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About Bohemia nugget. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1899-1907 | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1900)
BOHEMIA NUGGET ruhlUhfi Kftrr rrltfurt COTTAGE GKOVE ORKGON 1 If $ OF I WEEK oroirjlirnlv Revlnw of tllP Import ant Happening of the lt Wiwk Cnllnil From the Telrgrnph Coluinni. William Ahlos, nn old resident of Tacoinu, committed suicide. Rich gold strikes luno boon made an the Koyukuk, some clnlma staked out yielding $4 to tho pan. Robbers hold up nn Illinois Central train nonr Pnducnh, Ky., blew np the express car and secured $10,000. The empress dowager ha,sprderod the suppression of the Boxers and the protection of tho legations at Pekin. A Pullman car wns turned upside down near Redding, C'ul., the nine oc cupants were all more or less injured, but nono fatally. Thirty-six liodles, horribly disfig nred, have been recovered from th hull of tho steamship Saale, rocontly bnrned at llobokcn, '. J. County Commissioner Campbell, or Spokane county, Wash., was killed by an O. It. & J, passenger train near Lotah, Idaho. He was crossing the track in a boggy. A flood of sold is pouring in from Alaska. Tho raceipts of the govern ment assav office at Seattle in the fis cal year" were .$13,630,326. This month's recepts may exceed f 0.000, 000. The Chinese government Is sorry for the recent outbreaks, but holds the powers hlamable. The empress dow ager siiya the attacks on Tien Tsin were the result of the bombardment of Tien Tfin. Savages of the Caroline islands at tacked a shipwrecked Rritish crow, Aeiiously wounding two of the British, and wore only driven off when an American cattle dealer caine to the rescue of the Biitish. Os the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, a deliberate attempt to wreak the Washington express, bearing $3,000,- 000 in gold to tho snbtresanry in New j York, came very near being successful at Folsom, a short distance outside of .Philadelphia. The general freight agents of leading Western roads have formed un arrange ment for tho pooling of business. Joint agencies are to be established at Kan sas City, Omaha and St. Paul. A joint agent will be placed in charge ol the tralli o at each of these cities. Colombian revolutionists, under Gen eral Juan B. Gonzales and Simon Cbaux, have captured the city of Popa yan, n capital of the department of Cauca. On tho march to Popayan the revolutionists took all the cities near the Ecuadorian frontier, including tht Taport Tunico. Boers have retired from Senekal. British stormed and took tho town of Bethlehem, Dewet retreating. The empress dowager again holds the reigns of government in China. Three men were killed by the explo sion of a boiler at an oil works in Astoria, Oregon. The total casualties of the British, as it result of the Boer war, up to date are 48,188 officers and men. St. Louis street car strikers again have their busses running in opposition to the Transit Company. The French ship L'Aqnitaine has sailed from Toulon with 850 infantry and artillery for China. New Vork tailors are again planning big strike. Contractors are violating agreements made several years ago. Dr. Charles F. McDonald, the organ izer of our postal money order system, died at Hamilton, Ontario, aged 71 years. Southern negroes may go to Hawaii. Plantation owners of the island will wake them good offers with a view to dispensing with tho troublesome Jap laborers. A plot to assassinate President Mo Kiuley has been frustrated. It war concocted) y a group of Spanish and Cuban conspirators who had head quarters in New York. George A. Morse, an aged and abso lutely helpless patient in the Agnew's insane asylum, at San Jose, Cal., was slowly boiled to death in a bath in the men's ward of that institution. He was placed in a bath tub, and after the hot water was turned on the attendant left tho room for a towel, forgot his patient, and did not return until the imbecile was fearfully burned. A serious lire is raging on Bull moun tain, Railroad creek und Pompey's .Pillar, on