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About Bohemia nugget. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1899-1907 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1901)
BOHEMIA NUGGET. rUhd Xtott Friday. COTTAGE GROVE. . . .OREGON. EVENTS OF THE DAI A Cranprtfctrulve Review cf ttic Imports , rupptnfeji of the Past Week PrtwnUd la a Coodtmed Form Which It Moti Utely to Prov of kttrat la Oar Hu? 1-xkrt, Marquis I to Arrived t Washington. Kellgiou exerckes opened the Yale U'CMteMlBl. Otaielawof Wahingta k tiiousjht to be defective. Cuba's imports show a decroa.", the r-parts in iacreato. Kain storms did much dam? to property at Skagway. Famine conditfatos are proclaimed in five wire Rkn district. Grieving over ber dual life caused a Chicago womaa to kill lierseit. There is a possibility that the threat ened Misers' strike in France may be averted. Admiral Bodies recommends that the Havana drrdoek be seat to the Philippines. , Another dot to slaughter Ameri case ia Saatar w&s frustrated. Re:a forcemeats are being rushed to the island. American troops there an ticipate hard fighting. Ex-Governor Pilkbury, of Minne sota, is dead. i-ive. me were killed by an acci dent is the New York sabway. Londoa police are guarding the Jaeksees to prevent a lyaehiag. The French government prepar- ag for trouble ia the coal Sera. Eagtaad aad Russia come to as agreement ob the Afghan question. Bulgarian Minister SaratotT protests against Consul Dickinson's c arges. OregOB batter in tins comes in kr first honors at Pan-American exposition. The Agricultural department is planning to develop the industries of Hawaii. Five band red bolomen attacked a detaehmeat of the Ninth Infaatry ia Samar, killing 10 aad wounding 6. The insurgents were repulsed, leaving many deed oe the field. A gains Wo is posing as a martyr. Famiae riots have broken out in Russia. Sixto Lopez is being closely watched at Hong Koag. The typhoon at Manila was the worst in 20 years. A Japanese pirate ship starts ob a cruise from Formosa. Threats were made against Jadge Cantrill at the Powers trial. million FAMINE IN RUSSIA. Government ReKel li Necessary la F1vt .Hor Sofftrlnj Dotrkts. St. Petersburg; Oft. 22. Aeting under additional information from the coventor of the province of Sa mart, the minister of the interior has orrV-iallr proclaimed famiae cemdi tkm in iiv more district in this j ravine. This means that the bad harvest has already made itself so keenly felt that a special medical and relief ornnisation is deemed neces sary for that districts. It i likely that the Ikt will le added to from time to time daring the winter. ; The minister also publkbed today a detailed report aWxit the relief riven to seven Mfeerian districts, rorty thoneand rouble were aseisraed. The preheat indication are that ' little in formation about the famine will be published in Russian papers which k not riven out by the minister of the interior. The papers have been given to understand that incorrect informa tion or "colored" articles about the famine will not be tolerated, and the Rasskn editors know when they have been spoken to. The bad harvest in rortkms of Siberia last rear and this year has bad the effect of turning a j part of the tide of Siberian emigre tion back toward Ruwia. According to an official tource, i,74o emigrants and 519,721 men whom the peasant communes seat to spy oat the land went to Siberia between January 1 and September IT, and 19.7SS emi grants and 12.G19 envoys returned. In addition to famine a circum stance that deters emigration and occasions the return of many is the exhaustion of available farm land. ! It is a fact that is not sufficiently nn derstood abroad that portions of Si- bene are alreadv fullv occupied. This is true of nearly all good and conveniently accessible agricultural land in West Siberia. Recent settlers have been assigned