3.. in V 4 Y -. r . , Ull tutallpa US to ranch, four of the most iUT. Vy. XV. " , the job of setting iDsugmuv . in the val- I lit) vcj ...... t i .1 " 7.- At the fruit heglnner proveraent ju u bv the middle oi ji he company I Lfor the be JLJLyc company win tne Dunu : "' - ( Yx m River Glacier. C, : It's a Cold Pay When We Get Left T VOL. 7. HOOD RIVER, OREGON; FRIDAY. MAY, 18. ; NO.50. v' 3feod Iiver (5 Lacier. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BV S. F. BLYTHE. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. On year...., SS 00 Six months ....... 1 00 Three month. 60 8nKle oopy -. i Cent. THE GLACIER BARBERSHOP, HOOD RIVER, OR. GRANT EVANS, Proprietor. Shaving and hair-cutting neatly done, aotiou guaranteed. Satis- THE NEWS RESUME A DIGEST FROM ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. ' Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Happenings of the Fait, Week Called From the Telegraph Column. At Home and Abroad, 1 "',.... A case of leprosy has been discovered in California. The afflioted person is girl of 16. , , Lord Dnnraven denies the report that Mr. H. MoCalmont is now the sole owner of Valkyrie III. Rev. O. O. Brown has given up the fight and resigned hia paBtorate of the First Congregational ohuroh of San FranoiaooH- , y- ;! '. .,. :" 'i; v; Alhot Rieuff blew out the brains of his wife Julia, at a lodging-house in Seattle and then killed himself. Jeal ousy ia given as the cause. John Heinetz, aged about 28, and James Da vis,' aged about 71, prospect on, mining near Delta Cal.,,. were drowned while crossing the river in a During a fete at the town of Les Sanier, Franoe, an anarohist named Colan stabbed and killed the mayor. The motive for the crime was politioal hatred.... j . , - A dispatch from Athens says another conflict has ooourred in the Hagion Vasileon distriot of Crete. It is alleged , v twentyurks were killed and thirty wounded. . .,..-.,... Si' William Robinson, governor of Soiig Eong, telegraphs that there has been-seventy-flve new cases of . buboine plague and seventy-five fdeaths from the disease in Hong ' Kong the past week. ' "u . , ' . '' Commander Booth-Tucker, of the Salvation Army, while out slumming in New York, -was arrested and taken to the Elizabeth-street police station. Bail was fixed ' at $1,000, which was ' furnished by Steve Brodif. ' Cripple - Creek, - Colo.i was aga Visited by fire, and now. from 8,000 to 4,000 people are homeless , in a city of desolation, with no homes to offer and .... no food, to supply.; the daily 'wants. .,!; One life was lost. The business por- tion of the ,oity. left standing is less than would cover a blook. The resi dence section is confined to what were formerly the suburbs. , : The announcement is made that M. Meline had succeeded in forming his cabinet as follows: M. Meline,- pre mier and minister of agriculture; M. Barthou, minister of foreign affairs; M. Coohery, finanoe; M. Lebon, oolonies; M. Valle,' oommeroe; General Billet, war; M. ; Darlan,1 justice; Admiral Bernad, marine; M." Lacombe, publio works; M. Rambau publio instruction. The Old Dominion steamer Wyanoke, when making for New Fort News pier near Norfolk, Va.i Struolt-the prow of the United States - steamer Columbia, lying at anohor, and had a hole out in the forward part of the starboard side. She sank, in sixty feet of water. . All the Wyanoke' s passengers and orew were saved, but - their baggage, and probably the oargor was lost. Two firemen were badly soalded. - A special to the Denver Times from El Paso, Tex., : says the governor of Chib.ua has sent a regiment of troops to Mina V iejo to oompel the peons to open the mine and rescue the. miners. He had the polioe gather all the unem ployed men in the city streets and maroh them to the mine to work. Of the sixty-one entombed miners fifty were taken out dead. The disaster was oaused by the enoroaohing for ore on the pillars supporting the roof. The Spanish gunboat Mensagera has captured and brought into Havana the American sohooner Competitor, of Key West, loaded with arms and ammuni tion. In oommand of her were Alfredo Laborde, Dr. Beudia and three news paper correspondents, who are held as prisoners. Some of the filibusters are said to have succeeded in jumping overboard and swimming ashore. Others who jumped into the sea were drowned. The insurgent general, Monson, was a member of the expedi tion. The following unique challenge has been sent to Colonel Robert G. Inger soil, by Thomas Eenyon, a resident of Providenoe, R. I.: "I, the under signed, ohallenge Robert G. Ingersoll in a joint debate before