SSSSW&tr&. j ConsoliiatedFeb. 1899. CORVALLIS, BENTON COtfNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1899. VOL. XXXVI. KO. 40. 1 NEWS OF MK From All Parts of the New World and the Old. OF INTEREST TO OUR READERS Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Happening! of the Tut Weak Goliad From the Telegraph Columns. Emperor William is on a visit .to Sweden. ' .. A big strike for an eight-hour day is anticipated in Cuba. A regiment of Canadians desire to be sent to South Africa in the event of war with the Boers. . . Checks for $5,000,000 have been is sued by the government for the antici pated October interest. '. The permanent organization of the American Hide & Leather Company was effected in New York. ' The Crown cotton mills, of Dalton, Ga., has established a world's record by paying a dividend of 03 per cent. - The state grain commission of Wash ington has reaffirmed the grades adopt ed last year, and made them permanent.. The navy department has directed that the Eagle and Yankee be accepted at the Portsmouth navy yard by Octo ber 17. . - : The navy department has awarded the contract for building the Ports mouth dock to John Pierce, of ,,Nev York, at? 1,890, 000. " ' Italira nf ftnaiiikh, mlo. in flnha; oa-a tn be disposed of. The property of Cu bans that was confiscated by the Span iards will be returned." . " The . insurgent 'leader, General de Castro, is making much progress' in Venezuela. He'is following the course pursued by the revolutionists in 1892. A passenger train collided with a freight train 18 miles southeast of Kan sas City. Four people were killed and four others more or less seriously in jured. News has been received from Alaska to the effect that the front of the Taku glacier was shattered by a recent earth auake. Thousands of tons of ice were precipitated into the sea. The master of the Norwegian cutter Martha, reports that on September 9, on the north coast of King Chalres is land, he picked up an anchor, and Jtmoy marked "Andree Polar Expedition." It is probable that after the first of the coming year railroad employes will Imlva to tav fjlrft whan travel in or nvctr any but their own lines. Influential shippers will also be obliged to pur- liasA f.liair inVa.a rr tr l r t 3 - I j in a typhoon off the Japanese coast, going to the bottom like a stone. . She bad 60 passengers on board, the major ity being women and' children. "Twelve of these were drowned and two fatally injured. - - , Captain Dreyfus has been pardoned by the council of ministers. . Colonel John Miley, inspector-general of volunteers, is dead at Manila. Hawaii will endeavor to secure set tlers from northern Italy and Sweden. Mark Hanna says it would be more than disgrace for us to sell the Phillip? 'pines. ; . At a lumber yard fire, in Los Angeles three men were injured, two of them fatally. ; One battalion of the Thirty-fifth will sail from Portland on the Elder withir 10 days. , ; Scheurer Kestner, chief exponent of the cause of Dreyfus, died on the day the captain was pardoned. : A prominent Filipino has approached General McArthur in the matter of releasing the American prisoners. The empress dowager of China - is Bald to be seriously ill and' Earl Lf Hung Chang - has been recalled to power. - v President Kruger has been informed that the will receive no help from Ger many in the event of war with Great Britain. Labor unions have ordered all work In connection with the Chicago fall fes tival stopped until an agreement is reached. After a six weeks' siege Jules Guer in, the French anti-Semitic agitator, surrendered when the army was aboi to attack his fort. " Mrs. Mary Brooks, who has been is Michigan prison for 23 years has been pardoned. She immediately married the man who had her convicted. Representative Dalzell, of Pennsyl vania, says that both the senate and house will present bills in regard to currency legislation' at the next session of congress. . ' C. N. Peck, a prominent farmer liv ing near Lexington, Morrow county, Oregon, died front hemorrhage of the lungs. The neighbors thought he had' smallpox, became frightened and re fused to bury him, 'and two physiciant performed the task unaided. Frank H Burford, a 15-year-old boy, has been admitted to the bar in Guth rie, O T. i . Two divinity students are working their way through Yale by -doing job printing. The narie of the firm is Clark & Watkins. At the coming session of congress Hawaii will be represented by William O. Smith, for met It attorney general of that conntiT. He will be appointed by President Dole. Caps are now being made with small thermometers which tell the degree of temperature of the cocoa or coffee they bold. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson ia arranging for an exhaustive scientific investigation of the abandoned farnia of New England, with a view to their reclamation. , David Rankin, of Talkio, Mo., who is said to be the richest farmer in the world, made his beginning with no oth er capital than a horse. He now owns, at the age of 47, 23,000 aorea of land, worth from $60 to $100 an acre. LATER NEWS. The United States cruiser Olympia, with Admiral Dewey on board, has ar rived at New York. ' - The Kearsarge made 17 knots in her trial run. . - "- Otis wil hold Snbig as a base of op erations. The local; revolution in Argentina has been quelled. The Dakota boys will be entertained by the people of Portland. Lopez and 64 followers surrendered to Byrnes at Negros island. Vice-President Hobart is ill, and may not again preside in the senate. The remaining six companies of Mon tana volunteers have arrived in San Francisco. Otis' Chinese exclusion act is caus ing considerable uneasiness in diplo matic cicrles. - . ;.'