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About Condon globe. (Condon, Gilliam Co., Or.) 189?-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1895)
TH3 CFHCIAL AND LEADINO PAPER OP CILLIAia COUNT?. PVBLISHRD SVtRV FRIDAY BV SLOAN P. IHUTT, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription It a tee. One yenrdn s'Ivruks) , , , If nut inld lu ailvanue u Stx mouths ....... ..,......,,,.., 1 lire mini ilia ,....... Biugle cuules ,. ,.11 60 ,. 2 W .. 1 uu .. ?fl , 10 Entered at the Pnttnmu at Condon. Oreton. OJ I lecond-cUut mail matter. , orriciAL UMECTOBT. 's .' United States. , I'reaUleal. .........Gaovm Clsvsi.akb ice I'roaUlent ,.Am,i K. Htkvknkon Bw.reUry ol Btate.... ,.WMm Q.UbiuihAm Sourelery of Treasury ..Jyw (J, Cabi,ii. nooretary or Interior...... .....IIuks hmitm Secretary of War IUnikl . Lammnt ttwiretary of Navy Hilary A:lr.nunnt Pusunaaier-Umisral. ,Wiioh . Bdwki.l Attomey-Meuttral t. ...... Kuh a d out kv feaorvtary of Agriculture J Htksum. MoaroM late of Oregon., !.v QoTfirnor.. ,.,, Beoretary of Stale... Iroasarer....... ...., Attoruvy-Oeneral ., tQ)U o( fubilo luetraoilou., , ,.wm. p. lord ...... H. K. KINt'AlD ..i'Hlt MkTSIJMAN ci, M. (iii.M Senators... (J. H. MiTCUKU. iMaieMees 14. N. Vot.ru. IB. IIIMMAMH Congressmen. ' W. K. K 1.1.1 a W. II. l.KKIH Printer leeeeseteeeeeeeeei (:. K. WOLVSHTUSI lupreme Judges.. , (r. A. Mooas JL U. Bw. ,.. Tenth Judicial District. Circuit Jndce.. W. L. BRaDSHAW l'rsutliiK AtUruy A. A Jrns UuiuMreiale iiuartl... W. C. WILU OllllMM OoOlltr. '" Joint rlenalor lor Gilliam, Sher man anl Waaco eottiitlus W. W. ftrilltll Kejirwu(tle.. ...... ........... J. K. David Clera.. r?. I. tUC A H. HAHKKa ComMlloneii.M..-.........., j k?m f" iVem01 M O CLaaKC ''rwV'perluteadent. .W. w. XKNNcuf .,Lr' g'Jtr. .....,..,.M.,m.W, W. KmxKUT LiUfllllVf.... iutiiitlr ..W. A. lifKlUWlH Kkouk loatiector.. ,.Lwis A. Miu.br Preeloet OWoers. CONDO. Jtiatlce n( the Peace.. ....8. P. Hhptt M, HCCaUsT Constable,. .. AaUNOTOK,, J nat Ire of the Peace..............-i....-.0. 8. Eai COUaUtle....-...., ........JUHH CtUfKINOIlAM w . yusniL. v Joaiieeof the Pece.............8x Tknui.tmo touauDie....... ..........u.l. T MOKUJill : NATVIUI. Jiistire of the Peace.... Coustatil... OlKX. ' Jwatlo of the Peace, ., Constable......... , lom'c kocic. Jostle of the Peace. CXJUsMetUi&tt a Me ; i TmaiL roMK, .W. 11. A,tt t O. RaViiaU ...JKo Jastlce of the Peace. ..mH. Conulile.... ' , " CKOWK ROC'K. Jnstlrwof the Peace ......,... Cuuavable....uU .......... HLAUKK. Justice of the Peace....... , Cous table . Ha l, PAraH oe. ItATsa O. It. at W. U. Time Ciird. Train arrive end leare AtHiiKtut as follows: gAST-IKrBMB. Train ., fast soalt, arrie al ArlS(ton et ... WSST-eOOMD. ... ' ' . ' T Trala No. t, fast mall, rrlreeat Xrlldatasi at . : ' ' ' USB Only one train a day. , Jiitppuer trains Son. 9 and 10 hare dlacontln tniHi the run to Arlington, but make close eon-tit-oiloiia with No. 1 and 2 at Willows Junction. f.irjnsb ttckeu sold and bttitfe cheuksd tbrouxbto all poluU in tlieUukedHUtosaud Canada. . I . . - , F. C. HIHDLE, Tl0kt Agent, ' i Arlington, Or. At: a a. m.mt. moriah wwk, no. s , Htnlitl roramHnlcatloiia ou Matarday even inn on or before full moon of each month. Hv Iimrnlii(lrlhru in good slaiulmitare cordially vl!. a to atiiid. P, r. VAUQH, W. it. M. U. UoWNlMO, Bocretary. : w1. D R, J. J. HOOAN . r , :' , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, S Condon, Or, Office Orngnn ave., between Catholic Church and rvaldeuce of e. V. BbutU D R. J. II. HUDSON, l Physician and Surgeon, Condon, Or, Office and residence in the Wtley UlUer real deuce In ttoiitli Condon. Calls promptly attended to day or night. T W. DARLING, 1 ' Attorney at Law, Notary Public end