tho north side of the Yellow stono river, Montana. It is extending east to the Mussel Shell river, and is swooping tho range like tinder, as everything is dry. A late report says that 20 head of horses belongiug to Itainsey, of Billings, were uurned. Vast flocks of sheep uro in great danger. During the last .13 years tho popula tion of Germany has increased 14 per cent, but the number of doctors in the German empire has increasod no less than 60 per cent. If this ratio is kept up, any statistician can forsoe the time when every German will bo a doctor, und the whole German popula tion, having no patients on whom to practice, will have to migrate to fields where physicians are a uhade lees common LAI hR NEWS. Ten thousaud Boors are massing near i'retorla. Domnnd for harvest hands lu Knptorn Oregon is enormous. More soldiers nro needed for garrison duty in tho Philippines. Chinese reformers nro using every cn doavor to save the foreigners. A mountain of gold bearing quartz is said to have been found in tho Hluo river district. A daughter of Theodore Havemnycr, the sugar king, shot and aocidoutly killed hersolf. Manila is now the counterfeiter's paradiso. Big snap in niakluK Ameri can dollars out of Mexican dollar. Andy Smith, 70 years old, was struck with paralysis at Knlama, Wash., and when found had been four days without food or wator. Heavy rain storms are raging in Northern Wisconsin. All railroads have suffered from washouts. Hail did great damage to crops. It is reported that 10.000 Boors nre preparing to emigrate to Amorlca. President Krugor will rofuse to surren der until his supplies nro exhausted, Theodore Groil, aged 00, an employe of the woolen mills at Oregon City, Or., was accidentally drowned while attempting to got into a boat to row home. Tho Amorican liark McNcar was lost on n reef near Laysiin island, near Japan. Tho passengers and crew spent two days on the water and landed on Laysan island. Aumiral Seymour was compelled to shoot his own wounded during the re cent disastrous retreat of the Pekin re lief expedition. They preferred it to tortne by barbaroup Chinamen. Judge W. II. Washington, of Phila delphia, a direct descendant of Augus tine Washington, father of Goorga Washington, is dead at Castle Creek Hot Springs, Arizona, of consumption, lie was 45 years old and a lawyer of recognized ability. A Holland submarine torpedo boat may protect the port of Portland, Or. Two of tho new onos soon to bo con structed will be assigned to service on the Pacific coast, and one may come to the Columbia river. The Washington government will take every precaution against violence to Chinese in the United States, winch Is intimated in some sections, in order that the force of our demand for satis faction from China shall not be weak ened by counter claims. American athletes were successful at tho Paris tournament. An all day right between the Boers and British at Platkop resulted indeci sively. The Russian minister at Pekin is said to have been boiled to death by Boxers. Nine houses were entirely consumed and many others damaged by fire at Dunsmuir, Cal. A German paper says the seizure of Kiao Chon has caused the present trou ble with China. Fire at Durant, I. T., wiped out the greater portion of the town, causing a loss of $100,000. All foreigners have been removed from the town of Wn Chon, China, and are safe at Shanghai. United States Senator John II. Gear, of Iowa, died at Washington City of heart disease, aged 75 years. A large part of the business district of Prescott, Arizona, were burned, causing a loss of $1,000,000. The steamer City of Topeka ai rived at Seattle fiom Lynn canal with be tween $750,000 and $1,000,000 in gold dust from Klondike. Twenty square miles of forests were bunred by a fire started by a firecracker near Grub Gulch, Cal. The loss will be hundreds of thousands. General rain ban fallen over nearly all India during the past few days and the prospects are that crops havo im mensely improved. The famine area has generally been benefitted. Eight-hour shifts for all mderground men at the