GAZETTE. CORVALLIS WEEKLY. VOL. XXXVII. NO. 42. UNION Estab. July, 1897. GAZETTB Eatab. Dec, 1862. Consolidated Feb. 1899. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1300. EVENTS OF THE DAY Epitome of the Telegraphic News of thf. World. TERSE TICKS FRGJk .'HE WIRES An Interesting Collection of Items From '"lie Two Hemisphere Pre ' it i in a Cor-lensed Tcvav Fighting has broken out again in Ashantee. Shan Hai Kwan forts surrendered to the British. A plot to assassinate President lie Kinley has been discovered. In a train hold-up near Council Bluffs, one robber was killed. Passengers on Nome steamer were vacinated on account of new outbreak of samllpox in Alaska. Evidence claimed to have been found which proves that Mount Baker mines are not in American tetritory. In an explosion at the Corning Pow der Works at Santa Cruz, Cal., C. Merier. an employe, was killed, and J. Valencia was fatally injured. Portuguese officials at Lourenco Marques have warned President Kruger to make no more speeches and forbid his wearing insignia of office. The latest report of cotton damage to the state of Texas by the recent floods places the estimates at 400,000 bales. The value is estimated at not less than $20,000,000. Boers captured a British convoy and j wrecked a train. Of the convoy's escort of 60 men only 12 escaped and in the train wreck, live Britons were j killed and 19 injured. The population of Arkansas, as offi cially announced by the United States census bureau, is 1,811,564, an in crease over the population of 1890 of 183,385, or 16.25 per cent. General Wood, commanding the United States forces in Cubn, has made bis annnal report to the war depart- ! ment. It contains his recommendation j that all troops in Cuba be mounted, to- j gether with an account of the with- i drawal of the troops during the past year. The health of the tioops, he ; says, has been good, and their conduct j is commended. C. E. Gallaway, aged 89, died at Denver, Colo., from injuries received j by being struck by a tramway car. He was believed to be the oldest news paper editor in the United States He was born in Portage county, O., Feb- j ruary 13, 1812, learned the printing! trade in Lawrenceville. Ind., and pub- j lished and edited newspapers in Ohio, Illinois, Missouri and Utah. The allies captured Shan Hai Kwan. Germans routed a Boxer force near Pekin. Roosevelt received a great ovation in Lincoln, Neb. Hanna spoke in Chicago on the Tarn- j many ice trust. Minister VA'u confirms the reported indictment of Prince Tuan. Prospects are again pood for settle- j ment of the Chinese question. British election returns continue to show large Conservative gains. A business block at Sbamko, Or., i was completely destroyed by fire. Daily Democrats of Montana, nomi nated Thomas S. Hogan for governor. Massachusetts Democrats nominated a full state ticket, headed by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. .A negro fiend was burned at the stake at Wetumpka, Ala., for an at tempted criminal assault. The population of the city of Seattle, as officially announced by the United States census bureau, is 80,671, as against 42,837 in 1890, an increase of 87,834, or 88.32 per cent. The Peruvian cabinet has resigned, owing to a unanimous vote of censure by congress, being inevitable as a re sult of the scandal in connection with the purchase of arms in Belgium and the alleged use by Senor Belamunde, ex-minister of finance, of government funds for his private transactions. According to semi-official state ments, the Russian naval estimates for 1901 show a total of 97,097,666 rou bles, an increase of 10,000,000 roubles for the current year. The ordinary ex penditure swallows 60,000,0c" roubles, of which 16.000,000 is intended to strengthen the fleet, 3,000,000 roubles for harbor work at Libau, 2,000.000 roubles to be expended at Vladivostock, and 3,000,000 at Port Arthur. Kate Carmack. wife of George Car mack, the Klondike millionaire, filed a suit in the superior court at Hollis ter, Cal., for divorce, alleging deser tion and infidelity. She demands half of the community property, which con sists of valuable Klondike mines, real estate in Seattle and other places, and large sums deposited in Hollister. San Francisco and Seattle banks. The en tire property is appraised at $1,500, 000. Carmack proposes to contest the suit, and a sensational trial is antici pated. A man in North Missouri is named i South West. Lord Roberts is due in London on November 1. Buller is to command in South Africa. The postal service establishment of the United States is the greatest busi ness concern in the world. Belgium uses more tobacco, in pro portion, than any other country, about 110 ounces per capita yearly, while taly uses only 22 ounces. LATER NEWS. Bryan made 14 speeches in Southern Illinois. The Chinese court refuses to return to Pekin. France is anxious to annex Yrnnan province. Russian troops may withdraw from Manchuria. Chamberlain is mentioned as a pos sible successor of Salisbury. The