y - - KKWS ITEMS. Seattle ha negro lawyer. Wall Walla ill have Ciurney cabs by April Int. ' The epecpshearing campaign will noon commence. Clackamas counly is infested with horse thieve. Malheur county scrip is worth 95 cents on the dollar. Milton has a town site addition named after Brother Mahana. The Wallula paper claims that tow n is "the center of gravity." Sheep are selling for three dollars a head in Southern Idaho. Joseph, Wallowa county, is to have a water system by next September. M M. Miirnhv suicided with mor phine at S.?ultle Wednesday night. Minter Bras-slield, of Adams, is to locate in Milton and engage m bricK-ninaing. T in nosro nee hi viii.-oo, . . . . IT .111., countv. will be discontinue.! April 10th AIumiI ll!0.0fl0 has been subscribed on ttm Hunt railroad subsidy in I'nion countv. The people of Arlington are talking up the matter of establishing light plant. an electric A k-nv woLdiing over 1)00 pounds was killed on the 'farm of Joseph Pond, near Walla Walla. f!. V. Tlnntin-.-toi savs the .Southern Pacific Company will not build north of the Columbia at present. Milton wants a bank, and this want being loudlv proclaimed in the Fagle, which irone'rallv gets what it screams for. The Salvation Army is still holding Inrth at The Dalles, ana IB uenouncen chronic nuisance by the puix-rs of that place. The furniture in the office of the Hank tni' Mutual Relief Association of Port land, which recently "went under," sold for t.r!. The application for vacant dwelling bruises, at the real estate othces in Spo kane FIIb, the Review says, average fifty per day. r 1 Heardalev. who killed a man named Ferryman a few days ago at Kola, Polk county, has oecn reieaseu uu 500 bail. The briekmaking machine at the Walla Walla penitentiary is in successful opera tion, and will soon be able to turn out 36.000 daily. Stock losses were heavy in Wallowa .countv during the winter, some sheep .men losing 2G and cattlemen 12 per cent iof their herds. Lexington wants a broom factory, a starch factory and a bank. ' .Lexington want considerable here below, but get ting it is another thing. The Garfield Enterprise notes the dis covery of a paint mine ten miles east of that town, with enough mineral to paint very town in the country red. The LaGrande Journal says the hold ing of a term of the Supreme Court in Pendleton "will be a great convenience io the jreople of Eastren Oregon." An epidemic of malignant scarlet fever israging at Livingston, Montana. There have lieen twenty-live deaths in two weckB, and all the schools are closed. r. u. amiuieiou, who w.iboh m dleton Tiibune stall' for some time bus tmtio huolr Union tit l.ilkfi chlirUO of tl)6 Republican at that place, Mr. Irwin re tiring. P. B. Johnson and Col. F. J.Parker are now throwing mud at one another through tiie columns of their papers, all of which is naturallv highly edifying to the Walla Walla public The Fossil biscball nine recently de feated the Antelope Jiino by a score of 4") to 'i'l. Good battery wot k and first-class - fielding probably hepl the hi ore down to these low figures. A wedding took place in Spokane Fall the other day, wherein a Mr. Wood espoused a Miss I'yle. That is the sort of a Wood-Pylo that is likely to grow in stead of diminish. Port Townscnd has n Building mid Loan Association, lately muaiiized. Ho Las nearly every town of any eonseiiiencu .-.il. N.'.riliui.uf whieh knows u uood thin;? when it sees it. Sehal:richer Brothers of Walla Walla liave announced tbeir intention of grad ually eliisiiiK their mercantile busi - nees, which luW been in Hiiceessful oper ation Ihero since l,Wl. The twciity-fourtli kienniul conclave of the Knights of Templars meets in Wush-toe-tmi. I'. C, October 8, 1KH!). A number .of Knights from Oregon and Washington Territory will probably attend. The Saleui Street Railway Company decided Saturday to build over a mile of new track, one branch into North Salem and another into Alliert A Van Duyn's addition, south of the depot. The richest man in Eastern Washing ton Territory is A. M.Cannon, of Spokane Halls, who is saiil to lie worth between ' H ,000,000 and $11,000,(100. Mr. Cannon went to Spokane Falls nine years ago as a machine agent. The water wo. ks election at Weston resulted almost unanimously in favor of the enterprise, only three votes being cast jigainst it. The plan proposed is to bond twcity for $10,000, for the construction of Hater works system. Arlington Times: Somebody has di' tovered tliat the Columbia river sand will jjrow excellent eanutg. Now, will some ibody please discover a way to hold the '. iand down during the growing season so that we can grow some? Milton Faigle: It is very probable that the next meeting of the County Normal Institute will lie held in Milton. A great deal dependa upon the inducements otlred by our citizen for board and lodging of teachers in attendance. " On bint Saturday evening some one entered the barn o( ltolart Kirkland, of North Milton, and stole a tine saddle worth Mo. a bridle worth 1S and a pair fti HniirH. iii iiih Biiiim r iiiiik ",. purloined a hum from Mr. Anderson's cellar. Onions should not be put in without niakinir sure that the land is in first rate condition for a seed bed. Ikj not plow it or harmw it while wot. and make it line and mellow before sowing the seed. The nerd is not injured by the freezing of the N ground after it is sown. rV'lell, the Boise City murderer, was captit.'fJ last Wednesday, at the ranch of a man named lirown," where he had f,w food and lodging. lirown had been fisted by officers a few hours 'hefora t.niLt liedell 'might, puss that way. and so drew a shot-gun oil the murderer and captured him. Milton Eagle : A party of surveyor m the employ of the O. A W. T. manage ment passed through Milton Sunday last. They were somewhat reticent when up , proached by a reporter on the subject of the Grande Konde branch, hut sntli cient facts were gleaned to enable us to announce that the Mill creek route has been abandoned a utterly impassable. . At a reception to Governor Moore in Walla Wulln Saturday evening, 1'. U. jCrowley, a prominent Republican onirratuliitiim him said: "If, ttiiei!iiintioii of his term, lie leaves i the chair with us good a record as (iover- UorHemple, the people of Washington U1 be perfectly aatisiieo;. Ortuonian: The naval commission ere waiU'd upon yesterday by a delega- ' tion Itoae oiiject was n set loriu me n- vantagi - uttenyl bv ancouver as a sue for the p TpoHftd naval station lor up- Northwest. UB lUlUlinmuil ' 9 ' bt to meet ibe Jl.tu- , Wrtsiona lasi u - . . ali ,i uinita there and i, , . ' j , Colombia for a suitable ,or " nav 1 , ' Uition. The aensational item apj)earii: Jj last issue of the Ealirande Jouina !."; der the head of a' Paker City Sensation, in which Martin Ludwig is made the hero in the Play, u wholly u .......... play, is wnoiiy i ra - , tlnn nnn the i there it not one grain oi trow, u UDS -"" . , . o-.ronir wortl in me enure iim. Journal uiu am iukuu . - story," but was imposed upon. VVoll Wolla .Tnnrnnl- Someone sto a span of mules land harness belonging U till. .11 ill I 111 '11 1 . 1 1 1 ' B 1 iai, lii.i i" ........ to another party, giving him a bill of sale for the same. The second jiossessor brought the team into town and had Auctioneer Short sell them at public auc tion. The mules only brought $7", and Mr. Martin is in town and has the olice force woi king the case up. The large sawmill at Kamela, know n as the Smith mill, which was recently fitted with new machinery throughout, burned lo the ground Wednesday night, inflammable mateiial having been left near the engine. The mill was owned by a gentleman named Russell, whose loss is a severe one. A large quantity of fine slock, especi ally horses, is being imported into this section, and the result will doubtless be an improvement in the grade of domestic animals. Stockmen, who are alive to iheir interests, are rapidly becoming aware that "good blood" counts in tlieir business. Now is a good time to clean up back yards and remove the rubbish and lilt h that has accumulated during the winter. "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure," wrote Franklin, and the ounce is well applied in thecleaning-up process. In Gilliam countv, a few days ago, A. N. S. Cottin shot Anton Miller, the ball passing through the ear and grazing the cranium. Cottin is under arrest. Miner is a herder and the shooting is the result of a range war. Centerville Home Press: The I nia tilla County Bank opened up tor business Monday morning. The gentlemen report a flattering amount ot linsiness lor ine hrst week Judge Gray, of the U. S. Supreme court will soon marry Miss Jeaunette daughter of Justice Matthews. He is 62, and she is 30 years of age. Jasper Stevens slaughtered three pork ers last week on J'owiler river wnose maximum weight was, when dressed, l;;:) J pounds. At. Irvington, S. J., a farm hand named Salman, assaulted Airs. Mutter with a hammer, inflicting probably fatul injuries. Gilliam county sheet) owners are mak ing a determined ellort to eradicate scab in their Hocks, WHAT IT COST. Almost a Million Hollars lo l KalHert by Taxation to I'ay the Appropriation! of the Late I.eRlMlaiure. Flom tho.Salrm Ktatemnan. Fo' lowing are the appropriations made by the last legislature : AppronrlHtloiin as r-nnlalncii In the regular iiipni(iriiiLioii nni duu.iii AI'I'ROI'KIATIONS IN SI'KCIAI. ACTS. For e'ffttl ililli-relit wagon mmls ..SiM.wmoo Fur horllcullurut ; iiniitiNslon Kor lain nu weal tier m-rvlce n mill lie ; 1 0 For purrliiet" MHiin 15 Or. r enit Kur two KHHt- I'll On 011 Mid nnn Sou hern MrcK'Ui agi icultui-Ml no: 1- etteR at 8l.FiOO tiri per iiniumi or pureliiis nf one half Ijlnek eiml Of MlLlH ll'HIHl d.niio m 6,000 1,001' 00 ,0UJ IH 17K IKI For H'lilitioa 1 MtUuy of kstiilo II hr.,rian For relli t of .Inn. e.t:ipleinll Fo relief Mih N..I. Mel'tierwin Fur relief of helr of A.J. Hcmlire For relief of Kr, (1 Yenko I'il I 0 loll HO For relief of I, Hn -Her For el ef of ,ln. lihiNmoro F r Agrli'iilnirnl (i"l ieii Kor I'oitlaii'l l(n'U:;e Home line i(7,iV.l l" ri.nifHiii iilUHIIHUI 42,1 W I'D For Ktnte reform m-Ijooi Korexpe Men of Heslon Totid This iloeB not include tmn.iww appropriations made from trust funds. This is the total amount, then, that is to be paid out of the general fund during this year and next. If the stule were even at the beginning i this vear and received nothing into tho general fund from any other source than taxation this would be the exact amount to bo raised by taxation during this vear and next. But, as shown by the Unit statement of the commission lor the computation and apportionment of state lew of taxes, made I lee. fi, 18HH. the statu" was deficient llB,r)15,il. In stead of a deficiency the law contemplates and requires a surplus of $.ri()()0. Adding these, amounts to Hie total 01 appropria tions, we have $!l!)7,()l".07. From other sources tnan taxatinii me stute will probably rucoivo the following amounts: From the Ronernt irovermnent on In dian wnr i-.lullll, aider COIIilll ihsiuii im paid f-IUM r.,111 other HiiureeH iW.UDn Hnliimeorolil appropriation!! not likely to bo ilniwii i,iaiu Tollil 9V1I20" Deiluet this and there Is left the sum of t!H7,Kl.r).ll7 to bo raised by taxation. Of this uniount lt!ll7,H0,.tl.S has already been provided for by the present levy, leaving iftSOO.OllUII On an estimated valuation of fsH,OU(),(iO(), tho next State tax for current expenses would bo about tl.S mills. Tim I.cL' H iiture of lKH.ri. that mane larger appropi lat ions than that of IHHll, bad some ?;ioo,Uiiu 10 iou,omu m ui State treasury to go on. I lie rceem session had no such BtirpliiB, and the whole amount of the vast appropriations must be provided for in the Slate levy of taxes. , , , It is not a very enoouraging outlook 101 the reputation for economy ol tho tale legislature, but the truiti may as wen ne told now as later on. lliillruail NUI' rlptlen. From the HllenstmiK I'upltnl. Tho committee appointed by K.lloiisbtirg hoard of trade to solicit I be Bllll- ucrintiooH for the Columbia Kiver Kail- way, have been actively engag m me work and are meeting wiih success worthy the enterprise, l'p to Mediies- day evening they had $50,000 subscribed and t-JI.Oiill more promised, with Hie meat portion ot too country ouisnie 01 I he citv to hear from. The committee feol greatly encouraged over tho prosiect, and the prompt manner in which the 3oplo are reepDnoiiiu, leaon Hicin iu i ti.wa tlmir wotk will soon he accom plished. The people of Kllensbnrg and Kittitas countv, true lo their past history, stand shoulder to shoulder in this good cause, and there wil) he no hesitating nor halting until tiie work is wcjl aim umo- fully done. 1 literal utri'otiiiiierve Commlaalon The Interstate Commission, by Com miMsitinnr Morrison, rendered its decision Saturday in the case of the Northwestern Grain anil Slock Shippers' Association vs. the Chicago A Northwestern Kailwa' Company. It stales that a railtoad col pany, when making ditl'erent rates for tl ' mime distance on dlllerent branches of it .j road, must justify them by showing that there is a ilill'ereiice in the cost of carry- iinr on the dlllerent branches The company gave special rates to car shippers to a wint in Illinois, by means of which tho com letii bed the sealsiard at low through rates. hen the com pany denied as u did, sncn Bpeciai acivan iiore'a to the corn shippers ill Iowa, i gave unlawful prefer,, nee to the Nebraska Blupirs. . , A Tramp Hnd the Vood-plle A tramp called at a residence in Pen dleton Sunday morning ami asked feel ingly f ir "something to eat." Heing asked if he wouldn't tackle the womb pile ami eain bis breakfast, he replied that he couldn't conscien'iously wotk on Sunday. The good housewife then in formed him that her husband split wood on the Sabbaih, and he was as good a mau as any tramp; but the tramp re plied that he "didn't hardly have time, as he must catch the train," and moved away, chalking a mark on the fence as a ,,r,'oio to bis snecies that a woodpile and crosscut laid in wait for them at that 1 n,Ki,,ince Moore the Heeoud. From the Walla Walla Statesman Although the Republicans have Miles O. Mooie for governor, the lHMiiocniia came to the front with the nrst governor nt the name In the person of Marshall F. Moore, who waa apoiiited by President ' i I nn.....l fisim 1KI17 to OIIIIHOU, aim I'W p-ino isji'i hen he was a candidate lor ivie- ""-. ':;' - .... iu.m,,ic ticket lot"""- - " n.d.l who defeated Moore by a majority - , voteoi b357. f kf M " w11 ' I e CIIBXUUI'I.i. A liMy.hu,.d UrM,lltloll , th. Mineral Wealth of m I'ortl nofl'nlon Couuty. Correspondence Union Scout. I will venture the assertion that no where since the fabulous, era of t'ali fornia's gold discoveries, bus there been found richer and more extensive mines of gold than are In re in a around Cornucopia, in Cuioii coun v It is, too. not out of humanity's reach, b... in a civilized, thickly sell led and fertile region. The products of the soil are vaiiousand abundant. "Wood, water, and urass" aie everywitere. ! It is truly a miner's paradise. J can i see no drawbacks no discouraging as-1 ieet no cloud to dim the horizon. Its I accessibility adds to its charm. Taking j the stage 111 I'nion at six in lie morning, you are in the "horn of plenty" at the same hour in the evening, and when 1 only thirty miles out you stiike. tiie San-1 ger mill and mines which even I'.aUer i -ity journal-! chronicle assiupping, a lew weeks a'o, seventy thousand dolhus in gold bullion. There ate more mines than have been dise'iveretj. the avocation of prospector is nut yet jione. 