I RKnUlA IS A El -l I l 1 . . . I ...... ivj nnuuatU, II i EVENTS OF THE DAY Items Gathered from All parts ol the World. PREPARED FOR THE BUSY READER . ... hut Not Less Inter Leu mp0""'" Mtlng HnpponB OuUfdo tho State. P La I-ollcttc says the senate SeM,or'r. Moaned. Th, fate of the Balkan conference ..li', on Germany' consent. I' xf-xienn rebels have been ff X a rcvolt American soil a nrcmatiirc explosion oi uynni.mc Arir, killed two men and height other, r,Mt Northern earnings ior uic Unw a decrease of last I'S"' " "...i. . .... jl nas.OOO compare" w year E . . I 1 1 . i German military, miiwrn ca Vi . miv in the air. The occu- a, fell i a tree and were uniti- ureu. Ftneru who have been going over .Vf hooks of San l'rancisco have Id a shortage of $00,000 in the treasury Senator I lkms says lie knows not li J about the mariiagc of his daugh- r to the Uukc of Abruzzt and con fers the 11.1..1I escort a good Joke. rjaring the reception of the Amer ica licet at Yokohama all the Amer ican admirals were carried around the deck of tlictr vessels on. the shoijlders Japanese admirals and captains. Deaths in Luzon from tho storm will jettl 500. B&o has drifted to a depth of Jfi m Montana. . ...I...... tt.ttltritil fnvnr fir. 1 Oltfilirti. A login German lmron 1ms boon vie- on death lias been roportod from Beiio camlkrs are putting tin n hard 9 Lrutcnant Jeiipson, who lina boon Jotin W, Kern. Jr.. son of tho Demo A Ktw York thief, nftor robbing a uuru in .in iiulu. Tie croatcHt celebration in the his. ttn I... A i - .. ..... I 1. i in aiiiitil-uii tint L. DUmomU equal to thono of South jmru aiu biiiij iu iiiivu uvun iuuuu 111 ii. ii . i Ote hundred nnd fourteen thousand .... l m ii . rnr ..iiia.iu.is n ij 1 1! iltui vuu iui mn uuuu Women suffragists will meet at Se- inr m mm Qunue in Canada are raisincr a relief fad to send to China to lieln the tarv. French troops have had another en- wm.nt t.M 1 1. At,.,,..,. -r-I.- 1 .. . . Immense crowds attended the funeral Br the hurstmg of a stcamnine four rHf n .!.. i t The kiiiK of Ilalv tmo . UUtr ni l hnti l.i .......... Ctincse Iiav "w sum uy iiiis i e or ritie It! vrot Henry R Rfi.,i "'n v. arif fai i. a ; i -r.w..au o, tne beanie jairt Governor Patterson, nf TnnV i,n. v" iayior ana Captain Rankin. A SHOW (Inrm "! J 1 six ueaiiii. A tornado i n Mn. f : .1.. i tour deaths. Gsml.t . . ten? I! . D uv.'VV....V A Rftiitl. r-i ... FlathMH T-.i!. , h. ... . v-.ufc.i. who irinon trviii- no ' "'"li. un not improved. A tornnrtn l.t.... . - . rai. "ivn ii witrir rnr rir riiw and in !,C man Wy" killl"ff two jna injuring 28 others. Kr-Adm!rni c r.. 0. ill- rl-. . !'" "'I others n.i . Hi. j . ""1U1 in r . !? BrSirt n1 K.,,n Possible removal n ... lU '0 leave Pnn.J. .1 . ,tlurato India Nevada .,iii ..." . rt . " i niii min . f "u lav v uniibiD iui A biff Tln.i .... lent unjer"n,i8nment Just before ybSfe.wngementi are al- Poopls Enrngod by Austrian Outrage on vukoucs. nclgrade, Oct. 21-Gcncral Vukotics, ui umciai o: tne Montenegrin govern ment, arrived here yesterday at noon, iftcr an extraordinary experience at Agrnm, where lie was arrrsir.t t, a... tro-Hungarian officials and detained for several Honrs. In an interview, the gen eral said: "On my arrival at Agrarn gendarmes entered my car, dragged me out and took me to the prefecture of noliee. t then searched, and my purse, papers, in wci, everything i ,ad( wcrc faken from me. My baggage was also completely ransacked. I game the Kcndarmerif m name and explained my status as a spe cial envoy to King Peter. I showed also the passport and safe conduct tr!,, me at the Austro-IIungarian legation at ccmiijc, but all to no avail. . "Ultimately I was ncrmitlrd n c.,i , telegram to Baron von Achrcnthal, the Aiisiro-Jiiiinganan minister of foreign anairs, complaining of the treatment .nr. corded me, which was in violation nf tcrnalional usage. After considerable delay an order arrived from Vienna in structing the police to release me. nnil this was done. "I was detained at the nolice st.nintt for seven hours, and, as I lost mv train connection, my journey was delayed al together fourteen hours." This occurrence ras aroused acrain a bitter fcpling toward Austria-Hungary on the part of the Servians, and the peo ple arc greatly excited. The general is the hero of the mo ment in Belgrade. A great crowd of students and others gathered in front of his hotel yesterday afternoon, and when the general entered his carriage to drive to the palace the students unhar nessed the horses and dragged the ve hicle through the