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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1901)
WEEKLY. uzBrn'ukuMi ( Consolidated Feb. 1899. COKVALIilS, 'BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1301. VOIi. XXXYIII. NO. 21. events of the bay FROM THE FOUR QUARTERS OF THE WORLD. X Comprehensive Review of the lmporwt Happenings of the Past Week Prese ied in a Condensed Form Which Is Most Likely to Prove of Interest to Our Many Readers. Mrs. McKinley is much improved in health. Lacuna has promised to surrender his command. Shamrock II was beaten by Sham rock I in a trial race. A watchman in a Utah refinery stole $15,000 in silver bullion. The Chinese are astonished at the amount of indemnity demanded. Twenty five thousand regulars will be returned from the Philippines. A Russo-German tariff alliance against the United States is proposed. The military governor of liataan has been reprimanded by Mac Arthur. Governor Nash and party are visit ing the various interesting places in California. Rear Admiral Schley will cut short his visit in London on account of sickness in his family.' Russia is standing steadfast for peace, according to an official state ment received at Washington. ' One mail .clerk was killed and another injured in a wreck on an Illi-' uois Central train in Louisiana. ;- A steamboat on the Mississippi river was wrecked near ' Chester, 111. Two passengers were drowned and 22 deckhands are missing. Unless the sultan of Turkey yields on the question of interference with :fortign mail, the powers ,will present an ultimatum, backed by naval dem onstration. , ; A new Russian loan of 424,000,000 francs is authorized. , Fire in suburb of Detroit, Mich., did $800,000 damage. . , General Dewet, the Boer leader, has resumed operations. Pennsylvania beat Annapolis in the intercollegiate boat race.' National organization of machinist has ordered a general strike. . - Yale beat Harvard1 57 to 47 in the annual track and field contest. The Porte has ordered all foreign postoffices removed from Turkey. The steamer Princess Louise was wrecked in British Columbia waters. Ah attempt was made to sell con fidential documents in the Neely case. Seattle njen have bonded 1,000 acres near Willapa bay and will bore for oil. :.. Esterhazy has -made an affidavit that he was the author of the Dreyfui borderau. ; Embezzlement charged against ex School Land Clerk Davis, of Oregon, may be outlawed. Trouble between the managers of. the Buffalo exposition and union, workmen for a time threatened a com plete tie-up of work, but the difficulty has been settled. ..-. A grip containing dynamite was in process of fumigation at Port Town send, Wash., when owner told con tents, causing a panic among the steamer passengers. Mrs. McKinley is ill, and-has been taken to San Farncisco for a rest. Her illness, while not serious, may cause curtailment of . programme for the remainder of president's tour. Two lives were lost in a New L York fire. . - ..; The presidential party is now . in California. " Eastern wool market shows no im provement. . v ' . ' " Martinelli has received the red be retta at Baltimore. ' u The steel trust will close down the Everett nail works. --. English coal miners have decided not to strike at present. : . Fire in Augusta, Ga., destroyed $169,000 worth of cotton. ,. A fire in Seattle destroyed property to the amount of $200,000. A naval war college is to be estab lished for the naval officers. The Industrial commission is in vestigating rate discriminations. The steamer Tantillion- Castle, wrecked near Cape Town, is a total loss. ?. The contract plans for the cruiser St. Louis have mysterioulsy disap peared. - , . ; Forest " fires in Pennsylvania are destroying immense quantities of val uable timber. : . . ".' Much disturbance continues among the eduacated classes in Russia, and the police are kept busy. , It is said that 1,000 pounds of poultry will cost less to raise than 1,000 pounds of beef, and will sell for almost twice as much, r ; While finding that the seed trade of England, generally . speaking, is well -jconducted, the - departmental committee appointed by the board of agriculture recommends the estab lishment of a central station for the purpose of testing seeds sent to it for official examination. - THE ARTILLERY ARM. Secretary of War Will Increase It to Its Full '. Strength.' ' Washington, May -13. Secretary Root is a man to whom wide discre tion in the matter of interpreting and administering the laws might have been given. ? This is shown in his de termination to increase the artillery corps at once to its full strength. Congress, in its abject fear of criti cism, placed a provision in the bill which looked as if the artillery " corps of the army was to be increased only 20 