7* Scio Weekly Press. SCIO....... .............................. OREGON OCCIDENTAL NEWS. Cases Against Trapmen of the Columbia River. OREGON CONVICTS MAKE BRICK. The Federated Trades at Los Angeles Fail to Make Out a Case for Deportation—Etc. Salt Lake has voted $25,000 in school bonds. Nevada farmers are pleased with the crop outlook in the State. Another prospector at t-an Diego claims to have found the Pegleg mine. His name is John Ingram, and his age is 63. There is much sympathy at Spokane for Mr. Cannon, whose banking house has just failed. The assets will cover all liabilities. A vast deposit of borate of lime has been discovered in'the Calico Mountains. The find is thought to be worth millions of dollars. The Naval Board at Mare Island in making their report have pronounced the Monterey to be all that the con­ tract required. The citizens of Ashland are making a determined effort to raise the $12,000 which is required to insure the location of a branch of the Portland University there. The Los Angeles Times will put in a new perfecting press this week, and with it introduce seven linotype type­ settingmachines, the first to appear in California. We wonder, says the Yuma Sentinel, if there is another town outside of Yuma in the universe where any of its citizens are charged from 50 cents to $1 for drinking water in a saloon or barber shop? The,Bradstreet agency reports eigh­ teen failures in the Pacific Coast States and Territories for the past week, as compared with fourteen for the previous week and ten for the corresponding week of 1892. A large draft of seamen from the Mare Island naval rendezvous will be sent to Honolulu by the next steamer to reinforce the crews of the United States ship Adams and the cruiser Bos­ ton, now there. The Federated Trades at Los Angeles failed to make out a case for deportation in the Ah Yung arrest, owing to the fact that the District Attorney did not show that the Chinaman was unregistered. The Trades are determined that a case shall be properly brought before the courts. Parties who crossed the Cascades at the head of Rogue river recently report the snow still from six to eight feet deep. This'will make summer travel to Crater Lake very late this year. Teams should be running within a month, however. Twenty-five leading fruitgrowers of the Mud creek neighborhood, in the eastern end of Umatilla county, have organized a company for the better dis­ posal of their products, to be known as the Fruitvale Fruit Co. They have engaged the services of an agent, J. E. Hodgen, who will establish an office at Spokane. Governor Richards of Montana has issued a proclamation prohibiting the importation of sheep into Montana from Oregon, California, Nevada, Washing­ ton, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah, Colorado or New Mexico, except upon the certifi­ cate of the State Veterinarian that the sheep have been inspected and found free of any infectious or contagious disease. Worms have again appeared in the vineyards west of Fresno, Cal., by mil­ lions, and in several localities people are fighting them with reiays of Chinese, who work night and day. The worms work night, and in some places several acres have been stripped of leaved in a few hours as if a band of sheep had gone through the vineyards. It is thought the pest will be cleaned out. The McKinney will case at Stockton, Cal., has been stopped. A motion for a nonsuit was agreed to by the contestant, a colored woman , who swore she married McKinney in 1878, when the records would prove that she had married a man named Nicholas in 1879. There was every evidence of conspiring to obtain the McKinney money, and it is possible a conspiracy case may be formed. Penitentiary convicts are now making about 40,000 brick a day. The Salem Statesman says: “It is a pity they could not make enough for the soldiers’ home, the branch asylum and all other prospective buildings now, before the starting of the proposed jute mill, so as to keep the idle convicts employed. They aim to make 3,000,000 this season, to be used in public buildings and ad­ ditions provided for by the last Legis­ lature. The eases against the trapmen of the Columbia river have for the second time in two years fallen to the ground, and Hon. C. W. Fulton and his brother won two cases recently for the defense, one after the other. The Prosecuting Atj- torney declared he would never again bring a charge against a trapman or a gill-net fisherman. He declared it utterly useless to try to secure a con­ viction, and stated that it would never be possible for the State to win a case of the