5 OREGON MI ST VOL. 13. ST. HELENS, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1896. NO. U. TELEGRAPHIC RESUM Events of the Day In a dented Form. Con OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS Items of Importance Wtom Domestic and Foreign lni-OrtM of tli Dispatches. Two young men, named Montgomery and Fox, rlvili in a love affair, (ought a duel with revolver on Birob oreek, Alaska. Fox reoelved two wounds, neither of tbem fatal. Complete arrangements have been made by the Prinoeton Athletlo A wo olatlon to tend a team to represent America in the Olympian games, to be held in Athena, Ureeoe, April to 11. A Cairo dlspatoh tayi the Egyptian troop have atarted for Wady Haifa where the entire Soudan expeditionary foroe is expeoted to assemble April when the advance on Dongola will be oommenoed. Kid Thompson, convicted of partlol panoy in the Rosooe train robbery, wa aenteuoed by Jndge Smith, in the Lo Angele superior oonrt, to be hanged at Folsom on May 93, between the hour of 10 and 4 o'olook. The eaae of the United State vs. the atate of Texas, involving the owner ahlp of Oreer county, haa been dooided la favor of the United State. Juitloe Harlan handed down the opinion. The ease Involves 1,600,000 sores. The New York Herald oorrrespondent in Kio Janerto ssys that the Brazilian government will present to oongress an agreeement with rranoe upon tbeqnea tion of the oon tested territory in Amspa, on the border of Frenob Uniana. A powder mill wbloh give employ meat to seventy-flvs men at Kiflon, Ulster oounty, N. Y., blew up. The mangled bodlea of five men bav been found In the ruins. The same mill blew up eighteen mouths ago, killing onr men. Mayor Broatoh, of Omaha, Neb., has sent oat letters to BOO mayors of otties . in the trans-Mississippi valley, asking them to present the matter to the oouu oils of their respective municipalities, and nrglng the adoption of resolutions favoring the exposition that is to be held ia Omsha during the summer and fall of 1898. In Chios go, J J. Colvin, promt Bent manufacturer of galvanised iron oornloe, was superintending the work of the new station on the Lake-street elevated road, when the temporary scaffold on whloh he stood waa struck by a train, and he waa burled into the street being almost instantly killed. Dr. Brown, of Ban Franolsoo, haa been aoqulttod on the charges of iro morslity and oeusured for unmlnlstar ial oonduot He considers himself vindicated of all the charge preferred against him. The Congregational oounoil haa been in session tor the past three weeks trying the ohargos agatnat Dr. Brown. Fire in canton, Wia., inntcted a loss of from 175,000 to $100,000. The Urge stock of general merchandise of Crosier Brothers is total loss; also the Y. M. O. A. fixtures, and the buildings snd stocks of several other firms. The fire is the seoond one whloh haa occurred reoeutly, and ia believed to have been Incendiary in Its origin. The Kentucky legislature haa ad Juurued, after sixty-day session. The legislature failed to aooomplish the two important act It bad, before It the election of a United State senator and the enactment of legislation to save the atate's financial reputation. Gover nor Bradley has refused to order a spe olal session, and the state Is In a bad way. The United States supreme oonrt ha reversed the deolslon of Judge Maxey, of the Texas federal oonrt, in the oaae of Consul Ornalea, of Mexioo, asking for the extradition of certain men claimed to have been engaged in the Garas inaurreotion of 1881 and 1898. The decision haa the effect of holding them aubjeot to extradition. Chief Justloe Fuller read the opluion. Senator Mitchell of Oregon ia pre paring his report in favor of an amend ment to the constitution providing for the election of United State senators by dlreot vote of the people. At its last meeting the oommlttee on privi lege and elections, by vote of Ave to four, ordered a Joint resolution looking to a ohange in this particular to be re ported to the senate. It is Mr. Mitch ell's Intention to press the resolution for consideration. A sensation has been caused by th announcement made by M, Berthelot, minister of foreign affairs, in a Frenob cabinet meeting, that he had asked the British ambaassdor, the Marquis of Dofferin, for Information regarding the proposed advance of BritishrEgyp tlan troops np the Nile, and had point ed out to him the serious oonsequenoes of snob an advance. Thla warning note may be a preliminary to a moro decided step. In