The Hooli River J VOL. 3ood Iiver (5 lacier. PUBLISHKD EVERT SATURDAY MORNINO BT The Glacier Publishing Company. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. One year..., 92 00 fcfix months , 1 Of Three months.. , 60 SdkIc copy ( Cent THE GLACIER BarberShop Grant Evans, Propr. Second St., near Oak. , Hood River, Or. Sliaving and Hair-cutting neatly done. Satisfaction Guaranteed. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE Judge Shattuck Opposed to the Chinese Exclusion Act. AN APPOINTMENT BY GOV. MARKHAM. British Seal Poachers Threaten to Sail Under the German and Other Flags Other Kews. A large colony of Japanese propose to emigrate to Sonora, Mexico, locate along the Yaqui river and cultivate silk, tea and rice. Chinese are getting into San Diego from Mexico with but little trouble. Eighteen were smuggled in at one time a few days ago. There is a protest against the manner in which the voting booths are being constructed at Los Angeles. It is claimed they will permit of fraud. Charles Taylor, the man who . Xached" 0n Frank Henton, his pal, in --the robbing of the Boise City postuflice, now Bays his story waa false, but that ' ' statement is not credited. """i'he Chinese of Portland are exercised over the death of one of their country men while in the jail. They claim the police used undue violence, and are de termined to have the case thoroughly investigated. -: The Palm Valley Water Company in ' San Diego county, Cal., has ordered In dian Agent Rust to reopen the ditch which he recently closed. The Indians are overjoyed at their ditch being given back to. them. The State Supreme Court of Idaho has held valid what is called the high-iicense law in Idaho. The court sustains the law at every point. The measure pro- vides that the license shall vary in towns of different population. The seal poachers of British Columbia threaten to sail under German and other flags and look toother governments than Great Britain for protection. Many of the sealers have invested all their money in these piratical ventures, and are now bemoaning the probable loss of their in vestments. Astoria's railroad excitement has taken to that city a gang of burglars, who are frightening lone women in their houses in the early part of the evening. A number of petty thefts are reported, but no large "haul" has yet been made. Judge Catlin at Sacramento has de- ' cided that the election to provide a spe cial tax to pay special policemen was illegal and the tax not collectable, owing to a fatal feature in the tickets voted, which had the affirmative printed on them and not the negative, the law re quiring both, so that the voter could scratch the one he did not wish to in dorse. . , Chances are favorable for the estab lishment of the proposed telephone line from Pendleton to Long Creek and Can non City, and it is probable that work will begin very soon. As soon as roads are easily passible W. D. Fletcher, man ager of the Pendleton Exchange, and . others interested will go over the route and perfect arrangements. The building of the line will be a great advantage to Pendleton and to places all along the route. ' Hopmen of Lane county. Or., report that up to within a couple of weeks ago hops made a rapid and hardy growth, but the past two weeks ago they have grown very slowly, owing to the damp, cold weather. They expect them to come out all right, however, and the prospects at present are that hops will command a good price next fall. They are now quoted as being worth 35 cents. Most hop raisers believe that the hop s lice are going to be numerous this sum mer, and many of them are already pre paring to do a large amount of spraying. Judge Shattuck refused a writ of ha beas corpus in the case of thirteen Chi- nese, who came to Portland on the steamer Batavia and were denied land ing by the Federal authorities. Judge Shatt uck gave his decision in accordance with Uniied States law, and then pro ceeded to declare the law, excluding the Chinese obnoxious and iniquitous. "We must alter our attitude toward the Chi nese," said he. "or war will be the re sult. China is' getting to be a ve-3 wealthy and powerful nation, as the French found after a vain struggle of three or four years to get possession of a little piece of her." HOOD CONGRESSIONAL MATTERS. Bill Designed to Remedy Defee's in the Workings of the Interstate Commerce Law. The Treasury Department has decided that customs officers are not authorized to permit the original entry of Chinese persons on the submission of naturaliza tion papers issued by another govern ment. ' The United States Court of Claims has rendered a judgment under the Hermann bill of last Congress in favor of Ezekiel Bailey. of Douglas county, Or., for $2,650 for property destroyed in the Oregon In dian wars. T-The annual fortifications bill has been practically agreed on by the fortifications