.. Three new ' cases, making 21 so far and 6 deaths is the yellow fever report from New Orleans. , More bubonic plague is reported at Alexandria. : There are four new cases at Sparta, Portugal.: . ' The large t Dungeness coal mine in West Virginia, which has been lying idle for two years, has resumed. - A relief expedition has been sent by the mounted police to Mackenzie trail, where great 'suffering is said to pre vial. . . ' . Dewey '8 ships are in need of repairs, and several million dollars will be spent in overhauling and remodeling them. Mrs. : Steinheider, of Dorchester, Neb., ended her life by winding wil low withes around her throat until she succeeded in strangling herself. The insurgents have captured ' the United States gunboat Uradenta, , in the Oram river, where she was patrol ing. One officer, an Oregon boy, and nine Of her crew are missing. The Pe trel reports that the Urdaneta .was burned by the Fhliipinos and her guns and ammunition taken. William Bonney, a noted explorer, is dead at London. ' At Key West Sunday 80 new cases of yellow fever and two deaths were re ported. - As a result of religious riots, Ferroll, Spain, has been proclaimed under mar tial law. v The plant of the American Tin-Plate company, at Atlanta, Ind., was de stroyed by fire; loss, $150,000. Friends of General Maximo Gomez say they will : push the old patriot for ward in the coming Cuban elections. The steamers City of Seattle and Cot tage City, which have arrived from Alaska, had a combined cargo of $500, 000. . A French paper says that Colonel Jouanste, president of the Rennes court martial, voted for the acquittal of Dreyfus. The district of Adien, in Asia Minor, was visited by an earthquake, and ac cording to the latest advices over 200 persons perished. . Between 3,000 and 4,000 marine en gineers on the Great Lakes threaten a strike unless their demand for a 12 H per cent advance is met. The Colombian government has'is sued a decree closing her ports to ships having the bubonic plague on board, arriving from infected ports. . Dispatches from Johannesburg re port a complete dislocation of the Rand mining industry. The exodus con tinues and all the mines are closing. The excitement of meeting his chil dren has produced a serious , reaction in the condition of Dreyfus, and it is feared that it may be necessary to send him to Malta or Madeira. Congressman Hawley, representing American capitalists, has purchased a large sugar estate in Cuba, in the prov ince of Matanzas. A million and a half will be expended in improving it. "Big -Dan"" Dougherty, a notorious bankrobber and murderer, who has been serving a sentence in Manchester, England, has' been pardoned and is thought to have started for this country. Official reports of two battles be tween the Mexicans and Yaquis have reached Los Angeles. The Mexicans were victorious in both engagements, but suffered considerable loss. War is proceeding, despite the official an noucement of suspension of hostilities. Daniel Lamont'a private fortune is now said to reach 15,000,000. The navy department has taken steps for the opening of a naval recruiting Elation at Buffalo, N. Y. The queen regent of Spain has signed a decree calling out 60.000 men of the 1899 class for militaiy service. Alexander Henderson, of Syracuse, has acted as pall bearer at the funeral of 173 of his friends during the last 50 Tears. It ia estimated that about 400,000 acres of land in the United States are planted with vines.. At the convention in Marquette, Mich., of the Western Hay Fever As sociation. W. A. Rowe, of Des Moines, was elected president. The foimer Spanish cruiser Reina Mercedes may be in the big water pa rade at New York this month in honor of Admiral Dewey's return. . William Henry I jam a, who has re resigned aa treasurer of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, waa in the service of that corporation for 46 years. Works on the Bay of Subig Destroyed. 5 TOWN OF OLANGAPO RIDDLEC Krapp Cannon Which the Iniurse." , Wero Working Was JUomn tip by Landing Party Town Took Fire. Manila, Sept. 26. The crsiser, Charleston, the monitor Monterey and the gunboats Concord and Zafiro, with the marines and bluejackets from the cruiser Baltimore, left Cavite Septem ber 19, and, as already . cabled," pro ceeded to Subig bay to destroy an in lurgent cannon there. Owing to the bad weather, the .opera tion was postponed until yesterday, when the warships for three hours bom barded the town of Olangapo and the entrenchments where the gun was situ ated. Men from the Charleston, Con cord and Zafiro were then landed un der a heavy , insurgent fire, proceeding to the' cannon, which .was utterly de stroyed by guncotton, and then re turned to the warships. The Ameri cans had one man wounded during the engagement. ... '" While waiting in Subig bay for bet ter weather, the Americans descried Filipino reinforcements moving toward Olangapo. At 6:40 A. M. yesterday the Monterey began to advance upon the town, which was about three miles east of the monitor's anchorage. The Chalreston, - Concord and Zafiro