Eagene City Guard. THE LAI IK NEWS. Bruals Will CASE OF CLARK. T«k« It I'p N«st Thurs day. BRANDFORT north coast LIMITED. ‘ th.ussn<ts «» F.opl. In»p«cl«d Hanil- .oius and Brilliantly Lighted Train. Four miners perished in a tire in a Exclamation» of astoniihment an i mine near Roanoke, Va. Washington. May 5—The senate to- ' jslight at the sumptuous furnishings of Second Mining Camp Munkacsy, the celebrated painter, day adopted the motion of Hoar to take Northern Pacific » new North Coast OREGON. EUGENE CITY Two Hundred Men Lost up the resolution of the committee m British Army Captures a Boer tbs died at Bonn, Germany. Limited were heard on every tide Wed Slocan Country ■ » ■ ■" Stronghold. elections declaring that Clark, of Mon Michigan Democrats want Charle» Their Lives. nesday evening at the union depot in tana, was not duly elected to the sen A. Towne for Bryan’s runmug wate. Portland. Lighted by electricity, as ate, and then postponed consideration it was. from the outside the train looked LOSS EXCEEDS HALF A M il An eight-hour day has been »e«ure< i of the question for a week The army 4 GREAT FLANKING MOVEMENT like a gigantic fiery glow-worm. Ou by New England building trades jour WRECKED BY AN EXPLOSION appropriation bill, after a rather spirit _______ 0 the inside the effect was aa rich as an neymen. ed debate, was passed without division. Th« Water Supply Faile« >n4 u Salt Ia»ke capitalists have bought the The day closed with the paoss ge of a Jp«ratlons tn the Ihsbsnthu District Oriental dream of splendor. An Interwatlng ('ollectlou nf Ilanía Frai Burned Itseir Out-Atg * • ^Beautiful 1” No Time Was Lost in Beginning the city Iowa group of mines in the Baker num tier of private pension bills, includ luteudsd to Cut Off the Dutch More Needed Many Left g ’ th« Two Hemispheres P reseti tail "Look at those fine chairs!” , Work of Kricue, Which la Still district for 93U,OOU. ing bills to pension Mrs. Julia Heury, Retreat to the North in a ('and ansati Furio. Proceeding, "Never saw anything to equal it!" widow of the late General Guy V. A dozen vessels have already left o ------- These and ^ymilar exclamations of Henry; General James Longstreet. Mrs. Spokane, May 7.-A speei.1 » Neattie for Cape Nome. Opinions vary London, May *»—It is announced wonder burst from visitors. Salt Lake, Utah, May 3.—A special Margaret M. Badger, widow of the late The Boer peace commission incoming as to when they will get there. Spokesman-Review from £ that the British have captured Braud- The train made its initial trip from to the Tribune from Scofield, Utah, Commodore Badger, and Mrs. Harriet says: '11 to America. State Secretary Reitz, of the Trans says: St. Paul to Portland without a hitch of _______ _ ^Gridley, widow of the late Captain fort. Sandon, the second riunirò ti General Olivier is reported to bs vaal, says the Boers will mo^Ji to any kind. At every station where a Boer* Taken by Surprise. The English language cannot de ^Gridley, of the navy. importance in the Sloe «nriisi ' wounded. Q America if defeated. stop was made large crowds of visitors Rrandfort, May 5. — Brandfort was scrilie tte- appalling disaster T/hich The house today, without division, captured by a combined movement of swarmed aboard, and in some of the completely destroyed by fire the President McKinley signed Twenty-two shops in ’ are oc-igrred hereof 10:25 this forenoon by passed the free homes bill, which has Colonel Tucker’s and General 1’ole- larger places difficulty was experienced all its 1,200 people are homel^ Hawaiian bill. completely tied up, own yTjto tje boiler tji explosion in mine No. 4 of the been pending before congress for a darew's divisions, on the east and in getting the cars cleared in time to ruined. Kaslo is 28 miles riea»an*Valley Coal Company, and by Governor Pingree, of Michigan, hai makers’ strike. number of years. The bill provides 1 center, and General Hutton’s Mounted start again. Charles 8. Fee, general don, but about midnight Urw ’ which certainly 200 men and upwards turned Democrat. Roberta will advance on Pre'Jiria that the government shall issue pat nfautry on the west. The British sur passenger agent, was aboard. H h was of smoke came rolling 01 er th have lost thej; lives. At this hour 137 Four deputy fish commissioners are from KMnberlev, 1, xnufoutein and Na bodies have been recovered, and the ents to actual bona t^e settlers on prised the Boers, who retreated hastily. met at Seattle by A. D. Chariton, of from Sandon. At once word »I? tal, simultaneously. that Sandon was destroyed, but ik watching the Clackamas j^ver. work of rescue is still proceeding and agricultural lands of Indian reserva Four thousand of the enemy moved here Portland, assistant general passenger