Conveyancer, - Condon, On Collnctlnns and lnanranne. Term! reasonable. Office In rear of postoillce building, Main street. m R. LYOJJ8, ' ATTORNEY AT LAW, Condon, Or. All lexal work tended to. promptly end carefully at- g A. D, GtlRLEY, Attorney and Counselor at Law, , Arlington, Oregon. ' Will practice in U the oourts of the Btate. Collt't'tl'iiia wade and general law busiuees tranaacUid. ' , United Stales Commissioner sns NoUrj Public Und proofs and llllngs taken, and all other land buIne unreiully attended to. r s AY P. ,U0AS, County Clerk, Y D0S ALL,LlDi Or y, LAND AND NOTARY BUSINESS In a iia$ aud careful manner -i . O P. 81IUTT, f Justice of the Peace and Rotary Public, i Condon, Or. Collections promptly and carefully attended 'to. UVHsa w.T. J. Av tt W, ill. l fA,ji COXDGN VOL, 5. ;: fCONDON, GILLIAM; CO.. OREGON. FRIDAYV MARCH 22, 1895. NO. On Thouaaod Bhoti m Sflnnta. . &i'iusariiei.), O., March 15. It is ! t.U.I . 1 I 4.. I I . ,, www a kuii iittn uoyu luveiiwu Uoro UIB charitirjir 1,000 nhots per tnlnote. It la operated by eloctricity, ana is eight feet lonsr. The utmoHt secrecy as to the in ventor oi it is m&inutined. " ARLINGTON-FOSSIL . Stage' Line' 1 L. PARKER, Proprietor. . It A RB VH(M A U I.I X U TO K TO Fossil A 00. Round trip, 110 00 SOW....... ..kound trip, 0t 4 00. Kou ml trip' 7 M Mayvllle Condon.., C'liun... S 00 , ..koand trip,, 00 2 UO.....,.........Kouiid trip, I 00 tnox Leavr Arlington even? mornina (KiindaT i Oepted) at fi.o'clock, 1 due at Condon at r, .. and arrlvee at Koaail st7 r. u.- , Comfortable eoachea and caref al, experienced UdTVIS. ' olJUo'liJo E. MoNEILL, Receiver. TO THE oive the choice or . TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL ROUTES lOaTHEBN BY. : PACIFIC BY. VIA VIA SPOKANE DENVER 'OMAHA MINNEAPOLIS AND AND ' ST. PAUL KANSAS CITY LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES. ' OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 6 DAYS ..rod.. - ' , 1 SAN FRANCISCO 'Fut fntl details call ou O. R. ft N. Agent, F. CUIIiudle, Arlington, Of. : OR ADDRESS ... W. H. HURLLUTTT, - -Gen. Pass. Awnt, Portland, On, ' Llgntest, Easiest Workiog. Most Accorata, Compact, ' Moat Modem and progressive For catalogue or information write to THE MARUN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Coos t" Everything that is L-......Tiri Solid v7-7-t :! Top .. i?il5M4rt Reefer. Nf REPEATING REPEATING Rifles llShot-Cuns. ALL KINDS OF AMMUNITION, ARB MADB BY THB Winchester Repeating Arms - OUR MODEL twit now used Bond fbr 100-psvsro lUuetrstted Catsilosraej, FEEE. 2Tinchoster Repeating Arms Co., New laven, Conxv PIAMO nSMO-. Our new Catalogue is a grand portfolio of all the latest and best styles of Organs and Pianos. It illustrates, describes, fi, manufacturers' prices on Organs from $35.00 up, and Piano from $150 up. It shows how to buy at wholesale , direct from the manufacture re, and save over go per cent, THE CORNISH ORGANS AND PIANOS Guaranteed for ?S yrs., have been played and praised for nearlw 30 vrS.1 tO-dflT thev are 'Sacurt our SPECIAL TERMS f Cndit. fraifwt to tuittht (imti lUemtmbtr thia grand book it smf FREE, f Writ fnr it -CORNISH & CO. (Estah. nearly SO yra.) Ma,.a,na4on N j OREGON'S FLOUR California Is Endeavoring to , Shut It Out FROM THE ORIENTAL MARKET riour Space on Iteatnere for the Orient Kn gaged by Han Franvlaeo; jri'onrlng Hills for the Next Two Months-Ore gon's Only Recourse, . J,: oa Fbancisco, March i 15, ,ilie steamer City of Peking sailed yesterday (or China and Japan, and all of her available space for freight was taken. The principal item of her big cargo was floor, and there has been a scramble for room for this article. It has been learned that contracts are being made for flour shipments on both the