he Hood River Glacier. VOL. 4. HOOD RIVKR, OREGON, SATURDAY. AUGUST 13, 1802. NO. 11. n 3food Iiver Slacier. rcai.uatu iriar utobdt nomiki r Tilt Glacier Publishing Compasj. inscnirnox mica On. jratr 0 l i i.unlht I IhrM monUt . ... , M ImiiI. uwf ICsbs THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. feooud Ml., iintr Oak. flood kJr.r, Or. Shaving and Hair cutting aaatly J Batisfaution (JuaratiUad. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE The Chinese Keriting Rooms in the City of Tacoma. OREGON'S WHEAT CROP FOR 1802. Fruit Men of California In a l'lcasant Frame of Mind Composition of Oregon Legislature. Portland and San Bernardino have In augurated ft war on dives nnd dawe homes. The Utah Liberals have decided to nuininHte ft candidate for delegate to I 'on grim . Los Angeles It having an epidemic o( burglaries. Several export crooks are believed to Iw Ht work. The Sacramento Federated Trades has begun a crusade to compel the Chinese to move outside tho city limits. The Umatilla reservation la overrun with lame black crickets, which are proving deHtruulive to the grain fields. Grasshoppers in swarms have aipt'ared lit Williamson Valley, sixteen miles north of Prescutt, A. T., and all vegeta tion it suffering. The fruit men of California w ere never In lietter humor than lit preHent. Tlit rise in price for fruit has made ft delight ful change in affairs. The Interstate Commerce Commis slonerg will goon lie in Han Francisco to look into the alleged discriminations on Missouri river and l'acilic Coast rates. One hundred and fifty Jang have been run out of Nsnipa and GaldwwII, Idalio, and thore will probably boa further up rising against thotn ou the Oregon Short lane. Tlio Temescal tin mine haa lmen cloned to the public owing to the lute pub lished renorU of its standing. No one will l)e allowed on the premises exrept employes. Rev. J. A. Smith, the absconding evangelist, has returned to Santa Cms from Seattle in company of the Sheriff. Bail was set at f2,0UO, in lieu of which he Is in lie acknowledges his guilt. The Wollley Canal Company, in Mari copa county, A. T., is working 5. HI men, and the mounter enterprise will be com pleted by November 1. Tho ditch is over t0 miles In length and la now near ing completion. The Sun Luis and San Joaquin Rail road Company has been incorporated, with a capital stock of $100,000, to con struct a railroad northward from San Luis Obispo to 1 Moro, a distance of alxmt ten miles. At Phcenix, A. T., four member of the Philharmonics Band (Mexican) iiave been arrested on a charge of maintain ing a nuisance, in playing their instru ments between the hours of 10 and 12 A. M. and late at night. Judge Van VIeet has decided to re sign Ids position as Superior J edge at Sacramento, to take effect within the next few months. The Judge proposes to resume the practice of his profession and will locate in San Francisco. Rooms at Tacoma have been rented through third parties, presumably for Twin Wo, of Portland, for the use of a mercantile house. This is tha first de cisive move to establish Chinese mer chants in connection with the Northern Pacific Oriental Steamship Line. The weeds on the monitor Monadnock, wbicb vessel has been lying for a year near the ferry-gate entrance to the Mare Island dock yard, were fonnd to be from three to twelve inches in length, and it required considerable labor to get them off the hull. Articles of Incorporation of the Gran ite and Greenhorn Consolidated Mining; and Milling Company of Granite, Grant county, Or., were filed In the office of the Secretary of State by A. J. Tabor, Joseph N. Ditniara and C. N. Miller; capital stock, $1,260,000. Dun's Commercial Agency baa advices from every wheat-growing, county in Oregon, snowing that Oregon's wheat crop for 1892 will be 2,800,000 bushels loss than in 1801. The yield in the State of Washington will, it ia stated, be considerably diminished. EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Many Discounting features In the EJu cutlonal Situation In the United States-Yale University. Chicago schools will cost $Y0li,0H for 1802. The new fourth duns at Went Point has 2(u members. Forty-three electrical engineers were graduated from Cornell this year, The University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, I nd., has just completed its forty eighth year. The total gifts to Yale during the last year have Uteri $000,0(10, while Harvard received but $600,0;K). Yale University has Just celebrated her one hundred and ninety-II rst birth day. Old age is honorable. The pupils of the Doylestown (Pa.) public schools have about 11,400 to their credit In the national bank. Over 12,0(10 volumes have lieen added to the library of Columbia College within the lust twelve months. Tho commencement of the University of Michigan was held June 30. Nix hun dred and eighty-nine students were graduated. Philadelphia pays school teachers $420 for a lirst year, increasing $.10 year for five years, when the maximum