could lie had from thè dèsoUteta These festerday evening in order to oppose agent; I. A. Nadeau, general agent at Twenty Americans were killed in an will continue until all bodies sre tions opened to settlement. It is now known that Captain < 'aryir'» ’ engagement with insurgents at Cab brought to the surface. There are will lands were taken up by settlers, who >ur advance. Colonel Tucker’s artil Seattle, and A. Tinling, general agent is all wires had been burned gigantic steal will reach *2.000,000. At 4 I*. M. a train came in contracted to pay for them *1.26 to big, on the island of Samar. lery had a sharp duel with the enemy ’ s at Tacoma, ing hands at work, and as fast as the Many thíTisands of people gr- Sts ‘ To attempt to give a description of don bringing a ijimlair of tbo«i Senator Hanna believes the Republi bodies are reaced they are brought *3.75 per acre. By the terms of the ¿uns and put two of them out of action. Admiral Dewey on his »¿rival C!H- bill, the government assumes the pay each separate section of this new train lost all their property. They r,,/ cans will have fully as hard a battle down to the boarding houses and other In Thsbsiuliu District. .ago, e that the total loss was between | 1 Oould tax the English vocabulary. It ¿ns year as they h?d iu 1S911. company buildings, where they are ment of the purchase price tQ the In London, May 5. -General® Broad- Governor Taylor has rffir£Q 000 and *1,000,000, while the dians and changes the existing law rel was thought that modern railway con Hankers estimate that Americans dressed and prepared for the coroner's ative to agricultural colleges so as to wood’s cavalry brigade has rea* bed Isa- Kentucky. No warrant '¿’as '0 veniences had reached a high degree of ance could only have been about u inquest. These buildings are numer oefontein, 28 miles north of Thaban- w ill speai *40,000,000 more than us 000. him. o insure the paj&nents of the endowments ual abroad this year, owing to the ous and in each are from 10 to 35 which heretofore have come out of the :hu. General Ian Hamilton is bivou perfection, but it remained for the The alarm was sounded shortb»» WashinSPC oour> have declaryi Paris exposition. builders of the North Coast Limited to bodies. When a corpse is brought out acking at Jacoberuhl, 15 miles north of *50,000 worthojj OlympO warraQp ? it is usually carried to the place of de sale of public lands in case of deficien Thaba ichu. General Tucker’s division show that added improvements could midnight, and quickly the »treetiw, D. J. Sinclair, postoflice inspector posit. Here there is a corps of men, cy. These payments involve *1,200,- filled with hundreds of men «>4, lie illegal. made. connected with the St. Louis force, has from four to 10 in number, with 000 annually. Of the 29,000,000 acres a mov’ng eastward from Karee Siding. be From The ffames started bgn one end to another it is a con men. Nine peopio were killed by tj>< fall The divisions of General French and Spencer’s hall and Brown’s r" l>een apfsiinted chief postoflice iaspec- sponges, hot and cold water in tubsand in Indian ¡F-servations opened to settle tinuation of luxury. Bathed in the Pt('3 ing of a comlem{e<l 10'idge at General Rundle areita and near l’hab- tor of Porto Rico. other receptacles. The clothing is first ment, for whichj^he government is to inchu. Thus Lord Rolierts ha, 50,000 soft glow of shaded electric glides, the Two staapma seemed to hold the L exposition. General MertiS’s request for retire removed, the soot and powder burns oay or has paid *35,000,000, about men operating clear of the railway dark redwood finishings shine with rich in check for a while. Then one Roberts must have more ¡jorseii lie- ment has been granted. General Bnxike washed from their .aces, the bodies 8,000,000 acres have been taken and »long a front of 40 miles. He is ad brilliancy; the polished glass walls gave out and the flames spread «p* fore he cax advaxo*. Lo.’.do? oouip’*QjD succeeding him as commander of the prepared aud laid out in long rows to 2,000,000 are supposed to be still avail vancing Blowly with some successes, sparkle and scintillate with light, and After that it whs only a matter jfs of his slowness. A re fire burning itself out. department of the East. await identification by relatives or able for agricultural^purposes. Yet, at all the other furnishings gleam with bor markable thing in connection with the hilt nothing decisive. By a vote of 20 to 29 the tejjite re The miners’ hospital and a drug », friends. Many small yachts and tugboats posits of concentration, the Boers ap rowed light in a manner that makes the fused to consider the resoluteC of »yin- The removal of the bodie$ began at passage of the bill today was