'there is yet many a pine which mark!-: the boundaries of claims vet to he located. The prospec tor can strike himself rich and all 1 he while live in a land of plenty and com fort, while the school bell cliiiuea melod iously with the whistling of the quart, mill and the rattle of the stamps. The town of Cornucopia wits laid out in the fall of ltW,", the first mines having been located in the fall of that year. It was named after the old .Nevada tow n of Cornucopia, by W. It. 1 'slier, familiarly culled "Icicle I'.ill" Usher. Mr. falter. Sain Senor, and George Holies, old Tus can ras, now own valuable mines named the "Comet," "Way l'p" and "George," which are held 'way npin the thousands, with the proHicct of a sale during the coming Hummer. Allentown lies below and adjoining Cornucopia, and was laid out by some parties second comers who were too late to get their choice of lots in Cornu copia. In both places there are in tiie vicinity of two hundred houses, many of which are now vacant, but present indi cations are that in two months time they will be mostly occupied. Lumber, deliveied, is from $17 to $i0 per thousand. All vegetables anil farm products are cheap and abundant. In Cornucopia there is one hotel, kept by Mr. Nicholson, three stores, three loons, and 0110 public hull and school house. Pine creek runs through the center of the town, and southerly throng a rich and thickly settled agricultural valley, lrout are abundant 111 the creek as also in a lake situated six miles from Cornucopia. '1 lie timber is the black yellow and hull pine. Some of the trees are VAI feet high and from ;i to 7 feet in diameter at the butt. This town, almost exclusively tiilititarv to I'nion, has every convenience and luxury for the suppoit ot a largo and thriving community. While in California last w inter your cor respondent had fieqitcnt conversation with mining men about minim' sales. I'beie. the only bilk was about gold, and here they can find it. 1 can assert and you can s.ifcly publi-h that out of a thous- ind locations in tins district, tlieie w not one which win not mill two dollars per Ion, anil from that up in tho hundreds 111 Grass valley, Cel., mines pay divi dends that mill only nifty cents, so your readers may form some idea of the extent and value of Ibis locality. It ia truly Cornucopia a big born of plenty, lllful-inill Ion Desired. Under a recent date Captain Win. K llirkhimer writes the following note which is self explanatory : Illl'U'liS HuP'r OF TIIK Col.I'MlllA, ) Vancoiivkk Hauhacks, W. T.,' r March 1, 1H.S0. ) I laving been designated to investigate the matter of the service of certain volun teers, pursuant lo the following resolu tion : "In tiik SiiN vrr. or tiik C S., I January 211, ISSil. )' Kusolved, That the secretary of war be, and he is hereby, directed to cause an investigation to be made into the or ganisation and service of what naH been commonly known in Oregon nm Vaptain i -iv v. I iiioi n . ooijiii oy oil oilmen Volunteers,' which, it is alleged was or ganized in the early part of the year 1S4S, lor gervico, mid whicli served in ine Indian war in Oregon, known as the 'Cajuso War;' and to repot t lo the Sen ate, at Ins earliest .convenience, all facts relating to such alleged organization. whether of record or otherwise, toio!hcr with the names of the officers and pri vates constituting such company. Attest: Anson G. Mel ook, ei'. I will thank anyone having knowledge of tho organization and services of the com pany mentioned, lo coujuiuiiicate it. 1 lie information w hich, it is conceived, w ill niuut the iiinposos of the S uato resolu tion, ami host serve those interested, should cover these points, viz: I'list Anything authentic regarding the organization of tho company. Second 1 lie diameter of I be service where and when that il rendered. This should likewise be conlincd to fads, us nothing else will servo any useful pur pose. llnrd Ihe names and residences ot the members of the company with the rank of each; and the names and post- ollice addresses of suniving members. It is suggested to those w ho may be interested in this matter, Unit they can perhaps best serve themselves us well as more salistaclorilv develop the lads, ivy calling on me ami making the statement in person. Wt. K. ISihkiiimkh, Captain, cting Judge Advocate, I'.S. A. Oregon and Washington territory papers please copy. , Heath of I'licle Jimmy Stephens. Mr. James II. Stephens, a well-known pioneer of Fast Portland, died at his home there .last Friday night. lie was horn on the lino between Virginia, and Pennsylvania in ISOii, moved lo Indiana ill 1HI4, where ho lived lib manhood and learned the trade of a cooper, and came to Oregon ill ISI I. settling on the present site ot Fast Portland, when the place where 1'orilund and Fast Portland now stand was an unbroken wilderness. lie followed his trade, inn I lie litsl ferry boat aero a the Willamette river, and was a typical and useful pioneer, lie leaves a large est ale. A Heavy llplde. Miss Alice llogiiboom, of Vermont, w bo was mariied lo Alfted Thompson in Huston tho other day, weighed bob pounds. She is a blonde, with an array of haud-ome, hut colossal, charms. The husband, un the other band, is a little fellow weighing only ninety pounds. It took lifiy-.-ix yards of white satin to make lliolniil.il dress, and the gauntlets worn b) the biide were the legs of rilk stock ings. She had on No. 1 1 satin slippers, and her silk stockings were the biggest ever made in Host on, costing 2S. Her husband bought her wedding presents costing fiUiH), including a $4ivi pair of diamond earrings. I lie nt C 'lilrallit, Vt'. T. Cknik.uja, V. T March 25 Fire broke oul in Ihe dry bouse hclonumg lo Frank Mellaril s bilck yard at six o clock last evening. The drv house was en tirely destroyed, together with several thoiisatid biick. The roof of Sterger's sawmill caught lit e and soon disapieared. line U'll was burned, but no machinery was injured. The loss is not vet known. Kx-Mavor Hewitt and F.dward Co.uvr. proprietors of the .New Jersey Steel and Iron Works at Trenton, K. J., have been traveling In Ihe iron region South lor several weeks on a tour of investigation. As result, it is announced that alout Apiil 1 Iheir works will be removed to Chattanooga. Much of the raw iron and coal supply has been coming from there, and the co'mpany has found a large mar ket in that region. The works employ thiiteen hundred men. At II ehhridire. Wisconsin, teamster f(ll ,,miul of , ir, , year, old be- cause "be refused to marry him, and then 1 killed himself. The girl will recover. j CHICAGO MARKETS. 