per cent each for five years. But the men who drafted the bill knew what they were doing, and when' it came out as a law it provided that not less than 20 per cent should be raised the first year, and not less than 20 per cent each succeeding 12 months until the full strength of the artillery was reached. Secretary Root inter prets the "not less" to mean that he is not prevented from making the en tire increase at once, and so he di rected that it should be done. -. This - is a very good thing. - No branch of the military service needs men so much as the artillery. The fortifications and the equipment of the fortifications with valuable guns has been far in advance of the in crease of the artillery. In the Spanish war congress was induced to increase the artillery from five to seven regi ments, and the last congress was in duced to make the increase to 18,000 men, but with an intimation on the wording pt athe bill that the increase was to be made only gradually at 20 per cent a year for five years. - Every coast state, every state where fortifi cations are needed, and where they have been erected will applaud . the action of Secretary Root, '-as it means more heavy artillery, and fortifica tions already in place and fortifica tions to be erected will have artillery placed upon them, and received the care of trained and. efficient men,"a care that very valuable defenses have not received during the past three yean. : -. Another thing where" Secretary Root showed his judgment was in construing the ? stupid provision " of the Spooner amendment to the army bill, relating to the Philippines. There were two amendments, one pre pared by Senator Spooner, giving the president authority to control the Philippines, and Senator - Hoar se cured the adoption of another regard ing franchises, which would prevent anything from being done to improve the condition of the - islands; ' Soon after the Philippne amendment was cabled to the Taft commission, a reply "r was received shownig that if it was adhered to strictly, it would mean great hardship to the people of ; the Philippine islands. After mature deliberation the sec retary decided to allow the regu lations for the cutting of - timbei which ; the Philippine . commission had enacted . to remain in force and not-to be interfered with by the -Hoai amendment -to the army bill. It would have been well, perhaps, tt give the secretary some authority ic modifying affairs in Cuba,' for he has a way of making such modifications of the best interests of the government and the people who aregoverned. . -;';", AUSTRALIAN PARLIMENT. First Under the Mew Federation Opened by - : - Duke of Cornwall. Melbourne, May 13. The opening of the first federal parliament which took place at noon was a most im presive ceremony.; The capacity of the exposition building, the scene of the ceremony, is 12,000 people, butthe available space was taxed to the ut most. - ' The decorations consisted of regimental - standards, trophies of arms and floral festoons. . The doors were opened to ticket holders at 9 o'clock in the morning, and by 11 o'clock the auditorium was filled except the royal dais. This was located - beneath the great dome. It held a single row of chairs, the largest, in the center, being sur mounted by a - Binall gold . imperial crown. The whole was overhung with the royal standard. In front of the royal chair . was , a small table,' on which was a telegraph key, by which the Duke of Cornwall and York was to flash the ; opening signal throughout the commonwealth, when the UnionJackwas to.be simultane ously raised in every" settlement of the federation. " . ' " - , The majority of the audience was composed of ladies,, Mostly "clad in mauve colored costumes, but many of them were dressed in white. "-1 Bril liant scattered groups of army ;and navy uniforms gave color; to- the, scene. Facing the dais was a slightly raised platform, where seven rows of chairs accommodated the membrers of the commonwealth , parliament. The . lofty north transept was de voted to the members of the state par liaments. East and west of the dais were grouped the -ministerial staffs. The . remainder of the hall and the galleries were packed with a well dressed, earnesst, expectant crowd. A great orchestra enlivened the ante meridian hour with operatic airs. .:" Our Mail Not Tampered With. Washington, May 13. No United States official . mail was included in the lot of foreign mail which -is re ported to have been tampered with while passing through Turkey, thus forimng the subject of a protest .from the diplomatic body at Constanti nople. -. The official ; mail from our minister, Mr.Leishman, and his mail for the state department never passes through Turkey in transit. NEWS OF THE STATE ITEMS OF, INTEREST FROM ALL OVER OREGON. Commercial and Financial Happenings of Int. - portance A Brief Review of of the Growth and Improvemeuts of the Many ' Industries Throughout Onr Thriving Com monwealth Latest Market Report . -- - Newport will have a Fourth of July celebration. .;'.'