a speech pear in force sufficient to compel the general effect dazzling. Each car is as were blown up in the effort to stops laiught for use during the Spanish war, in its favor by Galusha A. Grow, the flames. By this time all thè kn pathy with the Boers. are rotting in the navy yard and the 12 o'clock today and every diligence is venerable ex-sj>eaker of the house, who British to proceed with caution. Their completely furnished as a modem part of town, including the tenderla used to get tiw charted and mangled Charles Ingersoll, of lthica, N. Y., government will sell them. drawing room. All the accommoda wide front in a rugged country makes remains out from the mine. Man& 48 years ago, fathered and massed the turning movements off-hand difficult. tions accorded by first-class hotels can and many business places weiej, HQ embezzling county treasurer, wQ The Northwest Episcopal general hundreds of men have freely volunteered original homestead bill. He was then arrested in San Francisco. The Boers, Winston Churchill says, be secured aboard the palace on wheels. Then the firemen blew up the U conference, bv a unanimous vote, de- their services, and as fast as one set or t?.e youngest and is now the oldest hotel, one of the finest buildings have enormous herds of cattle and This observation car to the rear will German officials at WaeQington think cided to admit equal lay representation member of the house. The remainder Kootenay country, the Canadup h force is tired or worn out others take never be detached to make place for flocks of sheep gathered in the south that Secretary Root’s »|«ech on tQ- to all Methodist conferences. their places. While the stench of of the day was devoted to the sundry past. These they are driving north any private cars, and no smoking will cific railroad station and other m Monroe doctrine was aimed at then civil appropriation bill, the last but Two hundred Klondike miners are smoke and jfbwder is sickening, re be allowed irvthe main section, so that ings iu order to save the valuables» country. ® ward. stampeding up White riQr, Alaska, to sembling much that of a diseectin; one of the great supply bills. women may enjoy the luxury while of H. Geigerich and H. Byenttj Observers at headquarters in Bloem Forest fires are raging furiouQy north the scene of the latest gold discovery. room, there are brave-hearted hoi 1 GOEBEL MURDER CASE. fontein seem to think that the Boers viewing the scenery. Two commodious This «as accomplished. Half st« of Fish, Mich., and the property «lain- The find was made on a nameless tribu brawny men of muscle who have been are preparing to evacuate Ladybrand. card rooms at one end are placed there other buildings at the extreme mu age will bu large. The town of Arne« tary of the alsive river last winter. continuously at work since the moment Culton Described the Conference HeM The Boers still holding Thabanchu dis for the accommodation o*the smokers. the town were saved, includili g O in Lexington. been wiped out. An<S«w Carnegie, who refused to of the explosion. As wain as the acci The following table gives briefly electric power-house. The rest ol g trict are estimated at 4,000. They Frankfort, Ky., May 5.—W. H. Cul have among their guns a 40-pounder. — The Boer forces have moved iron» from contribute to the Dewey arch fund, dent was known, officials of the coal some facts about this end of the century town was drawn into the maelstnal flame. Thabanchu to a stronger |«>sltiou, and has given *1,000 to the fund for the company at Salt Lake City and also ton resumed his teatimmony lo the The correspondents at Kimberley trains: Relief measures were taken quicfcvj General French has abawloued the widow of Sergeant Douglas, who was tO railroad company were notified, and Goebel murder investigation today. have been forbidden to communicate Cost........................................... *100,000 effort to capture the burghers. killed at Croton Qin during the recent though the number of dead was report He stated that Governor Tavlor author for several days, the deduction being Weight......................... 1,000,000 pounds The officials of Sandon donated The American ehamla-r of commerce strike. In sending the check, Mr. Car ed lower than it really is, it would ap ized the witness to give Youtoey any that a forward movement is under way Length......................................... 691 feet ana mining men there contnM amount of money desired if he would ut Manila has entered a protest against negie wrote: “Sergeant Douglas fought pear that every tiling in their power Illumination.............291 electric lights *3,000. Kaslo raised *1,800 aid J there. leave Kentucky. At a conference in The Boers in Natal are restlest. Two Capacity........................... 