lands distant frum the railroad or navigable rivers, or have received forest and marsh lands which it would not rwv tbem to till under present conditions. With additional railways, with new markets tor est Siberian grain in the hast Siberian, Mongolian and Manchurian mining regions, and with better modes nf cultivating the ground there will be room lor more settlers in est Siberia, but the plain truth k that there is little room for peasants there BOW. NEWS OF THE STATE :ms of interest from all PARTS OF OREGON. CefBBKTtUI and Fhundtl tutr-Ttnine,! of Im portance A Brief Rkw cf Vt Ototh nj Impre-tRwatj of tK Many laduitritt Throcjhoet Our Thriving Cctrvroonrtilth Utut Mtrltt Report TUNNEL CAVED IN. SENTENCED TO BE HANGED. Nicaragua bays a half dollar cruiser freaS Germany. Three mea were injured ia a trolley car coiKsioB on the Vaaeouver line. Chester Andersoe crashed to death oa Morrison street bridge, Portland. The aavy department asks for an appropriation of nearly IICO.000,000. Secretary Gage was the principal speaker before the banters' coaveo- t The new Manchurian treaty k oa the lines of the one lately with drawn by .Russia. Quarantine oi e ex ref orts 90 lepers aad 1R4 ekaa persons ia the Molokai sottlemeatt ia Hawaii. Orgaais&tioB auxiliary ta the Me Kialey memorial assoeiatioa are Le iag tonacd throngboBt the eoaatry. Aa aglfea clergyman was obliged to pay duty oa a box of souvenir pam phlets intended lor distribution at Yale. Maliaeax has beea granted another new trjat. Salem warehoufemaa eharged with Jareeay by haile3. Omcsak of the Harris system met at catt Jaxe UHy Colombia k willing to accept the mediattoa of the Uattea tates. MaaipnbUioa faBe to hold ap priees ia the Jew lore sttok marxet. Steamship Albarta diverted from Saa Fraaeisee by strike trouble. De la aalx ballooB tnpacrosj the Jiesiterraaeaa was af&uare. ummx, asa., waeat saie aggrt- ad 3w,vui nothete at -N ceate. Bevolntionary oathreaks oecomd at Seville sad other Spaakh cities. The eonTeatioa of the Amerieaa Bcakors' asceiatioa o;aed at Mil watee. SevomI eaMera capitalists seadrep ngotativeg to the Malheur county, Orogoa, oil Adds. Gabaa eketioB law will be promul gated. Kiap Leof4d, of Beigiiia,will visit AaMtrioa. A geaeral strike of toh&eeo workers is oa at Seville, Spain. The patriae! ioreists of Ariiooa were receatly ezamiaed anew aader the direct ioa of the goaexal laad omc& The siliciaed logs lie ia the greatest abundance within aa area of eight square miles ia Apaoho county. Ja tome plaees they lie more thickly thaa they could bare stood while liria-g 33 trees, aad it is thought that they most have beea earned there by a swift onrrnt of water ia the mes oxoic age. A Cue of L'ncisil Drpravity la tht Array ta the PWKpptM UUodx. Washington, Oct. 22. George A. Raymond, an American aad formerly a private ia the Forty-first Volunteer infantry, was tried by military commis sion in the Philippines a short time ago on a triple charge of murder, rape aad robbery and sentenced to be banged. The records in this case, of unusual depravity, have just been received at the war department. Upon the muster out of the Fortv-first regiment, .Kamond went to the prov ince of i'ampaaga and endeavored to organize a hand of outlaws among his former comrades. Mav 7, while be was riding along a road near the bar rio of Saa Jose with Henry Bohn.wbo had also been a private in the Forty first Infaatry, and with whom he assumed to be on friend! v relations. Raymond treacherously turned oa hk companion and killed him with hk revolver and then emptied the dead man's pockets. Two days afterward, ia company with two privates of the Forty-first, Baymoad, garbed in the uniform of a United States. Army offi cer, entered the premises of a peace ful native and robbed him of saddle, bridles and three horses. On the night of May 9 Raymond forced hk way ins the borne of a respectable