Kalamaaoo, Mioh., non-union molders who had taken the plsces of striking union men at the foundry of Clarageft Son, attaoked two onion molders from an adjacent foundry, and in turn wore attaoked by a big orowd of nnion molders who were lying in wait for them. The non-union men were armed with iron bars, and in the fight that followed one of the union men had his head out open and two others received broken noses. The trouble resulted from an aasanlt on a non-union molder on Saturday nlgntj by striking molders. The non-union men were finally vanquished. The raoe lor the Hirosh cup in Nioe, a total distanoe of thirty mile, Satan its won, Alias second, Britannia third. The sobooner Noyo, from Ban Fran olsoo for Fort Bragg, oollided off Point Arena with the stesmer Pasadena. The Noyo was damaged. The German reiohstag oommlttee has concluded the first reading of the sugar bill, and fixed the Import duty at 40 marks per 100 kilos. Ex-Chief of Polios Thomas M. Speers died in Kansaa City of heart disease, sged 59. He ws chief of police In Kansas City for thirty -two years. Th miners employed at the Win throp mine, in Ishpemlng, Mioh., quit work, boosnse the management wanted thein to work ten-honr shifts, Instead of eight. The Prinoe of Monaco ha renewed hi oonoesslon to the Monte Carlo Casino for fifty years, on oondition that bia annuity be inoresaed from $300,000 to f 400,000. In Ban Franolsoo, C. F. Mars, a lathing oou tractor, was aasaulted and beaten by strikers, who claimed Mars wss working for less than nnion rate. He died from the effeotaof the injuries. William U. Judge, of the Tbeoso- phist Society, died in New York, after an illness of two yesrs. He has been slnoe the death of Mine. Blavatsky, the moat prominent Tbeosppbist in this oonntry. A Washington dispatoh ssys the or der soon to be issued drawing into th oivll servioe a large number of offloers of the government who are now exoept- ed la still under deliberation by the president The strike of the special -order, or custom tailor, ia already practically broken. About forty of the shops olosed hsve opened, the oontraotors having ligned the contract drawn np by the men. Th strike begun with reported number of 1,000. The bia- suit of Swift & Co.. the Chi oaso packers, againat the Grand Trunk railway, whloh baa been pending slnoe 1899, waa dismissed by stipulation. Swift A Co. sued for 1800,000 on ao- count of alleged excessive obargea for freight on shipment esst from 1887 to 1889. The scheme of adding the latest weather forecasts to the regular post marks on letter will be oommenoed by the postofflc department July 1. Applications for this servioe from over forty pustoffloe hsve been filed, and It will be lntrodnoed In Ubioago and other large cities. New baa reaobed New York from Luayra, Veneauela, of the bursting of the magaslne of the Veneauela war ship Marsoale Aysouobe. Eight men were killed in the explosion. The re mainder of the crew were rescued by fishermen. The warship was burned to the water's edge. A dispatch to the London Globe from Cairo aaya the Kalifa baa proclaimed a Jehad (holy war) againat Egypt, and called on all dervishes capable of bear ing arms to enroll under his banner. It is said Osman Dlgna la to leave Caasala and join the dervishes now mustering at Dongola. In Chicago the cupola in the shed of the iron foundry on Ashland avenue fell from ita supports. Molten metal waa hurled in every direction. Michael Donovitoh and Peter Rovitoh were fatally burned, and Edward Davla, Miles Conway and Alexander Cameron were seriously Injured. That trade between the United State and Asia la increasing is Indicated by the heavy trana-Paoiflo malls now ar- lvlng and departing. The steamship Viotoria that aalled from Taooma, car ried the largest mail ever taken out by Northern Pacific liner. There were 48 aaoka of papers, amounting to 9,860 pounds, and 8,600 letters. In Cleveland, O., the fishing tugs Jessie Ens and Helene went out on the lake, and after gathering the nets, set ont the night before, started baok. When outaide the breakwater, a bits- sard struck them and they- were soon hemmed in by dense staoks of floating Ice, The powerful harbor tug Baoon forced her way to the resone, and, after hard battle, brought the Hoiene in. The Baoon put baok to rescue the Jessie Enaa, but the effort waa nnany aban doned. The British ship Auldglrth, whloh arrived in Cork recently with a cargo of wheat from Portland, Or., reports having passed in latitude 68:09 south, longitnde 