grianan Cxprrss. H. X. KH'.KPATUICK, Publisher. 1EBAJ.0K OREGON OCCIDENTAL KEWS.- Chinese and White Men Super seded by Mexicans. CAKXIX6 LOBSTERS AND FISH. Strang!1 Complaint Prevalent Among the Cattle in San Bernardino County, California. Flagstaff, A. T., has been wleeled ae the site for ihe Territorial Reform School. The Collector of Customs at Victoria, B. C., haa paid oat in sealing chums o0,123. Prospectors ha reached San Bernar dino from the Colorado Desert with ' pockets full of gold nuggets. " Much activity is being manifested in the canning of lobsters and fisb and otherwise profiting from the tisheries along the lower coast of California. Oregon expects to clip 17,OUO,O0O pounds of wool this rear, her increase in sheep over last year being estimated at 90 per cent," all of which is sheer gain. The expedition from San Diego into the Colorado Desert after the iilipave 1'egleg mine has been forced to return, owing to the extreme heat encountered. James Laruoreao of Idaho Falls has brought suit in the Fifth District Court against the Ensor Institute of Pocatelio for (6,000' damages, because they tried and iailed Wcure him oi the liquor habit. The Pend d'Oreille river is risine rap idly, being within six feet as hiph at present aa at any time last year, kvery indication points toward the water being higher this year than ever known before. The offices of the Southern division of the Santa Fe railroad, heretoiure located in San Bernardino, are being removed to Los Angeles to take quarters in the new depot recently erected in the latter city. Arrangements have been completed for the right of way to construct a canal on a cut-off at the month of the Yuba river, the object being to relieve the river daring high water and make the channel more direct. Work on the doable-tnrreted monitor Uonadnock has been practically sus pended during the past month, 2U) me chanics having been taken off the work ing force and assigned to other work about the navy yard. ' The Chinese and white men heretofore employed at fl.25 on the Southern Po ntic railroad between El Paso and Dos Angeles are being replaced with Mexi cans from Chihuahua at f 1 per day. It is openly stated that the spirit of the contract law la oemg nrocen. Ida Maude Kline, the bogus colored widow in the McKinney will contest at Stockton, Cal., who swore" that she was the wife of tha old negro in the hope tliat she could get his estate worth (40, OuO, is in jail charged with perjury, and A. J. Boss, an ex-police oflicer, who is alleged to have worked up the evidence, is under arrest on a charge of suborna tion of perjury,, W. A. Shaw, a real-estate dealer of Saltan, induced Mrs. Elizabeth Joseph to deed her home to him for as alleged consideration of (6,000, that sum to be paid her at the rate of (250 a year for twenty-four years, without interest or ecuritv. Shaw exacted a promise of se crecy, but finally Mrs. Joseph consulted some attorneys. Shaw's lawyere advised him to deed back the property, and that has been done. Z. 11. Potter of San Miguel mesa, ban Diego county, Cal., was ridiculed a few months ago "when it became known that he was to raise a crop of mustard Beed. The crop will mature about July 1, and it is estimated to be about 1,500 pounds of seed an acre, or about sixty-live tons in alt This is from about eight pounds an acre of the seed sown. The total crop is worth 110,41X1 at 8 cents a pound, which is the ruling price. ? Attorney-General Chamberlain has rendered an opinion upon the Weston Kormal School act, in which he says it is evident that the Legislature did not in tend that the appropriation should be expended in the erection of new build ings, bat onjy in the payment of salaries, the purchase of needf ul and proper ap paratus, and generally in settlement of such expenses as might be incurred in the successful arrangement of the school. A strange complaint is prevalent among the- cattle in San Bernardino county, Cal. It is a disease of the bone, similar to ray fungus, which starts inside the bone and consumes it. Generally it starts in the bones of the left shoulder, gradually reaching other portions of the bodv and invariably terminates in death, fenerallv in from three to five months, t is as fatal as glanders and is supposed to be as contagious. It generally attacks cattle pastured on heavy dark loam. The Fresno Expositor says : An item is going the rounds of the California press that "millions of worms are de vastating the vineyards of