1 Chicago, Hatch 25, 1 :15 p. x Close i wheat, easier; cash, $1 OS1-' ; April, fl Ol'j; ; May, 1 037. Coin, firm; cash, 34J4; April, 31'8'; May, 41 11-10. Oats, lit m ; cash, 24 1-24 ; May, 2.1?,'. Barley, nothing doing. Pork, firmer; Mav. 12 4"i : Julv, $12. 47. Lard, firmer; cash, ?oo; Mav. $7. 02'i'. THU (illVKKMAl KM IN KAUXKSr. The United Stute Nteamstilp Thelia to Ko to the Arctic Oceitn to Protect. Washington, March 22. Sailing or ders have been sent to the United Hates steamship Thetis, at the Mare Island navy yard, to proceed to Sitka, touching at such places as the commanding officer may oeem necessary. lien sue arrives 111 i lia miu MMuimiiinaieu Willi tile COII authorities, she will, it the situation is quiet and her presence there not re quired, continue on northward, and de vote her attention particularly to the whaling fleet and other commercial in terests of the United States, inthe waters about Behring straits and the Arctic ocean. As the whaling vessels usually leave the Arctic in the latter part of Sen tember. the presence of the Thetis, until then, will add security to those engaged in that important industry, and the ThetiB will remain until they have taken their departure southward, taking care not to be caught in the ice. She will then return to Sitka and await further instruc tions. Miaht Fire In VauuitUTer. Vani oi vkk, W. T., March 25. This morning at 11 o'clock an unoccupied nu Kiing on Nxtn ana u streets, in r.ast Vancouver, owned bv Mr. McCarthy of J'ortland, originally intended for saloon pui poses, was discovered ablaze. The fire department did good work, being on Ihe scene in very short time, and saved the adjoining buildings. The saloon in question has been on fire three times since it was built, and the opinion pre vails that the fire is the work of incendi aries. The Wheat Crop. Washington, March, 21. The March statistical report of the department of agriculture gives the average weight ot wheat by States: General average 50.5 pounds, the lowest of six years. In the spring wheat region the range is from 5H.5 in Dakota to 55 in Nebraska. It makes the crop equivalent to 3111 ,000,000 bushels, sixlv pounds each ; less by nearly 25,000,1100 bushels than the quan tity in measured bushels. A Governor Wanted. Pkovidknck, It. I., March 21. The Republican Slate convention met this morning. Governor Royal C. Taft wag renominated, but declined to accept. Governor Herbeit L. I, add, of Providence, was then unanimously nominated for lieutenant governor, but he declined, and Dual G. I.itllefield was chosen. The rest of ihe ticket was renominated. The Willi. lee. Maleh CollHpied. l'oiiTi.AMi, March 25. The six-days-go-as-you-please walking match has col lapsed, only one hundred and fifty dol lats having been taken ill at the" door. One of the judges got the manager's w atch lo secure his money. Ihe Mai ine Bank brought attachment suit to recover iKO. and all the w alkers quit. ThoKe Chained NkeletnliH. Nohkoi.k, Va., March 22. The story that two chained skeletons were found in the bold of the sunken rebel ram Merri inac is denied, and it is asserted that they were in (lie hold of Ihe United States ship Cumberland, w hich the Mer limac ran down. Oklahoma I'rocliimnl Ion. Washington, March 22. Secretary Noble after leaving the cabinet meeting this afternoon said he thought the Presi dent would sign Ihe Oklahoma proclama tion this afternoon. If not signed he felt confident it would be done to-norrow. To Tax Sleeping Curs. ' Lincoln, Neb., March 21. The State Legislature has passed a bill taxing- sleetiinir cars. Tho tax to ho assessed at tho same rale as private property, and i n u mi io ot t tio number ol miles oper ated in a State to the total number of miles operated. I dapanoMC Nohlllly. CiiU Aoo, March 21. The Count and Countess Sana, Marquis and Mar- bioness Malda, and a number of minor officers a id attendants, of Tokio, Japan, arrived hero from San Francisco this morning on a pleasure trip through the country. A Liirgrer Navy Wanted. Sr. Phtkhsiu'iio, March 21. The gov ernment is considering measures for in creasing the number of vessels in the navy. The plan under consideration in volves an expenditure of 120,000,000 roubles. VillHrd'a Scheme Col lapsed. Nnw Vouk, March 21. The World says: "The great scheme of Henry Vil laid whereby all the Kdisnn electric com panies were to bo consolidated into one jigantic concern, i reported to have col lapsed." Fifth In Ihe Knee. Nun, March 21. A regatta took place here to-day. Tho course was from Mon aco to Nice. The American yawl Moan itu came in fifth among the foreign. The . It. N. Co. WIiih aSult, Washington, March 23. The U. S. supreme court rendered a long decision to day in the case of Ihe Oiegonian ltail load 8 the O. H.& N. Co., in favor of the latter. A Nti iko FMK Hkw Yoiik, Match 21. The strike of the leather workers has lieen declared of, Ihe giils applying for work at the em ployers terms. A Taper Sydtcnte. London, March 21.--Fourteeu of the latgosl paper makers in Fugland have formed a syndicate foi the purpose of raising prieeB. The capital is 2,000,000. rilpitl'H lllary. London, March 21. It is slated that the ditiiy of Pigolt, forger of the Parnell letters, is ill tho possession of Maurice and Timothy M. llealy. l'aul Heyuton Exhibit. Pokh. isn, March 25. Capt. Paul Hoj nton gave a pleasing exhibition a few miics below tow n to a largo audience yes terday. A Dark II erne's Chwncea. ' W isiiiso roN, March 25. It is thought a dark horse will he appointed governor of .Montana. ritOJJ Al'ltOSS THE Mtll'N T UNS. ttreey Notes l-'rtmi I .tlraiide- Mur About Ihe Keren! Fire. I.itiitiNDK, On., March 20, HS0. Fire was discovered at 10 o'clock last night in the rear ot Ihe LaGrande Brew ery, probablv eliminating through care lessness. When the alarm was sounded it was patent that all ellorta, except in protecting other proerty and making salvage, were futile. The hose company w as on deck in good time, but it required too many minutes to tap the plug, and then a patty had to travel over a mile lo turn on a bead ot water. Luckily, every thing was damp and burned slow ly. The Golden Utile Hotel, 40 feet dis tant, was saved, although Joe Trueedal, the proprietor, is largely loser, hy re moval of elVects. No insurance. Johns Kocbe, the proprietor of the btewerv building, was insured in full.and Ihe slock in the cellar was saved almost intact. H ither a discreditable affair between two prominent members of the hose com pany occurred subsequent to their haviug done as well ts they could in protecting property. But this was attributed to ihe "ardent." The lulls are donning a verdure. Tom Barton, formerly of Umatilla counly, has reverted to bis old trade painting and says that unite an activity in the building line will soon do apparent here. An engineering party is here to locate a railroad from this place to Wallowa . vallev, tor tiie O. K. & N. Co. 1 I..VTLB March 21. S. R. Reeves, for- merly a Heppner sheep man. is now pro prietor of the Blue Mountain House, (he first class hostelry of LaGrande. Fred L. Guodnoiigh, who for years was head ' clerk with the M. & M. Co., is the oblig ing clerk. LaGrande is a good hotel , town now and the above house is a favor ite. George White lost two fingers yester day by familiarity with