71:81 west, two large ioe bergs, about five mile long and about 500 feet high. On the following day, in 58:37 south and 88:08 west, sue passed eight loebergs from one to twelve miles long, and from 100 to 700 feet high. There were light northeast winds at the time, and fine weather. The loebergs were right in the truck of ships. Edison ha succeeded, with the aid of the Roentgen ray, in penetrating the hnman body with the naked eye, the auooessful experiment having been made at laat He looked Into the lungs and heart, and examined the arteries, musoles and blood vessel of one of bis assistants. With the pow erful cathode light placed behind the subjeot he looked through a screen of prepared ohemloals, and ia said to have plainly seen the working of the various organ of the body. , , . . , . : A boy named Swlneheart, 18 year old, was arreated In Bnrlington, Ia., at the leader of a gang of youthful ruffians who attempted to burn alive small boy against whom they had a grudge. They persuaded the little fellow .to en ter the oellar of an empty house and then tied him securely to a post After torturing him with tales of death in various form, they set fire to the building and ran away. Parties passing ssw the fire, broke in and extinguished it and rescued the almost nnoontoious child, tied in the oellar. GROWING NORTIIWES Progress and Doing in the Pacific States. CONDEN8KD BUDGET OF NEWS from All the Cities and Town, of th. Faelfle States and Territories Washington, The grip is prevalent in Rosalia and vlolnity. Governor MoGraw was visitor at the normal school at Cheney laat week, About 100 sacks of potatoes were shipped from Cowllts oounty last week, about 600 saoks going turn Lewi river and 600 from Kelso. Very few oriminal oases will be tried at the present term of the superior court of Lincoln oounty, most of them having been continued till the next regular term. The nnion revival services at Spokane have olosed. Eleven hundred and sixty-six cards were handed in with the name of those who are anxious for their soul' welfare. Judge C. M. Kinoaid, of Colfax, aays that the cold weather did not hurt the squirrel in the least; that they are a fat and numerous aa If they had been stall-fed all winter. After paying all the expense Inol dent to purchasing the army post, the Spokane oommlttee bad left 7 per oent of the oasb subscribed to return to those who donated It Some of the Indiana on the Cplvllle reservation have been angered by ami teur prospectors staking off aa olalma the well-cultivated garden patobe of the members of the tribe on the reserva tion. ine taus oi 1,000 squirrel were laid on the commissioners' table in Spokane one day laat week. They were taken up in th regular order of business, and the bounty of one oent apieoe paid. Formal notioe has been reoelved at Walla Walla from the Interior depart' ment that the land for the site of the United States penitentiary has met with approval, and that the purchase price will soon be forwarded. i wo renegaae wanna, known aa "Billy" and "Diok," brothers, were arreated in Walla Walla on a charge of attempted arson, In having set fire to the large barn belonging to "Boston Charley," who lives near Walla Walla, The town of Marcus is booming, a barber shop, saloon and restaurant be ing among the new enterprises, while East Marcus is forging ahead with a new blacksmith shop and saloon, with several other new bualness ventures in sight King county's delinquent personal tax ia now $31,849.48, and there, is no immediate prospect that it will be paid. The oolleotor recently sent ont by County Treasurer Maple gathered in about $6,000, and about an equal sum waa secured by letters sent from the offloe. Mr. Posey, a Leavenworth barber's wife, successfully performed a very diffloult opeartion on a chicken laat week. The ohioken had swallowed a toadstool, and it waa noticed that in a day or two ita orop blackened and the fowl seemed sick. Mrs. Posey opened the orop, oleaned it out and sewed it np again. The ohioken is now in bet tor shape than ever, and is taking the cure lor the toadBtool habit a a Moore, sentenced to Walla Walla from King oounty for burglary, has been pardoned by Governor Mo Graw. Moore escaped a few years ago and went to British Columbia. He re tunred of hia own aooord on oondition that be would be released at the end of his term, aa originally fixed. His time had really expired and the par don wa only the carrying ont of the agreement made at the time of hia voluntary return. A