Fresno coun ty." This is altogether an error. Worms are not devastating the vineyards to any extent. They have appeared at two or three points outside tlie regular vineyard rfintrii. but have done no material in jury to the grape crop oi hub county, t i,e worm that is doing the most of the damage in this vicinity is the worm of the suit FROJt WASHIS6T0X CITY. ActinglAnd Commissioner Powers has rendered a decision in which he orders canceled on the ground of fraud and col lusion about twenty-three timber and stone entries of valuable timber lands in the Vancouver land district. Wash., and now held by J. B. Montgomery of Port land, Or., to" whom the lands were trans ferred immediately after final proofs were made. The board, consisting of engineers of the army and three engineers from civil life, appointed to examine and report upon the fcasibilitv of a boat railwav or some other method of unproved naviga tion at The Dalles has submitted its re port to the War Department. I'p to the present time the department has refused to make it public, because the report was ordered by Congress and, it is claimed, most be made public in Congress. Enough is learned about it, however, to know that the boat-railwav proposition has received a black eye; also the canal, which, it is claimed, would cost too much money. The only scheme recommended by the board is said to be a portage rail way. It will be almost impossible for the Oregon delegation in Congress to overturn this report. The Department of State has not been informed of the reported purpose of the Chinese government to retaliate upon the United States, evidenced by the re ported prohibition of the purchase, nse or sale of American kerosene in the prov ince of Amov. Even if there has been such a prohibition, it it not believed at the denartnient that it can be reearded . as a measure adopted in a spirit of retal- iation, bat rather as an exhibition of the extremely conservative character of the Chinese, whose resistance to such an in 1 novation as the use of kerosene may have been strengthened by some recent casualties. Moreover, it is a fact that a ' mere Viceroy of a province would scarce- ly be authorized to institute a policy of j retaliation, which would rather be initi ! ated by the imperial government itself. Secretary Smith was asked the other day what would be the probable policy of the Interior Department in reference I to the approval of lists of Northern Pa- j cine lands under the grant which was : not earned in the time specified, but vet to which the company assumes title. The , Secretary eecnied to be of the opinion i that, the lands having been earned, the , company would undoubtedly be entitled I to them, and that in the approval of the lists, unless the statutes mud that they , could not be approved if not earned in , time, he supposed that he should not take that question into consideration. i He intended to follow the law, no matter what the assumption might he of parties j nneresieu. rie auueu: mere is no doubt that the building of the road was a great improvement It has been of j vast benefit to the country, and the gov 'ernnieiit has had the advantage of sell ing its lands, and the country has been settled and developed. Of course, the road has been built and the lands have j been earned. I shall look into the law Ion the subiect before makintr annroval. : and shall act on the law, whatever it is." j It was suggested that quite a large party ! in Congress was anxious to forfeit these ' lands. The Secretary said that he had ! heard of it, but that he would have to i follow the law Congress had enacted j rather than anything that may be in nrosnect. The nrobabilities are tliat the jiisus will be approved and any efforts made to forfeit the lands will be defeated ' by the Democratic administration, as it seems to be regarded that the road, even if it did not complete its lyie in the time specified, made every effort to do so, and its intention was amply shown from the fact that the road was really built. CHICAGO EXPOSITION The suggestion comes from Chicago that the World's Fair may have to be continued throughout next year in order to enable the management to recoup it self for the vast expenditures that have been made. The Spanish caravels are on their way to Chicago by a king water route, and wiil probably not reach the World's Fair before Julv. They will be objects of I great interest to the people who encoun ter them in tne et. .Lawrence or the