IT'S A COLD DAY WHEN WE GET LEFT." VOL. XII. HOOD RIVER, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 13, li)0O. NO. 8. HOOD RIVER GLACIER Published Every Friday by S. F. BLYTHK. Terms of subscription 11.50 a year when paid In advance. THE MAILS. The mail arrive from Mt. Hood at 10 o'clock a. m. Wednewlays and Saturdays; departs the same days at noon. For Chenoweth, leaves at 8 a. m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays; arrives at 6 p. m. ' For White Salmon (Wash.) leaves daily at 6:45 a. in.: arrives at 7:15 p. in. , From White Salmon leaves foif fulda, Gilmer, Trout Lake and (ilen wood dally at 9 A. M. ForBlnRen (Wash.) leaves at5:4j p. m.; ait rives at 2 p. m.' e$ - 1 SOCIETIES IAVHth REBEKAH DKfiRK LODGE. No i 87, I. O. 0. F.- Meets first and third Mon days in each month. Mi-s Stella Richaudson, N. G. H. 3. Hibbard, Secretary. CUKBV, POST, No. lfi, . A. K.-Meets at A. O. Ui W. Hall second and fourth fiatur avs of each mouth at 1 o'clock p. m. All 0. A. K. members invited to meet with us. M I'. Isenbero, Commander T. J. Cunninq, Adjutant. CANBY VV. R. C, No. 16 - Meets fl rst Satur day of each month in A. O. U. W. hall at 2 p.m. Mks. A delIa 8 i'ranahan, President. . Mrs. Ursula Dukes, Secretary. HOOD, RIVER LODGE, No. 105, A. F. and A. M. Meets Saturday evening on or before each full moon. O. E. Williams, W. M. D. McDonald, Secretary. HOOD RIVER CHAPTER, No. 27, R. A. M. Meets third Friday night of each month. O. R. Castner, H. 0. F. Williams, Secretary. HOOD RIVER CHAPTER, No. 25. 0. E. 8. Meets Saturday alter each full moon and two weeks thereafter. : . Mrs. Mary A. Davidson, W. M. LETA ASSEMBLY, No. 103, United Artisans. J Meets second Tuesday of each month at Fraternal hall. F. C. Bkush'S, M. A. D. McDonald, Secretary. AUCOMA LODGE, No. 30, K of P. Meets in A. O. U. W. ball every Tuesday night. , Geo. Stranahan, C. C. C JJT. Graham, K. of R. & 8. fflVERSlDE LODGE, No. 68, A. O. V, W. Jt Meets first and third Saturdays of each month. O. ti. Chamberlain, M. W. J. F. Watt, Financier. H. L. Howe, Recorder. 1DLEWILDE LODGE, No. UI7, I. 0 O. F. Meets in Fraternal hall every Thursday night. A. G. Getchel, N. G. H. J. Hibbard, Secretary. fJ F. SHAW, M. D. f 1 Telephone No. II. All Calls Promptly Attended ' , i ' Office Hpstalrs over Copple's store. All call: left at the office or residence will be promptly attended to. JOHN LELAND HENDERSON ATTORNEY-AT LAW, ABSTRACTER, NO TARY PUBLIC and REAL ESTATE AGENT. For 21 years a resident of Oregon and Wash ington. Has had many years experience in Real Estate matters, as abstracter, searcher of titles and agent. Satisiaction guaranteed or no chait. J F. WATT, M. D. Surgeon for 0. R. A N. Co. Is especially equipped to treat catarrh of nose and throat and diseases of women. Special terms forofllce treatment of chronic caiies. " Telephone, office, 33, residence, 31. piONEER MILLS Harbison1 Bros., Profs. FLOUR, FEED AND ALL CEREALS Ground and manufactured. Whole Wheat Graham a specialty. Custom grinding done every Saturday. During the busv season additional days will be mentioned in the local columns. HOOD IllVER, OH EG ON. ' pAPERHANGING, KALSOMINING, ETC. If your walls are sick or mutilated, call on B. t. ROOD. Consultation free. No charge for prescrip tions. No cure no pay. OfBca hours frj a 8 A. M. till 6. P. M., aai ill night if necessary. C0N0MY SHOE SHOP. , PRICE LIST. , Men's half soles, hand eticked, $1; nailed, best, 75c ; second, 60c ; third, 40o. Ladies' hand stitched, 76c; nailed, beat. POc ; second, 36. Best stock and work in Hood River. C. WELDS, Prop. JHE KLONDIKE CONFECTIONERY Is the place to get the latest and best in Confectioneries, Canities, Nuts, Tobacco, Cigars, etc. ..ICE CREAM PARLORS.... COLE & GRAHAM, Props. J" C. BROSiUS, M. D. ' PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. 'Phone Central, or 121. Office Honrs: 10 to 11 A. M. ; 2 to' 8 and 6 to 7 P. M. JyJT. HOOD SAW MILLS T0MUS6OX Bkos, Props. .....FIR AND PINE LUMBER..... Of the best quality alwas orr hand at prices to suit the times. -J gUTLER & CO., BANKERS. Do a general bankiaj businees. HOOD RIVER, OREGON. DALLAS & SPANG LEE, DEALERS is Hardware, Stoves ami Tinware. Kitchen Furniture, Plumbers' Goods, Pruning Tools, Etc. We hare a new and complete stock of hardware, stoves and tinware, to which we will keep consUatly adding. Our prices will continue to be as low as Portland prices. lEMHIS TIIfUE I Vl'MTl- EVENTS OF THE DAY Epitome of th3 Telegraphic News of thft World. TERSR TICKS FRO JriE WIRES An Interesting; Collection r Items From the Two Hemlspherea Present 1 In a Condensed Form. President Kruger is reported to have moved to Nelspmit. Eight deaths from extreme heat are reported from Chicago. In a wild plunge of a street-car into a gulch at Tacoma, SG people were killed and 60 injured. Elizabeth