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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1894)
nn E OREGON MIST VOL. 11. ACTION TAKEN BY US. Government'ii Posifron in the China-Japan Question. , GROVER'S MKH8AHK TO EXPLAIN I'rasldent Cleveland Will Probably Urge Tliat Wo Have Tried tu Aid In Main, talnlng His I'raite of tli, Wurlil-Tlie ' I'esltlOlt ut Jauaa. Wamiinoton, November 21. The statement wm msde In Congressional circles to-day tlmt President Cleveland's , message to Congress would throw Unlit on tlia China-Japan question and would ' foremall any rorolutlon of liKpiiry. At the Secretary of Slate, nnllke the other Cabinet olllcura, makes no annual re port to Congreaa, the Pretldmit'a mesauge ordinarily deals with the afMrt in which ' IhU government hat any part, and aa the recent negotiation! with China and Japan are the moril im (Kirtuut questions the dcpaitmuiit hu hod in Home time, it I concluded he will make dear the rmsl tion o( thie government, lip to the present tlieie it no ofllciul information on llietuhjocl, and the Stats Department list mil aiaieu otncially that negotiations , wllh China aud Japan are In progress. Tlmreadingof the 1'rcaidcnt't message In the first business o( Congress, no tlmt - II won ui prectme the contemplated intro duction ol resolutions of lniuiry by K.-p-resonUiWe Bellamy Slorur. It In the MM of thoie familiar with President Cleveland's ioaitlon against forlgit en tanglement! that such rede re net) an lie may make to thin subject in hia message will lie on the ground of huniunity, urg- , inn that, while tlili government need not reach abroad (or comincst and ac quisition, It ran well adopt an enlight ened policy which will aid in maintain ing the peace and progresa o( the world. JAl'ASi's roKlTIOM. Wamiiinoton, November 21. The China-Japan incident, an lar at the United States' oiler of mediation it concerned, ia considered clied for the present by those in a position to understand the situation. At the department and at the Chinese and Japanese le(ationi there la only negative Information to theell'ect that no positive answer to the American Suggestion of mediation hat been re ceived. Vet well-informed persona lay Japan hat made her position clear In audi m way aa to avoid the embarrass ment of a poaliive declination and yet ahow her acceptance would have to be bated on certain dellulte) conditions. It It believed that the essential considera tion on which Japan would consent to any mediation is ihat China shall raise the white flag of trace, the emblem rec ognized the world over aa an indication that a contestant wants to treat for termt of peace. China hat not yet made any direct offer to the Japanese, and the lat ter are not disposed to consider a round aWit offer which overlook! the reco nined international emblem of the white flag. XO ANSWKR AT AIX. WaaniNaro!, November 21. Sec tary Ureshato says he hat received no reply from Japari to the guarded offer of mediation made by the United HtnU'S Novemlier 0. awl in the opinion of other State ofllclala no deliuilo reply from Ja pan it expected in the immediate future. ITALY WOULD HOT CONWtNT. , Lohdou, November 21. A special dis patch from Home tayt Italy has informed tiie powers the cannot approve of any form of Intervention between China and Japan. ;. . THE CRUISER OLYMPIA. It It Jtspeoted That alis Wilt Soon Oo ' Into Commission. ' Vallkjo, Cal., Novemlier 21. It has finally been decided by the Navy Depart ment that for the present the Marion will not go Into commission, owing to the lack of men, aa it it desired to com mission the unarmored steel cruiser Olympia, now at the Union Iron Works, at toon aa she comet up to the navy yard, which will bo very soon. Prepar atory ordcrt have already bean Issued to Lieutenant T. 0. Prince of the Marine Corps, detailing him to command the Marine Uuard, which will consist of six teen non-commissioned olllcere, privates and musicians. Tho Olympia will carry about forty ollicert and 400 men as her complement This will be none too many, when It it taken into coneidera- ' tion that she is the third largest cruiser In the American navy and carries a bat tery of four eight-inch bteceli-loiiding rilles. ten live-inch rapid-firing guns, fourteen six-pound and tlx one-pound rspid-llriiig guns, four gatlingt and all of the smaller arm that go to make up a ship's battery. The detail of officer will be made out Just as soon as the de partment is Informed that a crew enn be secured here for the ship. Manyof leers are more than anxiout to secure a detail to the Olympia. To Oblige Near Neighbor. Wahiiinoxo, November 21, Count Kaveullow, the Danish Minister, first t heard of the ootion of Denmark in ex cluding American beef and meats through the press cablegrams from Co penhagen. The Count expressed sur prise, for no action In that line bad here tofore been contemplated. He said tho action was probably due to request from Germany, a. , beef Tft'li Into ports frequently would find its way into Germany and thus overcome the Gor wM miriclioiu. He had never heard that any of the American product in