The Hooc Ever lacier. It's a Cold Day When We Get Left. VOL. IX. HOOD RIVER, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1897. NO. 28. TO SHUT US OUT. SWEPT BY THE GALE. APPALLING DISASTER. ' Epitome of the Telegraphic ; News of the World. ; TERSE TICKS FROM THE WIRES In Interesting Collection of Items From, the New lyid the Old World In a Condensed and Comprehensive Form The celebration in honor of Oregon's martyred missionary, Dr. Marous Whit man, was begun in Walla Walla, Wash., , Monday. Large orowds were in attend ance, ... The opening address was made by Rev. L. H. Hallock. A monument is to be ereoted over the grave of Dr. Whitman. ' Senator Lodge, of the oommittee on foreign relations, was at "the state do- pirtmeht early in the week. He would eay nothing about the Cuban situation except that the committee had accom plished a great deal. The first business would be to oonflrm the annexation of Hawaii, which woulj be done by rati fying the treaty, or by legislation. ' Ex-Senator Corbet t and Wife of, Ore gon, have arrived in Washington for the session. The Post, of that city, says that the committee on elections will hold a meeting the first week cl the session and report favorably on Cor ' bett's oase, and that party lines will not be be -sharply drawn, which will mean that Corbett would get his seat. Asphyxiation caused the death of three men in the Grand Trunk railway tunnel at Port Huron,' Mich. The train which was being hauled through to the Canadian side, broke in -two. The engine backed down to get the de tached portion of the train, but for hours nothing was heard ol the crew. Finally a searching party found the dead bodies, and also rescued two brake men, in an unconscious condition. Three members of the searching party were also overcome, but were rescued 'by another party. The tunnel (fas arises from the hard ooal . used by the locomotives. . Colonel Domville, M. P., who went north in the interest of the Klonkide Yukon Stewart Company, of ,London, says his company will build a wagon road through White pass, plaoing Bteel bridges over the canyons. Work is to commence immediately, and the road is to be ready by February. They will build steamers to run from Lake Ben nett to White Horse rapids, around which they will have a tramway. From the end of this trawmay they will have-steamers to run direct to Dawson. These steamers, he says, will be ready when the 'river opens. The wagon road through White pass is to be followed . immediately by a railway. v One of the bills that will be pushed in the coming session of congress is that introduced by Representative Sha froth, of Colorado, which provides for changing the time when congress shall meet. ..It is a very sensible bill, and ought to be passed. The first session , of congress after an election would be ia the January - following the election ' in November. This session could last as long' as" would be neoessary. The , oongress elected in November could legislate before another election was on 1 hand.; The second session could meet in December previous to the coming congressional election, and the congress would expire before the election took place. As the matter now stands the first session of congress is given over4o politics by representatives who wish to be re-eleoted. The short session is often a discredited and defeated con-! gress and oftentimes enaots very bad legislation because it will not be called to account before the people. Pos sibly, Mr. Shafroth's bill will get a hearing, though such reforms as this move very slowly. . . ".'; ... i Postmaster-General Gary is reoeiving many letters regarding the postal-savings bank 'proposition strongly urged by him' in' his annual report.. The great trial of Arroyo's murder . ers is over, at the City of. Mexico,, hav ing terminated with the sentence of death propounoed on 10 of the police officers and policemen concerned in the butchery of the hapless wretch whose audacious attempt on .the president's life caused so . profound a sensation there. The jury was out over seven hours. '',;,';' A. . One of the most important features of the Behring sea negotiations not i i .T : I j r.. .i.i . I iiereuuyre uiHciuaeu i uihi in me evem that Groat Britain and Canada consent to a suspension of pelagio sealing for one year,, the United States ' for the same time will agree; to a suspension of all taking of seals , for 0119 year on Pribyloff islands. 1 constituting the American seal possessions in Behring sea. '' ' ;sr ii . ,: V Ex.Governor Crittenden, of Missouri, who Tvas , consul-general to Mexico under the last Cleveland administra tion, l announces that he will leave "Kansas City next week for San An tonio; Tex., where he will be joined by W. J.