Chapman, a Salem pioneer of 1848, died at that city in her 81st year, of a complication of diseases. An explosion of firewoiks in Phila delphia caused the death of four chil dren and the fatal injury of thiee oth ers. By the explosion of an oil tank in Parkersburg, W. Va., six men were blown to atoms and three others fatally injured. Three men were killed; one wound ed In a wreck on the Delaware, Lacka wanna & Western road at Durkin's Cut, near Henryville, Pa. Southern provinces of China are drifting away from the empire. Li Hung Chang and the friendly viceroys are engineering the movement. The foreigners in Pekin will be left to their fate. The allies cannot rescue them on account of the overwhelming force of Chinese that oppose them. The United States battle-ship Ore gon, which ran ashore off the island of How Ke, in the Miutau group, 35 miles northeast of Che Foo, on June 28, has been floated. The steamer Dirigo artived at Seat tle from Skagway, bringing 10 boxes of gold dust, valued at nearly $800,000. The Dirigo carried 72 passengers, mostly from Dawson. Rear-Admiral Bare, now command ant of the Norfolk navy yard, has been selected to succeed Rear-Admiral Philip, deceased, as commandant of the New York navy yard. Charles W. Dickinson, inventor of the geometry C lathe, which made a successful counterfeiting of bank notes impossible, is dead at his home in Belleville, N. J., aged 77 years. June 80 the grand staff of the Rus sian army estimated the Chinese army to number 1,720,000 men. He also said that about 900,000 Mausers have been imported within the last three years. A dispatch from Bombay says that in all except three districts cholera is raging in Bombay presidency, the cases reported for the v?eek ending June 26 umbering 20,689, and the deaths, 12, B33. Twenty thousand Chinese solders are within Pekin walls, 30,000 outside. Admiral Kempff reports that the Ore gon is not in a dangerous position. The German minister at Pekin has been killed and other legations are un der Beige and starving. The cruiser Philadelphia arrived at Astoria to take part in. the Fourth of July celebration there. The steamer Danube arrived at Na naimo, B. C, five days from Skagway, with 40 passengers and $70,000 in gold dust. As a last hope of saving foreigners in Pekin, the powers may now threaten to destroy the graves of the imperial ancestors. . Fire destroyed the large soap and fertilizing plant of the Walker-Strat-man Company at Pittsburg, causing a loss of $75,000. A scandal in Klondike. Gold Com missioner Senkler is charged with il legal grants to persons with whom ha was partner. Lou Cramer, of Independence, Or., 1 pioneer of 1852, committed suicide by hanging himself. No cause is known for the deed. The four-oared race between Penn sylvania, Columbia and Cornell crews was won by the former. The race took place at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. At Chester park, Cincinnati, W. A. RuU and F. Hansman, of New Haven, Conn., on a motor tandem, made a mile in 1:29 4-5. This gives them the world's record for a cement track. By the bursting of a reservoir of the city water works of Grand Rapids, Mich., 100.0Q0.000 gallons of water was precipitated upon a thiokly popu lated district of the city, doing dam age estimated at hundreds of thousands of dollars. The strength of the foieign forces at present in China are as follows: Ger many, 44 officers and 1,400 men; Great Britain, 184 officers and 1,700 men; Austria, 12 officers and 127 men; America, 20 officers and 329 men; France, 17 officers and 887 men; Italy, seven officers and 131 men; Japan, 119 officers and 3,709 men, and Russia, 117 officers and 5,817' men, with a total of 53 geld guns and 36 machine guns. fipxmans naturalized in America are ' in disfavor in the fatherland. The wall paper trust, one of the earliest and best known of the com binations, has asked for a receiver. Since January 1 174 national banka I,-- in nroAnized. On June 9 there were 8,754 national banks in the coun try. , 1 Carleton college at Xorthfield, Minn., has received $25,000 from Dr. D. K. Pearsons, of Chicago. LAI hR NEWS. Tien Tsin is hard pressed by 80,000 Chinese. Cubans are pleased at the withdrawal of American troops. St. Louis street car employes have renewed their strike. Chinese imperial troops are defend ing the foreigners in Pekin. Chinese do not want religion and no amount of war can make them accept it. Battleship Oregon will not be sent to Taku again unless absolutely neoes sary. - It is said America is to have 11,000 men in the force of 100,000 to be used in China. The 6teamer Rosalie arrived at Seat tle from Lynn canal, with $600,000 in Klondike gold. American trade will be injured il the powers decide to make war on the Chinese empire. The Oregon must remain in dry dock 90 days. She has arrived at Che Foo and will go to Japan at once. Li Hung Chang is again urging the powers to intervene and establish a strong government in the Chinese em pire. George Horrick, is held at North Ya kima on a charge ot killing a squaw oa the reservation. He claims self-defense. Rumoi is current that the Chicago & Alton, Kansas City Southern and Un ion Pacitio railways will be amalga mated. Dr.