I LEXINGTON WHEATFIELD S.A. THOMAS, Publisher LEXINGTON., OREGON NEWS OFTHE WEEK In a Condensed Form for Oar Busy Readers. A Resume of the Less Important but Not Less Interesting Events of the Past Week. EVIDENCE OF MORE CRIME. The Illinois Central will Bpend f 2, 000,000 elevating its tracks in Chicago. One day recently 4,650 steerage pas sengers arrived in New York from Eu rope. There is a coal shortage in San Fran cisco and the price has been boosted $3 per ton. At its next session congress will be asked to pay for entertainments by our foreign ambassadors and ministers. It is alleged that an attempt has been made to poison one of the Twitnesses in the land fraud trials now on at Salt Lake. Tenement house residents of New York's East Side "have begun a war on buteher shops for raising the price of meat. Realty in Victoria, B. C, has in creased 25 per cent in value on the an nouncement of improvements by the Canadian Pacific. A new all-Canadian mail service re cord has been established by the trip from London to Vancouver, B. C, be ing made in 11 days. Investigation has shown that large amounts of money intended to relieve Russian famine sufferers has been pock eted by those intrusted with the funds. British Columbian Indians are in the habit of selling their girls as soon as they are ol denough to find a buyer. An effort is to be made to stop the prac tice. With the thermometer standing' near the zero mark a large number of prom inent citizens of Payette, Inaho, held up a coal tram and took two cars for their own use. Thye were prevented from taking moreb y a promis eof relief by the railroad company. Helena has voted to own her own water plant. The use of tobacco in any form is be- ing driven from the university at Lin com, JNeD. . The Canadian governoment has agreed to place a lifeboat service on the south ern portion of Vancouver island coast, tne marine graveyard. The Alabama Great Southern rail road has given an increase of 5 per cent in wages to all ita employes receiving less man ?zuu per month. No Influence Can Protect Plunderers of Coal Land. Salt Dike, Nov. 30. Powerful influ ence is being brought to bear at Wash ington to prevent threatened prosecu tions of corporations and individuals in connection with the land frauds which have been disclosed by the Interstate Commerce commission. These efforts, however, have been unavailing and the course which the government has mapped out will be pursued unfalter mgly. When the Interstate Commerce com mission resumes its hearing here today. evidence will be produced by J. 1 Marchand and E. E. Thomas to prove that the Utah Fuel company, ever since its organization six or seven years ago has received rebates from the Denver & Rio Grande and Rio Grande Western systems. It is expected to prove this by William O. Williams, auditor for the Utah Fuel company, and it will be shown, it is said, that by means of these rebates the fuel company, and also the Pleasant Valley Coal company, were better able to maintain the mono' poly, which they are charged with hav ing, of the coal business in Utah. It is alleged that both of these coal com panies enjoyed a blanket rate of cent a mile per ton on all of the commodi ties which the railroad company men tioned transported for them. These preferential rates were enjoyed upon both state and interstate trallic. FIVE ARE INDICTED Union Pacific Railroad, Coal Com pany and Officials. BRING GRAFTERS TO JUSTICE. In thel nterstate Commere hearing at Salt Lake a witness declared the Unon Pacifier ailroad prevented opposition from acquiring coal lands by the use of aynamite. Dr. D. P. Barrows, director of educa tion in the Philippines, says the is lands are in good condition generally speaking. There is no market for sugar ana tobacco. The Japanese governmentis said to understand the recent school situation in San Francisco. While she may punish the Bay City a bit, nothing more win come of the aftair. An international committee has been appointed in China to secure relief for the hungry. An appeal will be made to Europe and America. Ten thousand people are on the point of starvation. Booker T. Washington, leader of the colored race, says Andrew Carnegie wears shoes made in a ngreo industrial school. . The United States governmnet has been asked to furnish protection to the leader of the street car strike now on at Hamiltton, Ont. The president, vice president and counsel of the Mutual Reserve Life In surance company are on trial in New . l ork on a charge of grand larceny. TTTl- i I 1. 1 1 wane noming up passengers on a Chicago & Alton passneger train near Kansas City a bold robber was captured by the conductor and later turned over txyhe police. Advices have just been received of a disastrous tidal wave which followed an earthquake at German New Guinea. Many natives were drowned and the property loss is enormous. Mrs. Stilwell, head of the Salvation Army rescue work in Chicago, boileves the beta way to cure vice in that city would be to take pictrues of the fre quenters of notorious places and publish them in the newspapers. The American Insurance company lias been barred from doing further bus iness in Massachusetts and the justice of the State Supreme court says con- pan ies must show that they can protect Stolypin Starts Vigorous Inquiry Into Famine Fund Scandal. St. Petersburg, Nov. 30. Prompt steps have been taken by Premier Stolypin to deal with the famine relief contract scandal in which Lidval and M. Gurko, assistant minister of the In terior, are involved. The premier has called a special meeting of the council of ministers for tomorrow to discuss the affair. M.