-- Bryan and Mrs. Bryan, and that the three will depart from San Antonio , n a week's tour of Mexico. . Aided by the ex-oonsul's knowledge of the people nd oountry, Mr. Bryan will make a areful study of Mexico's finanoial system. Franca Will Put High Duties on Certain American Goods. . New York. Dec. 1 . The authorities in Washington, according to the corre- spondent of the Herald, hae been in formed that France; while ostensibly engaged in negotiations with this gov ernment for a reciprocity treaty, is tak ing steps, to place a prohibitory tariff upon some American products. The state department has been notified that a bill is pending in the legislative as sembly of France imposing a high duty upon certain products, which will prac tioally make that oountry a closed mar ket, so far as the United States is con cerned. Ambassador Porter probably will be requested to make an earnest protest against the measure. This bill may cause the authorties here to go slow in negotiations for the reciprocity agreement. ' The depart ment has reoeiVed no reply to its propo sition that in exchange for a lower tariff on French wines the French govern ment shall remove the prohibition against the importation-, of American cattle. Unless this concession be grant ed, the measure referred to may be de feated and the reciprocity negotiaitong come to naught. Should this happen, the French government may , retaliate by imposing the maximum tariff under its laws upon Amerioan products which now enter under the - minimum tariff. As these products are few, however, the authorities are not greatly dis turbed over the outlook. Dr. Van Hollenben, the new Ger man ambassado to the United States, will be formally presented to. the pres ident tomorrow. He is expected to make representations in regard to the tariff. The state department is in formed that Baron v(on Hollenben's in structions contain propositions desig nated to lead to a ! reciprocity arrange ment. It is believed the United States will require in return for any conces sion the removal or abatement at least of restrictions now imposed upon the importation into Germany of American cattle and beef. The German government, of course, will direct its efforts in the direction of seouring the repeal of the bounty section of the tariff law, which clearly affeots Germany's sugar interests. Many representations on this subject have been made already by the Ger man authorities. It is not likely, how ever, that the president will recom mend any restriction of the tariff law, and apparently the only way in whioh the German government can secure an advantage for her industries would be to enter into a reciprocity agreement.. Officials are speculating on the atti tude of the agrarian interests of the German empire and the German em peror, who favors the .agrarian, party upon their proposition to be submitted. So far as they have gone the outlook is not favorable. ' " "" . - - MASSACfiE OF INNOCENTS. Frightful Mortality Among- the. Cuban t Concentrados. New York, Dec. 1.; A dispatch to the World from Havana says: The World's first figures of Cuba's starva tion . were timidly moderate. - They showed the deaths o'f only 200,000 per sons; but every painful fact unearthed tends to prove them nearly double that number. , When the grim returns re all in it is now almost certain that this Cuban massacre of the innocents will reach 400,000. And this awful num ber does not-include those killed . in battle or the thousands and thousands of women and children who died of ex posure, disease and massacre in the swamps. ,,,'.' , It now seems certain that more than half a million people, for the most part loyal subjects of Spain, have been killed by the Spanish war in Cuba A week's trip 'through the provinces of Havana, Matanzas and Santa Clara has tended to make' moderate this tremen dous extreme figure. The figures of Spanish official. reports show but a part of the mortality. They only give the number ' buried in conse crated ground, and, they do not give that fully.. '- And yet these official ultra-Spanish reports of burial permits issued admit that in the ' province of Santa Clara there have died and been buried since Weyler's fiat, 71,847 per sons. , . ' ; The number of people for whose ex istence Weyler is direotly responsilbe is 155,132, in Santa . Clara province. And of these he has . killed. 