an Fdgar saw which he was running in the Kamela : sawmill. j lion. L. B. Hinehart advises me that j $125,000 of the subsidy has already been ! sunscrioed. I Senator Slater is able to walk around. La Grande shows considerable improve ment willun the past eight months, ti. A silver Wagon itoad. From the Phfhidelphiaf'reRs. "You may talk about nickel-plated railroads," said Vice President L. T. Mtunlov of Wnlniif atraat "hot a-lint .in yi, ttiii'.tc of a solid silver wagon road? -1 i.B tmHM1(in mine in ftol.m.,1,, l,a ,,,, u ninouM U'lu.n O nan l.n 1 thev didn t think it would pan out that way. They had to have a road from their mine, a distance of three miles, over which heavy loads were to be drawn. They took the rock that had been taken from the shafts they were sinking, and which lay around in the way, and macadamized the road all the way through. The wagons pass ing over tiie road ground the rock down. One day they had a heavy rainstorm, and w hen things got dry again after the rain, the wind blew the dust off the road, and all through the road-bed, every which way, they could see big streaks of silver. Well, maybe they didn't collar on io me resi oi that loose rocic tnat lav around those shafts! Thev sent awav lot of it to be assayed, and when the report came back they found that their roan-oeu was worth 200a ton. It was little expensive to drive over, but they had to have the road, and I suppose they've got it yet, it their mineB have held out Tightening; the Hqueeze. From the Spokane Chronicle. Iiy the transfer of the 0. R. & N. Co.'s stock to the Northern Pacific and Union Pacific companies, and the arrangements lor conducting the aflairB of the O. K. & Co., the fiorlhern Pacific practically comes into control of the concern. The commissioners of the two roads interested who are to have control of the O. R. & N. are six in number, and of these four are Northern Pacific and two Union Pacific men, hence the balance of power is in the hands of tho Northern. Presumably, tlien, the policy of the O. K. A Is. Co, will be dictated by and be in harmony with that of the Northern Pacific. It is doubtful if Spokane Falls will gain by this absorption as it eliminates one factor in competition for transcontinental traffic. Comfortinir Advice. From the New Yo'-k Weekly. First Friend Hello, Jinks! pot a bad cold, I see. Bathe your feet in hot water, and drink a pint of hot lemonade. second friend Inhalo ammonia or menthol. Third Friend Take four hours' active exercise in the open air. Fourth Friend Sponge with salt water ana remain in a warm room. fifth friend Put on all the winter things you've got, and spend half a day sawing wood. . Sixth friend The best cure I know for a cold is to get drunk. Jinks (with emotion) A friend in need is a friend indeed. Let's take a drink. . Democratic Humorists ltalked. From Puck. Harrison (to his private secretary) Lige, do you remember how you aiid I used to laugh over those imaginary con versations in the natiers between Presi dent Cleveland and Dan ? Lige ILilford Indeed I do. Ha, ha, ha! Weren't they funny? Harrison (anxiously) But. Liire. I'm afraid the funny men of the other party will now spring the same joke on us, and begin assuming that you are running my Administration. Lige . (confidently) No. thev won't. Kvev"fcr'y will know Bluino is running it. f tione to Destruction. From ivic Chlcax iTrlbun?. The proud New England man entered his home with dragging step and bowed he.el. "Klizabeth," he said, with trembling voice. "I have heard at last from our way vrard son, William, for the first time since he left us, five years ago." "Is he dead, Jonathan ?" "Worse than that!" groaned the wretched father.- "He is in the Oregon Legislature!" Turkeys In California. In California turkeys are raised in Hocks numbering several thousand. They are placed in charge of a herder, who drives them as he would a Hock of sheep. They range over miles of territory in a day, and live almost entirely by foraging. When the grain is cut and harvested the turkejs are turned into the immense wheat and barloy fields, and the birds do the gleaning, and become fat and ready for market at very little cost. Union Pacific Movements. A Uoston dispatch to the Herald says : Union Pacific affairs are in a curious shape again. There is an activity in the construction department strangely out of place in a company which has been pos ing as bankrupt, and asking congress for an extension of time for their debt. Sur veiing partiea are out, and a number of new lines are projected. The most im portant is a direct outlet to the Pacific coast at or near San Francisco. Every man charged with the management of the company for years back, has recog nized the necessity of such a road, and has tried to secure it. A SiKnlflonnl Beginning. From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Is there anything significant in the fact that about the first removal made by Mr. Harrison, President by virtue of a corrupted hallot-box and blower of the bugle blast for a purer ballot-box, is that of C. C. Watts, United States District Attorney for West Virginia, who has made himself objectionable to the blocks- of-iive party by his diligence in bringing illegal voters to justice I IflHtne'a Karly i'luiu. . From these loula lo-t-t ispa'ch. Secretary Blaiiio eniovs the unworthy distinction of being the first member of the Harrison Administration to apoint a member of his own family to the most important office in his gift. He has made bis son, Walker Blaine, examiner of claims for the State llepartuient. But .Mr, Maine is accustomed to unworthy distinction, and mere nepotism is almost a virtue in him. A Fair Division ol t-anor. Knmlover (to new clerk) This pack age of money you've just counted is two live-i'ollar bills snort. Vau- I'Urb- lloW Ho VOtl knOW ? Yoll u.,;.i vim huitii't counted the money. 1 mid lhat to test your honesty. 1 hardly know what to do about it. 1 can help you out; you take me into partnership, atid I'll do the stealing for ihe firm and voucan uo sue onus u we'll make things hum. A lined I M for a Noel. From the t'hlcaso Herald. Andrew Carnegie is said to be writing a novel. Andrew may have a soul above pig iron, perhaps, and tiie practical dusi ness of making the principles of protec tion yield him a million and a half a year may not be inconsistent with a fine vein of romance. After being under indictment seven years, the charge against Luke Carty of the murder of Peter GoeU at San Fran cisco was dismissed Saturday, tarty had three trials, and wu twice convicted of manslaughter, but the Supreme court overrule.! the decisions. Once the jury disagreed. The reason tor dismissal waa iusuttieiencv of evidence, the most im portant witueaabaving left Use State. A BABT TOUCHES KVERV HEART. On. or These Little Eptxodes of Life That Brinuont Mai,-. ine Eeeilnite. Marlon D. Kgirt In Meattle Hnnrlsy lindeet. It was last summer on the Northern Pacific east-bound express, lietween Ta coma and KUensburg. liig-hearted Henry Buckley was conductor, and when he came into our car he said ' tickets." The first one offered him was bv a little bit of a light-haired woman, who with a little bit of a light-haired, blue-veined baby and four little light-haired children, oc cupied Ihe double seat near the stove. "Hank" took the pasteboard, looked at it. turned it over, glanced inquiringly at the