IONE PROCLAIMER IONE OREGON EVENTS JFJHE DAY Newsy Items Gathered from All Parts of the World. Less Important but Not Less ting Happening from Points - Outsids tha Suta. Tbraa miners wan burled by a cave- In Id a Goldflsld, NaT., mine. Tha physicians attending ludg Wil- llama ars hopeful of bia rac ovary. ' A biff fight is on in If tssouri between the brawariaa and prohibition Lata. A Franco army dirigibls balloon - ploded In the air and four aviator war killed, f Tba Omaha streetccatr company will make eoncaaalona to it man and a sct tlamant la llkaly. Dlsssss la breaking out in tba dls triet denusdsd by tha burricana along tha Louisiana eoaat and mora death ara expected. Ra porta from Morocco say tba tribes man ham Inflicted a terribl defeat upon tha Spsniih, driving them back and killing 7,000. An American company will bo awarded tba eon tract over a Britlah eoneern for farniahlng tba machinery for constructing a amall arms factory In Australia. danger among tba Moon baa lad to overture! for peace. A Colorado man 78 years old Is to remarry the wife be divorced 60 years ago. Moro pirates are thought to have captured an American cottar and mur dered the craw. Police of Omaha ara busy in their efforts to prevent riots In connection with tba atreetcar strike. Several English suffragettes In jail In London hava refused to eat and bad to be fed with a stomach pomp. Eastern rsllrunus eTOEriTied'cneap searsion rates from the Middle Weat to tba Atlantis this summer wit good results. Clarenee H. Hack ay save tha report that tha Pnatal Telegraph aomnanv la about ot absorb the Weatara Union la r.ifoonded. The Wright brothers ara to start a fight againet aaveral flying mscfainos wblch they consider infringements on their patents. The late Governor Johnsono, of Mln neeota left no will, but it was his wish that bia wife abouh) have all bis prop erty, worth about $18,000 General Solicitor Loornls, of the Union Pacific, with headquarters at Omaha, Is to go to New York to be come bawd of tba legal department of tha Barrlman lines. French inventors nave several new aeroplanes. Tha death mas m tha Gulf atom la now pieced at 100. Peary says bis indictment of Cook will contain 80 counts. : Religions riots at Castro, Spain, re sulted to the death of a or Leal An Iowa grand jury bat Indicted 86 seen for a gigantic bunco game. Tba teal trust has secured a foot bold among rich districts of China. High winds have fanned California forest Ares until they are again assum- , tng dangerous proportiooa, A young Chines at Baa Francisco baa. Invented an aeroplane which baa made several soeesssful flights. Thoaoanda of pounds of supplies are being cent from Monterey, hi ax ice, to the flood sufferers. Pack mules ara The recent flood fatalities In North ern Mexico have ra ached the appalling total of 8,000. The property loss will reach Into tha million. A conductor an the Southern Pacific tried to leek a ear door near. Reno, but aouM not Insert the hey. Examina tion revealed a diamond worth W76. t la thought to bav been hidden there by eon thief who Intended to secure UUtor. Faery baa arrived at Sydney, N. S., aa his way homo. Damans to srona by the Southern storm will reach 1 1,000, 000, 1 Government troopa of Paraguay hava been repulsed by reveruttauMtt, Dr. Cask has reached Hew Task and received a tog. Maxtea Bitot, tha actress, save -T.rvT-v. .TTTLil. ward m "sharmtagly, anlsxhh- atreskaeV ass hove axajagwd i wo over tha sivtaisa of the KUw brwurd Is rsi." to a legal CLASHES WITH. GOVERNMENT. National Troops May Be Called To Settle Georgia Trouble. Atlanta, Ga., Sept 28. Lawyers and judges of the stato are intensely interested is the seriouo clash now on between the state and the Federal ao boritiea in toe ease of Charles E. Steg gall, in Jail at Trenton, Ga., for con tempt of court by order of Judge A. W. Fits, of tba Dade county Superior court. Steggell refused to testify be fore the grand jury In reference to an alleged distillery. Over, Sieggal), tha bitterest legal flght In the history of the stato has been precipitated, with both sides con fident and standing pat. Should the State court persist