OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. A. W.CHENEY i s . .'...PubUsner i UAi- interesting Collection of Items , From ; Many Places Called from, the Frees -' Reports of the Current Week. I j A report from General Otia to thfl department states that the total numi bet of deatlis among the troops at tbe Philippines in three months was 87. The state department has issued ,?s circu'ar instructing the United Statel consulates to half-mast their flags Is memory of the late Ambassador Bayard, A wn3nn4 ia ''rt... ! L Li United States Senator Quay. Himseii and son and other prominent Pennsyl i vanians are charged with having used 1 state moneys from the People's bank to speculate in stocks. Thirty miles from Murfreesboro, Tonn,, four prominent men were assas sinated by John Hollingsworth and . several of his friends, who fired upon uiem irom .amnusn. ,,, iioillngswortn was later captured and shot by a posse. General Fitzhugh Lee's corps will go to Cuba this month. The . general rtAflit.Vl nf'Vila Anniman1 ia avnttllnn The camp at Jacksonville, Fla., is well i -watered and in splendid sanitary condi tion. Cuba, the general thinks, will ' be divided into military departments. " Captain Dreyfus, whether guilty or , Jnnooent, has certainly oaused a verha- and Paris was in a turmoil all Sunday. Crowds, scuffle, uproar and arests was the programme of the day. About a score of people are said to have been' seriously wounded in the various free , fights. .,, . . ,-: , ... ,. .;i ,, ,., i Secretary Long, upon advices received at the state department, which show the existence of threatening conditions i in China, has ordered Dewey to send two warships immediately from Manila to a point as near the Chinese capital as possible for a warship to approach.' The vessels selected are the Baltimore nd Petrel. ' '.') ,,. ,., , .' Bertha Beilstein killed her mothei in Pittsburg, Pa.; and later put several bullets into her own bndv. from tha effects of whioh she cannot reoover. The only explanation the girl has given for her terrible deed were these words: IIT . T.I ,1 t i -was uruu or me. u neia no pleas ure for me. I wanted to die and did not want mother to live and fret over my death. For that reason I killed her." V'Ofl'man exports to America are said to be decreasing. In Wisconsin it is estimated that Kff AAA AAA J L I , . . puu,iuu,uvu piutj truL't) uttvtt uuen ue Itroyed by fires. Spanish forces are preparing to leave Cuba. Marching orders have been given at several points. An authentic report received at San Francisco, says the seal herds of the northern waters are being rapidly ex terminated. 1 " It is reliably reported that the ulti matum of the powers to Tnrkey regard ing the island ot Crete, has been pre sented to the sultan. Advices from Van, Turkey, say fight ing occurred at Alashgord between Turks and a number of Armenians from Russia, About 60 Armenians were killed. A Quoboo speoial says that Skagway or Dyoa are. to be placed under British administration, and that Canada will be allowed access to the Yukon by way of Lynn canal undor the treaty now Do ing porfeoted at Quebec. It is estimated that the total hop crop of Washington this season will be between 27,700 and 80,000 bales. A considerable portion of the crop has boon already contracted for on a basis of 10 and 11 oents per pound. Fire, supposed to have originate) irom forest fires, burned half of Cum berland, Wis., causing a proporty loss pHtiinatod at f325,000. About 25 families are homeless. Five children are reported burned to death. A large caw mill is among the bufldings burned, throwing many out of employ ment. Rain saved the entire city from being burnod. The steamship Gaelio has arrived in Pan Francisco from Hong Kong and Yokohama via Honolulu, bringing the congressional commission from the lat ter place. In speaking of the work ol the commission Senator Culloin said: "We have done ai much as was possi ble in the time at our disposal, and w have covered the ground thoroughly. When we meet in Washington we will go to work at once on a report." Senor Agonoillo, the Philippine rep resentative who has gone to Washing ton to ask tliat the insmgents be heard ttv tha linAi-n rninmiuuinmtra nt Pa.i. has made public a translation of the Philippine constitution, which Aguin ldo wag to have proclaimed at Mala Los. By this constitution-Aguinaldo formally renounce! the title of dictator, and assumes that ot president of the revolutionary