- Henry D. Cogswell, a well known philanthropist and prohibition ist, is dead at San Francisco, aged 80 yeais. Commissioner of Patents Duell is said to be out for the nomination for governor of New York on the Repub lican ticket Japanese laborers in Hawaii are dis contented. Plantation managers have conceeded everything asked for and still they are not satisfied. The converter and billet mill'of the Illinois Steel Company at Joliet, 111., resumed operations and nearly 1,000 men were put to work. Russian, French and German admi rals at Tien Tsin are said to have ex pressed themselves as unfavorable to Japan's being given a free hand. v Roy C. Gage, of Company C, Third regiment, O. N. G., in their annual encampment at Salem, was drowned in the Willamette river while bathing. Many prostrations from heat in New York city. Two more British warships have been ordered to China. A Franco-American alliance is pro posed by an enthusiastlo Frenchman. Fire in the business section of Pitts burg caused the death of four persona and injury to six others. Fhe in the Cramp's shipbuilding yard near Philadelpha, destroyed prop erty to the value of $200,000. Nine deaths in one day in Chicago from extreme heat. The record for a week is 27 deaths and 96 prostrations. The total number of bodies recovered from the recent Hoboken fire now number 143, and 140 persons are re ported missing. A cyclone, accompanied by a cloud burst and hail storm, swept over Kala mazoo, Mich., resulting in damage to property of $100,000. On June 17, the Chicago & North western railway opened for traffic their new line from Belle Plaine, la., to Ma son City; also their new Fox lake branch. The length of this new line is 195 miles, which added to their mile age givw) them a total of 8,462.85 miles, the largest mileage of any rail road in the world. The dock laborers' strike at Rotter dam, Germaqy, is assuming threaten ing proportions. The carmen have now joined in the strike, and the police and marines are guarding the streets in order to check disturbances. The strikers have picketed all the ap proaches to the town, so as to prevent non-unionists from entering. The la borers of Rotterdam will hold a mass metting to discuss the best means of aiding the strikers. The orders recently issued for the re moval of a large number of troops fro'n Cuba have been gladly welcomed by the Cubans, and General Wood is in receipt of many letters from various municipalities offering thanks for what they call his disposition to trust the Cubans, and declaring that the entire island is in a state ot absolute tran quillity. The Tenth infantry, it is be lieved, will leave the island shortly af ter the departure of the regiments now nnder orders to proceed home. , James W. Porter, of Chicago, has re ceived a cablegram from Che Foo, an nouncing that his brother, the Rev. Henry J. Porter, and his sister, Miss Mary II. Porter, missionaries of the American board of commissioners for foreign missions, stationed at Pang ! Cbnang, 200 miles south of Tien Tsin, ' had arrived safely at Che Fop, July 6, I coming overland from Chilian Fu, capr . 1 : rru . panied by the Rev. II. 'P. Perkins, an other missionary stationed at Pang Cbuang. An ordinary sight in Manila is a Fil pino market or washerwoman srook ing a large cigar and clothed in a low necked gown, with flowing sleeves and a handsomely embroideried silk scarf. .Partick Sharkey, who died at the age of 83 in East Cambridge, Mass., was the last survivor of the four organizers of the Father Matbew Temperance Mr ciety, the oldest association of its kind among the laity of the Roman Catholio church. IS N Unanimous Choice of Kansas City Convention, ON A FREE COINAGE PLATFORM Webster Davis Arraigns the Republican Party for Lack of Sympathy for the Boers. Kansas City, July 6. William Bryan, of Nebraska, was tonight unanimously placed in nomination as the Democratic candidate for president of the United .States, ou plutform op posing imperialism, militarism and trusts, and specifically declaring for the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1. The nomination came as the culmina tion of a frenzied demonstration in honor of the patty leader, lasting 27 uinutes, and giving utterance to all die pent-up emotions of the vast mul titude. It followed also a fierce strug gle throughout the last 36 hours con cerning the platform declaration on silver and on the relative position which the silver