fol lowed. At 7:20 the Monterey opened fire with her secondary and main bat teries; the Charleston and Concord join ing immediately. At 7:30 the insur gent cannon answered the first shot passing close to the Monterey's smoke stack. The gun was fired twice only. , The American bombarding then be came general. . At 9:30 the Monterey advanced to a range of 600 yards, using her main battery. Two hundred, and fifty men were landed about 800 yards east of the cannon at 11 o'clock, under a severe Mauser fire. , ,. The men from the Charleston were the first to reach the beach, but the Concord's men were the first at the gun, which they reached at -11:10. The cannon was found to be a 16-centimeter Krupp. gun, presumably ob tained from the Spaniards. Meanwhile the warships continued to shell the shelving beach on the east and west side to silence the insurgent fire upon the sailors from the trenches skirting the beach. ' - Gunner Olsen exploded 60 pounds of guncotton in three discharges, in the cannon, which had suffered from the fire of the warships. .. The Americans then returned to the boats, the firing inland being kept np to protect the embarkation. The Con cord's men were the last to leave the shore and the warships . were reached at 11:50. Cadet Brinzer, with the , Concord's launch, armed with a gatling, did ex cellent work on the left of the landing party. Captain Meyers, of the ma rines, captured a muzzle-loading field piece. Lieutenant McDonald was in command of the landing party, and the. movement was splendidly executed and controlled The numbers of the Filipinos there could not be ascertained, and no dead were seen. ; : The Monterey fired for four hours 21 shots from her 10-inch guns, and 17 from her 12-inch guns. The town, which was riddled with shells, took fire at several points. ' ; STRUCK A REEF. Transport leelenaw" Kept Afloat : by Working Her Film p. Steadily. San Francisco, Sept. 26. The United States transport Leelenaw came into port today with the pumps steadily at work to overcome the effect of a hole in the ship's bottom. The Leelenaw sailed for Manila September 2, with a cargo of 'commissary stores and 200 horses for army use. After leaving this port distemper was developed among the horses, and so many of the animals died that the Leelenaw put into Hono lulu and landed there the commissary etorse and ' the surviving horses. The transport then started on the return trip to this city. . . . . . During the three days prior to reach ing this port, so thick and constant was the fog that no observations could be taken, and, having lost her bearings, the Leelenaw struck a reef near Mon tara, 20 miles south of this port, last evening. She was for five hours stuck fast on the rocks, and when she finally floated off at high tide it was found that the jagged rock had torn a hole in her bottom. It will be necessary for the Leelenaw to go in drydock for a considerable overhauling. In addition to the leak, the vessel was badly strained by her experience on the reef. Lninbn Barge Sank. Chicago, Sept. 26. During a severe wind and rain storm this evening the steam barge Cleveland, laden with 100, 000 feet of lumber, sank in the harbor near the mutho of the Chicago river. Captain Hemy Davis5 and a crew of 11 men were rescued by tugs with consid erable difficulty. - Tragedy In a Theater. Chattanooga, Tenn., Sept. 25. Julia Morrison, the leading lady of the "Mr. Plaster of Paris" farce-comedy com pany, shot and killed Frank Leiden, stage manager and leading man of the company, at 8 o'clock tonight, at the City opera house, on the stage just be fore the curtain . rose for the perform ance to begin. Three shots were fired -at clsoe range by the woman, all tak ing effect in Leiden's head. - He sank to the floor and was dead in a few min utes. The woman was arrested and taken to the city jail. - A coroner's inquest was held, at which it was developed that trouble had existed between Leiden and Miss Morrison, and today she slapped him. The woman claims that Leiden fre quently insulted her, and in self de fense she shot him. , ; Major Ray has sent ' a dispatch to General Shatter, .who in turn has for warded it to the department. It says 2,500 people are anxious to leave Cape Nome, but there is transportation for .but few. Only three steamers will leave before the season closes. SALEM v MILL BURNED. Loss on Buildings and -Orain About .- siao.ooo. ; - Salem, Or., Sept. 25. The mill and elevator warehouse of the Salem Flour ing Mills. .Company, located - at the corner of Commercial and Trade streets, were destroyed by fire at 4 o'clock this morning. The total loss is about $150,000, a large part of which will fall on farmers who had grain stored at the mills. There was over 125,000 bushels of wheat stored in the build ings, only about 25,000 - bushels of which belonged to the mill company. The fire was caused by adust explo sion near the cleaners on the third floor of the mill, and - it spread rapidly. The insurance on" the mill company's buildings and machinery, which are almost a total loss, is about $60,000, while their value is placed at : about $75,000. Only about 80,000 bushels of the stored grain was insured,, so the loss to the owners is great. ', Consider able of the grain not damaged by water, it is thought, can be cleaned and sold for about half price, and the mill com pany will take immediate steps to save all