woman, counted the children, five of them, and the mother, five and one is six, on a single ticket. Six is a good many for one fare, but there'B no mis take about the children being under five years of age, either. W here from, madam '!" ho inquired. "All the way from Texas, seven days on the road, me and the children. Going to Ellensburg to meet my husband, w ho has taken uu a ranch near there. Oh. i in so tired. The train whirled along, the little tots, one after another, fell asleep, and last of all the tired mother, as well as the wee, blue-veined baby that lay in her lap, closed their eyes in fitful slumber. Hy this time the mother's simple slory hail gone through the car and occasioned Ihe sympathy that is the natural imuulse of Americans on like occasions, and kindly thoughts on all sides were ex pressed for the family, and an earnest nesire to do something tor them in a ainuiy way seemed to tie possessed bv one and all. After awhile the sleeping babe became reHtless. and for feat it uiiahl full from the sleeping mother's lup, a tiowpapoi- maii, without disturbing either, gently lilted the baby and was about to lay it on an adjacent seat, when a Portland drum mer doubled his fur-lined overcoat on the seat, w hich made for the little one a bed as soft as down, saying as he did so : "I've a kid myself down home." A young lady from Weston, Or., gently folded her shawl for a covering, while Mr. Thomas L. Nixon, of Tacoma, pinned a paper across the window to shut out the light from baby's eyes. Directly the butcher with his basket of fruits and nuts, passed bv, but soon returned and quietly laid beside each Bleeping child and the mother, a paper bag that col lectively contained every blessed thing the trainboy possessed, a contribution from Ben Snipes, the stockman, who sat in the rear of the car. And the train rattled along. After a half hour's fitful slumber the mother awoke, and starting to her feet exclaimed: "Oh, my baby !" She agonizingly looked around for the little one she so quickly missed, but im mediately she saw the lost one snuglv ensconced on his soft anil shaded couch, and the anxious eyes at once softened and tilled with grateful tears. A glad smile played across her weary face, and, allot a neap she tell back into her place and covered her face w ith her wan hands, and the passengers looked out (he window, wiped tlieir eyes, blew their noses, and felt of Iheir collars to see what made them lit so tightly to their throats so suddenly. Pretty soon ihe mother had baby back again. The liftle ones were awake, and exploring the mysteriously-obtained bags, and wor.iier ingly looked into their mother's smiling face, and into each other's faces, and into the faces of the other passengers, enquir ingly as to the source of their great pos sessions, and the passengers laughed. whispered to and winked at one another. and felt just as glad as the children did. ihe cars had scarcely Btopned at El lensburg before the eldest child shouted : See, there s papa ! Sure enough, iust outside the car stood the gladdest man on earth. The little ones jumped up and down, babv crowed and reached out his hands to him who could not wait to come in the car, but put nis glad lace tlirougli the window and kissed them all, baby first, and when the awaiting brakemau took his sleeve down his face was all wet and smutty. Then the Miss from Weston took baby and started to the door, followed by Tom Nixon, who had a bundle and the next in size, then Hank Buckley came along. with the twins and the drummer. who had the fur coat and the kid in Portland, car ried tho other. The brakemau with the smut on his nose carried his arms full of pillows, bundles and things, while the newspaper man from Walla Walla helped the tired mother along. ine crowd at the depot platform didn t seem to understand what the singular spectacle meant, for one of them said : "1 guess they are unloading a car of babies here." But when the little ones had been set tled amid the fragrant clover that almost filled the wagon, and babv was on moth er's lap again, they seemed to under stand; for w hen we took off our hats and said good-bj-e to the thankful parents, and delighted children, the crowd took off their hats and said good-bye, too, and wnon we Had gotten into the car again we were as happy as could be. Directly the drummer said : "Baby is king, isn't he?" "Yes, he's lord of the land and the sea and he makes the whole world akin," some one replied. Reunited Once More. From the Hiker City Hevellle. Several davs ago, our readers will re member, mention was made of on elope ment which occurred nt Union, the par lies being Mrs. A. C. Boyd and a sheep herder by the name of James Hill. The husband of the misguided woman ar rived in Baker City yesterday, and at once interviewed the delectable pair whom ho found employed at the West ern hotel. The woman had evidentlv learned that her boyish lover was not all that her fancy had painted him, and ex- ressed herself w illing to accompany her lawful and wedded husband back to where she could once more hear the sweet music of her children's voices, feed the pigs and chickens and read the motto "God Bless Our Home" as in the happy days of yore. The sheep-herder, loo, was longing to exchange the dis cordant rattle of crockery, pots and pans in a hotel kitchen for the melliflu ous jingle of the sheep bell as it lulled me urowsy ioiu to resi, ann accompanieo the pair to the depot, where he bade them farewell, and announced his deter mination to go out in the world alone and let his crushed hopes grow up with the flowers that bloom in the spring, tra la. All's well that ends well. Well, well! Next. On the Nfe side. From the Alhny Kxpress. Some amusing incidents happen at the civil service examinations, which the laws now reouire to lie passed by caoAv dittos for oltieial positions and clerkships ft was at an examination in Boston trial a voting woman found herself confronted with this question : "Are you of good moral character?" She w as very much amused at the ques tion, and in doubt how to treat it. Call ing the examiner to her desk, she said : "I have the reputation of being of good moral character. But you know reputation' is what people think of us, while 'character' is what God and the angels know of us, and that I don't want to tell." The examiner said she need not worry. Taxing ! Ho lids. Some one writing from Salem to the Oregonian thus criticises the position of that somersaulting journal iu regard to taxing bonds: "You have, in to day's issue of yonr paper, an article on the water bond ques tion in which you state that 'a tax upon th bonds ia not a tax upon the bond holders but on the necessities of the pe - tlo.' and that 'the Vondholder eventually escapes it (the tax) since ho always has means of doing so and there is no way to rach him.' If it be true, as yon assert, that the bondholder 'invariably escapes' taxation and that 'there is no mav to reach him,' it would not make one bit ot difference to him whether the bonds were taxed or not. and he could therefore afford to pay as much in the one case as ia the other. Are you not .hoisting your- self by your own petard ? Have you not yourself demolished vour own argument? j( jt lc r(ei gg you u"s,lt that there is , n0 wav lo reach'the bondholder iu order ; to make him pay on his wealth, is it not a virtual expression that such a thing