-2- (T)jss Cc f J" ' ..'i i. THE BEND BULLETIN. VOL. I. JJEND, OREGON, FHIDAY, JUNE 12, 1003. NO. 13. $ Ufc'' EVENTS OF THE DAY OATIIERED PROM ALL PARTS OP TUB TWO I1CMISPIII1RGS. Comprehensive Review of tho Import, nt Happening! o( the Put Week, Presented In Condensed Perm, Most Likely to Prove Interesting to Out Man Readers. Itobliuri rilled tho in(o of n bank nt Vlitn, Minn., of f 15,00. Itnumsnlna In considering topi to op Americans out o( 1(h oil fluids. Tint tandoNltawlliiii, Wyo., stage was Imld up mul tho mail sacks rlfhl. Tlio Aont rebellion In nt nil mul nml tho chiefs Imro promised obedience to llrazll. ' Flro tins destroyed tlio CO,000 plnnt of tlio Mldlnnd iimnuIurturlnK company nt Tnrklo, Mo. Tho 4iMlHlppl capltol building, uroclodntn cost ol 11,000,000, has boon formally dedicated. A treaty will Imi slgnod by tho United States mid llrazll for tho admission of Amorlcnn Hour into Uracil. Thn great alato jmvrplirokiiift estsb JlihniKiit nt Homo ha been nutted by lire, nnd damage of f 2,400,000 done. Tho American consul nt Canton re porta 1,000,000 nntlv.ii In Kwnint HI n UrvliiK, nnd make nil appeal for nld. Two Inrgo whales which pursued ncliooli of mackerel And themselves lin prisoned In tlio llrai d'or Jnke, Cnjto Drentou. Ottmnwn, la., suffered n long of (400,000 by flro. A InrgaplnnlnKiulll, a printing establishment nnd ton roil donees woro burned. Tbo iom li suffering greatly from tlio lutno brnt. A itorm which swept Valparaiso wiocked four veiwels In tbelmy. Water In Kansas In falling nnd tho ltnntlon li much Improrod. A. K. Amos it, Co., ono of tbo largest nnkliiR houses In Canada, bat iui ended pnymont. A nephew ol John Wilkes Itooth do claici that tbo nenassln of President l.lnooln did not din until 1001. A tHurllnitton passenger train hm boon lout sight of nud It In feared It linn run Into tbo Hood along tho Missis sippi rlrer, Klght hundred nro homeless an the result of tbo Georgia tornado. Ono hundred peoplo woro klllod nnd 1(50 others Injured, of whom nt least SO wlli die. Thn supremo court ban decided thn WhlUkor Wright, tho promoter, can be extradited for trial In Knglnnd. Clillo In negotiating n loan for 9500, COO to cover tho Inntallmenta due on two warship and moot debt to banka. The ilritlnh admiralty li necking a tillable atuamer to tend to the relief of the Kngllilt scientific expedition in the Antarctic. Chicago policemen nro Booking for three Itnilnni who klllod n fellow man and then placed n rovoWer in bin hand to raise tho cry of suicide, A goefirnphlcal society expedition bna sailed from Haiti ruore to explore tho llahnnm Islands Many noted sc. -entlats made up the party. The Jnpnn house of representatives lias ndoptod the appropriations for naval oxpanslon but has rejectod tbo proposed expenditure for Fortnosan railroads nud harbur works, Tho Quatnmolnn Icglslnturo has Is oitod n call for a constitutional aneom nly for the purpose of changing tho constitution no ns to allow the president to succeed himself. Tho Itollance has ngnln defeated tho Constitution nnd Columbia. Hlx thousand people nro homoleis in Iowa ns the result of high wwtor. Ituiela will enforce its Manchurlnn volley, dosplto China's refusal tc grant tho demands, Nearly CO people woro Injured, eight seriously, in n collision of Ban Frun cloco stroot cars. Uoprosontatlvo Payno says tho noxt congress will not roylse tho. tariff or pass any laws against' tho trusts. Pour cars on tho Bout horn PnolQo went over a high ombaukmont south of Santa liarbarn, Gal., Injuring 40 poo plo, Boino of thorn Boriously. TURKS AWI'UI. D12BD. linllre Population of Village U Massn cred by Soldier. Monnntlf, Kuroponn Turkoy, Juno 0. Horrible details nro arriving barn of tho HlniiRbtor of tho Inbnintnntii of tho village of Hinordnsh, nouth of l.nko 1'ronbn, May 21, by linshl llnxouks. It appears that on tho ar rival of tho Ilnnlil Ilnzoukn, Chaka turoiiff'M bund of Insurgents withdrew to tho inountnttiH without sustaining ntiy loss. As no rebels woro loft In tbo vlllngn, tlio luhfihltnntH oxpor- loncod no nnxloty until nuililonly