.- .. - The new school house at Marcola has been completed. " .; ,-. Timber claims on the middle fork of the Coquille are being rapidly taken. . Operations have been - resumed at the Eureka mine, at Selma, Josephine county. . ,, The telephone line being extended from Springfield to Waterville is com pleted to Thurston. ., .- The Southern Oregon Oil Company, operating near Ashland; has pur chased a boring plant. - The machinery of the Summerville creamery has been received and will be in place within a few "days. Eighty seven scalps of wild animals were presented for bounty in Jackson county in the month of April. Contract has been- awarded to the Athena Flouring ; Mill Company to pump water for the city for $800 per year. -: The Henry P. Smith farm of 199 acres, 1 miles east of Dallas, has been sold to an Okalhoma - man for $6,400. s- - - : - ; The Ontario Warehouse Company is building a warehouse on "the Short Line right of way., : The building will be 50x70 feet, fire proof, and will be pushed to a speedy completion. ; The Sunset mill owners started their quartz mill on Forest creek again last week for a run of several months. They" have a large amount of rock on the dump, some of which which will yield $75 to the ton. - . " A hotel will be built at ' Enterprise if citizens will give a bonus of $1,200. Strong indications of natural oil and gas have been found near Mil ton. ... . J" ' " ,. The receipts of the Oregon state land office during April were $23, 459.36. , - The contract has been let for build ing a school house at John Day. The price is $3,466. ; -: ' Baker City wheelmen are having trouble with miscreants who steathily juncture their tires. - The Southern Pacificis putting in a l,SOO-foot siding at Rice Hill. Other repairs are being male along the line in that vicinity. ., . Citizens of Enterprise have organ ized an immigration board, and will try to secure the co-operation of other towns in the same county. : . All but eight or 10 men employed at 4he Mineral City smelter "have been discharged t-and .work has been suspended for a time. . : .- ;,- The stages . between Canyon City and Burns are now traveling on the summer schedule, and the entire dis tance "of 70 miles is covered in one day instead of two as heretofore. - Portland Markets. Wheat Walla Walla, .... 5960c. ; valley, nominal; biuestem, 6162c. per bushel. Flour Best grades, $2.903.40 per barrel; graham, $2.60. Oats White, $1. 30 1. 35 per cental j gray, $1.27J1.30 per cental. " Barley Feed, $1717.25; brewing; $17 17. 25 per ton. Millstuffs Bran, $17 per ton ; midd lings, $21.50; shorts, $20.00; chop, $16. Hay" Timothy, $12.5014; cloveV, $79.50; Oregon wild hay, $67 per ton. Hops 1214c. per lb. Wool Valley, ll13c; Eastern Oregon, 710c; mohair, - 2021c. per pound. Butter Fancy creamery, . 15 I7)c. ; dairy, 1314c. : store," 11 12 j c. per pound. . - .i Eggs Oregon ranch, 12j13cv per dozen. Cheese Full : cream, twins, 13 13c. ; ; Young America, 1314c. per pound. Poultry-t-Chickens,mixed, $3. 50 4 ; hens, $44.50; dressed, ll12c. per pound; springs, . $35 per dozen; ducks, $56 1 geese, $67 ; turkeys, live, 10 12c; dressed; 1315c. jer pound. - v - - Potatoes Old. 90$1.10 per sack; new, 2c. per pound. - Mutton Lambs -4 5c. per pound gross; best sheep, wethers, with wool, $4.254.50; dressed, 7 Jc. per pound. - Hogs Gross, heavy, $5.756; light, $4.755; dressed, 77c. per pound. - i Veal Large, 78c. per pound; small, 88c. per pound. ' ;,Beef Gross, top steers, $55.25; cows and heifers, $4.504.75; -dressed beef, 8'j8)c. per pound .. ' . - ' A Toledo, O., police judge says drunkenness is a disease, not a crime, and dismisses all plain drunks that come before him. An Omaha . man 'claims to have made out of common earth, petroleum and ; two secret ingredients a cheap and plentiful fuel. -- v Earl Grey, of Great Britain, has a plan to secure control of all saloons and to discourage the sale of intoxi cating drinks there. . .