In Its attitude of defiance to the mandate of the Federal court, the chances ara that most interesting developments will com to pass this week, which will re sult In the arrest of several other offi cials. It Is believed hare that the Fed eral court will carry Its point, even if obliged to make a direct appeal to the United States government to enforce its orders. Therefore, in too settle ment of this dispute, national troops may have to be used - The acute situation lb Dads county arose over an effort to secure evidence in an alleged blind-tiger caee. The people of Dad county, near Rising Fawn, have believed a distillery bss been located in that neighborhood for some time, and that It baa paid tb government license to secure immunity from Federal raids. In order to get tba necessary evidence, tba grand jury summoned before that body Charier. Steggall, storekeeper and government gauge r. Steggall then aommunieatod with the collector of internal revenue, H. A. Backer, asking him what he should do In the matter. Rucker wired him that under the government rule, bo would have to keep quiet. ' This Is tba outcome of government statute, under tb revieed laws, by which government employes are liable to loss of position, fine and Imprisonment, if they divulge informa tion secured In their official capacity. Steggall promptly informed the grand jury that he could not answer the questions put to him, and gavs tha gov ernment rulee as bis reason. Bis re fusal brought the matter to the atten tion of Judge Fits, who ordered bim to answer. Three times ha was sent for, and thro time refused to answer, and then be was sent to jail. He mode appeal to tb Federal au thorities In Atlanta for protection, Aa tha government cannot afford to allow its employes to bo kept In prison for obedience to government rales, the Federal officials determined to stand by Steggall. Before they could take action, how ever, Judge Fit held that Rucker bad Interferred with the conduct of bia court by ordering Steggall not to speak, and so he sent Sheriff Thurman, of Dade, to Atlanta, to serve summons on Rucker to appear In hia seurt CANADA WANTS ASIATICS. Railroad Contractors Facing Serious Labor Famine. Ottawa, Out, Sept 18. The Cana dian railways are race v lass wits a labor famine, and unless a plan can be devised whereby Aeiatlc labor may be imported for construction work, moeh of their railroad building will bav to be abandoned. Tola la the opinion ex pressed by Collingwood Searieber, eon- eulting nginr of the department f railways. On tb Western prairies the demand for farm laborers has temporarily de moralised tha railway cone traction gangs, tba Grand Trunk Pacific road being eapeeially bard bit Thia road baa been able to retain only a small percentage of ita laborera employed en conatructioB work, the farmers in that section having offered aa high as $4 a day for men while the railroad company P71 tat 18. in the next two years, four new eon- tracts are to be let for construction work, and 16,000 men will be needed. Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, president of the Grand Trunk system, has be here nonsuiting Sir Wilfred Lnarier upon a propeaal to employ Asiatic labor In building new line. It Is proposed to bring the Asiatics to Canada and re turn them to their native countries after tha work baa been completed, dene Heretod With figs Victoria, Sept t8.-ptard by the Rosslan aruiser Shilka, la an attempt to make a sealing raid an the Ski Island aval rookeries, three Japanese seal hunters el tha crew a the Japen eae sealing ech saner Heesi Mars, hava returned to Japan being released se eording to tafornation brought by the steamer Cmprves of China, which ar rived Inst aight Tha report la that Into an outbuilding an Copper Wand, tabling n earn ear sf sows and nigs, and warn imprisoned there far 11 days. I eFTfjFsanjHxl HfAaVfaW L Victoria, B. C., Sept feSavenf af tha Japan ass suhsener nyaumen aiarn, gi von up long ago aa not ratarnad to Hakodate shortly e fore the dapartnra of tha rmprsaa af Chine, which arrived bare bat night The? sohasnar wwat aabsro hi to KsrUnnnntoAexfs Hykamon