three judges and two timekeepers, ten minutes eaoh, for points on his ( Ingersoll' s) Bible leotnree, in any hall in New York or any other large oity, but New York preferred. The one gaining the most points must reoeive 65 per cent of the net receipts after paying expenses. Thomas Kenyon." Colonel Ingersoll will probably aooept the ohallenge. The Spanish authorities in New York and Washington, have recently dis ooverea a conspiracy, -wnion was formed by Cubans, to blow up a Span ish warship and at the same time in teroept a peninsula mail steamer and rob her of a large quantity of gold in tended for the government troops on the island. The plot further inoluded the capture of the seaport town of Neuvitas, and contemplated certain demonstrations along the northern ooast of the Eastern Cuban provinoes, in order to procipitate a rush of troops from the west and effect a weakening of the miltary trocha across Pinar del Rio, " J. C. Sommers, a millionaire banker of Keokuk, la., was killed by a train in the uinon depot at Burlington. : . Columbia university will send a band of naturalists to explore the Puget Sound region. The expedition will set out from New York June 10. i The six-story building of - the Junior Order of United Amerioan Meohanios, in Philadelphia, was entirely destroyed by fire. Loss, about $210,000. ' ' The Paris newspapers confirm the rumor that M. Hebete, French ambas sador to .Germany, will at onoe return to Berlin, to present his letters of re call. A woman named Mary Shore, leaped from a bridge into Elkhorn river, near Washington, W. Va., fifty feet, to es cape a passing engine. She was rescued but will die. '. . Warren Fisher, who came into prominenoe in 1876 "through.' his con nection with '' the investigation of charges directed gainBt James. G. Blaine, died at his home in Roxbury, N. Y. . . .. ; ; Rain fell almost continuously for twenty -four hours in Oconto, Wis., and all the lowlands are flooded. The oity Is nearly inundated and the river reaohed the highest mark that it has for years. '"v:-' Prinoess ' Beatrioe, the . youngest daughter of Queen Victoria, and widow of Prinoe Henry of Battenbug, has been; appointed governor of the . Isle of Wight, the office previously, held by her husband.; i "t ' . , , ;. ; Word has been received, in Washing ton "by telegraph that the Canadian government has adopted an order in counoil exempting Amerioan vessels from entry and olearanoe charges' 'at Canadian ports, . , , , .,' ,,. v. . ; V c A dispatch from Madrid says: The Spanish government has declined, the pope's mediation in Cuban affairs, on the' ground that acceptance would be. ntamount to recognizing America's righto in.terfeiUH . 'X' The black plague is. still prevalent at Hong, Kongand Canton. Two Eu ropean children have been attacked by the . disease. Japan is taking elabor ate precautions to prevent the intro duction of the plague. ",, iCl- An attempt was made to burn An derson, Cal., by saturating a number of buidlings with coal oil. The plot was frustrated by the disoovery of the fire five minutes after it was started, when it was soon extinguished.' 1 ' An explosion, by which 100 persons are believed to have perished, has oo ourred at Micklefiela, Yorkshire, Eng land. The explosion took fplaoe in a oblliery, and twenty injured persons have been rescued from the shaft. .'. ' An "X" ray will kill the bacteria Of , diptheria... .The, eleotrioal depart ment of the university of Missouri,, at Columbia, announoes that,' after exten sive experiments, diphtheria germs had been killed by the Roentgen light. .; ":' Seven hundred men were thrown out of work by a strike of the employes in' Sherman & Company's iron mines in Port Henry, N. Y., whose demand for an inorease of forty cents a day was re fused. The mines were shut down. la Woodland, Cal. , two armed men stood up Jailer JLabrie in the' jailyard and relieved him of $187 in oash and a watch chain. The official bad occasion to go into the jailyard for a moment, and left his pistol and.hat in the offioe. M. Coubertin", president of the inter national committee ' of the Olympio games, writes to the London Times that the games in 1900 will be held in Paris, and for 1904 the committee Will ohoose between New York, Berlin and Stookholm. " ' i fY.i: -; The publio debt statement just issued, shows .that on April 80, the debt, less oash in the treasury, was $948,287,670, an inorease for the month of $5,945,417. This is aooonnted for in part by a de crease of $1,551,087 in the amount of oash in the treasury, and an inorease of nearly $5,000,000 in the amount of bonds delivered