Lakes. Much-needed money is now Bowing into the treasury of the exposition as a result of the largely increased attendance of visitors. Ko one welcomes the change more than Treasurer Seeburger, whose position since May 1 has not been an enviable one. The exposition has been short of ready money to liquidate its ob ligations to contractors and employes, and it is not out of the woods yet bv any means. Bank and commercial failures in that region and the panicky feeling among savings-bank depositors, which has just subsided, have made it impos sible for the exposition corporation 1o borrow any large sum of money, and the directors have stuck manfully to the pay-as-you-go policy, having confidence m a speedy and permanent change in the number of paid admissions. The 100, 000 mark has been passed at the gates several times, and is accepted as an in dication of an era of prosperity and a plentitude of canti to pay off all out standing bills. There is a standing order at tiie finance department for Auditor Ackerman to hold all vouchers for money due on April and May contract work in his office until there is money to spare in the treasury for the payment of it. It means that only March bills have been paid on contract work, but the em ployee of the exposition have been paid promptly. There is much discontent among the workmen on the pay roll of ' luc lair on Huiuui vi me oruer juni, is- i sued by the director of works reducing 1 the force to an eight-hour basis and eight i hours' pay. They have been working ten hours and for eleven hoars' imv. There is talk of striking, bat sach a step ' l is likely to result in the strikers being ' i put on an indefinite vacation basis with- j oat pay. EASTERN MELANGE. Onr Imports From China Over top Our Exports. MOTKXIKG AMONG THE GYPSIES. Cholera Raises Havoc Among the Hogs in Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska. There are in Pennsylvania over 6,000 members of the Sons of Veterans. Virginia Populists are making prepa rations for an active campaign this fall. Twenty-three illicit distilleries were raided in North Carolina week before last. Residents of Lake George are very anxious to have a fish hatchery located there. An electric railway, several hundred miles in length, is to be built in Ten nessee. The sentiment against ball-fighting is spreading to nearly all the States of Mexico. Floods in the Tombigbee and Saxa puiia rivers have injured the Mississippi cotton crops. Moonshiners in Pickens county, Ala., disguised as whitcaps, murdered a wit ness again Bt them. Five thousand people in and "around Hope, Ark., were left homeless and des titute by the recent tornado. " A peculiar characteristic of Washing ton's death rate is the excessive mortal ity among infants and children. The last letter written by George Washington has recently been sold at auction In Philadelphia for (850. Western roads are paying commissions of (5 and (0 each passenger to get the immigrant traffic from New York. Forty-two foreign nations are now represented at the World's Columbian Exposition by 327 representatives. The Connecticut Legislature has re pealed the Btatute requiring drunkards to tell where they bought their liquor. The sheriffs of Kansas propose to make a fight for the commissions on sales of property cut off by the last Legislature. Ex-Labor Commissioner Feck of New York has fled the country. It is said he feared punishment for burning his office records. In the last two months fully one-half of the young hogs in Northern Iowa. South Dakota and Nebraska have died of cholera. Passenger business over the Pennsyl vania lines is now so heavy that the company declines to furnish cars for pic nics or excursions. The merchants tailors of Texas have formed a State organization to fight com petition of agents from abroad who take orders in that State. The Massachusetts Commission on Highway Improvement finds that half the towns of the State cannot afford to improve their roads. Suits for (150,000 against the various branches of the Standard Oil Company have grown oat of the big flood and hie on Oil creek last summer. Though the entire cotton crop of the country was under 7,000,000 bales last vear the enterprising New York Cotton Exchange sold 52,450,500 bales. Senator Sherman has just moved into his new (150,01X1 house. Much of the Senators wealth has been made by in vestment in Washington real estate. The exports of breadstuff's from the United States the past nine months have shown a loss of