question is to main tain to the other grearissues of the day. It was late this afternoon when the convention was at last facoto face with the presidential nomination. Early in the day there had been tedious de lays, due to the inability of the plat form committee to reconcile their dif- WJB, ferences and present a report. Until this was ready the convention managers beguiled the time by putting forward speakers of more or less prominence to keep the vast audience from becoming too restless. . ,L Tne first session, beginning at 10 o'clock this morning, was entirely fruitless of results and it was not un til late in the afternoon, when the sec ond session had begun, that the plat form committee was at last able to re port an agreement. Already its main features, embodying the 16 to 1 princi ple, had beoome known to the dele gates, and there was little delay in giving it unanimous approval. This removed the last chance for an open pture on questions of principle and 1 the way clear for the supreme entof the day the nomination of the presidential candidate. The vast auditorium was filled to iti utmost capacity when the moment ar rived for the nomination to be made. Not only were the usual facilities af forded by tickets taxed to the utrhost, but the doorkeepors were given liberal instructions, under which tho aisles and areas and all available spaces were packed to, their fullest limit. When the call of states began for the purpose of placing candidates in nomination, Alabama yielded its place at the head of the list to Nebraska, and Oldham, o that state, made his way to the plat form for the initial speech, placing Mr. Bryan in nomination for the presi dency. The orator was strong-voiced and entertaining, yet to the waiting delegates and spectators thrre was but one point to his speech, and that was the stirring peroration which closed with the name of William J. Bryan. This was the signal for the demon- (ration of the day, and with a com .non purpose, the great conourse joined in a tribute of enthusiastlo devotion to the party leader. Ail of the intensity of former demonstrations and much more was added to this final tributo to the leader. When the demonstration had spent itself, the speeches seconding the nomi nation of Mr. Bryan were in order. Then came the voting. State aftei state recorded its vote in behalf of the Nebraska candidate, giving him the unanimous vote of all the states and territories. The convention managen had already agreed that this was suffi cient work for the day, and the vice presidential nomination was allowed to go over until tomorrow. Next to the demonstration for tht party candidate, the greeting of tht announcement that imperialism was to be the paramount issuo of this cam paign was the most spontaneous and significant of the day. Another stirring event of the day Wis the appearance of Webster Davis, ex-assistant secretary of the interior under MoKinley's administration, in a speech severely arraigning the Repub lican party for its lack of sympathy for the Boers and formally announcing his allegiance to the Democratic party. Victims of rtobuken Fire. New York, July 5. Up toll o'clock last night 120 bodies had been recov ered from the waters of the North river. Thero are yet over 125 people missing. A large electric light plant will be put in at the Cornucopia mines in Union county, Or. The waters of Fine creek will be utilised to operate the machinery. Work on the same will begin immediately. tt - - DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. Imperialism Announced as the Para mount Issue. Kansas City, July 6. Following is the official text of the platform as sgeed upon by the committee on reso lutions and presented to the conven tion: We, the representatives of the Demo cratic party of the United States, as sembled in national convention on the anniversary of the adoption of the Dec laration of Independence, do reaffirm our faith in that immortal proclama tion of the inalienable rights of Ameri cans and our allegiance to the constitu tion framed in harmony therewith by the fathers of the republic. We hold with the United States su preme court that tho Declaration 01 Independence is the spirit of our gov ernment, of which the constitution is the form and letter. We declare again that all governments instituted among men derive their just powers from the consent of the governed; that any gov ernment not based upon the oonsent ot the governed is tyranny; and "that to impose upon any people a government of force is to substitute the methods oi imperialism for those of the republic. Believing in these fundamental prin ciples, we denounce the Puerto Rioan law enaoted by a Republican congress, against the piotest and opposition of the Democratic minority, as a bold and open violation of the nation's organic law and a flagrant breach of the na tional good faith. We condemn and denounce the Phil ippine policy of the present administra tion. It has embroiled the republic in an unnecessary war, sacrificed the lives of many of its noblest sons and placed the United States, previously known and applauded throughout the world as the champion of freedom, in the false and un-American position of, 1 "At. I IV i.