ministerial majority in the Brit ish parliament will be from 150 to 160. Trades Council orders strike on Seat tte's buildings. Over 1,000 men are' idle. The Boers now occupy Wepner, af well as Rouxville and Ficksburg, iu Orange River colony, and the Biitish are attempting to surround them. Five persons were killed and 75 in jured in a railway collision at Karls tbor, Germany. The accident was du to an error in signaling. One official has been arrested. Andrew C. Armstrong, one of th founders of Scribner's Magazine, anc one of the oldest publishers in New York city, died at his country hom at Stamford, Conn., aged 71. Five thousand pilgrims assembled ai the St. Nikandex monastery, in the Porkhoff district. St. Petersburg, foi a religious festival. During the night one of the upper floors collapsed and many of those sleeping there fell upon those below. A panic was caused by a false alarm of fire, and four men and 3C women were crushed to death, many others being seriously injured. Arrangements for building 8.00C freight cars for the Baltimore & Obic railroad by the Pullman Company, at Pullman, 111., has been completed. The contract calls for 2,500 box cars, each with a capacity of 60,000 pounds, and 500 flat cars. The total ccst Of the rolling stock. will be $1,865,000. This is the second large order for freight equipment given by the Baltimore & Ohio management within the last week. The first order was for 6,000 steel cars, to cost $6,000,000. Having found the natives of Tutuila fit to serve as policemen and maintain peace and order, Commander B. F. Tilley believes they would make excel lent soldiers to man the fortifications of Pango Pango harbor. In private letters to officers on duty he has indi cated that they would make effective artillerymen. To enlist a regiment ol natives, it would be necessary to ob tain special authority from congress. The natives who are acting as police men were enlisted by Commander Til ley as landsmen. It is likely, how ever, that a force of marines will be permanently stationed at Pango Pango. The Boers are active in Orange River Colony. Roosevelt spoke to two big meetings in Chicago. Japanese troops are withdrawing fiom China. Bourke Cockran discussed the issues in Topeka, Kansas. , The battleship Texas may be perman ently retired from service. A collision on the Great Northern line near Seattle resulted in the death of an engineer and the serious injury of another. A tornado struck the town of Biwa- bik, in Northern Minnesota, killing j nine persons, injuring several others and doing damage to the amount oi $500,000. The secretary of the interior has de cided to dispose of the Indian lands ceded to the Chippewas in Minnesota, amounting to 74,125 acres. They con sist of pine and agricultural lands. Fire on the docks of the Atlantic Transport Line, in the North river. New York, destroyed one of the piers of the company, with all the merchan dise on it, entailing a loss of $175,000. The population of the city of Ta co ma. Wash., according to the United States census for 1900, is officially an nounced as 37,104, against 36,001 in 1890, an increase of 1,708, or 4.84 per cent. It is officially announced by the cen sus bureau that the population of the state of New Hampshire is 411,588. In 1890, the population was 376,530, the increase being 35,058, or 9.30 pel cent. Li Hune Chang has ordered the re lease and safe escort to Pekin of five Belgian engineers and 15 missionaries, who have been kept prisoners many weeks at Pao True Fu. Li Hung Chang is apparently doing his utmost to please the powers. At Trenton, N. J., Eddie McBride, 10 years old, died from burns received while playing "Indian" with compan ions. McBride was tied to a stake and his clothing saturated with gasoline and then ignited. The boy broke loose and ran screaming to his home, where he died. The war department has approved an exhaustive opinion by Judge Advocate-General Lieber to the effect that absentees from a volunteer legiment, save prisoners of war, are discharged from the service on the same date upon which their organization is mustered out. The decision was important as affecting the pay and status of many officers serving on detached duty. Pearls are being found in great quan tities in the Black and St. Francis riv ers, in southwest Missouri. General Richard O'Grady Haly, the new commander-in-chief of the British troops in Canada, won the distinguish ed service order in the Egyptian expe dition of 1882. During the last three years Russia has been colonizing Siberia as far as possible. At least 200,000 colonists have been sent into the country over the Trans-Siberian railwav NAVY SHOWED FIGHT Chinese Fleet Tried to En gage Russian Cruiser. BUT THE LATTER GOT AWAY Allied Squadrons Will Force ships to Capitulate, or Will Destroy Them the 1 Klsa London, Oct. 8. It is reported in St. Petersburg, according to the corre spondent of the Times at the Russian capital, that the Chinese fleet in For mosa strait attempted to engage the Russian cruiser Rurik, but