225 passengers up a special train with large repj the excessive taxation exacted ».•y the not for foreign conquest, but for |>eaee was done. The injured, eight in number, were Lexington, the Sunday before Goebel hundred crossed Sunday’s river Wed Time, Portland to St. Paul military governQ-ut under General nnd order at home.” 72 hours of food, tents and clothing. MnJ ?aken on a special train to Salt l«ake, was shot, it was decided that Repre nesday and tried to engage the British lief is needed. Otis. President McKinley has selected leaving here at 7 o’clock thia evening. sentative Heury Rerrv, who had l>een COURT MARTIAL PROCEEDINGS. William F. Miller, manager of the Dole to lai the first governor of Hawaii. There are one to three of the injured unseated a few days before, should go outposts. . • . ------------------- GREAT FUNERAL TRAIN NOT ENOUGH COFFINS. ITQnklin syndicate, who was recently Ex-Minister Denby gives American that will not survive the trip to the to the house of representatives next Officer* In the Philippines Guilty of convicted of grand larceny, was sen missionaries credit for the open door in hospital. Breach of Military Diwcipline, morning and take hi* seat and refuse Started From the Seme of ths (J Cremation May Be Reported to at Sco- tenced in Brooklyu to ID years' im China. Mine DiMHNter. I The war department has received _ The theory is that the explosion 00- to give it up. Vanmeter, his opponent, field. prisonment. Salt Lake, May 7.—The tnsJ from General Otis, 9 Manila, the rec Fire at the town of Gladwin, Mich., corred by powder being carried into was to be in some way prevented from Salt Lake, May 5.—The latest dis- ords of the proceedings of courts mar The first batallion of the Fourteenth destroyed 111 buildings, causing a loss the mine by the workmen. The work going to the hall that morning. Caleb funeral train in the history of WesJ United States infantry, which has been of ,50,000. of rescue was delayed by after damp, Powers, who was at the conference, patch from Scotiel«! says that the ex- tial in the cases of six commissioned America started on its journeyM treme estimate of dead is now conceded iu quarantine, has landed at the reser the dead being piled up in heaps, in- telephoned to Governor Taylor at officers. The chief of these cases is Scofield today. The train had cpcti The north half of the Colville, Wash., (Heating that they had prepared for Fiaukfort two or three times in regard to have been too large, and that it is that of Major George W. Kirkman, the remains of about 35 or montlJ vation wharf at the Presidio, San Fran cisco, after two years of continuous Indian reservation, has lieen opened for death from damp, which they knew to the conference. Un cross-exam ma- numerically impossible to place the Forty-ninth Volunteer infantry, (Cap victims of the Winter (JuartertiM settlement. tion, Culton said he did not know of loss of life at 300, as there were not tain Twenty-third infantry) who was ter. Accompanying the boditsvJ fighting in the Philippines. was inevitable. q Chicago landlords have formed a any list of state senators or represent«- that many men in the* mine. The dismissed from the service by order of many relatives, who are bowed fei q Three persons were drowned at Port DEWEY IN CHICAGO. Q titves who were to be put out of the 1 probabilitie*are that 250 wit?be about General Otis on conviction by court with the severity ef the blow thatu« combination aud rents advanced 16 Qi Gamble, Wash., by the capsizing of a ! the total number of dead. way. cei* immediately. martial of conduct unbecoming an offi have so suddenly sustained. sail boat. Windy City’s Warm Welcome to the Relatives of the victims continue to On re-direct examination, Cui ton cer and a gentleman, in having misbe the miners who was iu the mineu si Charles II. Allen was inaugurateQis i Admiral. Fire destroyed the buffing occupied irrive from all the surrounding towns. said that Sergeant-at-Anns Haley Chicago, May 3. — “1 like your west signed the sub|svenas for witnesses for The body of Tom Broggon, of North haved in appearing on the streets of time of the explosion and who «iv by the Atlas Brewing Coni|>any, of Chi- governor of PuQto Rico with impres of the first rescuers who went in xm sive ceremonies. ern hospitality, ” said Admiral Dewey. Governor Taylor to testify before the Lawrence, O., was located today in Manila in a drunken condition. cago. I johh *L'Q,I> ii O. The other cases received are those of cover the bodies, tells an intenffg “ I came on to keep social engagements 1 mine No. 1. There are not enough The customs feature of the Puerto At an Indian famine mass metting in gubernatorial contest committee, and