Mr. Crilly, of Blaine, ha been making experiments with fir bark, with view to utilising it in the manu facture of useful and ornamental ar ticles . He haa a polished block of this material oovered with a coat of var nish, whiob, for riohness of oolor and beautiful markings, is truly admirable. For dock oases, glove, handkerchief and oollar boxes, eta, thl material would work np well, and would be a novelty whiob would secure a ready sale in the notion store of the Eaat Colonel Molntyve, an Irrigation and oivll engineer of Seattle, is the invent or of a new system of wagon roads, whloh he thinks will revolutionise country travel. He calls it the "steel wagon road." He got his idea from observing that the drivers of every vehicle seek the street oar traoks in preference to the beat gravel or paved street Mr. Mclntyre estiamte that the ooat of single-traok rural steel roada will not exoeed 11,000 to $3,000 per mile, while the cost of maoadamiaed wagon road average over $8,000 per mile. Oregon. Clatsop oounty is about to oall in ita warranto up to July 1, 1894. Trout are taking the fly in the north fork of the lower Coos river. - A farmer of Lake oounty ssys that he expeots to shear80,000 aheep this season. At the last term of oourt in Baker oounty no oirminals were sent to the penitentiary. The firm of Shea A Co. haa pur chased grounds near Albany and will start a creamery. At Corvallla last week, 8,000 bushels of wheat waa sold at 57 oents, free on board the river steamer. S. Merton, of St Paul, Marion oouunty, has contracted 10,000 pounds' vt uvyw mw u toih F" yvuuu, iui m.v years. An ordinanoe forbidding women in saloons and providing punishment for its infraction has gone into effect at Astoria. , It i proposed- in Pendleton to or ganize an "artesian water": club, to raise fnnds to bore for artesian water in that vicinity. Harney county sheepmen will drive a great many bands of tbeir sheep to the railroad before ahearing, and thus save freight money on the wool. Captain Wand has informed The Dalles Chronicle that the dredger will open ohannel entirely through the look within two week, so that boats may pass. The steamer T. M. Rlohardson baa taken the plaoe of the steamer Volants, destroyed by fire lsst week, and Is car rying passengers, mall, etc., between Newport and Yaquina City. The Oregon Central & Eastern is making arrangements to rnn a mixed train from Yaquina to Detroit, in one day, and. baok the next, one of the trains now on being dispensed with. A lot of salt marsh lands in Warner valley, Lake oounty, was sold recently, under the saline aot, and purchased by a man who will erect a refinery and manufacture sal tots first-class quality. Several counterfeit $5 pieces that have been in circulation in Baker City have been turned over to the deputy United States marshal by the business men who took tbem in the course of trade. Pendleton bloyolists have atarted a good-roads campaign, their first object of attaok being the highway to the UamtilU agency, which it is desired to put into a permanently good oon dition. Hop are very slow in Washington oounty. There are several lots scat tered through the oounty whose own ers are holding for a higher prioe. Two cents were advanoed on two oar loads recently sold. - The sawmill of the Oregon Lumber Company at Baker City has resumed operations. A large aupply of loga ia on hand, and there will be nothing to prevent a oontinuoua operation of the mill for many months. About $11,000 has been paid into the oounty treasury, at Grant's Pass, as taxes thus far. The total amount to be collected from taxayer of Josephine oounty for all purposes is $43,000. Of this the O. & C. railroad ia down for $7,601.18. Gilliam county farmer do not be lieve fall gra'n was injured by the late freeze. The ground was oovered with snow, which protected the grain from the oold. Everything indicates that that oounty will produoe an immense yield of wheat this season. One hundred and eighty-seven of the 1,700 taxpayers in Benton oounty have so far paid their taxes for 1895. It Is sssertod by officials that penalty ia to be added after April 1, and that after that date oounty warranto will not be aooepted In payment of taxes. Idaho. The powder house of the Sandrea' mine, near Bnrke, waa blown up last week, and not a vestige of it remains. All the window on one aide of the oon oentrator were shattered, but fortun ately no one was injured. Charles Well, Jiving across the river from Fort Sherman, haa Instituted suit