Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner times. (Heppner, Or.) 1???-1912 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1904)
THE HEPPNER TIMES PuMUbrd Every Thursday. SCTTLtRS WILL OCT DUES. HEPPNER OREGON WEEK'SpOINGS General Review of Important Happen, penlgs Presented In a Brief and Condensed Corm. to Prominent Oregon men are likely be indicted lor land funds. Kuropatkin is fighting doggedly to prevent an utter rout of his forces. The Montana mineral dl-play will be transferred Horn St. Louis to Portland All hope of relieving Port Arthur this season has been abandoned by the Russians. A Massachusetts commissionei has s'arted for Portland to select a site loi 1H05 fair building. A number of torpedo boats believed to have been built tor Japan have been shipped from Newport Sews, Ya. A mortar battery exploded at Fort Banks, on the Atlantic coast, killing three aitilelrymen and injuring eight otheis. The lowes of the Russian army in the week of battle south of Mukden is uiaeed at 40 000 Ibe Japanese have lost half as many. The Fomteneth infantry, now in the Philiivuines. will be bi ought back to this country next February and eta tioned at Vanouver barracks, succeed ing the Nineteenth, w hich will be sent to the islands. Kin George of Saxony, is deaad. All official advices are withheld at St. Petersburg and the people ar pre pared for the worst. The St. Fetresbuig Vovoeti admits editorially that the Russians have euf' feied a telling defeat. Russia will rush men to the front military authorities believe 150,000 can be transported by April Knropatkin must bear the responsi bility for the advance, as it is officially denied that he was ordeied to advance According to Tangier advices evidence haa been discovered that the bandit Raisnli intends to attempt to captuie another European. Telephone operators at Portland are on strike. Both sides are confident and in the meantime the pnbtic is suf fering many inconevniencea. A sensation has been ransed all through Russia by the piesistent rum ora that the Russian teasury inteada to draw upon Russian church property order to replenish ist war chest. It bas developed that a pouch of mail for the United States cruiser Cincinnati which was aboard the steamer Calchas when she was captured had been open ed while in the hands of the Russian officials, subsequently resealed and sent on to its destination. Fire at Kansas City destroyed piop erty valued at $100,000. The RuBfians are offering fabulous prices to ships to make Port Arthur with supplies. President Fiancis says the St. Louis fair lost $1,000,000 by being foiced to clote on Sunday. The Rio Grande is still rising in New Mexico.. The river is now the highest in 20 years. The Duke of Cannaught, brother of ' King Edward, narrowly escaped death in an auto accident. It is reported from St. Petersburg that five Jananese cruisers have been sighted off Vladivostok. The New York Rapid Transit com nanv's new subway will be opened to the general public October 27. There is renewed anxiety regarding the condition of King George, of Sax ony, whose difficulty in breathing and general weakness are marked. The battle at Port Arthur is becom in fiercer than ever. The Japanese have succeeded in placing a mortar bat tery which has the range of the inner fortress. for an Ihesa settlers. on when the company, the (iovernmcnt Completes Invcstiga Hon of Castcrn Oregon Cases. Washington. Oct. IS The interior j department, acting under a special act parsed at the last session, lias complet ed au investigation of the cases of Sher man county settlers who have been dis- po?sei-evd of lands lying within the limits of the grant to The dalles Mili tary Wagon Road company, in Eastern Oregon. The report of the findings is confidential, and will be submitted to congress early in December. The evidence collected will be suffi cient to enable congress to take final action for the relief of It will show the terms Eastern Oregon Land successor to The Dalles Military Wagon Road company, is willing to relinquish title to the disputed lands, and al low then to revert to the settlers. It ill also show the state of improve ments which the settlers made on these lands while temporarily in possession. Congress must decide whether an ap propriation shall be made to buy from the company its title to these lands, in order to restore them to the sett lei s. or whether it is better to reimburse the settleis for the losses thev sustained by reason of being dispossess-!. The land company, it vs said, is in clined to deal fairlv with the govern ment in this matter, and will waive its title to these lands provided the govern ment pavs its price. Manv years have elapsed since these disputed lands were eventually awarded to the land company, and in that time number of original settlers