i Vol. XV. No 36. CORVALIilS, OREGON, OCTOBER 25, 1902. B. F. IRVINK Editor and Pno - Headquarter for Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Ladies' and Men's Purnishings, Etc. 7--- New Goods All the Time. Corral"! is, - - - Oregon. : - - Twenty five hacks to be sold in the next month" ' The most durable hack on the coast for the money. Made out of the best material from the east. We do not turn out any cherp work; all first class with guarantee. We are preparing to furnish covers for all hacks. Patronize your home fackwy. . : Remember our organs, we reasonable prices, for futher particulars call on or address. Cramers Organ & Carriage Factory Corvallis, Oregon. Summons in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Bentt ii couuty, E A Holcomb, plaintiff versus L W Holcomb, defendant. 1 o L W Holcomb the defendant, Bbove named In the name of the State of Oregon- You are hereby summoned and required to appear in the above entitled court at the court room tuereof m the City of Corvallis, Benton County , fetate of Oregon on or before Monday the 24th duy of November 1902, it being the f rst -day. of the next regular term of paid Court and to ans ' wer to plaintiff's complaint now on tile in this suit in said court and if you fail' so to appear and answer for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the said court for the relief prayed for in the complaint, towit, for a decree 'annulling the marriage contract now existing between the said plaintiff and defendant and ior the costs and disbursementsl n said suit. This summons is published bv order of the Hon Virgil E Walters- judge ol the County Court of the- fctate of Oregon for Benton COnnty made on the 2nd d iv of Oct, 1902,antltobepublished for six concern live weeks and in seven issuesof the Corvallis rimes and the date of the first publica tion thereof to be October 4, 1902 . W, 8 McFadden Attorney foi Plaintiff. .0TOSIIA. Bears tie s9 The Kind Yon Have Always BouefJ Signature of Prompt Delivery is ordered 3wift service you'll get if you favor us with your orders but you will get more than . quick service if you deal. You will get good goods, whether you order teas coffees, spices, canned goode, or the latest advertised breakfast foods. We have them all as a call will prove. P. M. ZIEROLF. are ready to furnish them at Out or Death's Jaws . "When death seemed veary near from a severe stomach aDd liver trouble, that I had ' suffered with for years," writes P. Muse, Durham N. C, "Dr. King's New Life Pills saved my life and gave perfect health." Best pills on earth , and only 253 at Graham & Wortham's drugstore. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powdef Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair. San Francisco. . For Sale. English rye grass seed, large - cheat seed, and vetch seed, A few cords of oak wood,- I am booking orders for vetch seed, speak in time. Also pure bred Aberdeed Angus cattle Poland China hogs, and Shropshire bucks from recorded stock. L. If Brooks. STRIKE DECLARED OFF THE TOTE WAS UNANIMOUS FOR ACCEPTING THE ARBITBA; TION ; FR0P03IT10X. Not a Man "Voted No Mitchell Is to Represent Miners Before Ar- : bitrators Convention Ad journed Sine Die 0 th Other News. Wilkesbarre. Pa., CJet. 21. By a unanimous Viva voce vote the con vention of United Mine workers ac cepted President Mitchell's arbitra' tion plan shortly before noon today Great cheers greeted the announce ment of the result, lhe resolution as adopted carried with it a declar ation that the etrike is off and pro vides for an immediate resumption of work in the coal mines through out the anthracite region. President Mitchell told the conr vention that President Roosevelt had told him that he would call a meeting of the arbitration commis sion immediately after the conven tion's acceptance of the proposition, and Mr. Mitchell gave it a? his o pinion that the finding of the arbi trators would be announced within a month. I The end -of the convention and of the great" strike which has lasted five months suddenly appeared close at hand. President Mitchell, after the convention had given itself ov er to heated debate for ah, hour and a half, arose" and calmly told the delegates that it must be appaient to all of them that there was no doubt whatever that the president's proposal would be- adopted. There had been a renewal of the serious opposition of the steam men and heated rjyords had - passed be tween delegates. Explanations of the president's proposal.' had been made in four "languages. There seemed to be more opposition than ever to settlement. when suddenly there was a break in the clouds when a motion was put by a dele gate down in front near the presid ing officer. In a clear voice the strike leader called for a -vote on the all-important question and instantly there was a roar of aves. The next in stant messengers were flying in all directions trom the convention hall to give the news to the world through the newspapers. After the strike had been declared off there was some routine business, includ ing the usual votes of thanks, and then shortly before 1 o'clock the convention adjourned sine die. i lhe motion to resume - at once means that the pump men to work tomorrow and the of coalwill started at 7. Thursday. ''- , will go mining A. M. New YorkrOct. 