-800,000 FIRE. Suburb of Detriot the Scene Blaze Started in Idle Mill ' Detroit, May 14. Fanned by a 35-miles-an-hour wind, fire this after no n swept the west tank of the Rogue river in Delray, a suburb to the south of Detroit, for three quar ters of a mile, and. destroyed over $800,000 worth of property: The fire originated in the roof of a saw mill. The plant has . not been running for several months, and the roof was as dry as tinder. The build ing - was soon : in anhes and the fire swept across a block to where a dredge was tied up. - Despite the efforts to save her, this craft was burned to the water's edge. " Great embers were picked up by the wind and dropped iri several directions,, .setting fire to buildings. " . ;-:i . Delray has a small fire department, which responded with three engines and the fireboat Battle. Even the greatest streams of the fireboat were powerless to check the flames which were rolling down the river bank for hundreds of feet. When darkness fell the glare from the burning poles il luminated the sky for miles. The firemen, worked on the fire almost all night to keep it from spreading to other property. ,. A TRICKY BANK TELLER. His Scheme for Making Money Led to His " - Arrest New Orleans, - May . 14. Samuel Flower, paying teller of the Hibernia National bank, has been arrested here charged with a shortage of $36,000. The Fidelity . & Deposit Company; of Baltimore, is on Flower's -bond for $25,000. It is alleged that Flower, expecting an examination, sent to an other bank in this city a government sealed package said to contain $4000 and received in exchange for it $40, 000 gold clearing house certificates of the -denomination - of $5,000 each. His cash having been counted by the National bank examiner the evening before and found correct; it is alleged he returned the clearing house certifi cates to the bank fronrwhich he had received them and received in return his" unbroken government : package, said to contain $40,000. - This pack age was received by the Hibernia National Bank from the sub treasury, of this city, in March last, and con tained " $4,000 in $1 bills. It is al leged that Flower had preserved - the label from an old government package that did contain $40,000 in denom inations of $10 each, -which he pasted on the .package, containing only $4,000 in $1 bills, thereby making it a $40,000 package to all appearances. This package was opened and counted after, his departure from the bank. PHILIPPINE POLICE FORCE. Already Organized, Including Over Six Thou sand Natives. . - Washington, May 14. An . exten sive resume of the organization and varied conditions of the Philippine native police force is contained in a statement made public by the : divis ion of , insular affairs of the war de partment. The reports recites' that, because of the poverty of the munici palties, ; the ; Philippine commission appropirated the sum of $150,000 to provide increased pay for the body, and offered through General Mac Arthur,': further ; incentive in . the way of increased compensation for cases of meritorious and Jaithful serv ice. - Late reports received at the war department indicate that an efficient and loyal force of native, police has now been organized, with prospects of further extension and increased abili ty .-The total force now numbers 6, 349 officers and men, a great many of whom are on the meritorious list and receive addtiional pay. The body at present is concentrated in Northern Luzon : principally,- although - the Visayas, Mindanao, Jolo and South ern Luzon have police forces of con siderable strength. In many of the towns the men are fully uniformed. KLONDIKERS IN LUCK. Miners Are Enjoying Greatest Harvest in fiv -. ; . History of the District. - Port Townsend, Wash., May "14. Returning Dawson passengers on the Victorian, which arrived fromSkag way report ; that the miners of the Klondike are enjoying the greatest harvest in the history of the country, owing to the abundance of the surfact water, which is being utilized in sluic ing the dirt taken . out during ' the winter months, and the yield of yel low metal will exceed the best expec tations of the mine-owners. . - The Victoria reports considerable excitement in the north, caused by the smallpox epidemic, and "various settlements are taking every- precau tion to check and wipe out the dis ease. At Skagway a mass meeting was held, the Indians were driven out of the city, and a "strong guard was placed around the town to prevent their return.- .Nearly all. sections are in quarantine. Every stranger arriv ing is held up and inspected. - - t - - ' Northwest Postal Orders. . Washington, May -14. The post office at Brinnin, . Jefferson county, Wash., - has been moved one mile to the south, without change - of post master.;; The office at Kaufman, Fre mont county, Idaho, has been moved two miles north, without change ' of postmaster. - -" . ; - - . The Minnesota game r warden ' is hatching 100,000,000 wall eyed pike. WANT DOLE FIRED HAWAIIAN LEGISLATORS' DON'T "LIKE THE GOVERNOR. The First Session of the Territorial Legislature of Hawaii Comes to an End Without Ac complishing Anything President Dole Is Ignored Charges the Legislature With Accepting Bribes. - Honolulu, May 7, via San Francis co , May 13. The first legislature of Hawaii came to an end the evening of April 30, according to Governor Dole, and