for damages against Colonel Hall, the commander, and Lieutenant Brown, the quartermaster. In harvesting ioe for the post the military teams cross a narrow neck of Wells' land, and he wants $500 from the government for the passage of the teamrs. The work of constructing the irri gating ditches on the flats aoross the Snake river from Lewiston is the most important faotor in the develoment of this city and immediate aeotion, aays the Lewiston Tribune. All of the pre liminaries have been arranged and the oon tract let The Western Lumber Company, of Portland, with whom ne gotiations have been carried on for sev eral weeks, has been given the contract for the lumber (Oregon yellow fir) to be used in the flumes. About 1,600, 000 feet will be used, and more than 100 oars will be required for its ship ment A special boat will bring it np from Riparia and unload at the month of Asotin oreek. Montana. President Hill of the Great Northern railway, has purchased 800 acres of land on the west side of Great Falls. This will no doubt be made the termin al grounds of this company. It ia said that the Union Lumber Company, whloh is the trust combina tion controlling the output of Flathead oounty, haa been awarded the oon ta ret for furnishing the lumber for the Blaokfoot agency at prioe of $19 per 1,000. feet Shonld the long-oontemplated rail road be built into the old deserted mining camp of Castle, there will be a genuine revival of mining interest at that point The hill surrounding the old town are full of rioh quarto veina and it requires a railroad to make the ores available. Montana's citizens' are beginning to realise that the livestook industry is bound to become one of the largest and most profitable of their resources. The shipments from Montana for 1895 amounted to 806,480 head of cattle, valued at $11,083,560, or an average of $36 per head. The citizens oommittee of Dillon axe considering the advisability of building several roada during the summer in order to attraot the trade to that point Thla oommlttee haa Just made a report on the prospective road to Argenta and have estimated that with an expendi ture of less than $3,000 a first-olass road can be oonstruoted over which heavy loads may be hauled at all sea son of the year. MOST MAKE ANSWER Self-incrimination No Reason for Refusal. DECISION OF THE UPPER COURT Rights of Courts to Compel an Answer to Questions In Interstate Com merce Matters Sustained. Washington, Maroh 36. A decision was rendered by the supreme oourt of the United Btatee today in the case of Theodore F. Brown, Involving the right of the oonrt to compel an answer by a wltnesa to questions in interstate com me roe matters, notwithstanding that he may plead self-incrimination as a result of the answer. The deci sion wss opposed to Brown's oonten tion, that he waa protected by the con stitution from this requirement, and toe decision oi the oourt below was affirmed. The opinion was 'handed down by Justice Brown. Justloes Field, Shiras, Gray and White dissented, holding the oonstitntional provision waa sufficient to relieve Brown from all requirements to answer. This waa advanoed on the docket of the supreme oourt on motion of the attorney-general made at the instanoe of the interstate commerce commission. It was considered a test case, and the olalm was set forth in a letter written fur the commission that a large number of similar cases must wait upon its final decision by the oonrt The case osme to the supreme oourt on an appeal taken by Brown from the decision of the circuit oourt for the western dis trict of Pennsylvania in refusing to grant a writ of habeas corpus, and arose from a proceeding by the Inter state commerce oom mission against the Allegheny Valley Railway Company, of which Brown ia an officer He was a witness before the grand jury for the commission In this case and refused to answer certain, questions propounded to him, on the ground that in so doing be might incriminate himself. He was then proceeded against for con tempt of oourt, found guilty and aen tenoed to imprisonment Brown pleaded his constitutional right of si- lenoe, bnt the ataute of February 11, 1893, requiring answers in such ques tions, waa invoked against him and held to be valid by the circuit oourt. In announcing his opinion. Justice Brown said the question involved was ss to whether the law of 1893, specific ally relieving witnesses In interstate oommerce oases from prosecution, when they reveal faota which might incrlmi nate