the latter's speed frustrated the plan. The corre spondent says the allied squadron will force the fleet to capitulate or will de stroy it. Shanghai telegrams announce that the imperial edict, dated September 30, ordering the court to be removed to Sinan Fu, was issued owing to the famine at Tai tfuan Fu, capital of the province of Shun Si. They also ex press the opinion that the object of the recent edict regarding the degradation of the Chinese personages of high rank is merely to gain time to enable China to be in a better position to dely the powers, as the new capital will be vir tually inaccessible to foreigners. The Shanghai correspondent of the Morning Post, discussing this aspect of the case, remarks: "The German troops have no means of transport, and any attempt to fol low the Chinese court would be, there fore, quite futile." He says the Chinese firmly believe in the existence of a Russo-German agree ment, under which Russia will take all the territory north ot the great wall and Germany the provinces of Chi Li and Shan Tung. The Times' representative at Shang hai says: "It is believed here thai highly in flammatory edicts are being issued secretly, and that the recent public edicts are odIv intended to hoodwink the powers." MILLIONS FOR LEVEES. Why Not Use n for Portion of This Reservoir,.? .Honey The history of levee construction on the Mississippi river has been a long one. The first levee was begun in 1717, which was, when completed, one mile long, erected to protect New Or leans, then a mere village. This levee was four feet high and 18 feet across at the top. It was not, however, until after Louisiana had been ceded to the United States that levee construction was begun on a large scale. As the work progressed up the river and addi tional basins and bottoms were en closed, the levees necessarily increased in height. The average height of the levees in Louisiana above New Orleans, is now between 12 and 13 feet, and this heigh- proved insufficient in the great flood of 1897. This flood indicates to the official engineers that three or four teet additional will be required. Fortunes Appropriated. Millions and millions of dollars have been appropriated by the federal gov ernment for the building of these levees and other constructions intended to protect the surrounding country lrom floods, and millions more must be ap propriated bv every congress to come ! unless other steps are taken to prevent these floods. These measures ot the government are merely palliative; they do not go to the root of the evil. The report of Captain Hiram Chittenden, of the government engineer coips, how ever, shows that there is a way to strike at the trouble itself, and largely prevent the floods instead of trying to enclose them between banks after they have become such. Storage Reservoirs. He shows in his official report that, by the building of a series of great storage reservoirs at the head waters of tne Missouri, floods can be prevented through the diverting of the excess of waters into these artificial lakes. Surely this is something for congress to give its attention to. Here is a practical plan. An ounce of preven tion is worth a pound of cure. Con gress will go ahead appropriating mil lions every session for flood prevention without a question, but it will not ap propriate the same amount for a plan, which, according to the government's own engineers, promises far greater re sults. Of course, the storing of these reservoirs would mean the reclamation of large tracts of land to irrigation; but this need not worry congress, even its Eastern members, for the Eastern merchants are already alive to the situ ation, and realize that the reclamation of the arid West would open to them the finest market in the world. GUY E. MITCHELL. Confessed to Robbery. San Francisco, Oct. 8. A man giv ing the name of Frank W. Travels has surrendered himself to the police, al leging that he robbed his brother, D. R. Travers, of 41 Park Row, New York, of $1,000, last July. He says that he stole the money from the cash drawer after his brother had refused to lend it to him. Lloyd McKim Garrison Dead. Springfield, Mass., Oct. 8. Lloyd McKim Garrison, aged 83 years, a New York attorney, is dead after an illness of about six weeks with typhoid fever. He was a relative of William Lloyd Garrison, the note abolitionist. Powder Explosion. - Shamoikn, Pa., Oct. 8. By an ex plosion at Asbury Powder Mills, near here, last night, two men were killed and another was so badly burned that he is not expected to recover. DEVASTATION IN TRANSVAAL. Consul-General Stowe'i Report to the State Department. Washington, Oct. 6. An interesting picture of the Transvaal and Free State in August, after the wave of war had passed over the country, is presented in a report to the state department from Unted States Consul-General Stowe, at Cape Town, dated August 17 last. He had just returned to the Cape from a trip through the two re publics. He says that for hundreds of miles all the wire fencing