kind when the lawyers so mixed the jury up with the jurisdiction question that they were unable to agree on any­ thing. Mr. Fulton produced certificates held by both defendants, and argued that the laws of Congress giving Oregon jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases to the Washington shore of the Colum­ bia only applied to the service of pro­ cesses and to crimes committed on a floating boat or other craft and not to anything fixed into the bed of the river on the Washington side. He claimed in addition that, if a Clatsop county jury pronounced jurisdiction over Washing­ ton fishtraps, the State of Washington could with just as much reason levy dues on and control the Union Pacific wharves that run out toward the middle channel from Astoria. Judge Cleveland, being powerless to instruct the juries bn the question of law, was barred from in­ structing either jury, and the Fultons secured acquittal for every one of their clients. The question unfortunately is no nearer settlement than ever. The Sheriff of the county and all his dep­ uties are denouncing Fish Commissioner Crawford of Washington for what they claim is flagrant dereliction of duty in favor of the trapowners. < BUSINESS BREVITIES EASTERN MELANGE. from W ashington city . FOREIGN FLASHES. PORTLAND MARKET. FARM AND GARDEN. . PRODUCE, FRUIT, ETC. Secretary Carlisle has appointed Drifting, drifting, drifting! Floating- W heats —Quote: Valley, $1.20; Walla Worthington Ford of Brooklyn, N. Y., along with the current; dropping into Walla, $1.10 per cental. chief of the bureau of statistics in the ruts; slipping into the paths pointed Total Immigration During Ten Treasury Department. During the last British Government’s Appropri­ F lour —Standard, $3.40; Walla Walla, the $3.40; graham, $3.00; superfine, $2.50 out by existing circumstances! This is Cleveland administration Ford served as as I see the great mass of ’farmers mov­ per barrel. ation for the Exposition. Month Ended April 30. chief of the bureau of statistic? of the •O ats — Choice, 50@53c per bushel; ing ; this is the cause of so many failures, Department of State. Mr. Ford is worth rolled, in bags, $6.25@6.50; barrels, of “ straightened circumstances,” of mediocre results and. almost fruitless la­ nearly $1,000,000. $6.50@6.75; cases, $3.75. H ay —Best, $15@17 per ton; common, bor.’ This it is that- makes farm life the The Star says that President Cleve­ FREEMASONRY IS DENOUNCED. SOUTHERN PACIFIC’S REPORT. “humdrum” existence so many realize, $10@13. land has told members of Congress that M illstuffs — Bran, $17.50; shorts, barren of satisfactory results, fruitless under no circumstances would there he .$22.00; ground barley, $23@24; chop in much that helps to render life pleas­ an issue of bonds unless especially au­ feed, $18 per ton; whole feed, barley, 80 ant and attractive. Many a farmer is thorized byCongress. The administra ­ Reduction of Freight Rajes From tion, he said, was not responsible for the India’s Wheat Crop Prospects—The @85c per cental; middlings, $23@28; there who never dreams of planning for per ton; brewing barley, 90@95c per more than the single season, while there present financial-situation, and it lays Austrian Army Bill—A Rev­ New Orleans to Pacific Coast .cental; chicken wheat, $1.17% per cental. are others who permit conditions as they with Congress and not the administra ­ olution Quelled. Points Does Good. B utter —Oregon fancy creamery, 22% find them to dictate their course of ac­ tion to find a remedy for it. @25c; fancy dairy, 17%@20c; fair to tion. One will go out over his fields in The experts employed under the di­ good, 15@16c; common, 12%c per pound; the spring, select a little spot of an acre rection of the Congressional Committee or two where the grass is failihg and California, 35@44c per roll. authorized to investigate the methods of The slave -trade in Morocco continues The church taxation bill was defeated conducting business in the executive de­ C heese —Oregon, ll@13c; Eastern “guess I will put a little corn here.” in the Michigan House by a vote of 32 partments began Work last week. They to flourish. Twins,-16c; Young American, 16c; Cal­ Some other spot for like reason will be. selected for potatoes, and so it goes in a to 35. Cholera cases.-are reported at Mar­ ifornia flats, 14c per pound. will first take up the business methods series of “ patch wcfrk ” all over the farm E ggs —Oregon, 14c per dozen. The Texas Central is looking over, of the Treasury. It will take perhaps seilles, Cette and Toulouse, France. PduLTRY—Chickens, old, $4.00; broil­ and-all through the season. The plow­ ground for its proposed extension in two years to finish the work. It is proposed to levy an income tax ers, large, $4.00@4.50; small, $1.50@ ing, harrowing, cultivating, etc., are all Mexico, The officials of. the War. Department in Germany to meet the military credits. 