for tho subscription advertisements of tho new corporation. At one point Mr. Lawson says: "Wo eyed each other as fighters In a ring -looking for an opening. Both sparred for an idea. Mr. Rogers's re luctanco to shoulder any legal responsi bility deepened my suspicions, and in- ships may be blown up or annihilated with all on board in a manner horrible i enough to satisfy even some of our own warlike brethren who are continually demanding that irj time of peace the country prepare for war. The prospect is certainly favorable for rivers of blood and cruelty red enough to suit the most yellow person. one of the best lawyers of the state. From 1880 to 1883 he was associated with Hon. John M. Gearin in the prac- - i i i 1 1 ums passion, .. ne oe- St pETERgBUB0( May 24. -Reports came a member of the law firm of unconfirmed here of the cuttlng 0f the jjuipn, oemugei, iuanui jr esoiuiun. m ranroaa to Vladivostok by tne Japanese. 1893 he was appointed by President I 11 " ' Cleveland as United States District1 T t , "B" " ' e . , Judge to fill the vacancy caused by the I "fi 5 death of Judge Deady. During a per- j ne learns from a trustworthy source iod of ten years he was the professor 1 that Vice-Admiral Togo'sfleet is still - IT . .. , . il il i of equity,' jurisprudence and pleading i " musampno, 011 uw auuuieaswirn .1 n T.- ..it.. u r r ;..,.,, ... t - Oregon, and had been a member of the Board of Regents of that institu tion since 1898 to the time of his death Russian's Aggressive. St. Petersburg. May 23. The news from the front continues to point to the I Tho following was by Marcus M. Marks, president of the National Asso ! cUtionof Clothiers in an address to the Boston Clothing Association at West minster Hotel, Boston, March 17: Nations of the World, "Get Togetherl" I Tho Hague tribunal should prevent cruel war. One hundred thousand slain in ono battle! Think of itl Ose hun dred thousand fathers, brothers, sons! And this blood spilled for what? These I fathers torn away from their weoping wives and children for what? These fensive is not yet clear. wardly I sweated blood at the thought son3 taken from their old father8 of tho doviltry that might be piled up around the affair. Howover, there was nothing for it but to square awny and koop fighting, for if I lost my tem per and exploded, 4t meant that I should bo ground up or disappear in the hopper, and then, good-bye to independ ence It was the first time I had ever sat in a finish gnmo with tho master of 'Standard Oil,' and I trembled at the p.issiblo outcomo. Yet this duol for it was as clearly a fight for life on my aide us though wo both worn armed with deadly weapons was but ono of a , thousand similar encounters tho Rog- crses and Kockofollors had had with ' other adversaries as fearless and as honest as I. and out of theso heart li:v.ikin.; and soul-crushing sit-downs thev had always emerged survivurs, , whilo behind tho 'Standard Oil' jugger naut, defeated and submissive, trudged the men who had dared opposo thorn. "Should the fate of thoso others bo also mine? Across my mind flitted 'not whilo my brain retains its fly-wheels and my hands their power'; and I found myself wondering if tlioro s :ne stago at which a man cornered by arbitrary conditions nnd legal ob servances was justified in bursting nil such trammels and meeting nrtifico with physical violence. Murder is a crime ugn nst society nnd against na ture, and wo must nil observe tho can ons of God and tho regulations of the law; but at least a dozen times in my wrestles with tho exasperating; grind ing, hell-generating machine, it was only my Inborn reverence for God's law and man's that prevented 1110 from well, shall I say, strangling tho fox." A now nnavsthotic is announced. It la called phiorohydrato of dimthyhimino bezoylpentnnol. Tho great thing aliuut it is tho fact that ic does not affect tho brain, tho patient retaining conscious ness, though absolute nniesthosia oct curing in tho body below tho pjint 01" injection into tho spinal fluid. Tiio e -feet will last for an hour nnd a half giving plenty of lime for operations. and mothers for what? To glorify a czar or an emperor! To get a little ex tra slice of tho earth's surface! Is it worth whilo? And we sit idly by and sco this cruel slaughter, this disgusting wholesale butchery going on! Should we not at least raise 'our voices loud and strong, giving vent to tho cry of humanity? Remember that wo aro all brothers! "Got together!" Not by tho triumph of might, but in tho pence of justico! Davenport's Birds. having been president of the Board for imminence of a renewal of fighting on several years. - '"t,- T " -- - But death is always active, "loves a 'Passing the Japanese center both j,on ... , ,, , ..v i(.i. the line of the railway and on the Man- shinmg mark!L and with unrelenting darin road bu(. vhet&t he is simpiy hand removCi' Judge Bellinger from Reeling out Field Marshal Oyama's i.l t i.:..ii.: U,AJ I nnHtu nH kn. -..n...nrl nnn.,rnn - (ne ousy uuuviuca ux tm cauiicu uai- 01,10111-11 ui nan uauuicu a genuine op tion on the bench, and this removal un settled some very grave and important business now pending in said Court. By force of his native ability and rare energy he achieved a success that will be a lasting monument to his memory. A man of of rigid integrity, unswerv ing convictions, and a geniality of dis position, he was eloquent in proclaim ing the. rights of individuals from the bench. Adorned with the graces of eminent culture and refinement, and in spired by a broad feeling of sympathy for the whole human race, his presence will be missed from the Halls of Jus tice where the fascination of his per sonality and the warmth of his greet ings drew around him all who came in touch with his life. He deeply loved and honored his profession and strove to elevate the standard of its character. His intellect was keen, his power to grasp the spirit of the law quick, and his mind was well stored with the im mutable principles of justice and right, and the record of his life should im press a useful lesson on the minds of all tho members of tho profession. Tho blow that removes him from our midst is, indeed, a sad one to the bar of this Btato and nation, but his honored name will go down to posterity undiminished in lustre. This committee would recommend To .the .Bitter fend. Chicago, May 23. All prospects of peace in the teamsters' strike have dis appeared, and it will be open war from this time on. The last conference look ing toward, a peaceful adjustment was held at 6 o'clock tonight between J. B. Barry business agent of the Express Drivers' Union and the local managers of the seven express companies. Goingjthe rounds Breathes there a man with soul so dead, who never to himself has said, ' I'll pay before I go to bed. the debt I owe the printer!" There are some, we know full well, who never such a tale can tell; but they, we fear will go to-well, the place where there s no winter. SHERIFF'S SALE. Portland, May 21. After demon strating to the satisfaction of nil con-thatthiate3timonialand tho proceed. cornea emit an uregon man raiseu on an Oregon farm can succeed in almost anything ho tackles out in tho big wjrld, Homer Davenport is coming homo to Portland again. Everybody who reads newspapers knows Homer Davenport. His cartoons have amused was not 1 and interested nnd possibly influenced us all. His cartoons of men have made them famous, or infamous in some cases, and some of his drawings on questions of national import hnvo had ings of the court relative thereto be re corded at length in the Journals of this Court. Very respectfully submitted. J. J. Whitney, Chairman. J. K. Weatherpord. N. M. Newport. W. R. BlLYEU. Percy R. Kelly. Committee. A professor in Georgia thinks that a direct influence upon their settlement isomo scientist could make himself or adjustment. But while ho is tho , "'Shty popular with the "head of tho world's greatest cartoonist today, only i houso" by proving that the man who a trille mora than eighteen years ago ho was a farmer boy at Silverton, Oro., where ho secured his first art educa tion by drawing pictures on tho old stable door. Strango as it may seem, Mr. Daven port has had time during these eight beats a carpet or rug is exposing him self to all kinds of deadly microbes. Milwaukee bank clerks must here after furnish their photographs to their employers. We suggest that bank pres idents should be required to furnish taen eventful years slnco ho has bem toif photographs to the police. struggling for fame to make tho great- Of course Nnn Patterson will continue est collection of birds nnd domesticated her work as nri actress. The DEMOCRAT animals in America. Ic was tho early knew very well that just ns soon as influences of the farm, no doubt, that sho had soon her mother and had some In the Circuit Court of the Hlnte -i Orponn tor tliH coo-ntv of Linn.' rred Mespeu, praiuun va. a. l. muu ardson, dutenlant. . jSotice is hereby eivn that by virtue oln rxecutioD and order of sale ieeued nut of the bo' Darned court in be nbive entitle,! mm I wi I on Stturdav, the 24i h dav of June, 1-905, at the ourt hon-v i.oor in Ibe citv of Alnaciy, Linn couitv. Ornion, at the 'inur of one o'ulojK a. m. if aid dy, fell at puhlic ..nation for otsh in bud. to