Denmark was affected with Texa. fever Under these circumstances he feels that the action of Denmark is not so much "imod against the United (Hates ... It is Hmke D-mark's nelghl irellve In her exclusion. Hie i Minister hM not yet received any official advice, on the subject. ; -' ' Determined to rroaeoute. NkwYork, November 21. John Ja cob Astor appeared In the Jefferson Mar ket Court to-day, and expressed hit n dignS at th? light put aliment to flicted on the tramp, Oarvin, who was found asleep in hia mother's bouse Sat urday. He Subsequently bad an Inter Slew with the "' ' PrlBon ndde' rW Taf terward that bo was aufe Gar VIn purpose was robbery. He will prosecute him- CANALS OF MARS. frofasaar Lowell tars That baf llav. i.g un to Uotiltle, Boston, Mass.. November 21 A ill.. patch was received to-day from Perclval Miweii at the Lowell Observatorv. Flair. staff, Arlnona, stating that the canalt of Mars, ai observed last night, have begun lououuieanu that I'hlson and Euphrates were teen geminated. The dunlication of the canals and the planett fa a phe nomenon for which astronomers have leii watching with great interest. It Wilt first observed hv Ilia Ilnllnn iui omer Hclilttppnrelli a number of years BLTO. He BIIIIOIHII'HiI Hint inma nl 11. straight lines, which are known as ca- iiiiis, were m ne seen accompaiileu by a parallel linn, as if nnnllmi. rnn.l eslde the first. During the different oppositions of Mais the canalt have been closely watched to learn more about the duplication. The first Kuropeun astronomer to observe the phenomenon a-fl IWfOtln Ut Klt'a whn In 1 ... ..... .....v, ' V. ... VWU BW ceasive obsnrvationt observed duplica tion. In this country the canalt were observed doubled by tho Lick Observa tory in 1HIK), and airain In 18H2. Dui I ii It the present position one canal only has heretofore been announced as llfllllil till.. Iiolnn T.ta er of tliit was Profesaor Holden of Lick. Olwervations of the tame canal since n.ai time nave not shown It to be con tinuously double. The cause of the du plication is by no means determined. Mr. I X. well is of the opinion that it is dependent upon the eeason, and has pre dicted all along that the canalt would not lie teen iu duplicate until some timo in Novemlier. TENNESSEE LYNCHERS. ITnritir III Laws at Hi Mists an InUdol Cannot Taaliry. Mkmi'hih, Novemlier 21. The prose cution of Ned Smith and W. 8. Richard son, charged with the lynching of six negroes near Milllngton, Tenn., last Au gust, received a tevere setback to-day when " Hutch" McCarver went on the stand and stated that be is an infidel, lie it therefore incompetent under the lawt of Tennessee to give testimony be fore a jury in a capital case. " Butch " McCarver is the man whom the State mostly relied upon for a conviction. The prosocution 0enly charged that McCarver perjured himself when he said he did not believe in God. The Attorney-General bad no doubt " Dutch's " testimony would be tntticient to hang the men on trial at well aa three or four others. Immediately after McCarver't sensational statement to the court to day he was arrested oo a bench warrant charging him with perjury. It is also given out by Attorney-General Patter ton that he will immediately proceed aicainat A. J. McCarver, the Sheriff of the county ana the father ol " liaUh," to remove him from office. MURDEROUS MANIAC. H. Kill Ills Mnth.r, Mlal.r and Brother, auil Then Coinmlta Snloldo. Momtoomkby, Mo., November 21. A terrible tragedy was committed at 3 o'clock this morning about two miles from Wellsville. At that place lived Thomas Portercbeck, his mother, two sisters and a brother, all Bohemians. It appears that Thomas Portercbeck com- plalnea yesteruay evening mai ins neau was hnrting him, and said that he be lieved his neck was broken and refused to go to bed. At 8 o'clock this morning he secured an ax, and killed his widowed mother, hia sister and brother: hiaother sister made her escape by jumping th rough the winuow. one suxxi ouisiue and looked through tiie window and saw her maniac brother saturate the room with coal oil, set it on lire and then gash himself with a knife in the throat. He tank down and all four bodies were con sumed in the burning bouse. By the time the neighbors reached the place the house was ablaze. They tried in vain to rescue the bodies. This morning the four bodies could bo teen still burning In the ruins. The mother was an in valid, and had been confined to her bed for twelve years. The murderer sud denly became insane. i i . In Voonootlon With tho Dispute. Wahiiinoton, November 21, Senor Arrigia, the Guatemalan Minister to the United States, has none to Mexico in connection with the boundary dispute of (iuutemala and Mexico. It Is said at both the Mexican and uuatemnian lega ;..... l.t tm oililitlitnal lufnrmiition lias como to them looking to a breach of friendly relations between the two gov ernments. There has been for some time a controversy between the two cmintries, and both sides have troops along the frontier aim win prooaoiy maintain their respective forces there until tho pending controversy is