have diS' appeared. These few cases cannot be reported upon. All the facts obtaina ble have been collected, and congress will be able to compensate settlers who sustained losses thiongh no fault of their own, but rather through a faulty decision of the land office. ARMY IN TRAP Kuropatkin Is Cut Off Pour Divisions. Witn ATTEMPT AT RESCUE PATAL Jananese force Will Be Reinforced With Idea of Dealing a Crush Ing Blow to the Enemy. REGARD DEfEAT AS COMPLETE. AT THE CANAL COLORADO TRAINS COLLIDE. One Man Is Dead and fifteen Oth ers Injured, Two Badly. Pueblo, Oct. 18. As a result of a head on collision today between the east bound California limited paseenger train No. 6 and a west bound freight train on the Denver & Rio Grande rail road mile and a half west of Portland this forenoon, one man, J. E. Duey, was so badly hurt that he died tonight and 15 others received injuries two of them perhaps fatally. The accident was due to the la i lure of the freight to take the siding at Portland and allow the passenger train. which was running on schedule time and had the right of way, to pass Both locomotives were completely wrecked, tbe baizaaire and express cars were telescoped and piled tip in a heap, the forward end of the day coach was smashed and five freight cars loadtd ith merchandise were demolished. The Pullman cars were not damaged. The passenger train was running about 35 miles, and the freight 20 miles an hour, when the collision oc curred. Great confusion followed the collision, and exaggerated reports le- garding the disaster were circulated. The injured were taken on reliet trains to hopitals at Pueblo and Salida. Llao Yang, Oct. 17. This city la in a turmoil of excitement over the teporti brought in by wounded soldiers from the right wing of the Japanese army that General Kuroki has caught Gem r al Kuropatkin in a trap, having cut him off with four Russian divisoins which he attempted to save, and now haa the Russian commander isolated and enveloped east of Bensihu. The! general engagement continued all day1 yesterday. Russian losses so far ate estimated at 15,000. The Japanese have also suffered heavily, but no fig ures are available. The bearers of the news of the latest Japanese victory state that Held Marshal Marquis Oyama lias ordered vast masses of reinforcements to the s sistance of General Kurcki to enable him tf execute the coupe as planned. General Kuroki is pushing the Hub- sian divisions eastward in order to make their isolation cornph te and to preclude the possibility of Rumian reinforce ments reaching them. The Japanese are fortifying their po sitions to the north. Another of Gen eia) Kurokt'e columns today captured the Sbaotakan hills to the south of Rentaiaputze alter a series of fierce en gagements, in which 1,200 Japanese and neary 1,500 Russians tell. An en tile battery was captured, and now the hills, which may be called the key to the Russian left advance, are in the hands of the Japanese. A crushing defeat has been admlulS' tered to the Russian right by General Oka at Yenti. The entire Russian lines, extending from the Hun river to the railroad, were driven hack 20 miles with terrible losses on both sides, and but for the awful punishment suffered by the Japanese, General Kuropatkin'a right would have been completely crushed. As it is, the flank is utterly disorganized and the Russian tommand- ers are endeavoring to rally their forces northeast of Changtan. On both lidus in the battle raging near Mukden there have been such losses in killed and wounded as mark the contest a one of the bloodiest bat' ties in history. Already the louses at Liao Yang have been approximated rand the indications ar that they will be exceeded. The Russian advance has been converted into a stubbornly fought retreat. The result, according to the Russians, is still to be deter mined. On both sides the soldiers hae shown the utmost tenacity and bravery and whole regiments have gone down before the fire of the enemy. In offic iai circles of St. Petersburg there is disoosition to argue that even should Genarel Kuropauin be ohlidged to re tire npon Mukden, his position will be finite as favorable as it was w hen the order to advance was given Ueiolar u and that, o i the other hand, the Jap ani se powers of further resistance will have been materially weakened. London Papers Agree That rturo- palKIn Has Shot His Bolt. London. Oct. 15. The London pa pers have to rely mainly on official re-1 porta for news from the Far East, but the dispatches thus far received regard a complete Japanese victory assured, rknd editoralUo Irom this point of view. Says the Daily Telegraph: ' General Kuropatkin has shot his liolt. It seemed to be speeding well toward the mark, yet missed it badly. He has suffered not merely a repulse but a disastrous defeat, w hile