Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1891)
(Stpttst. U. I. KIKKPAVRM1K. Fabllikor. LEBANON OREGON PACIFIC COAST. The Chino Sugar-Beet Faetory. MORE TIN MINES DISCOVERED A Roseburg Han Ohjsots to a Marriage Ceremony Proceeding, and is Bounded. Parties have been violating the Ne vada fish laws by catching trout in the ' nuiuuoidt. The inquest on the body of Constable John Teeter, killed by James Meed at Trucks, finds the killing was done in aeu-aeienae. A bitter fight between Los Angolas and the city water company has been inaugurated over the possessory rights us water source. An Oregon woman haa invented dish-waahing machine, and she will ex hibit it at the World's Fair. It is re ported to work aplendtdly. Annie Campbell baa been indicted at BoieeCityforpassingcounterfeitmoney. She in believed to be one of a gang op erating in me narcnweeiera elates. Southern California promises to have daring the next few months the greatest planting ot orange ami lemon orchards ever known in the southern part of the tnaie. Tin ore that rivals the Temescal prod uct has been found in abundance aixty- nve muea east at Han Diego in the lor gun Mountains. Nine locations have been made.' . A Tucson inrv has fonnd Gem-ire KamI who killed James Farreli at Nogalee one year ago, guilty of manslaughter. Heed is SO years old, and hia age called for sympathy trom the jury. President John A. Kemp of the de- lunct went ioaat insurance Company at Tacoma has skipped from town, and ex perts are at work on the books to see if there were any irregularities. The land on which the Shoshone Falls in Idaho are situated has been selected as school land, but will not be sold, as other lands are. It is proposed to rent it so as to secure a perpetual income, Governor Pen never of Oregon will not call an extra session of the Legislature to legislate on a portage -road between The Dalle and Celilo. He thinks the next Congress will provide for the work. The Chino sugar-beet factory is shut down now until it can be ascertained from W ashington whether it will be per mitted to hold its syrups over until next season before they are run through ma chinery ana reaucea. The inquest on the bodies of the men killed in the Anaconda mine in Montana resulted in finding that the cage was overloaded and the shaft was in good "oriditivii. T.ie jury rendered a verdict xoueratmg me company lrom all blame. A seaside hotel is projected at Santa Cruz. It is to have 400 rooms, an opera bonne, conversation house and casino, swimming tanks and large bathing houses. Cottage and villa residences are to be let or sold, and handsomely adorned grounds on a large scaie are to be laid out, . . "' 8. A. Mallorv, D. T. Diamond. K. H. Pry ce and ii, A. Lusty have been in- dieted ty tne united Mates grand jury at Portland for conspiracy to defraud the government by fraudulently locating parties on government land. They have operated extensively in Seattle and other cities of Washington. A. J. Clave, who has returned from an HjHxiitUininto Alaska, report that he located the soiree of the Alaska river about eleven mile northeast of Mount m. Elias. and found that the whole of the country east of Scwatka's field of exploration M available for pack horses. .He himself took and brought back four horses in perfect condition. He will ask the government for an appropriation to open up trail. During the marriage ceremony at Roaa tmrg. Or., which was to unite Charles Miiiler and Lottie Citizen, when the minister asked if any one had any rea son why the ceremony should not pro ceed, a young dry-goods clerk named Vina" stepped forward, saying he had senous objections. He said he wanted to see and Bpeak with the girl privately. He iw put out of the house, and a pis tol win iotmil in his pocket. He said he had always wanted to marry the girl, but had never gathered courage to toil her of his feelings. It is a singular fact that, while from wenty to tiiirty licenses for the sale of ajitiirjfariiie have been issued by lu- rrni Revenue ;Co!iector Weidler to ' AFaflbiDgton parties during the past few 4nonth, not a license has been igmied lor the aaie of it in Oregon during toe a .