streets themselves. Meanwhile the mob shouted its approval of King Peter and Prince Nicholas and cursed Austria. PREDICTS BIG WAR Balkan Trouble Means Dawnfall ot Turkey, Says Escaped Prlnco. Chicago, Oct. 21. Prince Shaban Bey Gotshsa, leader of the Turkish revolu tionists, upon whose head the sultan has placed a price of $35,000, is living quiet ly in Chicago. Prince Shaban would become sovereign ofAlbania should that country be freed from Turkish rule. He believes the present Balkan situation is a crisis in European affairs that will result in the disintegration of the Otto man empire. "I predict a general' European war as a result of the Balkan difficulties," said Prince Shaban. Prince Shaban, who lives at 21 32 Michigan avenue, was a leader in the organisation of the revolutionist party in his province. He gathered an army of 12,000 men, which was defeated at the battle of Jackova in 1004. He evaded capture and fled to London. RAISE FUND FOR CHINESE. Countrymen In Victoria Get News of Lost of Crops by Floods. Victoria, B. C, Oct. 21. Local Chi nese have received cablegrams telling of heavy loss of life and great desola tion of Yannan and Hciping, China, as a result of the breaking of the dykes and overflow of the West river, inun dating the district for a hundred miles. The number of killed is not given, but the message states that the loss has been immense, and starvation is feared, and it appeals to the Chinese abroad to send aid, Subscriptions from local Chinese were made within a short time after the re ceipt of the cablegrams, which totaled $7000, this amount being cabled to Chi nese offic als at Canton for distribution among the sufferers. Starvation is ex pected to follow, as the disaster comes at the time of harvest, when the crops arc ready to be taken from the fields. Half tne district is statca to uc nwucu. Michigan Fire is Spreading. SnnW Sie Marie. Mich.. Oct. 21. Hundreds of residents in this district lark 111 lttf1 firrlitincr fnrcst fires to- Wilis inn n o - day arc depending upon showers pre dicted for tonight to give mucu nccucu relief. A 40-mile gale spread the fires in all directions touay. ii is h-tuhvu that Suzar island, which has a ponula- - . .. . . 1 . 1 nlntner tion ot looo persons, is amwzc annual . ....i . ..i Mmt Teilour sixteen llWIlt tllU IU VIH. .v... - " square miles have been burned over. Gladys, Eckcrman, snciiuraKc aim Whitcfish Point are surrounded. Brim ley had a narrow escape today, but the fires were driven ditch. Return to Normal Basis. New York. Oct. 20. The National Association of Manufacturers an nounccs that every branch of industry is showing marked increase of busi- i !... .inrlnir the nast three liens i n'-i j . .o " months the business conditions have taken on new activity. In an exhaus- c canvass among tne .i.wuo iucn.uw.a .. :.!.. returns bear ot uic assotiuuuii, I-- r,jn out the prediction that practically every manufacturing, uusic . upon a normal basis of production during mot). Groat Storm In Montana. Butte, Mont., Oct. 31.-A .heavy storm cut Butte ott trom inc Eastern Montana rcpons ... delaying trains from five to ten Tne unusuai nuw .. caused loss to sheep. newsIrom the national capital I wgwrmoBBmeaggf " . .1 ENLARGE MINIDOKA TRACT. Government Withdraws More Snake Rlvor Land. Washington, Oct. 22. The Minidoka irrigation project looks so good to gov ernment officials that they arc making preliminary surveys with a view to ma tcrially enlarging the irrigation area on the north side of Snake river. As far as they have progressed these prclimi nary surveys have been entirely satis factory, so satisfactory that the sccrc tary of interior recently withdrew from all forms of entry 105,000 acres of land on the north bank of Snake river just cast of Shoshone falls. The withdrawn land lies in townships 7, 8 and 9 south, ranges 18, 10 and 20 cast. If it shall be later determined to irrigate this land, its Withdrawal will prevent speculative entries. The examinations .low under way arc not only with regard to the possi bility of carrying water onto this land, but also as 'to the possibilities of in creasing the amount of water in Snake river for irrigation purposes through construction of storage works on the headwaters of Snake river and its tributaries. 