that possibly can be saved. : The mill, which was run , as an in dependent - concern by men interested in the Portland . flouring mills, may never be rebuilt, as the Portland Flour ing Mills Company owns another mill in Salem. The fire was ono of the largest ever seen in Salem. OUR HEAD IS TURNED. So. Says Ooldwln Smith, Who Thinks Dewey Is Overestimated. ' Toronto, Ont., Sept. 25. Goldwin Smith, writing in. a local paper, says: "Nothing could ; show- the extent to which the head of Columbia has been turned by the war more than her ador ation of the hero Dewey. What did the hero Dewey and his comrades dp? They sat in almost perfect safety and destroyed at long range a line of help less tubs, with some hundreds' of the poor Spaniards who manned them, and who alone had any opportunity of showing heroism on the occasion. So perfectly secure did the Americans feel that they adjourned to breakfast in the middle of their sport. There wat among them a single casualty, and hac. they all gone tiger hunting one casual ty at least probably- would have oc curred." 'w " "For this, however, Dewey, is de clared to be the equal of the great 'sea men who conquered in the terrible days of Aboukir, Copenhagen, Trafalgar. If he were so inclined he might probably be elected president of the United States. . ' "Canada , cannot possibly take part in the celebration of Dewey's triumphs without evidence of discourtesy toward Spain, a- friendly nation, which has done Canada no wrong. Spain, let it be remembered, though deprived of her possessions in this hemisphere, is still a Mediterranean power, decayed ; at present, but capable of restoration. The British government will hardly thank the Canadian government ' for making her an implacable enemy." HOOTED OFF- THE PLATFORM. Terry Simpson's Pralso of Agalnaldo Was Too Much for His Hearers. Kansas City," Sept. 25. A dispatch to the Journal from Wichita, Kan., says: ... . ' Ex-Congressman Jerry Simpson was hooted off the platform here this even ing while addressing a local G. A. R. reunion. Mr. Simpson said: - "I glory in the spunk of Aguinaldo's men. They are simply fighting to re gain the land the Catholics took from them. A local paper has asked: 'Who is John Brown's soul marching with Otis or Aguinaldo?' I believe John Brown's soul is marching with Agui naldo." . Mr. Sipmson said in substance that he would rather be with Aguinaldo than with General Otis. An old sol-, dier in the audience rose and said that the speech was drifting too much into politics.1 This was applauded and greeted with cries of "Throw him out!" and "Kick Simpson off the platform 1" Men and women arose and hissed, and the men kept crying, "Put him out!" - Simpson appealed to the crowd to sit down. "Iam coming to my perora tion," he said, although he had been speaking only 15 minutes. Cries came, "Take your peroration to Aguinaldo." Simpson attempted to go on, but no one could hear him 10 feet away. The band struck up "The Star Spangled Banner," and Mr. Simpson left the platform. His retirement was greeted with prolonged cheers. dmonton Relief Expedition. Seattle, Sept. 25. Moved at last by the appeals of the relatives and friends of the misguided men, so many of whom met death or encountered hard ships and sufferings almost beyond hu man endurance, Canadian officials have dispatched a. relief expedition over the Edmonton trail route. The rescuers left Dawson early in September. It is a splendidly equipped body, led by Corporal Kerving and Constable Boke. The voyage will probably require seven months. The expedition . left Dawson, going down the Yukon to the mouth of Porcupine river. Thence the voyagers go np the Porcupine to the portage of Bell and West Rat rivers, where tney cross the mountains to the Felly river, thence portage to the Mackenzie and down that stream to Fort McPherson. Uncle Coll Is Got It. San Francisco, Sept. 25. The Chron icle says: Definite and "reliable infor mation sent to the Chronicle from the East Bets at rest the rumors about the sale of the Crocker holdings of South ern Pacific stock, and ends speculation as to the purchaser. The Crocker shares, numbering 840,000, and valued approximately at $10,000,000, nave been bought by a syndicate of which C. P. Huntington was the promoter and is the head, and of which the Speyers, of New York, are the bankers. It is also certain that the recent visit of James Speyer to this coast had much to do with the Crocker deal. C. P. Huntington is now virtually in control of the Southern Pacific. Other outside holdings are also said to have been purchased by the same syn dicate in sufficient amounts ' to secure to Huntington the absolute control of the road. . - Ordered a Dewey Salute. Sacramento. Sent. 95. Governor Gage today issued orders to the ad-iutant-eeneral to fire a salute of 17 guns upon the arrival of Admiral w7 ia new Xorit, UlIlilHlNSll England Serves Notice on . the Boers. FORMER NEGOTIATIONS OFF Proposals for a Final Settlement of the Issues Will Ke Communicated In a ; Later Dispatch Troops In Natal. London, Sept. 27. The officials of the foreign office this evening gave out the text of the letter of the secretary of state for the colonies, Joseph Chamber lain, to the British high commissioner in : South Africa, Sir Alfred Milner, dated September 24. The British re ply expresses regret that her majesty's offer No. 5, of September 8j hasjtjeen retused, ana says: . . " "The object - her majesty's govern ment had in view in the recent nego tiations has been stated in a manner which cannot admit of misapprehen sion, viz: - To obtain such ' immediate representation for Uitlanders - as will enable them to secure for themselves that fair and just treatment which was formally promised them in 1881, and which her majesty- intended to secure for them when she granted privileges of self-government . to the Transvaal. No conditions less comprehensive than those contained in the telegram of September 8, can be relied on to effect that object.