themselevs, operates to take from witnesses in such case the privilege of silence as guaranteed by the oonstitu tion, and the conclusion was that it did. He said this aot was in the na ture of a general amnesty in such cases, and had been so regarded and upheld in half a dozen decisions in the state oonrts. HORRIBLE STORY AGAIN TOLD An Armenian Refugee Tells of the Mas saero In Marsovan. New York, March 85. Mharim Dal majlan, an Armenian refugee who re oently escaped from Turkey and haa juBt arrived here, aaid last night: The massacre in Marsovsn oocurred November last The first thing done on the morning of the massacre waa to put a guard of Turkish soldiers around the American college. This waa to protect the college from attack. Two or three houses in the town in which the naturalized American citizens lived were also guarded. The Turkish sol diers began by killing In cold blood all the Armenian whom they found in the market They did this partly with guns, partly with bayonets and partly with hatchets. Then they killed all the Armenians whom they found in the streets. They did not, however, enter any Armenian bouses, exoept four, where several women were assaulted and killed. "Meanwhile eaoh of the five mosques In the town had a Turk crying out every few minutes that the Armenians were sacking the mosques and killing the Turks. This added greatly to the public exoitement and added the Turk ish populace to the soldiery. "Over 1,000 persons were killed in all the maBsaores in Marsovan. It waa freely acknowledged by the soldiers that the Armenians were killed by di rect orders from Constantinople. There are altogether 600,000 Armenians under Turkish dominion and if they remain under that rule for ten years longer they will be exterminated or converted to Mohammedanism. "Between 30,000 and 40,000 Armen ians have been massacred np to the present time. The governor of the dis trict is now busy arresting all the young Armenian men whom the sol diers or police find in the streets. The result of this massaore ia that all the young men are keeping in the houaea and sending out the old men to buy food." The Distribution of Seed. Washington, Maroh 38. The secre tary of agrlonlture, In aoordanoe with the mandate of oongress, has prepared a circular letter to be sent immediately to all known reputable growers and dealer in Beed throughout the United States asking them to furnish at rea sonable prices to the department 10, 000,000 packets of garden, field and flower seeds, beginning with asparagus and ending with wheat The number . of paoketo will give to eaoh member and delegate in the honse, and to eaoh senator, 15,000 paoketo for distribu tion among his constituents, after de ducting one-thrid of the whole amount In aooordanoe with law for distribu tion by the secretary of agrionlture. All seed must be delivered on or before thirty days from the 17th of Maroh. CONGRESSIONAL NEWS,' Condensed Beeord of the Doings of the Nation's JGawmekere Senate. Washington, Maroh 19. The Cu ban debate in the senate is drawing to a close, and the expectation is that a final vote will be taken In a day or two. Sherman is keeping the ques tion before Che senate continuously, so that the speeches are not likely to last mnoh longer, Mills and Piatt are yet to be heard, but their remarks will not be lengthy. Morgan oooupled almost the entire day, speaking nntll nesrly 6 o'clock tonight in support of the reso lutions. It waa mainly an argument without dramatic interest The sen' tor severely arraigned. Minister Dnpuy de Lome, of Spain, for impropriety in criticising senators. He also recited many evidences of the cruelties snd atrocities with whloh Spain was prose- outing the war. Morgan aaid be feared that the fanaticism of Spain would lead her to take np the gage of war, no matter bow mild and proper the oonrse of oongress might be. Washington, March 31. Cuba had the entire attention of the senate today, speeches being made by Gray, Chilton and Ca fiery, the debate being enlivened by many spirited inoidenta. Gray 'a plea for Cuba brought on a running cross fire of comment and inquiry from Hale. The Delaware senator caused much amusement oy referring to Hale as the senator from Spain. A fresh, vigorous contribution to the debate oame from Chilton, who haa seldom addressed the senate. He urged that there wa abundant work at home to occupy the attention of oongress, in stead of enlisting in humanitarian oruaades abroad, with their possibili ties of war. Caffrey also, opposed