the next - night according to a majority in both houses, r The legis lature ended its existence at logger heads with the governor all along the line, and without having passed a sin gle one of the important measures to which the home -rulers were com mitted, except the county government act, which. the governor killed. . The last act of the house the even ing of the 30th, was to pass a concur rent resolution containing a memorial to President McKinley for the remov al of Governor Dole. ' Dole is charged with having hindered the work of the session by his hostility towards the legislature, withholding information and reports that were called for, and refusing to co-operate with - the law makers. The president is asked in the resolution to use his influence in behalf of an extra session of the legis lature to transact general legislation which Dole refuses to grant. , In con clusion, the home rulers ask that Dole be removed, if the president sees no other wajt of bringing about an extra session of the territorial legislature, declaring that the governor has acted in such a manner as to lose the confi dence of a majority of the people of the territory. - ..J - The concurrent resolution! passed through both houses by large majori ties, all the native home rulers voting for it. - - It did -not get to the senate until the day after the end of the session, as calculated by the governor, but on that ; day .the native party in the senate passed it. Governor Dole created a sensation by saying that one of his reasons for not granting an extra session was that he had been reliably informed that bribery was taking place. . Both houses passed a resolution demanding proof. ... NEW ORDER OF THINGS. Interior Department WiH Require Important Reports Regularly. : . Washington, May 13. A new order of ' things has been . inaugurated in the Interior . department and its sev eral branches,; relative to making public certain reports that are de sired from time to time by the Washington correspondents. ; Here tofore the geological survey, which is one of the bureaus of this depart ment, has been allowed to run along with comparative independence, and in a way it gave general satisfaction.. Under the old regime the newspapers were given access to the many reports that are prepared by the survey from time to time, often when the reports were still in manuscript ' form. Now this is changed, and no reports will be accessible until they are in galley proof, or even a more advanced stage. . The objection to the new ruling lies just here. - The survey sends its par ties out in the summer. During the winter months the field forces are oc cupied ; in Washington writing up their reports, which are generally profusely and valuably illustrated. It is well; into' the spring before these reports are completed in the manu script. .' It' very often happens that the reports of a past season 's obser vations, if made public' in the spring, will be of great value to prospector! and others in the season immediately following the scientific examination. Under the old order of things, when manuscripts were temorarily availa ble, the newspapers - could get -at the facts at a comparatively early stage, and when much of the information was fresh and newsy. .;; . But now the assistant secretary of the interior, who, ; in the absence of Secretary" Hitchcock is the "whole thing," sets out at once to exert his authority by issuing an order forbid-, ding the publication of extracts from the manuscript. This means that the reports will be held back until late in the summer or fall, and possibly into the next winter, and in this way the public will be prevented from get ting the benefit of the most import ant facts for a whole year, in . effect. - The Appetite Grows. )--Berlin, May 13. The' Berliner Tages Zeitung, which prints a Wash ington dispatch asserting that the United States government is think ing of securing one of the Azores as coaling station, says that "the appe tite grows with eating." 1 . -;.: wt- Dublin Paper Seized. Dublin, May 13. The police to night seized William O'Brien's week ly paper, the Irish People. It is re ported that the seizure was made on account of reflections upon King Ed ward.. , Watch Trust Falls -Through.' - - Boston, May 13. A director of the American Waltham Watch company says : "The officers of the American Waltham Watch company ; have in formed the promoter of the proposed watch trust that that company will not become a party to any consolida tion of watch companies. Other com panies have also declined to go into the trust movement, so the" combine hag been abandoned. ' - REGULARS RETURN. Philippne Army to Be Reduced 25,000 Men Orders Sent to MacArthur. Washington, May 15. By direc tion of the secretary of war, instruc tions