- ' orusning wiin military lurue uiotmuiiu of our former allies to achieve liberty and self-government. We oppose militarism. It means conquest abroad and intimidation and oppiession at home. It means the strong arm which has ever been fatal to free institutions. We pledge the Democratic party to an unceasing warfare in nation, state and city against private monopoly in every form. Existing laws against trusts must be enforced and more stringent ones must be enacted provid ing for publicity as to the affairs of corporations engaged in interstate com merce and requiring all corporations to show, before doing business outside of the state of their origin, that they have no water in their stock and that they have not attempted and are not attempting to monopolize any business or the production of any articles of Merchandise. .', , J We condemn the Dingley taiiff law as a trust breeding measure. We reaffirm and endorse the princi ples of the national Democratic plat form adopted at Chicago in 1896, and we reiterate the demand of that plat form for an American financial plat form adopted byjthe American people for themselves which shall restoro and maintain a bimetallic price level, and as part of such system the immediate restoration of the free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at the pres ent legal ratio of 16 to 1, without wait ing for the aid or consent of any othei nation. We favor an amendment to the fed eral constitution providing for the elec tion of Untied States senators by direct vote of the people, and we favor direct legislation wherever practicable. We are opposed to government by in junction; we denounce the blacklist and favor arbitration as a means of set tling disputes between corporations and their employes. We favor the Immediate construc tion, ownership and control of the Nicaragua canal by the United States. We favor an intelligent system oi improving the aiid lands of the West, storing tho waters for purposes of irri gation and the holding of such lands for actual settlers. We favor the continuance and strict enforcement of- the Chinese exclusion law, and its application to the same classes of all Asiatio races. Speaking, as we believe, for the en tire American nation, except its Re publican office holders, and for all free men everywhere, we extend our sym pathies to the heroic Boers in their un equal struggle to maintain their liberty and independence. Believing that our most cherished institutions are in great peril, that the very existence of our constitutional ronnhlin U . rlrfl And that tha Henia. ,' i. m At. whether or not our children will enjoy these blessed privileges of free govern ment which have made the United States great, prosperous and honored, we earnestly ask for the foregoing dec laration of principles the hearty sup port of liberty-loving American people, regardless of previous party affiliations. The Ticket Filled. Kansas City, July 7. The Demo cratic national ticket was completed today by the nomination of Adlai . Stevenson for vice-president. The nomination was made on the first bal lot, state after state joining in the wild scramble to record their support of the winning candidate. It was not ac companied by any such frantic demon- stration of approval as had marked the proceedings at previous stages. Slpldo, Wonld-be-Assassln. Brussels, July 9. The assize court today returned a verdict of guilty of at tempt to kill the Prince of Wales against Jean Baptiste Sipido, who fired at the piince in this city, April 14. The court considered that Sipido acted without discernment, and sen tenced him to a reformatory until he shall have attained his majority. Meert, Penchot, and Meirere, the in stigators of the attack upon the prince, were acquitted on the ground that they oonsdiered the plot a jok. I STRIKE IS ON AGAIN St. Louis Carmen Say Com pany Has Broken Faiih, THE BOYCOTT WILL BE RESUMED Employes Say There Will Be No I.nw. lessness Nor Demonstration of Violence This Time, St. Louis, July 11. The strike tgainst the St. Louis Transit Company by its former employes, which was de clared oft July 2, was ordered recalled today at a meeting of tho Street Rail waymon's Union, at the West Kud coli seum. Tomorrow morning at 5 o'clock was the time fixed for the recall of the boycyott uu all the company's lines. When the strike was settled July 2, there were some mutteriugs of discon tent among the men,' over the terms of