Japan' incomparable soldiers under iiicompai able general have added another glori ens page to the chronicle of war and proved that Oyama is still Miropai- kin's master in every brauch if the ait of war." The Daily Graphic describes General Kuropatkin'a move as a "gambler's throw," and considers the frank blunt ness of his repoit to the emperor seems to speak the language of a man w ho has dona his best w ith the bungling advice of eonie superior agency. The Standard finds Geneial Kuropat kin's dispatch full of tragic meaning bile the Daily News argues the Uns sian dash southward was prompted by desperate desire to relieve I'oit Arth ur rather than 'o Vieer.y Alexieii s malign Influence, the end of which, in .. nf the fall of the tortiess, cannot be far iiistant. Snence Wilkinson, in the Morning Post, discussing strategic possibilities thinks the issue will turn npon which side shall first become" exhausted by the protracted operations. Telegrams," he i a , "do not yet reveal the final decision, but they cer tainly do not point to the scale turn ing in Russia's favor. It remains to be seen w newer eimer nnj f reserves ready to throw in when it be comes apparent that the forces engaged have tiecoine exhausted." fire Work al Panama Progress ing Satisfactorily. COMMISSION REVIEWS WORK ON Cost of Excavating Material las Been Reduced Nearly 30 Cents Per Cubic Yard. JAPAN HAS SHIPS IN WAITING. at at Newport Sea. Torpedo Boats Built News Transferred Newport News, Oct. 18. Two of the Lake submarine torpedo boats built at the shipyards here, and believed to be destined for the Japanese or Kns sian governments, were hoisted on board the Kennebec today. Accoiding to the foreman in charge of the 200 men engaged in loading the craft, the Kennebec will sail for Boston before daylight. It was stated on apparently good au thority tonight that the Kennebec will be met np the coast oy a steamship now lying far at sea, and the big float ing derrick, the Ox, from New iorit. The Ox, it is asserted, will lift the sub marines from the deck of the Kenne bec, and transfer them to the waiting steamer, which will proceed with them to their destination. ROOSEVELT PREPARING TO ACT. LOSS IS 5OO,00O. Destroys Blocks In Three Bu cost or rccDiNG the army. He Will Soon Address Notes to Pow ers Regarding Peace Conference. Washington, Oct. 17. The president is preparing to redeem his promise to the delegates to the Interparliamentary Peace conference to secure another meeting of plenipotentiaries of the powers signatory to the Hague conven tion, with a view to revising and adding to that instrument. The state department will address separate nots to every government rep resented in the last confidence, inviting suggestions to the time and place of meeting, and without doubt, in the spirit of caution that is always exhibit ed by diplomats, many ot these govern ments will seek to seenre au ironclad agreement as to the scope oi the con ference. Many limitations are ex pec ted to be proposed In this way nd it is realized that will be experienced mony. The Japanese are preparing other assault on Port Arthur. The Portland postal receipts for the fiscal year just ended show an increase of $51,000. Hitchcock declares that the decision in the Benson case will not affect the prosecution of the land ring. John Bairett, minister lo Panama, ia in Washington, where he will confer with the president about conditions on the isthmus. A great battle is raging between I.iao Yang and Mukden. The Japanese have again assumed the offensive and the Russian advance has been checked. Field Marshal Oyama is said to have ordeied a retreat to Liao Y'ang and had it npt been for Geneial Nod.u the Jap anese would have been defeated. Oya ma is likely to be lecalled and succeed ed by Notuu. A terrible storm swept the Honduras coast the latter part of September which lasted for three days. Enorm ous damage was suffered. The banana crop is reported ruined. The steamship Stanley, from Hong Kong to South Africa, with 2,2t0 cool ies, grounded in the China sea. After the ship was floated, several holes were found in her hull and It was necessary to land all her passengers with provis ions for 10 days. Assistance will be mt them. Engineer to Investigate. Washington, Oct. 18. Chief Engi neer Newell, of the reclamation service, has referred to Supervising Engineer!!. Savage, at Spokane, the proposition of the'O. R. & N. Co. to remove its tracks from Washunac Coulee, in Northern Idaho, provided the government will bear the expense. The tracks now oc cupy land whicii the government would like to use for a reservoir, but unless thev are removed the project must be abandoned. It is probable the cost will lie so great that the gov ernment will not be justified. To Prevent Accidents on Warships. New York, Oct. 18. A device to