Pacific Mail and Occidental & Oriental steamers as far ahead as May 1." ' V- 'tY; The reason given for this rash for freight space on the part of flouring men is the demand for room made by Port land millers. Strange as it may seem to Kan Franciscans, (lour is being manu factured in Oregon and shipped to Hopg Kong by way of San Francisco, and pot on me uneniai marvel to compete witn the products of California. Oreeon peo ple are shot oat from shipping by the vanauian ana nortri ratine steamers, for the reason that those lines are car rying all the cargo that they can handle. With roget Sound shut oat from them Oregon millers had only one recourse and that was to ship by the Pacific Mail ana uccidental & Oriental lines. .. . What arrangement has been made with' the Pacific Company to transport flour to San Francisco is a secret. A special rate it is understood has been given to Oregon manufacturers by local Uiina lines, which enables them to compete with California mills. The lat ter naturally nave the preference when it comes to shipping for the reason that they; are the direct supporters of the Pacific Mail and Occidental &. Oriental lines, and also because they pay a high rate. To shut out Portland men to as great an extent as possible nearly all the flour space has been engaged on steamers to sail between this date and CHEERS FOR AMERICA. ' England Denounced for Not Extending Aid to Newfoundland. ' St. John's, N. F,, March 15. At a meeting of the West End relief commit tee last night John Boyd, governor for the poor asylum and an ex-member of the colonial legislature, denounced the British government for allowing the peo ple of Newfoundland to starve on the streets, and the British flag to be starved off the flagpole in Newfoundland, while England gives thousands of pounds to the Armenians and protects African trading companies, leaving our people to go begging to America for relief to keep body and soul together. - Seven hundred families in the east end of St. John's were provided to-dav with three days' provisions from the Boston relief contributions. When the - Halifax steamer, Grand Lake, left this port this morning sh had among her' passengers wr, r aye, who came be re In charge oi te American relief contributions.. "At the hour of the steamer's departure 4,000 people were on. the wharf to see Mr. Fae off. When the steamer Was swung out from her pier the American flag was how ted at her foremasthead. The banner was greeted with many hearty cheers. Cheers for Mr. Faye and Boston were given, The highest praise is given Mr. Faye' for the manner in which he has managed with the contri butions he had in charge, and the way in which he acquainted himself with the wants and distress of the people. NEWEST and BEST in INGLE-SIIOT Riflec, -AND Co. 1893 SHOT-GUN ty all tit most attTanccd trti ui wa snoatcrs. tudi: rr ii aU L) L. J i .3 the taoilt nonnlaf jnotrnmnnt. A BLACKMAILING, SCHEME. such the Cuban RoToIotion Is Said to . Be by an Authority, ; ; - Wasihnotom, March 15. The Spanish minister Senor Mornaga, has received within the past few days several threat ening letters from manufacturers of high explosives in this country; The writers have asked him to purchase their explo sives for use against the Cuban insur gents, and have stated that in the event of his refusal to do so they will be sent gratuitously to the rebels to be used, by them in the destruction of the Spanish troops and Spanish property in the isl- isvt, Th letters have been throws into the. waste-basket, and have been given oo further consideration by the minister. ; A high official authority in Washing ton states that the so-called revolution in Cuba is really a "tempest in a tea pot." This eentleman aava that tiiA at. ieged insurgents