86,216, or over one-half of them. Santa Clara has so far been by far the least -destitute of the provinces. It has 'many cattle and not a .very thick population. Between it and the 68 per cent admit ted dead in Pinar del Rio are the prov inces of Matanzas and Havana; with; a 60 and 70 per cent mortality respect ively. These percentages are estab lished by the actual figures of some SO cities and towns ; Applied to the den ser populations of their respective provinces, the total deaths since Wey ler's "bando" will foot up nearly a million.. .. . . night of the Fast Mail. Omaha, Neb., Dec. 1. The Union Pacific has made a record for fast run ning. A -mail -train has been shot across the country from Cheyenne to Council Bluffs, 519 miles, in 699 minutes. This is the actual elapsed time, and includes all stops. Engines were changed twice and one engineer was relieved. All tha regular stops were made. ' i to Relieve lee Bound Whalers. CAPTAIN TUTTLE CONFIDENT The Cutter Will Endeavor to Beach Sledge Island Overland Journey May Start at Point Rodney. : Port Townsend, Nov. 80. The United States revenue ou'tter Bear sailed tonight, carrying succor to the whaling fleet infprisoned in the icy fastnesses of the Arotio ocean on the Northern . shore of Alaska, between Point Barrow and Hersohel island. The Bear's first stopping place is un certain, depending upon .the extent to which Behring sea is closed by ice. Captain Tuttle will, however, go as far north as possible in his endeavor to reaoh Sledge island, which is 50 miles south of Port Clarence and five or six miles off . the mainland. It will be easy to cross from there over the ioe to Point Rodney, The chance of getting to Sledge island lies in the fact that it is in the lee of Point Rodney, which sweeps off the ioe carried down by the north wind, making a sheltered stretch of water. . From Sledge island,, the party that is to . proceed overland, to Point Barrow, under the leadership of Lieutenant Jarvis, will oross over to Point Rodney. From there the party will go to Port Clarence, where there is a band of reindeer. The length of the overland journey Will depend on the starting point. At the best it will be in the neighborhood of 1,000 miles. The shore will be fol lowed closely all the way to Point Bar row. Having landed the overland par ty, the Bear will go into winter quar ters at the nearest place of shelter. In the event that the Bear cannot reach Sledge island, Captain Tuttle said that there was a point he knew of from which he thought he could land the overland expedition. He would not tell where this spot was for the reason that he might also fai. to reach it. The Bear goes provisioned for one year. Captain Tuttle and his officers are very hopeful of the success of their mission. BURNED AT THE STAKE. Terrible Fate of a Negro Murderer in North Carolina. Southport, N. C, Nov. 80. A white boy was brutally murdered by a negro, and the murderer was burned to death by an infuriated mob 'of white farmers near here last Thursday.-, During the fall, a party of farmers had been fishing on .-. Cherry Grove teach, near Little River, S. C. Mon day, November 15, one of the farmer's boys, named Stevens, left for his home on the. Waocamaw river, with, an ox and cart. He carried a package of money. .,,The father of Stevens went home, but found that nothing had been heard of his son since' he- had left the beach. , . ;. It was learned that a negro, Nathari Willis, had borrowed a gun and left the beaoh "shortly after Stevens' son I had departed for home. A posse was organized by. the sheriff, and Willis was traced about 80 miles to Town Creek, N.;C; where he was found last Wednesday,. having in- his possession 'Stevens' ox, cart and, cloth hat full of ahotholes. He was carried by the sher iff and posse on Thanksgiving day back into South Carplina. - .,,. - ' ' Reports come today that Willis was taken from the sheriff on' Thursday night by a mob of ' infuriated farmers and carried into the woods, where he was ohained between two pine trees. Light wood was piled around him,-and he was burned to death.. , ..... The place is so far in the country that further details could not be learned. '-; -: I ; Hf : i- : ' : Trouble vis brewing Captain' Howe Advises Wichita Boomers to Defy the Law. Kansas City, Nov. 80. A special to the Times from Wichita, Kan., says: Captain E. L. Howe has designated January. 10 as the day for his boomers to move upon the Wichita reservation, if no step toward opening it has been taken by congress by that date. The instructions of Secretary Bliss that the Indian police be reinforced by regular troops if necessary has made Howe fur ious. ,,. v ., ' '' :' "Damn the ' Indian' police," said Howe today, in advising his men. "All we want is our right according to law, and the law allows us to go into the Wichita mountains. We propose to go about the matter peaceably. We shall ask congress, when that body convenes, to open the reservation or allow us to go into the mountains and take claims. We shall wait a reasonable time, and if our petition is not granted,, we shall move upon the land. .