settled. Diamond Cutters Deserting Holland. Washington. November 21. A report from the Commissioner of Immigration states that twenty-six diamond polish ers have arrived at New York from Amsterdam. After examination they were permitted to land, ine statement i I.. .!...! nl tt.u 111 nOO iliimnnii i.. n..n..r... rniiif a nnn am nut. nf cullers in .....j "i , , employment, and that many of them " e 1 ' . Clot.. X.o In. are cominn w mo umiii feience being mai uie oiainonu-uiiiiiiiK Industry is largely being transferred from Amsterdam to ew iora anu viu- csgo. . Admiral d Gania's Claim. London, November 21. A dispatch to the Times from Buenos Ayres says: Admiral Saldanba da Gama, one of the Brazilian Insurgent leaders, states that the revolutionary chiefs have definitely i.....,io,l mil. In accent the Presidency of Prndente de Moraes. Admiral da Gama declares mar. ne nas troops on the frontier of Rio Grande ready to begin hostilities Immediately, and that he will himself command the troops, tak ing the field in a few weeks' time. Sixty Arrests In Warsaw. St. Fbtbbhbuko, Novemlier 21. Sixty persons have been arrested In Warsaw for distributing circulars advising the people not to take the oath of allegiance to Nicholas II. ; . ."ile Glare lUslgos. : BminN, November 21. The Frank, furter Zeitung sayt M. de Glers, Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Genf Vannovaki, Russian Minister of War, htive rotignedt , ST. HELENS, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1891. IN THE NEXT CONGRESS Probable Distribution of Im portant Chairmanships. BASED ON ED BEING SPEAKER Hera ana to Bare tho Chairmanship of tho Hirers and Harbors, and Burrows tho Wayt and Means Chairmanship Tho Appropriations la Doubt. WAsnmoTON, November 20. The House Committees which are expected to be of tbe greatest importance in the next Congress are those on Ways and Meant, Appropriations, Rules, Banking and Currency, Coinage, Weights and Measures, Riven and Harbora, and Pub lie Building! and Groandt. Tbe first three named always head the Hat in or der of importance. Tbe others are ex pected to assume importance in tbe next Congress because of the special condi tions which will prevail daring that Congress. Tbe Banking Committee will ertainly be one ol the most important committees on the Hit, if there should be an effort, at it is hinted there may be, to revise the enrrency lawt and change the present system. Tbe probability of an ell'ort to secure silver legislation and the further probability that the Repub lican party when it cornea into power in House may want to formulate a policy on this queation, will have the effect also of advancing the Coinage Committee to position of tbe first rank. The Rivera and Harbors and Public Buildings Com m It tees will have the delicate task of providing for public improvements, to far aa the committees of the House can accomplish this work. With so many new men as there will be on the Republican aide of Congreet, and all of them feeling that it will be necessary for them to make a showing to their constituent!, there will natural ly be a pretty general clamor for ap propriation! for poetofhee buildings, custom-houses and river and harbor im provements. While tbe Republican party bat always shown a disposition to ward liberality in public improvements, there is probability of an effort to hold their miscellaneous appropriation! as low aa possible. Tbe low condition of the treasury and the fact that a Presi dential election will be so near at hand will prove atrong arguments in this di rection, aa will the possibility of a Presi dential veto. The Republicans at pres ent have six of the seventeen member! of the Rivera and Harbors Committee, and all their member! have been re elected except Henderson of Illinois. With Henderson out of the way Her mann of Oregon takes first place in the Rnnnblican roembershlD of the Com mittee, with Btephtma of Michigan, Hooker Ol rnew xorx, urosvenoroi uuio, and Reyburn of Pennsylvania following in the order named. It cannot, of course, be known whether tbe next Speaker will follow the seniority rale. If lie should, Hermann would become Chairman. Milliken of Maine leads the Repub lican membership of the Committee on INibiic Buildings, and the chances are, ii Reed becomes Speaker, Milliken will be made Chairman of this committee. Morse of Massachusetts ia the only Re publican member of the committee re turned. Only three of the old Repub lican members of the Committee on Banking and Currency are re-elected. They are Walker of Massachusetts, Rus sell of Connecticut and Johnson of In diana. Walker ia the senior member, and bis chances for the Chairmanship are the beat. Of the six present Repub lican members of the Committee on Coinage, Weight! and Measures five have been re-elected to the Fifty-fourth Con gress. They are in tbe order named: Stone 01 Pennsylvania, Jonnaon oi norm Dakota, Dingley of Maine, Hager of Iowa and Aldrich of Illinois. Stone would naturally become Chairman of Uie committee if be desired the place. In the natural order of events Bur rows of Michigan will become Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. With Reed in the speaker's cnair mere ia little doubt that he will be given thie important poet, which carries with it the Rennblican leadership on the floor of the House, if he tails in bis ambition to succeed Senator Fatten in the benate. With Reed in the Speaker's chair and Burrowa in the Senate there would be only three Republican member! of the present committee left to choose from, these being Payne of New York, Dahtell of Pennsylvania and Hopkins of Illinois. Henderson of Iowa is the ranking Re- Sublican member of the Appropriations ommittee, with Cogswell of Massachu setts, Bingham of Pennsylvania, Ding ley of Maine, Grout of Vermont and Cannon of Illinois coming in the order named. It is possible that neither Can non nor Henderson will be given the Chairmanship in the event of Burrows becoming Chairman of tbe Ways and Meana Committee J the probabilities are strong that the East would demand the Chairmanship of the next most impor tant committee, which would be the Ap propriations. In that contingency Cogs well's chances for being promoted to Uie head of the committee would be excel lent. If Reed becomes Speaker of the House, the Republican membership of the Committee on Rules will probably be composed of himself and the Chair men of the Appropriations and Wayt and Meant Committees. He pursued this plan in the Fifty-first Congress, and there ia reason to believe that ne would revive it rather than imitate Crisp's pol icy of distributing tbe honors.' THEY WILL LECTURE. Walte of Colorado and Broehlnrldga to , j0 on the Platform. Dxhvcb, November 20. Governor Walte has decided to go upon the lecture platform. He will make a short tour in the West before his term expires, de livering his first lecture at St. Louis and going from there to Chicago. After his term expires he will lecture in the BBICKINBIOOI ON THI TAHITI. ' Lexington. Kv.. November 20. 0. D. Hess in an interview to-night said that tbe report that be Had contracted witn Colonel W. O. P. Breckinridm for a lect ure tour was true, and that tbe Colonel would begin at once. His first subject will be "Ten Yean Among Tariff Ui formers." THOSE INTERNATIONAL GAMES. llarrerd Athletes Are Partlonlarly An loot for Them. Cambbidos. Mass.. November 20. The interviews with prominent Oxford ath letes cabled from London, in which the idea was auraested tbat. if Yale or a team made up from Yale and Harvard should challenge an Oxford-Cambridge team to an International athletic contest, the Englishmen would very likely send team to this country next year, nas aroused great Interest among the college .( 1.1. C.nlsln Ynman Ttinohftm. RUJIDWDI I t 1 1. .''... ' J Jr., of tbe Harvard-New Haven team was seen to-day, and be said : " Harvard certainly favors the idea of Inlnt llai-ffonl-Yiiln truck and athletic team meeting a Joint team from Oxford and UamDriuge, anu wouia nnuouoieuiy agree to s competition on either side of the water this spring. I should like to m rAnflAntaf.ivA fcpsm nicked at large from the colleges, from the choice of its members, resting on me resuat on in tercollegiate garnet at New York, Of onnraa Yolo In In or tha winner last spring, is the one to make the first ad vances to Harvard or to me omer col leges. I feel sure that Harvard will do airaivtlilnr aYa nan trt flirthpr t.tlA fliHtl. Nothing official, however, has yet been done. Several Harvard graduates have, nowever, men worauiK iu too m tercet v. the matter, but they have arrived at no fluRnlla Aiainn vol-.. Tt Ilea with Yale to take the initiative, and Harvard wm ioiiow oer ieaa. IS HE THE STRANGLER? An Italian Caught In tho Act of Choking One of DeoTer't Fallea Women. Dbnvbb, November 20. H. Meller, an Italian, entered the house of Marie Ventres at 1330 Twentieth street, near Market, about midnight last night, and toon became engaged in a quarrel with tbe woman, and without warning seized her by the throat. He pressed his thumbs tightly npon her windpipe, and squeezed so hard that the woman was notable to utter a sound. She imag ined tbat the man engaged in choking her waa the one who bad strangled Lena Tapper, Marie Contassoit and Kiki Ayama. She it a woman of great phys ical strength, and managed to release heiself. She called for help, and when an officer arrived Meller was trying to cut her throat with a razor. Chief of Police Armstrong and the police gener ally think that Meller is nothing more than an ill-tempered Italian. The de tectives are not enthusiastic in the idea tbat their prisoner is the man who stran gled three women recently. This at tempted murder has added to the terror and excitement of the women in that district of the town. NO WORK ON THE CANAL. Men Starving and Dying From Sickness Brought on by Kxposnro. Memphis, November 20. Not long ago there waa published in many of the newspapers of the country what pur ported to be a dispatch from Colon, Central America, on the Panama canal, and stated there was a great demand for labor. To-day the Commercial-Appeal received the following appeal from the roadmaster of the railway at Colon : "In