of $570 is reached. There are now seventy schools for the deaf and dumb In the United Status, and there is also a college for them located at Washington, D. C. At the recent commencement exer cises of the Ohio Wesleyau University, Delaware, ()., a clans of precisely 100 was graduated In the various courses. The American Society for the Inten sion of University Teaching has decided to establish a university extension sem inary for the training of lecturers and organizen. The University of Pennsylvania has this year 1,704 students, winch makes it fourth in the list of great educational In stitutions. The three greater are Yale, Harvard and Michigan Universities. Cheese-making in Canada has enor mously Improved within recent years as a result of the method of instruction which has been promoted by the govern ment in sending comjeteut Instructors among the cheesemakcrs. The National Kducational Association recently in session at Saratoga, resolved to hold no meeting in 180.1, hut Instead to take part in the World's Kducational Congress to be hold In Chicago during the Columbian Imposition. The Ohio University at Athens enjoys the uniqtiH distinction of being the old est institution of collegiate rank in the .Northwest territory and of antedating all similar institutions in that region by nearly a quarter of a century. One of its Presidents was Dr. W. II. McGulley, whose scries of school readers have been in extensive use for more than a genera tion. Its recent commencement closed the most successful year of its history, both numerically anil financially. There are many discouraging features in the educational situation in this coun try, but there are also many signs of progress. Education is weakest in the secondary schools and strongest in the universities and in the primary schools. That which many of our intermediate sclio ls the public schools especially lack in freshness of spirit, vitality of in terest and variety of method the kinder gartens and colleges and universities are developing In a rcmarkebl) degree. Tho spreud of the kindergarten and the enthusiasm with which the spiritual idea of education beh'nd it is being re ceived promise notable results in the near future. PURELY PERSONAL Prof. Garner Goes to Africa to Study the Language of the Gorilla and the Chimpanzee Etc. Some famous men's letters do not need to be burned. One of the "Iron Duke" of Wellington has never yet been read. Princess Louise and President Harri son's wife are said to be the only ladies who have ever been permitted to enter the cloisters of the Monastery of Santa Barbara. Tom Carter, Chairman of the Repub lican National Committee, was once a book agent in Illinois, and Las sold cop ies of the "Footprints of Time" to Quincy people. Mr. Moody will not return to America in time to conduct his general conference at North Held this year, and Dr. A. J. Gordon of Boston will have charge of the meetings in his absence. William T. Adams, better known as " Oliver Optic," has written altogether more than 100 books for boys, and he is now busy at work with another. Mr. Adams is 70, but well enough preserved to last for thirty years to come. Some New England newspapers speak of Miss Ruth Burnett, wko is a postu lant for admission into one of the Cath olic sisterhoods, as a niece of James Rus sell Lowell. The Boston Herald sets them right by declaring her a sister of the poet's son-in-law. Josephine Werner, a New York confi dence woman with the expressive alias of " Weeping Caroline," has been sen tenced to five years imprisonment for obtaining money under false pretenses. For thirty years she has bled the char itable by way of her tear ducts and false stories. General Kirby Smith's children all have " Kirby " in their names, and there are a great many of them. The Aldrich collection of autographs in Des Moines. Ia., has just been enriched by General Smith's fast official order in the Confed erate service, commanding an aide at New Orleans to turn over some funds to General Canby, the Federal commander there. BEYOND THE ROCKIES Warm and Friendly Expressions of International Good Will. THE PRESIDENT AND KING HUMBERT The Wheat Exports of the United States Last Year The Canadians on Canal Reprisals. Cattle In Lyon county, Tex., are suf fering from Texas fever. A Chicago dispatch says the whisky trust is in clanger of disruption. The Salvation Army slum workers In New York say the slums of that city are as oaa as those in ixinuon. Cruiser No. 12, denominated hitherto as the Pirate, is to be named the Colum bia by order ef Secretary Tracy. Dr. F. L. Sim, a noted specialist on nervous diseases, has declared Alice Mitchell, who shot tied a Ward at Mem phis, insane. General Weaver was presented at Den ver with a silver pen, with which to sign the free-coinage bill when he is elected Presideut of the United States. IHal capitalists, acting with an out side syndicate, have made oilers for the purchase of some of the street railways of NowOrleitus so as to