2.50; ducks, old, $6.00; young, $3.50@ I performed at a cost augmented because Philadelphia wants a new mint build­ protest that the recent? increase of the Bismarck is expected to come in out of 6.00; geese, $9.00 per dozen; turkeys, I of the small scale upon which the work ing. The money is appropriated for a military force at Chicago has nothing to the wet and patch up a truce with the live, 16c; dressed, 18c per pound. is done. A little corn is produced and new site. do with the closing of-the World’s Fair, Emperor. V egetables —Cabbage, 1%@1%C pier fed to the hogs; a small crop of oats for Governor Flower of New York is worth but notwithstanding this denial there is Austria and Hungary will introduce pound; potatoes, $1.50@1.75 for Garnet the horses; a little wheat and a few several million dollars, and be is taxed reason to believe' trouble is anticipated their new currency on the 1st of Jan­ Chilis; $1.75@2.00 for Burbanks; new, bushels of potatoes for family use, and for $10,000. if an attempt is made to carry out the uary, 1895. 2@2%c per pound; new California on- I . nothing v to - put into market to be con- Thousands of acres of land -have been construction of the law given by the The Catholic priests of France have ions, l%@2c per pound; asparagus, $2.00 | verted into cash, Now to those farmers United Stated Courts. laid waste in Southern Arkansas hy the been ordered to denounce Freemasonry per box; radishes, 10@12%c per dozen; who are always “hard up,” who never green Oregon onions, 10c per dozen; ' have any money to spend for the pleasure recent floods. Plans are being made by Secretary from their pulpits. rhubarb, 3@3%c per pound; green peas, that makes life attractive, let me urge Joseph Pulitzer of the World has given Hoke Smith for an extensive summer The French Senate has passed a bill $100,000 to the building fund of the Co­ tour through the West. These plans to facilitate civil actions against the Pan­ $1.75 per box; cucumbers, 40c per dozen; you to give up your aimless life and learn are not fully developed, and the time of ama canal swindlers. Oregon cucumbers, $1.00@1.25 per dozen; to do something, to accomplish results. lumbia College. Give up “ playing at farming ;” drop the departure is therefore unknown. string beans, 14c per pound! ' The Railroad Tax Assessors of Kansas his The Czar has distributed half a million He willjliown^y. visit points in Indian F ruits —Sicily lemons, $5.50@6.00 per little-boy manner of doing things, aiid are being urged by popular clamor to ini Territory'and'Stitipcdceedfto presents in celebration of the tenth an ­ work with some aim in view and some California, box; California new crop, $4.00@5.00 crease the taxes. returning bv tne,route of the Northern niversary of his coronation. per box; bananas, $1.50@3.00 per bunch; system as a guide. Dunn, chief of the weather bureau, Pacific railroad. Mrs. Smith ? has If you own a farm of fifty or 100 acres The British have proclaimed a protec­ oranges, seedlings, $2^2.75 per box; na­ promises one of the warmest summers decided to Accompany him on his torate over Uganda, Africa, and still'far- vels, $3fe0@4.00; strawberries, 17%@20c or more, and it is fenced off into small we have ever experienced. travels. ther extended her colonial possessions. per pound; pineapples, $6.00 per dozen; fields, the first step necessary will be to The Bell Telephone.' Company has se­ Every once in awhile the rumor is The Liverpool papers say that the pas­ cherries, $1.10@1.25 per box; gooseber­ make a good, substantial fence around cured an injunction against the McKees­ started that Justice Field contemplates _____ r. senger hookings by Tnost transatlantic ries, 3@3%c per pound; apricots, $1.25 your pasture land and (if you can do, no better) between your own and your port Company at Pittsburg. resigning from the Supreme Bench! __ lines have enormously increased of late. per box,. . “ ’ . As neighbors’ and stack your other fences STAPLE GROCERIES. A company has been chartered in often as this story is started it is denied In the cremation chamber at Milan, of the way.. You cannot afford to Kansas to print and circulate campaign by the Justice himself. Field was not a Italy, portraits of the dead are attached D ried F ruits ’—Petite prunes, ll@12c; out spend your time