my position with the railroad here I see a great deal of tbe floating population of the Isthmus. There are to-dav on the Isthmus crowds of well- educated, good-intentioned machinist!, carpenter!, draughtsman in fact men of every trade and profession who are starving and suffering from sickness brought on by exposure to tbe wetseason and neglect, and every boat brings more. There is not work for any of them. Since the revival ol the work on uie ca nal the canal company has not hired one single man, except negro laborers, at 60 to 70 cents a day and paid in Columbian silver. This equals 27 cents in American money a day. There are men here starv ing to death, who gave up position! at home to come here." THEY ASK A PENSION. Many Veterans of tho Indian Wars Are Really In Mood of Aid. Olympia. November 20. About twenty veterans of the Indian wars of 1S5C-59 as sembled in this city yesterday with a view to taking steps toward tbe securing of recognition of their claim! on ac count of the wan with Indiana. Among those in attendance were: H. G. far ton!, Jamet Patterson, John de Laca tour, William Lemon, Green McCafferty, B. W. Johns, J. P. Mannen, Jacob Ott, Thomas Prather, B. F. Ruth, William Littlejohn, Marcui McMillan, G. W. Bhaser, John P. Hays. , Resolutions were adopted asking the government to grant pensions and land warrants to the Indian war veterans and dependent widows, and that the Repre sentatives in Congress from the Pacific Northwest be requested to urge these .....immuI In ilia nrpamhte UIBIUIB. a. ... w " " and resolutions, what is done in this line should be done quickly, lor inese pioneert are now few in number, not exceeding . rin J . 1. 1 , 1 ..... iM n.ann im X,OW, anu mry aro uiu mm u j . stances need tiie aid of the government as a jubi rewaru lor meir paei. oc vivos. It Was Already In Type. Minneapolis, November 20. After tbe suicide of Editor James Liddell at Lyons, Ia., yesterday it was discovered that he had written a brief description of his throwing himself in front of a rail- 1 ,M:n ri.iinn i)..t ha It ail contam- ., smi.iu8 .. plated it for over a year. He even added a aispiay imjsuihk. pica Times was stopped and tbe article in serted. Absolutely no cause waa as signed. He was always cheerful and genial. Wlgalne and His Party. London, November 20. Mr. Byford, wboee eon is with Captain Joseph Wig gins, the Arctio navigator and master of the steamer St. Jernen, which vessel was wrecked near Yugorshar, has received news that Captain Wiggins and his party n. l.Ama .lnnnlhAahnm. niloted by Russian Bamoyeds. They are riding In reindeer sieua 10 nociiun, wm they will make for Archangel. .. Opened, to Trade. Tanoikes. November 20. The rebell- inn favor In of Mulev Mohammed has ended, and Morocco City is now open to trade. PACIFIC NORTHWEST. Condensed Telegraphic Rt ports of Late Events. BRIEF SPARKS FB0M TUB WIRES Budget of Hews for Xasy Digestion From Different Parte of tha States of Wash ington, Oregon and Idaho Item of : Interest to Pacific Coast People. "Parkhurttlng" is not unknown in Tacoma. Spokane pays 11.700 monthly for its electric lights. Tbe Bncoda-Tenino Enterprise is go ing to move to Coemopoiis. A stage is to be run from Fort Klam ath to Crater Lake next summer. Srjokane'a Citv Council proooses to pay only f 8 a month for aro lights. The first pile has been driven for new cannery Bam Elmore ia going to build at Astoria. A threshing hand in Wallowa county. Or., has spent $60 trying to collect $27 due mm lor wages. Representative Belts is shipping 200 Oxford grade bucks from Pendleton to s lion tana purcnaser. The Spokane bureau of immigration hat decided to repeat the fruit fair next year, tbe date selected being tbe nrst week in October. A lot of nursery stock shipped from New York infested with woolly aphil was destroyed by Btate Inspector Ton neson at Winlock recently. t Work has begun at the Cascades on the job of raising the State Portage rail road to higher ground, so as to set it out of the way of the canal work. j St. Joseph's Hospital of Aberdeen hat issued a neat pamphlet commemorative of two years of very successful work on the part of the Sisters of St. Dominic. It is thought now that the county seat will remain at Snohomish, as a three fifths vote was required to change it and thit, it it believed, Everett failed to se cure, i The Questions of special tax levies for light, water, fire protection and street Improvement purposes are to be submit ted: to the voters of Port Townsend on Wednesday of next week. , Marshal Drake savi that four men in cluding the cook are now guarding fifty- f eight convict! in the McNeil's Island penitentiary, and that the walls of the penitentiary are old and crumbling. The attendance at the Cheney Normal School continues to increase, and now the enrollment in tbe normal depart ment is ninety-eight, the largest number ever enrolled at this season of the year. Klamath and Lake counties. Or., will j sell in all this faU about 15,000 head of 1 cattle. Will some local statistician let us know whether the increase in sight is sufficient to make up for thit drain