-We-have the men to do it, and if these Indian po lice, or Agent Baldwin interferes,, there will be graves all over the reservation, and many a regular will lie down with the rest, too. if the -.federal , troops in terfere. This is no time to agitate the matter, but the federal authorities may as well tie informed as to our inten tions." r I Bear Sails North A Fearful Storm Raging; Off the Eng lish Coast. London, Dec. 1. The gale which swept the English coast yesterday,, do ing great damage at many places, raged all night. In many places it was almost cyclonic in its violence, and the longlist of disasters includes a large loss of life, many wrecks of large ves sels and the loss of scores, if not hun dreds of smaller craft, with ' serious damage to property ashore at many im portant towns. . s At Norfolk, Bacton and Happisburg five vessels, as yet unidentified, went down and the crews of all perished. A number of bodies have been washed ashore near Yarmouth. The brig Rugby was wrecked off Hemsby. The coastguard made desperate efforts to save the orew, and sucoeeded in getting' a line on board. A dying woman was "rocketed" in safety, and then the brig capsized, all the rest of the ship's com pany perishing. A large steam collier dashed upon Flamborough head, the famous prom ontory on tha North sea coast, floated off, and then foundered,, with all on board. A feteamer not identified was wrecked on the Birdlongton sands, with her entire company. ' Last evening the steamer Rose of Devon ' went on the rocks near Red Ruth, Cornwall, where she pounded all night long, her crew, of 12 perishing. This morning the bodies of the captain and seamen, all wearing lifebelts, were washed ashore. t ' The British ship Larnica, Captain Burgess, was driven ashore near Fleet wood, at the entrance of Moretown bay, about 18 miles northwest of Preston. The crew were saved, but the position of the vessel is dangerous. She left St. Johns, N. B., November 1, for Fleet wood. , -., : 1 ; Phenomenally high tides are reported in many localities. The district near the mouth of the Thames has suffered severely, several townships being partly submerged. The Sherness dockyard and the Woolwich arsenal were inun dated. Scarcely a vestige remains in sight of Lord Nelson's old flagship, theFoudroy ant, long fast in the sands of Blackpool. There is a lot of wreckage near the Goodwin sands. ' Immense damage has been done to government property. at Sherness dock yard and the Woolwich arsenal. . Sev eral .thousand troops were hurriedly ordered out today to remove thousands of pounds' worth-of ammunition and stores from the wharves and sheds to places of safety. The tide continued to rise, and invaded some of the work shops, quenched the engines and stopped the electric lights. The work men were obliged to go home, wading knee deep. ' " 1 Six vessels were wrecked between Yarmouth and Baoton, only a few miles apart, on the Norfolk coast, and 25 lives were lost. ... . The brig Vedra stranded at Bacton. The storm tore out her masts, and when the rocket line was fired, the crew was unable to haul it in. Finally the line 'dragged them into the Surf, and three out of seven were drowned. Rochester and Strood, on the Mid way, out 80 miles south of London, have suffered . severely. At Rochester the gas works are flooded and the town is in darkness; the gale is now traveling southward and traversing various parts of the Continent. Very rough weather is reported along the north coast of France. 1 ,.. A dispatch from Liverpool says that during the gale the Russian' ship Nikolai, Captain Karlsen, 'stranded oh a treacherous bank near' Formboy, south of Southport. After fearful ex periences her sails were blown away and the vessel was so damaged as to be uncontrollable. One' of the crew, a man named Karlston, was swept over board and drowned. The captain says no one on board slept for four days. The vessel will probably become a wreck. ,. : - DEATH AND DESTRUCTION. Blaze on Lake Steamer Extends to Docks, With Fearful Results. Escanaba, Mich., Dec. 1. Late to night a fire broke out on the steamer Nahanta, and before it could be con trolled it spread to the ore docks, the largest in 'the world. Two of the docks are on fire, and the others are threat ened with destruction. Two of the crew of the steamer, whose names -cannot be learned, are known to be lost, and sev eral others injured. The steamer was lying at the dock loading ore. Shortly before midnight, the crew discovered that the vessel was on fire. The crew made every effort to quench the flames, but a brisk wind ' was blowing and spread the fire with great rapidity. From the steamer; the fire spread to Dock No. 4, which was partly loaded with ore and lumber. The lumber was soon a mass of flames, and from this it spread ' to the next dock. The fire is still burning fiercely. The loss will be fully f300,000. ' ; ,'., United States Warns Germany. , Berlin," Nov. 80. The state depart ment at Washington has requested Am bassador White to ascertain the inten tions of Germany with respect to the oliams of Herr Luder, whose recent imprisonment in Hayti caused friction between the German and Haytian governments. Insurgents Also Loot Several Houses