2l. Anthracite coal-carrying roads, through ord ers just issued by the general man agers, have called back into service all trainmen, station agents and clerks laid iff in consequence of the suspension of coal transportation duriDg the strike. . The Philadel phia & Reading and the Jersey Cen tral roads will, reinstate between 45oo and 5ooo trainmen this week, and other coal-carrying roads prob ably 1 0,000 more.' The coal roads are making prep arations to rush anthracite to the market a3 soon as the miners go back to work.: The Reading alone already has nearly lo,ooo cars side tracked near the mines. New York, Oct. 21. One of the rarest operations known to surgery the sewing up of a severed ven tricle of a human heart has been performed at Bellyue Hospital. The patient was Annie Kingsley, who . was stabbed by her husband during a quarrel on the street. She was thought to be dying when the ambulance reached the 7 hospital. The blood was pouring from a long wound in the left ventricle, which supplies the body with blood, while the right pumps to the lungs. The- surgeons knew that the flow must be checked at once if the woman was to be saved. The operation was decided upon. It was performed by two surgeons, with i5 more looking on. The heart was laid bare and the - surge ons saw that the wound was very severe. It would require six stitch es. During intervals between the beats of the heart the needle was inserted six times, and the flow of blood stopped. The wound was carefully dressed and the surgeons awaited the result. : The. patient rallied rapidly and the surgeons ex pressed the belief that she -.will ires cover. , Mrs. Kingsley left her husband three months, ago. v .Whsn.j he ; naet her for the first time ie appealed to her to return, to their A horned. '". She says it was her intention: to do. so. but she did not reply at "once, and her husband stabbed her. She was carried to the hospital and the bus and ran away. lie was ' captured a few hours later. " -" Boisej Idaho, Oct. 20. Miss Al exia Mueller, the , sweetheart and betrothed wife of Jim Younger, the noted outlaw, who committed em cide in St.': Paul " Saturday has been in "Bjise about three months, and has been living at the home of Mrs. French, Sixth and State streets. The news of the sui cide was; secured by her from news paper dispatches, but later a dis patch was received from her sister, annouueing the tragedy. She was deeply affected. - J Miss Mueller intended to start for St. Paul this morning, but met with a disappointment. Her Bister stated money would be sent her, but it did net arrive, and Miss Mu eller was obliged to remain until to night. During the day Mies Muel ler sent a dispatch to the authori ties at St- Paul, saying: - -'Jim's body ia mine; it must be cremated." Discussing the tragedy today, she said: ' "Jim4 wrote me under the date of Octobor 16, stating he had given up all hope and was out cf work. 1 Saturday he telephoned me: 'Don't write.' He waB driven to this act by: his CDersecutors. I am his wife, you know,-spiritually. No scandal has ever attached to my name. But before (iod he is mine and miDe alone. My life will be to place him right before the world. I have wired the authorities to cre mate his body. It wa9 his request." The purpose of Miss Mueller m coming to Boise was to regain her health, which was much broken. She had. completed her outing and was preparing to start home m-a short time- Mis3 Mueiler is about 30 years of age. She and Jim Younger expected to marry this fall or next spring. She became ac quainted with the man during the prosecution of prison mission work. He attracted herj she became con vinced he was innocent and she ac tively interested herself in securing his liberty. It is . apparent that Miss Mueller rather feared that )unger would commit suicide. She was not surprised : when the news came. Now that be is dead she will attempt to set some matters right which she alleges are wrong. It is her claim that he was innocent and suffered for others. From what she says of Cole Younger, the broth er, it is evident that Jim suffered to shield him from punishment for crimes not known, to the public. She is -also incensed , against the warden of the Minnesota . peniten tiary, and it is apparent she intends to make eome disclosures of alleged wrongdoings on his part during the time Jim was confined there. The time has come, she : says, for the guilty to suffer. There 13 a tale to be unfolded and she proposes to un fold it '. ' . J; .