under the last sale. ANOTHER OUTRAGE CUBAN DRIVEN FROM HIS PLAN TATION BY SPANIARDS. Hie Family Left Bomele.a Their Uvea Spared Because Bis Nephew Was an American A Negro Servant Killed . and Other Employes Arrested. . New York, May ; 6. A Herald dis patch from Havana says Your correspondent had an interview with Pedro Casanova, a Cuban, who was driven from hia plantation at San Miguel de Jaruoa, by. Spaniards. Casanova's family consists of his wife and three children, the oldest a girl of 5, the youngest a babe in arms, and his nephew, Julio Vidal, a young man and a native-born Amerioan. Casanova's story is as follows: I have suffered great outrages, at the hands of the Spanish soldiers. The soldiers reoently passed on the road, and my wife oalled attention to the faot that they had broken into the va cant house where valuable property was stored and were pulling things to pieces. Just then I saw two officers ooming toward the house, to meet them and invited ter the house and refresh They aooepted, and said I went out them to en themselves. they liked ooffee. While they were drinking one or more soldiers came and spoke to the oaptain, who asked: .'Who are the men in the sugar-house?' em ployes,' I replied, 'including one en gineer. Tney are engaged in repair ing. ' The captain said: .'I heard the rebels were hiding here; I must take the men before the major for examine tion. The major him&elf will be here tomorrow. After he left I found the door of the house on the hill broken open. A bottle of beer had been taken, also my saddles and bridles and many other things. I went to the station. The drug store looked as if it had been visited by a mad bull. All the shelves and. drawers were thrown out and smashed. An1 empty store opposite was in the same condition. The coun ter was thrown down and the door posts were haoked by machettes. ' The large ooffee mill was broken, and all was in disorder. . An account of this work was what the Boldiers had whis pered to the oaptain. The officer had remarked to me with a sneer:- 'The insurgents are very kind to you, as no harm has been done here. ' . . I was surprised on the following Wednesday morning to hear shots, as of several volleys of musketry. About 800 soldiers, infantry and oavalry, were in faot out, having surrounded my house. ' Soon my son appeared, and, under command of Captain Cerezo Martinez, in most brutal and vulgar terms, the oaptain ordered all in the house to go outside. ' The soldiers rushed in and dragged me out by the oollar. My wife, with her baby, was taken out, a rifle being pointed at her breast.. A negro servant, who was badly' frightened, tried to hide. He was . pulled to the front, and belore my eyes a soldier struck him a heavy blow with' his machette, cutting him deep in the head, leaving a pool of blood on the floor. ' An order was then given to take into custody all the men on -the estate. . Near a tree beyond a hill, a hundred yards form the house, I stopped about forty paces from the others, to talk to the oaptain who had been at the house the week before. At that moment a young negro, Manuel Fabets, made a dash to escape. Some oavalrymen rushed after him, firing. He fell, and they mutilated his body, taking nut his eyes. The officer, en raged at the negroe's flight, pulled out his sabre and shouted to the others of the party, 'Get down on your knees I' They obeyed, and he had them bound and kept in that position for a quarter of an hour, . While I was talking to the oaptain my wife and 5-year-old child were begging for mercy for me. The oavalrymen helped themselves to corn for their horses, ' and finally started. The officers told me that my nephew's life and my own were spared because we were Americans and they did not want to get into trouble with the United States. , They ordered me to - San Miguel without waiting a moment. Their explanation of the raid was that the rebels fired upon the troops and that they saw one man run as he fired, into my house, and, under the major's instructions the whole family should have been killed. An officer of high rank in the Spanish army who passed my house after I left came to me here and said: ' 'I know what has happened. The man in oom mand is unfit to bean officer of Spain.' I heard that my men had been taken into the Spanish oamp and shot while eating breakfast. " A Mint Robber Sentenced. Carson, Nev., May 6. JohnT. Jones was sentenced this morning to eight years' imprisonment 4n the Nevada state penitentiary and to pay a fine of $5,000 for the robbery of the United States mint of bullion. Two little pet dogs