da not exceed in the aggregate 1,000 men ; that they are not liawiow no mo term is understood Here, out separate; Danas oi roving banditti, who have combined for nnlawful our. poses, ana wno are encieavonnar to trive a political color to their action by posing as native Cubans deeirious of throwing ou me yoKe or npain. xne same author ity states tne present troubles are fo mented by certain Cuban adventurer in the United States, who are using their followers in Cuba as a means to collect money from the United States, the motit oi wnicn onus its way into their own pockets.:. ' " ; It is asserted that the 20.000 Cuban cigar-makers in this country are con tributing S1Z each, of their monthly wages to the support of the revolution. It is claimed that through various sources upward of $(10,000 have been contributed by Cuban sympathizers here, and that while some of this money has been ex pended for arms and munitions of war. most of it will be converted to the per sonal use of the men who are instru mental in collecting it. f, An unqualified denial is given to the report, that the sovernor-seneral of Cuba. Senor Calleio. is to be recalled and his office filled by another gentle man, who will be become a practical dictator, v Senor Callejo has, it is said, given entire satisfaction to the Spanish cabinet, and there is not the slightest probability that he will be removed. - - WILL PAY THE PENALTY. .Washington Counterfeiter Volnntar- . lly Olvos HUnaelf Up. ' SKim.s,Iarch.I5-Tlie first case of au accusing conscience, influenced bv religion, that ever came to the notice of the federal authorities in this city was brought to light last Monday afternoon, when Thomas Gorman, a big ironmoul- der by trade, walked into Commissioner Emery's office and asked United States District Attorney Brinker to have a war rant issued or his arrest for counterfeit ing and passing counterfeit coin. Gor man said that be had confessed to the officers of the Salvation Army and made up ins mind to do tne same to tne au thorities. . He said that he had passed $180 in this city and also in Tacoma during the past two months, and that be made the coin himself, using an electric plater to plate the lead money. tie said that he did not know the pen alty for his offense, and did not care as long as bis conscience, which was both ering him, was clear and he had atoned for bis crime. He was sent to iail in default of bond to await trial in June. MONTANA'S SILVER STATUE. Bold Attempt to Steal It From n Kan- -, sas City Dry Goods Store. Kansas Cm March 15. What was doubtless an attempt to steal the $225,- 000 gold base of the famous Montana silver statue exhibited at the world's fair was frustrated here to-night The statue is on exhibition in the dry goods store of a local firm. It rests In plain sight of the street and is easy of access. l.ate to-nignt two men, wno, it was later developed, had hidden themselves in the store when it was closed this evening, got so far as to wrench an iron beam oil, the ioor where the statue stood, and were opening both doors when discovered, 1 he men fled and ware " chased for several blocks, -and . al though bred at halt a doxen times, escaped- They left the tools which would have ,been necessary to remove the statue, showing their intentions. Tracks in the alley near by, where a rear door had been opened, ' indicated they had confederates, The statue was , that for which Ada Kehan posed as a model. THOSE WRECK , TELEGRAMS. r oeeeutlon Called I'pon - to , Produce V; T ',; Them In Court. - ... . ', ak' FaiKCisco, j March .15. In the strikers' casein the United States dis trict court to-day Harry Knox, the leader of the) Sacramento lodge of the A. K.VU.. testified that at least six of the signatures