nt Htinsot tho Turku, who hnd completely surrounded tho plnro, commenced n logiilnr bombardment, whereupon nil tho villagers ussumblu'd In tbo streets. TIioukIi the artillery censed firing ilurlUK part of tbo night, tho Turklflh Infantry II roil nil night long. Tho ur tlllnry botnbnrdmont was recom in on coil nt daybreak, but ns It wns In ffTcctlvo tbo Turks not flro to tho vll Ingo on nil sides nnd commenced n general mnsnacra. About 300 houses were burned nnd upward of 200 per sons, mostly women nnd children, woro killed. The women and girls woro murdered wlillo resisting outrage. Whole households wnro sin In. Not n IIvIiik soul was left In tho village. Tho survivors, many of them half burned or otherwise Injured, fled. Homo of tho fleolni; villagers woro captured, nnd hnd their oars nnd noses cut off before thoy wcro biitohorcd. Tho report adds thnt H00 villagers were In tho mountains without food or clothing. Ono bnnd of these, con slstlmc of 40 women nnd children. woro caught by noldlorn In n ravlno nnd wcro killed nftor horrlulo treat merit. r . , RUSSIA WILL SOON FldtlT JAPAN. Officers Have Advised Chinese to Leave Manchuria, Victoria, H. C., Juno 5. -Tho steam or fllojun Mnm, which nrrlvod today from tho Orient, brings nddltlonnt nown regarding tho crisis. The North China Dally Nown tells of tho adop tion of Itusstnn tactics by Japan, which power In gnthorlng forces Into Coron In tho giilso of rcttlers. Tho Shanghai papers say. that while tho opinion of thn best-Informed men Is that thorn will ho no war thU spring between Jnpjn nnd Russia, there Is not thnt footing of cortnlnty. which Is Indlsponnnblo If comroorco is to ho uninterrupted. In Japan nnd Manchuria tho most Infnmmnble mate rials nro piled up ready for conflagra tion, nnd no ono can bo miro that somo nccjdontnl spark will not start n flro whorfo oxtont It Is Imposlhlo to forsoo. Tho North China Dally News says also: "Reliable nown has been received by local mandarins of tho great In creaso of Russian soldtory In Manchu ria. Port Arthur Is ono succession of largo camps, bristling with field artil lery and nrmed men. Russlnns state In nnswor to Chlncso Inquiries without hesitation that thoy oxpoct war with Japan, whoso troops would bo likely to try to enter Munchurla through tho Western coast of Llntotung. Russlnn officers friendly with Chlneso hnvo oarnonstly advised thorn to remove their fnflilllca nnd return to China, nnd not conio back until after tho war. on thn ground thnt tho wholo of I.! ne tting and Southern-Manchuria will soon bo ono groat battloftold." trains Mnirr head on. Disregard of Orders Caused Petal Collis ion In Kansas. Topokn, Kan., Juno C A disastrous collision between Santa Fo passcngor trnlnn nt Stllwoll, thin afternoon, kill ed nlna peoplo nnd seriously injured nix. Train No. 1 wns going west at full npeod and crashed Into tho Chi cnirn section of No. 8, east-bound. Tho trnlna woro routod on tho Mis Rourl Pacific tracks on nccount of tho llooda which washed out tho Snnta Fo tracks. Ordorn woro sont out by tho train dispatcher today for both trnlnn to mcot nt Stllwoll. It Is chnrgod nt tho Snntn Fo ofllco hero to night that tho crow on tho Chicago t nil n dlBrognrdod thin Injunction, nnd ran n mllo or moro past tho mooting plnco. No. 1 did not stop nt Stllwoll, but on running nlowly by tho engi neer saw no othor train, nnd nn ho hnd n clear track according to his or dorn bo rushed nbond. No. 8 whistled boforo tho onst-bound train had pro ceeded far, but too Into to nvotd a col lision. The pastcst flattleshlp Afloat. Vlonr.n. Juno 0. Tho snood trlalH of tho Aufltrjnu Bocoiul-cliisrf bnttloshlp Arpnd nt Pola proves hor to bo tho fnstoat bnttloshlp In tho world. Hor maximum spocd la 20.12 knots In a nix-hour run. Shu wns constructed by (ho Trlcatoa Shipbuilding, Company, PAYNE MAY QUIT P0STEMASTF2R GENERAL AT OUTS WITH P1RST ASSISTANT. Hcctnt Prauds are the Cause of the Prlctlon-llead of t)t partmenl Holds Airing Is Too Prce-Nootevclt Will Pass on the Issutf-Payne Will Likely Neslgn. Washington, Juno C Strained