nearly (100,000,000 in comparison with the preceding year. According to the Albany Law Journal women are eligible as delegates under the law providing for the holding of a constitutional convention in that State. The Civil Service Commission has been called upon to decide whether the Postmaster-General can remove a clerk in the classified service for insubordination. The cable cars on Broadway, New York, appear to be a great success, tak ing in, it is said, nearly three times as much money as the horse cars they dis placed. There !b mourning among the gypsies because of the death in Illinois of Mrs. Harrieon, who had been chosen to suc ceed Mrs. Young as Queen of the Ro many folk. Mr. Jewell, the latest of the Kansas rainmakers, whose fi rat attempts chanced to be coincident with remarkable rain falls, finds tliat he cannot play the trick a second time. .... P.ev. Mr. McAnnev of Tarrytown, N. Y., thinks lu,000,UUu of the people of this countrv will die of cholera before fall if the W'orid's Fair should be kept open Sundays. Leading capitalists in Ea'rn cities have been conferring with a view of forming a company to establish electric lines on large scale in a number. uf cities, East and West , The New York Five Points, once re garded as the wickedest spot as well as the most densely populated, has been condemned, and will be converted into a magnificent park. Among the West Point graduates are Edward Taylor of Idaho, Frank B. Mc Kenna of California, William K. Smed lierg, Jr., of California, and Verting K. Hart of Wyoming. We bought of China last year mer chandise, chiefly ta and raw siik, to the value of near I v (20,000,000, while China bought only (5,000,000 of goods, chiefly cotton doth and kerosene, from us. PURELY PEKSOSAL," Queen Mnrgherita of ltnlv on the oc casion of her wedding dy received among other tilings over 22,000 begging letters. Governor Hogg of Texas has delivered another didactic addons to his people. It seems to be Hogg and homily down on the Mexican border now. The entertainment to the Daks of Veragua cost New Y'ork (37.000, it is stated. That's why they emphasize ths word over there when tliey refer to him as hit Highness, Senator and Mrs. Hawlcy of Connect icut have given up their proposed trip to England this summer to visit relatives of Mrs. Ilawley, and will remain at their cottage in Woodmont, New Haven coun ty. Conn, Dr. Julia Washburn of Lexington, Kv., is in charge of a bureau in the Kentucky State Medical Society, and will deliver the public address this vear at the meet ing of that body in Danville on " Women in Medicine." Editor George W. Cliilds is fitting up the Philadelphia Ledger with a band of trained pigeons to act as messengers and carriers of "copy" from distant report ers. It is expected that the scheme will be a great success. The Duke of Edinburgh, it Is under stood, is among the heaviest sufferers in England by the recent bank suspension in Australia. As the Duke is a very wealthy man, he will not be embarrassed by the misfortune. Governor Kussell of Massachusetts lias elected for his private secretary (to suc ceed Samuel Koada, J r. ) Charles Warren, a Harvard graduate of 188!l, who, though onlv 25 years of age, has already shown ability as a TOnpaign organiier. Warren is an independent in politics. Some of the wealthy American women who are now Londoners have in hand a project to endow in perpetuity a cot In the Victoria Hospital in memory of young Abraham Lincoln, whose death, following a painful illness, occurred dur ing his father's residence in London. Lord Roberts' services in India are to be commemorated by an equestrian statue on the Maiden at Calcutta. Al ready between 3,000 and 4,000 has been Bubscrilied bv the native Princes and personal friends, and it is thought tliat the fund will reach a large amount. Probably the oldest illustrious pianist in the world is Mine. Clara Schumann, who is known abroad as " the queen of filayers." She has been before the pub ic nearly as long as the Biblically allot ted lifetime, having mode her debut in Leipsic three score years and five Bgo at the age of 8. Rev. Joel Swartx, I). D., pastor of Bt James' Lutheran Church, Gettysburg, who has 700 widely scattered members in his congregation, thinks nothing of doing his ten miles on a bicycle in pros ecuting his pastoral duties, though he is 70 years old. He has three sons in the ministry also. Ex-Recretary and Mrs. J. W. Foeter, when the Behring Sea arbitration pro ceedings