the Cuban resolutions. A resolution an thorizing the nse of the unexpended balance of the appropriation for the canal and locks on the Columbia river, uregon, amounting to 920,000, waa adopted. Washington, March 83. During the Cuban deabte in the senate the floor was yielded temporarily by 8herman to Allen, to atate bis views on the claim of Dupont The statement had more than a passing interest, for the six Populists votes are regarded as decisive in the contest, and this wss the first expression of a Populist senator. Allen contended that Dupont was not entitled to a seat without a certificate or cre dential from the executive of the state, and when this was lacking, as in this case, the oonrts of the state oould 00m pel the iasnanoe of credentials by the governor. A resolution, offered by Chandler, waa adopted for an inquiry of the naval oommittee of the desira bility of building one turret above an other, after which the following bills were passed: For the relief of settlers within the indemnity limits of the grant to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company; for the disposal of lands in the Fort Klaamth hay reservation, Or egon; fixing the rank and pay of the judge-advooate-general of the navy; for the survey of the mouth of the Yu kon river, Alaska. Home. Washington, Maroh 19. The house devoted the day to the bill to amend the administrative tariff aot of 1890, and passed it without substantial amendment The purpose of the bill is to strengthen the aot of 1890, some weak spots having been developed dur ing the six years it ha been in opera tion. The bill wa drawn after exten sive hearings and upon the advioe and with the ass is tan oe of the treasury de partment, the board of general ap praisers, importers and others with praotioal experience on the subjeot One of the most important changes makes increased duties and penalties for undervaluation, oommenoing at the point of undervaluation, and not at 10 per cent above the undervaluation, aa provided by the present law. -Washington, March 81. In the house today Boutelle introduced a resolution amending the constitution by making a provision therein to meet the contingency of the death of the president-elect after the electors have oast their votes in January, and before hia Inauguration in Maroh. It pro vides in snob cases that the person elected aa vice-president shall be Inaug urated and hold offloeaooordingly. The resolution proposed by Wright wss adopted by the house Paoiflo railroads oommittee oalllng for the appointment of a oommittee of five to review all plans for the settlement of the Psoiflo railroads debt presented and to recom mend a bill to co-operate with the sen ate oommittee. ' Washington, Maroh 33. The house today, after three days of debate, adopted a resolution censuring Thomas F. Bayard, ex-seoretary of state, and now ambassador to the oourt of St James, for utterances delivered in an address to the Boston, England, gram mar school, and an address before the Edinburgh, Sootland, Philosophical In stitute, last falL The vote stood 180 to 71 in favor of the first resolution, and 191 to 69 in favor of the seoond. Five Republicans broke away from party lines snd voted against the reso lution of censure, and aix Democrats voted for it All the Republicans and nine Democrats voted for the seoond resolution. Chairman Gideon, of the League of American Wheelmen, aaya aotive steps will be taken to prevent amateur riders from violating the rule of tbeir class. He insists that Southern and Northern California must be regarded as two , distinot states by the L. A. W. and the raoing board, and an amateur resident of either division oannot oompete out side the boundary of his division at a distanoe of over 100 miles from bis borne. He olaims that the greatest abuses of the league's rulea and the Paoiflo board' oonfldenoe are commit ted by these men who obtain their ex penses and other concessions aud yet seek to remain smsteurs. GLENMORAC AGROUND The Ship High and Dry on North Beach. TWO OF THE CREW WERE KILLED The Captain Lost Bis Hearings In a Dense Fog, and the Vessel Was Beached at High Tide. Astoria, March 38. The British ship Glenmorag, Captain Archibald Currie, of Glasgow, bound for Port land, In ballast from Callao, went ashore on North beach, about three miles north of Ocean Park, at 8 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Two of the crew were killed and four injured. The ship struck about high water, and now lies with her port side