847,000 Will Cover Shortage. Washington, Oct. 23. Although thc controller of currency yesterday ro eoivftil tho report of Bunk Examiner (hitch on tho Farmers & Tradors bnnk at La Orandc, Or., ho rofuscB to mnkc any statements other than have already been published, holding the report as confidential, an nro nil reports of bank examiners. It is not believed that tho Hhortagt will exceed that already pub lished $47,000. Tho taco valuo of tho honk's iisw'lfl was $100,231, nnd its lia bilities, us far as ascertained, $213,515. Pacific Fleet's Program. Washington, Oct. 21. The navy de partment announced the plans for the cruise of the Pacific fleet today. After the fleet leaves Magdalena bay at the completion of the autumn battle prac tice, it will cruise down the west coast of South America, visiting Panama, Callao, Coqucmbo, 1 alcahuano and other South American ports. The fleet will return for the spring maneuvers in the north Pacific, and then proceed to Cali fornia ports. Mann Declines Honor. Washington, Oct. 20. Giving as a controlling reason that his work in Boston is still unfinished, Rev. Dr. Alexander Mann, rector of Trinity Episcopal church of that city, has de clined the position of bishop of Wash ington to succeed the late Bishop Henry Y. batterlec. Dr. Manns declination is the third since the death o! Bisho" Satterlee about six months ago. , Fleet Goes to Panama. Washington. Oct. 22, When the Pa cific fleet under command of Admiral Swinbttrn leaves Magdalena bay about December 1 on its trip south, it will go first to Panama and then sail di rectly for Talcahuano, a distance of 3,300 miles. The other stops in South America, including Coquimbo and Callao, will be made on the return, to the United States. has west. zards, hours to have Court Wants No Politics. Washington, Oct. 23 Tho supreme court of the United Statca yesterday indicated disapproval of tho efforts to bring that court into politics at this timo by denying tho motion to advance the hearing in tho enso of tho Nobel Htato bank of Oklahoma against Gov ernor Hnskoll nnd othors, involving the constitutionality of tho Oklahoma bank deposit guaranty law. Fleet Leaves Honolulu. TI.,1.,I. rnt oi The Pacific cruiser fleet, commanded by RcattAd miral Swinburne, salicd at 0:15 o'clock Thursday morning, with the accompanying torpedo-boat destroy- nn in tnw. fnr the Pacific coast. The cruisers will proced to Magdalena bay for target practice, aticr wnicn thev will visit the west coast of South America. Discontinue Fumigation. Wrxshinirtnn. Oct. 24. In view of (tin imnrnvpil conditions in San Fran cisco, Surgeon-General Wyman. of the public health and marine hospital service, has instructed his officers to liscontinuc the disintection ot outgo ing vessels. New Carriers for Oregon. Washington, Oct. 21. Rural carriers appointed 10 urcgon romca; route 1, William Seals carrie, Charles Seals substitute; Mcdtord, route i, John E. ucnt carrier, ueorgc ti. wnuicy substitute. Fires In Adlronknck Forests. Utica, N. Y., Oct. 21. Heavy winds in the central AdiroimacKS nave pickch ..n ii.- firec which raced during the long drought and are driving them on as furiously as before. Disease is Slaying Moors. Wnaiitnfrtnn. Oct. 23 A virulont dhv oaso, highly contagious and fatal in ovorv easo, has brokon out at Rabat, MorOCCO, and llio iluurou uuwiuiimvs hnvn hoon nskod to tako nil quarantino precautions. Slocum Sent to Puget Sound. Washington, Oct. 23 Convmandor Q. R. Slooum, Unltod Statos navy, 1ms boen ordorod to Pugot Sound navy yard for duty as ordnaneo officor. BEGINS WORK ON MESSAGE. President Consults Secretary Straus on Immigration Problems. Washington, Oct. 20. The presi dent is busy holding conferences and working on his annual message to con grcss. He conferred on immigration matters with Secretary Straus and Robert Watchhorn, commissioner of immigration at New York. Mr. Watchhorn's visit revived' speculation regarding the successor to the com missioner-general of immigration, the; vacancy which it was - recently an nounced at the white house would not be filled until after election. The general political situation was reviewed at a conference between the president and Representative Louden slager, secretary of the Republican congressional committee. Mr. Loud- cnslagcr said he told the president that the committee was getting plenty of activity, though not plenty of money, and that the Republican prospects wcrc good. PUNISH OFFICEHOLDERS. Civil Service Men Suffer for Their Political Activity. Washington, Oct. 24. More pun ishment has been meicd out as the result of charges of pernicious activ ity in the poitical campaign. The civil service commission today an nounced that J. H. Foidham, a dep uty collector of internal revenue at Orangeburg, S. C, had been repri manded and suspended without pay for 15 days for active participation in the Republican state convention at Columbia. Robert A. Stewart, tem porary deputy collector, who was county chairman of the executive committee of Clarendon county, S. C, has been reprimanded. R. O. Pierce, an employe of the Marc Island navy yard, who announced his candidacy as supervisor in the first district, has been discharged. Clyde Knock, a let ter carrier, at Independence, Kan., who became the independent candi date tor the district court clerkship, has resigned to avoid, dismissal. 