were cabled to General Mac Arthur to send to San Francisco at his earliest convenience, the follow ing organizations of the regular army : Fourteenth, Eighteenth and Twenty third regiments of infantry ; Fourth regiment of cavalry; Twenty ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty second and Thirty third companies of coast artillery; First, Eighth, Tenth, Twelfth and Thirteenth batteries of field artillery. - General MacArthur is instructed to transfer to other commands all men in the above organizations in their first enlistment having more than one year to serve," also men wishing to remain in the Philippines. All men of other organizations having three months or less to serve, not in tending to enlist, are to be transferred to the returning organizations. It is expected that this movement of troops will begin soon after July 1 next, by which time the homeward movement of the volunteers will have been completed. - It is the intention of the department to replace the home coming regulars, so far as the mili tary conditions in the Philippines re quire it, with troops recently organ ized in this country under the pro visions of the army reorganization act. These movements are predi cated on the policy of the adminis tration to -reduce the army in the Philippines to 40,000 after the return of the volunteers. The war department today pub lished the reorganization order pre scribing the' strength of the various branches of the military service upon the basis of a total army of 77,287 men and a staff of 2,783, the enlisted strength being 74,504 men. By the order eaehcavalry regiment will con sist of 12 cavalry troops of 85 enlisted men each, making, the total strength of the cavalry branch 15,840 men. The coast artillery will consist of 126 companies of 109 enlisted men each, making 13,734, and the field artillery of 30 batteries of. 160 men each, mak ing a total artillery force, field and coast, of 18,862 enlisted men. The 30 infantry regiments will consist of 12 companies of 104 enlisted men each, making the infantry strength 38,520 enlisted men. The engineer, battalions will have four companies of 104 enlisted men each, with a band and will, have a strength of 1,282 en listed men. COST HIM HIS LIFE. Man Who Stepped Aside to Let Anothei Gain Safety First. ? -Indianapolis, May 15 While Wil liam Phelps, of Richmond, Ky., and James Staplebury, of this city, were cleaning out the inside of an eight foot upright boiler at the Cerealine mills today, an employe turned on the steam, thinking the cock tight. It leaked, . and. the scalding steam poured in on the two men. The only exit was up a ladder. Both men jumped for the ladder. Phelps reached it first, took one step and stopped He jumped aside and shouted, "You go up first Jim, you are married. " - Staplebury sprang, up the ladder and' escaped with slight burns. Though Phelps followed at his heels, his act of heriosm cost him his life. Both men" were being cooked .when Phelps jumped aside. By the time he had followed Staplebury up the ladder the flesh was dropping from his limbs. He lived for two hours in great agony. ..Both men are colored. GOT AWAY FROM MOTERMAN. ' Three Passengers on a Trolley -Car. Seriously Hurt-About 100 Bruised. " New York, May 15. Ah open trol ley car, in which were packed about 115 people, got away from the motor man near Fort Lee, N. J., and dashed down Leona hill. Every person on the car was bruised and three serious ly hurt, but only one of them, the conductor, is likely to die. The heavily loaded car had started down an incline a! quarter of "a mile 1 in length when the motorman lost -control. The car was going so fast that no one dared to jump off. ; The road is a winding one. - At the foot of the hill it curves sharply. When the front trucks hit the curve they started around and made it. The rear ones followed part of the way. . The wrench upon the car, however, as it swung about, was so great that the body was torn and lifted from the trucks and rolled over and hit the ground. The passengers were caught in and under the car and were piled in a heap. ;-:-,' - '" 1 i. ..r. :a" More American Liners. ; Philadelphia, May - 15. The New York Shipbuilding Company, at its new yards near Gloucester, N. J., has begun work on four steel passenger and freight "steamships for . the At lantic Transport : Company. Two boats are 600 feet long and the others 500 feet and they are to trade from Philadelphia, New York and Balti. more to London. The steamships are not intended to be flyers, bflt will run at a moderate speed. They will have a canying-pacity of 6,000 tons ol cargo, Cables Art Interrupted. New York, May 15. The Commer cial Cable Company has issued the following notice : "We are advised that the cables' between Tschifu and Tsingtau