native rjirl aad assaulted ber. Ia reviewing thk case and approving ine sentence ot oeattt, UeneraJ Chaffee said : "The depraritr and daneenra For the first time in iu hktory Mt. Angel college has a football team. The Pnceaix mine in the Green horn district has been old for $$0,000. The new filter plant for the Oregon City water system k being installed. Part of the Oregon City paper milk are shut down on account of low water. The run of silverids in the Colum bia k as large as ever, and quality first-ckM. About 1,500, OX) pounds of prunes have been received at Salem, and they are still coming by the wagon kail. Representatives of Milwaukee cap italists will arrive soon to negotiate with the incorporators of the pro jected electric railway between Sumpter and Bourne. j The superintendent of the Dadger i mine, of Susanville, has hi hi oil a ! vat ion. large number of the hands. Hk 'at least likely that a larger force than ever will soon be put to work. So far thk season steel head mlaon have not made tbeirappearancein the :routh tock and Wallowa rivers. It is said that a dam has been pbeed at the mouth of Salmon river which prevents teem from going up into those streams. Mr. Peck, in charm of tlw i r v , c. t ' j i w1 FTr I M f- tlk 1 i IU1 U. f W.l V. ..... I Pacifie from Scappoose to Tiilmook, will probably reach Tillamook Oc tober 20. The route s a rough one, but a railrod can be constructed cheaply. The summit will be tun- nefed for a distance of iOO feet, and the crossing of the South Fork of the Xehalem will .be made at Vine Maple postotaee. Umatilla county has 103 schools and nearly 3,000 school children. The slope is now down over 1,300 eet at the Beaver Hill mine. A Hubbard correspondent gavs the Pudding river bridge will be rebuilt. B. C. Edwards' Kit log drive of 3.- 500,000 feet for the Uarrkburz saw mill has reached its destination. The Empire Gold Mininccomr-anv. ot rortland, will station a fla.OUO gold dredger on the John Day river. The Monument school board has decided to purchase new desks and moke improvements on the grounda. Through the kindness of Charles Martin, the citizens of Hubbard have access to over 1,500 books, whieh he has placed in the room over the post- oujee. Without Wtmliij Nui el Rotk VTcijhlnj 150 Tom FH Upon Wotkmtn, XewYork, Oct. 21. Five men were killed aad two injuml by an enor mous mass of tock oaving from the side ami roof o( the ltapkl Trauit tunnel, in the course of eontructio on llroatlwny, atout the line of One Humlrel and Sixty-fourth street. The section of tunnel where the cave-in occurred k UX feet below the surface. A shaft kwU to the tltiinel,' aud from t)w shaft headings extetHl north ami south, each alout 700 feet BATTLE IN SAMAIt BOLOMEN ATTACKED DETACH MENT OF NINTH INFANTRY. K1 T ih! Wounded SU 1 Ribtli Were Drhtn Oil, Lwvtaj A Ufj Num btr cf Dod on lh Fkld OunboiU Dbpitchcd lo th Si-Pn. ' United StiUi In SJmir. Manila, Oct. : tottven attacketl 1. Five humlml lio a detachmeut of 48 Jong. The accident oocurred in the !,,,, erf the Ninth Infantry at Kan- south heading of the tunnel, about ; miitMt, on the Oandara river. Ilaml of . A gang of ; Samar. Wednmday killing 10 ami SO rock drillers was working in the wounding (Hr. The remainder of extreme wuth end of the heading, !, comj-Any arrivwl on the scone in and about 10 feet from the end a j tme to prevent further slnughtor.and gang, made up of 30 muckers and a ' km,;) the enemy, killing over 100 of foreman, was removing the debrk them. It is talieved that the enemy made by the blasting. only retire.! for wiiiforcement. As : . ..... . . i. ' mkmi aa in (tea's was receiv-nt a. warning a 63 feet long. 11 feet wide and 10 feet high and weighing about ISO tons, fell with a tremendous crash directly where the muckers were working, almost closing the tunnel and creat ing a panic among the 300 to 300 men i working in other sections. Great