discovered a fire in Chicago the other night, and were instrumental in saving a large amount of property. SHIPMENTS OF, FRUIT. Marlon . Countv Growers Looking Toward Eastern Markets. Salem, Or., May 5. Tnere were shipped from Salem last season twenty two carloads of green fruit Fruit dealers have predicted that there will be much heavier shipments this year, if the yield proves as good as that of last season. This is scarcely expected now. especially in the line of prunes. The orchard aoreage has been largely inoreased in this section, however. An Eastern market has been established and fruit-shipping will again be re sumed as the season opens. ; The Oregon Fruit & Produce Com pany last year shipped from Salem to Eastern markets seventeen carloads of green fruit. Tins company bandies fruit on consignment. After packing and defraying the expenses incident to shipping, the net proceeds go to the fruitraiser. ' The oase of one grower is given who furnished 2,678 orates, real izing net therefor $592.64 or 22 1-8 oents per orate. ' The fruit consisted of peaoh plums, Columbias, Hungarian, Washington plums, and silver prunes. The shipments were made at different periods of the season, as the fruit ripened and it is considered a fair av erage of what growers could have real ized on the same classs of fruit Another grower shipped 1,442 crates of Italian prunes, which netted him 24 cents per orate. This lot was also shipped at .different periods. Peaoh plums usually average the grower 20 cents. James Kyle, of the Oregon Fruit & Produoe Company, whose interests de mand close attention to the condition of the fruit industry, says of the out' look: 'From a personal examination of several orchards in this vioinity, it oan be said the Italian prune crop will be a failure. The petite orop will be very light; some orohards will yield none, while others will produoe a one fcurth crop. Pears have been dam aged by frost and the cold rains. The Royal Ann and Black Republican cherry orop bids fair, but all the earlier varities are killed. ' It is very hard to tell anything of the apple crop yet The prospect is for a fair prioe this year-" Fleotrical Exposition Opened. New York, May 6. The National Electrical exposition,"" under" the : aus pices of the National Electric Light Association, opened at the Grand Cen tral Palaoe tonight It was opened by the pressing of a golden key by Gover nor Morton, who sent out an electrical ourrent that discharged cannon in San Franoisoo, New Orleans, St Paul, Au gusta, Me., and London, England, and from the roof of the Exposition build ing. An immense orowd attended the opening. One of the most interesting of the exhibits was the Edison appar atus showing the telegraph and tele phone equipment, the earliest forms of electrio lighting, transmission motors and models, together with fonr sets of apparatus, with whioh experts gave ex hibitions of the Roentgen rays, so ar ranged that by using the florescent screen, . people were able to inspect their own anatomies. Were Probably Mnrdered. r San Diego, May 6. News reaohed the oity late last night that three white men, had been found dead on the desert at a plaoe supposed to be on lower Carrisso oreek. The report was brought in by - Juan Ignacio, a Cooopah Indian, who oame up from the Cooopah mountains along Catrrisso oreek on his way to Pala. - The Indian said he discovered the bodies last Tuesday. , All were dressed roughly like, miners and two bodies were lying together near a mesquite tree with their heads caved in and their bodies partly eaten by coyotes and vultures. , Stanford's Bequest to the University. San Franoisoo, May 5. Mrs. Jane Stanford Wednesday last turned over to the trutees .of Stanford university $2, 500,000, the am'ount of Senator Stan ford's bequest to the Stanford university This amount was in railroad bonds which pay interest at the rate of $10,- 000 a month. It costs $15,000 a month to run the university, and Mrs. Stanford will make up the deficit from her personal estate. The great ranches, which also belong ot the university, do not more than pay expenses.and the in stitution will derive no inoome from them for several years. A Fight With Maceo. Havana, May 5. Six Spanish col umns under Generals Suarez and Inolan reoently fought the insurgents com manded by General Maoeo at Caoara. The fierce oonfliot, aooording to offloial advices, resulted in a deoided viotory for the Spaniards. . Maoeo's loss is offi cially given at over 200, while the loss of the Spanish is said to have been only sixty. A Struggle Imminent. Ottawa, May 6. The controller of the