United Yerde mine and an increase of 15 per cent in wages for miners in certain portions of tho mine were announced at Jeiome, Ariz. Advices were received from Sydney that tribal wars are raging at the Solo mon group. There has boon a tierce battle between tho Mariau (Boys) and Malata tribes. The losses on each side were heavy. Dynamite was exploded under a Transit car in North St. Louis, and four passengers were injured A su burban car, the only union line in the city, aocidently ran iato a strikers' 'bus wagon and injurod 12 occupants, two seriously. Judge Thomas Ayer, of the United Statos court of appeals nt St. Louis, has handed down an opinion doolaring that John P. Reese, the Iowa Miners' Union official who was sonteucod to imprisonment in Kansas for violation of a strike injunction, was illegally restrained of his liberty, and granted a writ of habeas corpus releasing him. Judge Ayer ruled that the lower court erred in induing Reese under tho in junction. Robert Fitzsimmous will meot both Sharkey and Ruhlin noxt month. Gold hunters in Russia are governed by arbitrary laws, ono of which com pels them to turn over all gold they may ilpd to the imperial treasury, which pays the miner at a standard rate. This law may seem tyrannical, but it has one inestimablo advantage no gold digger in Russia can tell extra ordinary romancos about the richness of his claim when the official figures art there to stop him. I MILLION DOLLAR FIRE Entire Business District of Prescott, Ariz., Burned. FEW BUSINESS HOUSES LEFT Mhiij Whii WrrnOnmforUbly Fluid N"" lViiillf.ai Territory'. ''HIcIhI On.tu MutUllc llatl a'oio.r ball. Prescott, Ariz.. July 17. A sceno ol groat desolation and a fueling of deep est gloom porvades this town today. All tliot remains of the principal busl uoss portion of tho town is tottering walls and piles of charred and burn ing debris. Tho firo, which started at 10:45 o'clock last night, was not under con trol until 3 o'clock this morning, when tho ilchtors wout n considerable dis- tanco in advance of tho llamosand blow up tho buildings on tho south sldo of Goodwin street, preventing tho tiro from crossinc that streot. Tho most conservative estimates of tho total lossos nro from $1,000,000 to $1,500,000. Tho burned district ombracos live blocks, in which woro located tho prin cipal morcantilo housos, both uanKs, both telegraph offices,, the thrco news paper oillcea. four hot"olst and every saloon and restaurant oxcopt ono in tho town, besides ecores of privuto resi dences. To add to tho p-ovniliug gloom, n high wind has prevailed all aay, sending smoko, dust and burning embers in every direction, requiring tho greatest vigilanco to prevent an other outbreak of tho flames. Owing to tho chaotic condition existing today, it is impossible to obtain an accurate account of the loss or individual insur ance. From interviews witli insurance agents, the total insurance does not ex ceed $350,000. At daylight this morniuc teams were at work hauling lumber to the public pluza, and this evening it is covored with tents and temporary frame build ings. The occupants will bo ready for business tomorrow. Both banks have secured temporary quarters and will be open tomorrow. The Bashford-Bur-meister Company will be open for busi ness tomorrow in thoir warehouse, two blocks from tlus plaza. Hon. W. A. Clark, of the United Verde Copper Company, who was visit ing tho works at Jerome, wired a draft for $500. All the sufferers from the fire are provided with food, shelter and clothing, and it is not thought any outside assistance will bo required. The only business houses remaining in tho town are Goldwater Bros., A. Blumberg and .Mrs. R. R. Blaine, dry goods; Joseph Dougherty, T. W. Otis and J. I. Gardner, grocers, und W. W. Ross and W. P. Covilland, drug stores. The express office and postoffice wore both out of the firo limits, but thn latter had a clote call. All the mail and effects were ready to move at a moment's notice. The office of the supervisor of census for the territory was located in the Prescott National Bank building, und