VOL. XXXIII . CORVALXIS, BEiNTCXN7 COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY J, 189T. NO. 42. I BS OF THE WEEK From All Parts of the New eWorld and the Old. OF INTEREST TO OUR READERS Comprehensive! Review of the Import ant Happening of the Past Week Called From the Telegraph Columns, An ocoult temple wili be built in Sn Francisco by. theoaophists, and f unds have -already been subscribed. ' A strike instituted at Georgetown, Mass.:, ' has thrown ont of work 200 men, and promises to embrace the en tire six shoe factories of the town. A threatened cot in wages was trie' cause of the strike. A family of ten persons and a num ber of oattle have been engulfed by the subsiding 'of a bog of "lOtt-Apres ' rear Castle island, county Kerry, Ire land. Jt is stated that other persons were drowned. The foreign office informs the Asso ciated Press-that no communication to any power regarding Cuba and the United States has been made by GreaA; Britain,' and it is added that no repre senatiops directly or indirectly have been made on the subject to the United States by Great Britain. If any other power have done so, the foreign office is not aware of the fact The 'constructors of the Siberian rail road have undertaken to build a line through Mantchuria, starting from a point on the river where the Siberian toad j ins the trans-Baikelia line and terminating at Mikolskaya, Russia. The ministe) i;tl press of St. Peters burg points out that this line will make Russia the intermediary of peace ful civilization between Europe and Asia. ' A special trom Paris says it is sug gested that Great Britain, France and Italy, tbje powers most interested, offer their services in the Cuban question in order to prevent a conflict between Spain and the United States, and ter minate the revolt. Dr. E.- Forbes, representing a Lon- - l... ' from the Oritnt'in' San Francisco, with cases 'of medical instruments valued at $80,000. He claims they are works of art, and should be "admitted free of duty. The customs authorities are withholding: the instruments, however, until the duty is paid. The postmaster of Des Moines, la., had his oarfiera' look up worthy cases of poor families and delivered presents to them on Christmas morning. Sev eral hundred dollars was" subscribed by business men for the purpose. Scores of letters were received from poor chil dren telling what they desired Santa Claus to bring them. r "' "'' ""7" Senator Mi tchell, of - Oregon, baa proposed an amendment to the sundry civil appropriation bill, providing for auxiliary fishcultural stations at points to be selected by the commissioner of fish and fisheries in Oregon,. Washing ton ard California, for the propagation of salmon, trout and other fishes. The amendment appropriates $17,600 for the purpose. Jerry Burke, the colored boy, who backed Mrs. John Fobs and her daugh ter, Mrs. Cavanaugh, with an ax, at their home at Clio, Livingston parish, Louisiana, last Sunday, was captured by a posse of citizens about a mile from the scene of the crime. In view of the fact that the ladies are not dead,' the plan to burn him at the stake was abandoned, and he was simply riddled with bullets. The secretary of the treasury has sent to congress a computation of the Pacific railroad debts as made by the government actuary. The statement shows that the advances to the Union Pacific, including the Kansas Pacific, by the government, will, at maturity, the first of next July, amount to $92, 846,285, of which sufficient has been re paid to reduce the amount to $53,289,-. 593. The balance due on acoount of the Central Pacific on July 1 next will be $60,318,377. Dr. Thomas Powell, of Missouri, re cently made some remarkable experi ments before a party of doctors in Los Angeles in order to prove the efficacy of his remedy for certain diseases. He alarmed the physicians present by in jecting bacoillus tuberculosis and bac cilli diptherial into himself, appearing to take them without evil effect. He also injected some bactina into two guinea pigs, which promptly died. His next experiment will be to inject sputum from a woman 'dying of con sumption into himself. The annual statement of construc tion published by the Railway Age, of Chicago shows that during 1896 only 1,802 miles of railway lines were built in the United States. This Is one mile less than the total reported for 1895, and the smallest mileaee built in anv year since 1875. The number of lines 1 on which this track was laid is 163. I - which is eleven less than the number ' of new lines added in the previous j Tear. Trar.k vm.a laid in thirtv-piicht of the forty-four states and territories. The longest mileage was built in Cali fornia 187 miles on eight lines. Notice has been posted at all the Philadelphia & Reading coal and iron collieries, numbering forty, and also at a number of individual collieries,-1 that work would be suspended for a -I week. Twenty thousand men and boys ' will be idle. '' j The executive committee of the monetary conference with headquraters ' in Indianapolis, Ind., are sending out j a call to all commercial organizations who intend to send delegates to the con- f ference. It is now believed that about 1 500 delegates will be in attendance. j A serious riot occurred at Aqueduct, four miles from Schenectady, N. Y., o i the. trie canal, where 300 Italians a e employed on the canal improve ments. A body of about 150 men from Schenectady, who are unemployed, marched down with guns, knives, club, pickaxes, etc., carrying a red Bag. and compelled the men to stop working. The sheriff and a large force of deputies quelled the riot and arrested the ringleaders. The mob returned later and attempted to burn a shanty where fifty workmen slept. Small pay and excessive prices for food are the causes of the trouble. ACCEPTS OUR -OFFICES. Spain Asks the United Stales as Mediator. to Act "Washington, Deo. 30. It has. been learned from an authentic source that j Secretary Olney and Senor Dupuy de Lome have practically terminated the; negotiations of . the Cuban question, wnicn are to be submitted to congress when it convenes, January 5. The terms of the agreement are based on recent official communications from Premier Canovas addressed tot the sec retary of state. " ' - The premier states clearly the terms which Spain will accord to the insur gents, and practically asks the United States to propose these conditions to ' her rebellious subjects. In return for ; our good offioes, Spain assures this gov ( ernment she sincerely deplores the great j commercial loss which we have bus i tained on account of the 'Cuban dis turbances. She assures us she is even now considering a reciprocity treaty which will deal mainly with Cnban products, and which will be framed in such advantageous terms toward this government that our losses, both in commerce ,and in the destruction of American property in . Cubi. will be. most generously compensated. Premier Canovas bays Spain cannot, as a self-respecting and respected na tion, stand before the' world as having been coerced into measures by the United States. She has freely granted all she now offers, and. that in the face of a rebellion. But she accepts the good offices of the United States to act as mediator, and to guarantee to the insurgents amnesty and the enforce ment of the new reform law which she is about to proclaim in Cuba. The form of government offered is, the Spanish ftatesman declares, the limit of -independence which can be granted to a province by any nation without absolutely severing the bonds of union with the mother country. Autonomy as enjoyed by the Canadians can never be granted in Cuba. What Spain is willing to grant the insur gents, if they lay down -their arms, and what she asks the United States to guarantee, is an act which provides for a council of administration which Bhall control all matters pertaining to the commerce of the West Indies- aad all estimates upon the general taxation and expenditures of the island, as well as its general home government. ' - Spain's Backdown. New York, Deo. 30.- A Madrid dis patch to the World jaays: - An evidently inspired editorial in the Epoca today, foreshadowing the possibility of an understanding be tween the Spanish government and President Cleveland, has caused a pro found sensation in Spain. The Epoca, the organ of the conservative party, now in power, says: ''American intervention in Cuba is perfectly " logical on the grounds of material interests and national senti ment.. It might become an inevitable necessity of -American borne 'politics,'5 and it is . eminently to the interest of pur own"- country- 'to avoid . a conflict while we can do so with honor, main taining our dignity and sovereignty." The present active efforts of Spanish diplomacy are all aimed, it is asserted in diplomatic and political quarters here, at convincing the American state department that exigencies of dome'stio policy make it impossible for Spain to enter into any formal agreement or convention with the United States for the settlement of the Cuban question. Strenuous efforts are being made by the Spanish and other European gov ernments to prevail upon President Cleveland to be content if Sp .iu assents tacitly only to his interference, and satisfies American opinion for the time being by voluntary and prompt insti tuting in Cuba and in Porto Rico of the reforms voted by the oortes. This is an understanding,, however, that Preimer Canovas will ask the cortes this year to authorize complete colonial autonomy -" and reduction of colonial tariffs, to prepare the way for a rt ci procity treaty with the United States. The Spanish generals agree that it is possible to reduce the irisnrrecu in in Cuba to the three eastern provinoej in a few months with the forces ii ,w on the island, but they share the opinion of General Weyler that complete pa cification of the rest of the island would require a much longer time, un less the rebels should be convinced that resistance is sure to tliaiinish in consequence of the Spanish government coming to an understanding, even un official, with the United States to set tle the Cuban question. Crime of a Trt mp. - ' Grafton Wis., Dec. 29. John Holmes, a farmer near here, was shot last evening . by Ferdinaud Fragen knecht, whose object was .presumably robbery. Two shots, lodged in Holmes' head and one passed through hisr neok. He cannot : recover. ' After firing 'the shots Fragenknecht fled. He was quickly pursued by a posse of citizens, . who caughthim and were on the point of executing - him when the police in terfered, and after much trouble suc ceeded in lodging him safely in i iil. Tne murderer He asked Mrs evidently is a tramp. Holmes for . a meal, which was given him, and he then pulled a revolver and shot the old farmer while his wife was in another room. She ran out shouting, "mur der," and a crowd soon collect 3d and followed and captured the' man. Italian Village Demolished. ., London, Deb. 80. A special from Rome says a landslide entirely de stroyed the village of Santa Ana de Pelago,' demolishing 118 houses and rendering 150 . families homeless. There was no loss of life. A Ferryboat Burned. New York, Deo. 30. The double decked ferryboat New Brunswick. owned by the . Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was burned to the water's edge today. The loss is $120,000. Result of a Christmas Fight. Oakland, Cal., Deo. 30. Frank Dar rique died at Livermore this afternoon, presumably from the effects of a severe beating received on Christmas day at the hands of Louis Petitfice. The lat ter who has been in custody dince Sat urday, will be charged with murder. Both men were employed at the Paris vineyard, three miles south of Liver more, and quarreled on Christmas, Darrique was shockingly beaten abont the head and badly cut up, although as far as known Petitfice only used bis ' fists. There were no witnesses, and the cause of the fight is not known. I II III 10 II H Venezuelans Not Ready Ratify the Treaty. to A DELAY IN THE" PROCEEDINGS They Insist That Inc'dental Negotia tions Shall Be ( losed First Gen eral Arbitration Treaty Completed. '- Washington, Deo. 30. Secretary Ol ney left the state department at 12 o'clock today and went direct to the British embassy, where he held a long conference by appointment with Sir Julian Pauncefote, the British ambas sadcr, relative to the status of the Ven ezuela treaty. Mr. Olney 's call fol lowed the arrival of Minister Andrade, of Venezuela, and James J. Storrow, counsel in the Venezuela .case, wio reached Washington late last evening. The result of the conference was guarded with the usual secrecy which prevails at meetings between the secre tary and an ambassador, but there is good reason to believe it was the occa sion for going over several new phases of the Venezuela question. The officials are reticent, and will ay only in general terms that the pros pect of an acceptance of the settlement by Venezuela is good. It is under stood, however, that there are impor tant limitations to the acceptance which appear to make the case .less hopeful of an immediate and satisfac tory conclusion than has been expected. The plan of an extra session of the Venezuela congress to ratify the treaty baa been practically abandoned. There appears also to be, a question as to the nature of r Venezuela's acceptance. ' President Crespo and the government authorities have expressed satisfaction with the general settlement,, so . far - as they secure arbitration, yet they have not yet expressed official approval of all the details of the settlement. On the contrary, there seems a very earrrest de lire at Caracas for more ex act information of the terms of the treaty between Venezuela and Great Britain. - ' A present there is no disposition to awtfit the gradual maturing of this complete treaty, and it is little short of settled that the treaty --will have to be forthcoming, and all the incidental negotiations closed .before the desired Venezuela ratification is secured. In official and diplomatic ' circles, there continues to be a satisfactory and hopeful view of trie situation; It is felt all obstacles will be cleared away in time, and there is a disposition to minimize obstacles as being under the head, of minor details. A f the same . time, the practical abandonment of the extra session of the Venezuela congress and the dispo sition to olose all negotiations on the anal treaty before acceptance is given do not increase the prospect of a speedy conclusion of the case. ' Oa.the question of general 'arbitra tion .between the United States and Great Britain, Mr. Olney and Sir Julian have made their final draft of. the treaty, and it is in the hands of Lord Salisbury, awaiting his approval. No doubt exists of its approval, and it is expected to come daily. THE PACIFIC ROADS' DEBT. President Cleveland Preparing to Bring the Mattir to a Settlement. Washington, Deo. 80. The Even ing Star today says: The president has had several con ferences of late with the attorney-gen eral, and the secretary of the interior and the secretary of the treasury, with a view to speedy action for the adjust ment of obligations of tho Paoifio rail roads to the government. It has been settled that steps will shortly be taken for the foreclosure of the government mortgages on these roads, unless congress shall make provision ior settlement oi the ques tion at the present session. With the amount already matured, more than $13,000,000 of the principal of the subsidy bonds issued in behalf of the Union Pacifio line, and more than $6, 000,000 of similar bonds issued in aid of the Central Paoifio road, will have fallen duo and been paid or must be paid on or before January 1 next. Without reference to the application of the sinking fund now in the treasury, this state of affairs will, in the opin ion of the president, as stated in his annual message, "create suoh-a default on the part of the companies to the government as will give it the right to at once;. institute proceedings to fore close its mortgage lien." ' In addition to the above stated in debtedness maturing January 1 next, there will mature thereafter, br Jan nary i; 1899, the remaining principal of such subsidy bonds which must also be met by the government. These ag gregate $41,000,000, of which $20, 000,000 are on account of the Union Pacifio, and $21,000,000 on acoount of the Central Paoifio Company. Lost on the Swedish Coast. Hull, England, Deo. 30. The Wil son line steamship Volo is a total loss at Wingu, off the coast of Sweden. The crew and passengers were saved. The Volo was a screw steamer built at Hull in 1890, registering 841 tons net Serious Fire In Washington. -Washington, Dec 80. The large furniture house of Julio Lansburg, on New York avenue, was burned this evening. The loss on building stock and adjacent structures damaged will amount to about $160,000. The loss on the stock alone is plaoed at $100, 000, on which there is $60,000 insur ance. Folding beds which are hung from the center and drop down at both sides have just been devised. Bank Closes Its Doors. West Superior, Wis., Deo. 80. The Bank of Superior, doing business in the East End, suspended today. - An assignment was - made by the directors to Henry S Butler, who has taken possession. - The bank has $25,000 eapital and $6,000 surplus, which is largely tied up in investments. Big proportional deposits of $100,000 