- ' . - "The refusal of the South African government to entertain the offer thus made, coming, as it does,-, after four months of protracted, negotiations, closes five years of extended agitation, and makes it useless further to pursue discussion on the lines hitherto fol lowed, and the imperial government is now compelled to consider the situa tion afresh and to formulate its own proposals for a final settlement of the issues which - have been created in South Africa by the policy constantly followed for many years by the govern ment of the republic of SouthjAfrica. It will communicate the reBult of it; deliberations in a later dispatch." A telegram received from Calcutta announces the departure of the trans port Chidhana for South Africa, and the last transport " for the Cape will leave India tomorrow. A special dispacth from Pretoria says that the members of the volksraad, be lieving that the British notes are in tended to gain time for the concentra tion of. troops, urge the government to adjourn the raad immediately and to send Great Britain a note declaring that further mobilization will be re garded as an unfriendly act. Trenches, earthworks and sandbag defenses are being erected in all the available ap proaches to the capital. .. 4 . Read In the Volksraad. Pretoria, Sept.. 27. The , imperial dispatch was read today in the volks raad. President Kruger announced that the reply of the government of the South Afrcan republic would be pre' sented to the volksraad tomorrow. Troops In the Natal. Durban, Natal, Sept. 27. Seven hundred and fifty men of the Leicester shire regiment, 750 of the Royal Dub lin fusilleers, 200 mounted infantry and the Eighteenth hussars have arrived at Dundee from Ladysmith. : Pietermaritzburg, Natal, Sept. 27. The troops that have been moved from Ladysmith to Dundee will form a new company at Glencoe, their places being filled by others from India. The move ment was executed so smartly and un expectedly that the Boer spies were un aware of it until it was actually ac complished. DISASTERS IN INDIA. Earthquakes. Floods and Landslides in Lower Himalayas. . Calcutta, Sept. 27. Eartquakes, floods and terrible landslides occurred at and near Darjeeling, in the lower Himalayas, last night. Great damage was done, and no fewer than 60 natives perished. There was a rainfall of 28 inches in 88 hours. Three bad land slides took place between Darjeeling and Sonada, involving the trans-shipment of a railway train of passengers. According to the latest reports, nine European children and 20 natives were lost between those two points. The whole Calcutta road is Mocked, and the Paglajohre line has been seriously damaged. About 100 acres of tea have been destroyed from Jalapahai to Burchill. At the latter place some 3,000 feet of water supply pipe has been ruined. The electric light plant has suffered seriously, and the town is in darkness. There is great fear of further rain. A dispatch from Jalpaiguri, on the river Teesta, 40 miles southeast of Dar jeeling, says that a boat crossing the Teesta with three Europeans and six natives was swamped by the high waves. The body of one of its occu pants has been found 14 miles down the river. It is. reported that the Euorpeans, Anderson, Kuster and Whitman, jumped overboard. Their fate is unknown. - Search parties have been sent to look for them. ..More Than They Asked For. Cleveland, Sept. 27. As a result of a meeting of the executive - committee of the Lake Carriers' Association, held this afternoon, the wages of nearly 16, 000 men employed on the vessels of the Great Lakes will be raised from 10 to 20 per cent, beginning -October 1. This includes 2,000 engineers, who de manded an advance of 12 per cent, and threatened to strike should it not be conceded. Instead of the 12 per cent asked for by the , engineers, they will receive an advance of 20 per cent. - Transport Strike. v San Francisco, Sept. 27. The boil ermakers in the Fulton and Risdon iorn works struck today out of sym pathy for the boilermakers employed on the United States transports, who have demanded $3.25 for an eight-hour day, and double pay for overtime. It is possible the strike will extend to the Union iron works, unless the strike is settled very soon. : The contractors said that the trans ports now under repairs will sail with out delay, but that no new contracts will be taken until the matter is set tled. LOPEZ HAS SURRENDERED. Laid Down His Anns With Sixty-Four Followers. Washington, Sept. 27. Two impor tant dispatches from Otis at Manila were made public today by the war department. They are as follows: "Manila, Sept., 27. Adjutant-General, Washington: General Hughes, at Ho Ho, reports that Lopez and 64 armed men surrendered to Byrnes, at Castellano, . Negros. An election was held in that island October 