prevent accidents like that aboard the battleship Missouri several months ago, when several men of a gun crew were killed by a "blowbaea" in one of the turrets, is being inslalled here on the battleship Kentucky. It is called smoke ejector and is designed to force out of the bore all of the unhurried gasses and smoke remaining after the gun has been discharged. Flood Still Delays Trains. El l'aso, Tex., Oct. 18. The Santa in road still has a washout f about 12 mdes lietween heie and Alhu qiieique, and it will be several days before trains are running. All other roads are running tiains regularly. It is 8! ill rainy here, however, and the Rio Grande river is rising slowly. much difficulty in securing bar rnmmiturv General Reports me Expenses Reduced to Minimum Washington. Oct. 15. The annual report of Brigadier General J. F. West on, commissary general of the army .. ... . i I ! -. t V. SayS the tOiai COSl OI leeuuig iu mini during the paBt fiscal year was $8,821,- 750. During the year the losses were $418,650 in the Philippines; $7,467 on the transports and $129,853 in the United States, Alaska, Porto Rico and elsewhere. General Weston says it is difficult and often impossible to prevent losses of perishable stores. General Weston urgently recommends the passage of a hill hv conaiess to give authority to all officers entrusted with the disburse' ment of subsistence funds to hold re stricted amounts of such funds in theii personal possession. He says tbe ex-1 igencies of the public service require an open disregard of the restriction of the existing laws in cities where the tress nrer or an assistant lieasurer ia located. He urges legislation authorizing the sa e at public auction of accumulated subsistence stores in good condition. General Weston says the problem of feeding the army in the Philippines uas a difficult one. but "it has been successfully solved, and subsistence affairs in the archipelago are now run with system and economy". The subsistence department, u is stated, was able to make a contract for fresh lf for the fiscal year, iui. t.y which an annual saving of over $140, 000 was effected. The running expense gradually have Isren leducid to a min imum, the report says, and a saving oi more than $40,000 made in wages civilian employes alone. Washington, Oct. It. Mimberi of the Panama vanwl commission uuw in Washington tailed todny by appoint ment on President Uoosevull. A short time altwi ward, John Barrett, Amerl can minister to Panama, hud a confer' ence with the president. The comiuls slim remained with the president about half an hour, & they left the execu tive office they said the visit was "purely complimentary call" on the president and was wllhout special tig iiiilcance. It is i ow i, however, thai they disciiHUid with him the conditions on the Isthmus ot Panama which have arisen since the acquisition by this country of an Ameiicun xone, and the differences between the commission and the government of Catania. What, II stiv. conclusions were teamen was noi disclosed. The commissioner left with the president a memorandum giving in do tail the work accomplished on the Itth nius. Surveying panics are at work in the viemty of Colou, making plans and estimates bu an inner harbor; also at Gutaii, survciyng and boring at thu various proposed dam sites in that m-ighlHirhood, ami for a cut off between Gutau and Tiger Hill. At Rithio the surveyors are making detailed surveys and studies and Investigating thu vari ous dumsitt'S that have been propped in tnat locality. An engineering corps along the main line ol the canal lu the vicinity of Cub chra is making suiveys to determine the feasibility of straightening the lines of the Fri nch company and to dctcrm ine the amount of material removed and to be removed in act oriWnro with the ditto cut canal plans tinder conaid eration. Another engineering lorce is constructing a le-ervoif In the valley of the upper Kio Grande, which will (urn ish a minimum supply of 2.000,000 gallons of water a day lor thu City of I'anama; also a distiibuting rctervnlr (or the City of Panama at A neon, li is also making survey ami estimate for a sewerage system for Colon and plan are being prepared for the con t met ion of a harbor thete. The average amount of material tsk en cut of the Culleracut has been from 1.000 to 1.500 cubic yards aday. This is with the tire of old French machin ery available. Three modern steam shovels, which are to lie put at work on Culebra Hill, will increase the cut five feet. In August, the unit coat ot exravat ing material was cut to OO.S rent a cubit yant, while during the time Major l!lack was in charge of the canal woik the cost, according to the French melhi U of excavation, was t cents a cubic yard. Winnipeg. ' Winnipeg, Man., Oct. 13 ! it night destroyed three ot the finest