was a oonstant menace. A slight run Sat urday caused the closing. The deposits are mostly small amounts. : Officers of tne bank expect to liquidate in full unless there is a continual decline in asset. ' THE SULTAN IS OBDURATE! Absolute! v Refuses o Permit Further Interference. Constantinople, Dec. 30. The Rus sian ambassador on Saturday, acting iq concert with representatives of 'Griat Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Austria, had an audience with the siil? tan, Abdul Hamid, one of many such interviews within the past year, on- the same subject, the better administration of affairs in the Turkish empire ' The Russian diplomat began by warning the sultan and the Turkish government that if the revenues ceded for payment of the. Turkish debt WiJro. touched, European control of the finances of the empire would becoCie inevitable. M. de Nelidoff, the Rus sian ambassador, further informed t'jie sultan that the czar guaranteed his per sonal safety and- engaged himself . to maitain the sultan's supremioy in the eve at of severe measures being necea- .. 4.1 l a 1 ' ml B-ary upuu inB pars ui ine powers. iae sultan; however, remained obdurate refusing to consent to any measure of control, financial or otherwise, by the powers. f The Russian ambassador ' said the condition of the Turkish empire placed the throne and the caliphate in immi nent peril. Thereupon Abdul Hamid remarked impressively: - "I may be the last of the caliphs, but I will never become a second khe dive." I In addition to these warnings, M. de Nelidoff sent a note to the Turkish gov ernment and to the palace. The ut most significance is attached to it in diplomatic circles.' He pointed out' in precise terms the necessity for the sul tan following the advice of the powers and acting in complete agreement with their plans for improving the situa tion, warning them once more that the sultan? refusal to do so involves the most disagreeable consequences. The ambassadors of the powers will meet again to discuss the situation, apd will reassemble in future twice a week until they complete their recom mendations to the sultan and his ad visers. The envoTS acting together will henceforth maintain the strictest secrecy regarding their deliberations and the action taken or contemplated and will ' not even inform the envoys of other powers of the decisions reached. 'These latest steps upon the part of the powers are once again reported to have produced-a profound impression at Kiosk and in pursuance of the is suance of an amnesty decree the Ar menian prisoners in Asia Minor and this city and vicinity are being released daily in batohes of fifteen. . , . JUSTICE IN CHINA. rtrates and Counterfeiters are Promptir Beheaded. , San Francisco, Dec. 30. According -to the latest advices 'from the Orient Li Ka Chuck, superintendent of the Canton police, on November 23, seized - a large - number ' of counterfeit coins. The chief coiner, Tse Sang, and others, were arrested. An imperial deoree from Peking commanded the immediate decapitation of the three named offend ers, and enjoins' 'the viceroy to deal with the others as he thinks necessary according to law, as a warning to the people. The offloials who effected the seizure were all promoted in rank. The Canton viceroy reported in an other memorial the capture of two no torious pirate junks. In effecting the capture one military officer lost his life. A deoree' was issued on the 19th of November authorizing the execution of the captives and ordering the officials concerned in the capture to be promot ed in rank and that the matter of the military offioer who had lost his life be referred to the board concerned for rewards and posthumous honors. An Investigation Asked For. New York, Deo. 30. Several life insurance companies have asked Coro ner Tutb.il 1 to make a thorough investi gation as to the cause of the death of David Blakeley, manager of Sousa's band, who expired suddonly in his office in this city in November last The body is to be' disinterred in odrer. to determine whether certain sums in a Chicago accident insnranoe company can be collected, Blakely having suf ferel a severe bicycle accident some weeks prior to his death. An Immense Blast Fired. San Diego, Deo. 30. The Southern California Mountain Water Company fired the largest blast at Morena made in -the history of the state. The amount of rock disloged was 150,000 tons. Giant and black powder was used. All the deposits of powder which were plaoed in tunnels at differ ent levels m the bills were connected by electric wires, which completed a cirouit. - A Big Crniser Floated. Cronstadt, Dec. 30. The armored crniser Rossia, of 12,130 tons displace ment, the largest vessel in the Russian navy, which ran on a sandbank in the beginning of November and has been frozen in ever since, has been floated after fifty-one days of incessant labor with steam icebreakers. Bombay, Dao. 30. The bnbonio plague is increasing, there having beeri 2,094 cases and 1,494 deaths from that cause up to date. The exodus from the city continues, and the natives are threatened with malarial law unless they conform with the sanitary regu lations. , Hundreds of Cocaine Fiends. Hartford, Conn ; Deo. 30. The co caine habit as taken such a hold on many residents of Manchester that steps are being taken to obtain the restriction of the sale of the drug. The evil had its inception when a local druggist a year ago made a preparation of cocaine and menthol which could be used as snuff. It was intended as a specific for asthma, but the prescription was passed around, and now hundreds of persons have become slaves to the snuff. - Sentenced to Death. Denver, Colo., Deo. 80. Allen Henz Downen, a highwayman, convicted of 'the murder of Joel G. Ashworth, who was shot on the street on the night