-Gurko has resigned. When he presented his resignation, the premier told him he should not quit office, but that, for his own sake at least, he must face the court. The premier is expected to appoint an inter-ministerial commission com. posed of assistant ministers to investi- gate the case. He will then bring it before the first department of the sen ate in public session. Orders have been given to collect evidence and cross examine all persons connected with the affair, and General Fredericks, gover nor of Nizhni Novgorod, lias been sum. moned to St. Petersburg to answer to the charge of standing sponsor for Lid val. A certain Sotskich, an assistant of Lidval in buying grain in the pn vinces, also has been summoned by the minister of the Interior, but has failed to answer and is thought to be in hid. ing. GREAT FIND OF EXPLORERS. Fragments of Gospel and Many Other Ancient Writings. Chicago, Nov. 30. A cable dispatch to the Tribune from London says: It now is possible to give further details of the remarkable find of papyri as a result of the efforts of Drs. Grenfell and Hunt, of the Greco-Roman branch of the Egypt Exploration Fund at Oxy- rnynchus. I he hud consists of no few er than 130 boxes of papyri, ranging in date from the second century. B. C. to the sixth century, A. D. They com. prise all classes of literature, many fragments of the lost or even unknown classical works, and some most import ant fragments unknown to Christian literature. The most important find is a vellum leaf containing 45 lines of gospel which has a variation from the authorized version. The subject is the visit of Jesus and his disciples to the temple of Jerusalem and their meeting there with the I'harisee, who rebukes them for their failure to perform the necessary ceremonial of purification. In the dia logue which follows, which resembles in some respects Matthew xxiii:25, the Pharisee describes with considerable fullness and detail the formalities he has observed, whereupon Jesus delivers an eloquent, crushing reply, contrast ing outward with inward purity. SENATOR'S BROTHER IS IMMUNE Government Charges That Men Were Hired To File On Land for Railroad Company. 1 Salt Lake City, Utah, Dec. 1. It is understood that the Federal grand jury now hearing testimony concerning the gigantic grab of coal and timber land by railroads and coal companies, has voted to return indictments against the Union Pacific Railroad company, the Oregon Short Line, the Union Pacific Coal company, and two officials of these companies will be included when the indictments are returned. It is said the bills would have been "reported out oeiore now, but the government offi cials are waiting to hear additional evidence at Pueblo and Denver next week. The indictments will charge the de fendants with fraud in obtaining gov ernment land by subornation of perjury in Hiring persons to swear that they were making entry upon the land for their own personal use. and then turn ing them over to the companies. A brother of a United States senator. who, it is said, was implicated in these dealings, was unwittingly permitted to testify, thereby securing an immunity bath. CONTROL OF RAILROADS. COAL TRAIN HELD UP. Mob of Law-Abiding Citizens Take Measures to Relieve Famine. Ontario, Or., Nov. 28. The coal famine was temporarily relieved here by a mob of about 250 men, among thm some of the best citizens and bus iness men of the tov n, who held up a west bound freight train on the Oregon Short Line, containing 35 acrs of Rock Spr ngs coal consigned to the O. R. & N., and demanding that four cars be sidetracked. The train was a throng! train and was flagged by members of the hold-up party. The officials of the company were notified by wire that the train could not leave until the request was complied with. They in turn telegraphed the train crew and station agent to consign four of the cars to J. H. Parley, a local coal dealer. The four cars were sidetracekd at Farlve's coal bunkers and the train proceeded to MUCH LAND STOLEN Government Grip Tlnlitens on Plunderer's of Domain. MANY HIGH OFFICIALS INVOLVED Machinery of Law At Work Against Men Who Ruled Land Office To Rob Nation. Salt Lake, Nov. 29. The grip of the government and of justice is tightening Payette, Idaho, the next station, whore Vy, llab(),!t ho orK,imi!tl1 " which, Issue Raised in Oklahoma Conven tionState Rights Revived. Guthrie, Okla., Dec. 1. The actual formation of a constitution for Okla homa was inaugurated this afternoon when propositions were introduced in the constitutional convention of two planks providing respectively for rail way regulation and separate coaches for whites and -negroes. The railway regulation bill, intro duced bj Delegate Clint Graham, is summarized a follows: Railroad, ex press, sleeping car and oil pipe line companies shall be declared common carriers; to provide for stock inspec tion; to prevent consolidation and pro hibiting free passes. Ihe "Jim Crow", resolution was offered by Judge Ledbetter, of Ard more, I. T. Both propositions were re ferred to the committee on railroads. A feature of this morning's session was the address of