liiess blocks in this city, entail) l.issof at least $800,1100. For a the flumes threatened to spread to olnlng buildings, and but for splendid woik of the (Ire bilgnd much larger money dituiiige would lull been infill red. The Are started In the new Pullman block, which was totally that royed. The Ashdowu Hardware company, on Haiinaiine street, one of tlm largest es tablishments of Ho kind In Canada, wan next attacked by the flames. Many explosions were caused by powder and cartridge carried In tbe stock of the hardware company, but no one was In jured, liiu UIhHo block and thu Great Northern telegraph olhce were also de stroyed. There 1 no estlinato o! the amount of Insurance. The Woodbine hotel block and Dufterine block were also badly itain aged. The fhlcl suflcrers in those block were the Slater Shoe compniiy, the Gundy Music company, Calder'a photorguph supplies, and Raver's sta tionery stock and Conrudly, drugs. The tdectrlc light and power service was cut off owing to the lire, and all newspaper olllies are in diukness. Tim Free Press office, In the rear of the Hulliuau block, escaped injury. JAPANESE GUNBOAT LOST. EXCHANGE IDEAS ON WARSHIPS. of Boy nillcd to "WorK Spell." Kingston, Island of St. Vincent, Oct 17. Police investigation into the mat ter of the murder of a little whits Ixiy whose heait and dismembered bands were found in ttie house ot a negio sorcerer in the Island of St. Lucia, has resulted in the arrest of a seemingly intelligent negro and and the diwii sure of barbarous superstition that survive to a startling extent in the Vet In dies. The child, it appear was the victim of the deire of the man now in custody, to "work a spell" upon the judge of the supreme court. Road fast Nearlng Completion. Salt l ake City, Oct. 17. A stretch of 80 miles Is all that intervenes now lietween the completion of the San Pedro, Los Angde A Salt Lake load, which In to Join halt Lake City and I os Ang' h s, Cal. Tracklavlng from Cailcnto, Nev., bus now readied tin Vegas branch In Southern Nevada, which is but 47 mile from tint Cali fornia line. The work from Daggett, Cal., Is also being actively pushed. Part of the 80-mile stretch is graded. Company Declares Dividend. Chicago, Oct. 17. 1 lie usua 1 quarter ly dividend of $2 per share from net earnings was declared today by the Pull man company, The annual statement for the fiscal year ending July 81, shows th net surplus for the year ol $3,741,025. Wreckage from Troopshla. San Francicso.Oct. 15. The schoon er (iotama, which arrived here early this morning from Knrlie tsland, re port that on August 4, when 40 miles moth southwest of Csihs Curat, she sidhted a mass of floating wreckage. She made out iiartsol a mast. Csptsln Macomlier later succeeded In getting closer to the wreckage, and established that It was from the Japanese troop ship Klnshiu Maru, w hich was sunk by tbe Russians last April, when 2w per Ishfd. Entangled in the wreckage were a imnilier of hendle trunk. , Important Conference Attended by British Expert. Washington, Oct. 14. An important conference was held at the White House this evening by tbe president Admiral Dewev, Secretary of the Navy Morton, Sir William White, formerly naval ch ef of tbe British nnvy, Ad ndral Cppe, chief naval constructor of the Uulbd States navy, ltiar Admir al Conve sc. di'"f of bureau ot nsviga Hon, Rear Adr i al Frederick Rodger, Rear Admiral h. I). Evan and Coin mander Sims, Inspector of target prac tice of the United State navy. The general suhji-ct of battleship ronstiuc lion wss considered at the conference, views beinif sxchanged between Sir William White and the American naval officers. The conference was called by the president, Sir William White being asked to attend. Sir William favored the construction of llgbl ing ships and not those that could run sway. This met with the president's approval. The idea foilnd favor to have sold many of the gnnbosti and cruisers, purchased luring the recent war, which are maintained at great expense, and whose complement of office)! Could lie used advantageously on th new battleships Ik! Yen Strikes a Mine, and Nearly 200 Persons are Drowned. Toklo, Oct. 13. The Japanese gun boat I lei Yen struck a mine of! Pigtott hay on the night of Seplemler 18 and foundered, It Is officially tUI that 197 men were lost. Those rescued managed to reach Chiao Pal island, from which they were rescued. Per mission was today gianted by the au thorities to publish the details of th disaster. I be Hei ven, which was engaged in guard duty off Pigeon bay, was missed by the fleet, and a search for the vessel was immediately begun. The petty officer ami sailor (mind on Chiao !' Island reportel that at dusk on Sep temher 18 a storm came up, accompan ied by high sea. The Hei Yen endeav ored to return to bet base, when she suddenly struck a floating mine, which exploded under her starboard side amidships. The vessel tiegan t snit, and an attempt was made to lower the boata. The boats were swamped and the ciew Jumped into the sea, wtere, owing to the heavy com Iters, they were quietly drowned. Tho Japanese fleet caielully searched tbe patrolled locality, but failed U find any other survivors. 