rela tions exist botwoon I'ostmutor-Ocner-nl I'nyno nnd First Assistant Wynne nnd ns n result, ono of thorn wilt prob ably have to go, when tbo matter Is laid before tho President. Tho prob abilities nro that I'nyno will bo (ho one, not because ho hn failed In his duty, hut bocnuso tho work has be come uncongenial to him, and tho de partment Is much too largo for n mnn In his hcnltli. When Payno took tho department It was oxpectod that ho would look after thu political end of affairs for tho administration, on account of bis long connection with tho National committee, nnd acquaintance with pol iticians throughout tho country. It wna supposed thnt tho department would run along vory smoothly and would not require so very much exec utive nctlon. Hut tho developments of tho last few months havo bcon such ns to chow that rigid care Is necessary In tho management of this depart ment, which handles so much money and whoro thorojro opportunities for so many Irregularities. Tho differences between Payno nnd Wynno resulted, first, from Payno's criticism of tho First Assistant, be cause tho latter was too free In giving out reports of nbuscs nnd Irregulari ties to tho press, whllo tho Investiga tion wns In progress. Pnrno believes that Wynno has alsq.jncouragcrt some newspaper attacks upon hlrar Wynno feels thnt Payno has not stood by him ns ho should, and Is trying to prevent him from getting credit for tho Inves tigations ns far nn they havo gone. When tho matter Is brought to tho notice of tho President Wynno's posi tion will bo qulto strong, because he begnn tho fight on Mnrhen and Denv er. When Wynne becamo First As sistant ho found that the two burcnus presldod over by theso men wero nin almost Indopondont of tho First Assist ant, nnd both of them woro Inclined to defy him. Ho begnn to assert his position, nnd followed up tho nowspa por nttnckn upon tho Irregularities of tho dnpartmont Tho fnct thnt ho tins forced both of tho officials out will no doubt help him with tho President In any contest with Poyno. Possibly Wynno will bo mndo Postmaator-Clcn-ernl, but attention Is directed moro towards Fourth Assistant Ilristow, who, moro thnn nny ono else, has bcon responsible for unearthing tbo Irregu larities in tho department. PRIDR OP TIIH NAVY. Olds for Three New llattleshlps Opened Will He Our Most Powerful. Wnahlngtdn, Juno 3. Dlds "woro op ened today at tho Navy Department for tho construction of tho Mlnncsotn, Vermont nnd Kansas, tho throo 16,000 ton battleships authorlxod by tho last Congress, circh to cost not exceeding 4.212.000. Tho Nowport News Ship building Compnny, of Nowport Nows. Vn., wns tho lowest biddor for ono ves rel; tho Wllllnm Cramp & Bon Ship & ISnglno Dulldlng Compnny woro tho only bidders for moro 'thnn ono ship. Theso battleships will bo tbo most nowcrful of tbo American Navy. Thov will hnvo an acquired speed of 18 knots, n displacement of 1G.O00 tons, a .mnln battery of four 12-Inch, olght 8-Inch, and twelvo 7-Inch broe'chload Ing rifles, nnd a Becondnry battery of 12 four men, ono rour-pounuer rnpiu flro gun; twelvo thrco-pound soml-nu-tomntto guns; six one-pound nutomnt lo cuns: two ono-noiindor noml-nuto- mntlo gunaj two thrco-lnch flold piec es; two macblno guns and bIx nuto- mntlo guns. Maine Ono Wall of Flame. Portlnnd, Mo., Juno C Mntno to night Is burning from ono aldo to tho othor and In almost ovory section. Thousands of dollars' worth of pro porty nml vnlunblo tlmbor land nro bohiK doatroyod hourly by forest flros, nnd there la llttlo proapoct for changed conditions until rain bna soaked tiro nrouud nud woodlands. At loaBt 30 flroa woro roportod tonlpbt, nnd many others nro raging. Tho flro lino at Romls nnd Raining I-nkca extends from ono to twelvo mlloa, PHANCO ALARMS JAPAN. Incursion of Troops Causes Protest to be Untercd. Victoria, D. C, June ir-The crisis In China grows apace, according to .'ions received by tho ISmprcss of China, for not only Is tho situation grnvo In tho north, but also In the south, for with tho Incursion of 2000 French troops across tho Hwang ill