aliened to be his on tele grams a,troduced by the prosecution were forgeries. Attorney Monteith for the defense had served notice on Dis trict Attorney Foote to compel the pro duction of x'!H:;rro8 alleged to have been sent by.Saperintendent Wright, of Sacramento,ito Auburn and Willows, to wreck the two trains taken from Duns muir and Truukee-.by strikers. .It is said that the telegrams have been de stroyed ; but the defense has copies of them taken feff the wire by operators on the other side of the receiving stations. Had the trains been wrecked, as is . al leged they were ordered to be, any of the A. K. U. t en who went to Sacra mento to all the strikers there might have been kill. X. 1. SHOT AT NEGROES White Laborers Kill Ponrin an Early Morning; Attack. WERE TAKEN BY SURPRISE me Trouble Has Been . Brewing tot Some Tint nnd Was Caused by the Blacks Taking the Plseee of the White torswsiTa.'',''.y 'i'.' ...'--v lgw Orleans, March 14. The thick fog early this morning was the veil b hind which desperate white levee la borers gathered, and which they pene trated with Winchester rifles all aimed at the colored non-union workmen on the ships loading at the docks. .The attack was made at points several miles apart, just before the arrival of the po lice, and as a result there are half a dozen corpses and a dozen or so wounded men. The police saw the attack, but no ar rests were made, they claiming they were too few to cope with the unexpect ed outbreak. The day before the mas" sacree an was quiet, and the governor saw no grounds for interference;, but to day the business men are denouncing both the executive and peace officers; the militia is ready to move; an appeal to the federal government has virtually been made, and even the foreign consuls have decided to join in . the move for peace at any price. The causes which led to the trouble have been of km it standing, and crew out of the attempt of ship agents and others interested to reduce rates. The white screwmen claim that the colored men, who were eiven a share of the work under an agreement, made secret cuts and violated the agreement in or aer to obtain more work and gradually crowd the white men off. The white association then severed ties with the blacks and refused to work with them, or for men wbo employed mem. ine wnite longshoremen joined the screwmen in this. Since then the steamship lines have been gradually going over to the negroes.. Lately, the white screwmen Quit work on the linea still loyal to them, stating they would not work nntil the who e affair was straightened . onfc.'u.. Soveral more .lino then took on negro laborers from neces sity.. ' ;;?' .1 - ' - t; Ihe white nmon finally determined to retaliate upon the stevedores, by offer ing to reduce ratee and deal with the ships direct. Ships in baste accepted the oner, but the asenta stood bv the stevedores. The latter offered to pay more than the screwmen asked, but the screwmen refused to deal with them. The agents offered to pay the screwmen their wages and place the stevedores over them as superintendents, but this the screwmen declined. Then the stevedores began importing colored screwmen from Galveston, and the whites, growing desperate, broke loose in riots. The smoke and foz combined made the scene almost as dark as night. The negroes were on board the ship, and had ust raised the tarpaulin of hatch num ber 2 when the attack was made. Thev were taken completely by surprise, and their cries were pitiful. Many sought refuge aboard the ship, while some ran down the wharf and made their escape. It is impossible to estimate the number of shots fired, but it is said that there were about 200. . After the bloody work the men hur ried off as fast as thev had come. The white men