clouds of dust filled the whole exoa Cabalogan two gunboata wre dk MtcheT.General Smith going in per son to t be scemi. Gcncrit Chiflce't Report Washington, Oct. 21. The fol lowing brief cablegram from Gen. Chtttlee, .reporting the fight of the Ninth Infantry in Sainar. Wednet- At first it was seippo! that !,U.v. reoeive.1 at tlw war deirt under the debrk. Word of the acci- ".Manila, uct. ". uorwn, .uju- .Urt kul .n-ii ... I tant (teaeral, as h In r ton: rorty-lix crornl gatheml around the shaft.scomi '. lmnv r.s . i ! States Inutitrv, aw-a maaw win II V 4 f 1 P a tVA IIML' , a f Jill ing their hands while tln reoers ' e,uinl btorft . hM, in field, rt-ui :k tnwi.u .! Lower Gandara, 2amar, were at- tk I rl w'u, tacked by 1KX) bolomen Octol-er 1. OBJECTS TO FREEDOM Ajulruldo Ajeln Poilnj At Mttiyr n Nstlvti Pcrhhed la MlnHs Typhoon. M toil In, Oct. 18, The rly cf Md, ntors ami repreiitativts that ,, leell vllltlllg llifl 1'iilllppino In left today for Itome on the t States traiMjiort Hliwnnmi, 1 leaving uro nwmi'w oi inr j Itael an Interview wltliAuginald. i, heraever, was reticent. He m .1 original outlreak of hostilitif t turprke to lilm.aiMl that hie(! r, t,, maintain the true were unavi .... I 1 III . . ,igniaiuu mw nm vi a i.uutr 'Mi !'d r"f K, Ninth Unitd under Firt Liu- the mangleil i ber and Gron- V. UuLImi .mi Knetny the rescuing party tegan to remove the rock they found bodies of O'Hara, Kelleher ski. The bodies of Madden and Danife were buried under imus of rock which had to be shattered by blast before they could U removed. Xo more todies were found and it k now believed no more lives were lost. On en Illy, the section boss in charge of toe work, was placed under arrest. He was later taken to the Harlem jolice court and remanded to the cor oner's otBce where the coroner paroled him until tomorrow. jOurloA 10 killed, six wounded. who m trying to ootain a habeas corpua In Ilia U-balf, ob to the emir taken by the ia saying h prefers to remain a r . while there k one owtn.atn t cuithlng in jail, "sitlTeniiK Filipino cauHi, and an infinity ipino are rtVjwirrd of the : which they are anxious lo cbi.i The civil and military ant! are having Sixto Ixx aatchwl at Hong Kong, as tht shier hk arrival there to U- s of danger. The rhilipidne eonirniMiio iwel an act prohibiting at . jeel from landing uniWi h the oath of allegiance, the i for breaking it being two years prkonment lor perjury. The typhoon which hat swept over Manila was the wur perineced in 30 year. Much 1 . was done to the smaller hip.n., many natives lot their lives. f It I. NAVAL ESTIMATES. Department Aiki (or Nurly One fluftrid Wi.) for Puret So not received. highty-one ... . 1flT. . eoemv left elead on the new. . : . " neiny Ujaten otT." m'i IOT l As of interest in connection wiui ending June u, twua, were wiatir , the report irom amar, -ujutant ik at the navy department t-. y General Corbin today made public a .The total amount hu SttS.91 1 WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY. William Allen had the largest pota toes of the season oa exhibition last week at Lostiae. Among tbem were three that averaged three pounds aad six ounces each. The oil fields above Vale are creat ing an excitement next to the famous Big Ueod gold fever a few weeks ago. More than 12,000 acres are bow lo cated and halt a doaen eurvennc parties are in toe new. The hotels at 'S ale are crowded. Portland Stirktt. Wheat Walla Walla, nominal J51)c; Uaestem, 55c; valley, 55. lour best grades, iz.oom3.zu per terra: graham, fz.W. Oats OM, VO&H percental. Barley Feed, 15 15.50; brewing. per ton. criminal probities of the aceosed.in-! MilbturTs Bran, $17 g 18; mid velvinc in the short scace of thnw days the robbery of a belplesj native, the licentious violation of a respect able girl and the-treacherous ssi nation of a eomiadt from motives of pare avariciousaess, calk for but