are finished, will turn their faces to the eastaard for a vear of travel, during which time they will make a tour of the world. It is not yet decided whether or not they will be accompanied by their voungest daughter and her hus band, who accompanied them abroad and are at present with them at Paris, A State Federation of Labor woe or ganized week be lure last by the labor uniotiK in Iowa, In Primula incomes above flOO are taxed. Oniv one peraon in forty-three has over $750 income. Over 25,000 women in thia country are engaged in the decoration of different kinds of ohina and pottery. "A legal fence" haa been defined in Kentucky as one that is "jng-tight, nortKHtight and ball-strong." AltBAlJY v FUltJITURE 7 CO. H. R. Hyde, A FULL Furniture OF EVEKY DESCRIPTION AND ALL KINDS OF Carpets! Carpets! We make a specialty of UNDERTAKING. Calls answered night or day. Baltimore Block. Albany, Or. W. f. ttEAU.Prcldciit ORO. r. 8IMI1!Oil,Vi.Prtil(lent. 1. 0 VumvXAH.fkcnUn J.i, OOWAJiirMUUrer. , . A. HII.KKK. Farmers' mi Merchants' Insurance Company OF ALBANY. OREGON. CAPITAL 8TOCK.. $600,000 VOAJBD OF UIBECTORI. Hon. E.B.STEAHAK. Cli el Jiu'lM of Supreme Court. Hon. J. W. Cl'SICK. Hanker. Hon. J. K. WP.ATIIKkr'uHl). Attornej-.! Ijw. J.O. WK1WMAN. Ki.. CuniUHit. wtii.tnette niur Lmia uomp.nr'' No two thtrrt.. tttrce-loiirttiK, tinny or ixi7-da claune in the Farmer.' and Merchant.' FA KM pollcie. The Farmer' and Merchants' Insurance ''.ompaur pev. the full amount of low up t toe antoaiit Ineurwl. The .utocrihon to the capital xtnek ron.i.u of farmers, in' r'haul. bankera, capitalist, attorneys, vnjraiuuuij and nwenanlot, Uui large amount bold bj lunKi. tadivkLuaki nauitluJWI. BUSINESS BREVITIES. There are 552,720 telephones. A self-operating bicycle is announced. The bottle industry of England U de clining, Washington, I). C, has underground trolleys. Our 1802 wheat crop was 510,000,000 bushels. An Englishman claims toownatl.OOO, 000 yacht. The Earl of Dudlev has the largest life uibu ranee (6,000,(HK). Boats on the New Y'ork canals are to be propelled by electricity. Over 1,000 steamships are traversing the four great ocean routes. The American Flint Bottle Company is the latest projected trust. The telephone lines of 8weden are to be bought by the government. Georgia raises more watermelons than any other State in the Union. At least (720.000,000 worth of British property is always on the sea. The revenue from the New York docks is more than (2,000,000 a year. It is said to cost (00,000 to get out one nnmlier of Scribner's Magazine. The English people consume annually ovor five pounds of tea per capita. At an average price of 8 cents ier head an acre of cabbage will return (2U0. The Johannesburg gold mines pro duced, during 1802, 1,525,3)4 ounces of gold. EAST AND SOUTH -m- The Shasta Route OF THE- SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. " Ex pre tiatut kwtc fofiimjiJ dHy; 7:00 r H U 'nrtiwtd,.Ar. 7; V."i" 10:23 . N N.T., ..Allmnv .Ar. 4:28 A. H. it. w Uf Whu Friiin'tin'.U.I 7:H0 f, M. Tiieairtne Irmut i.mji tiuiy at tlie fi.ikwiu tat Urn fiiirtli of Rimetmnr twit I'ltritaiid. Or mod firy, Hnofiimru, Haiem, A limit v. Taimeiil, tttittdri, HtMy. HurmlmrK, JaiiH.ou(.ty, trvitiff and Euseue, Riwlmnr mtU-dnll? : x:JQ A. u fU i'l.rtritiHi At. 4 Ji) r, M. tt'46 r. U hi AllmitF ..Ar 11 -30 p, 6: P. H.jAr HwI.hu ... .l.v 7:00 A. u AlMniy tl;j!fjr (Mi.t .Mtttitltj I. b:Wf. .;L....Poitlii....Ar.::4. M. 9.SS) r. :Ar ... AKhiiiy .Lv.i 6:.'W. M. Iwl wnwnr trm inii -(lit It ti-xrpi fittnrttr,. i :Jo r. m. U .A.ltisr , Af. lK 11 A. M. 2: r. M. At Uaiiuii I.r. 9:M A, M. no a. a.M.r....u.AiiMiiiy..I a u. Kr Ubmiuu... .......Ar. r. M. U.I 23 f. M. lllnlns Cam o Ondnn Knula. PULLMAN HirrriT LKEIfcK ". , . AND Kotni-Cli 8lttnc Vara A I laeb4 to AH Through Train. WtCBT tll UIVIMON. Brrwitn Portland and ComU4, Mntl Iniu - (UMjr (eii( Hmiday): 7: i"m, iXf.....".PortlBd..".Af. j ft-soi. i 12:10 r. m. I Ar !orvalim..;rLf. 1 12:36 f. . At Albanr mid Corvillti couiHXit with ttaiua of Oreyou raciflp railroad. 4:40 v. k. j Lv I'ortlmiil Ar. i 9:& a. 7:ft p. M, I At... Mt-Hlunvillf... Lr. ' Mft a. W THROUGH TICKETS 2Ji,.ar.aJS and Kumfw mn he obtained at iowtMit raU from i. A. Heuuett, aul. LUimon. H KOKin.KH.M.i.AjtW. . P. BCKtKEUl. Am, u. r. fwa. akbdl Proprietor. LINE OF Bon. 1, L. COWAN, t'riiMtivnt Man Count. National Bwik, . STRENBEKO. tm- Merchant '. r. BKAP. Ko., Merchant II. . MONTEITII. Catilullat. 0. y. IMI'8UN. F-q.. t.pit.ll-t.