borders, Pokln has become greatly alarmed. On tho arrival of tho Fronch forco at Chlnnan, Governor Wang Chlh Chung, of Kwangsl, askod asked tho Fronch Consul to de mand their withdrawal, but ho re plied ho had no authority ovor the forces. Pokln correspondents say that It Is considered, at Pokln thnt the ac tion of tho Fronch In tbo south In taken for tho purposo of creating dis cussion in favor of Russia. An In fluential petition has been received nt Pekln from Hong Kong asking for tho dismissal of Governor Wang Chlh Chung on the. ground that ho Is In Icaguo with tbo French. Tho situation regarding Mnnciurla waa vory grave when tho Kmprcss sailed. Rcllablo reports published "by tho Japanoso papers told of continued war preparations. A Cheo Foo din patch said that Russians wcro busily chartering stenroora to carry troops and arms to Tnku Sbata and Yniu. It la reported thnt tho Nippon Yuscn Kalsba has been asked to hold Its fleet In rondlneoa for transports. 8torloa of largo accumulations of pro visions by Russians and Jnpancso nro frequent la Japan papers. Tho Rus sian squadron was maneuvering off the Ynlu when tho Empress sailed on May 23. Mr. Sung, governor of Moukdcn. ar rived nt MoJI. nnd, Intervlpwcd there, ho said Russia alms at securing per manent possession of Manchuria and tho mouth of tho Yalu. L0VQ8 aivns wayjn iowa. Crops on Thousands of Acres Aboat Keo kuk are Rhms4. St. Louis, Juno 4. A special to the Post-Dispatch from Keokuk, la., says Six hundred square miles of rich farming land along tho tfaslslppl south of hero Is undor water. The Egyptian levco broke during tho night In two places, nod tlicro aro now moro than 20 brakes In It This leveo rnns from tho Mississippi -At Alexandria to tho muffs, and protects tho town and shoro ns far south at Hannibal from overflow of tho Dos Moines. A strip of country ton miles wldo nnd sixty miles long Is now under wntcr, and the crops, which never looked better, will bo n totnl loss. Much of tho land over flowed hns not been flooded for S3 years. The loss will reach fl.000.000. Tho town of Alcxnndrin. la., six miles south of Keokuk. Is entirely sub mersed, and tho dcodIo aro living in tho second stories or making prepara tions to move. A strip 300 feet long and 25 icec wide along tho river front Is tho only land In tho town that Is not flooded. This Is covored with horses, calo. hnM and neonle. with their house hold belongings, and tho problem of transporting them Is a serious ono, Oravo fears aro entertained for the safety ot tho Hunt loveo, which pro tects tho bottoms iron Warsaw 10 Qulncy. on tho Illinois aldo. Men nre wnrk nn It. anil It Mh stand a ToW moro Inches of rise. Tho loss ot live stock will prove very hotxvy. MINERS MAY GO OUT AOAIN. Operators Will Not Recognlxe Thetr Se lections lor Peace uoani. Wllkesbnrro, Pa., June 4. Another dark-streaked cloud loomed up on the horizon of tho anthractto coal re gion today. Tho oxocutlvo boards of tho United Minors. In pes slon horo today, Indorsed tho ae lectlon of their three district pres idents? on tho board of conciliation, authorlxod by tho strlko commlBnlon. and If theso momoors nro noi rocog nlxod by tho operators, tho executive boards will contomplnto calling a con vnntlnn nt rtilnB.wnrVom to declare n gunornl suspension of work until their members nro given recognition. In a statement tonight the district nrnjiiimirn RTnm innt mo uuuruium objected on tho ground that tho mlno- workers roproseninuveB woro ap pointed by tneir organisation nn u n ui in nnph iilntrlcL Another meet in will Itn hnlil tnmorrow tn dectdo whether a BUBpenalon of work shall bo ordered. Ounm nnd of Cable Spliced. Manilla. Juno 4. Tho British cablo iiuinn. AnpfOln. enenced In lavlaR tho Commercial Pacific- cnbio nrrlvod nt (lunm nt midnight. Sho had good wonthor throughout and hor trip from this port was ontiroiy buocosbiui, me Guam ond of tho cnblo wbb ifpllioqd to day, completing connection boton Malay and Guam. " , A HUNDRED DEAD TERRIBLE WORK OP A CYCLONE IN QEOROJA. Uolnesvllle the Scene of Destruction Plro Droit e