First Lieutenant Robert C. Gregg, story. He was in No. 1, in the M New York, *1,667 was contributed. Rican tariff and government bill has made six months ago, and my first day authorized Culton to secure good men coffins in the camp to bury the. dead, Forty-ninth Volunteer infantry; First raise, when the explc ion occurtsl. a of it has been enjoyable in every re and, to add horror to the situation, the gone into operation. in the various counties to serve them. Helen M. Gould pledQd *290. Fire destroyed the Hasting shingle spect. Yes, this is a little different Culton said he did not know where bodies are rapidly decomposing, and it Lieutenant Clayton J. Bailey, Twenty so far away from it that the sound i« George C. Tod, formerly of KeQ- than two yean ago. I was more en has la-en suggested that cremation may seventh infantry; First Lieutenant not reach him. He suffered a mon® tm-ky, a brother-in-law of PrestleiQ mill at Goshen, Wash., together with gaged then than I am iQv, and not so Powers or Youtsev were when the shot have*» be resorted to. There are 50 John J. Foley, Thirtieth Volunteer with the air, but thought it the raw was fired. The last talk he had with 1,000,000 shingles. Lincoln, died at Barnwell, 8. O. certain as to where my journey would Youtsey, the letter said the plan to kill bodies for which no provision for burial infantry; and First Lieutenant Harold of a cave-in, worked on a quarter of« Hamilton, Ninth infant», These offi- hour, when his miner’s instinct n The transport Sherman arrived at end. My health is excellent. I am Goebel ha<l been abandoned. Culton has been made. Desk Sergeant Timothy S. O'Connell, of the Woodlawn police stJSlon, Chi San 1 ritncisco from Manila with 22 in fleshier than when I landed in New had been asked by Taylor to ascertain If any one man is to blame for the cers were tried on various charges. him that something was w rong, and at Lieutenants Greeg and Bailey were con came on down to the main entniw O York last September, but 1 have not cago, was shot and killed by ftaitpada. sane soldiers on board. w hat the witnesses in the contest knew, accident, it will never be known, for victed and sentenced to dismissal and A door had been fitted in here tab« had so much to do since then. This Carpenters of Omaha are no man who can tell the story has out on a Mayor Harrison has issued an ap|>eal because he was a lawyer. To the pros Many Lieutenants Foley and Hammond were the current of good air from ril to citizens of Chicago to use their in strike. They demand an eight-hour commemorating of what you now call ecution he said he had told more now come out of the mines alive. acquitted. The sentence in each case above, and to direct it into the ms ‘ Dewey Day ’ pleases me. It makes a fluence in settling the labor troubles day and increase of wages. on the stand than to any person except old coal miners, familiar with these was approved by General Otis and were workings, where it would meet» new national holiday, and it aide in mines, state that they have always there. q his father. Here his testimony ended. Five men were killed and three in disposed of without dismission to the damp and either weaken it very uw building up patriotism. ” been regarded as the safest mines in Circuit Court Clerk Moore, of Jack- The Berlin pr<* says laird Rolóte jured by a boiler explosion in the mill The rec or drive it back. This door was The admiral was in his beet mood. son county, denied that Culton had the state. These men also say that lhe authorities at Washington. has blundered in l>«li«viQ, that the of J. V. Bray A Co , Tifton, Ohio. lie met the mayor and celebration coni- told him anything alsrnt the plan to company’s policy has always been to ords have been sent to the war depart- ed on the outer side. I’assingontc* aoiitheru half of Orang« Free State »Q At the Hercules Athletic Club, New Onittee just beyond South Chicago. He spe-f? no expense in order to keep the mentor file and recorded in the office mouth of the tunnel, this miner. »■> fortified. ^)-rk,Bob Fitzsimmons knocked out Ed had a triumphant drive on Jackson bring on a no? and kill Goelrel and mines iu a thoroughly safe condition. of the judge advocate general. otheis, joined Su[>erintendent T - other members of the legislature. At the instance of the secretary of Parmley, and went to No. 4. wbeiG* Señor Perfecto La cost« has accepted Dunkhorest, the Syracuse giant, in two tnulevard, a breakfast at the Audi At the coal company ’ s store every The afternoon session of the court torium annex, a meeting with some of was taken up with testimony by the thing is being giving out free of charge war, Judge Advocate General Lieber greatest danger existed. Outsideof® the office of