with ’short furrows,, matter for the People’s party. Cleveland man,, because Cleveland re­ to the urns in which their ashes are pre­ silver, ll@14c; Italian, 13@15c; Ger­ hacking weeds in fence corners, etc. So man, ll@12c; plums, 8@12c; evaporated arrange your Kansas crops are improved. Wheat is fused to appoint him Chief Justice. He served. work as to reduce useless giving better promise, and the corn acre­ was so angry at that time that he might There is a predominance of females apples, 10@llc; evaporated’ apricots, 15 expenditure of strength. The outside have resigned to spite Cleveland, but he over males in.Spain, the number of the 17%c; peaches, 12@14c; pears, 7@llc age will be larger than usual. of a field always costs the most (propor- ' over his mad and now thinks that former being 8,943,00p and of the latter per pound. Seventy furniture factories at Cincin­ is tionat’ely) to keep clean. The larger the some other Democrat may appoint his H oney — Choice comb, 18c per pound ; nati have closed, This is the'answer to successor. At any rate he is going to 8,607,000. field under cultivation the greater the ' new Oregon, 16@20c ; extract, 9@10c. the demands of ..the workmen for nine try it. If Harrison had been re-elected, economy in producing the crops. Decide The British government’s appropria­ S alt — Liverpool, 100s, $15.00; 50s, what hours and other concessions. proportion of your land you desire he might have retired, because it would tion for the exposition was. only $300,000, $15.50; stock, $10.00@11.00. plow each year.' If one-fourth, then Tammany is in clover. The Governor have meant the selection of a Republican the government of India allowing $25,- C offee —Costa Rica; 22c; Rio,' 22c; to it all up. in one piece. Crópswill. of New York did not veto the bill that as his successor, unless he waited for an­ 000 additional. Salvador, 21%c; Mocha, 26%@30c; Java, take quarrel. You can just as well put gives Tammany $10,000,000 dock im­ other election; Revolutionists made a demonstration 24%@30c; Arbuckle’s and Lion, 100- not your potatoes thé whole, length by the provements. During th.e first three months of, the at Navarre, which the Spanish govern­ pound.cases, 24 85-100c per pound; Cor side of the corn or upon the end of the Since Jay Gould’s death the “Gould present administration ended June 3 the ment soon quelled, killing ten and’ lumbia, same, 24 85-100c. corn rows, and your garden truck upon stocks” heve suffered, a shrinkage of total number Of fourth-class postmasters wounding several.^ R ice —Island, $4.75@5.00; Japan, $4.75; the end of the potato rows, as to make more than $50,000,000, and one-half of appointed was 6,537, of which 4,672were India’s wheat-crop prospects are said New Orleans, $4.50 per cental. patch of each variety. this falls upon his estate. B eans —Small whites, 3%c; pinks, a separate to fill vacancies caused by resignations to he good, although the harvest will be I have lost much time for want of Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott in Plymouth and death and 1,865 by removals. Dur­ two or three weeks late. The crop should 3%c; bayos, 3%c; butter, 4c; lima,' 4c proper system in arrangement of crops. per pound. Church, Brooklyn, Saturday referred to ing the corresponding period of the pre­ be equal to last year’s. yrup —Eastern, in barrels, 40@55c; I now find it a great convenience to put Dr. Briggs as. a modern prophet, fit-to vious administration the total number In obedience to the order of the French in S half-barrels, all together as far as practicable;- 42@57c; in cases, 35@ them rank with the prophets of the Bible. appointed was 8,226, or 1,686 more than residents the Siamese have withdrawn If I am cultivating my potatoes and wish 80c per gallon ; $2.25 per keg ; California, Michigan health officers are accused were appointed during the last three from Cammbn, the principal military in barrels,’ 20@4Oc per gallon; $1.75 per to work in the garden truck an hour, the by Canadian papers of “ working” Do­ months. Of these 2,659 were to fill va­ post of Northern Anam. tools, horses and crops are all together. keg. minion railways under threats of inter­ cancies caused by resignations and death I don’t have to load up my tools and fool Strong influence is being brought to S ugar — Net prices: D, 5%c; Golden C, and 5,567 by removals. The number of fering with their traffic arrangements. on Gladstone to induce him to visit 5%c; extra O, 5%c; confectioners’ A, away time going to some other part of appointments made on resignations was bear Hundreds of English sparrows have 2,015 Ireland this summer. Cork is spoken of 6%c; • dry granulated, 6%c; cube, the farm before I can begin to convert greater during the first quarter of built their nests in the World’s Fair the administration the center of the tour. as crushed and powdered, 7%c per pound; my labor into’ money. 