settlement, and so it is the dissatisfac tion has grown daily. The men main tain that the company has failed to keep the agreement and a dozen or, more instances were cited tending to prove that there had been a breach of faith. Meetings were held at several places in the course of the week, and committees were appointed to procure proof of infidelity on the part of the company. At a meeting of the executive com mittee of the street Railwaymen's Un ion held Monday, a batch of affidavits was presented to the effect that men had been employed by the company since July 2 in violation of the terms of the agreement of that date. At a session lasting several hours, the com mittee called a mass meeting of the men for this morning to recommend at that meeting that the strike be declared on again. The Central Trades und La bor Union met later and indorsed the action of tho executive committee. The company, through President Whitaker, addressed a letter to the men, denving that the company had intentionally violated the agreement of July 2, and declaring its intention to live up to every condition of the agree' ment, both in letter and spirit. Fred W. Lehman, attorney for the company, appeared at the meeting and offered to submit the question as to whether the company bus broken fuith to Joseph W. Folk, counsel for the men, and bound the company to abide by Mr. Folk's judgment in the premises. The proposition was ignored, and by a unanimous vote the strike was re newed. A member of the executive commit tee today said that this whs the second time the company had broken faith with its employes, and no agreement would be accepted in the future that did not provide for the reinstatement of all old employes in 24 hours after the execution of the agreement. "There will lie no lawlessness or demonstrations of violence this time," he continued. "By means of a vigor ous enforcement of the boycott we hope absolutely to destroy the earning copac ity of the company " The whole trouble seems to hang upon a few of the men violating its agreement, while the company, on the other hand, emphatically denies that such is the ense. The men claimed yesterday that a verbal agreement was entered into concurrently with the written agreement and under the ver bal agreement the company had agreed to re-employ all the old men in 60 days, seniority in the services deter' mining the priority of re-employment It was claimed that the Hev. Dr. W. J. Boise instructed the men that such an agreement existed, in a speech at tho West End coliseum. The 0 dicers of the company declare that there was no such verbal understanding and that the only agreement" made by them was the written agreement, which was published at the time. WEEK'S WORK IN LUZON. Eleven Ainerlcau Were Killed Sixteen Wounded. and Manila. July 11. The past week's scouting in Luzon resulted in 11 Amor icuns being killed and 16 bounded One hundred and sixty Filipinos were killed during the week and eight Am ericans who had been prisoners in the 1 hands of the rebels were surrendered ' and 100 rifles were turned over to the V"" uu.um.e. Ao cuuu.y ' ambushed a wagon train between lnd Bug ami imu. inv iiui'j , uimuiry lost nine men while oil an expedition to punish the Lad rones in the delta of the Rio Grande. In the Antigua, province of Panay, a running fight of three hours' duration resulted in the killing and wounding 0 70 of the enemy. There were no cus valties among the Americans, The insurgents are slowly accepting the amnesty provisions. In some in stances Americans are suspending oper at ions in order to give the rebels an op portunity to take advantage of the decree. A general movement of Boer settlers in Cazaland', Portuguese territory, seem to be in contemplation. Large herds have been driven across the ' ixirder. The Portuguese welcome the movement. Sensational Taper Suspend. Chicago, July 11. The Chicago Democrat (the Chicago Dispatch), an afternoon newspaper, founded in 1892, suspended publication of its daily edi tion today. It will be continued as a weekly. Nathan Kisenlord, publisher of the paper, states that the discontin uance was because of the lack of pa tronage. Two persons were killed and three injured by a runaway at Indianapolis, lnd. WEIRD TALC OF THE SEA. How Stowaway Bred a 8erloat Mutiny on the Dolphin. San Francisco, July 11. The steam er Dolphin, which arrived last night from New York, through the Straits ot Magellan, had a sensational trip. Ac cording to Captain John O'Brien, the day following her departure three stow aways were discovered. But for 1 the stormy weather Captain O'Brien would have put about and landed the men. Subsequently the captain wished -with all his heart that he had followed his first inclination in this respect. From St. Lucia, he took eight na tives to assist the crew. About a week