secretary of agriculture of ■ Qnds. Culia, made vacant by the resignaticQ Joseph Gurtar Rampon, a former the old members of the Manila bay surgeons, who conducted the autopsy that the families of the dead are in im will make a special report in the case mine those working had all been*^ of General Rui» Rivers. famous bandmaster, leader of th« Old squadron, a cordial greeting from on the Irmly of Goebel, and a civil mediate need of, and the store is being of Major Kirkman, which report also jured, so the party was ^tll. will have a bearing on the cases of British iiQmunitioii wagons passiQg Guard band, is dead at New York, Canadian-Americans, a reception of the engineer who had made a measurement kept open uight and day. Army Bill Passed. naval officers now iu Chicago, a sight of the state house yard. The prosecu An inquest was liegun this morning Lieutenants Gregg and Bailey, as the through Basutoland were stopped by ag'Q 57 years. Washington, May 7.—Today’»H HaQtos, who iuformed General DeWet. I'he United States navy will not Is* of the lake front illumination, an hour tion sought to show, from the nature at the residence of the late John Hunt same legal principle is involved in each Generally stated, that in eion of the Renate was rendered «1*1 The British were forced to retire. sivat to Turkey. Aa the sultan has at the Dewey la»U, and then retiremeut. of the wounds and fyj,in the course of er. who was killed iu the mine. The of them. volves the right of General Otis to dis ially notable by the passage, after »H 11« shook hands with over 1,000 people, jury did not go into the controversy as The British government has issued made some conceQens, he will ls> talked with 100 or more in off-hand the bullet, which is supposed to have miss the officers without the reference bate lasting three hours, of the cri to what caused the disaster, but simply passed through Goebel’s body and was ordeQ(or the clearing of all the hos givet^more time to study the matter. fashion, who cheered heartily whenever dug out of a tree near to the president, as commander in chief reorganization bill. In military -' found that Hunter met his death iu m ar where he fell, ! pitals at Ca|>e Town, with a view to As a sequeQto the Johannesburg ex he ap|>eared in public, and was made to that the shot *'»• filed from a the measure is regarded a« »■1 window the mine through explosion. State of the army. It is admitted that such cles providing (or future contingencies. the most important of the present»! plosion. the Transvaal govcOlment has feel that, as chief of th. American in the office of the secretary of power is conferred on generals com- Mine Inspector Thomas testified that it state. Mr». M. I. Warfield Clay, the di ordered British subQ-ta, with a few navy^p man who had proved bis cour was his opinion that the explosion was n>*t^ng armies in the field in time of sion. It practically revolutionin»R Fanal Bill >•««««<). vorced wife of lion. Ca»»ius M. Clay, exceptions, to leave the republic with age and a genial gent^iian, he has to canted by a "tight heavy shot”. He war. but it is contended that no such present staff arrangements of thr ar3’ Washington. May 5.—The house to said the mine was free from gas. sage of Whitehall, died. 86 years old. in 48 hours. lie thoroughly “at home“ duriug his lie condition existed in the case of Major It proposes to change the present•? day. at the conclusion ofgithe most had examined the place where it was Kirkman at the time of the offenses tern of permanent appointments m* She was the mother of Brutus J. Clay. An engine aud.70 empty cars of the entire stay in Chicago, ,‘i- r.T"’..““'/',? cUiuted^wder had’liZen “»¿red' a * 1 alleged to haie been committed. tain staff corp« to one of detail ’• Floods tn Tex^ continue unaliated, Santa Fe were Mimwn into the hay Fourth Town Destroyed, congress, passed the “ Nicaragua bill by said it was plainly evident that the ex- ■ ....... .. ..... ' gradual process as the officers in»* and hundreds of families are moving from the new Santa Fe wharf at K«n .Menominee, Mich., May 8.