consolidate them all. The people of Louisiana have resolved not to tie dry nod out again, and the general levee system is to tie rained three ti-et above Hie height of the recent flood. The United States exported last year 225,000,000 bushels of wheat, its lament export, ami Eastern grain men are of the opinion that next year will be still larger. The Secretary of State is advised of the denunciation by Salvador of the treaty concluded in Decemlier, 1870. The treaty will, however, continue till May 30 next. The Canadians on the question of ca nal reprisals threaten to return blow for blow, and if the Americans want to light, they can have as much of that article as they want. The most conservative estimatas pt ihe wheat yield this year at 650.000,'.WO bushel and the corn yield at 1,700,W0, 000. This is a falling oil" from lS'.U on both cereals. A watch company in Canton, O., is suing the American watch trust for dam ages resulting from a boycott instituted by the trust to force the company into I he organization. Assistant Superintendent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey Davidson will be detailed to assist Colonel Mendell in pre paring a plan for a system of sewerage for San Francisco. Of a total of 800 convicts in the Kan sas penitentiary but nineteen are fe males, showing that women possess only a little more than 2 per cent, of the cussedness found in men. Commissioner of Internal Revenue Mason in his report for the fiscal year ended J une 30 says : " The total collec tions of internal revenue were $153,b57, 643, an increase of $7,822,128 over the previous year. The newest innovation in cars is the " whaleback " freight car, made of steel and said to be superior to the ordinary square-built car. It is claimed that in collision they will be able to withstand an enormous push. A sensation haa been created at Den ver by the arrest of J. H. Cross and J. McDaniels, who are charged with the robbery of President Moffatt of the First National Bank, which created such a sensation there years ago. It is expected that the cable road on Third avenue, New York, will be in op eration by next November. The road will be divided into three sections, with a separate cable for each section and a different speed for each cable. A New York woman has been making a good thing by having her teeth pulled bv barbers ana then informing on them. The; fine for the unauthorized and irreg ularfculling of a tooth by any tonsorial practitioner in that city is $50. At one time there were $3,000,000,000 of United States bonds out. payable in gold money or its equivalent. These have been redeemed, except about $500, 000,000, and most of these are held against national bank currency. St. Louis will have over sis miles of Illuminated streets during the autumnal festivities. There will not be less than fifty arches and over 75,000 electric lamps and gas lets in each night's display. The electric-light companies are putting in engines and dynamos especially for the occasion. At Cincinnati last week was a gather ing of leading capitalists to discuss a proposition to organize a steamship line between New Orleans and South Ameri can ports. The sura of $4,000,000 has already been subscribed, and $2,000,000 is aBked from Cincinnati and other cities that will be benefited by the direct trade with South American ports. A letter haa been received by Editor Medill of the Chicago Tribune from the Marquis de Mores, expressing disap proval of the way he has been treated in the Tnbune and asking if Mr. Medill as sumed the responsibility. Mr. Medill is 65 years of age. He looks on the letter as a challenge, but says he is willing to meet the Marquis in a twenty-four-foot ring in Jackson Park with gloves, mus kets or anything suitable. The Tribune treats the matter humorously. CONGRESSIONAL MATTERS. iMessage Relative to the Practicability of a Cable Between California and the Hawaiian Islands. The House bill for the admission of New Mexico will not be called up until next session. As a precautionary measure ugainst the Introduction of cholera Secretary Tracy has directed the Collectors of Cus toms along the Atlantic seaboard to pro- ii mil me lauuing oi immigrants from France. The presiding officer of the Senate has laid More that body a message from the President .if the United States, with the accompanying papers, relative to the practicability of laying a cable between California and the Hawaiian Islands. Secretary Tracy of the Navy Department in a letter states that the result of the survey shows that a practicable route can lie easily selected. The report of the hydrographic office of the bureau of navigation states that the survey shows that the laying of the cable on almost any line between California and the Ha waiian Islands is practicable. A line about 300 miles wide was developed be tween California and Hawaii, and the results as shown bv the report Beern to indicate the most favorable route to be a rhomb line between Monterey Bay,Cal., and