and Stores. SPANISH SOLDIERS STARVING An Unsuccessful Attempt Made to Res cue Rivera General Blanco's Genera Shake-Up Excites Havana. New York, Nov. 29. On Sunday morning, for the first time, in the his tory of the Cuban war, rebel bullets sought the palace in Havana, says a dispatch to the Herald from Havana. The shots came from Casa Blanca, 600 yards across the entranoe to the harbor, and while no one was hurt, the palace, with its electrio' lights, was a shining mark, and must have been hit. The Spanish authorities attempt to make light of the affair, but at the same time a reporter for La Lucha who wrote up and attetmpted to publish the facts in the case, was put in prison. The attack on Casa Blanca was made by Brigadier-General Cardenas and 60 rebels. They entered the town shortly before midnight on horseback, and at the end of an hour each man led out of town a horse with one extra head 'ap propriated, laden with clothing, pro Visions, silver plate and money. Before they left they sent two volleys across the narrow harbor entrance at the pal ace, then cooly went to a friend's house inside the Spanish lines and took sup per. All this was under the guns of Cabanas and Moro. It is learned from an inside source that the object of the rebels was to re lease General Ruiz Rivera, and hang a citizen named Fumiro who is known as a spy. They failed in the first object only because of some misconception of the appointed time on the part of con federates within the prison with whom arrangements had been made to admit them into, the fortress.. Fumiro man aged to escape across the harbor. The whole affair was well planned. General-Cardenas came in the early evening with two columns along the seashore, and at 10 o'clock the men followed. They first visited Cabanas. Whey they saw that the arrangement had failed, the rebels went after Fu miro.. He fled across the harbor and the rebels did not dare to follow. Then the rebels went to Casa de los Frailes, the priest's house, where they took blankets, silver plate and money. This house is close to Moro castle. The priest made a great outcry, but no soldiers came. Then the rebels sacked the store of Fumiro, securing some gold. They also looted other stores. Working as quietly as possible, they approached a cavalry outpost, securing several horses. . For two hours they enjoyed them selves, then rode to the harbor and fired two volleys at the palace. This aroused the Spaniards for the first time, but by the time troops turned out the rebels had gone. The authorities made every effort to suppress the details of this raid, though an official report admitted that six rebels entered the town. The rebels approached and fired upon Mariana last night. There was great excitement. The volunteers were called out, and with the troops returned the rebel fire. The residents were panic stricken and locked themselves in their houses, j The rebels did not succeed in entering the town. The lines have been strengthened all about Havaua. . Correspondence received from the cast states that General Gomez is mass ing men near Sagua, and is preparing to march westward to strike a potent blow before congress meets. Unusual activity of the rebels is reported flora all quarters. The Spaniards are also making preparations for action, but as yet each avoids the other. Where and in what manner the blow that is com ing will fall cannot be predicted, but it is more surely coming than autonomy. General J. M. Rodriguez, command-in-chief -, of the western 'provinces, k out in a manifesto stating that he will accept nothing but independence. He contrasts the treatment of Cuban prisoners with that of Spanish prison ers, and says only the Spaniards under arms are considered as enemies. He promises equal rights to other Span iards if independence is gained. General Blanco's general shake-up of the police force throughout the island is causing some excitement. The heads ef departments of police were nearly all changed. - Wherever fraud or undue cruelty was discovered drastic measures were taken. Secretary-General Con gosto's knowledge and ' experience" gained in America are of valuable as sistance in this direction. , Special re ports from the Herald correspondents in Various parts of the island state that the Spanish soldiers are as badly off as the pacificos and concentrados. In many places the troops have been forced by circumstances to beg from door to door. General Blanco is making every effort to relieve their condition, and to reform the hospital service,, Vienna, Nov. 29. The unparalleled violence in the lower house of the reichsrath yesterday is about the only subject of conversation throughout Au stria today. The German progressist party has published a note expressing regret at the outbreak, and disclaiming any responsibility for it. Tornado in the Philippines Swept Thou ? sands to Death. San Francisco, Nov. 30. The ty phoon which swept over the Philippine islands, October 6, caused one of the worst disasters reported from the south ern ocean in many years, if not in the history of that section of the world. Thousands of lives were lost, includ ing many Europeans, and the damage to property was something appalling. Telegraphio advices concerning the calamity have been very meager. The difficulty of getting news . from the islands is great at any time, and, ow ing to the remoteness of some prov inces visited by the hurricane, full de tails of the storm did not reach Hong Kong untiV November 1. : The steamer Gaelic, from the Orient, today brought letters and papers which contain accounts of the ravages of the tidal wave and wind. Whole towns were swept or blown away.' Fully 600 Europeans were killed, and it is etti mated that 6,000 natives perished. The storm first struck the islands at the Bay of Santa Paula, in the prov ince of Samar. It devastated the entire southern portion of the island. . On the 12th, a hurricane reached Leyte, and struck the capital, Taclo ban, with great fury. In less than half an hour the town was a mass of ruins. The natives were panic-stricken. Four hundred of them were buried beneath the debris of wrecked buildings, and 120 corpses of Europeans were recovered from the ruins when the native authorities in stituted a search for the dead. Reports from the southern coast were received which claimed that a score of small trading vessels and two Sydney traders were blown ashore and their crews drowned. The sea swept inland nearly a m ile, destroying property valued at several million dollars, and causing wholesale deaths among the natives. ' VICTIM OF CANNIBALS. ' Fate of Two Washlngtonians In Congo Free State. Washington, Nov. ! 80. A startling and horrible story of the killing of two Washingtonians and the mutilation of the bodies by natives of the Congo Free State has just been received here in a letter to Leo Harman, of this city. The men. were members of a party which, during November and December, 189-1, weipt from this city to enlist in the Belgian army, for service in the Con go. The party included Lindsay Burke, Frank Batohelor, Barry R. An- . drews, Harry Sparlin and a Mr. M el lin, who was at one time a noncommis sioned officer of the United States army. All except Thornton and Mtd' lin were members of the National Guard of this district. The information received is that Mr.' Burke and a party of 60 natives, who were sent out in December, 1896, to dislodge a band of natives who revolt ed, were ambushed and killed. 'An Arab, who was with the command, but was some distance off at the time of the ambush, states that Burke was dead before the natives reached him, and that the most hideous looking lit tle men he ever saw walked up and cut Burke's head off with one blow of a knife. , The chief then began to slice pieces of hh legs and arms and to dis tribute them among his followers. There were so many of the natives that the pieces were very small, and before they had concluded, there was a fight to see who would get the remainder. The natives then left, one carrying oft Burke's arm. "Windeye, a New Yorker, who had command of another detachment of sol diers sent out on the same errand, ar rived a few hours after the natives left. Windeye gathered up the remains of Burke and . buried them. When he learned the strength of the rebels, he hurried back to Michau and notified' the commandant of the post. The other Washirigtonian who lost his life .was killed March 1, when ' the troops, under the command of Baron Dhanis, revolted near Kabanbarre, and assassinated a number of officers of their regiment, among them being Mellin. The body of Mellin was but chered beyond recognition. His heart was cut out and burned. " - . The situation is said to be precari ous, and a relief expedition has been sent to the resoue. Mr. Gage, another American, is very sick at Vangine. ' Will Accept Aid From America. Washington, Nov. ' 80., In conse quence of the widespread destitution among the people who have been con centrated at certain points in Cuba, the governor-general of the island has in formed Consul-General Lee that United States citizens who desire to send sup plies to the poor and needy in Cuba should send them to the Catholic bish ops at the nearest point of collection, and' these prelates would in turn oon sign whatever might be sent to the bishops of the island at Havana and Santiago de Cuba for distribution. ' Fatal Boiler Explosion. - Halifax, N. S., Nov. 30. The explo sion of a boiler at the Gold Lakevnines, East Halifax, caused the death of the manager of the mine, Daniel Phail, ; and James Hennessey and John Mc Isaac, their bodies being terribly torn by flying wreckage of the boiler. Hennessey and Molsaac were testing the boiler. . ;