2. Fili pinos sought a conference. The chief insurgents of Panay wished to know what promise could be given them in case of formal submission. They were told that no answer was possible until they surrendered, and the force dis banded. OTIS." "Manila, Sept. 27. Adjutant-Gen eral, Washington: Bates returned from Jolo on the 21st of September, having placed garrisons at Siassi and Bungham, in the Tawaii group, one company at each place. ' . "Affairs in the archipelago are satis factory. Bates saw chief of insurgents. Zamboanga, who is still anxious to re ceive United States garrison on condi tion of withdrawal should Aguinaldo succeed in Luzon. ' The proposition was not entertained. Zamboanga is having trouble with more Datos in the vicinity, who have raised the United States flag. Dato Cagayan, of Sulu islands, visited Jolo and gave adhesion, and desired to raise the American flag instead of the Spanish flag on the is land. The Ameircan flag will be raised there for the purpose of . giving six months' notice in order to establish in the archipelago customs regulations under the . protocol of 1885 between Spain, Germany and Great Britain. Bates' report will be sent by mail. ' "OTIS." CAPTURED BY REBELS. American Gunboat and Crew in Fili pino Hands. - Manlia, Sept. : 27. It is reported that the insurgents have captured the United States gunboat Urdaneta, in the Orani river, on the northwest side of Manila bay, where she was patrol ling. One officer and nine of crew are missing. The gunboat Petrel, sent to investi gate, returned and reported that the Urdaneta wait beached opposite the town of - Orani, on the Orani river. She was burned and the following gun with their ammunition were captured One one-pounder, one Colt automatic gun and one Nordenfeldt, 25 milimeter gun. The crew of the Urdaneta are prisoners, or have been killed. Further details are lacking. - Woman's Work In England. New York, Sept. 27. James O'Con- nell, president of the International Machinists, who had been a delegate to the British- trades congress meeting held in Plymouth, England, spoke to the Central Federated Union of , his experiences and observations at the congress and among the working classes in England. He did not have a high opinion of them. The condi tion of the English working men, wo men and children, he said, was deplor able. . The difference of sex seemed to be entirely lost sighaxfif. He saw the women going about in clogs, dressed in men's clothes, in blacksmith and other shops, wielding the sledge hammers with the men. - Belief Expedition. Victoria, B. C, Sept. 27. News reached here by the Cottage City that a relief expedition has been sent by the mounted police to the Mackenzie trail where great suffering is said to prevail. The last arrival from the Mackenzie was an Australian named Ed ward son, who, after losing his supplies, was a week without food. A prospecting ex pedition which returned to Dawson after 10 weeks on the upper Klondike, Porcupine and Stewart rivers, reports that although colors are found there is no gold on any of the creeks of these departments. American Prisoners. Manila, Sept. 27. Two Englishmen who had been held by the insurgents since June, have arrived at Angeles. They have reported that the Filipino congress has resolved that 14 American prisoners shall be surrendered Wednes day or Thursday. They have, how ever, no information as to the where abouts of Captain Charles M. Rocke feller, of the Nineteenth infantry, who disappeared in April last, and from Whom nothing has been heard. They assert that three Americans who were captured by the rebels are ' acting ar officers in the insurgent army.., Americans InTade Germany. London, Sept 27 The Berlin corre spondent of the Daily Mail, in a dis patch dealing with the great increase of American iron and steel imports into Germany, says: . "I learn that the Garvin Machine Company and the Nile tool works are going to erect ' large plants in Berlin. Other important American concerns, including the Buffalo Forge -Company, are expected to follow , suit. There is an average of 2,400 value of iron tools alone imported weekly from New York." -- - - Killed by Soda Fountain Explosion. Vacaville, Cal., Sept. 23. By the explosion of a soda fountain in a bakery today, Karl Andler, an employe, was killed. The "proprietor, ' who was fill ing the fountain, was' uninjured. JJn,tore OUt. San Francisco, Sept. 27.-r-The Idaho and North Dakota volunteers were mustered out of service of. their coun try at the Presidio today. : Explosion Killed Three Brothers. ' Palmetto, Ga., Sept. 27. E. P. Hearn, J. P. Hearn and Henry Hearn, brothers, were killed today by the ex plosion of a stationary engine boiler in a building owned by them. The ex plosion was caused by letting cold water into the boiler.' One Death at Swinburne Island. New York, Sept. 25. Private C. Oswald, of the First infantry, who was transferred to Swinburne island last Tuesday from the transport Buford, died tonight from yellow fever. Four Tachts Capsized. Toledo, O., Sept. 26. Lake Erie witnessed the worst storm of the sea son, the wind blowing at the rate of 70 miles an hour. ; Four yachts were cap sized near Maumee bay, and the crews were rescued with difficulty. Consid erable damage to houses is reported in Northwestern Ohio, , ' . Ill A Mammoth Exhibit of the Products of the Northwest. INFORMATION AND RECREATION The Pair. Opening September 8. Will Run Day and Evening Until October 88 Attractions Numerous. - The Oregon Industrial Exposition at Portland this year is going to be a grand combination of fair, band con certs and thrilling performances by world-renowned performers.'