niwin thm hfrHa7 t Many of the farmer! around Spangle are going into bog-raising quite exten sively. There will be a large number of nogt reauy lur marae nw jw.. farmer! are anxioue to see a large packing-house in Spokane, to aa to have borne market. Jnhn W flllntnn Irnmintr opposite Coquille City on an extensive scale this season, employing about eighteen men and two teams. He baa six acres of low ground completely covered with logs, wailing lor uig u wawr m iuu imwu vuv. In the cases of the State against Potts and against Parker, charged with murder in the second degree, tried last weex in Harney county, the verdicts were guilty. Parker was sentenced to seven and one half years and Potts to twelve years in tne penitentiary. Oakesdale's water and electric ligbt projects have finally come to grief. Judge Sullivan has sustained and made j permanent the injunction againit the proposed bond issue. Tbe bonds exceed tbe town's legal indebtedness, and the electric light plant, the court finds, haa . decreased in value. A firm of Walla Walla horse dealers I have just shipped four carloads of horses ' to Vermont. In order to have the ani- mals in good condition it is proposed to j allow them to rest every alternate twen- j ty-four hours, thus occupying thirteen daya in the journey. Though the freight per car is $346, the firm expects to real ise a handsome profit from the venture. I The United States grand fury at Walla ' Walla returned thirty-seven true bills. One of the prisoners when called upon to plead, said: "I will plead guilty if 1 can't get more justice than I got before the Judge who sent me here." Judge Hanford, with the " icy" look that he has always on the bench, directed tht clerk to enter a plea of not guilty. Most of the offenders had sold liquor to In diana. Wyman J. Lewis, who for the past three years has acted as agent for tht Stevedoring & Rigging Company of Old Tacoma has been arrested on a warrant sworn to by Frank Donaldson and Al bert Anderson, stockholders of the com-1 pany. The company is made up of long shoremen, and Lewis is charged with having collected sums to the amount ol $2,473.75 Tor work done, which he did not turn over to the company. Lewis denies the whole charge, claiming the men have entered into a conspiracy to ruin him and break up his business. He says the money he it accused of em beztlihg was paid to the Co-operative Stevedoring dc Rigging Company through the same Albert Anderson who is one oi the complainants. Lewis waa placed under $1,000 bonds, which he furnished. The November issue of the Puget Sound Lnmberman says: "The recent shipment of 500 red cedar doors and a quantity of window frames to Johannes burg. South Africa, per bark Levenbank by Wheeler, Osgood & Co. of Tacoma marks another epoch in the door trade of the Pacific Northwest. Only three years ago the red cedar door trade was unknown east of the Cascade Mountains. The doormen of tha Pacific Northwest will, however, have the same difficulty in introducing their goods that the cedar shingle men had, namely, the prejudice of custom. It is always hard to intro duce any new material in the older com munities ; but, once introduced, the ex cellence of the material will apeak for itself. The door trade of the Pacific Northwest in onr humble opinion has a bright future ahead." . JAPAN IN NO HURRY. No Answer Beeolved ae Tat to Oar Offer to Arbitrate. Washington, November 10. It It stated here in official circles that Japan has not yet accepted the Invitation of the Unfed States to submit the ques tion of peace with China to our media tion. While the statement is probably literally correct, there is reason to be lieve that Japan has requested aa a pre liminary to action upon our invitation that she be informed explicitly just what terms China has to propose as a basis of a treaty of peace. Up to this moment China has not submitted any definite Eropoaals, so that the delay appears to a rather on her part than on Japan's. It could not fairly be expected that the Japanese would halt in their triumphant march and perhaps afford their oppo nent! a very potent opportunity to rally from their disorganized condition, unless Japan is furnished with some satisfac tory proposition by China that may be binding beyond question upon tbe latter. No such satisfactory proposition hat yet been made by China, but on the con trary the Chinese tenders so far have been on basis that could not be ac cepted with safety and consistency by Japan. For instance, a Chinese proposition waa that Core be evacuated by both Chinese and Japanese troops. Inasmuch aa the principal cause of the war was Japan's contention that tbe entire Co rean administrative and financial system must be reformed on modern lines, and that .Tanen mnet nnderfc&ke the task, a temporary occupation of tbe country at least by Japan was a necessary condi tion. And consenting that the Japanese troops evacuate China immediately; would also violate all precedent, for it is customary in such cases for tbe victori- j ous nation to remain in possession of the captured territory as a pledge until the Sayment