'An official armour cement ol the disaster, issued today, says: "It is highly regrettable that no re port in any form ha been recevled of the fate of the other survivors, Tho sad evert wa made worst) on acdiiint of the weather, which mint have added itreatly to the already awiul remit caused by the ixplo Ion of the mine." CAUGHT WITH HIS MOLDS. Secret Service Men Swoop Down on Counterfeiter al Work. Seattln. Oct. l:l. United State Sec- Passing of Negro Roustabouts. New Or.ean. Oct. 15. The passing of the negro as a roustabout, marking an epoch In stearnboatlng on the M !! sinoi. was witnessed by a large riowd of people, w ho today saw HO while men sent here from Western aim northern cities, no to work at the steamboat I ml ing In place of the colored men For years the steamboat men hsve suf fered from the strikes ol negro roosters who sometime have demanded as high a $150 a month. Great Dockworkcrs' Strike Ends, Marseilles, Oct 15. Tbe coal besv r who have len on strike for nearly two month have agreed to resume work on the employers' condition, This bring the great dockworkers strike to to rpd. ret Service Agent Bell, of this lily, to day descended upon a counterfeiter's cabin in the woods nine mile west i f Tacoma and captured H. N. Stone vir tually in the act ot manufacturing spurious United State half dollars, quarter and dimes. Mi. Bell was as sisted in the raid by a deputy United States marshal, two Tacoma detective) and a special secret service agent w h- ha Iteen working on the case for two weeks. One of the most elaborate outfits ever captured in the Northwest wa seised together with the mollis, which yero liscovered in a stove, where Ihey had been placed to dry only a few minute before. Stone rorilesseil Ills guilt when confronted with theevidciice., but main tained that he was only "experiment ing" and had not actually put any o! the counterfeit money into circulation. Tim cabin in which Stone conducted his operations I locatrd In a dense swamp, entirely removed Irom human habitation. It Is conceded that It would hardly have been discovered hsd not the secret service officers secured a clew In Seattln, where a considerable part of the Isyout wss purchased. Dewey Offers to Assume Command Wishimton. Oct. 14. Admiral Dewey has againiffered to assume corn mand of the combined fleet In the Car ibhean sea and direct the winter man stiver. It lit services can lie spared Irom the presidency of the general board at t ha time Secretary Morton will certainly accept the admiral offer. It I probable the admiral will leave In the Mayflower early In the new year and assume command of the fleet at (iliantanamo. ihe fleet will reach (iliantanamo between January ami 10. Suffering In Mexlto. Denver, Oct. 14. A New special from Albuquerque say:. Seventy dwelling In San Martial, 80 miles south of Albuquerque, have been wrecked by the floods of the pant week and there I gn at suffering and deati tut on there. The plight of the Mexi can peoplain Ihe surrounding valley is terrible, am! hundred must starve tin les Immediate 'telp I furnished from the outside. Not only the crop and stores, but their land are ruined. Snow Falls In New York New York, Oct. 14. lbs first snow of the Mason fell at Albany, Hchenecl sily ami a number of other places up the state to lay. It mulled a fast a it fell. Admirals of the Baltic Heel. St. Petersburg, Oct. 13. The Official Messenger has annr.uncetl the appoint ment of Vice Admiral Ber.obr.off, com mander of the first squadron of the Pa rlflc fleet, to b senior admiral of the Baltic fleet, and ot Rear Admiral llautie, naval commander, at the Port of Vladivostok, to lie Junior admiral of the Baltic fleet. Rear Admliol dreve will sin cced.Kesr Admiral llaupt a commander at the Port of Vladivostok. Admiral Jensen will assume command of the first Pacific squadron. Predicted China Would Profit. London, Oct. D! The Time today publishes the summary ot a letter al leged to have been written by LI Hnng Chang shortly before hi death, pre dicting that little harm would como from allowing the Russian to liohl Manchuria, because it would lead to war between Russia and Japan, ami then China, by espousing the winning side, would be able to recover Man churia. Russians Hold Railways. Mukden, Oct. 13. The baltlo com mented this morning along the line of the railroad with a terrific artillery fire on both sides. The railway line al most to Yental I In possession of tho Russians. '