of June 27, was today . sentenced to be hanged the third week in January. Downen, who originally confessed to this murder and many other crimes, broke down and tearfully protested his innocence. Fatal Floods In Greece. Athens, Deo. 80. Floods ooourred in the Liviada distrust They have been accompanied by some loss of life. Coal-Mine Horror in Prince ton, Indiana. SIX MINERS WERE KILLED The Mine, Was New and the Air Shaft Had Not Been Completed Pathetic Scenes ''About- the Pit, Princeton, Ind., Djc 29. A terrifio explosion .of firedamp occurred in the mine of .the Manle Coal Company, of this city, at 3:30 this afternoon, and as a result six men were instantly killed and four. were injured. - One of the four men taken out is dangerously injured. The dead are? " - Robert Mauler; married,.:- treasurer i : ; - JS: ' James Riley r mffftied: John Ernst, married: Carl Fabre, married; Robert Pony lite, and John Hclmes, married. It was at first thought twelve had been killed, but Dave Nolan, James Turner, a man named Colgate and a colored man were taken out alive before midnight. ' The work of resoue continues and will be kept up by relays, bat there have been no more bodies found- since midnight. Meantime, the scenes about the mine during the night become more sad as the hours pass. - The men were at work making re pairs of damages resulting from a simi lar explosion last Sunday. Besides the regular, miners and blacksmiths, others were - assisting in the work, while Robert Manle, son of President John Maule, "and treasurer and super intendent of the company, was superin tending the work. The mine has been in operation only a short time, and the air shaft is not quite completed. The' gas which collects in portions-of the mine, was ignited by an -open lamp. ' , A year ago yesterday, Prinoeton was jubilant over the striking or a-seven-foot coal vein by the Maule company,' but tonight many homes . are scenes of great sorrow, made so by the awful ex plosion in the mine, . When the mine was opened, the finest machinery was put in, and "it was the intention of the owners to make it the finest in the. ( state. The air shaft was n at started until the mine had been prepared to operate. -Work on it has progressed slowly, and there are still about ninety 1 feet to excavate before-4t is completed. Gas has frequently aooumulat'ed in pockets, and several men . have been' burned by: small explosions. - About two, months ago a serious ex- i plosion occurred, in wbioh one man was killed and Frank Turbie, who was injured in today's explosion, was inv jared."!; The state mine inspector in vestigated, and work . went on with a f mall force. It was well known that gas ' accumulated and there was no way to dispel it yetv. -The.miners went to their daily work without thinking of the danger they were constantly in. Last Sunday a jet of gas was fired by a blast, and it burned all night. . In t':e morning the descent of the cages forced gas to this jit and a terrifio explosion occurred, but fortunately there was no one in the mine. . Today abont twenty men were en gaed in repairing the damage done' by the explosion, when the firedamp again let go with terrifio force, and with deadly effect The escape' of some' of the men from . instant death seems al most a miracle, when it is considered that th'e huge cages were blown from the shaft bottom to the top of the top house, over 500 feet above, by the force of the explosLn. These cages were wreoked so they were useless, and an iron bucket was improvised for a rescu ing party as soon as possible after the accident. - The first persons brought up were Turbie, Grim, Davis and Booker, col ored men. The first was badly burned and was carried to an ambulance. Grim and Davis were appaiently unin jured. Booker was cut and burned. his jaw broken and one eye was torn from its socket. Then . the rescuing party began to bring up the dead. The scenes around the mine were most pathetic. Weeping piteously in anguish were wives, whom the crowd vainly tried to comfort Mothers, daughters, sons and other relatives of the men in the mine with blanched faces stood wringing their hands, and some were kept from going down the shaft with great difficulty. Slowly the work of bringing the bodies to the surface proceeded. It was believed mat tne men still in tne mine were dead, and those waited only for their dead. Seattle, Deo. 29. A little girl 4 years old, daughter of a poor wood chopper, burned to death Christmas day at the family's home, near Lake Washington. The father was at work during the day, and the mother was in town, doing a little marketing, leaving the five children, the eldest a girl of 12, at home. While playing around the room, the youngest approached the stove and in some way her clothing caught fire. The other children rushed from the house, calling ior their father. By the time he reached home' and succeeded in putting out the flames the child was so badly injured that she died in a short time. The flames had been drawn into the lungs. Waylaid, Robbed and Nearly Boa-ted. Erie, Pa., beo. 29. Roscoe Finley, the tax-collector in Greenfield town ship, this county, was waylaid, beaten into insensibility, robbed of $300 and then dragged into his own barn, which was fired by the would-be assassins, last night But for the fact that a neighbor, who had been attracted by the fire, entered the barn to release the cattle and horses and stumbled over Finley 's body, he would have been cremated. The barn was burned. Destroyed by Fire. . . San Franoisco, Deo. 29. The Cali fornia glue works, at Sixth avenue and Q streets, were destroyed by fire last night The building was insured for $10,000 only, and the net loss will be $40,000 at least It is supposed that the Pre was caused by the careless handling of a lamp by Henry Hellier, the wjtohman, who lost his life in the flames. ' When found, his charred re mains lay near a pile of broken glass, onoe a part of the lamp, and it was evi dent that bis clothes bad been saturat ed with oil. - PERISHED TO A . MAN. Brave Tartr of Texans Fighting for Cuba Killed in a Hot Fight. New York, Deo.'