—The th« overwhelming vote of 225 to 85. Here's a Fl«x Story. corps go out of active service -'•T| plosion started where the powder wa»' from the submerge I district. The Francisco, by the breaking of an aprou. town of Arnold has been wiped out by The best flax story is now reported eancies occur in the department of fe All attempts to retain in the bill the stored, as the lodies taken from that rainfall has been the heaviest sine« No one was killed so far as known. forest fires. This makes the fourth lauguage of the original bill for th« for from western Walsh county, save the adjutant-general, the inspector 1853. A passenger tification of the canal and still further point were badly burned. Omemee (N. D.) Herald, where a quartermaster-general and c. niiui<* I Frank H. Peavey, of Minneapolis, town to tie destroyed. Pleaded the Hrlt«,n's Cause. In the accident at Matanza», C $«. Minn., Ifc obtained in,prance in the train reached here today, belug the first to strengthen the language on that line farmer raised 2.500 bushels of flax (r^n general, they are to be filled by ‘•'■"I whteh resulted in the death of the wife Mutual Life Insurances Company, of in two day. The wires are all down were balked, and the victory of Hep Chicago, May 5 —Bishop Hartzell 100 acres of a *750 farm and is still The burn and the «■otnmittee was complete. pleaded the case of th« Briton in the selling it at home at *1.76 a busMft for from the line, the details to 1» •>( < leot-ral Wilson, governor of the de- New York, to the amount of *1,000,- and railway traffic is sus|>ended. partiosiat of Matanza», Santa Clare, 000, the anuual premium on the policy forest fires cover an are». of 30 miles, A motion to recommit the bijljwith Transvaal tonight l^pre an audience seed. A *4,375 crop off a *750 farm porary and not to exceed four yean the daughter, who was driving with being *48,390. extending westwaid as far as Swanson instructions to report back another bill that almost filled the Auditorium. He is pretty swift farming. Shaw Is Not a Csnill4s>»- bcr, was al» bui^d. though not seri and northward to Carliondale, Mich. leai lDg the selection of the route to the spoke from impressions gained by per- I Startling Itsathbed Confession. Chicago, May Governor 8h»» Active preparations are l>eiug t(s)ls They are spreading. Much concern is presideut was buried under an adverse ■Sual obnervations in South Africa; ously, while endeavoring to extinguish A startling deathbed confession was Iowa, who is here attending ths M the tianies Mrs. Wilson's hands were for a world’s fairCXg-J ke place in san felt for small towns in Menominee majority of 52 to 171. | from personal acquaintance with Presi »0 badly swollen ts'fore death that it Fraiic-naxv tn May 1901, which will county along the Northwestern. Wis lent Kruger and from close study of made by Mrs. Van Horn, at Sioux Falls, dist conference, declared in «a ‘ The point of absolute tero, or the la^i and the administration of laws by S. D. She solemnly declared that she view that he was not a candidstr was found iie«'e»sary to cut the rings continue for six months. It is to be consin A- Michigan and Northern Pa , Trom her fingers in order to glv» her known as the Pacific Ocean and ty- cific roads. Serious damage uiu,t re point of no heat, is fixed at 461 degrees the government. Bishop Hart»eli made had murdffed her mother, the wife of the vice-presidency on the Rep“ below zero. tcruational Ex|<Millon. relief. sult as high winds prevail. his argument in behalf of the English. Thomas Egan, who was hanged for the ticket, nor did the know that i ■ erime in 1882. Soldier Mhot. man Hepburn was. ------ Montana ('antral Lockout. Oil Trust Raises Wages. A Isuidon physician claims to have San Frnnci*-o, May 3. — Robert Wil- A S|iani»h »liver mine lost a century New York. May9 — The World to Stranded Near Port Tow»«**4' A Human Plneoshlon. Minneapolis,. May 5.—The Montana cured inebriety by hypnotism. soc. a private in the Sixth United ago was rediscovered in Texas. morrow will print the following: I'eutrsl trainmen ’ s strike has assumed "People are always wondering where States aitillery, was fatally shot to Victoria, B. C., May 7.-—Th* Bishop Hartsell, in charge of Metho- l«ewis Watkins, a native of St Paul, The parent. "Twenty-five thonssn 1 men employed all the pins go to.” Victorian did not get in until I*** night while he walking with Mrs. the form of ■ lockout. i» «al« to I t the tallest man in th« diet work in Africa, has traveled 50,000 William Denner, wife of a piivate of Great Northern Uompstny, has lung by the Standard Oil Company as 1 hat s right. Do you know? ” day, having l>een on a sand ba^ mechanics and laborers __ world ill.« height Is said to be eight miles »invw 1894. “No, but some Baltimore surgeons Port Townsend for six hours, company II, Eighteenth infantrv. A Iwu preparing for it, and has hinev^x- ----------- -------- —.._.J all over the Constant weeping over th. death of country have had their wages raisedi) tael 11 lankaa, and his weight 364 can account for 11 of them. Thev coming up the sound this uiore«» young man named Kisaick, who was p«rieuce<l men in the Twin cities and her husl aud and daughter made a Naw pueoda. with th« couple at the time of the Chicago to take the strikers' place« I*r<*nt. The advance will nut affect found them iu a Human Ostrich’ upon was very thick, and in a bunk of clerks.” whom they were operating."