subcommittee of the House Committee on Appropriations. A cut amounting to more than so per cent, has been made from toe bill of last year. The Senate has adopted the resolution ottered by Stewart several weeks ago, calling upon the Secretary of the Treas ury for information as to the purchase ot silver bullion and the coinage of sil ver under the act of 1890. Bland has introduced a resolution in the House instructing the Committee on Ways and Means to report a bill impos ing an income tax sufficient to meet the expenditures for pensions ; also a bill to repeal all taxes imposed upon currency issued by authority ot ttie States. The House Committee on Agriculture has decided to report a bill providing for agricultural colleges for experiments in silk culture. Representative Caminetti says one of them will go to California under the bill's provisions. It will be under the supervision of the University of California: Senator Allen has submitted to the Indian Committee what he thinks is about the fair thing for a report on the Puyaliup Indian reservation; but, as before stated, the committee does not take the same view of the situation as the Washington delegation, and is liable to make a different report. After having considered the question of constitutionality for a long time the House Judiciary Committee has decided to report a resolution directing an inves tigation to be made into the Pinkerton system. The committee came to the conclusion because of the alleged use of Pinkerton men by interstate commerce carriers and also because it was alleged their employment resulted in violence to persons and property. Secretary Blaine appeared the other day before the Senate Committee on Commerce and made a strong argument opposing the pending resolution author izing the landing of the French cable on the shores of Virginia and South Caro lina. His objection was because the French Cable Company, ' co-operating with the Brazilian government, had an absolute monopoly of the cable privi leges between the United States and Brazil, and if the resolutions passed, the negotiations looking to the procurement of "a concession to the American Cable Company would come to naught. The Secretary appeared to be in excellent health, and made his argument with spirit and emphasis. Senator Squire says he is not sure that he will be able to secure the passnge of the biil for the gun factory on the Pacific Coast, and he is now looking with some favor upon the proposition from the War Department, which suggests that the Pacific Coast Bhould, pending legisla tion on this latter, accept about fifty mortars, to be situated at important points for the protection of the river and harbor property. Even if the bill should pass for a government factory, it could not be built and turn out guns until at least two years. During that time it is. thought by some of the War Department officials that it would be well to send the mortars to the coast. ' Mr. Mason, Commissioner of the In ternal Revenue, said the other day that the recent decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of George R. Eaton is liable to be misunderstood by persons not familiar with the facte. That particular case, he explained, arose under the original oleomargarine act, which did not prescribe a penalty in case wholesale dealers failed to report to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue The law, however, was subsequently amended to cover this omission. It Bhould be understood therefore it is no longer a mere department regulation, but a provision of the law. John Joy Edson, Chairman of the Citizens' Committee of the Twenty sixth National Encampment of the Grand Army, to be. held at Washington in September, has written a letter to Commander-in-Chief Palmer, stating the committee has asked Congress to appro priate $100,000 from the funds of the District of Columbia to assist in paying the expenses of the encampment, and that in consequence of the erroneous belief tha t the appropriation was asked from the fund of the general govern ment, members of the Grand Army sent protests to Congress against the appro priation. Edson saya the misapprehen sion is embarrassing to the committee, and asks the appropriation may be re quested so far as possible. Economist Holman is determined to make a very strong fight against the river and harbor bill when it cornea up in the House. He thinks he will have strength enough to defeat it. Chairman Blanchard, however, says he sees no reason why it should not pass. , The Senate Committee on Commerce is going ahead with the consideration of the bill and the amendments which that com mittee proposes to make to it when the bill comes over. They have gone about half way through the bill, but have not yet touched the Pacific Coast improve ments either on rivers or harbors. There Is no doubt Senator Dolph will secure some