Mam, given up long ago as i TEN THOUSAND IDLE ' y' Labor Troubles Tie Dp All Butte Nines lo Strike. SHELTERS MAY BE THE NEAT HIT Officers Protect Men Who Attempt to . WormSheriff WarnaJSrriker - He Will Shoot Butte, Moot, Sept 86. Every mine in Butte Is shot down tonight and 10, 000 men are idls, with the prospect of 6,000 moro being thrown oat of work. If tb suspension continue for five days the smelters sod other allied to- dustriss will be forced to sua pond. The trouble was caused by a majori ty of Engineers' Union No. 88 having seceded from tha Western Federation of Miners and organised a new union. The Butte Miners' union ordered its members not to go to work in mines employing members of tha new engin eers' onion. The evening was ushered In with great excitement, when nearly 8,000 miners surrounded the shaft of the Gagnon mine, apparently for the pur pose of mobbing 28 minors who defied the eobHnand of tba union to stop work. A detail of 16 policemen with Captain Thomas Norton in command hurried to the scene, and reinforced by Sheriff John K. O'Bourks, with svary deputy of his office at his back, succeeded In reaching, tba haft mouth. Mounting a pits of timbers, tb ahor iff in plaW language toM the. crowd that the officers proposed to protect the Uagnon miners and intimated that any attempt at violence oupon tha port of the strikers would result in snooting. It is bardto likely that work will be resumed before s week, and the various smelters throughout tha state may bo eompatled to suspend onerationa. WRECK AT SEATTLE. Trolley Oar dumps Track and Crashes . Into Comer Cafe. Seattle, Sept 26. Of the 80 passen gers on a big Wellington! avenue ear that was wrecked at the curve near the main gate of tits World's fair, shortly before noon yeiterday, hot one escaped being out or brussd or sharply shaken. but It Is belfeved that none of the in jured will die. frank Hull, of Taeo- roa, aged 46, aa Oddfellow attending the recti vlties accompanying the Sov ereign Grand lodge meeting, died an hour after being taken from the wreck. Tb ear got beyond control of the motorman, attained a peed of 80 mllee an hour at the corner of Fourteenth avenue, Northeast, and East Fortieth street saretned. left the track and crashed Into a one-story building at the aoutheaat corner of tha crossing, de molishing the flimsy building, splitting and wrecking tba ear and burling the pasaangera forward with frightful force Every pane of glass m toe ear was broken and the jagged pioeee showered upon the passengers, who were tossed one upon another In Indescribable eon fusion. WRECKAGE LINES OULF. Southern Coe to Strewn Whh Broken Ship and Launches. New Orleans. Sept t.--WUh the list of deed from Monday's tropical burricana well above 100 tonight every Indication points to a maob larger num ber of victims. Many amall sloops and munches ara lying wrecked on the Gulf shore of Louisiana and Mississip pi, and there is little doubt that of their occupants are lost Anxiety for tha eefety af bound for New Orleans during the hur ricane period on the guhT, has been re lieved. Nearly all af thsee veeseJe wore many hour lata, but anally ar rived at this port with the exception af nm visum, wtawa H lour oars over do from Puerto Cortes, She was re ported today to have gone asmund off Siseaeri light near the mouth of the Miaafcsippi, with no tees of life. ' " - -- taVeafcavuh nmAaaehBh BjaaaasnhnsBtSkSB B Paso, Tex Sept to. It envoi- oped today that there was no plot con nected with the flndiuc af a nappes id bomb in Juarez, Mextoe. Taw "bomb'' proved to be a sssil popper box. three uchs long, an teen and a half In d- tec, and contain mg a substance like paraffin poured ever the top. Eva had H been sxptoexa) H would bam. The police hava arrested aa Aajsrtoan ttwasa who had been sleeping on ah preaniaea of Sonar Argwalles and had boon ordered sway. He had made threato agateet AigwsUsa. MVPVmVq4q (MaM ln WWeBto Bilexi, Mies., gowt f. About Sou storm geteta ara heeaetass at Bayou i m manre, near toe ssaetta t Iciest ppi river, and two lives thorn. The water ran ai tha hensas and tb sswaas i ttvet by tohtog ah lata