is down and cannot be used again. The posts have been burned for fuel and must be replaced with iron posts, owing to the scarcity of timber. The plowing in progress is limited, compared with former years, and there will be large market for American cereals. By March, 1901, agricultural machinery I will be wanted Meat and livestock will continue to ! be imported. Johannesburg had only i three days' supply of meat when Mr. j Stowe left the town. While the Boers ' who have returned are anxious to get ' to work, several months must elapse before things settle down to a normal ! basis. The government is building a new line of railway from Harrismith ! to connect with the Orange Colony sys- tern, so that the Netherlands railway, j with its 200 per cent dividends, will no longer nave a monopoly in me Transvaal. There will be a big de mand for bridge material and electrical I mahcinery and supplies. Lord Roberts has appointed an ad visory committee to assist him in the reopening of Johannesburg, and to se- cure the return of the mining popula- tion, which the prosperity of the town i depends upon. It is questionable whether an undesirable element com mon to all mining towns will be al lowed to return to Johannesburg. TELEGRAPH TO SKAGWAY. The Line Is Completed and the First Message Sent to Seattle Yesterday. Seattle, Oct. 6. The first telegram from Skagway to Seattle, marking an epoch in the history of business be tween Alaska and the ontside world, was received here today. The time oc cupied by the message in transit was seven hours, which, however, will be reduced one-half as soon as the line is in working order and business reduced to a system. The route taken by the message was from Skagway to Atlin, thence over the old Atlin-Lillooet line to the Fraser river, thence to Ashcroft and on to Vancouver, from which place it was sent to Seattle. The line over which it passed to Van couver is that which the Canadian government has been engaged in con structing for the past four months. It is not yet completed, and will not be for about a week. However, in order to get the first message through today, a temporary line was put up connect ing the unfinished portion between Lillooet and Ashcroft. and in this man- i ner the transmission of the message was accomplished. According to the reports received here today, the whole work of the Ca ' nadian government will be concluded i by October 10, atter which the through j line will be open for commercial busi- ness. TO PUNISH REBELS. A Whole Regiment Will Be Sent to Marinduque. Washington, Oct. 6. The following cablegram has been received at the war department: "Manila, Oct. 6. First infantry goes to Marinduque, October 6, on Sumner. General Hare is to com mand the island, with orders to push 1 operations until insurrection is stamped i out absolutely. He will have 12 full companies of infantry for the purpose. Anderson's first operations developed nothing. No reports since October 2. "MACARTHUR " The above dispatch relates to rein forcements sent to the Island of Marin duque, where Captain Shields and 51 men of the Twenty-ninth volunteer in fantry were either killed or captured by the insurgents. At that time Gen eral MacArthur sent Colonel Anderson and two companies of the Thirty eighth volunteer infantry, with the Yorktown and two gunboats, to the re lief of Shields and his command, if they were still alive. Collision at San Francisco. San Francisco, Oct. 6. The naval reserve ship Marion and the United States ship Ranger were in collision this morning and both were damaged about the lower rigging and along the rails. Captain Bolles and Bulger, local in spectors of steam boilers, commenced an investigation today of the cause of the collision between the steamer Columbia and the ferryboat Berkeley. The captains of the two vessels and members of both crews were examined as witnesses. Additional evidence is to be taken and the case will then be submitted for decision. Andrnp'i Greenland Exploration. Copenhagen, Oct. 6. Lieutenant Andrnp's Greenland expedition has ar rived here on board the Antarctic. The members of the expedition explored and approached a hitherto unknown stretch of land extending from Cape Town, latitude 69 degrees 28 minutes north to Agassis land, 67 degrees 22 minutes north. Dutch Warships Ordered Sonth. I Shanghai, Oct. 6. The Dutch war : sbips Gelderland and Holland have 1 suddenly been ordered to Swatow and Amoy respectively. Charged With Malley's Murder. Wallace, Idaho. Oct. 6. The coron er's inquest on the body of Matt Mai ley, who was murdered Monday morn ing, concluded today. The .verdict charges Ed Rice with the crime. Rici (8 in. custody. AT LEAST NINE KILLED Work of a Tornado in North eastern Minnesota. THE PROPERTY LOSS IS $100,000 Locomotives Were Shifted From the Tracks and Founded Into Scrap iron Mines Disabled. Biwabik, Minn., Oct. 9. The tor nado that raged in this vicinity last evening was most violent. The storm cut a pathway 150 feet in width wougn me nurwiwrawn. uru ui .u