government of the Phil ippines. '' Minor Mews Items. Union book and job printers through out the country will soon be ordered out on a strike to secure a nine-houi working day. Put id Christie Murray, in t London newspaper, revives the suggestion thai monument to George Washington b. erected in England. General Shatter has been assigned to command the. department of tin East. Hi! headquarters wilfv bo sil 4Joveruor's island, New York, PIIWFIDIMH LATER NEWS. Yellow fevet is reported to be spread ing in Mexico. S f ( ( Wisconsin fores) ; fir &V have ' been quenced by r-in. ;.s j. ,'" -1 j .Omaha's fall festival opened with a grand street pageant. ...Eight thousand people attended the peace jubilee at Washington. " I five cases of yellow fever and one death were reported at. Jackson,, Miss. The fourth annual festival of, moun tain and plfiin has been opened at Den ver. ',..,,.' ,.' ;.'-':,.,"".X ;'! ' Wolff ,& Z wicker, Portland (Or. ) sh ip builders, have announced their inten tion of building a drydook. ;;.'; , :-. A fierce engagement between the In. dlansand soldiers took place' at Boy-Ah-We-Ge, Shink point,; Minn.v- The Indiana are reported to have killed 10 soldiers. Tho . Indian ' loss is : not kfiown.'.',1 ' ' ,'" : v'" The Paris peace commission Is ap parently divided regarding the disposal of the Philippines. Further instruo tions have been sent the American com missioners. ! Washington officials ad mit that the Philippines question must be settled before consideration of other terms is entered upon. ' ; ' News from the storm-strioken dis tricts along the Atlantio coast is com ing in gradually, and it is probable that 100 lives . have bc-en lost. News by war of a boat, is that 50, people were drowned at Fernandina, Ga. Camp bell island : was inhabited by about 40 colored people. It IB reported that all but three were drowned. , ' The second annual Walla Walla valley fruit fair opened in Walla Walla under most favorable auspioes. The street parade included- a troop of the Fourth cavalry, members of the city council, the fruit fair officials, war veterans, high-school cadets, business floats and hundreds of Bohool ohildren. It was witnossed by 10,000 people. , .i The fourth annual- fruit fair of the Inland' Empire opened in Spokane under ' auspicious i circumstances. Nearly 10,000 people passed through 'the gates. The exhibits are fully up to those of preceding years, in many instances, surpassing them. Every county of the east side of the moun tains, exoept Walla Walla, is ' repre sented, many by elaborate exhibits. ,:'At the joint session of 'the Dnited States and Spanish military commis sions, the Spaniards, according to a re port circulated , in Havana, declared it was impossible ' to evacuate the island immediately, while the American com. missioners insisted that their instruc tions called for an immediate evacua tion.' After a two hours' conference the joint commissions were unable to reach any definite agreement. A London special from Bombay sae a ferry-boat capsized while crossing the Andus river, and 100 passenger! were drowned. The Hawaiian Star says the new gov ernment of Hawaii is to be territorial in form, with one representative in congress. m Dr. David J. Hill, of Rochester, N. Y., has been appointed first assistant secretary of state to succeed John B. Moore, resigned. The Fans Figaro states that Count D'Aubigno, French charge d'affaires at Munich, will leplace M. Canibon as minister at Washington, Cambonwill go to Madrid. Thirty thousnnd people were present to witness the launching of the battle ship Illinois at Newport News, Va. Many prominent persons were presenl from the national capital. The American authorities in Manila have invited all the schoolteachers tc resume the instruction of their olasses, The schools have been closed since the surrender of Manila to the Americans. A. P. Swineford, ex-govornor o) Alaska, while in Chicago deolared the prospectors vho hvs rs,urnd goldless from that region wsre unsuccessful be cause of lack of foresight in failing til prepare for life in a new country. Ia consequence of serious disorder! duo to the presence of the insurgents in the vicinity of Manzanillo, General Lawton has dispatched thither the steamer Reina de Los Angeles with one battalion of four companies from the Third immunes under Colonel Day. Evacuation ia well nigh completed and the Stars and Stripes will soon wave over the entire island of Porte Rico. The Spanish