as 'eoual taxation' is a failure, and that hereafter the poor alone must be taxed and the bondholder exempted? If so not our government a failure? luu assert when the bonds are paid out to private parties lhat they are not private property 'iu the ordinary sense.' What do you mean? They are private property sufficiently enough to empower the owneis to collect the cou pons and place the proceed in their pri vate pockets. This is the ordinary way which bondholders have of collecting in terest from bonds which really areptivate property "in the ordinary sense." You have made a distinction without a differ ence. Your allusions to ''demagogues and fools," and to persons possessed of only "demagogy, malevolence and stu pidity, will not be noticed, as they are not arguments but Ihe sure indications ot the lack of argument." The Heart In the Ntoinaeh. From the Youth's Companion. The ill nature of many men will vanish in the presence of their favorite dishes on the dinner table, a fact lhat has given rise to the old saying that the way to a man's J'eart is through his stomach. The wiiter once boarded with an irrita ble elderly man who gave laughable illus trations of the truth of this adage. When things had gone wrong with the choletic old gentleman his wife would sh ly say to her daughter, who assisted in the cook ing: "We'd better have apple dumptln'ir to day. fMirah. vour pa is out c.f npecuts. 1 intended having a potpie, but he don't care much lor that, and you know how fond he is of ihiiiiplin's."" When the duiiiphnV appeared the oiu Kcnuciuan s wruui would np&aiiy vanish. Sometimes the wise old lady would scatter an impending slorm and keep it up for break fust by apiiearing with a plate of doughnuts or pie, saving: Here pa, vou'd better i at this; no body else wants it, and it's just sitlin round in the way." Kentucky's (lrl Preacher. Falmouth, Ky., Special n P.ttsburg Dis patch. Mary Semous, ten years of age. has delivered four sermons in this place, and is becoming quite popular as a p eacber. She has a good voice and splendid deliv ery lor one so young. Muiy is the daughter of a fairly well-to-do farmer. who lives ah aic tour miles from this place. From infancy she displayed un usual brightness. About eight months ago she joined the Baptist church lime and said that Hie Lord had cubed upon her to preach. She lirst addressed u small congregation at her father's house, and succeeded so well thar. she spoke next in a chinch near by. The little giil soon bad a reputation throughout tins and neighboring counties. After seveiai months in the country she preached here, and her success was greater than i was in the rural districts. Under her ministry several peisons joined the hutch. Many allege tb.it her sermons cannot be surpassed by any grown man or woman. Mnry is rather small fur her years, has sharp features, black eyes and hair and is very intelligent. She will continue her services bete for sveral weeks and then she will go to the largci Kentucky towns. oitlu rn Capital for Southern Institutions From Allunla Constitution. AVilhin a certain period private dona tions to schools and colleges in the Norlb go over i 20,000,000. In the same time in the South barely f)0,000. The besl endowed uuiversiiy in the South, the Vanderiiilt, gets its money from a north ern man. The endowment fund of Emory, is $05,000, of which ,t 75,000 came from a northern man. Every buildiii". at Emory, save the two socieiy halls, was paid for by northern money. More money has been spent by northern men for collegiate education for negroes in At lanta than any six Southern States have given to collegiate education to white boys. The Northern Methodist church alone is spending more money in the South for higher education than all Ihe Southern States combined give to their colleges. These figures are not only startling thev are significant ! Trouble on the Border. A dispatch from Gendu Springs. Kan sas, says: "Sunday morning cattlemen along the border for a great distance, on the Cherokee et ip, awakened to find their fences all destroyed. Sunday night the work of destiuction was renewed, and it is thought that stables, conals and other property will go next It is thought this is done in retaliation for the driving out of the boomers fiom the Cieek and Seminole ceded lands People here ami at Arkansas City are quiet, and seem de termined to stand loyally by the law and tho Presidential ordeis. Tiiey feel, how ever, that if the law-abiding are kept out all others should be. so that all may have an equal chance iu the selection of lands. Arched at Top and Itoltom. An Oregonian correspondent writing from Tacoma says: "I hear a strange story about the Cascade tunnel. The bed of the railroad track in the tunnel, originally a hard clay substance, is swell ing up from the botlom, w hich is spiingv, and is giving the railroad people conoid erahle trouble. To overcome the dilli culty the tunnel is to be arched at the top and at the bottom like a gigantic sewer. To this end the Northern Pacific com pany is said to have secured a very large tract of clay laud at l'aco, where an ex tensive brick yard is to be established and 15,000,000 of brick made at once, to begin the work." A Horrowlng Family. Little girl Mrs. Brown, my mother sent me to ask you if you w ould lend her a dozen eggs. She wants to set a hen on t hem. Mrs. Brown I didn't know your mother kept any hens. She hasn't got any hen yet, but Mrs. Smith has promised to lend ma one as soon as she has the egys for the hen lo set on. The Dignity ol American Labor, From the Cleveland Plalnilealer. It is worthy of rental k that not one of the fragments of the exploded boiler a the Cleveland rolling-mill yesterday struck an American. The missiles Uving in all directions wounded onlv Scolch- men, Englishmen, Bohemians and Poles. We once were accustomed to hear and read of Ihe dignity of American labor. here is the American labor? Branded as a lloudter. From r, ji, Y. World. Mr. aHmnker is rieb nnd tin is Irnlv good. As PiMtrnastpr ireneml be is now. erful. But he bought his nlace in the laoiuei, uiiii we moan to pet a hninil nn -i.: l - . . on him wlucti will warnini? to the i n i UOUU1CIB n no njiut; line- A few days since 800 tons 0 i,av BerP burned by incendiaries on tie. j)tarn0IU ranch, Grant county, owned by peter French. Subsequently a man was ctl,,( in the act of tiring a haystack. He wa4 beaten until insensible, and may or. Bad feeling exists lietween some of the piominent owners of land in this locality, of which the incendiarism is supposed to be the outcome. A week ago Charles Neir, of Seranton, Pa., ran a needle into his foot. The sur geons sought in vaiu for it. Thursday Seir was taken to the plant of the elec tric railway company, and bis foot held near one of the dynamos. In fifteen minutes the needle was drawn out. A correspondent recommends tar smoke for a diphtheria cure. His treat ment is to put few dro of tar, like that used in ship-yards, ou a warm stove lid and to require the patient to inhale and swallow the smoke ten times a day for hve minutes each time, lie has been invariably successful in his experiments, I STATE TAXES. A Table Showing Ihe Counties th.t Have Paid Mild ( huse that Have not. From the Sa'pm so-teaman. A number '.f ti e counties of the State have been very slow in paying in their quota of Stute taxes this vear. It w ill be i seen by the subjoined table that only seven counties have paid in full, among them iMMiig Marion, uhi'-h is square on the books except an item of al out 1800, over w hicli there is a dispute, the county officials contending it is not justly due, while the State authorities hold an op posite view. Some of those credited below as having paid in full have arrear ages for taxes of other years, and this credit only covers the tax of 1888. Be sides those paying in full, nine other counties have paid part and four of these Lane, Lion, Malheur and Polk, have p aid their shute of the military and univeisity funds in foil, in addition to the amounts credited to them on the general expense fund. Thirteen counties, or' nearly half the whole number, have paid no part of their State assessment for 1888, and a portion of them are among those owing the largest amounts. 