'It is well to bear than during the last, mind in all your operations upon the buildings, and before the show closes and the number made The Austrian army bill has been ac­ %c per pound discount on all grades for in on removals was farm that time is money ; that you can- . they will have increased to thousands. prompt cash; maple sugar, 15@16c per cepted without a murmur by Parliament, 3,502 less during Cleveland’s first quarter not afford to do any work that can as Representative W. L. Wilson of West .than during Harrison’s. though it was 10,000,000 florins more pound. Virginia, who is Cleveland’s choice for C anned G oods —Table fruits, assorted, well be avoided, and that a carefully ar­ than generally anticipated. Secretary Gresham has received infor­ ranged system of work to be followed out Chairman of the Congressional Ways mation The electoral canvass proceeds quietly. $1.75@2.00; peaches, $1.85@2.10; Bart­ year after year will trim off the useless from Minister Blount that war­ and Means Committee, favors an income rants lett pears, $ 1.75@2.00 ; plums, $1.37% @ in France and without unusual portent, the conclusion that he is prepared tax. strawberries, $2.25@2.45; cherries, or. worse than useless work that cuts off' to indorse all that has been done sin Ha­ and it is therefore a safe conclusion that $ 1.50; 2.25@2.40; blackberries, $1.85@2.00; the profits wherever the work of the The Kansas millers are buying wheat waii, and that he is now strongly in­ France will stand by the Republic. farm has not been carefully mapped out. outside of the State for July and Sep? clined to recommend at least the estab­ In addressing the delegates at Vienna raspberries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.25@ tember delivery for fear that the home lishment of a United States protectorate Count Kalnoky, Minister of Foreign Af­ 2.80; apricots, $1.65@2.00. Pie' fruits, —Ohio Farmer. crop will not meet their grinding require­ over the Hawaiian Islands. The Secre­ fairs, ridiculed the idea that general dis­ assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.25; plums, 1.00@1.20; blackberries, $1.25@1.40 per ments. PURELY PERSONAL. tary is also in official ignorance of the armament of European powers was pos­ $ dozen. EAST AND SOUTH Pie fruits, gallons, ,assorted, Late reports from South Dakota., and reported interference of Claus Spreckels sible. $3.15@3.-50; peaches, $ 3.50@4.00 ; apri ­ —VIA— Nebraska state that cholera has wiped in behalf of the restoration of monarchy Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix has ordered a out whole' herds of hogs, and that thé and of his insistence upon the repayment Emperor William says that under no cots, $3.50@4.00; plums, $2.75@3.00; circumstances will-he .countenance pro- blackberries, $ 4.25@4.50 . bell Jo be placedin the Episcopal Church sca.re.ity -will,.he. greater,. Ljian it. was a by t.lw. of money- - iX M i ttl o to 44 init tlio iiufl’ragwaOF ' t ho p ar»' at Cooperstown as a memorial of his fa­ year ago. auvancccT oy 1111^7^ tiie late monarchy. pose, of strengthening the government —M wr t s Dom ed beef, *» 4 s, $4.50 -; 2s? $2.40; chipped, $2.55@4.00; lunch ther,' General John A. Dix. The, St. Luke’s Hospital property on The Secretary’s^ of course,, in receipt of in the Reichstag. tongue, Is, $4; 2s, $6.75; deviled ham, Lieutenant Nixon, the designer of the Fifth avenue, New York, has been sold information from Blount that he does Through "the generosity of American $1.75@$2.15 per dozen. cruiser New York, is but 34 years of age. for $2,400,000 in cash to an unknown not feel justifiedj?in publishing, hut he 'F ish —Sardines, %s, 75c@$2.25; %s, He was graduated from the Naval Acad­ -millionaire; one report says to Collis P. feels no hesitation in denying the accu­ citizens and the kindness of the .Town $2.15@4.50 ; lobsters, $2.30@3.50; sal­ kJ Council Edinburgh is to have a monu­ racy. of the aboye report. emy about a dozen years ago'. Huntington. ment in' memory of Scottish Americans mon, tin 1-lb tails, $1.25@$1.50; flats, Mme. Madeline Lemaire and Mlle. A call from some of the prominent la­ $1.75; 2-lbs, $2.25@2.50; %-barrel, $5.50. who fought in the civil war. Breslau, who are serving on the jury of dies of Boston for a fund to provide Express Trains Leave Portland Daily. CHICAGO EXPOSITION. HOPS, WOOL AND HIDES. Steam carriages, ponderous phaetons the Salon of the Champs de Mars, are rocking chairs for aged women unable to H ops —10@17%c per pound, according Boil th. with a steam engine and boiler under­ North. the first women who have held that po­ buy them was responded to by contribu­ The ax Gladstone has been using at neath to supply the motive power have to quality. sition in any salon. tions amounting to over $400. Lv... ....... Portland .. . 