-ne ii-riod of time. This is accounted for hv the strinsreney of the Oreiron laws ! and comparative laxity of the Washing ton mwH regulating the manufaetureand "us of adulterated articles of foods, 'Tue-Oregon. law require ail aduilerated nicies oi food to he so labeled that the Wicomer shall knew what he is buying. JThif! requirement applies to retail q'uau- a well as whoi,e gekam la , CsoMngton m Mh labeling fa required. PERSONAL MENTION. Mrs. Can, a Chicago Woman, Haa Qenlus for Collecting Funds Qrand Ducheai' Fad. Louis Kossuth is now in his 80th year, Bishop Phillip Brooks speaks 812 WWIUS UJIUUHf. Lawyer McCurdv, who won the case for the Tllden heirs, receives $400,000 lor nis tee. Tolstoi's lean and cadaverous look at tracted much attention while he was in Pari recently. Baron Arthur Rothschild, a nephew oi uie neaa ot tne great nnancial house, is serving his twelve 'months tin the r ranch army as a private soldier. Colonel L. L. Denninit ot New York enjoys the honor of being the child of parents wedded Dy tne poet, William liullen Bryant, when the latter was a Justice of the Peace in a Long Island village. Cardinal Lavigerie was one a beau tabreur. Cardinal Howard formerly held a commission in the Life Guards, and the Cardinal Archbishop of Perth was in hi youth the smartest of Austrian riussars. H. P. Cheatham of North Carolina. the only colored member of the next Congress, is a college graduate, and is Ba'.a to oe tne nest educated negro, with a single exception, that ha yet sat in uie House. Mr. Gladstone is almost the only mem ber of the House of Commons who sits uncovered in Parliament. Thus hia face is more readily scanned by visitors, who look at Britain's legislators at a distance through a grating. Senator Hale's family is moving into his new mansion in Washington at Six- teentn ana h. street, it 1 Hardly hab itable, and the approaches are incom plete, but work is being vigorously pusuea 10 completion. ; Alehouse Daudet is arowiiur verv fee ble, and is now almost blind. His intel ligent wile la his constant comoanion and to her he is dictating a novel by the iiiie ot " i ioujott," winch in an prob- nuiuty win ue nis last. Dr. Dumeenil is the name of a nhvBi- cian of St. Louis, who declares that he has discovered peculiar microscopical insects in cigarettes. Now and then by uie naceo vision peculiar lorm can be observed pulling on one. Geonte W. Childsof the Philadelnhia Ledger entertained Sir Edwin Arnold at dinner the other day at hisprtvate resi dence near Philadelphia. Two Japanese ladies graced the festive board, and the distinguished fcnglishman fatrly scintil- uueu ui wie i.igni oi asm." Ephrafm W. Bull, who developed the noted Concord grape, lives a mite out of Concord village, Mass., on the Lexing ton road and close by the old Hawthorne farm. He is 75 years old. He grew his Concord vines from the seeds of a native wild grape in 1843. In 1864 he put the grape on uie marxet. General 0. W. Field of Washington denies that he recently made a speech in Kicnmono in lavorof unfurling the (Jan- federate flag at the Chicago Fair. The General was not at the meeting, and does not sympathize with the sentiments ol the speech. NATIONAL CAPITAL Full Text of the President's Thanks giving Proclamation Puyallup Indian Reservation. I was expected that the vexed ouas- tlo si regarding the Puvallun Indian res nation at Tacoma would be settled by Je commission which was sent out there by an act of the last Congress, but it seems that this commission has not done what they were expected to do, and the question at issue Is as far from settlement as before. .The Indians have bargained away some of their moat val uable lands. Their lands are needed for the development of Tacoma as a citv. ana tney are useless to tne Indians, ex cept for what thev cab not for them. The matter of the individual and tribal rights of the Indians was ninnosed to be determined by the commission, also the rights ot tne men Who have bargained with the Indians for their lands, but the commission's report, now with the Secretary, is far from satisfactory, and win ue uute or no neip in aiatng mm to make a recommendation to Congress. The Puyallup matter will have to be tought all over ogam this winter. , The full text of the President's thanks giving proclamation is as follows: It is a very glad incident to the marvelous prosperity which has crowned the year now drawing to a close that its helpful and reassuring touch has been felt by all the people. It has been as wide as our country, and so special that every home has felt Its influence. It is too great to be the work of man's power, and too particular to be the device of his mind. To God, the beneficent and aliwise, who makes the labors of men to be fruitful, redeems their losses by his grace, and the measure of his giving is is as much oeyono tne tnougtits oi man as it is beyond hia deserts, the nrsise and gratitude of the people of this favored nation are due. Now, therefore, I, Benjamin Harrison, Presi dent of the United Stales of America, do hereby appoint Thursday, the SMh day of November, to be a day of thanks giving to ttou tor uie bounties of his providence, for the peace in which we are permitted to enjoy them, and tor tiie preservation of these institutions of civil and