buildings. The property loss is esti mated at $100,000 and the known fa talities number nine, with a scoie or more injured, some severely. The storm swept in a northwesterly direction after leaving here and struck a little Finnish settlement near Pike lake, where a number of buildings were wrecked, in one of which an en tire family, consisting of husband, wife and four children, were instantly killed. So far their names have not been obtained. It is believed when the more remote districts are heard from further casualties may be re ported. The house in which the Marowitz family lived was completely wrecked, and the body of Mrs. Marowitz was found 400 feet away, every bone in her body being broken and her clothing completely stripped off. The body of her husband was found amid the debris of their home horribly mutilated. William Hilstrom was struck on the head by a falling tree and his skull crushed. He afterward died at the hospital. The engine house of the Duluth, Mis sissippi & Northern railway was com pletely wrecked and a number of loco motives and cars were shifted from the tracks and pounded into scrapirou. The engine on which Murray and An ders n were when the storm broke was blown from the track and the men were pinned beneath it and horribly burned by the escaping steam. Sev eral cars were blown from the Duluth, Mississippi & Northern tracks and we found in the Duluth mine pit, hun dreds of feet away. Many of the ! bnildings destroyed were owned by the ! mining companies, and tenanted by their employes. The shafthouse and buildings of three minas were reduced to kindling wood. The tornado which lasted less than ; five minutes, was preceded by an un ; usually severe thunder and rain storm. The rain has flooded many of the open pit mines, and they cannot be operated for some time. Explosion of 7, BOO Pounds of Dynamite. Duluth, Minn., Oct. 9. A special from Eveleth, Minn., tonight, reports a disastrous explosion. Seven thous and five hundred pounds oi dynamite iu the powder magazine at the Pruce mine, situated a half mile from town, blew up about 5:30 o'clock this after noon. A hole 100 feet square and 25 feet deep marks the spot where the magazine stood. The force of the ex plosion was so great that it smashed every pane of glass within a radius of two miles. The mine laboratory and warehouses were totally wrecked. At least 200 people were hurt more or less from being thrown down by the shook or hit by shattered glass. The explosion was plainly felt at Biwabik, 12 miles distant. The cause of the ex plosion is unknown. Boers Short of Ammunition. London, Oct. 9. It is estimated, ac cording to the Pietermaritzburg corre- j spondent of the Daily Mail, that 4,000 j to 5,000 Boers have retreated from Pil grim s Kest, nortneast ot iyaenourg, with four long toms and 22 other guns. The correspondent understands that tbeir long torn ammunition is almost exhausted . Lord Roberts, the Dail Mail an nounces, will leave South Afmca dur ing the last week of October. The au thorities have decided to limit the number of colonial troops who are to be the queen's guests in London to 500. Crime of an Insane Mother. New York. Oct. 8. Mrs. Lillian Smith, of Inwood. borough of Manhat tan, while insane this afternoon shot and killed two of her children, wound ed a third and committed suicids: The tragedy took place in the old Frank Leslie mansion. Mrs. Smith was the wife of Walter N. Smith, who has been connected with a large grocery house in this city for 21 years. They had been married 13 years. Mrs. Smith had been in poor health of late, and long brooding over the prospect of death is believed to have unsettled her reason. American Collier Floated. Suez, Oct. 9. The American steam collier Emir, which recently sank in the Suez canal while on her way to Manila with coal for the American fleet, but was successfully floated yes terday, has arrived at Suez roads. She is unable, however, to enter the port, as she draws too much water. Her cargo is being discharged, and divers will examine her bottom to ascertain the extent of her injuries. Peary Not Yet Coming Home. St. Johns, N. F., Oct. 9. The fail ure of the Peary exploring steamer Windward to return from the north leads local observers to believe that the explorer will not attempt to get back this autumn. Probably the sea son just passed was an open one in the far north. Should that have been the case, Lieutenant Peary is likely to have taken the Windward into some high latitude, hoping to use her in a farther expedition next season. OPERATIONS IN PHILIPPINES, Strengthening Weak Garrisons Steps Taken to Help Our Trade. Manila, Oct. 10. Four troops of cavalry and two companies of infantry have recently reinforced General Young in Northern Luzon, where the insur gents are concentrating in the moun tains of North and Sonth Ilicos prov inces under the leadership of Aglipay, the ex-communicated priest and rene gade. General Tinio and General Villan nave, who had been quiet for some time, are now showing signs of becom ng