_ Cleve suddenly came upon the «tean^ Iter. David Greeg, a Brooklyn (N. York woman blind. »hooting, ran away while the woman Todav the first consignment of 60 men land Plain Dealer. Chaplain C. C I'leree makes an offi. m-rranied fo» help. With riagtie at piatela. Y.) Preeybteriaa. a»r» he doubts if any The stxxvting is was «ent on a special train, geles, which was not whist in^j Suakin. Mar «V—Three oases of bn- member of the gsneral assembly be- cial report that there hss iwwi no in generally thought to ha»« bejn an at these it is hoped to opven the road to narrowly escaped oollision " He who would n t change timbones he effort to escape her that hevea in con leianatioa ut nou-elect crease m th« numlier of saloons tn tempt at murder, though iht^v ars sums traffic, Another train will follow in a bonic plague and one death from the , few days. Manila. I disease are reported here. children. into 1 read for himself multiplied the ian stranded. She floated st M suggestions of suicide. la««rlor •» Fanay. loaves of others.—United I’resbytenan without damage. At President McKinley's request the Beef for Al««ka <ohllwrn.| Maggie G. Carnevdy. of Toledo, O., Immigrali«« .1 J.|«r.M. Mauila, May * —A dispat«:« received Seattle, May 5 — The contract for gets a fortune of *1,8181,1X8) by the I I American building at th« Parts exposi ftkahespeareaa Retlr Fnnnri. J»« Plague Hanolal"- Washington. May I — Rapresentatlve hare today fturu Ila llo, reports that a supplying the government tion will t«e closed on Sundays. death of an aunt in Australia. military A well authenticated 'hakes pearean Kahn. of (allbruia. fealay lutroluced dispatch «aye • desperate tight took forces on the / San Francisco, May 7.— I11* *' ( '__ 7 __ _ with relic, an earthenware American Yukon The will of Mrs. Alice R. Rice, of a reaolutb n requeeting of thè eeeretarv The < ill io supreme court handnl «town given by Coptic, which has arrive : T . place at LaambaHao. in the center of the l«euf supplies has been award&Tto Jack hi»?« to his sister Joan. a «fes l«ion sustaining the law «hick Worcester. Mass , widow of .X-Con- >f itale intormation on thè iiuiuigra- islsnd of Pansy. It apperas that a re- Dalton, the noted Alaskan pioneer and Lndon. It is shaped i’ on sale in Orient, via Honolulu, is in {■retabíts the coloring of oleomargarine gresaman W. W. Rice, leave. *500.000 tlu of Japanese duriug thè la.t two like a modern Iaivt Friday, when the tm. itering party of the Tweuty-stxth explorer T »• It iniolies inroltes s at» ut' *1 *7i.,, ’« ut ........ 7h)' >,) cviffee pot, decorated k> chanty. in imitation of butter. year», what thè prvbabilitiee are aa to infantry was surrounded, and that tour and provides with heathen from Honolulu, there ha 1 l**D *. , that Delton «hall furnish ___ relief, and cases of plsgue for 25 dsy«, * Mis. Italia Garibaldi, a grand «neh immigration for thè eniuing year of the Americaus were killed and 1« thu soldiery at Fort Egt>ert. Circle Cltv mythological figures in bold The 71st birthday ot Rev. William Iteoth, gemeral of the Salvation Army, daughter of the Italian lits-rator, has and what measures bave been or will severely woumied »ere left on the field. Ram pail aud Fort Gibb «'■, with all k'pped with a silver cap and edging of quarantine that bad been a sine« the middle of last Dr ■■ «» celebrated in I«ondon, au«l be was arrived in thia <x>uutry to study Amari- 1* adoptml by thè »tate department to The remain ler had a narrow escape their " * fresh l-eef from July jt 1¡ xh » to engraved silver. to have been raised last Monda' regolate and control «neh tniniigration The dispatch adds that reinforcements July 1. 1901. The contre- t is on« of can institution« given a purse of *2(8). 1X8). 8» Know» «0 Plow, were «ent from llo Do as suon a« the the larg-t ever let bv the rnernment Mlsstssip|>l ax|*cts Its new apttol to ri,«»« at r.rt a«ia. Miss Helen Gould Í» l««eieg«d by In view of the almost innumerable Honolulu board of health, pr 1 thousands of applicants asking nr 11 lions he ready for occupancy when the legis Fort Sai l. May J.—Three new case, news was received, uhereupm the Uli- tn connection with Alaskan affairs kopje, mentioned as eiMing ln th. more cases of plague appear***- —- th« first shipment «Hl b« made fro» irensvaal. some curiosity is expressed 11 is ’< lmt*>nic plague have been reported pious reireated to their ------- in charity. In one week the request lature meets In January, 1901. tnoantaia Philadelphia has 41 wards •->. stronghold. to coat fl,000.000. beattie earlj in Jul^. nggreagtevi J 1,548,502. hero. the <t. Louis Star, a» to where ths branches of the city council- l I says Bos is do their ’among has 35 wards. I. L. OSirSIlL. Frssrl^s <1