came in a body, moving along the levee up town unmolested. After their departure a large number of policemen made their appearance n the scene and cleared the wharf of the large crowd which had gathered. Mayor Fitznatrick had hurried to the scene as fast as possible, and was very much disappointed when told that there were no arrests made. The negroes fired upon were in the employ of Steve dore Geddes. of the Harrison line of steamers. It is said that the reason there was not a sufficient force of police on hand when the trouble occurred was that the hour to begin work was 7:30 o'clock, and the police had received or ders to report at that time The Tyler-Last Chance Controversy Washington, March 15. Secretary Smith has rendered a decision in the case of the Last Chance Mining Com pany vs. the Tyler Mining Company, being a claim made by the former for the Tyler lode in the Coeur d'AIenee, Idaho, A portion of ' the Tyler claim overlapped the Last Chance, but the! patent waived the right to the overlap ping portion. The Last Chance," how' ever, asked that no patent be issued while there was pending in the supreme court a case affecting the title of the property. Secretary Smith holds as the overlapping tract had been waived fty the Tyler Company a patent shall iisssua for its claim.. , " . i The Bualnnss Hen Determined. V V New Oelkans, March 15. The com mercial bodies of this city Ui l high! is sued an address to the people; statifig iu substance, that , the interfuirrjce ,ot a few thousand organized laborers 1.1 ,ttie commercial affairs of (he .city wonM, 1 no longer tolerated. The a-.: ' ess In dorsed the right of an erepiry-r to hir. whom he chose, end warns i tin rs ft' 1 have taken the law into the to- a i an that they must desist. KaList-re--" a willingness to meet t'-e m" , . if they will return to ? .- v, 1 and accept work, but 1 r 1 , -, . must otherwise) stan,!' HAS THREE USES TEE CIS CS1ATIC3 OP ANT PAPER IN THE COUXTf. ADVERTISING RATES. Professional cards. One square , One-qnaiter column..... On half column One column rf 00 fer month 1 SO per monrn ..... 8 30 rr month , 0(i par mom 10 OO not month . Bnilneaa locals will be charged at 10 cent per line for 11 rat insertion and S cent per Hoe there after. : , ; .... iu ., legal dTertlaementt will In all cause be charged to the party ordering them, at legal ' rates, and paid for before affldarit is furnished FIRED FROM AMBUSH. Colorado Miners Avenge a Saloon Man's , ' .'V' ;: tv: Pueblo, Colo., March 14 A special from Walsenburg, a small town fifty six miles south of Pueblo, says:' A mob in ambush at 7:30 this evening fired on a wagon containing nine Italians who are charged with fatally beating A. J. Hiron, a saloon-keeper at Rouse, a mining camp six miles from ' Walsen burg, Sunday last. - Four of the Italians and the wagon-driver were killed. The prisoners who had leeh lodged in the AValsenbarg jail were.talien to tbecoro-1 ner's inquest at Rouse this afternoon. At the conclusion of the - session ' the prisoners were loaded into a wagon and started back to jail. At Bear creek, a region t where there Is much under-brush.'-half a mile from Walsenburg, the crack of a score of rifles, presumably in the hands of miners, rantr ont. Vnw of the prisoners whose names cannot be learned on account of the excitement, were instantly killed. Joe Welbv. a young American boy, was driving the wagon and was also killed. The officers returned the fire, which lasted for sev eral minutes. The most intense excite ment reigns. : Walsenburg and Rouse are both off the main line of the railroad, and at-1 tempts tq secure further details have failed, because the telegraph offices are not open at night. - . v The work of the mob was done to avenges peuliarly brutal