relisrious liberty which he gave oar fathers the wisdom to devise and es tablish, and us the courage to preserve. Among the appropriate observances of the day am rest from toil, the renewal of family ties about our Ameriran lire sidee, and thougbtfulnes towards those who suffer lack of the body er of spirit. EASTERN ITEMS. All the Coal Miners in Indiana Strike. THE KENTUCKY ALLIANCE. A New Haven Tobaoco Dealer Saya the Sals of Cigarettes to Yale Boys Is Falling Oft The uniform export bill ot lading is to go into effect December 1. Over 62,700 immigrant arrived in this country during September, The Baron Hirseh trustees have pur chased ,000 acres at Woodbine, N. J. Day and night shifts of men are now worked on all the exposition building. The remains of Jefferson Davie are to be placed in Hollywood cemetery, Rich mond, Va. The Baltimore .4nuhcon says : Balti more ha not had a bank failure for fifty seven yenrw. Heavy losses are being sustained by stockmen in Texas, owing to the th se vere drought. About fifty of the released Tennessee and retarned ' Arrangements an beint made to lav a cable from Nassau to Jupiter Inlet on the coast of Florida. Out of respect to State law the Fed eral government will not sell customs liquors by auction in Main. Pennsylvania's loss bv th dishnnnalv of Bardaley & Co. was tgfi,072 instead oi ti,90ti,37sYs am reported, The earnings of the Denver and Rln Grande for October are itW.OOO, a tie- crease of 24,189 from last year. The designs for the new fractional cur - rencyof the country have been approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, A tobacco dealer in New Haven, whose trade in the main Is with Yale bnvs. says that the sale of cigarette is falling Starts have been taken hv thA,Pham. bear of Commerce in St. Paul to start an immigration movement in that city and State. . Heirs of George Vf. Morse of Louisiana will sue the government for I4.A00.0II0 tor infringing his breech-loading rifle the exposition, Barbadoea.Frenchtiui patents. , ana, Ceylon and Corea have also joined A column of masonry in Kansas marks the exact geographical center of the umtea states, evidently without count- ing Alaska. The success of the Brnnklvn hrH has suggested to capitalist to form a j The Agricultural Society of France company with a capital of $24,000,000 j has decided to offer a number of prenii for the purpose of building vno more urns for the best French horse shown DHUgee across tne tsast river. The new Hebrew Orphan Asylum in Brooklyn oost about 1125,000, It is to be five stories high and to have a front-, age of 130 feet. It will accommodate several hundred orphan. The retired commander oi the Seven- teenth Infantry, General Mianer, has ' oeen placed in a private asylum under , treatment for softening of the brain, The annual report of the Board of General Appraisers of New York recom mends that the right of appeal be vested in the Secretary of the Treasury only, . One of the big Florida hotels has the great orchestrion which was exhibited at the Paris exhibition. Telephones are placed in each room, and are connected with the orchestrion so that each guest may hear the music when he wishes. A New York fury has awarded Thorns Fortune, the colored editor of the New York Age, 826 damage in an action brought against the proprietor of a Sixth-avenue hotel for being assaulted and refused a drink because of hi color. W. W. Long, a member of the North Carolina House of Bepresentatives, and a number. of other huge planters in the Koanoke bottoms are completing ar rangements to bring to their plantations some 600 of the expatriated Kuwiao Jewish farmers. Not for years baa the supply of drink ing water been so low at New York, nor has the danger of genuine water famine been greater than at the present. Com missioner Gilroy says unless there is rain the water will last only fifteen or twenty days more, The Cherokee since Judge Green's decision that tney do not own the Htrip are now ready to renew the negotiations, whicn were tiroxen on last year, lor the sale of the land to the government. Chief Mayes, it is said, favors the dispo sition of the outlet. ,. The miners of bituminous coal in In diana have decided to strik for advance of 6 cent per ton. The blockoal min ers have already struck for 10 cent' ad vance. The operators refuse to pay the increase. All the miners in the Htaie of Indiana are now out, and a long and desperate battle is looked for, The notorious Bob Musarave. who in sured himself for $26,000 in an accident insurance company and then procured a skeleton, placed it in a cabin near an Indian village, burned the cabin and by means of confederate spread the news that he was burned up, has been cap tured in 8t, Paul by detectives. Of the Tonkawas only oeventy-eiuht remain to negotiate with the Cherokee Commission. They occupy the reserva tion set apart for the Ne Percea, having been moved there when the latter tribe west to Idaho. It embraces 90,700 acres. of which about 7,600 will be remiired for allotments. The test will be avatl- bie for honifwleads. EDUCATIONAL Japan Has Just Opened a New College Which Is Called the Harris School of Science. I ."