amendments for increases in Ore gon, and the present action which Sena tor Squire made for Washington will se cure lome inereeiei for that Stale. , RIVER, ORE$, ROClf BEYOND THE Product of Silver From American Mines Last Year. FARMERS OF 10WA ARE ALARMED. The Women of Chicago Take an Interest In Clean Street Cars and Clean ., . StreetsEtc . The teachers at Fort Dodge, la., are on a strike for higher salaries. Wool rates have been reduced from 814 cents to 57 cents, Mississippi river to Boston. Farmers of Iowa are alarmed over the unfavorable season, which is delaying all planting. It is thought that a fair crop can yet be made throughout the flooded districts of Mississippi. A great deal of valuable land is being washed down the Missouri river above Atchison, Kan. . It is estimated that about 30,000 horses were ousted from the street-car service last year by electricity. The jury in the case of the Ulster County (N. Y.) Savings Bank wrecker, Matthew J. Trump, has failed to agree. San Antonio citizens have organized a force to assist the police in patrolling the city and stamping out the rampant hrebugs. The cost for carrying out the Behring Sea arbitration treaty with Great Brit ain is estimated by Secretary Blaine at $150,000. ' The women of Chicago have taken an interest in clean street cars and clean streets, and the improvement is marked evervwhere. . 1 . The Standard Oil Company is said to be trying to form a natural-gas trust. The object is to prevent waste and get more money. President Harrison has designs upon purchasing the old Harrison homestead, which is part of the Berkeley estate on the James river. The Thomas-Houston Company is building at its shops in Lynn an electric locomotive, which is designed to develop 500-horse power. Charlie Wing, the Japanese leper, who for over two months has been an inmate of the Philadelphia Municipal Hospital, is said to be recovering. At Topeka, Kan., indictments against several Union Pacific railway officials are looked for on charge of violating the interstate-commerce law. Dr. Julius Goebel of New York city has been appointed associate professor of . German literature in the Leland Stanford (Jr.) University. Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton will not live in Hiurope. She will live with her mother, and will return to New York to take her old place in society. . Mr. Dray ton will reside abroad. The farmers of the United States sent abroad in March of this year breadstuffs valued at , $28,000,000, whereas, the amount of such exports in March of last year was only $12,000,000. Senator Teller says there is no founda tion for the report that the silver men would form a new party. A league to promote silver interests is to be organ ized, but not as a political party. Mrs. Porter Stocks has filed a petition for divorce from her husband, a nephew of the noted revivalist, Sam P. Jones. They have been married for some years. Cruelty is alleged. Clark of Wyoming has introduced in the House a bill to extend the right of franchise to every woman in the country over 21 years of age to vote for Repre sentatives in Congress. The connection between the two sec tions of the intermediate spans of the great bridge at Memphis has been finally made, and the completion of the struct ure will be a matter of a very short time. Charles E. Stone, land commissioner of the Louisville and Nashville railroad, a club man and society leader, is under arrest at Birmingham, Ala., for embez zling $10,000. . He is said to have gam bled heavily. The Mississippi river is still rising rapidly, and there is every indication that it will pass the high-water mark of last year. It has been raining most of the time the past week, and at some points the levees are caving. E. O. Leech, Director of the Mint at Washington, states that the product of silver from American mines last year was 58,330,000 ounces of the commercial value of $57,630,040, or a coinage value in silver dollarB of $75,416,565. Another imposing structure will soon rise beside the divinity building of the Catholic University of America at Wash ington on the grounds of that institu tion. Cardinal Gibbon laid the corner stone recently with impressive ceremo nies. General Fpster, who assisted in the Brazil reciprocity treaty says the United States never promised not to make a similar agreement with any European country. Reports that such an agree ment was reached have been circulated by enemies of the Brazilian government for political purposes. The Lower House of the New York Legislature has passed a woman's suf frage bill, which will be defeated in the Senate. Last year the Senate passed it, and the Assembly defeated it. This game of passing the measure in one branch ana then defeating it in the other hat been played again and again. SATURDAY. MAY 14, THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Belgim