of the war indemnity. Bnt, isregarding these points of difference, it is becoming more evident that the in terference of European powers is a stum bling block in the way of a settlement of the war through the medium of the United States, nearly all having inter ests in the East which they regard aa paramount to our own. An official who nas given much attention to the subject is of the opinion tu.it Russia will never consent to anything which looks like aa indefinite occupation of Core a by Japan, unless she is herself allowed to take pos session of a portion of Corea for the Eastern terminus of tbe Siberian rail road. France is reported to have de manded a coaling station on the Island of Formosa, and Great Britain has reached out for the Island of Chusan. JAPAg'g outlay. Toxio, November 18. Japan has not yet received any peace overtures from China. If Japan accepts America's offer of mediation, she will do so only upon certain condition! concerning the ques tion of indemnity. It is understood that Japan't actual outlav for the war up to the present has been about 30,000,000. FROM THB FBOHT. WASHnroTON, Novemtsr 16. The Jap anese Minister to-night received the fol lowing cablegram from the Japanese government: Our army occcupied Ta il 117. 4k .riwnmn At tho ftth in- ri.nl hevino rlpatroved the Chinese torpedoes. Our fleet, transports and torpedo-boats are safely anchored in the bay. The torpedo station with ignition equipments, charts of submarine tor pedoes, eighty cannons and telephone line were captured. YAMAOATA'S ABJtT. Tokio. November 16. Dispatches from Field Marshal Yamagata say that he is continuing his advance on Manchuria. His left division is marching upon Sin Yon Ching, where a force of 20,000 Chi nese under General Ma is encamped. The right division recently routed a large force of Chinese cavalry on the road to Lin San Kwan, which was oc cupied later without opposition from the Chinese. The division is now advancing upon Wo Tin Tang, where the Chinese under General Too have taken a posi tion. THB SBI-aT at xis chow. London, November 16. The Tien Tsin correspondent of the Times says that Prince Kung sent back to Port Arthur General Shiu with 2,000 men. They made a vigorous defense eastward of Kin Chow November 7, and fought throughout the day? They checked the Japanese advance, though unsupported by the other commanders. Another se vere fight took place November 8, when General Shiu was overcome by the Jap anese then occupying Kin Chow. Some thousands of refugees, fleeing from Kin Chow toward the villages in the vicin ity, were mistaken for the enemy by the Japanese, who fired into them from the defenses, killing hundreds. IN THE HANDS OF FIENDS. A Young dirt Said to Hare Been lakes ton Cava by Netrroes. Stbacuse, N. Y., November 16. United States Marshal Bennett oi Weeds port, who has been searching foi Miss Ella Cooney of that place for twe weeks, found her in the House of tht Good Shepherd, where she has been un der care since November S, but unable, to give an account of herself. Mist Cooney disappeared from the home ol her parents about three weeks ago. Nc trace of her could be obtained, although Father Donohue, whose church she at tended, received startling letters from her. Briefly, the stories which these letters told waa that ihe had been ab ducted by aix negroes, who had taken her to a cave in the woods near Syracuse, where she had been held captive. Little was said concerning the treatment she was receiving except that she was kept prisoner. Bhe explained that the let ters were got out by stealth. Apparent ly aa last token to her parents of her self in the event of her never seeing a.in ko wit nfT a lock of her hair UH. -. ' " " ' and sent it to them. Many negroes are employed on too aew rcocrn here, and they live in " dugouts " half a mile from the works. These " dugouts " were thoroughly searched, but no trace of the girl could be found until yester terdav. The matron of the hospital says Miss Cooney was brought there in "oImajI AavananiA ) faVnUI fltlfc atvfc tha door of the hospital. She semed to be 111 A avUsownK In VAot fflratf ttt Ctt th f&f 111. A IUU1VUU ui1wiuwWH fair it to be made by the authorities of this county. It is believed that Miss Cooney haa been horribly treated, and ik.. ik. at tho voaarimir ara re sponsible for her absence. When she arrived at tha hospital her head had k. wVvKaj! rtS Mwafc ri Ito lfiTnriant HVOU .UlSLrw VI P.V.. . hair, of which she was very proud. She IS now a use) uvauo vi w yw w. . NO. 48. WORDEN IS SENTENCED The Court Says He Must Hans by the Neck. MOTION FOB NEW TRIAL DENIED Tke Condemned Man Was Convicted of Wrecking a Southern Pacific Train - Daring tho Big Strike Beard Hit Doom Without Betraying Kmotloa. Woodland, November 19. The court room was crowded long before 7:30 this evening, the hour fixed for pass ing sentence upon Worden, the train wrecker. In the crowd were many ladies. The court excluded all jurors in the Hatch trial. When asked if he had anything to say why sentence should not be passed Mr. Strong, attorney for Wor den, moved to set aside