to the shore. From Captain Currie, it is learned that the first indication of danger waa the cry, "Breakers on the port bow I" from the man on the lookout The captain immediately attempted to wear around, and had almost suooeeded when the ship struck and swnng round, broadside on, with her head to the southward. The after-port and star board boat were at onoe cleared away and lowered, both reaching the water about the same time. The mate, who wa in the lee boat, attempted to pull out to sea, but was forced to let her drift inshore. The boat which had been lowered on the weather side, in rounding the stern, was caught by a tremendous sea and dashed up under the ship's oounter, crushing the ooeu pants in cruel manner and smashing the boat considerably, the air-tight tanks with which she was provided alone keeping her afloat The captain next set about lowering the forward boat and reached the shore In safety, about an hour later. On landing he discovered that two men had been killed. James Adams and John Keedy, and four injured. The Injured were removed to the hotel at Ocean Park, where every attention was given them. The Glenmorag ia an iron full-rigged . ship of 1,667 tons register, and is owned by R. & C. Allen, of Glasgow, the same owners as the Strathblane, whloh went ashore bn the same beach, but five miles below, just four years sgo. Captain Currie has been In 00m maad of her for the past nine years, and up to yesterday haa never had a serious accident The crew speak highly of him as a man and a skillful navigator. The. crew consisted of twenty-six men. On receiving word at the Dwoco life- saving station, the crew immediately left for the scene of the disaster, drag ging with them their life-boat snd other apparatus. As It Is nearly seven -miles from the wreck, the life-saving crew are to be commended for their arduous work in dragging the boat which weighs 4,000 pounds, the long stretch. They arrived too late, how ever, to be of any assistance in land ing the orew. BRADSTREET'S REPORT. General Trade for the First Quarter Is Disappointing. New. York. Bradstreet' review of trade saya: General trade throughout the United States for the first quarter of 1896 is disappointing. When the improve ment in Industrial and commercial lines between Maroh and September, 1896, la recalled, occurring as it did. two years after the panic of 1893, rea son would seem to have been behind the oonfldenoe that the current calen dar year will bring a general revival. . But the most favorable reports at this time are those which declare the vol ume of business only eqnal to, and in few instances, in excess of the like total one year ago. The faot that in terior merchants are buying more free ly in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and parts of Nebraska, where the snow and rain has prepared the soil for the crops, oonstitu tea almost the only favorable announcement for the week. In almost all other parte of the oonntry east of the Mississippi, stormy weather haa tended to oheok the volume of business and still further restrict mercantile collections, which have now been ex ceptionally alow for more than a month. . - The usually large number of business failures taking place during the first quarter of the current year promises to mske a record. The total fox the cur rent week throughout the country is 300, or 18 more thsn last week; 86 more than in the like week in 1895; 103 more than the corresponding week in 1894 and 98 more than the corre sponding week In 1894 and 98 more than in the third week of Maroh, 1893. There ia a sharp decline in total ex- ports of wheat flour inolnded, from both ooasts of the United States this week, the total amounting to only 1, 693,000 bushels against 8,401,000 last week. This is the smallest grand to tal of exports of wheat floor inolnded, since the last week of July, 1895. King Menelek's Demand. New York, Maroh S3. A special to the Herald from Rome says: King Menelek demands an indem nity of 40,000,000 lire from Italy. . This oondition is of course . unsooept able, and further complicates the situs-, tion. The negus forces now threaten to surround Asmara, while continuing to advanoe upon Massowah. The Marquia di Rudinl is evidently losing ground. It is believed that in case the oredit he has asked for Is re-' fused he will dissol re parliament A royal decree for this purpose has al ready been drawn np and only awalfai promulgation. The Hudson river, from its month to the lakes, is 400 mile In length.