xmtainod all the official statistics of tho consus of tho territory, but they were removed to a place of safety. The Western Union opened its office this morning in u grocery store, and the Postal has opened an office at the railroad depot. The electric light poles and wires were in the burned dis trict, and the town will be in darkness until they can be replaced. The com pany also owns tho telephoue system, and loses more tlian'-4lialf its instru ments. Many citizens who yesterday were comfortably fixed are today homeless and penniless, a number losing both their business places and their resi donees. An army of carpenters have been busy all day putting up tempor ary structures, many of which have been completed und will open for busi ness tomorrow. Of tho three printing offices in town all that was saved was about 30 cases of type by the Courier. The destruc tion of the others was complete. J. C. Martin, proprietor of the Journal Miner, saved only his books. Included in his loss was a Mergenthaler linotype, installed in tho office only three mouths ago. Tho two papers have already made arrangements for continuing pub lication, although but little insurance was carried by either. Most of tho heaviest losers will rebuild at once. The origin of the firo was unknown until this evening, when It was learned that a mau rooming over the bottling works was lying in bed reading by candlelight when a piece of looso paper on the wall caught lire. He ran out to give the alarm, and before others reached the placo the fire was beyond coatrol. Mar Ituln. In Tumi, Dallas, Tex., July 17. Northern Texas bus been deluged by rains for more than 12 hours, and the indica tions are that the storm bus only be gun. The downpour at Dallas was ter rjfio. Streams uie swollen ana trains are delayed because of washouts. Youugstown, O., July 14. Tho severe storm last night caused a sud den rise in .Mill creek, sweeping away a bridge and washing out railroad tracks, causing damage amounting to 50,000. 8)100,000 fruit vim lu Cnlir,.rnl. Newcastle, Cal., July 17. Firo to day destroyod all the fruit houses and leading business houses of the town. The loss will oxceed $100,000. Over 100,000 boxes of fruit woro burned. Tho Southern Paolllo Company was tho heaviest loser. Their loss in fruit in cars and rolling stock is estimated at $35,000. Some women amount to nothing out side of thoir church. HUNDREDS BURNED, Oil Ta..U KM'lu.lr.l Soill-rliiS ' m" llirniiir I'fitiile. Now York. July W.-A special from Boston to tho Herald suyss ' eXploionofanullt.nk In HoinrvHI hJtnhtht nearly a Imndro, ,h, us woro more or loss Injuivd. and o y this morning two woro ij1rl U ; Many of tho Injured are lu tlu Co n bridge. Somcrvlllo and MuNsochusotts general hospitals, while taken to houses near tho scene of tlio explosion. i.i. In tho yard ol tho Boston Mliw Railroad, near-tho old Mclean asylum, among more than n thousand rolght cars filled with coal and general mot-, chntidiso. woro throo oil tanks ol t no Union Oil Company. When ono of tho cars caught firo and made a b are that could bo seen all ovei Somorvlllo. hun dreds of peoplo Hooked to tho yards. Tho Somorvlllo dromon arrived prompt ly enough, but had to enrrv hoso through all kinds of pl.u'cs, while the llrojiuriiod briskly and the crowd drew closer and closer. It Is estimated that soon after tho lire stinted fully 1 .001) persons woro In tho freight yards, and scores of tho most daring ore on top of freight cars near the tiro. Suddenly thorn wusn rumbling noise. Ono gioat thoot of Ilaiuo shot Into tho air, and a imgo oil tank which had been on a ear wont up i,t,'r Ing blazing oil In nil direction. 