after leaving the West Indes, a native told the oaptain that one of the stow ways was a notorious bandit, and an other was a lunatic and the third was an escaped murderer. Edward Talmer, a negro steward, assumed an independ ent attitude before the Dolphin was past Sandy Hoolf . Three days out from St. Lucia he attacked a fireman named McAllister with a chair and laid hi scalp open. The steward was put in irons and Captain O'Bren and Chief Engineer Winter took six stitches in the fireman's head. Tne West Indians then became friendly with the negro crew and they worked only whenever they pleased. , Captain O'Brien intended to land the steward and the natives at Montevideo, but the United States consul there ad vised holding them until an American port was reached. The steward was released from his irons and put to work painting and cleaning ship. Follow ing this trouble the blacks showed a tendency to rise against the officers and white men of the crew, but Captain O'Brien and his men kept their revolv ers in plain view and fey their apparent readiness to use them prevented trouble for the time being. Three days was spent at Montevideo in codling. In sailing out to open sea, in the river Platte, a hurricane swept down on the Dolphin, and she narrowly escaped be ing wrecked. In the Straits oi Magellan the man- eating Fuegans attempted to set fire to the Dolphin as they had done a year before to a Chilean man-of-war, killing and eating the entire crew. At Coro- nel, a Chilean coaling post,, the coal pusseis obtained liquor and went on the warpath and could sot be subdued. They smashed all the fire axes on board and threatened to kill every one on the steamer. During the trouble, Purser Humes and Second Engineer George Q. Carroll were sent ashore by Captain O'Brien to procure assistance and they lost no time in finding the men in au thority, The nearest troops weie 100 miles away, but a special train was sent aftor them by the government. It developed that Humes and Carroll were no better on shore than tbey had been on the Dolphin, for in so out of the way place it was useless to make at tempts to get back to the ship. "When we got back to the steamer," said Purser Humes, "the mutineers had the crew up in the rigging and were in full possession of the vessel. , The sol diers had a quieting effect on the ne groes. The striking firemen were tak en uhore in irons und next day the court of inquriy was held on the Dolphin. The court Bentenoed the six ringleaders to three months each in the calaboose. In the crowd were the steward and the three stowaways from St. Lucia. You can bet we lost no time getting out of Coronel as soon as sentence had been passed. I would not want to see my worst enemy in prison in Coronel. It is a desolate place where only leprosy and crime seem to thrive." The Dolphin is on her way to Seat tle, where she will go into the Alaskan trude. MORE BODIES FOUND. A Total of 140 Recovered Hoboken Fire. From the New York, July 10. Three more bodies were found today on the finale. This makes 29 bodies that have thus far been taken from the wreck of the Saale since the fire, and 146 bodies in all recovered. The bodies recovered today were found in the seoond cabin in the after part of the ship, and they were horrible sights to look upon. They had very little clothing on, and were all victims of fire. They could not be identified. 1 Chief Officer Henry Sohaeffer, who was in charge today, said he "had no idea who the men bad been, but, judg ing from the place where they were found, he thinks they were stewards. The body of a man badly scarred and burned was found at Rookaway Beach this afternoon and taken to the morgue there. The body is supposed ' to be that of a victim of the Hoboken dis aster. Dynamite was exploded on the river bed about the wrecks of the piers of the North German Lloyd line today without bringing to the surface any more bodies. Another Veneauela Itevolutloa. Kingston, Jamaica, July 11. Gen. Gorsira, the Venezuelan minister to Colombia, airived here yesterday, on his way to Caracas, to report to his government specifically on the Colom bian situation. He said another revo lution is impending in Venezuela, headed by Dr. Petrie. A private ca ble dispatch received here announced that starvation practically . exists at Carthagena, Colombia, and that the rebel general was recently near Bogota, the capital of Colombia. A Tesas Tragedy. Vernon, Tex., July 11. John and Edward Brewer, wealthy cattlemen, were shot and instantly killed near here by N. K. Norris. The tragedy oc curred over business affairs. Norris was arrested. I The consuls at Shanghai report that the Pekin legations were safe on July 4, and that the Chinese had ceased their attacks. The only fear felt, ac cording to the reports of tlia consuls, was regarding the food supply,