tne tiiebest bidder, the real property described io nun! execution and order ot bald us 101- loiei. to-wit : Ml of the said defendant's riuht, tit'e ana imervat in ai d to the following de (irihHii uremi e-. ii-wit: The South I14I Inf the D mnli uLani Claim nf w V, It chidn"U and wiih, rvot Bo 1-1UB in Tp, 10 S. R 1 VVpstoltne WilUmefe MerMlap. in L.lan V un'v.urB.on, oon ,,nin 160 cr. also me N-vth Wm qu rur 01 Sec. 5:6 in aaid Town-'hip a d K.ih.b enntaininu 160 a'rta: al-o the North East quarter of ithe nor h ens: quirter nf Sec. 27 in Bii'l Town-liip and Rinse and containinx 40 ores; also tbe South If of tbe South Wtei q arti-r, the Soa'h half nf the North lialf of the South West quar-er, die S lUtti hilf of the Smith Esi nuir tnrandihn Sou h f hall of tha Nor li Wcei quarter 01 the South Ea-t qu.rtur of Seo 22 containmts JJ ' acres, all in Towuehi- 10 8. K. 1 eat of iha Will amette Meridian ia Linn County, Oro .on. ' Tho north half of the Donation Land f W. W. Richardson and wife, Not. 1308 in Tp. 10 S. R. 1 west of the Willamette Meridian in Linn County, flinornn. rnnrjiininer ICO acres. 1 h nrru-emfa arising- from the sale of said preimses to be applied: First, to tne payment of the costs and disburse ments of this suit taxed at $15 00 and accruing costs; second, to the payment to ithe plaintiff, Fred Mespelt, the sum of $85.48 with accruing intorest thereon from the 8th day of April, 1905, at the rate of 6per cent per annum, nnd the further sum of $20 At torney's fees; third, tne overpiiia umij Instead of being settled the Chicago strike, like fire is spreading. More 0 1' the water of foreoearance and the golden rule are needed.. - " 4 Mayor Williams is having bis hands more than full answerirfg questoDS. Beiner attorney eeneral of the United States is a small thing beside it. 'The professional gambler is passing" says an exchange, me sooner the better for the country. Peopleno long er consider him a prosperity maker. J. Pierpont Morgan has been telling the pope how to run the financial part of his business. It's a cold day when Morgan doesn't attempt to mix up with some one's business. This is an age of ups and downs. Joe Eppinger, once a San Francisco millionaire's son who scent money as water flows is now singing floormanager of a saloon in San Francisco. Here's to Dr. C. W. Lowe, president of the state board of optomery. He knows his business, and being a demo crat, may be depended upon to see that the new and excellent law is properly enforced. There's a rumor that upon the change after June 1st the Albany local will not arive from Portland evenings until 9 o'clock, but the probability is that it win arrive tne same as now at aDouc ( o'clock. Rumors generally are made of straw. The Albany correspondent of the Tel egram announces that Judge Wolver ton of the supreme bench, and State Printer Whitney will be candidates for re-election, and that Judge G. H. Burnett is being mentioned seriously for the governorship on the republican ticket. Japs Reported Rcpuls ToKtO, May 22. Battle is rad the front. It is reported th Russians have repulsed several and 3000 are killed. Monmouth, May 22. Miss Hi ton, critic and teacher at the school, committed suicide by carbolic acid, caused by despon Chicago, May 22. The strike idly extending among the tear) who threaten to tie up all build) the citv. The Mayor threatens i of disorder to call out the troops Portland, May 23. The jury! case of Councilman C. E. Rii charged with attempted bribery, greed, today. Seven were for ac and five for conviction. San Francisco, May 23. B Smith the defaulting tax-col pleaded not guilty on two cha enDezziement was sentenced years in San Quentin. Madrid, May 23. Two' mill borers are idle in the Andalusia vinces owing to a failure in thi vescs. The government must suffer great rioting. Probably Not True Paris, May 22. A sensatio been created here by the circula a report that advices have been re by a well-known firm of French ers. who have been active in thi in floating the Russian loans, frorl connuenuui agem at ot, reter statins that Admiral Roiestvens died of dysentery and that Admiij oogatott nas assumed commana Tney Are FlghtlnR St. Petersburg, May 22. have been received by the Generft trom General Liimevitcn, stating general engagement is in progr along the line of the Russian lef and that two divisions are epgagi tne Japanese. The Immigrat'on Questii Chicago. May 21. Walter Wi wiring from Washington to the lL' Herald, will say, in part, toil that President Roosevelt has tsl the immigration Question and lsd ing to call the attention of Col and the country. Left for Portland. Indianapolis. Ind.. May 21.