- There are 487 school in Irkutsk, bsria. The population of Siberia nearly 900,000. Hereafter no girl nan graduate from the public schools in liOBton until she shall have successfully passed an exanii- luuiuu iu coonery. Prof. Harper of the new Chicago TTni. varsity hoe found difficulty In securing a acuity aoroau, owing to the operation of the alien contract labor law. A new collage ha been opened in Ja pan, oauaa tne flams Mchool ol Science. It was opened with elaborate ceremonv. An American (Mr. Harris) contributed the money, Beliglous instruction i an important part oi the elementary schools of Prus sia. It is compulsory in both public and private school and a part of the ijuaiiucauone oi in teacner. Dr. John Plente, the amateur telescope maker, is now finishing a Wl-inch sih ver-on-glass mirror for Alleghany Col lege, which, when mounted, will give mat institution the largest reflecting tel escope in this country, President Dwight of lata, while not favoring the admission of women to study in the classes with men, doe wish Yale hod a woman's annex, and the onlv objection he finds to its establishment is that the university baa not the money to put into it. , Th older buildings of Harvard Col- have til following date. Massa- chusetts Hall, 1720; H.-lden, 1734 ; Hoi- a, 4iuo, jiNni, iuo ntouguwo. IflfkL ITnlnHi.,, IQIO stone ot Gore Hall was laid in 1813, the books being moved into the library in the vacation of 1814. There were 41,000 volumes at that time. All the children in school in Prussia, numbering 4,000,000, on a certain day were examined and the color of their eyes and hair carefully registered. It ; u M tk.i i' t v,,..i m... eyes and 24.31 per oem. brown, while no less than 72 cent, had blonde hair, 20 1 per cent, brown aud only 1.21 per sent, "lack hair. Only 8.53 per cent, again are of brunette complexion. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. Mr. Palmer Highly Approve sn Idea Originated by Mm. Price of . North Carolina. , Paraguay has decided to participate in l"e I The State of Idaho has applied for 10,- uuu square leet ol space in the mine land mining building for a display of minerals. attnerair. ; The District of Columbia has decided j to ask Congress for an appropriation of (60,000 to enable it to make a creditable exhibit at the fair. Wisconsin's building at the eximsithm will be 80x00 feet, three stories high and of the -Queen Anne style of architecture. it cost is estimated at 120,000, The upholsterers of Philadelnhia have applied for 60,000 square feet of space is the manufacture building for a col lective exhibit from their several estab lishment. . The buildings of the World's flnlnm. bian Exposition according to Section 0 oi tne act ot uongres providing for the fair are to be dedicated October 12, 1802 ; the exposition is to be open to visitors not later than May 1, 1893. Hassan Ben Ali of Morocco i seeking a concession to make a Morocco exhibit at the exposition. He saya be will spend $50,000 in showing the people, manners, customs, amusements, etc., of his coun try and in bringing to Chicago a tribe of Berbers. Mrs. Potter Palmer is to drive the last nail in the woman's building. The lady managers of Montana at the auggestlon of Mrs. J. E. Kichard are having the nail made of gold, silver and copper. It will be forwarded to Chicago as toon as completed. . The number of intending exhibitors who have applied for space at the expo sition reached 1,023 on October 24. This is a much larger number than the Cen tennial had at a correspondingly early date. The number does not include any foreign applications, all of which are made to their respective national com missions. L. Takaqtii and K. Ikeda, two repre sentatives commissioned by the Mikado of Japan, have been in Chicago seeking detailed information concerning the ex position. They were greatly pleased, and said their country would make a fine exhibit, and that in It would be a num ber of the privste art treasures of the Mikado. ... Seventy-four oases of relies of the In dians and mound builders have been re ceived by the department of ethnology of the exposition from Chillicothe. 