will Make an Extensive Ex hibit Including Over 400 , -Works of Art. Victoria- Austrak. has made a World's Fair appi?Pr.latlon of 100,000. The bulle:""8 "B"'' by the Chicago World's Fair Commission contain no 4.: t aWH. In the governm?"" appear all the relics, whic!1.are obtalauMe, of various Arctic explores Arguments for and aai.n,8tv 8uKnda opening of the exposition n.bet bearfld by the national convention0 October 6. Great Britain has added as?!000,10 World's Fair appropriation, mal;J?n " now JE60,000, or approximately $i;uuu- The number of intending exhibit0'8 announced from Pennsylvania up to d? is 350, of whom 250 are PhiladelphianV J Applications tor space in the exposi tion buildings now aggregate rrore than 4,000,000 square feet, a little over one third being from foreign applicants. An Esquimaux village inhabited by from fifty to seventy-five natives of the frozen region will be one of the sights on Midway Plaisance at the exposition. It is reported that a number of Indians from the Peruvian forests and a large collection of native Peruvian paintings will be included in the exhibit which Peru will make. In the California building will be shown a growing specimen of every Cal ifornia domestic flower obtainable and also paintings in water and oil of 600 wild flowers and grasses. A concession has been granted for the construction on Midway Plaisance of a $60,000 natatoriuin, which will include besides a large swimming pool, bath rooms, a cafe and flower and cigar stands. H. W. Young' of Augusta, 111., has a Bible printed in 1615, the ownership of which in this country he has traced back to 1660. He believes it waa brought over in the Mayflower in 1620, and he wants to exhibit it at the exposition. A young lad, son of the editor of the Florida Standard, is making for exhibi tion at the fair a table, upon which ap pears an inlaid map of the State, each county being accurately represented by a separate piece of native Florida wood. In Georgia exceptionally strong efforte are being made to make its State Fair this year as complete and representative as possible, for it had been decided to send the best of the exhibits to Chicago and place them on view in the Georgia building at the exposition. The women members of the North Carolina World's Fair Board have under taken to raise $10,000 to be devoted to the erection of a State building at the exposition. They will hold meetings at numerous points throughout the State and receive subscriptions. The Pall Mall Gazelle states that the exhibit of the pottery industry of the Midlands will form perhaps the most important and interesting part of the British section at the exposition. Nearly all of the great pottery firms have ap plied each for a liberal allotment of space. Word has been received at exposition headquarters that Belgium will make an extensive exhibit, including over 400 works of art, embracing both paintings and statuary, a varied assortment of manufactured articles, arms and mu sical instruments. . A special Belgian Commissioner to the fair is expected to arrive in Chicago Boon. ' During October of this year a fair will be held in San FranciBco under the joint auspices of the World's Fair Commis sion and the Mechanics' Institute. Ex hibits, classified by counties, will be shown from every portion of the State, and special efforts are being made to have them of the most complete and representative character. This fair is in part preparation for California's exhibit at the World's Fair, for it is officially an nounced that the State's exhibit will be made up largely of the best articles shown at San Francisco. A unique exhibit from Pennsylvania will be a map of the United States. 18x 24 feet, made entirely of pickles, vege tables, fruit, etc. , preserved by the com pany which makes the exhibit. The State lines will be accurately shown, and the lakes and rivers will be represented by vinegar. The larger cities will be in dicated by spices. The whole will be covered wun a single piece oi piate glass, which is beirg specially made for the purpose. The expense of this interest ing exhibit of the pickling and preserv ing industry will be $15,000. PURELY PERSONAL. An American Cantatrice Achieves Grand Sucoess on Her Debut at Nice, Franca Secretary Elkins' country house in West Virginia is kept open all the year round, his father and a staff of excellent servants occupying the place in the ab sence of the Secretary. O. O. Whitman, professor of zooloav in Clark University, Dorchester, Mass., has accepted a can to tne head professor ship in the department of biology in the IT- ; IA university oi unicago.. Rev. Father John Slatterly has with drawn from the Josephites, and will form a new order to carry on the Catholic work among the colored people under the di rection of Cardinal Gibbons. Miss Jeanne Lawrence, the well-known American cantatrice, a pupil of M. Crit- icos, achieved a grand success on the oc casion of her recent debut at Nice in the part of Gildain "Rigoletto." ' Ex-Senator William M. Evarts is near ly blind, and while able to distinguish light from darkness and to write a little is not allowed to read, and feeli con strained to avoid public aisemblagei. 