nasi sto Mlnhnissj rivan. la Maura, near tha esswth of the Mie- night foot to nlutow THE CENSUS POSITIONS Appointment .Clerk Flnded Explalne Method of Application. Washington, Sept 24. Appoint ment Clerk PindeU, of tba TJ. S. Cen sus bureau, states on the subject of tb eenaua exnmmatiou, October tSd, that the distinction between the perm anent census force ssd tha additional temporary employes provided by the Thirteenth Census act la quite Import ant and should h Tumom bored. As vacancies occur on tha permanent asn sos they will be filled, as heretofore, by transfers from oleewbere in tb service, or by selections from the ex isting registers of tha civil service commission. Parsons now on the registers of the commission are, therefor, eligible for appointment to vacancies on the perm anent census roll, but there is no great er opportunity during the decennial pe riod for such appointment than there hsd bean bsrstofore. The additional temporary positions, authorised by tba Thirteenth Census act oxcept tboae above 91.200 per annum which will be filled largsly by transfer from too permanent eon us roll, will bo given to those persona who pass tba tost eiara ination on October 28rd. Those now oo the registers of toe -civil service commission, who desire appointment to1 these additional esnsus plsees, should take tb tost exsminstion as their pres ent eligibility avails them nothing in respect to appointments to these posi tions. The fact that a person Is on the civil service register doss not pre vent him from taking thia test lam ination. Blank application forma and the cir cular of instructions were ready for distribution by September luth. Aa soon as the applicant completes his ap plication In every respect It should be addreeoed and forwarded to the U. S. Civil Service commission, Washington, D. C, and not to the esnsus bureau. un snouia do taken tost toe enve lope containing the application Is prop erly addressed L-nad sufficient postage tamps are affixed. If the application la satisfactory a sard will be msilsd the applicant and It will ndmlt him to tb exsmfnation. An application must be filed In sufficient time to arrange for the examination at tba place selected. N request will b granted for sa ex amination otherwise than as scheduled for the cities and states en October 23rd. TAFT STARTS WATER. Opana Qataa to Famoua Gunnison Tunnel In Colorado. Montrose, Cola, Sept 24, Presi dent Teft spent yeeterday on tb west ern slops of the Rocky mountains amid a succession of msgnificent scenes. In many respects his day wss one of the most interesting be baa had since leav ing Boston. Late in tba afternoon Mr. Tnft stood on tha brink of the deepeet irrigation ditch la tha Weet and far out in the foo' bill- of tha mountains, with not a settlement to sight mad tb elec trical connection that started a Sow of water through the Gunnison tunnel that will reclaim 140,000 acres af arid land. The greatest irr-gation project the United States government ever hoi undertaken waa thus put in operation and tba opening waa tha oeeaaionl of a joyous celebration throughout the valley of tno Uneompabgr. During his travel yeeterday the President hsd ample opportunity to study the effect of irrigation. For a long time bis train ran through strsteh sa of country where as far aa the eye could reach the only vegetation to sight consisted of a few gresaswond buabes or oafeorueh. The i out of rocky canyon tha train would suddenly come upon n veritable oasis, where fields of alfalfa and miles af orchards told af tb miracle wrought by the tones ox water. The tunnel has been hewn throuaii six miles of a mounntain range and waen tb protect m completed next spring It will divert the waters af the Gunntoan river, now hWto? to the Onlf of California, to tha valley oA thia aide of tha mountains, where miner privets projects of irrigation already have told the Wonders of the Auslilan Capital for Oalfbrnta. Lea Alanine. Sena. Plana - utilising water from the Colstads for the veneration of electric anetee. launched two years saw by Count Ap- ponyt sa snginsernf totornuttonal rep utation, wba fsrsasrly bent a