one suing paakbmeat.'' Hay Crop Beia. La Crosee, Wis., Oct, 22. Late thk afteraoea fire was dkcovered in the hay kads which sarrouad the city. The games are bow burning ecrv thiag before them, aad the fireaoea are powerless, owiac to the fire Lbp ootsitie the city limits aad beTond water service. Thoosaads of toaa oi bay will be lost. Xar&xess Rotbcrs CiBst. Middkssboftx, Ky., Oct. 22. George, Gray was today arretted as principal aad George Eaton as an accomplice in the shooting aad robbery of P. T. Cobras, paymaster of the Virginia Coal aad Coke company last week at MicMlesaoro. Col can was robbed while oa hk way to the furnaces from the bank. Eaton made a partial con- Mestaa, impneaiiax three other men a a woman, it k said the worn. has Bed into Harlan couutr with the Raxsii Vm Not kfzrvtac Loadoo, Oct. 23. Referring to the movements of Prof. F. de Maarteas. of the University of St. Petersbunr. who k ako a member of the BasMaa privy council, the Braetek eonecpoad- eat of the Staadard deaies that be has aay mi&siea from the Ra&tiaa govern event beariafr anea the Saath African sitaatjoa. aad averts that Boer eireles ia Brassek dkeredk the ribUity of BaMfea iaterTeatkw. 2021: shoru, $19620; chop. Hay Timothy, Sll13; clover. 79.50; Oregon wild hay, $56 per ton. Better Fancy creamery, 2527.Hc; dairy. lS20c;" store, lf15c per pound. Eggs Storage 2022Kc; fresh 23c Cheese Full cream, twias, 12 a a 13c; Young America, 133jgLtc per pouaa. Poultry Chickens, mixed. $2,506 3.00; bens, $1.00: dressed, 9llc per pouad; springs, $3.00 per dozen; ducks, $3 for old; $3.0Qgi.OO for yoBsg; geese, $7 per dozes: tur keys, live. 10 lie; dressed. 10gl2Kc per pouaa. jiattoa luih, jc, gross; dressed, ogsc per pound; sheep, $3.25, gross; dressed, 6c per lb. Hoes Gross, heavy, $oet6.25: j light, $4.7965; dressed, 7g7Ke per pouaa. Veal Small. SSKc; large, 7 d7Kep6r pouad. Beef Gross top steers, $3.5064.00; eows aad heifers, $3.0063.50; dressed beet, !ibhc per pound. Hops $ lOc per pound. Wool Valley, 116 13Ke; Eastern Oregon, 86 123c; mohair, 20621c per pound. Potatoes $$L10 per sack. Aaiorax, the sixth plague of Egypt, mentioned in the bible, k ravaging the lower counties of South Dakota. The ropuktioB of Xevada has shrunk to 42,000. The latest ooami bulletin shows that Chieaeo oatelasses all the other large cities ia the sum bar of deaths from railroad aceidoats. Its total for the eeajs year is 330. while the biRed total for aiae other lartre oitiet is ealy 4S6. j North Hud Sutioa to B Equip Exd U Atv proprvition It Inertated. Astoria. Oct. 21. Weatlter Ob server Johnson, of thk city, has re ceived the plani and specifications irom .Major Langfltt, Lmted SUtes Engineers, ia charge of thk light house district, for the wireless tele graph station to be ervctcd at North Head, for reporting to . the teoal weather bureau the arrival and de parture of vessels at the mouth of the Columbia. The original plans for this station are made on estimates based on conditions which existed a couple of years ago. I Hit it was found that the plant could not be construct ed and placed in condition for nse within the amount of the appropria tion made by congrees for the pur pose on account of the advance in the price of the materials to be used. Since then the plans have been modified consideraldy in the hope that the worK could be done for the original price fixed. It k difficult for the government architects at Washington to accurately figure on the ooft of const rue ion. under the con ditions that exist there, but if the present plans prove to be too expen sive the difficulty mar be remedied by a further appropriation at the next session of congress. report by General Hughe. to General C bailee, dated August 20, on the situ a tion in that .kUmi. General Hughes says: "The progress in Samar k satis factory in some ways and not in others. Suldiiing of the fighting