active as the end of the rainy sea on approaches. Of late there has been considerable scouting and skirmishing in the prov inces of Abra and North Ilocos, though without decisive results. It is obvious, however, that the maneuvers of the Filipinos are more sikllfulthan former ly and that the field tactics of the Americans are being followed by them. Senor Mateni, the founder of the so called Filipino government, who was captured by the Americans last Decem ber and lodged in jail in Manila, hae been liberated. As he had always per sistently refused to take the oath of al legiance to the United States govern' ment he had maintained his reputation among the Filipinos as a resolute pat riot. They now believe that he has reached a private understanding with the American authorities which hae secured his release, and consequently be has lost some of his popularity, al though he is still considered the leader of the dormant revolutionary element. This week the commision will begin the work of revising the tariff, making use of the results on the investigation of the army board in this direction. It is the intention of the commission to give American trade a better chance than it has heretofore enjoyed owing to the high duties. The transports Sumner and Venue have sailed for the Island of Mariu duque, off the westcoast of Luzon, car rying two battalions. The former has already arrived there. The transport Logan will reinforce the Twent-ninth United States infantry now in Marin duque. GALVESTON NEEDS MORE. People Require Material to Build Them selves Houses. Galveston, Texas, Oct. 10. Miss Clara Barton, president of the Nation al Red Cross Society, today issued a statement to the manufacturers and business men of the country in which she appeals to them for aid in the way of material to be used in the building of homes for those who lost their all in the recent storm. It is addressed "To the manufacturers and dealers in lumber, hardware, builder's materials and household goods and to the busi ness men in general of the United States," and says: "We believe it is reliably stated that there is not one house in the area of the storm undamaged by it. A large proportion of those persons formerly occupiyng them are strictly entirely without homes or even shelter, save such as persons nearly as' destitute as themselves can offer them temporarily to their own great inconveience and cost. "The number of this homeless class is estimated at 8,000 or more. Winter is less than two months away. Al though a mild climate, still snow and ice are known here. If tents would J protect, which they will not, the sand j would not hold them d wn. Some j substantial shelter must be had at once for these people. "The havoc wrought by the i5torm in Galveston at once was much larger in loss of life and property than at Johns town, but the donations in money so far have aggregated one-ibird less lor both the city and mainland than was given at Johnstown, i "While the bountiful outpouring of the people's generosity has enabled the ! general relief committee and the Red Close to feed the hungry, clothe the naked and render the streets of Galves ton partially passable, nothing has as yet been done toward reinstating the impoverished survivors in houses where I they can escape disease' and enjoy a slight measure of the comforts of i which the storm deprived them. j "It is for the purpose of awakening the sympathies of the American people and further appealing to their bounti- ful instincts to rescue these sufferers ! from the hardships still confronting i them that the foregoing statements ; have been put forth." No Trace of Captives, -Manila, Cct. 10. The report oi the capture of about 60 men of the Twenty ninth United States infantry on Marin duque island is confirmed through com-: munica ions to MacArthur and Kempff, from Marinduque island, but details are lacking. The Yorktown's relief col umn landed at Torrijos, on the Marin duque coast, and marched to Santa Cruz, which was the proposed route ol the captured party, without encouu ei ing the enemy or learning anything definite regarding the captives, except that they had entirely disappeared. It is possible that the rebels have convey ed the captives to Luzon. Assam Tea Crop in Dancer. Calcutta, Oct. 10. An unprecedent ed drought is prevailing in the district of Chachar and Silhet, province of As sam, "causing the greatest anxiety in regard to the tea and other crops. Philadelphia Sent Over SIOO.OOO. Philadelphia, Oct. 10. The cash contributions made by the citizens of this city to the relief fund of the Texas flood sufferers - now exceeds $100,000. This is exclusive of numerous train loads of provisions, clothing, drugs and other atricles sent. Puddlers' Strike Over. Reading, Pa., Oct. 10. The Reading Company puddlers have accepted $3 a ton, a teduction from $4, and all mill resumed today after a biief strike. GONE TO SINAN FU Chinese Court Will Not Re turn to Pekin. AFRAID OF THE ALLIES' ARMIES The First Stop Was Made at Tai Yuan, but