7:00 p. M. 7-35 a . M. W ool —Umpqua valley, 14@15c; fall 10:23 P. M. Lv... ........Albany....... ..Lv. 4:23 A. is.to lié on exhibition at the become comparatively common on the M. Prof. Poole, for forty years connected General Boynton in a letter in the Hawarden clip, 13@14c; Willamette valley, 13@ World ’ s Fair. . streets of Paris. They run about ten or Ar... 8:15 a . M. ...Lv. ..San Francisco.. 7:00 P. M. with the British Museum, latterly being Washington Post says the demand of the 14c, according to quality ; Eastern Ore ­ twelve miles an hour. Florida, somewhat late it would seem, in charge of ancient coins, is. about to old soldiers is that the pension roll shall Roseburg Mail—Daily. In England an ificome tax'is levied on gon, 6@14c per pound, according, to leave that institution to become a lect­ be made a roll of honor, and a weeding is appropriating $25,000 for State use at 8.30 a . M. Lv... ....... Portland...... ...Ar. 4:30 P. M. condition. all incomes above $750, but between that the World ’s Fatr'on condition urer in University College, Chicago. that the A. M. Lv... ........Albany....... ..Lv. 12:30 M. out of the undeserving is necessary. H ides —Dry hides, selected prime, 12:45 figure and $2,000 $600 is exempt. The 5:50 P. M. Ar..-. ......Roseburg...... »..Lv. 7:00 A. M. railroads give a like- sum. Detroit is slowly but surely equipping The total-immigration to. the United 6@8c; green, selected, over 55 pounds, rate is sixpence in the pound. A man The foreign commissioners at the earning $900 pays $7. The total tax 4c; under 55 pounds, 3c; sheep pelts, an art museum, which will eventually States during the ten months ended Albany Local—Daily Except Sunday. ______ be a great credit to that enterprising April 30,1893, was 334,825, a decline of World’s Fair propose to have an inde- amounts to $69,250,000. short wool, 30@50c; medium, 60@80c; 5:00 p. M.iLv....’. .....Portland...........Ar.|10:30 a . m . city. Recent subscriptions include two 119,133 from the immigration of the cor­ pendent board of jurors and to issue di­ 9:00 r. M.jAr..... ......Albany...... ....Lv.j 6:30 A. M, Reports from several cities of Asiatic long, 90c@$1.25; shearlings, 10@20c; tal­ of'$10,000 each from D. M. FCrry and responding ten months of the previous plomas on their own. account; low, good to choice, 3@5c per pound. Turkey say that cholera has appeared _____________ Lebanon Brandi. Thomas W. Palmer. year. The World’s Fair managers have fig­ in many districts and was spreading BAGS AND BAGGING. 1:20 r. M.IL v ............ .-Albany. Albany........... Ar.l 3:25 P. M. John Burns, the London labor leader, The annual report of the Southern Pa­ ured expenses down to $20,000 a day, rapidly. Along the Lower Tigris ana Burlaps, 8-ounce, 40-inch, net cash, 2:09 F. M. Ar.......... .Lebanon Lebanon.........Lv. 2:39 p. M. began his summer series of Sunday lect­ cific Company (the entire system) for whereas the daily average revenue from the Shat-el-Arab river people are dying 6c; burlaps, 10%-ounce, 40-inch, net 3:10 A. M Lv...........Albany. ..Albany. .........Ar. 10:21 A. M. Lebanon..........Lv.j 9:30 A. M. ures at Battersea Park recently. He is ■the year ending December 3,1892, shows admissions and concessions is about $30,- by the thousands. cash, 7c; burlaps, 12-ounce, 45-inch, 9:00 A. M.jAr.......... .Lebanon. said to possess an almost old-fashioned net earnings of $17,603,996, against $19,- 000. 7%c; burlaps, 15-ounce, 60-inch, 12%c; Woodbnrn-S pringfield Bran ch. is reported to be much complaint courtesy of private intercourse. His 286,204 in 1892, being a decrease of $1,- A majority of the United • States Cir­ in There burlaps, 20-ounce, 76-inch, 14c; wheat 8:30 A. M.ILv..........Portland..........Arri 4:30 P. M. England at the poverty of the clergy. great hobby is skating. 2:06 r. M-. Lv......... West Scio:........Lv. 110:37 a . m . 