Honolulu. Senator Allen's bill granting about twenty-eight acres of the Fort Walia Walla military reservation to the city of Walla Walla for a public park has passed the Senate. The bill allows the city of Walla Walla the use of the triangular portion of the reservation on tha north corner, which is separated from the m tin body of the reserve by the county high way and the Oregon railway and naviga tion track, for a public park. It pro vides, however, that before beginning to use any of the land the city shall present to the Secretary of War detailed plans for the improvement, and it shall re ceive his approval ; also that the United States reserves to itself the title in the tract and the right to resume possession and occupy any portion of it whenever In the Judgment of the Presdent the public interest mar require it without any claim for compensation to the city for the improvements made or for dm ages which the government siay infill Representative Wilson has introduced a bill granting the Northern Pacific right of way through the Puyallup In dian reservation, which has recently been favorably reported by the Commit tee on Indian Affairs. The bill proposes to ratify and confirm an agreement be tween the ruyalinp Indians and the Northern Pacific, made in 1870. which grants right of way through the reserva tion for the Cascade branch of the Northern Pacific. There has been a number of bills introduced before for rights of way through the Puyallup reser vation, but all have been postponed or hung up, awaiting some action which will forever settle the Puvallup Indian difficulties. Perhaps this bill will be treated in the same way, although it is now represented that the Northern Pa cific needs the granted right of way and the station grounds, and there is really no reason why some bill should not pass. Of course the various railroad companies generally fi'ht each other on bills of this character, each desiring to secure the best lands on the water front. It is Erobable, however, that this bill will be ung up unlil some action is taken next winter on the pending Puyallup bill in the Senate. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Harvard University Applies for Space for a Representative Exhibit From That Institution. The World's Fair directory haa ex pended up to date approximately $7,250.- 000. The famed "Six Nations" in New York State will be well represented in the Indian exhibit at the World's Fair. It is proposed to hold World's Fairs in Berlin in 1898 and in Paris in 1900. but definite action has not yet been taken by me nations concerned. In Denmark's exhibit at the World's Fair will be a fine array of porcelain ware aud a notable art display, including reproductions of many of the Thoswald Ben sculptures. Several Amazons of the King of Da homey will probably be Been in the Da homey village, which will be established at the World's Fair. Sixty or seventy natives and their manner of living will be shown. An effort is being made to have the cotton mills of Georgia make a fine ex hibit at the World's Fair. It is believed that such exhibit would greatly stimu late the investment of capital in cotton mills in the South. The exhibit to be made at the World's Fair by Krupp, the celebrated German gunmaker, will represent an expenditure of $1,500,000. The largest cannon ever made, weighing 122 tons, will be in the exhibit, as will also several hundred tons of war material. The World's Fair Commission for Peru has asked government aid to enable it to make an exhibit of living animals of that country. It has suggested the im portance to all breeders, especially of the animals peculiar to that region, such f s llamas, alpacas, paco-vicunas and others, and there is no doubt that a very credit able exhibit will be sent to Chicago. The authorities of Harvard University have applied to Chief Peabodv of the department of liberal arts of the World's r air lor square ieei ior a tnorougn ly representative educational exhibit from that historic institution. The offi cers of the university say they are pre pared not only to fill, but to splendidly and representatively fill every foot of space which can be granted to them. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS Inebriety Among the Fashionable Women in England. LAVA DESTROYS MOUNTAIN HUTS. The Eyesight of the Czarina Growing Worse An Insurrection In the Congo Free State. It la reputed to have cost the present r.mperor oi c;mna iiu.uuu.UOU to get marneu. A recently discovered manuscript proves mat uoiumtms was born at Sa voua, Italy. They call the bicycle the devil's char iot in Turkey, and the Sultan has for bidden its use. Buffalo Bill was one of the lions of the evening at one of Mrs. Mackay's recent London receptions. It is proposed to have an exhibition at Milan in 1804 similar to the one now in progress at Vienna. Miss Terry's little slice for her share of the Irving-cum-Terry tour in America next year is fW.UW. Riots have been caused by the cholera