propensities of the war faction k re duced almost to nullity. Tlte growth of our strength, in the estimation of the people, k also quite satitlaetory. The fact is, their love for the rka'h pots, and incidentally for tlte Ameri cans who represent said pots, is grow ing burdensome, the securing of the hemp wit. i which to pay for rice k be against an,VzV, appropriate-! r the current year. The current creases are 52,flO0,O00 for consv .. - tion, $2,000,000 for armor, and $U9 -355 in the appropriation for yard- j: I dock. Secretary Long, in si-caking . the estimate, said that they were r ! with a due regard for the need ! ti navy, and intimated that they t.vl the approval of the adminiotrat. n He (poke of the increased cost of ti o navy, and said that the buildn.g f abattlahipcotiiig$fi.000,000wa r t the end of it expense, a it ri.a n- MiuaroB was very COSII V. 1 i & coming a heavy business. In nearly ' estimates, he said" did not cover a; r ... .1 . . . i . . . . . - an our post witere ine commamier has exercised good judgment, ooionie of natives have come in and settled and conclude! they would set up their kres and penatet under our wing. . These eokmies differ in strength, bat fn tkt vjeinlty. er be tween the Hibitan a ltd the Gadara rivers, about 16,000 have coiue in. In the interior, Klanca Aurora, Taviran, Matuguinao, etc, have their colonies. The trootM we have cantured show t hut th ttrniMt (nrti nr ibMrit-it I and breaking away from military con trol of the kol leaders. "The unfatkfactory features are the slowness of the process of eonvei sion, the failure to get the rifles and the slowness and thediflfoulty in mak ing roads and traik. PAY VESSEL LOST. Cabtett DUesistd Tea. Washington, Oct. 21. The cabinet meeting today meted less than half an hour. Secretary Hay was present for the first time under the newadminkra- on but had nothing to present to the cabinet Practically the whole time s spent by Secretary Wilton, who occupied tbe cabinet with a talk on the growth of tea in this country. Secretary Gage returned to the city today irom hut western trip. Trunaxa Gushed to Death. Birmingham, Mich., Oet. 21. Three trainmen were eroshed to death ia a head-end collision between two freight trains on the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee railroad curve five miles west of here. Monster EUtthihtp for Eajlind. London, Oet. 21. The admiralty has sent ltvstuetion to Uevonport to prepare fertile construction of a battle ship larger than any now existing, Tbe displacement will le 16,500 tone, and the length 425 feet. She will be the first of tbe King Edward class. Voa Kotow's DtdikMX Berlin, Oct. 21. It k reported in government eireles in Munich that Count voa 1 hi tow, at tbe wish of Bavaria aad Wurtemburg.has decided to drop tbe minimal duties from the new tariiT bills. Asstri aad the Boer War. Vienna, Oct. 21. Dr. Kaiser was today elected first vice president ot the lister ha us. In returning thanks Dr. Kaiser seized tbe occasion to in terpellate tbe government on its at titude in regard to tbe South African war. He insisted that Austria should Intercede to secure through arbitra tion aa ead to tbe "robber war bow waged by Great Britaa." That coun try, he added, zaeald be obliged to eeaferxa to the exigeacJes of huxnaaity Suspicious Graaasttaccj Attend Sinking of VenezseUa Sthooner. , Willemstad, Island of Curaeoa, Oct. 21 A fishing schooner which arrived here today from Aruba kland, northwest of Curaeoa, brings tbe story that tbe A rends, a Venexuelan schooner, bound from La Guyara for Maracaibo, carrying a sum of money irom tne government destined to nay the troops on the frontier, the amount being variously estimated at from $25,000 to $10,000, encountered heavy weather oa Aruha island, and km in tiered in deep water, the entire sum being lost. The crew, according to the story, reached tbe island in boat. I he