- President Charles W. Fairbanil leave Indianapolis next Sund I Portland, nr., where he will rej i PrpQiripnt. Rnnspve.lt at the oneil the Lewis and Clark Exposition,! 1. A small party will accompaii v ice rresiaent, dui iuj uuiiiuuaiuw not yet been determined, ne A Texas Storm. Fort Worth, Tex., May21-A windstorm blowinor at the rate! miles an hour struck this city fro" southwest at 6:30 tomeht. fart1 west wall of the Texas & Pacift senger station was blown in landj xoung, a train dispatcner Killed. Dr. M. M. Davis has just received a couple of tubs of oysters from Kanagawa Japan, for planting in the Yaquina. The Dr. is up with the times, and pro- Eoses to be in the lead in tne oyster usiness in tha Northwest. ' 'Kanagawa oysters, if you please, " how will that sound in the restaurants of the coast. Previous to the Heppner flood an old squaw is said to have made a predic tion of the disaster. Now another old squaw has come forward and predicts that tomorrow night Canyon City will be washed away, the flood to occur at night. Canyon City people are dis-1 turbed. Better keep in bed, there'll be I no Canyon City flood is the prediction or the DEMOCRAT.and we'll seewhether the Democrat or squaw is the better prophet. v gave him his passion for birds nnd nni- of the sentiment of life washed off she mills. He has searched the four quart- woul 1 bo ready tor the dramatic busi- ers of thi globo for his collection, and ness again. Hereafter married men there bo to be paid to the defendant, now that he is coming back ho is bring- liko Cesar Young will do well to let i ig tho birds nnd animals with him. ' Nan run her own affairs. A f.. Uiehnrdson. Dated this May 2GthlL905VHiTEi Sheriff of Linn Counny, Oregon. Mr. Lawson writes the Democrat . that he has spent $600,000 in advertis- I ing Amalgamated Copper and the I Standard Oil frauds. In the meantime 1 he has been the cause of the Business I of Everydody's Magazine increasing just five times. It is abuit time the oublishers of the magazine put up some thing. Whatever people may think of lawson nis articles nave oeen a great thing for the country. In an interview in Portland with President Lilian M. Stevens, theJournal tells the following: "Miss Gordan told of the pretty idea used in Albany where si little flower girls, dressed in white, with garlands and baskets of blossoms mounted the platform and strewed them before Mrs Stevens. "And Miss Gordon," added the pres ident quietly. At the close of the service they scat tered the remaining blossoms among the audience, who reached for them eagerly." Perhaps this pretty little act will cross the continent. A Disorderly House London, May 22. The sittiny . House of Commons tonight wasr 1 by scenes of the wildest disorder, ing out a motion by Sir Henry '.. bell-Bannerman to adjonrn the :T in order that he might disci) X. charge against Premier Balfoun ing violated his pledge not to di the subject of colonial prefereni uot first appealing to tne count! A Ibg Storm . 1 DALLAS, Tex., May 22. Seva 1 -j were lost and serious damage v 1 to crops in many sections of To 1 -rj night by the terrific wind an tr storm. Streams are out of thai and bridges have been washed ijj Union ot Churches. Winona Lake, Ind., May 2 -a storm of applause, without 3 J and without a dissenting voice, 1 1 ' ral Assembly of the Presbyterian C today voted to reunite with tb berland Presbyterian Church, seceded from the general body, 1 ary 1, 1810. The big Clum Reed farm, Corvallis has just been sold to 1 ': H. Hanson for $18,000 ci i. consists of 405 acres and cons d stock and farm machinery, all 1 f I went in the bargain. Mr. Hai iLl new comer from Nebraska. Invitations have been receivi 1 bany to the marrirge of Je s: Ballard and John Albert Keatii 0i home of Mr. and Mrs. Martin j lard 22 Highland Drive West, a Wash., on June 14, at 8 p. m. reception from nine until elevi 1 1 will be home after July 15, in Qi j os ..i ivl-n't Minister eowen may ieei m ing home to face charges is a ?s compared to staying in Venezi e j facing Castro. Under Local Option LjVg I Roseburg, Or. May 23. T. 4 er, owner of the McClallen hi and the Revere hotel at AUfi" baen indicted by the grand ju, l,.n,,kt In fma V.ill aaminsl selling liquor at the McClallenlh ueer ureeK precinci. wmtu 'j 1 by the passage of the local of ine oar claims to sen son una Voted for Union. Popsvn Pnl Mnv 23. Bvl ity of 27 the Cumberlind ian vjjiiciai noan, u.j the majority report declaring! with theiNorthern rresoyteij'j - 'Mayor Williams of Portlan ministers of that city arc liars and scoinc'als, which' makes the mayor himfe The truth hasn't all been tol mayor yet. 1