and Amcrioan com missioners have worked in puifeot har mony. The Spanish made no attempt to delay the carrying out of the terms of the protoool, but on the contrary were anxious to return to Kpain. Isaao Schlesinger, his wife and two children were held prisoners 14 hours at their home in West Taylor street, Chicago, by a crowd of 200 boy a. Dur ing most of this time the family were compelled to go without food, as their lardor whs empty. They were in con stant fear that an attaok would be made upon them. In the case brought by Governor Pingreo, of Michigan, to compel the Michigan Central railway to sell mile age tickets at a flat 3 oents, the Wayne county district court holds that the company, under its special charter, hat a right to fix its own tolls, and that this is a vested right whioh the state must pay for if it takes it away. There are 800 patients in the divi sion field hospital at the Presidio, San Francisco. ' ' ' - ' ' 1 s i ', - j t Colonel Charles William! has .been appointed chief quartermaster for Ha vana and otht province! of Cuba. l j t r. i ; t " ? Colonel W. J. Bryan has recovered from liia attack ol fever"and will join hii regiment t Jacksonville, Fla. 'J vTha Second array corpi will be ship ped from Camp Made to Aniiltoa, 11 The B,attle-Shir3j Christened by' kiss" Nancy-1 Letter?--' MOST POWERFUL IN THE NAVY .1 The Ceremony Took Place at Newport Kewi : Before 40,000 Spectator ProgreM on the Wlaeomin. n;r-j Newport ' News, "Va., Oct. 6. Amid the enthusiastic plaudits of nearly 40, 000 intently interested people, ' the shiill salutation of steam whistles from many boat! and tugs, and ;the strains of ,. "The, Star Spangled Banner," the first-chiss battle-ship Illinois slid into the water today."!! The launch was a brilliant success in every particular, The sponsor of the vessel, Miss Nanoy Leiter, of Chicago, was aocompanied by Governor Tanner, of Illinois, and his staff, in full uniform, and a orowd ol prominent Chioagoans. ' - Notable among the vessels in the har bor was the United States dispatch boat Dolphin, having on board Assist ant Seoretary of the Navy Allen and a, party Of Washingtonians. t 'The approach of the christening party was greeted with tremendous cheers, and as Miss Leiter and her at tendants ascenfled i(ie gaily decked platform, and while the workmen were figaged in knocking away the last eel blocks, all eyes were upon the young lady of Chicago. : . , : 'Suddenly the painted mass of steel quivered, then slowly began sliding toward the water. Just as the motion fairly began, Miss Leiter,' who had been standing with the christening bottle poised in the air, let it swing sharply against the bow. simultaneously utter ing the words: "I christen thee Illi nois," and then amid deafening ap plause, the waving of banners and the din of steam whistles, the gaily deco rated hull, with more than 100 persons aboard, glided gracefully into the James river and slowly floated out into the stream. Among the distinguished spectators were: Governor John R. Tanner, of Illinois; Governor Taylor, of Virginia; Mayor Carter . Harrison, of Chioago; Assistant Secretary of the Navy Allen, Mrs. John A. Logan, Naval Construc tor Hichbom, designer of the vessel; Assistant Secretary of WarMeiklejohn, Captain Paget, British naval attache; General Mestrago, Russian naval at tache; Mr. Kennedy, Italian naval at tache, and Mr. Bonfre, French naval attache. , At 4 o'clock a grand banquet was spread to the distinguished guests. Covers were laid for (00 persons. : The Illinois will be the biggest, most powerful, and probably the most effec tive battle-ship in the navy. Larger than the Iowa anddavier than the Oregon, the Illinois is still so designed that she will be able to enter any harbor open to the smallest battle ship, while in the matter of speed she will rank with any of them. The most striking difference between the Illinois and the battle-Bbips now in service is the high freeboard of the former, en abling her to fight her guns from their great elevation above the water in seas so heavy that the guns of a lower vessel would be submerged and useless. Splendid seagoing powers are also ex pected to result from this increased freeboard, by which is meant the height of the hull above the water line. The dimensions of the Illinois follows: Length on load water line, 368 feet; beam, extreme, 73 feet i inches; draught on normal displacement of 11, 625 tons, 23 feet 6 Inches; maximum