amount is supposed to have been part of a sum raked in Caracas a fortnight ago from the hunks ot enemeia uy President Castro. If it k actully tost, the government has MMtaind very severe blow. The sinking of the scliooner was attended with certain suspicious circumstances. The weather Sunday night was calm. and tbe captain of the A rends resided on Aruba is la ml. There are other minor details pointing to the possi btlity of collusion with outsiders to secure possession of the money. Butte .Hurdertr Caujht. Butte, Mont., Oct. 21. Patrick F, Hayes, who shot ami killed William McCaine last Saturday, was captured last evening near Elk Park can von. about 15 mile from here, and brought to tuts city. He roltises to say a word concerning tho shootitn. "and will not even admit that he is the man wanted. His identity, however, has been proved without a doubt. He appears siek and is oomtileinlv worn out from hisondmvors to ivoapo iiom jusiwe. A Speedy Automobile. Xew York. Oct. 21. According (n the Tribune a contract hns he.ui awarded in this city for an niitonmhtln conditional upon tho machine being able to make 70 milos nn hour nn n level road. If this speed can In) at tained the price for tho ntitn nun. pleted k to bo $20,000, Among thomi who are said to bo intimated In Mm experiment are Lowli Nixon, 0. II. Kendall, G. w. a Droxel and Fred ertek Lande, recommendations for increase .f tt e navy over that already authored, but it k more than likely that t secretary will recommend three r.f w tattleshipt ami two armored cruis ers, and a number of small gunboat Tbe teenttary nils fee $001,000 Ut public work at thepuget Sound navy yard, $101,500 lea than a year ag .. New Caiul Treaty. Wathingtou.Oct. 18. Senator M r Ban.of Alabama.who wa one rf I-r.-.i. dent Roosevelt's callers today, talktd with the president about tbe prosixv! of the Nicaragua canal bill at tbe coming session of congreM. The president told Senator Morgan that he would submit to the senate a new treaty on the subject, which in re nearly meet hk view thaa the first Hay-Pauncefote treaty. The prod, tit did not go into particulars. Speaking of tbe president's johey in regard to Southern appointments. Senator Morgan said : "It k the job ky of appointing the best men to omee." StriU At Stajer Wotkj Xew York, Oct, 18. Because they refused to work with a non-union man, 150 men employed in the awembling department of the Singtr Sewing Machine company' works at Elizabethport, X. J., went on strike today. The strikers asserted that tin. ks the man was discharged 2.700 other employes would follow them out of the works tomorrow. Six thousand persons, including many women are employed by the company. Fruwt It Retrcnehinj. New York. Oct. 17. The Pari cor. respondent of tlie Times says the budget committee, in spite of the re monstrance Of M. De LMUunimi the minister of marine, has struck out the vote for three new ironclads. M. Caillalux, the iniHkter of finance. announces that the government will oppose with extreme energy any pro posal to increase tlte expenditure. Armed Ananhists Amsted. Fark, Oct. 18. A taWmm re ceived at Lkbon from Rio Janerio aeru that two Italian wiam ar. rested Friday last in the corridor of the Preskientkl of the guard. Both nere armed with revolvers and daggers. In Rio Janeiro it is believed they are aiMrehkts ami intended to kill President Salle. BooVer Wtihlntton at White House. Wa8hini!toii. IS iwi-, t Hshington, colorxxl, dined with tlie prosiilont this evening. Iniurrtctlon Practically Subdued. London, Oct. 18, "The Americans "tvo pMotioally Mibdued t ha insur ants in tho Philippines," saul Ch.ilrm.ui John Hotnl Gwvther, rovlowlng thoiltfon of tho Clwr torinl llrtnk of India. Australia and Ultln.V at .1 me.it i llDlllUM. "Oribip i. .li i:.. mt ol olmos, ami tho natives, feeling thHt neuoo opuhl Ihi rwltetl upon, are resuming- tholt ordinary avocitions."