1892. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS! The Mascaret This Year Reported the Greatest on Record. " GAMBLING IS RAMPANT IN SPAIN. Elections in Victoria, Australia, Result Complete Victory for the Government. X in a hid.6 mUitia EnS,and ia to 09 mobil V It is said that tbe-, Hn p iM were nver so crowded as at Kre8ent. T. Saltan of Turkey iu. annoye4 at the chPonlaUc victory of i,ngljnd in A Germ2n Centrist leader decla, th defeat of th education bill due to sh ing free thinfc" The Jamaica 1 1- . nu: ri : v : the grant for thy Chicago Exhibition from $10,000 to 25x " )0. Emin Pasha has renfquered province in equatorial A. V??' an rebel officers who shdw flu'' The Archbishop of Cantei"bury Practi; cally has declared himself iiavor ot opening museums on Sundays. . The government methods of Rv381?,?" izing colonists ia likely to lead toN, wholesale emigration of Germans. VV The yellow fever has extended into" the interior towns of Brazil, and many small places have been abandoned. King Humbert has intimated his read iness to accept, a reduction of 1,000,000 lire (about $200,000) in the civil list. Herr Jaeger, chief cashier of the great house of the RothschildB at Frankfort, is a defaulter for over 1,000,000 marks. The Polytechnic Wheelmen's Club of England has altered the distance of its road championship from 5J to 100 miles. It is reported that the White Star line is going to build two immense twin-screw passenger steamships of 14,000 tons each. Sixty torpedo boats will join the Ital ian reserve squadron during the forth coming experiments in naval mobiliza tion. ''.'.' British copper magnates have declined to accept a proposal by American mine owners for a 15 percent. reduction in OUtput8. " It is proposed to unite all of the Isl ands of Japan by a system of submarine telegraph cables at an estimated cost of $2,000,000. , Mercier, the Canadian ex-Premier, has been placed under arrest to answer the charge of conspiracy to defraud the government. The elections in Victoria. Australia. have resulted in a complete victory for the government, which will have a ma jority of 2 to 1. ' 1 . M. Nakamura, a member of the Jap anese Parliament, has been sentenced to six monthB' imprisonment at hard labor for libeling the Cabinet in his speeches. The government troops of Venezuela are reported to have been routed by the insurgents under General Mora near Pu erto Caballo. The news is of a conflict ing character. Preparations for the proper observ ance of the 400th anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus are going forward in Madrid under the aus pices ot the (jueen Regent. News from Venezuela shows successes of the rebels under Crespo, who is mov ing slowly on Caracas. Palacio is aware of his perils, and will, if closely pushed, take flight from the Republic. The King of Dahomey has written the government of Porto Novo, warning the trench that, n they touch his towns, he will destroy Porto Novo and all the French ports in sight of the Bight of Benin. Negotiations are taking place between Switzerland and Italy for the modifica tion of the frontier of the canton of Ti- cinO with the view of preventing the dif ficulties arising from smugglers. The recently published story about fighting in Uganda, East Africa, between the Protestant natives and Catholic con verts led by King Mwanga is confirmed. The casualties are said to be heavy. The great equinoctial tide called the mascaret, which drives a solid wall of water up the Seine, and which is one of the great seaside spectacles of France, was this year the greatest on record. Rains have flooded the cities of San Paulo and Santos, Brazil, and caused much damage. In Santos thirty or forty persons are said to have perished, and the damage to property is estimated to be over $1,500,000. The estimate of revenues of the Brit ish government for the current year is $450,000,000. These revenues . come chiefly from tariff duties, which prove England's claim to the title ot free-trade country a misnomer. . Two Portuguese travelers, Messrs. Car- mago and Elbo, with a small retinue, have recently brought a large force of slave hunters to grief near the north end of Lake Tangayika, who had raided a village and had carried off some 1,500 of the people. The release of the pris oners was effected. Gambling is so ooenlv carried on in Madrid and all the towns of Spain de spite existing legislation prohibiting games of hazard that the Minister of Justice has published in the Madrid Gazelle a circular, which he has sent to all judicial authorities, instructing them to be exceedingly itsriet in putting a stop A Utl . 