Delegate Ledbetter. who opposed the adoption of a resolu tion recognizing the Federal constitu tion as paramount to that of the state of Oklahoma. Mr. Ledbetter reiterat ed his view that state sovereignity should be strictly Observed. BONDS BY THE TON. it is reported a similar hold-uo occurred. I here was not a ton of coal in town at the time the hold-up occurred here. The train was stopped at Nyssa, Ore., 15 miles east of here, the previous evening and two cars were taken from the train. There had not been a car of coal shipped to Nyssa since last May Ihe mobs at each town were orderly ami wen behaved, but determined SUGAR TRUST FINED. Rebates Received From New. York Central Prove Expensive. .New ork, Nov. 28. The American Sugar Refining company was fined $18,- 000 today for accepting rebates from the New York Central. The railroad was fined the same amount last week for giving rebates to the company. i he claims for a rebate of 5 cents a it is alleged, have for years, with the connivance of the Land department, robbed the public domain of coal, min eral and timber land valuod at many millions of dollars. In the end, it is- stated, every member of these gangs, whether he be a plain citizen of the United States or occupies high official position, will be made to answer in the criminal courts for his complicity in the most gigantic frauds said ever to have been perpetrated on the United Mates government. Every agency of the government, in cluding the Interstate Commerce com mission, the socM service, the Federal grand jury and 'the court of equity, has been set in motion to accomplish the end desired. While the Interstate Commerce commission is taking testi mony here tending to show that the Rio Grande railroad and its allied com panies, the Utah Fuel company and the l-ieasant Valley Coal company, have a view to guilty ones into' hundred pounds on all sugar shipments boing fra d X nVans all to Detroit were made out in the office f tua i :.. of LmvelM ..Palmer, traflic rnnager of and imiHft ucntl buil(i the trust. They were sent to the Buff a b lfmnnnlv in nfta i r i T , i. T-'Li. ,. . monopoly in this line, the federal EthvhT "T OI d J7.k awaiting the out- T:.i ' " ;r v.. r: come 01 tne hearing with cashier of the Buffalo office would go to & net. me iMiiiK oi isunaio and buy a draft on Tim nnfnl.iti,.. r.f i YorkhTS1di0nidlbank ? iork. This draft, which on its face tow....:.... tu... ' ,' . bore no mark of the railway corporation '7C "XL1 V,.,."-" "A rm or any of its officials, was mailed to 2 Palmer, who deposited it to the credit w;' V ' ZT !' ,.".,""" of one of the sugar trust accounts. ft" Z 'Z "TT.l' , .u viuoiu i 11 o nni lrii. im timber land as in mineral land. That such enormous frauds, 'extend ing through a long period of vears. could not hae been perpetrated with out the complicity of the Land depart ment is said to be a patent fact. During the hearing here vesterdav a. glimpse of the real power behind the throne was given when it was stated by- government land agents that they had! been compelled to see Senator Francis; E. Warren regarding official business of the Land department. Senator War ren is charged with huvinir ruled tho, land office for a number of vears. It, was his influence and that of Senator uark which secured the appointment. THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. Will Pan- before they will be allowed to continue writing policies. Send Colony to Africa. London, Nov. 30. A report was cur rent in this city today that the South Africa company has offered the Salva tion Army 1,000,000 acres of land in Rhodesia for colonization purposes, with the stipulation, however, that in the event of the colonizing scheme proving a failure, the land should re vert to the company. General Booth said tonight that the plan had been prematurely disclosed, lie declined to commit himself to any statement of details, because he said the plan might still fall through. Czar Fixes Twelve-Hour Day. er,. rerersimrg, iov. 3u. The em peror has approved the resolution in troduced by the council of ministers fixing 12 hours as a working day, in cluding two hours for meals, in all in dustrial and other circles. This law will become operative six weeks after its promulgation. Frenchmen Purchase Securities of the Pennsylvania Railroad. New York, Dec. 1. Fifty million dollars in bonds was unloaded at the French line pier yesterday and at once put aboard the La Provence, of the French line, for shipment to Pairs. The bonds filled 140 mud-splashed boxes and furnished loads for 12 trucks. The shipment consisted of Pennsyl vania railroad bonds covering a loan to the railroad taken by Paris investors. A special express train bearing the bonds left that city at fl o'clock and arrived in Jersey City at 10:50. i mi leen special service men acted as guard. In all there were 400,000 bonds of 5,000 francs denommination and 230,000 of 2,500 francs denomination. ihe issue required for execution 1,200 000 signatures and the affixing of 1,- wlbO.OOO seals, 10 specially appointed secretaries having continually signed tneir names each day for two months If the total number of sheets in this is sue were laid lengthwise in one contin. uous line they would reach 296 miles. The bonds weighed 14 tons. - --o Crusoe's Island Lives. Mexico City. Dec. 1. Eugene Metz. Chilean consul to Mexico City, received an official notice