'Played Ryan's Son'. Washington, Oct. 20. The record of a young man ' Alexandria, Va., who masqueraded liere for several days as the son of Thomas Fortune Ryan.- the New York multi-million aire, is being investigated by the po lice. The authorities have already discovered that he has a wife and chil dren in the Virginia city, and that he was associated with a woman who is believed to be the wife of a New York stock broker. Detectives have discov ered an alleged attempt by the young man to defraud a guest of the New Willard hotel by representing that valuable pictures could be bought by thc payment of a deposit. Tlje de posit, however, was not paid. Mortgage on Western Pacific. Oakland. Cal., Oct. 21. The Western Pacific Railroad company today filed a $25,000,000 second mortgage with the county recorder. The loan is secured from the Central Trust Company of New York City. The main line road from Salt Lake City to Oakland is given as security for the loan, which is to be used as a stnkmg fund. The mortgage runs for 44 years, bearing 5 per cent. The first mortgage was filed September 1, 1003, and was for a loan of SflOOOO,- 000. This amount was secured from the Bowling Green Trust Company, of New York. Wright Soon All Right. Washington, Oct. 22. Orville Wright, the aeronaut, who has been confined in the hospital at Fort Myer ever since the accident to his aeroplane on September 17, when Lieutenant belfndge met his death, is rapidly recovering. He is ex pected to be able to move with the aid of crutches in a few days, and his sis ter, Miss Catherine Wright, plans to take him to their Dayton home by the end of next week. Wilbur Wright, now in France, will complete the tests of their aeroplane before the army board at Fort Myer, next spring. Rains Will Put Out Fires. Washington, Oct. 22. The cheering news that the end of the. forest fires now raging 111 the cast is in sight was announced by the weather bureau to night. Out along the southern edge of the Rocky mountain states a storm is scheduled to appear tomorrow midnight, and, it will move northeastward, at tended by rains in the valleys of the Central and Atlantic states, The rains promise to be sufficiently heavy to ex tinguish the fires in the Allegheny and Adirondack mountains. Oil Company Blocked. Washington, Oct. 21. The supreme court of the United States denied the motion for, a rehearing in the case of H, Pierce Clay, of the Waters-Pierce Oil company, o St. Louis. Pierc.e re sisted an application for his removal to Texas in connection with the prosecu tion of his company on the charge of violating the Texas anti-trust laws. WHOLE FAMILIES DIE. Plan Welcome to Fleet. Amoy, China, Oct. 24, Admiral Sah, of the Chinese navy, and Mr. Sun, the provincial treasurer of the reception committee to welcome the battleship fleet, to this port, have ar rived here on the Chinese cruiser Fei Eng. Dovartated District In Michigan Covers 100 Square Miles. Alpena, Mich., Oct. 10. Out of the t', - n it.. . 1 . t .... c ow tjji uiaiiiki iu uic nurui 01 ims city, where flames are spreading un told death and desolation unchecked, come advices which indicate that the number of dead will exceed CO and may run up well toward 100. Early Saturday it was known that 22 had been sacrificed to the flames. Later advices confirrn.cd this report and added 10 more to the list of victims. Today it is certain that the casualties will largely exceed every previous report. In the vicinity of Mctz, Bolton and Poscn the fires have burned suffi ciently to leave several hundred women and children cammng with comparative safety in the open fields, but near this city Saturday night the fires became so threatening that Mayor McKnight called out a volun teer force Of several hundred men with shovels to construct trenches in an effort to stem the progress of the names icwara inls ciiy. inc same southwest wind that swept fires through the village of Mctz is still blowing, with consequent great dan ger to. villages and farms. I'ires