entonsl'a iswamssston to the Aoetrton an. being nutated -nnidly. asnording to mtormntMn given out by tha count today. Behind tha protect, he etoted, I Count Laecie Bachanvi. arha mmm. rtod Gladys VanderhilU And hmroawb him tb Rethachiida hava been toter- V, - . Praatorsrk Brant far PVaeidont Caiea. See. 4. Mater Ganarnl Predai lik Part Great, ana af tha fnav- eaa hMunrof aha Unto fsrsaa smring the Civil was, to bstog hoassad aa the totaUsuttol ssadiante af the Proh mi tten patty to is It, by itni af aha argaa tea ties who asw aaiimbllng hi sate amy to salihiata tha fartteth snal versnry af the berth af ntofawto. DEATH LIST GROWS Hurricane In Sooth Worse Than At First leported. SHIPPING AND CROPS DESTROYED Forty-Eight Known Dead and Others, Reported to Hava Perihb . AI Wire Are Down., New Orleans, Sept.. 88. At least 48 lives were lost in tha tronieal hnrri- esns that swept this part of the conn-. try Monday and Monday night It ia reoortod SO others nariaiiad In Iawm Terr Bonn parish, but this report, has not been confirmed. The nronertv loss is far hoavla, than wss flrit believed andj will ran wall into the millions. Miles of i territory have .been laid waste and crops have bran nracticaJIv ruined. . Shipping of all kinds in the bayooe inlet wsd deitroved. Storwhmiua agar mills and dwellings at Houma. anu outer villages were badly dam aired. The damageat Grand island and C ban i ere Caminada was heavy, but no lives were lost The crops on that islsnd were totally destroyed, for tb water swept across two or three feet dep. The orange groves were whip ped clean of fruit and foHa m,- drsds of trees being uprooted. ine nm message from the Itlsnda was received today when the moil itsamer Grand bland reached this city. It was feared before toe arrival of tba boat that hundreds hsd lost their lives. In the . tropical storm of 19u8-.no lass thui l.MWl nni. drowned on Chaniere Caminada, -v PLOT AGAINST PRESIDENTS. Bomb Is Found at Meeting Place of Taft and Diax. : O Paan. Tm . Ran a tl. ji. ' eovarv tnnlvht mt hk . i denes in course of erection In Josros, cross tbs border to Mexico, caused a senestioo. The authorities Were notified and 1 vrorkmsn were placed In ineommunl- cam. it waa nm reported the bomb waa fourwi In tk . A .k- . hoUM. where PnaaiUnt T d : dent Dial are to meet October 16, but this was later denied by tha soubori ties. wbers the bomb was found, Is a block from the customs house, where tno meeting of the presidents is to take pIsco. A visit by President Diss to Arguslles, wba la a close -persons! friend of Diss, waa thought probable. Colonel Corolla, commanding the rego- j in tfuarea, rays ibe object was a amall piece of dynamite. was not more than a quarter of . a stick," ha said, "It probably waa thrown there by a revolationist soma months sgo, whan arrests were being made of these people." . .ROBBERS SLAY SIX. Thtevaa Murder Whole Family in Weet Virginia for Loot, Blo.fteld, W. Va., Sept S,-An en tire family of six persons was murder ad and the bodies of all but one of the victims were burned with their bom at Hurley, Vs., early today. The motive evidently was robbery, setae owner of the house, an aged women known- as "Aonjl Betty" Jus tice, waa generally supposed to kosp a large sum of money in the plac. Mrs. Justice, her son-in-law, Georg Maadowa. kt j '- . .... ' - loeir wreo children were the vietims. Meadoww 5?J-JTll3f BtitaUd M found to Tha half Taiil k-ji ' Men and thre children were found boneath the (tebri af the bouas, m bodv beariM mMmm. fore the boon waa burned. The thieves era supposed to haw wsd th 1800 wbteh "Aawt Betty" always serried an her narsan. , . Judge WlHam Sartouerf il. Portland. fUn. - h ltomn, Oregon a dirtinguisbed stntsn msn sad jurist and Portland's former ma ror. la Ivinw mt k nw a , hospital ssrtousry ill, having ban ra--T 'dock tost night . - na .oeen -y" wit indiapoattiou for to wenks, sad bun aradoalry SnswajMaa. Late test eight H waa at the kmii tut w. rwttogaey snd that hs was m an hm- rtkar Bteeta TrwSaya, J , V h. Neb.. Sea. ftLBW. "tog from thn ntreetaar atruto aa. suited to saiisw totor aa hMntout. Two af tha tojsjrsxt am