mounted polioe has reoeived advioes from Alaska, via Viootria, "whioh say that trouble is imminent between the whites and the Indians over the ac quittal of a white man who brutally killed an Indian.' As the United States forces at Sitka is said to be not sufficient to handle an Indian outbreak, the residents are very apprehensive. THE PACIFIC STATES INTERESTING NEWS NOTES FROM VARIOUS PLACES. The Great Northwest Furnishes Borne News of More Than General Inter estDevelopment and Progress In All Industries Oregon. Silverton is working to secure a woolen mill. Harney people are going to build a town hall by popular subscription. Roaeburg will use July 8 and 4 for its annual pioneer reunion this year. Corvallis evangelists have laid foundations for new ohuroh and par sonage buildings. A subscription paper is in circulation at Monroe to assist in getting another flouring mill there. The Salem small boy is reveling in the anticipation of three monster allied ahowa this rammer. Members of the East Calapoola Coyote Club, of Douglas oounty, cap tured three ooyotes last week. An unusually small orop of lambs is the report of almost every sheepman in Gilliam oounty.exoept those who begin quite early. The sohooner Mayflower sailed from Florence last week with 120,000 feet of lumber, and the Daniel son with 150,000. tr. a. .Lack, formerly a newspaper man of Baker City, reoently cleaned up $75,000 in Cripple Creek, as the result of his mining ventures, says the Baker City Democrat. The ill-starred Stultz Company have a grudge against Humboldt ooun ty, Cal., where one of their recent dis asters ooming up the coast overtook them. They want $800 damages from the oounty commissioners. Wool has begun to arrive in the Pendleton warehouses. The quality is pronounoed as a general thing, very good. ' The scouring mill proposes to inorease its capital stock by $30,000 at its annual meeting, the 5th. A conductor on the Heppner branoh of the O. R. & N. Co., when in Pendle ton reported that of 500 sheep and lambs whioh had been shorn a few days ago at Heppner, all the lambs, over 200 in number, had died from cold. E. Boettoher, the Umatilla sheep man, expects soon to commence his summer's drive to the East He will take the usual number, about 12,000. Severe weather and snow in the moun tains will prevent Mr. Boettcher from starting for some thae yet Mr. Herriok, of The Dalles, has everything in readiness to begin can ning as soon as sufficient quantities of fish can . be taken. . Enough fish are being oaught there to supply the looal market, and to make shipments of fresh fish, but not enough to justify the canneries opening. . The Klamath shipping season was officially opened one day last week, when the Lottie C. was sighted steam ing up the river, 1 toward Klamath Falls. She arrived at the wharf late in the afternoon and, after giving a few citizens a ride on the lake, tied up for the night She left the next day for Brownell, at the southern extrem ity of Lower Klamath lake. H. B. Williamson has the contract for dismantling the steamer Three Sistera, and is now engaged in the work. The engine and boiler is said to be the beat and moat economical of the sort on the river, and may, the company say, be used in the construc tion of a new boat for the upper river servioe next season. The original cost of the Sisters' maohinery was $8,000. Mr. Clark, of Blalock, Gilliam oounty, has prepared and will plant thirty aores of sorgum this spring. ' He has a oomplete manufacturing outfit for making the syrup, whioh he brought out last fall from Kansas, where he has been for the past few years. He is making no experiment now, as before going east several years ago, he grew sorgum to good advantage on his plaoe at Blalock. , Washington. New Whatoom is to have a storm signal servioe. , A branoh of the state board of immi gration was organized at Asotin last week. ; The machinery for the flax mill at Whatoom is being built, and will be ready abqut June 1. A family named Keller have been suffering in Hoquiam from trichina, having eaten of improperly cured pork. Prizes amounting in value to $200 will be offered for the field day con tests to be held by the garrison in Walla Walla on June 1. The health offloer of Seattle discov ered a mild case of small-pox, about two blocks from polioe headquarters. The patient was immediately quaran tined. . ' Wheat and oat hay is bringing $6 a ton in the Big Bend oountry, and there is a disposition on the part of a num ber of the farmers to raise hay instead of grain. : A New York company offers to put in a creamery plant at Asotin if the