Out In the Wreckage Stores, Schoolbouxs and Hundreds of Residences Swept Away Many Bodies Not Recovered. Galnsvllle, Oa June 3. Within tho spnee or two minutes today a tornado dealt death and destruction to the City of Galnsvlllo and environs, knl- Inr; at least 100 people, wounding 16u more, leveling 100 cottages to the ground and tearing two stories off tbo factory of tho Galnsvlllo cotton mill. Of tho killed, probably two-thirds were women and children, who wero opcrntlvos In the cotton mill. Tho death list Includes only about six Ne groes. The storm camo from tho south. from almost a clear sky, swooping down on the Galnsvllle cotton mills, near the 8outkcrn Railroad station, at 12MB o'clock. With a terrific crash the two upper ntorics of the building wero shaved off smoothly, leaving. 32 operatives dead In. tho room. The tor nado then swept around tho out skirts of tho city to the suburb of New Holland, two miles away, where aro located the Pacolct cotton mills, ono of the largest plants In tho state. The plant of the Pacolct Company was not seriously damaged, but probably 100 cottages standing nearby, occu pied by operatives who wero employ ed In tho mills, were demolished, kill- Ing 33 people. Theso were mostly wo- mon and children, as the heads ot f&nilles wero nearly all in the factory at work. m The atoro of Joseph Logan, near tho Galnesvlllo cotton mills, was crushed to ruins by tho wind, and eight men . who had taken refuge In It wero In- '" . stantly killed. Tho Joses general . store met a similar fate, and la the ruins two persons, ono man and one woman, were crushed to death. Reports from Wfelte Sulphar "' Springs, seven miles from Gainesville, aro to the effect that the storm struck thero with terrible force, killing- a dozen people. This, however, is not confirmed. . . Tho property loss nt tho Pacolet mills, occasioned by the destruction of tho cottages nnd outbuildings; Is esti mated at J75.000. Tho Gainesville cot ton mills are damaged to the extent of sto.ooo. The cyclone first hit too town De low tho Southern (Railway depot. It dropped almost unnoticed, and bo- fore any one realized what was hap pening. Tho second and third stories of tho woolen mill wero shaved off smoothly. A Are started in this pile ot wreckage, and tho fire department had hard work to get to It because ot the obstructions In tho street. WAITB WANTED IN MANILA. Arrested by United States Msrshal la Seattle for Cmbexxleasent. Seattle, Jnne 3. Deputy United ' -. Btntea Marshal Jcbn Stringer arrived in ' Seattle this morning, having nnder ar rest Ed. L. Wnlto. who Is wanted la Manila for embeulement. Waita left Manila May 2, taking with bim, it is alleged, 0,000 of the money of Colonel Newberry's bank, of which he was cashier. Ho waa troced from thu Philippines to Hong Kong, where he boarded tbo steamship Tar tar for Vancouver, U. O. and tba auth orities at Washington wero notified. Deputy Stringer went to Victoria to meet tho boat Friday, and went on board pretending to bo an immigration inspector. He spotted his man all right, and offloer and suspect ooth re mained on the yosmI until Vancouver was reached. Walto left the ship there, and Mr. Stringer shadowed him and was finally rewarded Saturday night by seeing bis man step on board the Canadian Pa clflo train, bound for Seattle. As soon as the international boundary Una was crossed 8tringer Informed Walto that . he was under arrest. The prisoner ad mits everything except that bo took the monoy. Ho says bo worked In a. bank In Mnniln, and left there May 2, but denies moat emphatically that bo is an embezzler. No Longer An Anarchist. Chicago, Jnno 3. Horr Johann Most' ' was tho principal speaker at- a ban quot yostordny attornoon In Sharp- shootora' pnrK, unuor mo auspices ot tho Arboltor Zoltung. Many -anarclw lata wero present and n dotal ofpollco woro stationed In tho grove, J"An urchy was not discussed. Most ad vised hla audlonco to upuoldtho Mac and Constitution ot tho United States and retrain from nny acta ot violence. I "Wri ' ' V.J At.j. '" , -. fit ku, rijL