1 NO. 50. PRINTING BY TELEGRAPH. Messages Transferred to Paper fromth Wires at Any Distance. . The printing telegraph, though a de vice of comparatively recent develop ment, has been the subject of ceaseless investigation, and practical workers in electricity have directed their whole attention, in some instances, to the . transmission of messages and the re cording of them in plain Roman char acters. A very complimentary notice to a new system has recently appeared in various electrical papers as the most perfect and seemingly only practical system known. - Its advantages are simply those of an electrical typewriterj by means of which the message is printed in the presence of the transmitting operator in page form, and a duplicate of the same printed at all the receiving stations on the line, whether it be a long or short circuit. The benefit of such an appa ratus to the press at large can be readi ly seen, especially for the distribution oi current news m tne various news paper offices. A single transmission prints it simultaneously, in page form, ready for the compositor's case in all the newspaper offices of many cities. It is said to differ materiaUy from out. .,,:..,... ,e:j.U. impulses uove the instruments, where? In other syoi . . . ' .ove . , viua wus instruments jr the impulses A. . trans- mitter of the W . t0 by a separate poweVf combination of electrical impulses iJ currents is em ployed. An even succe'"''011 of dots or impulses, which operate tuo polarized relay armature at the receiving X, station, Maces the revolving type wheel sh the Quired position, when the local mtph- C1-V. .... 1, !(-- 1 fim'flir wluncn iiie iciiwri tu ux3 pi illicit. mLDOarent impossibility of. trans mitting fk?" -K"- or 1-000 miles over aXf ' onoe presents itself to the m.,nd- a,ll "L18, overcome in this system, t is -as8erted; ln a vf 7 8ml- ple way. Each lter of . the abet is represented by a?fta'n numbe' f impulses, which revoIVtnttype t1 . to the required positionVhen he letr' ; ters are struck by the loca."13'11?- fhe en ' Fourteen impulses represt tire alphabet, making a compU '70 lution of the type wheel, whicl. be turned 200 revolutions per minv thus securing very rapid printing. ' i v advantage also" is that of " absolute se crecy as a means of communication. The advantage of the printing telegraph for the transmission of news to news- , paper offices is unquestionably a sub ject commanding attention on the part of progressive proprietors. Paper and Press. Misapplied Benevolence. A short time ago a "distinguished citizen" of a neighboring state cele- brated the fiftieth anniversary of his . wedding day, and received on that . occasion, in the shape of presents from admiring friends, property to 1 the amount of $19,000. At least that is the sum at which he estimated the . value of his presents, and the figure which he gave to the reporters. The gentleman referred to Is not in im poverished circumstances, nor in any need from public or private charity, and possibly when he invited Lis friends to his "golden wedding" he did not expect that they would "come down" with such liberality, but he did not refuse their bounty, nor did he object to . the amount of their con tribution being published in the news papers. ' It passes our comprehension to con ceive why a "well to do couple, with all the comforts and luxuries of life at their command, should be made the recipients of a new fortune in addition to their own ample means, simply be cause it has pleased heaven; to prolong . their lives to a ripe old age, and they have lived together, as all married peo ple ought to live, in peace and harmony. Benevolence might be more wisely di-, rected than in the making of such un necessary presents, to say nothing of the shock which the self respect of the recipients ought to receive when they 1 pocket the cash and see the facts blaz- oned in the columns of the press from " Maine to California. New York Ledger. ' ' ' , Frankness. ' Professor Simon Newcomb is well known as a man whose scientific studies have tended to exaggerate a natural disposition to mental abstraction. The professor's friends, who are also his strong admirers, understand his pecul-. iarity, and overlook in him what might not be excused in a commonplace per son.,; A lady is very fond of telling this Incident:. ' . " She was at a reception given at Pro- fessor Newcoinbe's house. : The occa sion had been made delightful by the professor and his accomplished wife and daughters. Toward the close of the even ing the lady, who had enjoyed the affair greatly, approached the host and asked him, with much enthusiasm, "How often do you have these delightful re unions, professor?" No polite prevari cation delayed the reply, "Thank God, inadain, but once a year. Ban Fran cisco Anroimut. V V