0. They contain a great variety of prehis toric implements and utensils, such as axes, arrow heads, pipes, bowls, Jars, etc. They were exhumed by a party acting under the direction of Chief Putnam. Ample restaurant accommodations are to be provided at the exposition grounds. The locations for restaurants thus far de cided upon are four in the mines and mining building, sixteen in the manu factures building and six on the esplan ade in front, four in, the electricity build ing and two in the women's building. Kume are on the ground floor and some in the galleries. FOREIGN LANDS. The Peter's Pence Frem England Meager. SERIOUS FLOODS IN SPAIN. Th Hunioipal Election! iq England , ForeoaBt th Triumph of th . Gladstoniana. London has 6,000 telephones. - England ha 70,000 barmaids, London has ton main railroad lines, Switserland ha abolished banks. Serious floods nrerennrted in VuhmtU Spain; alsoetCadix, ' The Potato emu in Northern Hm,,... has failed, and a famine is feared, Prince Bismarck opposes the law lll. reduce the army service in Germany to two year. . Catholic prelates in Italv hn donbt that Pope Leo's successor will be an Italian. . Tlie Argentine Senate haa nuul a bill repealing the tax levied upon private UtUlK UUJHMUUl. . The Austrian polio hare mnfWu.i the report of th Brussels International Labor Congress. Ladv Dtlke has decided on nnmirmin,. her trade-nnion campaign among the women worker. JE Thirty thousand men are Idle thnSh tlie strike of the engineers of the West side Durham, England. The municipal elections in forecast a triumph for the Gladstoniana in the coming Parliamentary elections. The doty which France nroniiwa t put on American nork i 2ft frn 100 kilos, equal to about 2' cents per pound. It is dally becoming more clear thai French financial house are saddled with mora Hussies stocks than they are able to carry. Th neonle of Afarhanlatan urn.,;,. under the heavy taxes their ruler iui poses, are skipping over the border at a lively rat. Bain has fallen in torrent In the n,. inos of Malaga, Tlie lower-lying quar ter of Golila and Perchnl ubmerged. Karl Duffcrin'sannointment u War.u., of tlie Cinque Port is viewed in England as a bribe to oauae him to adhere to the' Conservatives. , The height of fashion in Pari u have everything Hussion, the glamour of the French-Russian nndentundinii m. uetziuK urn inu, , A bill has been read the first time in the Brazilian Senate, the object of which i to close the coasting trade to ships under foreign flags. Birmingham has beaten Loudon In the struggle for the possession of a great water-shed in Wafes as a permanent souroiCBf water aupply. 'There? are rnmora at St. Petersburg affecting tlie lUbilily of ten binking; houses, soma of which are considered the soundest in that city, , " Inquiry is being made into tlie unlaw ml extension of mining galleries at lien tenan, endangering the safety of the-' Bileeian Mountain railroad. Eiuin Pasha ho written a letter stat ing that he intends to enter the territory of the King of Buhanda, which ha never been visited by European. Those Alsatians of official prominence who attended a late Ferry banquet are being dismissed from office or forced to resign by tlie German government. Th House of Representatives of Hew Zealand has passed a bill granting resi dential suffrage to women and qualify ing them for election to Parliament. In a recent report ol the municipal head of Moscow it is shown ti.c i,u corruption of the Court of Probate and Publio Administration is very greet J.ne Moscow Vasetk demand the for mation of a Ministry of Agriculture which, it sets forth, would conflicting policies leading to the famine. , The .mpreaa of China has recently been endeavoring to give an impetus to the manufacture of silk in that country by starting a silk-weavlnu Uno,,t, ....... ,.V her own. A new paper. Tlis trn,i.,, p.r. will be started in London next mouth. It will be published in the gypsy tongue and edited by George Smith, the king of thegypsies. ,.!,;, The Danes do not require the makers of oleomargarine to etamp the kegs in which it is packed, but they do require that it be nearly white la order to dis tinguish It from butter. . Much disappointment is reported to be felt in Vatican financial extremely meager results of the offer ings for Peter's pence from KngUnd, the amount being only about flWO.' It is said the Russian eating straw in their bread. The French peasants were eating grass by the road side not long before the Revolution of 1703. History mav reoeat itself. With a ready market for an eiinrmnnu wine crop and with its crops of cereals considerably above the ought during the coming year to enter upou a new period ol prosperity. The German government boo 1 AuiAaa to entblieh a shin-bnilding vmi on ' small scale on the shores of" Litke Vic toria Nyanna, and iiieai-tirns nr I tk'n to put the design luw e cutiwul