- 29. A special to the World from Key West, says: The Lone Star company, of the Pa triot Army of ; West Cuba, consisting of fifteen Texas sharpshooters, perished to a man after battling more than five hours , against vastly superior' Spanish loroes in Pinax del Rio province, kill ing double their own jj umber and wounding probably as many more. Havana officials are jubilant, passen gers say, over the news of this victory, a unoan ,- Dana , was -observed near Pinar del Rio city Thursday morning, and General Melquiz. sent two squads oi cavairy io . attacK at. Alter a run ning fight, the band, which proved to be composed of the fifteen Texans, was chased into a "bottle," a bit of hum mock having one opening. The Texans, seeing they were in a hole, retreated to the: further end and, fortified them selves behind some boulders. The Spanish troopers -dismounted and sur rounded them; pouring in a fire from both sides. The brave Texans replied and kept np the fight more than five hours. By that time, six of the fifteen had been killed and four wounded while twenty-five Spaniards , had bit the dnst and ten or more were wounded. A nag' of truce was sent in by the Spanish, and the Texans were called on to surrender, but the Americans re fused, shooting, " We remember Ma- ceo." ... . This infuriated the Spaniards, and they fought with renewed fierceness. Twice they charged, but the rapid fir ing of the brave little band drove them back. By getting-on a high ridge be hind the Texans' position,, the Span iards were enabled to kill all but two of those left Those two gallantly con tinned to fight and held off the enemy an hour longer. Then, ' overcome by thirst and enfeebled by loss of blood, flowing from a dozen- wounds, they were cnt to pieces by the Spanish, who finally dashed up as the Texans cried, "Vive Cuba libre." ESCAPED' LYNCHING. A Murder. r Owes Bis Safety ernor Stone. to Gov Jefferson City, Mo., Deo. 29. The presence of Governor Stone at the ooun ty jail tonight probably- saved Tobe Lanahan, colored, from being -lynched At 8:30 o'clock, a mob of fully 1,000, whites and blacks, surrounded the jail, threatening to avenge the most revolt ing murder ever committed in Jeffer son City, j Early this morning the body of a 14-year-old negro girl, Millie Gaines, was found in a yard baok of Joseph Stampfli's furniture store.. The child bad been outraged, her-'skuli crushed and her body mutilated in a horrible manner. Suspicion pointed to Tobe Lanahan, -and he was arrested, In the basement of -the furniture store incriminating evidence vMfanncU: -The news' spiead. over the city, and by night there was great excitement. When a lynching was finally threat ened, Governor Stone, aocotnpanied by Mayor Sliver and Assistant Attorney General Jordan,, went to the jiil and Governor Stone spoke to the mob. He appealed to them to leave the punish ment of the crime to the state.. As citizens of the capital of the. state, he implored them not to permit, in the very shadow of the capital, such a crime as was contemplated. When the enraged men were finally Induced to withdraw, the prisoner'' was removed to the' state;- penitentiary. Armed guards from the state armory assisted in the transfer of the' prisoner. .Another Big. Tunnel. Seattle, Dec. 29.-T-H. C. Henry, the millionaire contractor, today confirmed the report that he had secured the contract-to .build the approaches to the Great . .-Northern railroad's - tunnel through .the Cascade mountains, and that men were already on their way to oommence preliminary work- Mr. Henry refused to state the amount of the contract It will take about six months to do the work, and then every thing will be" -ready to commence on the tunnel, which will be' one ot the greatest engineering feats known in railroad history. The tunnel will be ' miles' long, and will reduce the altitude" of the road 1,000 feet. Mallcarrier Protected Himself. . Burlington, Ky. , Deo ' 29. A col ore! people's Christmas celebration be gan at Big Bone springs 'Wednesday night, and continued all night. Chas. Elwart, a mail carrier while passing the place yesterday morning, was as saulted by Harvey Foster, colored, armed with a ra"zor. Elwart shot Fos ter dead. He has been arrested. El wart's reputation is good while that of Foster is bad. . Disastrous Fire. Potsdam, N. Y., Dec. 29. The Windsor hotel, four saloons, two cloth ing stores, three ' restaurants, one ' gro cery,, two livery stables, and two. bar .ber shops, composing a large portion of the business section of the town, were burned today. 'The loss is estimated at $100,000; partially insured. ; ... , A Postofflc'e Block. Burned Amesbury, Mass., Deo. - 29. The postoffioe blook was badly damaged by fire today. The loss p'n the building and property of the various occupants will- amount to $60,000; insurance about $40,000. - The fire ' probably caught near the boiler in the basement. Abandoned Bark's Crew Reecued. -New Orleans, Deo. 29: The steamer Queensmore, Captain Cross, from Lon don, arrived today, having on board Captain Tobiasson and son,, mate and crew" of the Norwegian bark ' Neptune, picked np-on December 9, in latitude 45, longitude 13 west. The bark had a crew of nine men, all told, and was from Belize, Honduras, bound . - for Havre, with a cargo of logwood. When abandoned there was ten feet of Water in her hold. 