tbe verdict fear reasons, first, tbat tbe court erred in in structing the jury in matter of law, and second, that the verdict is contrary to the law and evidence. Mr. Strong con tended that the court erred in not in structing the jury that it might bring in a verdict of murder in tbe first or second degree, orof not guilty. He read numer ous decisions on that point. On the sec ond point Mr. Strong contended that, if it be admitted that all tbe testimony in troduced by the defense be true, only murder in tbe second degree had been proven Mr. Cook in reply read from the instructions to the grand jury show ing tbat the court not only instructed in regard to tbe two degrees of murder, bnt defined both. He contended that the instructions expressly stated that the three forms of verdict submitted to the jury were moved upon by counsel on both sides, all three of whom were present. Counsel also produced the statutes of 1891 tosbowtbatremovingarail.whether life ia taken or not, is an offense punish able either by imprisonment for life or death, as the jury may elect. Judge Armstrong also addressed the court in opposition to the motion, and Judge Bush closed tbe argument in support of v it. The court after reviewing the argu ment and instructions denied Mr. Strong's motion tbat the case be dis missed on tbe ground tbat the court had no jurisdiction; that the government was in control of the road and Engineer Clark was in tbe- service of the United States at the time the train waa wrecked. Mr. Cook had cited many decisions in opposition to Mr. Strong. The court said he did not desire to delay tbe mat ter by an examination of these authori ties. Proceedings had been taken under tbe advice of the Attorney-General of the United States, and if an error had been committed, the Supreme Court can correct it. A motion for arrest of judg ment was denied. The court called upon Worden to stand up, and sentenced him to be hanged ' in the State prison at Folsom Tuesday, February 12, 1895, between the hours of 10 a. M. and 2 r. m. Judge Grant was much affected as he pronounced the sen tence, but Worden heard bit doom with out betraying any evidence ol emotion. Worden'a attorneys have announced their intention to appeal the case to the Supreme Court. The crime for which Worden ia sen tenced was committed July 11 IaBt dur Ino tha orpat strike. A train was sent ont from Sacramento under the guard of United States soldiers, and was wrecKea at a bridge crossing in Yolo county. Tha spikes were drawn from one of the ties and tie left in position. The engineer in charge of the train, Clarke, and two sol diers were killed. . The Output of floor. Chicago, November 19. Twelve mill ers, representing 600 merchant flouring mills with a daily capacity of SoO.UUU barrels, met in secret session at, the Auditorium to-day to consider the prop- ; osition to reduce the output 100,000 bar rels of flour a day for thirty days, or 3,000,000 barrels in all. The scheme was proposed some time ago, owing to a large unmerchantable surplus, but the recent better demand for flour and an advance in price has, it was claimed, changed the complexion of the siuation, and the opinion was expressed by some of those present tbat no curtailment wouia ds ordered. It is not thought, however, that a decision will be reached before to morrow. Those present represented mills in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Minne sota, Wisconsin, Missouri and North Dakota. - ' Matter for the Conrte. Washington, November 19. The In dian office is doing nothing in the mat ter of telegrams received from the Indian agent at Muskogee, L T., regarding the Cook gang of desperadoes. He haa been informed that the troops asked for can not under the law be sent into the In dian Territory. It is stated at the In dian office that the whole affair is one with which the agent need not concern himself, as it is under the jurisdiction of the courts. The Indian ollice has given him permission to use tbe Indian police in co-operation with tbe United States Marshals, but further than this he has no jurisdiction. Bebels tho Attackers. . Niw Yobk, November 19. A special to the World from Valparaiso, Chili, says: The British Minister to Peru has asked for help, and has protested against the attack on the British ship Siren at Salaveri early this month. The Peru vian government claims it is not respon sible, as the rebels were the attackers. The British Minister is said to have threatened to leave, going aboard a war ship. The British squadron is expected shortly. . ' Expulsion of Jesuits Threatened. - St. Louis, Mo., November 17. A City of Mexico special says Congressman Matze has presented a bill in the Cham ber of Deputies praying that all churches in charge of Jesuits be sold at auction in that Republic. It is claimed the meas ure will probably be a great factor in the complete expulsion of the Jesuits from Mexico. . - . i . - Again tha Cook Clang. , Muskogix, I. T., November 19. Last night twelve members of tiie Cook gang raided the town. They laid in a tnpplr of cigars, and then rode leisurely out of town, , ii