602-,203. cuit Court has decided the World’s Fair The 5,552 benefices in England and Wales bags, Calcutta, 23x36, spot, 6%c; 5;45 F. M.jAr...........Natron ........... Lv.j 7:00 a . m . A son of General' Zabala, the com­ It .is reported in Washington that At­ must close Sundays. Judges Wood and afford a yearly income of less' than $!,- 2-bushel oat hags, 7c. mander of the Nicaraguan insurgents, torney-General Olney and Assistant Sec­ Jenkins ordered that an injunction be DINING CARS ON OGDEN ROUTE. who recently won a victory over the gov­ retary of State Quincy will resign at an issued restraining the officials from open­ 000 to the incumbents. The suit- against Russell Sage by Will­ French naval architects have designed iam L. Laidlaw for damages received at ernment troops, is attending school in early date, and that there is a chance for ing the. gates of the fail- grounds. Judge Boston. He was much elated at his fa­ a Pacific Coast man getting one of the Grosscup dissented, recommending that a protected top or steel fortress at mast the time a dynamite bomb was exploded Pullman Buffet Sleepers ther’s military success. the injunction applied for by the United tops on battle ships that is regarded as a in Sage’s office, Laidlaw claiming that positions. -AND— big improvement by the Navy Depart ­ The first wife of Brigham Young is in Sage had interposed his (Laidlaw’s) body The Carnegie Land Company and the States District Attorney he not granted. ment of this government. SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARB Chicago with her daughter. .She is de­ Carnegie to prevent injury to himself, has been Company of Johnson The decision of Judges. Wood and Jen­ scribed as a sweet, dignified woman of City, Tenn., Iron Attached to all through trains. The calmest Parisian papers go to the decided in favor of Sage. kins, though reaching the same point in have made assignments to! 72, of medium size, with a gentle face, W. ,Cure. The liabilities of the two the end, take this action on widely diverg­ length of saying that the existence of kindly gray eyes and gray hair drawn J. Savages’ Pocketboo&s. West Side Division. concerns are due largely to Eastern and ing grounds, and dissenting opinion dif­ France’s whole Indo-Chinese Empire is back over either side of her temples. fers radically, from both. The court­ at stake. There seems a universal de­ Between Portland and Corvallis. The pocketbooks of savages are as re­ Northern parties. mand in Paris that a big army and fleet rooms were crowded when the decision Mail train daily (except Sunday). Henry Jones, “Cavendish” of the Lon­ markable as their money. In many cases The Confederate Memorial and Liter­ it is only a string. Pouches of grass, skin 7:30 A. M.ILv........... Portland....... ..Ar.l 5:30 p. M. don Field, the great authority on whist, ary Society of Richmond, Va., proposes was read. Judge Wood read his. own shall be forthwith dispatched. 12:10 F, M.jAr.......... Corvallis..........Lv.|i2;55 r. M. opinion, in which he concluded that and other material are used. The neatest Much of the plate that was used in who is now in this country, is an expert to restore the old “ Confederate White Albany and Corvallis connect with trains billiard-player as well as a whist cham­ House,” where Jefferson Davis lived in Jackson Park Was lawfully devoted for the ceremonies attending the reception pocketbook is that of the Hupa Indians of At the Oregon Pacific railroad. pion, He can beat most of the amateurs, that city, and keep it as a memorial hall. exposition purposes, and that the expo­ of the Czar at the Chudov Monastery, It is made of a block of elk horn dug out Express train dally (except 8u nd ay). sition had been in fact turned over to Moscow, was stolen, it is believed with to hold the alligo cheek, or -shell money and runs the professionals very close. It is now occupied by à school. P. M.ILv.......... Portland..........Ar.l 8:20 a . m . the control of the Federal government the conniyance of some of the priests. The opening is closed by winding around 4:40 7:25 F. M.jAr.......McMinnville,.....Lv | 5:45 a . m . Percy. Hayes Taylor, a nephew of Bay­ The Society of the Daughters of the by the local corporation,.and that its a band of buckskin,—Philadelphia Press. ard Taylor, died recently in Cambridge, American Revolution proposes, that the control was therefore as absolute as its Thé loss is over 2,500,000 rubles, Mass. He was a graduate of Harvard Columbian Liberty Bell, which' is to hé control of the Federal building. He; A Belgian named Fuller, who was ar­ ’ Adrummer who has traveled all over the THROUGH TICKETS £ Canada and Europe can be obtained at in the class of ’86, and had made a spe­ exhibited at the World’s Fair, shall aft­ held that t tne^maay-ciosmg theSpndaj--closing rule, hav- hav­ rested in Olmutz, has confessed that he