the Place Was Not Con. sidered a Safe One. Washington, Oct. 10. The effort to Induce the Chinese imperial court to return to Pekin has failed, after a week's persistent effort on the part of the powers. News to that effect was brought to the state department today by the Chinese minister, who received it via St. Petersburg from Viceroy. Liu Kum Yih and Chang Chlh Tung, under date of October 4. Minister Wu received the message last night. It was as lollows: "The departure of their imperial ma jesties for Shen Si (province) was due to distressing conditions at Tai Yuan Fu. There is a scarcity of food sup plies in the province of Shan Si on ac count of the long continued drouth and the provincial capital (Tai Yun) is al most deserted, the trades people having left on account of the disturbances caused and continued for months by the Boxer rebels, who had inyaded that province with the encouragement of Governor Yu. Their majesties, there fore, were obliged to proceed to Shen Siffl, where telegraphic communication with Shanghai and other parts of the empire is open and rapid communica tion with tbeir majesties may therefore be carried on, thus court and official business may be transacted more expe- j ditiously by their presence in Shen Si j rather than in Shan Si. I "The reasons for the temporary post- ; ponement of their majesties' return to : Pekin are the presence of the allied forces there, on account of which so- ! licitous fear is doubtless entertained, besides a danger of the outbreak of epi demic disease, which usually follows ' after great disturbances, destruction of property and military operations, li ; is hoped that the powers will be con- j siderate in their judgment in this mat- : ter." The important feature of the message I is the confession that the court is re ! strained by fear of the allied forces ! from returning to Pekin. The move- ment takes the emperor and empress dowager about 300 miles farther away from Pekin, though, according to the statements contained in the message by reason of the direct telegraphic com munication with Shanghai the court practically will be nearer for the pur ' poses of negotiations with the outside ! world, than.it was at Tai Yuan. FINDS A SNUG SUM. Hondurance Mining; Property That Was Left, by Dying Fiance. j St. Paul, Oct. 10. Through the I publication of a dispatch in today's j Pioneer Press, Mrs. H.E. Butterfield. of this city, has discovered that she is ! $200,000 wealthier than she imagined, j In 1890, while on an excursion to the Pacific coast, she became acquainted ! with Thomas P. Harkin, of Boston, j also a member of the party. They be came engaged and tne wedding naie was fixed. Shortly after Harkin was taken sick and died. Before his death he executed for his affianced a quit claim deed to a mining property in Honduras. Communication with the Honduran government officials led to the belief that the property was not worth the trouble of filing formal trans fer. Last winter, however, the prop erty greatly increased in value and the synidcate that bad it in charge offered Harkin's attorney $200,000 for a quit claim deed from Miss Giiffin. In some manner, however, all trace of that young lady had been lost and not even the names of her parents colud be found. Mrs. Butterfield, on reading the dis patch today, at once took steps to identify herself and will shortly receive the snug sum, which comes to her in so romantic a manner. Her husband is a clerk in the Great Northern Railway office. Tin Plate Mills Resume. Pittsburg, Oct. 10. The American Tin-Plate Company will have in opera tion this week 20 of its tin-plate plants out of 35 giving employment to at least 35,000 workmen. The tin-plate com pany employs iu all over 50.000 work men, and within a few weeks, it is said, every plant in the country will be working. The Monongahela mill, of this city, the Deinler plant and the one at Kennington started today, and the others will follow as eoou as possible. Nearly every plant in the gas belt will commence tonight, and by the end of the week every one of the 20 will be operating to their full capacity. The plants have been idle since the expira tion of the scale in June last. Situation in Santo Domingo. Santo Domingo, Oct. 10. The gov ernment has decieed the suspension of the constitutional guarantees on ac count of the revolutionary movement in the interior, headed by General Richardo, although it is asserted that order has been restored and that Rich ardo has been captured. All i quiet here. . Distress in Cuba. Havana, Oct. 10. Governor-Genera Wood, who returned yesterday from a tonr of investigation in the province of Santa Clara, reports only a partial re-, covery from the effects of the war in that section of the island. Although he fouud no actual want in the district of Sancti Spiritus, for instance, there was great need of assistance to allevi ate agricultural distress. This was asked for by the municipality of Sancti Spiritus, and has been granted by Ge eral Wood from the insular fund