'Took His Own Life. Chicago, Ded. 29. Suffering from depression, caused . by finanoial re verses , Otto Wasmansdorff, a well known banker of this city, fired a bul let into his brain and died almost in stantly. He killed himself in a front ball bedroom' at his home on Cleve land avenue. The Latest In NnniDf Bottles. ' Nursing bottles are now made with a porous filtering body located in the neck, Tbich strains the milk as it TAisei tL-rdagh it A TRAP IS SET FOR GOMEZ Spaniards Forming Three s. Lines to Crush Him. OPERATIONS ARE IN MATANZAS Weyler . Expected to Strike a Hard , Blow, So That Spain Can Call for 'Another' Loan Cubans Confident. Cincinnati, Deo. 28. A special to the Commercial Tribune from Key West says: Havana advices are that Gomez's advance guard has captured the town of Las Passega, in Santa Clara prov ince, taking the entire garrison and all the stores. A battalion of fresh troops was sent from Havana, to Matanzas this morning, to be sent to the front Great exertions are being made to get a strong force to oppose General Gomez, and three lines are being forced to get the Cubans entangled between them and crushed. Funds Banning Low. New York, Deo. 28. A Madrid special to the World says: It is rumored that General has delayed fresh operations Weyler against tne insurgents in order to give time to discover the disposition of banas and their chiefs since the death of Maoeo, with a view to feeling bis way to pre pare the ground for finishing the pres ent liUDan war use tne past insurrec tions in Spain and Cuba, where official negotiations proved more telling argu ments than foroe of arms, directly the insurgents saw no more hope of for eign aid. It is also believed in diplomatic oir- cles that Spain will take advantage of tne disposition of President Cleveland and becretary Olney to negotiate quickly and directly with the United States to secure a neutrality by grant ing, discriminating concessions 'in the contemplated Cuban tariff, and fair promises of colonial autonomy before the accession of MoKinley. One of the principal reasons of the Spanish government for insisting upon Weyler making a decisive attempt to clear the provinoea of Pinar del Bio, Havana and Matanzas, within a few weeks, is the urgent necessity for scor ing a military sucoess before Spain has once more to appeal to the native and foreign markets for fresh" loans, when sue snail nave exnaustea tne money obtained by the recent interior loan, which will be in Maroh of next year. At present the minister of the col onies- disposes of this cash, and Cuban bonds to the value of about $5,000,000 only remain out of the proceeds of the loans. The expenses of the war in Cuba are $12,000,000 monthly, and in the Philippines at least $4,000,000. up to tne present time, tne Spanish treasury has assisted the Cuban treas ury by guaranteeing advances made by foreign and native bankers upon Cuban bonds, and by pledging the sources of imperial revenue for the recent $80,- 000,000 loan.. The moment is fast approaching when the Spanish parliament and tho Spanish taxpayers must be asked to provide, in the shape of additional tax ation, $26,000,000 annually for the in terest and sinking fund of $250,000,000 thus far raised, to meet only in part the expenses of the Cnban war, up to March, 1897, and which the Cuban budget and the Cuban taxpayers oould not possibly undertake to pay, even if the war were soon terminated, con sidering that their budgets showed de ficits, averaging $5,000,000 annually, before the present insurrection. Rivera Warns Weyler. New York, Deo. 28. A special from Key "West to the World says: Steamship passengers say that Gen eral Rivera, who is in command of the army of Maceo, bas sent a formal warning to General Weyler. General Rivera notified the Spanish captain- general that if he persisted in his threats to kill pacifioos found in the country, the Cubans will make reprisals on all Spaniards whom they may cap ture. General Weyler is affecting to dis regard the warning. Those near him, however, say he will not dare to oarry out his ideas as ruthlessly as he intend ed. His guerillas still have full au thority to capture or to kill paoifioos in the country and to foroe their families into the garrisoned towns. As the troops in such places have little extra food and the residents none to spare, this order lays a great hardship upon the poor country folk. Hundreds will soon be starving. General Rivera is moving out ot his entrenchments. All indications point to an important engagement soon. General Weyler has visited various points on the trocha and San Christo bal. He is always accompanied by a large force. There is skirmishing daily along the trocha and on the outskirts of Arte misa. A battle has been fought in Santa Clara province between guerilla bands. The Cubans forced the Spanish to re tire into Remidios with heavy loss. Regia, across the bay from Havana, was attacked again last night almost under the guns of the fortress. . Sev eral houses were burned and a running fight maintained for two hours. . A Drunkard's Act. Los Angeles, Cal.j Deo.; 28..Whiie leaving the Santa Fe train at the First street depot in a drunken condition. Mason -Birkley stumbled, fell and threw his 6 year-old boy Harry under the movibg train. The child was crushed to death. Candlesticks, with chimneys, and having perforations in the bottom of the tray for the admission of air, are made by an Englishman. Canght by the Fire. Albany, Or., Deo. 25. Yesterday, at Foster, eighteen miles above Leb anon, a man named Wadli, who recent ly purchased the flouring mills at Fos ter, went from the mill to the house after his books. He found the house on fire, gave the alarm, rushed in to save his books, was overcome by the heat, and burned to death in the pres ence of bia father, brothers and a erowd that had assembled. His charred re mains were reoovered after the bouse had burned down. He was a single man, recently from Minnesota. A MOB