arc still raging uncontrolled through the counties of Sheboygan, Presquc Isle, Alpena and Alcona, as well as in other scattered districts through northern Michigan. Diligent search has been begun to determine the full extent of the holocaust. It may take many days to reveal the tragedies that are likely to have oc curred on isolated farms, with fam ilies fighting bravely to the last to save their lives and their modest homesteads. The death list may not be fully known for a week. But it needs no elaborated details to determine . that the property loss will run into the millions. Whole villages have been blotted off the map and logging camps by the dozen have been de stroyed, with their entire season's output. TURKEY WANTS WAR. Mobilizes Army in Asia Minor to Fight Bulgaria. Paris. Oct. 19. The optimism pre vailing in official circles up to the present time concerning the ability of the powers to maintain peace in eastern Europe was rudely shattered on receipt of a telegram from the French ambassador at Constanti nople. M. Constans. announcing that Turkey had ordered the mobilization of her troops in Asia Minor, and it is believed that a few hours will de termine the issue of peace or war. This is regarded as Turkey's an swer to Bulgaria's refusal to accord compensation for her independence and to the powers which arranged the program in London for the interna tional conference. Instructions have been hurriedly forwarded to the, French representa tives at Constantinople and Sofia to renew their counsels of peace and the other powers have sent similar in structions to their representatives in these cities, urging moderation on the part of Bulgaria and Turkey. The fear among diplomats, how ever, is that intervention may come too late and that the Bulgarians, in their present state of excitement, may accept Turkey's act as one of provo cation and advance across the fron tier, when a collision between the armies would be inevitable and irreparable. REVIVE SCHOOL QUESTION. Chinese Demand Native Girts Be Ad mitted to White School. San Francisco. Oct. 19. An order by the board of education for the re moval of ten Chinese school girts from one of the public schools of the city to an annex of the oriental school threatens to renew the Asi atic school complication of a year Soo Hoo rong, a local Chinese merchant, through his attorneys has threatened to sue the members- of the board of education if they remove his children from a school attended by white children, and others plan sim ilar action. Fongs attorneys c.aim their client and his wife were born in the United States and that the children were born here. They have a right to claim American citizenship with all privileges, they assert. Ihe secretary ot the board has an nounced that the order directing the transfer would not be changed. Kings Wins Over Welchers. Kingston, Jamaica, Oct. 19. The insurance companies are preparing to pay the thousands of dollars due on policies held by residents of this city whose homes and places of business were destroyed in the fire that pre ceded the earthquake of last January. The English court of appeals has de cided that the fire which swept Kingston January 14 was not caused by the earthquake, but preceded it. The decision practically overrules the earthquake clause. JLhe action of the court means that millions will become available to policy-holders Caught Carrying Arms. Buda 'Pest, Oct. 19. Six hundred machine guns and 50,000 rifles which Servia had purchased from Germany and France, respectively, were seized here when Austrian monitors in the Danube captured a German vessel conveying munitions of war to Bel grade. Regard'ng the goods as con traband of war, Austria is likely to present energetic remonstrances to both the marketing powers. Advices from Belgrade declare that the war fever there is again running high. Famous Soldier Dead, Tokio, Oct. 10. Field Marshal the Marquis Nodzu, the famous Japanese commander, who forced the passage of the Yalu river at the outbreak of the Japanese-Russian war and fought the fierce battle of Nanshan, in which he lost 3,500 men in order to beat the Russians back, is dead. DEATH LIST GROWS 41 Known Fatalities in Michigan Forest Fires, AT LEAST 1,700ARE HOMELESS Fats of 60 Families Camped on Lake Shore Remains in Doubt Worst is Over. Aloena. Mich.. Oct. 20. The cer tified known death list resulting from" the forest fires in Presque Isle and Alpena counties stands at 41, with sev eral persons still reported missing and a -probability of severe loss of