-.;.' Miss Mueller is from an influen tial family. Her father ia living in St. Paul. She wrote a history of the Police and Fire Departments of St. Paul and did work , on the Salt Lake Herald during the presi dential campaign of 1900. She is now writing a novel. She left this afternoon for St. Paul. She is a woman of independent means. Washington, Oct. . 21. The following letter was received at the . treasury de partment this morning: "New York, Oct. 3, 1902. To the Hon orable, the Secretary of the Treasury, Washington Sir: Prices for the custom ary kinds of winter fuel having reached the altitude which puts them out of reach of literary persons in straightened cir cumstances, 1 desire to place with you the following order: "Forty-five tons best old dry govern ment bonds, suitable for furnace, gold 7 per cent. 1864 preferred. , "Twelve tons early greenbacks; range size, suitable for cooking. "Eight barrels seasoned 25 and 50-cent postal currency, vintage of 1866, eligible for kindling. "Please deliver with all convenient dis patch at my house in Riversdale at low est rates for spot cash, and send bill to your obliging servant. . " . MARK TWAIN. "Who will be very grateful and will vote right." . ' TRAPPED BY FIRE THIRTY LIVES PROBABLY IN CHICAGO. LOST Burning of a Sugar Factory Vic tims Were at Work on Seventh Floor Some Jumped and Met Death One Man Rushing Through r Flames Escapes. Chicago, Oct. 21. Five men are known to have lost their lives in a fire which tonight partly destroyed thn nlonf flic fill nigut,the Glucose Sugar Refining Com pany, situated at Taylor street: and the Chicago River, and the list of dead will certainly be much greater than five, and may reach as high as 30. The estimates run . all the way from, that number down to 10. Only one of the five men whoee bodies have been recovered has been identified. . The fire broke out with an, ex plosion in the drying house, which i3 seven stories in height, and stands close to the main building of the plant, which is 14 stories high. A third structure is four stories high. The two smaller buildings were de stroyed and the larger building was badly damaged. The fire spread after the explosion with suck rapid ity that it was impossible for the men in the upper stories of the drying house to make their escape, and it is. the number of men believ ed to have been at work on the sev enth floor that "causes the uncer tainty in the list of dead. Some of the employes who made their es cape eay that there were 20 or 30, and others say that there were not any more that 10 at work when the fire brofee out. Whatever the num ber, alt are' dead. ; Fourmen leaped from the upper floors, and all met death. One persoD, an electrician, who is known to have entered the building, and was there at the time of the fire is in the list of the dead. He 11 r sTrfcposed to be-dead- for the ' reason that all the firemen and la borers about the burned building say that no man made' his escape from the tipper floors. The flames spread with almost incredible rapidity, and by the time the first cf the fire department had arrived, the building was ablaze from foundation to roof. It was impossible for the firemen to make any effective fight against the flames, and in a short time all the walls were down and the building, within half an hour from the time of the explosion, was a mass of de bris. The fire was so hot : that at one time it was feared the Taylor street viaduct, acroes which access is had to the south sede of the city, would be destroyod, but the fire men managed to Eave this after a hard struggle. The men employed in the three lower floors of the drying house ran for the doors and windows as soon as they had knowledge of the fire, and all of them succeeded in reach ing the open air. On the third floor one man was at work. He was cut off from the fire ' escape by dense smoke," that poured through the building, and was compelled to make a run for his Jifa down the stairs. He burst through a masa of flames when he reached the low er doorway, and was badly scorch ed. Two minutes later it would have been utterly impossible for him to make his escape. The men on the seventh floor had no chance whatever for their livee. Several of them left the window and crawled along the sills in an effort to reach a place of safety, but with the exception of two men all those who attempted to raach safety in this way made up their minds that it was certain death, and went back into the burning