OF BOHEMIANS. Tiled to Lynch, a Motorman Who Ban Down a Boy. , . ". Chicago, Deo. 28 George & Den-" mars, 7 years old, was killed by a trolley-car at Troop and Eighteenth streets, this afternoon. . Fred Bernier, motorman, was threatened with lynch ing, for killing the boy, rand was with ' great difficulty ' rescued - from the . mob of Bohemians, who. incensed at . the terrible accident, surrounded the oar and dragged Bernier from the plat form, determined to hang him. Patrick Hanley, the conductor, managed to save Bernier from the mob, and then a riot call was sent to the Maxwell street station. The police took charge of the ' motorman and conductor and locked them up. - After the boy had been killed, Motor man Bernier took, refuge in. the oar, which stood within a few feet of where the accident occurred, and in an in-. stant it was beseiged : by angry men. Ho attempted to keep them ont by latching the doors on the inside, but they broke the doors in, knooked him down and kicked and beat him for a few moments in a shocking manner. He managed, however,- to get away from them, and ran to the door of the', drugstore, where he was handed a pis- , tol, and was admitted inside by Mr. Kvitek, the proprietor, before any ' farther barm befell him. The crowd surged around the store and yelled: "Break it inl Killhimr It looked for a minute as if the store would be raided, but Mr. Kvitek had ' made use of the telephone. He called on the Maxwell station first for an am bulance, but by that time matters bad got so warm that he requested a patrol wagon. In a few minutes the wagon brought a number of officers, who did all they oould to quiet the mob. When some degree of quiet had been restored the polioe arrested the endangered men and took them to the station. There the men seemed unoonoerned, and de clined to make a statement- There were many versions, given ot the accident Well-informed people living in the neighborhood said they bad been expecting something of the kind for a long time, and were only surprised that it did not happen sooner. THE SON'S SACRIFICE. Benton Wilson Went to Prison , te Save . Bis.Father. Spokane, Wash., Deo. 28. Benton Wilson, who went to the penitentiary for a long term of years for murder, came into Spokane . last night, and to day went to Mica, where his parents live. He had been unexpectedly par doned. . : - The olrcumstanses under whioh Wil- son was sent to jail were uliar. Two years ago, 30m jys an- - eartnea tne DOdy 01 & t was subsequently . . identiflei - of. James Johnson, brother-: Ben- ton Wilson. The body bund two miles from the Wilso: homestead.. Benton Wilson and his tather were ar rested and oharged with murder. The father was first plaoed on trial, and the case looked blaok for him.: Per ceiving this, Benton arose and con fessed to having murdered his brother-in-law. He said Johnson had abused his wile, Wilson's sister; had returned to the farm and had threatened his wife, if she Sid not oome baok to the city. Wilson said that he accompanied them to a lonely stretch of woods, and, at an opportune moment, fell upon him and clubbed him to death. For this he was sentenoed to a long term of years in the penitentiary. It is a case of a son sacrificing his life to save that of his father. CHARGED WITH SMUGGLING. American Arrested for Driving Into Prohibited Alexlean Territory. San Diego, Cal., Deo. 28. Harry Mansur, the American who was arrest ed several weeks ago by the Mexican customs officials at Tia Juana for al leged infraction of the laws governing the free zone, has been released by the Ensenada authorities and is again at his home on this side. His release was obtained through the intervention of Hon. Anthony Godbe, American vice- consul, and a cash bail was obtained, which allowed Mansur- to leave the country. Mansur said today that bis ease was temporarily settled, and he did not ex pect it to oome up again for six months or a year. It is probable the cash bail will be quietly accepted and no further action taken, especially aa Mansur's infraction of the law was slight. Mansur's wife s family lives at Ro- sario, about two miles south of the free cone. Mansur had often visited them, taking his team and paying no attention to the law, being an old resi dent and acquainted with the officials. But a new administration of the Tia Juana custom-house, Senor Motavel a sco, caused Mansur to be arrested for smuggling a horse into the country, and imposed a heavy fine . upon him. Failing to pay the fine, Mansur was ar-. rested and sent to Ensenada to be dealt with by the higher authorities. Sinoe that time nntil a day or so ago he bad been in jail. A steel fly wheel twenty five feet in diameter and requiring 250 miles of wire in its construction, has been made in Germany. Oakland, Cal., Deo. 38 Dr. J. W. Robertson's sanitarium was partly burned this morning. It was occupied by thirty patients, suffering from ner vous disorders. . The first care was for the patients, many of whom were still in bed. There was great confusion, but they were all safely removed. The bouse was formerly Livermore college, and, while only two stories high, oc cupies a large area. The damage will be under $5,000. A defective fine caused the trouble. .. ." A Oouble Harder. . . Corning, N. Y.,' Deo. 28. A bor-: rilbe double murder occurred at Rath-. bunville, fifteen miles west of this oity, last night William Alien. William Harrington and Floyd Myers obtained a buffalo robe while in an intoxicated condition. Myers had the robe at his borne, and Allen and Harrington drove there at 10 o'clock last night and de manded it They were met by Myers, who bad a shotgun with him. When they demanded the robe, Myers shot them. They were in the buggy at the time, and the horses started at the re port oi the gas. Both men r dead. 1 V 1 i.