- -r" ' All the products of the. entire North west will be attractively - exhibited. Grains, grasses, fruits, flowers,, vegeta bles, etc., will all be shown, and man ufactured articles will be . attractively arranged. The amateur photographers - of the world will make a display of their work, and cash jrizes ranging from $5 to $25 will be awarded. This art exhibit is going to be a great feature, and amateurs everywhere are invited to contribute to it. -" . The music at the exposition at Port land this year is going to be .of . the very best. Bennett's full military "band will give both classical and popu lar concerts every afternoon and even ing, and its musio is really grand.' While the exposition at Portland has all the best features of a fair, .the dull and uninteresting features are carefully cut out, and everything is made bright and interesting. The amusement fea ture comprises performances by the great Florenz troupe, this being their first appearance in America: .The wonderful sisters Macarte . will - give thrilling performances every evening, and Major Ganz, the smallest man ia the world, will be on exhibition, and there will be an immense merry-go-round for the children. There will be no lack of healthful amusements. The' immense exposition building has been made as pretty as a picture, and you can imagine what a scene of splen dor it will present when illuminated by its 3,500 electric lights. A new feature this year is a repro duction of Multnomah falls, the - pride Df all Oregon. It is 80 feet high, has the same rustic bridge as the original, ind is worth coming miles to see. . ' Portland is a fine city to visit, and there are thousands of sights to see, and you can see many of them for 5 cents by riding all over town on the electric cars,' which run everywhere. The price of admission to the exposi tion is kept down to 25 cents, and all the railroads and steamboats will carry people during the fair at specially low; rates. , ' . t - i The Oregon Industrial Exposition at Portland is going to be one of the events of the year, and it is first-olass in every respect. . It spares no expense in being interesting and attractive, and has solid business men behind it. . Its general . committee of management comprises the following well-known gentlemen: . H. C. Breeden, president; I. N. Fleischner, vice-president; R. J. Holmes, treasurer; W. S. Struble, sec retary; E. C. Mas ten, assistant secre tary; H. E. Dosche, auditor; George L. Baker, superintendent; J. P. Mar shall, Ben Selling, H. L. Pittook, D. Solis Cohen, C. B. Willams, Dan Mo Allen, A. B. Steinbach, J. E. Tbielsen, D. M. Dunne, R. C. Judson, L. M. Spiegl, Sig. Sichel, H. D. Ramsdell, B. S. Pague, General O. Summers, Col onel I. N. Day, George Fuller, E. 8. Edwards. , . THE FIRST MONTANA. Sis Companies Return on the Transport Zealand ia. , San Francisco, Sept. 25. The Uni ted States transport Zealandia arrived from Manila via Yokohama today, hav ing on board six companies of the First Montana volunteers. A noisy greeting was extended to the returning soldiers, whose safe arrival was announced by the blowing of steam whistles and the discharge of cannon. , Notification of the Zelandia's . com ing was promptly given, and tugs went out to greet the transport. One tug had on board a number of officials of Cali fornia and of San Francisco, and mem bers of the local reception committee,' reinforced by a brass band. The othel carried Governor Smith, of Montana; United States Senator Carter and,: a party of Montanans, who were vocifer ous in their joy at beholding their sol dier kith and kin once more. ' The health of all on board is ' excel lent, and there was but one death on the voyage, that of James . Ashton, Fourth United States cavalry, who died September 19 of pneumonia, . Aside from this case there was no sickness on board the transport during the trip. Otis Becomes a Catholic New York, Sept. 23. Apropos of the charges ' of , vandalism in Catholic churches in the Philippines by Ameri can soldiers, a correspondent of the Times calls attention to the fact that in a. recently published book issued by a Paulist father a list is given of "American Converts from Pro teas tan t ism," in which appears the name of Colonel E. S. Otis, United States army. The Venezuelan Revolution. New York, Sept. 25. A dispatch to the Herald from Port Spain, Trinidad, says: The Venezuelan government is concentrating its eastern forces at Guy ara to meet he revolutionist troops un der General Mata. A decisive engage ment is expected to take place very soon. It is reported that . the reason President Andrade returned to Caracas was that he feared treachery on the part of two generals who are believed to be in sympathy with the revolution ists.,; ' '- v y Cleveland Street-Car Dynamited. Cleveland, O., Sept. 25. Another Big Consolidated street car was dyna-. mited tonight. The explosion occurred on the Wade Park line, in a lonesomt place near the city limits. The explo sion smashed the front wheels on each side. The car jumped the track, ran across the other track and stopped in the gutter of the street. There were only