'I ho huge tank of oil, ono of three, on as many cars, had exploded. Tho burn ing oil foil uKin men, women and chil dren In tho throng, who slulokod with pain and torror. Six men on top of ono box ear woro thrown to tho gronud with thoir clothing on Hie. Men and women, with their garments burning, run about tho yard in terror. Soma were so badly burned that they drop ped. Those who wine not on lire help ed thorn, and woro themselves burned. Meanwhile tho rullioad men wero performing acts of heroism. Tho oil tank whloh had exploded was on a car between two othors, and those weru in danger of going up at any minute. A locomotive was backed in and started to draw out tho train. A railroad moil run np, throw a heavy sleeper bouoHtli tho wheels of tho burning tank, tho coupling broke, tho ear snipped "' the oil tanks wero separated. Fifteen pcrVons wero taken to the Somcrville hospital. Joseph llaydon, of euglno company No. I, who was standing on tho nil tank at the tlinu of the explosion, died early this morning. KETTELER TO BLAME. Would ut 'Hll tilillllminl (luitriU tot III I.t-Kiiliiui. New York. July 11!. A d sptach to tho Herald from Berlin says: A letter has just been published her fiom Lieutenant von liei-eh, attache of tho (ierniau legation at IVkin . It is dated May 21), anil shows that the early failure to iucmiMi tho guards ol the various . legations wn dnu to the action of the Into Baron von Kettoler. The letter states that after the first attack by the Jtoxers mi the Pekin Hankow railroad, a meeting; of tho ministers was held to ducido whether additional troops should be tent for to protect tho legations. Huron von Ket toler was very much opxcl to this being done, while the French minister was very much in favor of this course. The latter was, howeicr, overruled by his colleagues. M. I'ichon was so hurt by this refusal to ask for guards that he wept. Another factor that led the minister! to leach this unfortunate conclusion was the desire of the diplomat!" corps to take their usual summer holiday and it was feared that if additional troops wure sent for they would not Imj ubto to do so. Later on, as the Boxer movement ill creased, a second eouferencu of minis ters was called, at which it was re solved to bring detachments of at least 50 men to guard each legation. A Ituimnay l'rvlgtit Train. Iteddlnit, Cal., July Id. Last night, when a freight train bound for Oregon, drawn by two engines, was climbing tho heavy grade above Upton, a coup 1 ng gave way, and 30 cars, loaded with fruit, started back. They passed through Hisson seemingly at "tho rate of 70 miles an hour. Haifa mile bo low Siskin is the Pioneer Box Factory. Here seven of the cars broke loose and pitched over than embankment. The others continued op their mad course. At Big Canyon, three miles below Sls miii, the runaway train again parted, soino of tho cars flying tho track nud being dashed to pieces. Tho other half dozen continued over a high tres tle around a loop and finally shot off tho rails bolow Mott, uftei running 10 miles. All the timbers are in splin ters. Fortunately, no trains woro on souutered by tho runaway. UoIiWii Rnitglit lii the Act. Murshaltown, Ja., July 10. Four pieu wero cam-lit in tho net nf rnhl.ln.. Mason Whitohill's t'fliiernl stnrn at State Center today. A number of citi zens surrounded the hiillillnir n,,1 .. pitched battle ensued. Ben Whilehill, ano of tno proprietors, was shot in the leu. One of tliti rolilim-u wm ..iun wounded, and with one of his nesocl- ates was captured. Tho other two es caped. Political success, Hko anything else flnponds almost entirely on the amount of rustling a man does. Niirgrmm fur 'niio Noma. Washington. Jul V 1(1. Ah n rnaiiU of u conference today between Assist ant Secrotarv Tnlvor mi nnii..i of the marine hospital sorvico, two ud- munnai snrgbons imvo been ordered to proceed nt onco from Han 1Vi nlc.n to beuttlo, and thence by boat to Cape iiuiue, io assist in stamping out tho smallpox now epidemic at that place. When a woman riUlllsaa a ....... u her favorlite mode of abuse to chars that ha leads a dual liU. T News of Ropulso of Conflrmod. Alllos AMERICANS LOST OVER THIRTY vl,.. Tliiiiionitil I'rlrmlly riilnrin" OHI- ,.i.. Ilr.lrrr.l m,) Uf l'rtiit. Timnd -MlnltlrP Wll'a NllilMtliiu. Washington, July IH. 