displacement, all ammunition and stores on board, 13,825 tons; probable speed, 16 knots; normal coal supply, 800 tons; coal supply, loose stoiage, 1,200 tons; full bunker capacity, 1,400 tons to 1,500 tons; complement of offi cers, 40; seamen, marines, etc, 449. The main battery will consist of four 13-inch broech-loading rifles ill Hioh born balance turrets, oval in shape and placed in the center line of the vessel, and 14 6-inoh rapid-fire guns. The seoondary battery will consist of 16 6-pounder rapid-fire guns, six 1 pounder rapid-fire guns, two Colt guns and two Bignal guns. She will carry four torpedo tubes. There are two sets of triple-expansion, twin-sorew engines, each in its own separate water -tight compartments. The collective indicated horsepower will be about 10,000, with 120 revolu tions per minute; stroke, 4 feet. The first keel plate of the vessel was laid February 10, 18S7, not quite 20 months past, and the percentage of work completed to this date, based on the vessol fitted ont and ready for sea, is now reported between 63 arid 54 per cent. The contract price was $3,695. 000, and the date of completion is stated to be October 5, 1899. Launching of the Wisconsin. San Francisco, Oot. 6. The battle ship Wisconsin is to be launched from the Union iron works on Novembor 26, and preparations for the event are al ready under way. It will be made a gala occasion. The governor, many other publio officials and a delegation from the state for which the vessel is to be named will be present. The young lady who is to christen the ship has not yet been chosen. Fire In a Smelter. Butte, Mont., Oct. 8. Flames start ed in tlm ore bins of the Montana Ore Purchasing Company this morning, and before the fire was under " control a loss ot $12,000 had been done the smel ter. The origin was in one of tho bins in. the smelter-room. The prinoipal damage wa! to the bins. Madrid, Oot. 6. The cabinet today decided to maintain the war tax, but to abolish the Ux on expoita RECEIVED BY FAURE. Peace' Commlimloner Entertained at Klysse Palace. My --:- Paris, Ocfer6.Tha session of the American commission i began at 10 o'clock today, and lasted until? o'clock in the afternoon, General Morritt de tailed to the commissioners his person al views and those' of Rear-Admiral Dewey legarding" the ' physical.' geo graphical, .moral and political condi tionr'revftilin ti the -Philippine islands. -General - Merritt's exposition of his personal views was not finished today. He will meet1 the commission again tomorrow,when he will continue to disoharge his errand here.: :j i. The Spanish commissioners were re ceived at 4 o'clook; this aftenoon by President Faure at the Elysee palace. The members were introduced, by the Spanish ). minister, Senor,. Leon y Cas tillo, and : Senor Rio expressed . the gratification of the commission at meet ing the president of France. , , . ' At 4:45 P.i M., Immediately follow ing the reception of the Spaniards, the members of the American peace com mission were received by the president at the Elysee palaoe. Goneral Porter received the ' commissioners on ' the Bteps of the court of honor and they prooeeded to the grand salon. Presi dent Faure, surrounded by a few mem bers of his official household, received General Porter, who introduced Judge Day and the other members of the com mission in turn, after which Judge Day presented President Faure with a cable message from. President McKinley,, It was dated September 30 and it was ad dressed to "His Excellency, M. Faure, President of the Republic," and was signed, "William McKinley,. President of the Dnited States.'1 It read as fol lows: ' . -;! " .': V' -v ' "On this occasion, when the com missions of the United States and Spain are about to assemble at tho capital of France to negotiate 'peace, and when the representatives of this government are receiving tho hospitality and the good will of the republic, I tender to you my most friendly personal greeting and the assurances of my grateful ap preciation of your kind oourtesies to the American commissioners." President Faure, in replying, cour teously , expressed his appreciation of the cordial sentiments uttered,' and heartily reciprocated them., President Faure said that everything possible would be done for the, comfort of the commissioners, and concluded with say ing: i "As the name of Lafayette is held dear in the United States, so is the name of Washington revered in Franco." ' ' -' The president