from his government last night to the effect that the report circulated last August, at the time of the disastrous earthuuake. saving that Juan Fernandez island had sunk into the ocean, was untrue. The doctor said that the report of the disappearance of the island was at first credited every where. A short time ntro. howevpr. warships were sent out by the Chilean government, and the island and its in habitants were found uninjured. Will Not Pay American Claims. Tangier, Dec. 1. The American minister, Mr. Gummere, is said to have left, Fez, the capital, without ob taining satisfact ion from the sultan in regard to the claims for indemnity made by citizens of the United States for alleged outrages, or assurances re garding the safety of American citizens resident in Morocco. Touch Every Phase of the ama Canal Question. Washington, Nov. 28. President Roosevelt, bronzed and invigorated in heatlth from his long sea trip to Pan ama and Porto Rico, was in his office early today. Secretary Loeb took to him a large amount of correspondence, which had accumulated sinec the presi dent's departure, and was with him until the time of the cabinet meeting. at 11 o clock. j. ne presiuent s special message on the Panama canal, it is now said, will during President Mck'inWu o,im;iu! i 1. i u i i , .. . j ....... wi. .O- uc Bern, uj uuiigress prooaoiy aDout a tration, of Willis Vandevanter to-be- week after it convenes on Monday. It assistant attorney general for the Inter im ueai wun every pnase oi tne ques- lor department. Vandevanter was the won ana give a graphic and detailed de- legal conscience of the Land depart- seripuon oi conditions on the isthmus ment. and Vandevanter had been at- as tne president lound them. 1 here torney for the companies charged with win be recommendations for the better- stealing the land. It was Warren who- ment oi conditions, which themselves during his visit. DOUBLE-DECK BRIDGE. Disgraceful Scenes at Rush Call for Relief. New York, Nov. 28. The daily crush of the .Brooklyn bridge is receiv ing the earnest attention of Mayor Mc- Clellan and other city officials. At a conference yesterday important plans for temporary and permanent relief were discussed. Longer trains and in creased headway, it is expected, will bring temporary relief. Plans for permanent relief include an almost entire rebuilding of the bridge. Double decking will probably be resorted to in order to make room for additional lines of railroad tracks. The engineers have informed the may or that the stress on the anchor bars is only a third of their capacity and that the double decking of the structure is entirely feasible. This form of re lief, however, will be a matter of years. Irrigate Their Stock. Indianapolis, Nov. 28. The "water ing" of railroad stocks or over capitali zation by .the large transportation lines is commented upon by the State Rail road commission in its first report which will be made to the governor of Indi ana in the next few days. The report is the first the commission will have filed since its creation by the last gen eral assembly two years ago. The re port shows that 43 roads reporting to the commission state the value of the road and equipment, and give the value of each per mile. Keeping Up Its Record Wilburton, I. T., Nov. 28. With a record of 19 horrible deaths during the past year, the Degnan & McConnell mine No, 19 at Wilburton blew up with frightful force last evening. Six men in the shaft miraculously escaped. It cannot yet be determined whether any lives were lost. suggested made Congressman Frank 'W. Modell assistant land commissioner, who later put Binger Nermann in the position of commissioner, and who succeeded him by present Commissioner Richards. It. is Warren, it is claimed, who still con- Hours trols the land offices from Nebraska and the Dakotas to California and Alaska CALL FOR OIL TRUST PAPERS. Texas Wants to Know All About Its. Dealings With Bailey. Austin, Tex., Nov. 29. Attorney- General R. G. Davidson and counsel associated witli him in the prosecution of the suit of the state to oust the Waters-Pierce Oil company from Texas. yesterday served on former Attorney General George Clark, one of the at torneys for the oil company and filed with the clerk of the court a demand for the production of the books, records, vouchers, etc., of the oil comtmnv. showing agreements with other , com panies, correspondeace between the at torneys of the oil company and J. W- imney, and purporting to show pay ments of money by II. C. Pierce and said oil companies on divers dates. Copies of all letters passing between J. D. Johnson and George Clark, coun sel for the oil company, or written W them to J. W. Bailey and to narf ies in New York during 1900 relating to tW settlement of the cases nendinir in Waco, Tex., against said oilcoini-mnies. letters written by or to said parties are called for. The other matters called for are copies of the original trust agreements, agreements with the Eagle Refining company and the Texas Oil and Gasoline compay, agreement as to the division of territory and agreement with Attorney General Iladley of Mis souri as to ownership of Waters-Pierce stock by the Standard Oil company. Plans for New Sugar Trust. New Orleans, Nov. 29. Plans to form a $28,000,000 merger of Louisiana suagr plantations and sugar houses are announced by a committee in charge of the project.