milk from 800 oows oan be secured. The irrigation company will give a free site. The electrio light plant at Cheney is again in operation, and the citizens hope that a satisfactory agreement has been reaohed by the Edison company and the bondholders. The residenoe of W. E. Mitchell, in Olympia, burned with its oontents last Saturday: There was $800 insurance on the building and furniture, whioh about covers the loss. The effects of the bank of Anaoortes, whioh suspended in 1893, were sold at assignee's sale the other day, and brought but a small . sum, compared with the bank's liabilities. " The dead body1 ot an unknown man was found in the bay at Seattle last week. There was a frightful wound on the right side of the head, but the real cause of death has not been ascer tained. - The Whatoom Reveille claims that the old briok courthouse on E street in that town is not only the first briok building built in the territory of Wash ington, but the first built north of San Franoisoo. Mrs. Sidney T. Ford, of Centralia, last Thursday oelebrated her 90th birthday, among many of ' her old friends. Mrs. Ford is one of Wash ington's earliest pioneers, having set tled on Ford's prairie. Saddle horses belonging to Wesley Jones and E. W. Brackett were taken from hitching posts in the center of North Yakima last week and ridden off. The horses, stripped of saddles and bridles, were found in the sage brush near the old town a oouple of days later. . ' A doubt has risen in the minds of some in Seattle as to whether or not Jamea E. Allsop, the man who com mitted suicide in the Seattle jail re oently, after being arrested for murder, was the man the polioe was after. A photograph of the real Allsop has been ' received, and does not resemble the who killedman himself. It is claimed that there is a snake" measuring about three inches in length, in the eye of a horse belonging to Alex McAllister, of Yakima City. The snake can be plainly seen . wriggling around in the ball of the eye, and the horse., is,, gradually becoming . blind. Mayor Lake and George Gervais vouoh for the truth of this statement, says the Yakima Herald. s " Idaho.' The postoffioe department has or dered discontinued the apeoial mail service from Caldwell to Suoker, Mal heur oounty, Oregon, to take effect May 31 next. At no distant date the New Colum bia 1 Gold Mining Company operating ' : in the Yellow Jacket mining district, will be absorbed by the new company organized for that purpose and known as the Idaho Chemioal Gold Mining Company. The postoffioe and general store at - Cameron, about five milea from Kend- riok, was robbed of a quantity of stamps and groceries last week. This ia the second robbery in the last four months, and it is believed that an or ganized gang of boys in the neigbor hood is responsible for it Lemhi oounty ia to have a new mill, and all the plana have been prepared and aooepted The mill will be ereoted by the Gold Dust Mining Company near Leesburg. It will be a twenty stamp plant of 850 pounds eaoh. There -is plenty of ore blocked out to keep the mill running fully one year. From all indications this will be an active year of mining, in Custer ooun ty, says the Challis Silver Messenger. Our mines are not boomed to any great extent on the outside; they do not re quire it, as they show for themselves. ' ' Just how much work will be done on them this year depends greatly on the prioe of lead and silver. New and -rioh strikes are reported almost daily from aome section of the oountry. Montana. A new stage line is soon to be put on that will oonneot with Graham's line from Butte to Sheridan, and make the trip from Butte to Virginia City in one day. The terrible accident at the Broad water mine at Neihart resulting in the loss of several lives this week, was caused by the explosion of giant pow der. This makes the third serious mine aooident in Montana within two weks two of whioh are laid to pow -der explosions. .The Butte smelters are offering very favorable terms just now to ore ship pers. For the copper ores of the Butte distriot leasers and shippers have sc oured a price for concentrating as low as $1.25 per ton, and for smelting the concentrates a fee of $8 ia charged and pay 95 per oent of the value of the ores. After a shut-down for several weeks the Butte & Boston concentrator started up again this week. Some muoh needed repairs are being made in the smelter when it is expected that it will again be running with a full foroe of men. Thre Trout mine at Granite is shipping in an exoellent grade of sil ver ore to the Colorado smelter in Butte just now. Y