regulations in Tashkend. The troops killed and wounded seven persons. A street-car line is now being built in Tashkend. the capital of Russian Turk estan, by a French company. The lava stream from Mount .Etna has destroyed many mountain huts, and is rapidly approaching Nicolosi. At the Bislev (England) rifle meetimr Scotland won the national challenge trophy with an aggregate score of 1,2. All the pawnshops in Moscow owned by Jews will be closed before the end of this month by order of the government. V erdi has consented to compose a can tata or symphony in honor of the Co lumbus celebration at Genoa this au tumn. It is eaid that only five Dassenirers were killed on all the railways of Great Britain and Ireland during the whole of last year. A series of fires have been rerjorted from the Philippine Islands, rendering thousands of inhabitants homeless and destitute. The Arabs of Yonirwe on the Unner Congo have revolted against the Congo Free State and cut olf communication with Tanganyika. All the tickets for next summer's ner- formance at Beyruth have been sold; $140,000 in all has been received for the twenty performances. Latest advices from the Areentine Re public state that wages are again going nn In tha nlrniaa mi'i A Y i- ....... scarcity of farm laborers. The greatest oculists of Europe will soon be called in to consult upon the condition of the eyesight of the Czarina, which grows from bad to worse. It is said by those within the pale that overindulgence in intoxicating beverages is lamentably on the increase among fashionable women in England. Information respecting the cereal ex ports of the Argentine Republic for the first quarter of 1892 indicates a large in crease over the same period in the pre vious year. A scheme is now being developed in Scotland by which a high grade of brick is being made from chipped granite and clay. The experiments are ssid to have been successful. The newly elected Municipal Councils, composed of Socialists, have dissevered the police force in several towns of France. The government will reorgan ize them as State police. For the first half of the current year the returns of no less than seventeen English railroads show a falling off, and the loss in coal freights is responsible for more than half of that. The London Times, which tried to ruin Mr. Parnell through a series of Pigot letters before he had ruined himself, ie now coddling the Parnellites, who are wavering in their support of Gladstone. Raimunds Indueza Palacio, ex-Dictator of Venezuela, has arrived at Paris, with $15,000,000 as a golden solace for the ills of defeated ambition. He says the good of his country was all he desired, but he got more. The medical department of St. Peters burg is distributing cholera disinfectants at cost prices. The Czar presided at a discussion of the appointment of an of ficer with dictatorial power to combat the epidemic in the Volga provinces. An opportunity will be presented to the arcbssologista who visit the Colum bian Exposition at Madrid to instiect one of the well-known European palaeo- iiiuic sues, mat oi san laidro, in the Valley of the Manzanares near Madrid. It is predicted that the coming mobil ization of the British naval forces will be on a very large scale. With the ex ception of the Minotaur, Indefatigable and possibly the Latona all the ships of the Portsmouth fleet reserve will be commissioned. The Cologne Gazelle alleges that the African natives who recently repulsed Baron von Bulow's forces in the Moshi territory, near Kilimanjora, were sup plied with a large number of Snyder rifles and 30,000 cartridges by the British East India Company. The trial of the Anarchists at Liege, Belgium, concluded with a verdict of guilty. Moineaurthe leader, was sen tenced to twenty-five years' penal serv itude. Wolff and Beaujeau got twenty years each, the four others fifteen years eaeh and nine to shorter terms. CLEVER DETECTIVE WORK. A Not.I Plan for Orerhesrlnf and Ova, looking- Chicago'. Uoodlar. Several aldermen of the city of Chicago have been Indicted for accepting bribe, and the matter from It similarity to tt celebrated New York "boodle" canes is at tracting national attention. The evidence against the aldermen was very skillfully Worked up by Detective John Bonfleld, wboiie device for overbearing the consulta tions of the conspirators in related by the Chicago News as follows: When Alderman Johnny Powers read that certain detectives bad been watching "boodling" operations through ft hole in tbe ceiling, he went into the business de partment of his saloon on Madixon street nd looked carefully at the wall paper overhead. He could not see any hole. Af ter gazing at the wall paper long and earnestly without finding a break or tat ter he became convinced of his own Inno cence and said tbe story was a lie. Johnny i'owera is not a specialist in optical Illu sions. Detective John lionleld is. When the saloon was opened on Madison street by Alderman Powers and Alderman O'Brien it was