then added that he would immediately transmit his replv direct to President MoKinley. SUGAR-MAKING BEGUN. Machinery of La Grande Factory in Operation Flrt in Northwest. La Grande, Or., Oot. 6. -La Grande is rejoicing over the successful opening this morning of. the first beet-sugar fac tory in the Northwest. The wheols of the vast and intricate pile of machinery were set in motion at 7 o'clock by Su perintendent Granger, and 80 minutes later the first juice mado its appearance at the vent of the big vat. The first refined sugar will be ready by Thursday night for market, and La Grande wiil then use home-grown and manufactured sugar. The plant cost $500,000, and the machinery weighs 2,500,000 pounds. .Everything worked as smooth ly as if it was an old ana tried institu tion. It is estimated that this year's crop of beets will keep the factory em ployed 100 days and nights, and the total output will be 30,000 tona of BUgar. Beets are coming in lively by team and rail. A number of citizens have bid for the first "pound of sugar. Professor Cordes, one of the Ger man experts, who is here now, says thot this is the best first-year crop of beets, with the greatest percentage of saccharine matter, ever known any where. Notwithstanding all this, some of the largest growers have lost heavily on the orop because of their inexperi ence and the extra expense of cultivat ing the large tracts. Another vear they will manage differently, and an ticipate profitable results. The acreage is contracted for five years. At a meeting of the Commercial Club tonight, it was deoided to hold a jubilee celebration on Saturday of next week and invite the Portland Chamber of Commerce and members of the legis lature and business men to be present. The O. R. & N. will make a speoial ex cursion rate for the occasion. Ttis Uonet on Uls Claim. Voncouver, B. C, Oct. 6. Alex Stafford, of Lethbridge, Alberta, just returned from the Klondike, reports the fiuding on his' claim of several tusks and bones of mammoths and mas todons. One pair of tusks was nearly 10 feet long and seven inches in diam eter. The socket of a hipbone was like a soup bowl in size, about eight inches across the top. With Red Crone Supplies. New Yoik, Oct. 6. The steamer San Antonio, which was loaded with Red Cross supplies for Havana, and then held at this port awaiting a settlement of the question of dutie! charged by the Spaniards on relief supplies, sailed today for Key West. She will bemet there by Miss Clara Barton,. who will direct her futuie movements. ' Death In a Well. ( ' Paola, Kan., Oct. 6. A report comes from Somwset, 18 miles from here, of the suffocation of three men in a well on the farm of James Hamer. After an explosion of dynamite in the bottom of the well, William Ballard, Burt Pur vii and John Gatlln went into the well, one after the other. When no sign came, from the-, men below Bob Coffey was lent down, with a rope tied around hii body. Coffey, too, suc cumbed to the deadly gai,, Being Rushed by the Amer icans at Paris.. J. HAVE ALREADY' MADE DEMANDS on Eeport of Retention of the Philippine! Stupefies Madrid-Will Begin to the - Verge of Hostilities.. ' t r ' " ? ' ' ' - ' r 'f .... -:.!f SH'.1 - 3 j ' Paris, Oot.v 5.Major-Generaj Mer-' ritt reaohed Paris today. The Ameri can peace commission held a .session this morning preparatory to a second meeting with the Spanish commission ers this afternoon... ! Today's session lasted until 4 o'clock,' at which hour the commissioner! ' ad journed to meet at 2 o'clook next Fri day afternoon, such interval being. de sifbd and neooessary to allow separate consideration by each commission of matters before the joint commission. The interval will he thus filled with work by each commission, the ultimate results being so facilitated. . The sec retary of tha Spanish commission will arrive tonight, and the' interval will also be employed by the secretaries jointly in maturing plans for the work of procedure. While the American commissioners were at luncheon today, General Merritt called at' their hotel, but did not wait to see the commission. He will call again tomorrow to see members of the commission. , - The Spanish and American commis sioners will be reoeived tomorrow by President Fauro. The hour fixed for the reception of the Americans is 3:45 in the afternoon. General Merritt will accompany the Ameiioans to this func tion, which will be held at the Palaoe de Elysee. . i , , The opinion is now held