'Ihe following table shows the State tax of each county for the general expense fund for 1888, and the a noiint paid to the State treasurer up to Ihe present time: i olinlles. Bue. Tux. ..! II Mi! SI ... 12 Hull S7 ... S.li." 79 ,.. M 2!) ... 2,'iSS .15 ... 5. (17 21 .. a:i'4 ii .. i,si2 a, .. ll',:07 M .. 4,1(1' 73 .. 7.NKII si) .. II. 1 .t 51 .. 8,e 4 : .. :l.ll CI 112 .. .ri,.i;; is .. 15,1111 U.( ,. "il.IK.-t .-14 .. :i .ot 20 .. nyiw . i,M M .. IU,!' 8 71 . 1 1 m .. 17 :('4 III) .. II..V4 tl . v:yvt :i . i,an 4H ,. II.MSI It . 14,1171 34 Paid, no h ng 11,010 iii mil not lung 111 foil 4,l-'3 58 nm hlng nothing in full nothing ai nothing in mil S,li.'i3 U2 nothing S,74:l 74 13,: 01 51 Mil 04 til full - no: III i g 3 151 18 41685 not' b.g nothing nothing nothing in full lu full HeiitOM... chtckxm ts . i a sop Columbia.. . 1 'oi Crook Cany III! lillf ill Mil 111 (I runt .luck-ion los phine ... K 111 mat 1 1 ke Lane Ii nn Mulheiir tul noinnh . I Ik Tilt-tni' ok.... I'uintilla I J ti ii .- IISCO Wull wit Wa-liini; ou. Yumiiill Society nt Jug Kidge. From the nil City lerrlok. The Bowetsocks entertained very beau tifully at Ihe dance given after the barn raising Friday night, and Jug Kidge society was well represented, ll is to he regretted though, lhat Ihe Stover's Mill people, w hen 1 bey are honored and ele vated by un invitation into Jug Ridge society, cannot conduct themselves in it becoming manner. What possible ex cuse can there be for two full-grown men like Sandy ('.rimes and Walt liruyfoglo currying a polecat secreted in a rubber -iitck and lelling the animal out just as refreshments were being served ? It does seem to us that discourtesy to a host and hostest eotdd go but little beyond this, and we are asked to denounce this in our most vigorous style. This we do here and now, and impale the perpetrators on i he sharp lance of public opinion. Nothing hud oceutred up io this point to mar the pleasures of the occasion, unless it was the -regrettable dispute be tween S.un iMelvce and Israel Langfelt regarding their right lo dance with Sarah Uillingslcy. The dispute ended in a knock-down, but we must ejve ihe young men credit for repaiiing to the orehurd to enjoy their brutal fisticull's, ins'ead of having it out in the parlor, as Bob John son and Van Miller did. It was bad enouiih for twenty or tbrity young men to go to mo orchard to see tiie tight, thus breaking up the dance for a time, but that is certainly no reason why some of the young ladies should go too. We do not believe in so much pugilism at our little social allairs, and hereafter the power of the press will be brought to bear to break il up. If any of these Kilrains and Snllivans don't like this they know who the Jug Uidgo society reporter ig, and they cuu'be accommodated with a iitlle bear daAee on very snort notice. U'e trust wo are understood. We know our gait, and think we are able to main tain it. The Democratic Outlook. From the New Yoik World. The word of courage and of hone whicli The World spoke to tho Democratic party after the loss of the election iu November can be repeated with even more reason now. The Republican policy, as outlined by President Harrison, will make for Dem ocratic success in the future. The Democratic parly is riirlit in assert ing lhat un necessary taxation is unjust taxation. It is light in demanding that the surplus revenue be stopped, not soent. It is right in holding that the raxes to he Hist reduced are those which ear hardest, upon the greater number of people namely, the war taxes upon the necessaries of life. Every word of the Itepublican President, and every act of a Republican Congress which antagonizes these everlastingly right and truly Demo cratic principles w ill hasten the day of the second overthrow of Iheir party. Hie plinocratiu tendencies and monoD- olislic alliliations of ihe Itepublican party w in nieviiiii.lv weaken it with the people. The Democrats have only to be true to their piincinles. united iu action and wise in the selection of leaders to pluck a final victory out oi ine present reverse. A ISig H ater Scheme. f Some of the members of the Oaklmd fioard of Trade are nursing a Droiectf to get the cilies of Oakland, San Francisco, -an j ise, Mockton and Sacramento to co-operate in n water scheme. It is to bringdown from the mountains big supply of water by tapping the Tuolumne river, twenty-five miles from Sonera. It is estimated I hat the cost, not including the pipes, would be $10,000,000. A Maiden's Artillc?. From tVe Burlington Free Pres. Artful Amy Algernon, in parliament ary usaj-'e, what does Ihe presiding of ficer s.iy when a matter is put to vote? Unsuspecting Algernon Are you ready for the question? Artful Amy Y yes, Algernon, I think I am? The total production of all kinds of commercial coal last year was 133,515,744 tons, valued at $L0J,534,3.h;. Of this amount, Califo nia produced 8,0.)0 tons, rained at 340.00.1; Oregon produced 50, i)00 tons, valued at tfl id,00,); Washington territory produced 1,215.7.-0 tons, valued at J3.047..iO; and Idaho produced 60J iocs, valued at ?:.7J0. Six desperate men of the party which committed the torturee on the citizens of UcClellandtown, Pa., last week, are located near Maiklcysville, a mountain settlement on the southern borders of Fayette counly. They are well armed and are on guard against surprise. The Matkleysville people cannot raise a posse strong enoimb to attack them, and have asked for aid from the county seat. The Halifax express on the Inter Colonial Railway collid -d Tuesday with a freight train near Rinouski station. Four itain men were killed and two others were injured. None of the passen gers were hurt. Both engines, Ihe bag gage car, and three freight cars were wrecked. At Winslow, Arizona, Sunday, Otto Schmidt started out w ith a double-bar reled shotgun to look up his strayed cat e. While driving them home the ham- mer 'aught on a tw ig and it was dis- cbaigeAv inflicting probably fatal in- juries. -0.000,0JO f.,uanv fr carryiog tne mails. At the pv rate of increaw it will soon reach 4;',-vj,t)oo. if the present rate of compensation i-.ept up. Many applicants are i. the field for The Dalles' pos office, say .iie Timea Monntaineer, and a man mut ei ggy. eral peti'i 'n a day or lie demonina a "crabbed ol 1 ja hawker." What promises to be the largest orange grove in the world, 3J.0iJ tiees, is to be pianieu in ronoma vallev, Lat., bv a ) syndicate of Illinois and low a capitalists. Over 1000 immigrants arrive daily at the Portland liotela.