tbe understanding that th place waa to be the headquarters for th "gang." Thoee who were watching th operations of the crowd soon became con vinced that much business was being trans acted in the private office of Powers & O'Brien. Detectives made an examination of the premises. The saloon, fronting north on Madlaon street, had a cigar stand and screen near tbe front door. The bar ex tended down the eaHt of tbe room to the tall ice chest. Behind the ice chest and shut off by partitions eight feet high were two private rooms, apparently intended for wine closets. The room in front was kept locked. Alderman Powers and Alderman O'Brien each carried a key. Behind these two private rooms waa the partition sepa rating the barroom from the "stock ex change" bucket shop in the rear. An offset in the west wall of tbe barroom nar rowed the passage leading to the bock, room. The private office had a safe in the northeast corner and a table In the center. The detectives gained temporary posses sion of the vacant room over the saloon. Election Commissioner Hutchings held th lease. They fonnd that the offset in the west wall continued up through the second floor. By estimating t! uiatances from the angle of the ciUet they were able to locate a point in the floor immediately above the private ollice. This waa not done, however, until frequent visits had been mode to the saloon and all of the dis tances had been "stepped off" by the sleuths. Then the next thing was to get hole through the ceiling and watch the transaction of business in the clearing house. It waa no easy task to make a hole In the ceiling large enough to see what was going on underneath and small enough to escape attention. The new wall paper in the barroom was of a light shade and ft black hole, even a half inch in diameter, would have been at once noticed. The boards were sawed off between the joists, which were sixteen inches apart. Then the laths were cut out for a space about six inches in diameter. Tbe re moval of the plastering was a careful oper ation. A solution of glue and water was used to moisten it, and it was picked out little at a time. The detectives were ex pecting to come to the wall paper, but they were surprised to find a layer of boards under the plaster. When a hole was cau tiously chiseled through the boards the workers came to a layer of muslin, to which the wall paper had been plastered. This was a piece of good fortune. The stiff muslin allowed a 6-inch hole to be cut in the wood. The only things to be pen etrated were the cloth and paper. Detective Bonfleld then decided to prick a large number of very small holes through the muslin and paper. Experiments were made, and it was found that a sheet of pa per could be made as porous as mosquito bar without marking it up. It was feared, however, that in trying to put in so many of the little apertures the paper might be torn by the holes "running Into each other." So the needles were fastened to gether in a comb and the work was done with tbe holes very close to each other. It was found that the whole interior of the office could be seen and the talk could be plainly heard. In order for the ob server to lie down and keep his eye over the sieve, a neat little shelf was inserted between the joists. All of this tedious work was done in the few hours of tha night during which the place below was closed. i As to what the man on the shelf saw and heard and what was taken down in short hand the grand jury will inquire in good time. After sufficient observation had satisfied the detectives, the bole was closed up and the floor relaid. The reason Alderman Johnny Powers did not And the hole was that there were several hun dred holes. Feats of Fakir. Soli man ben Aissa, an East Indian fakir, haa set the Viennese physicians to talk ing. He performs remarkable tricks, or whatever they may be called, and his en tertainments created so much excitement that the authorities have refused to permit him to exhibit in public. One of Soliman'a favorite tests is to inhale the smoke from a powder prepared from extracts of snake and scorpion poisons. Then he shakes his head violently and foams at the mouth. While this is going on a large stiletto is thrust through his tongue, and his body is used as a pincushion by bis assistant Soliman also pulls his eyeballs forward and holds them outside the sockets be tween his fingers. A blazing torch is held against his arm and . he never flinches. Chewing glass is a diversion which Soli man now considers it beneath his "profes sional" dignity to perform. They Were His Own. A journalist told me that he once over heard this passage of arms between a coachman and a beggar man outside the Four Courts, Dublin. As the beggar was whining for alms at the carriage door the coachman turned around to cry sharply to him, "Come, my man, take your rags out of that!" The beggar, with a withering glance at the coachman's livery, retorted: "Me ragsl They're me own, me manr' B. A. King ia Belgravia.