building. The two men, however, remained to take their chance of a leap, and, climb ing upon the window ledge, they sprang out into the air. . One of them came straight down the great er part of the way, but just as he was within a short, distance of the pavement his body swung around, and he struck the stone wall at full length. The other man turned ov er and over as he came whirling down. The bodies were horribly mangled, and it was impassible for any of the men who saw . them di rectly after their jump to-identify them in any way. Four other men jumped from the windows on the fourth floor. These men Were terribly injured, and were taken in police ambulances to the county hospital. Two of them were able to give their names to the police. A fireman, working on the fifth floor of the drying house, met ; hia death in making a jump for a net held by the .firemen underneath the window where he stood. He. was compelled to leap far out in order to clear some obstructions on the side of the building, and missed the net by a yard. -His skull was crushed and he died instantly. Another person, who escaped with his life, but is badly burned aDd bruised, had better fortune in strik ing the net when be leaped from another part of the fifth floor. Hs hit it squarely, but being a heavy- man he went through - and struck the ground with terrific force. He was rushed to the county hospital. where it was said he may recover. Another man also broke through the net but he was not badly huit. lrun, Spain, Oct. 21. Robbers entered the mail car of the Spanish express last night, mortally wound ed one clerk and secured - checkiv money orders and cash amounting7 to at least $4oo,ooo. "The robbers ' escaped. This is one of the most : daring robberies ever chronicled in " the history of this country." v7 5 '' Lee's Summit, Mo.', Oct. 22: The body of Jim Younger, the? bandit, who shot himself at St. Paul, arriv ed here today, and probably will be ; buried in the family lot tomorrow. ". Pallbearers have been selected from Younger's former Missouri friends, several of whom knew him frerxi childhood and served with the Youngers under Quantrell. When the coffin arrived it was seen that many splinters bad been cut from the pine, box inclosing it, presuma bly by. relic-hunters, who had ' met the funeral party at different points along the route from the North. Kansas City, Oct. 22. The body ., of Jim Younger will not be cremat ed, notwithstanding the special re- , quest of the dead bandit. C. 3. Hall a cousin of the Youngers, who accompanied the body from St.. Paul, talking to a reporter today, : said: "Jim never wanted to be cremat ed. The story probably . grew out of a line written on an envelope be- fore he died. Hs told the newspa per men in this note to treat him fair and not to bum him up. . Out of this has grown the impression that he wanted to be cremated," Montreal Star. If President Roosevelt were Premier of the Unit ed States, and there were any guar antee that a republican congress would folio his "lead," his attack upon "trusts" would make the heada of those organizations more distinct ly nervous. Bat President Roose velt was in favor cf reciprocity . with Cuba, yet Cuba did not get it. It is a hard thing for the American people to know when they have got a whole party committed to a defi nite policy. For a president to ap peal to the people over the heada of his party, leaders will not have much effect, unlesB it leads to the retirement -of the said leaders. The day may come when our neighbors will see that they need a truly re sponsible government, under which the party leaders must agree upon a public policy, and which will, not let a congress balk a "Premier" without voting him out of office and some one else in. If the . republi cans had to follow Roosevelt or go out of K)wer, his utterances would have the weight of those of a Brit ish first Minister A Canadian point of view. A Typical South African Store. O. R. Larson, of Bay Villa, Sundays Riverr, Cap9 Colony, conducts a store typical of South Africa, at which can be purchased anything rom the proverbial "needle to an anchor." This store is situated in a valley nine miles from the near est railway station and about twenty-five miles trom the nearest town Mr. Larson says: "I am favored with the custom of farmers within a radius of thirty miles, to many oi whom I have supplied Chamber lain's remedies. - All testify to theii , value in a household where a doc tor's advice is almost out of tht question- Within one mile of m? store the population is perhaps six ty. Of these, within the past i'J . months, no less than fourteen havc been absolutely cured by Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. This must surely be a record." For sale by Graham & Wells. A