that the work of the commissioners may be fin insbed within a month from the pres ent time. While it is the general im pression that today's meeting was again devoted to . preliminary work, and that' the ' adjournment to Friday was taken only to enable the secretaries to draw up a schedule; ot ; work, the representative of the press learns that the session was highly important, and that the Americans' have made a de mand of such character that the Span iards find it necessary to ask for an ad journment in order to enable them to consult with the government at Madrid. It is believed that the question con cerns the Philippines, and it is known that the Americans are highly pleased at having go soon reached what they consider a very important phase ot the negotiations, and consider the two ses sions thus far held as very satisfactory to America. The fact that a member of the com mission expiessed the belief that work would be oompleted within a month indicates a happy frame of mind. In the Spanish camp great hopes are built on what they believe General Merritt will advise, namely, that the Philippines are incapable of self-government, and that the whole situation does not warrant Amerioa in taking the responsibility for the entire t Philip pines. The Spanish commissioners are quite ready to give whatever America asks in the way of coaling statioiiSj but will resist more, to the verge of a re newal of hostilities. Madrid Worried. Madrid, Oct. 5. The reported inten tion of the United States government to retain the whole of the Philippines has Dreated almost a state of stupefac tion here, and it is semi-offlcially an nounced that the Spanish government has resolved to vigorously combat any action which, it is olaimed, the terms of the peaoe protocol preclude. Gen eral Rios, governor of the Visayas islands, reports to the government an other defeat of the insurgents. ' The Spanish volunteers, he says, also . re pulsed an insurgent attack on the town of Basan, and killed 31 of the attack ing force. TO CORNER WAR IMPLEMENTS. Reported Scheme to Form a Combine of Warship and Gun Factories. Cleveland, O., Oot. 5. An evening paper cays one of the most gigantio pro jects for a combination of capital is be ing examined in this city. It is noth ing lees than an attempt to unite the warship building interest and armor plate and gun-making interests of the world into one great syndicate. Men of international reputation in the finanoial and manufacturing world are in the deal. The projectors claim they can raiseaoapitalof $200,000,000. Among the Clevelanders who are in the deal is said to be Colonel Myron T. Herrica, president of the Society of Savings, and Robert Wallace, president of the Cleveland Ship Building Com pany. Dr. Gatling, the famous in vetor of guns, has been here in confer ence with other men in the deal. Arm strong, the inventor of the guwhich bears his .name, has also been here. Andrew Carnegie la one of the chief men in the negotiation. Robert Wal laoe is now in the West with several foreigners. Before he returns he will Btop at San Francisco, and the proprie tors of the Union Iron Works will be approached as to whether they will come into the deal. Killed His Wife and Himself. ' Indianapolis, Ind., Oot. 4. This evening Robert Lasb, a desperate char acter, went to 824 Court street, where hii wife was stopping, and, calling her into the hallway, shot her dead. Lash then killed himself with the same wea pon; The tragedy was tbe culmination of many quart els. $ j -i - : 4 i : "' I ? ; J In tha hotel! built in China for tbe use of foreigner! the highest stories are the most expensive because the Dree- iMk- ,3 HO .YTIO Vq THOUSANDS. i;:ARE i,?ICK,;. f Critical Condition of the Army In Forto Klco. . . Ponce, Porto Riccv-Oot. 8. It is the Well-grounded and! almost unanimous opinion of; the 'medical staff of the American army in Porto Rioo that the condition of the volunteef forces here necessitates their immediate removal north...- Sioknesa is increasing, and has been increasing duiing the past three weeks at an, alarming jrate; "i Today 'the sick, report showa .ovei2, 700 iii. hos pitals or in quarters, out of a total com mand 6f 10,000 men; that is, oyer 25 per cent of the troops are on the sick list This, however, does not ,mean that there is an effective strength of 7,500 men. The J soldiers discharged from the hospitals as fit for duty are in nine cases out of ten incapable of serv .loo, and. if ordered On', duty are alrnost invariably back in the hospitals within a few days.