crime. At-7 o'clock Monday morning two men en route to work at Kouse discovered A. J; Hixon, proprietor of a saloon, in a dy ing condition about an eiehth of a mi 1a from his place of business. Hixon had oeen struck on the back of the head with a blunt weapon and was uncon scious. ' He expired within an hour. Some days ago T. J. Brewer, nit boss of the Rouse mine, imported a trained Diooanonnd, which was promptly suni- monea. ine animal rosnea away on ' the trail, and within ten minutes seized - a table leg in the rear of saloon Jrnlf mueaisiant. upon examination uuxki was found on this leg. , The dog then HMuuulaJ A , V. A 1 ,t.wv anil ,em - men, Lorenzo Danino fli Jobatto An tonio, were discovered therein, exhibit ing coosionrable anxiety to get away. Two more men, Pete Rof ta and Fran k . -Anrico, were arrested in 'tt bin near by. Admissions of kiaowle19 of the murder were secured from two o.thern on their arrest, and later thev divuf:'3 - thfl namM nt iavaa rf haM Ua 1) With them? and charged Lorenzo Danluo with the murder. Two of the parties-' - unu buuku eon mi. ine omeera were quickly in the saddle, and all of them'.'. were under arrest bv 4 p. u. Threats of ' lynching Danino were indulged in dur- : , 1 1 1 . , i iiik we u.v, ami qnite a numrjer 01 men - were scattered along the ronte to Wal. senburg, but it was thought .there esas - scarcely a possibility violence would be . attempted...... liiion was rather popular with the American miners, and general indigna- tion prevails. He was an Arkansan, late of Texas, and was 36 or 38 years of age. He was supposed to have returned j from walsenburg on horseback about 10 p. m., and to have been attacked una wares. The incentive of the murder is problem, as ' Hixon was not of an aggresssive or quarrelsome disposition. PERILS OF THE SEA. "' . Particulars or the Lmi f the Bark - : Sarah g. Kldgeway. Victobia, B. C, March 14. The' steamer Miowera brings the following ' story: Survivors of the wreck of the American bark Sarah S. Ridgeway, 8G9 tons, belonging to Philadelphia, bound from Newcastle to Singapore with"coaT, reached Bundabeerg February 10. Thev - comprise Captain N. Spjorgren, lus wife, -officers . and crew, ' numbering eleven. . The vessel made a splendid run until January 25, when she encountered a terrible cyclone, lasting four dava with out cessation. . Three of the crew were - washed away and drowned. The wind defied ail the efforts of the men on deck. - Men lashed to the wheel worked splen didly until forced by falling masts to abandon their post.. On the 29th the wind abated, -when the bark went aahOre . on Belona shdals, in 21 :59 south, 435 miles northeast pi .Burnet. Jxeads.he master stood by until February 8, when finding that the erection of inrv .ruat-ts or effecting repairs would be impossible, " ne ana tne crew toot to the ixats with provisions and water.' In this wav tht-v arrived at- Bnndabeerg" in an utWv destitute conditiow.- Albert Kestols, "a seaman, Is suffenng froro - a broken leg, the mast having fallen on him. He wa - conveyed to a iiosnital, and and is now in a precarious state, . me barit y, surf d, and was only abandor aid had beeome valueless. ..Tii nnin- whMi of those drowned are Albert t.p 1 Harry Bailor, seamen, and Clear., eten, carpenter. -. ; ; ,-' A Clevex JTorgpt Oaaght.;l. " " PvtpTH, Minn. Marchl2. Dt'ectiv arrested e man" to day hais'8 ' to I j one of Ihe cft-yereat forgers In tLo c - try.: His name is variously, jrS veu Arthur F Hudo5n,Tj: S. Dod - l- ' if k Raymon i and William e man's ope-'ttion's ae s;. '.'-. - eU'!sdJ f'om VVaahir-on', ii, C. - h was in T'ul fr a ti. .0, to f J C'-ro. and I hissvisitu St. Jo ni,( . ; L n firoiih, Kan.; AIilw', o' . ' j 'ft'i .n his cart-or. . - l.'iiglfch. BBtflK!