United'States for a firm of tpbacco dealers States, lowest rates from Mrs. M. E. ‘Woodniansu. agent, cial study of modern languages in the erward be transported from place to ing once beeg||j|gsed by the local direc direc- : helped to steal the jewels of the Count­ says Maine men chew more’ tobacco and We-tScio. R. KOEHLER, Manager. graduate department of the university. place throughout the world as a mission­ tory and' ap^^fed^Sy the National Com­ ess of Flanders last February. His con­ Maine women chew more gum than are X. P. ROGERS, Asst. G. F. » s elu G îc - ».tv though that is his real name. Like Lieu­ Louisiana merchants being able to com­ agreement that all negatives of photo­ tificatiori that all freight vessels andj _ CLAIMS COMPANY__ tenant Viaud, whom the world knows as pete in prices with China and Japan and graphs or Other exhibits should be re­ their crews bound for the United States ' must henceforth be inspected by the F STREET, NORTHWEST, WASHINGTON, D. (X Pierre Loti, he could circumnavigate the furnish a far superior article. Rough turned to the commissi°nerS- This agree­ P» O« BOX 463. JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney. globe incognito by the simple process of rice is being utilized for flour purposes ment, however had no effect on ---- Arnold, medical officer attached to the American ! e» e> j utilizing his real name and discarding at home, and is cheaper and more nu- and the matter’was laid before the coun- Consulate before bills of health can be issued. I. Gut this out and send it with year inquiry. -S3 nom de plume. tritive than oate. ¿1 of administration. Wood pulp is rapidly becoming one of the most universally used of manufact­ ured articles. Beggars are so numerous in Paris that they support a newspaper devoted to their interests. • Kentucky -leads the Southern States in the production of tobacco, with a crop of 221,880,000 pounds. Reports from the lumber regions of Michigan and Wisconsin indicate that the trade is very brisk. The year 1892 was one of the worst years ever known in the iron and steel industries of Great Britain. Europe consumes upward of $24,000,- 000 worth of gold and silver annually for plate, jewelry and ornaments. It is stated in the Omaha Bee that 3,000 persons have secured homes through building associations in Nebraska. The largest piece of mica inothe world was recently taken out of a North Caro­ lina quarry. It measures 9%xl6 inches. The producers of maple sugar in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont will get about $70,000 in sugar bounties-this year! The' total value of the live-stock prod­ ucts of Kansas in 1892 was $42,853,835. Ten years before that the total was $29,- 559,934. The length of the New York State ca­ nals is 628 miles, and the expenditures upon them for the year 1891 aggregated $3,661,102. The Ohio law. making jit unlawful -to discharge an employe because of his be­ ing a uriion man has been declared con­ stitutional. The number of sheep in Iowa has in­ creased 18 per cent in the last two years, and the value per head has increased 22 per cent in the same'time. And now it is Connecticut that dis­ covers the necessity of a building-asso- ciation law that shall restrict 'the wild­ cat business done in that State. There are some rich colored men. One in Washington is worth $200,000. A “ light-complected ” colored man in that city is reckoned as a half-millionaire. A woman’s building company has been formed in Toledo, 0., and .the names of the directors, of whom there are fifteen, are all prefixed by “ Mrs.” or “ Miss.” The production of mercury reaches about 55,000 to 60,000 frascos per annum, The frascos %re enormous bottles of cast iron, which contain four arrobes of about twenty-five pounds each. Large numbers' of Italians and Hun­ garians are being discharged from the anthracite coal fields. A number of electric mining machines have been in­ troduced in Western Philadelphia. There are 50,000 sheep in the. mountains of Apache county, A. T., owned by New Mexico parties. The St. John’s Herald states that these escape taxation in both Territories by being driven from one to the other. Wichita, Kan., has a factory which is using up the cottonwood trees of the Ar­ kansas Valley at a great” rate, cutting them into shavings, which are made into mattresses. It can turn out 150 mat­ tresses a day. The white-pine supply of this country stands in the States of Michigan, Wis­ consin and Minnesota, the pine forests of Maine, Northern New York and Penn­ sylvania having been long since substan­ tially swept away. The Shasta Route FOR INVENTIONS