-' ,!!n'-::'1 j i " The medical offlcerB have found that the convalescents do not, and seeming ly ' cannot, recover. Jheir strength' in this olimate, and for this reason they are being sent north as rapidly as pos sible, several hundred leaving every week. ' 'l':--' ! i .. i;. . FATAL. FOREST, FIRES. Several Lives Were Lout in Wisconsin j s . Woods. Cumberland.; Wis., Oot. 5. Tho tXMlies of a man and a boy were found today in the woods between Araena and Poskin Lake, burned beyond recogni tion. Several persons are still missing. Peter Ecklund, who was seriously burned by forest fires, was brought to this city today in a critical condition, and it is thought he 'cannot live. A 4-year-old daughter bf Rudolph Miller, and tha 7-year-old son of Nels Swanson were found in the .woods, 1 miles northeast of Almena, so badly burned that they cannot recover. : Mrs, Frank Ileinrichmeier, at Poskin Lake, died this- morning, as a result of fright and exhaution in. fighting fires. Relief rooms were opened today, and relief is . being extended to starving families.. The fire is still roaring on one side of this city, but the gieatest danger is believed to ; be over, Near the town of Johnston. Polk oountjs, eight miles distant, heavy loss of farm property ia reported today, and fires are still raging. "AMERICAN PORK. v Thousands of Tons Have Entered Ger many Without a Certificate. Berlin, Oct. 5. A most important revelation regarding American pork was made by the German goveinment an nouncement in the semi-official press today, that it has received information showing that American pork had en tered Germany without certificate. The United States embassy confirms the report that the discovery had been made that thousands of tons of Ameri can pork have been imported through a number of custom houses for yeara past without certificates. . The embassy has requested the' foreign office to in struct the custom house to insist in every case upon a certificate. No American firm is implicated in these transactions, whioh explain the alleged discoveries of trichinae in American pork. German dealers in American pork offered in July last a reward of 1,000 marks for a case of human trichinosis due to American pork, and three months have passed without anybody claiming the money. NEAR1NG THE CRISIS. Foreign Ministers at Peking- Hold an Kinergenoy Meeting. London, Oct. 5. A Rpecial dispatch from Shanghai says that telegrams from Peking have been detained two days. The last telegram received, acoording to this dispatch, announced that the foreign ministers had held an emer gency meeting. The German warsliip at Kiau Chou. it also stated, had start ed hurriedly for Taku the. day before. Marquis Ito, who, it is understood, is visiting China, for the purpose of arranging an offensive and defensive alliance betweu China and Japan, has left Tien-Tsin for Shanghai, owing to the impossibility of prosecuting nego tiations duiing the crisis. The foreign ministers, it is stated, forbade any foreign residents going to Peking. It is expected that Sir Claude MacDonald, the British minister, shall surrender Kang Yu Wei. Yamantsu, leader of the rebellion, in the Sze Chuon provinoe, has issued a proclamation ordering the extermina tion of all foreigners. Mob Mi-Vaelng- Foreigners. London, Cat. 5. The Peking oorre spondent of the Daily Chronicle, tele graphing Saturday by way of Shanghai, says: "A mob is menacing foreign ers. Tbe wife of the Italian minister was attacked yesterday, while on her . way to church, and several Americans conyng from the railroad were wound ed by stones. "The foreign ministers have sent a collective note to the government, ask ing for the suppression of these out rages, and the punishment of the cul priA." Wheels Moving Again. Lawrence, Mass., Oct. 5. The Wash ington mills started up in all depart Besnts this morning, after a partial shutdown of several weeks. About 4,600 hands are now employed. ' Klondike on the Discovery. , Seattle, Wash., Oct. 4. The steam schooner Discovery arrived at midnight from Alaska with 100 passenger! and about 150,000 in gold dust. Tbe trea sure was owned by a few men. A. Helwertb is credited with $15,000 and George MoCoid fl0,000. Dan McDon ald, .a brother of Alei' McDonald, ' the mining king, is said to have- brought out $10,000. H : Jf $ Croesus, of ancient times, possessed about $20,000,000. MOO3f!0