two passengers, and they both escaped injury. Nobody was seen about the place where the explosion occurred, and there is no olew to the perpetrav GENERAL TRADE IS GOOD. Reaction la the Stock Market Has But Little Effect. R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: -The reaction in the stock market is not a sign of anything outside that market, but has caused many to look for signs of a reaction elsewhere. Such signs have been hard to find. It has been for months a wonder that the demand for products was sustained at rates exceeding past consumption in any year, notwithstanding the general rises in prices. But the demand does not appear to abate, and the rise in prices continues. Wheat exports fall a little below last year's, but in three weeks, flour included, have been 8,865,877 bushels for Atlantic ports, against 9,293,831 bushels last year, and 1,021,998 bush els from Paciflo ports, against 907,961 bushels last year. But Western re ceipts have been 21,759,852 bushels, against 23,099,397 bushels last year, and even more impressive are the re ceipts of 18,515,933 bushels of corn, against 11,177,483 bushels last year, and the exports of 9,201,427 bushels, against 5,943,966 last year. ' Further government reports have been so credited abroad that cotton has risen to 6.62 cents, but it comes for ward more freely than in years of max imum crops. . - ., When men pay $3 to f 5 per ton more than the latest quoted price- for iron products in order to get early deliver ies, it is because delay is threatened on works or railroads or bridges, vessels or machinery, promising a profit many times the cost of a small fraction of the material. In such circumstances as in much of the reconstruction and ex pansion now going on, present cost counts for little compared with the earning power of the finished product in a time like this. PACIFIC COAST TRADE. Portland Market Wheat Walla-Walla, 58 (3 59c; Val ley, 60 (g 61c; Bluestem, 6061o per bushel. Flour Best grades, $3.25; graham, $2.65; superfine, $2.15 per barrel. Oats Choice white, 35 86c; choice gray, 83 84c per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $15 16; brew ing, $17.50 per ton. Mills tuffs Bran, $17 per ton; mid dlings, $22; shorts, $18; chop, $16 per ton. Hay Timothy, $89; clover, $6 8; Oregon wild hay, $6 per ton. Butter Fancy creamery, 4550o; seconds, 3540c; dairy, , 8035o; store, 22 21o. Eggs 20c per dozen. Cheese Oregon full cream, 12c; Young America, 13c; new cheese 100 per pound. ' ' Poultry Chickens, mixed, $4.00 5.00 per dozen; hens, $5.50; springs, $2.504.00; geese, $6.508 for old; $4.606.50 for young; ducks, $4.50 '6.50 per dozen; turkeys, live, 12 13o per pound. ' Potatoes 6575oper sack; sweets, 2 2Jio per pound. Vegetables Beets, $1; turnips, 90c; per sack; garlic, 7o per pound; cauli flower, 75o per dozen; parsnips, $1; beans, 56o per pound; celery, 70 75o per dozen; cucumbers, 50o per box; peas, 34o per pound; tomatoes, 2530oper box; green corn, 12)4 15o per dozen. Hops 11 13c; 1897 crop, 46o. Wool Valley, 12 18o per pound; Eastern Oregon, 818o; mohair, 27 80c per pound. Mutton Gross, best sheep, wethers and ewes, 8o; dressed mutton, 6 7c per pound; lambs, 7 Ko per pound. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $5.00; light and feeders, $4.50; dressed, $6.00 7.00 per 100 pounds. Beef Gross, top steers, $3.504.00; cows, $3.003.50; dressed beef, 67o per pound. ' Veal Large, 67o; small, 8 8 o per pound. . Seattle Markets. Onions, new, $1.25 1.60 per sack. Potatoes, new, 75c$l. . ' Beets, per sack, $1.10. Turnips, per sack, 60o. Carrots, per sack, 85 90c. Parsnips, per sack, $1 1.75. Cauliflower, 75o per dozen. Cabbage, native and California, $ 1.25 per 100 pounds. Peaches, 6580o. ' Apples, $1.251.50 per box. Pears, $1.00 1.25 per box. ; Prunes, 60o per box. . Watermelons, $1 1.75. Cantaloupes, 5075o. 'J . Butter Creamery, 27o per pound; dairy, 1722o; ranch, 12X17o per pound. . Eggs 27o. , Cheese Native, 18 14c. ; Poultry 14 16c; dressed, 16 o. ; Hay Puget Sound timothy, $7 9; choice Eastern Washington timothy, $14.00 Corn Whole, $23.60; cracked, $23; feed meal, $23. - Barley Rolled " or ground, per ton, $21; whole, $22. . , ' Flour Patent, per barrel, $3.50; blended straights, $3.25; California, $3.25; buckwheat flour, $3.50; gra ham, per barrel, $3.60; whole wheat flour, $3.00; rye flour, $3.75. I Millstuffs Bran, per ton, $15.00; shorts, per ton, $16.00. , Feed Chopped feed, $20.50 per ton; middlings, per ton, $22; oil cake meal, per ton, $35.00. aa Fraaclseo Market. Wool Spring Nevada, 1214oper pound; Eastern Oregon, 1014o; Val ley, 17 19c; Northern, 810or , Onions Yellow, 7585o per sack. Butter Fancy creamery 25 26c; do seconds, 23 24c; fancy dairy, 21 23o; do seconds, 18 20o per pound. Eggs Store, 20 23c; fancy ranch, 2528o. : Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valencia, $2.753.25;- Mexican limes, $4.00 5.00; California lemons 75c$1.50; uo cnoice 91.75 2.00 per box. Hay Wheat $69.50; wheat and oat $6.508.50; best barley $5.00 7.00; alfalfa, $5.00 7.00 per ton; straw, 80 35c per bale. Potatoes Early Rose, 40 55c; Ore gon Burbanks, $1.25 1.50; river Bur banks, 50 70c; Salinas Burbanks, 90c$1.16 per sack. Tropical Fruits Bananas, $1.60 2.60 per bunch; pineapples, $2.00' 4.00; Persian dates, 66)o per pound. : . -. There are in existence more than 700 biographies of Columbus, written in various languages.