'I ho navy dpenrtmont this morning received olll vini confirmation from Admiral Homey of tho rovcrso of tho allied foicim at Tien Tsln on tho morning "f tho Ulth. Tho dispatch Is dated Clio Poo, July 10. and says: "Roisirteil that tho allied forces at tacked tho native city tho morning of the lilth. Russlaim on tho right, with tho Ninth infantry and murines (in h" Inlt. Tho loss of tho allied forces Is largo; Rusnlans, 100, including nrtil lory colonel; Americans over MO; Rrit ish over 40; .lnuiiiose, 5H, including colonel: French, 2ft. "Colonel lilsouui, Ninth Infantry, killed; also Captain Davis, murine corps. Captain l.oniley, Lieutenants Butler and lAMinurd wounded. "At 7 in tho evening ail allied attack on tho native city was repulsed, with groat loss. Returns yut Incomploloj details not yet eonlltiiiod. "RKMKY." Consul-General Ooodnow cabled to the state department from Hhunglinl under ttsluy's date that thoto is noth ing more to roisirt since his cablegram of tho Kith Inst. Tho dispatch report ed tho attack on the legations at Pekin a- alsiut to belgn. Mr. Goodnow's statement is lu direct ooutradiutloii of tho .Shanghai story that all foreign con suls wore informed Saturday hv Sheng that thu lcgatioiIhad fallen und the mlulsteis were killed. Without exception today tho foreign i ropreseutatlu-s in Washington nocepteil as practically certain that tho foreign legation and ministers at IVkin have leu wiMd out. Tho opinion Is Imsed on tho accumulating unolllciiil data that tho slaughtor occurred nlxiiit July ti or 7. F.vcn among tho high Chlueso olliclals hniMi has been alsiut given up, but they maintain that there is no olll cial information, mid that they are no much in tho dark as others. .11... . I......I.... ... .. ...111.... ..fTn... .... I JUT tllll,lliwi( itn . tu.i.i.i .,,. .... - .I.,... tho Chinesu minister, ulia is under .1 " " ""',r K"1""' l? sovero than that of tho American olli clals. He is seeking to show ill tho pres ent acute crisis that 110 matter how bad conditions may m in China, he is not tho les anxious to servo tho American Ieop1o and government, for he has taken groat pride in thu kindly mioii al 1 elation between lum and the peo ple hero. Minister Wli declares un worthy of belief tho cable rejsirt that Shout:, director of telegraphs and jmihIs at Shanghai, know of the killing of tho foreign ministers at tho time ho made a recent suggest Ion that foreigneis bo escorted out of IVkin it the allied forces would not advance. An 11 mutter of fact, Minster Wti statos that tho Chi tieso olliclals have no better means of learning the truth of atTuirs in Pekin than the foreigners, as nil the usual means of eouimuiilcntiou are suspend ed. But ho points out that Hheiig could not havo known of tho death of tho foreigners, else he would not havo made a proisisal that thu foreigners bo escorted out of tho city. This latter is considered proof positive by Mr. Wu that Sheng considered tho foreigners ulive. Itiialnrx !nlirriitr! Uy .Strike. St. Louis, July 18. Tho St. Louis Transit Company today filed in tho city register's olllco its returns of trips and passengers fur the quurter ending Juno !J(l last, as required by law. These reports are particularly interest ing, as showing tho decrease in tho company's business, caused by I ho striko. During tho first three months of this your, before tho strike was in augurated, tho Transit Company, ac cording to its returns, carried 27,058, 1585 passengers, its cars making l.!!()7, H25 trips in so doing. According to its returns for tho three months ending June :if). Its cars made only 447,041) trips ami carried 1!), 7:1:1,021 passen gers. Hurl by I'ltUIng Wnlls. Chrago, July 18. Nine persons were Injured, ono fatally, by falling walls lu a firo caused by lightning tonight ut Michigan street and Doarliorn avenue. Fireman Robert Meany will die. Tho total damage amoniitN to noarlv $200,000. Henry F. Vehonioyer. & Co , proprietors of tho broom com fac tory, estimates thoir loss at $11,0,000, and J. Dreyfus & Co., furriers, at $30, 000. Attfiiniit to Wreck I'aul '1'rulu. Jnnotion City, Kan., July 17. An attempt was made to wreck and prob ably to rob tho Union Pnclflo "flyor" about four miles this sldo of Manhattan this evening. Tho Hwitch was turned bat