and Tsingtau and Shanghai are interrupted." . New Naval Academy. ' The naval academy at Annapolis will be a fine structure. . When com pleted the building will' have coBt 3," 000,000. " RIVER BOAT SINKS MISSISSIPPI RIVER STEAMER HIT ' A SUNKEN SNAG. - The City of Paducah Wrecked at Brunkhorst Landing, Illinois Two Passengers and Over Twenty Colored Deckhands Find a '. Watery Grave Divers Searching for the Passenger List Grand Tower, 111., May 15. The steamer City of Paducah sank" in 25 feet of water five minutes after strik ing a snae while backinc nut. frnm Brunkhorst - landine-. The bodieo nf two passengers who were drowned- nave been recovered, and 22 members of the crew, most of them Neeroes. . are missing. All of the officers were savea. . The nassene-fir list hna nnt lun re covered. A diver is searching for it. vniy tne texas ana hurricane decks are above water, which reaches to the skylights of the cabins. All the : staterooms are completely filled with , water. The steamboat drifted a third of a mile below the landing before she sank. The first mate says the boat went down within three minutes after striking the snag. . He was on the cabin deck and escaped by climb ing through the skylight. - -- It is supposed that most of the mis sing deck hands who were on the lower deck were washed down the river The Knit lim Hnvn ,l,t inn feet from the Illinois shore, the fore pan oj tne hurricane deck being under watpr. omuMN r u total wreck. ' The coroner of Mur physboro, I1L , is now holding an in quest while the diver is searching for more bodies. . NUMBER. OF SOLDIERS KILLED. Due to Explosion of Mines Buried on Fron. ; . tier Chinese Provinces. ' . .- . Victoria, B. C. Mav 15. News was brought by the steamer Glenoglc that, a severe earthquake occurred at Yokohama April 24, lasting fully two minutes. No damage -was reported. The Asiatic reports that on April 22, 150 French and 30 Germans were killed and wounded by the explosion of mines buried on the frontier of Shan Si and Chih Li. . The China Times repjrts the capt ure of a brigand headquarters, where Chinese were pillaging the neighbor hood under the leadership of -10 for eign soldiers. The Germans killed 20 Chinese and captured a junk, on which a cannon was mounted. The new 700 ton liner Sobranon Was Wrecked on tha Oh in pan cnast near Lung Ying prior to the sailing " of the Glenogle. The passengers and mans were savea. xne vessel was .a total wreck. A mixed battalion of English and Japanese and French had a sharp en- gagment with 100 Boxers near Shan backwan. The fip-ht. lasfpH all Av and a number of Chinese were" killed. . Ihe British lost two men wounded, ' the French one, and the Japanese ; two.; . : There had been 110 cases nf nln and 104 deaths, and 65 cases of small pox and 43 deaths in Hong Kong from January 1 to April 15. LOCATED BY OFFICALS. Craft Which Has Been Used to Smuggle r 1 J in Opium. - Seattle, May ; 15. The means of the transportation for the 585 pounds seized several days ago hy the local customs officers and perhaps of tons of other smuggled opium was locatnl today by Customs Inspectors Delaney and Brinker and seized. It is a name-' less naptha launch 25 feet long. The craft was found secreted on the tide flats in a resdience . boat house near Moran Bros. ' shipyards. The launch was euuirjted with wvml msnlino tanks, half a dozen cases of gasoline, numerous rubber sacks used as recept acles for the contraband opium, rub ber clothing, dark lanterns, red lights and many paint pots, indicating that the launch had dmnirpd hor Alnr almost with the changes of the moon, ana a smau arsenal oi rines, revolvers ana snotguns. -jno one was found in Dos8ession of or a claimant, fnr t.ho seized launch, which would indicate that the head men in the gigantic smuggling scheme have escaped, at least temporarily. . k Militia Still on Hand. ' Jacksonville, Fla., May 15. The relief association is doing stupendous work, particularly in the commissary and labor departments. There is abundant work for everybody who can do manual labor, but difficulty is ex perienced in getting the colored men to work. The militia is still in pos session of the city, and will remain here as long as the committee of the relief-association thinks best. The liquor men have approved the action of the" governor in closing the bar rooms and have endorsed it. - Clad They Are Gone. London, ' May -14. Considerable amusement has been caused by the publication of a dispatch from China saying great relief was felt among European troops at the withdrawal Of the Americans, who were too free arid easy for the military etiquette of the : Continental forces. . - . . ; ' Oi all the British colonies New Zea land has sent the largest proportion of its strong youth to fight on thp African veldt. -