life in northern Pulaski and Krakow townshins in Prcsoue Isle county. At least CO families were living near the shore of Lake Huron in the north ern half of Pulaski and Krakow town ships and nothing has been heard of them since the fire. At Grand Lake a farmer and wife and four children are known to have taken refuge in a boat and nothing; has since been heard from them. A dozen school children sent home by the teachers have not been heard from. While big fires are still burning throughout the northern tier of, coun ties, not a single village or town is now known to be in danger, and only the Hurst branch of the Detroit & Mackinac railroad is out of commission. Some apprehension is felt for Grace Harbor, which is located on the shore of Lake Huron, northeast of here. No word has been received from there since the fire. At the lowest estimate there are 1700 people homeless, and there is not even an adequate supply of water. The Detroit & Mackinac Railroad company ordered 150 pumps sent into the fire district. Ihe relief fund at Al pena has reached $3000, and is growing rapidly. MYSTERY ABOUT MAINE. Warship Arrives Unannounced and Authorities Keep Quiet. Portsmouth. N. H.. Oct. 20. The bat tleship Maine, one of the special service squadron that has preceded the Atlantic battleship fleet on its voyage around the world, arrived in the lower bay yesterday. The Maine has been in wireless com munication with the commandant of the yard here since Monday morning. The messages have caused considerable stir among the officials of the yard, who refuse to reveal their significance. For the first time this year, wireless oper ators have -been forbidden to disclose the contents of the messages. It is understood that the Maine will stay in port here for three weeks, and after a cruise will later return for a general refitting. During the present stay fhe vessel will go to the Kittery drydock to have her hull scraped. The Maine and the Alabama sailed from Hampton Roads as units of the battleship fleet. They were detached from the fleet at ban Francisco and. sent ahead to prepare the way. 1 he Maine s last port was the Azores. The Alabama is expected to reach New York tomorrow. She left the Maine last Wednesday. THOUSANDS AREJSTARVING. Floods Devastate Vast Area in China at Harvest Time. Victoria. B. C, Oct. 20. Local Chi nese have received cablegrams telling of heavy loss of life and great desola tion of Yannan and Helping, China, as a result of the breaking of the dykes and overflow of the West river, inun dating the district for a hundred miles. The number of killed is not given, but the message states that the loss has been immense and starvation is feared, and it appeals to the Chinese abroad to send aid. Subscriptions from local Chinese were made within a short time after the re ceipt of the cablegrams, which totaled $7000, this amount being cabled to Chi nese officials at Canton for distribution among the sufferers. Starvation is ex pected to follow, as the disaster comes at the time of harvest, when the crops are ready to be taken from the fields. Half the district is stated to be flooded. Guilty of Disrespect. Yokohama, Oct. 20. The court- martial that tried Lieutenant Frank T. Evans, of the battleship Louisiana, son of Rear-Admiral Evans, found he was not guilty of intoxication, but was guilty of disrespect to his superior of ficers and of leaving deck while he was on duty. The court's sentence was that he shall lose , 150 numbers -and receive a public reprimand. Rear Admiral Sperry criticises the sentence as inadequate and too lenient and says he approves it only in order that Lieutenant livans snail not entirety escape punishment. Tolerance Must Be Advocated. Seattle. Wash.. Oct. 20. In his ser mon Sunday, on "The Sacred Use of. Sunday. Rev. Joseph L. uarvm, at the First Christian church, declared for the opening of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific ex position on Sunday. In explaining his position he said that since the expo sition is elevating and instructive and the majority of men and women do not go to church on Sunday, the spirit of tolerance should impel helpfulness from church people in the selection of other places. Three Shocks In Manila. Manila. Oct. 20. Two sharp earth quake shocks were felt here today, fol lowed by a third, which was less severe. no damage was done tn or about Ma nila, and as yet no report has been re ceived from other points on the island. Ihe first shock came at 10:50 A. M., the second at 1:40, and the third at 3:10 P. M.