tho ougineor succeeded in stopping tho ti nf 11 before it hud gouo hut 11 short distance in on the siding. A gun, dyniiiiiilo and u bottle, supposed to contain nitroglycerine, wero found hidden under a pile of old tics, VI it ml It 11 rut In 'I'ikiii, Coloman, Tex., July 18. Fiftoon lives aro known to have been lost in a cloudburst hero today. Ton bodies havo boon recovered, but only two wero idfintillod. It is feared that many more lives wero lost in tho vulloy he low Coleman. Tho cloudburst, which followed throo days unprecedented rainfall, caused Foul's creek to burst its bauks and rush through Colonmu, a village of loss thun 1,000 inhabit taut. MORE MEN n"E NEEuC ..... rutin An .. Inly 18.hm. ' . . ''""!. -Inly ib.. Wr ioiiiiuh whlel, i. ,! oral MaoArtlmr fr of tho Is amis. ., l.r Ioih..1 it tho demand whlel, I. . JiKlKinont that ltm.( , , m,m,,,,, ,0''H'IOlsh A or T"l ty over tho Phil., "?r,w?.oJi wtte.npted to lu.ld m ur mm. linn iirikii " . v,"uivnn,, liii.i ...... . " I' I wVlIIPfia . I " v, tun A i. ...i "' h. ... I1.....11.. . . .. .. .1.1.111.1 in III H. TI,.. iuii iiiimi niifiiiKi, ,.. ... . lum llltll till! Im,u...... . raotiil 1111 Illll ....... " HU 1 I.. Mlliitmiun ....1- .. "nil emtii..' "'"J Illll I'm. f" aru ooeuiiieii. "i t. I'ho Moron am a ei,..i . win. i no on ii.r-1 . - ' b Ulmwlu ...it .1... 1 thn 1.1 111. W It lot , , , HID Ufl 1 whloh are scatter,.,! 1 ,. 1 .. "HUM -""tv tti ilium ntiiiiit....!. - " U III itnA .r ....I.... 1. ... K.1T k . " INIIh L K 'us. lllOl.gh ol " " II I luiit ...... villi, I.. I. . . 'II ... ..i. niiek 11 mi ,.. ... Mnu-ti 11 1 Ml...... ...I... . . IB .. . ...... mux thmn.w j iimir ri.fiiiii.. 1..1 . t- 1 "n '""I pcari, nncAT ...... "AS 0PNtD Will Kml Only w.U, Mr,.,,,,,.,, New York, .lulv IH.Xu the Trlhnii., fr 1 1 abM iiiniiiiliir or 11. u - A great war has nt..n.i 1. " iimih's 111 the irnMit.. U'llll !M lllmlili.t .... . . . WU1 B..,,iii.i ti,... fir.i.. n L-flUillTll I IITII 1M1II Hlitlrt tl. . . . e-MLU I eilU Tmc HiiiKlll. so Hint the l iiiw HKKroKatos .Ti.iKin .u iiimmnn Kiuwiy uriiibiiDg Into 1 War has not Is-en fomuill iiiil it 1 n in tintitpukd ...iti. .. . . ... . -i'Hvnnl nun rimki Iinil TMUT If .u.i.ll. . . . OVlirtimtWII tlllll tllii in.nl huu 11 rrriPB 111 iMiniiHMiti nA 1 inui iiiliih nun in iiiiifiriirnf wi. WAtllfl 1W1 flXl lttfjul n..ll...l inn i(iriiuiiirM in ii 11. llullnt. ..mm "K""K. "Ull II .......(. .u 1 rinluiliri uf flu lit Mttli.nj ..111 i 14.-.t, I ... - ble. Ibis Is nut the tncrlc-aa tUt, tno iins-iiHii. .iiiiitnco, Orricii eyes tlxiil iisu futuio pronsca coniiiuwls, and the l uslljb ril an India in Central Aniu. A Trim tf !riinlOi. Tint Imvn i' nrcilrri'il 111 kin ton street. Tho coriiMi of iwi ..... - - n ' - - 11, III.., ,1111) ,1 l.lll .lll.l'.lV V. 1 ui... 1... f mh fitft IKMIJ 1 fin "i "Ri (Vtwrwi iiiuiiivrn " - 1 1 . . 1 .. t 11 .iMni nn riHf tnnij vi inn unui - Illll ISIV WI1N Flllll. Ill M H"r.. rrmii Iitnlln t Chlot. r....ii i..lf iu tho Fotirleentn ininmrr u.. iiaiuirv 01 iiiu 1-11111 j ... . 1 Tlin nrnnrHtioiK Which ' f" Klntk li,fu,.trr. will Crry SW 1 .1 o ifir.i. rn 11 iiiiiii. audi)1 ' " . . l,a. nf l.nnii.nnii rnnuiis, vv- In r.llll ...Mil ifir LI11LU ... . mnn it ...in ..i.... ...... unvpii law" .....l ylv ineli howitzer, munition. Tho hospital .in going to China. .r ........ nir ci.l .... In 10. i.,M i.nMinrei si""1: ......... 1.4.nA IJllUI"'. U.J V. . .... ...p., ., ,ko. 1 .. . . .1 n fli.lllflllHLllll.v. ' . ..it ti.A nnnco r . . ... .. . i .i.iiiiim .... .i.n innuu.; tnrowini: siouun - . ,,,,, - . . ... iM.nar.l lu' urm.lri Iflll 111(1111. n "IT. ..' . .. ....! nnlOKIIl ' till) lllSllLMUUIl Ul iici . dred Chinese in huusa - ... . ... . ixi. . tho iilaco during tno jib -: ".....I.,. nint"u rmnn .niiv i , . ,l. 3 iiiinniuij . ...i.irnDJ nun jusiiun a .....-"-- u. . ... . .i an rnuvi- Italian missions imi have been usBnnlted, "iVre at St. Pn1, . , " . ... tin KiU noon destroyod flvo uttinii iiiiiiuii1' v ..ii rruT ' . ..A. L'nilTIl Ulf . .1 I ILTi aiiui , Z t S52OO.000. ;.raei wind blowiug, buildings audjr 'B;DberllltJ.