o im «AH ABDUL HAMID ALARMED. Order« the Completion With All Speed of Defenses—Excitement Prevails. 5[ir HAM (jftltML Paris, Nov. 4.—‘‘The sultan has Malvar Appoints Himself Com­ ordered the completion with all speed mander-In-Chief. Proposed By Board. of the defenses at Smyrna and the entrance to the Dardanelles,’’ says the Constantinople correspondent O.M BATTLE SHIPS DOWN TO TUG BOATS of the Echo de Paris. “Submarine ISSUES PROCLAMATION TO THE NATIVES mines will be placed and troops mo­ lb de S«m Need« a Large Variety of Craft to bilized at points where disembarka­ All Who Aid American« or Surrender to Them tions are likely. A violent anti­ Will Be Treated as Traitor«— Reor­ Complete the Symmetry and Balance French feeling exists, and fears are ganized Filipino Forces. of the Naval Forces felt for the safety of French residents in Turkish cities, Constantinople Manila, Oct. 31. — Malvar has issued Washington, Nov. 4.—Over and excepted. ” afcove the four wiirships for which j The officials of the foreign office a new proclamation, appointing him­ c©ngress directed him last season to today informed the Associated Press self captain general and reorganizing that the information set forth in the the Filipino army under two lieu- prepare plans as a basis for appro­ dispatches yesterday was correct. j tenant generals and four generals of priations at the next session, Secre­ The incorrect announcement from tary Long has before him the recom­ Toulon of the return Admiral Gail­ divisions. Every guide caught aid­ mendations of the board of naval lard’s division, which of created great ing the Americans will be treated construction looking to the authori­ sensation, emanated from the a corre immediately as a traitor. Those who zation of by congress ot the building spondent of a well known news agen ­ ­ surrender to the Americans will be of 40 more vessels of classes from bat- I cy. The announcement was that Ad­ treated in the same manner. • tie ships down to tug boats. The miral Maigret, commandant of the Malvar considers his own appoint­ plans for the two armored cruisers | Mediterranean fleet, returned to Tou­ ment to be temporary, until the apil two battle ships projected by con- j lon at 10 o’clock with all his vessels» meeting of the general assembly of gress last session already have been i including those belonging to Admiral : liberators. He congratulates the prepared, and look to the construe- j Gaillard’s diivsion. The correspond­ soldiers on the good work they are tion of 16,000 ton battle ships and 14,- ent of the news agency referred to doing in the field and also those who OOo cruisers. The battle ships and confused the fleets, owing to the dark­ are working for the cause of freedom cruisers additional to those which the ness. Admiral has three and liberty in the cities. clnstruciton board proposed probab­ cruisers and two Gaillard A hat and umbrella factory, em­ torpedo boat de­ le will be of the same and general stroyers in his squadron. ploying 600 hands, which recently type. The board’s complete pianist found it necessary to close, the ac­ ] Three sea going battle ships of tion constituting the first labor prob­ SAN JUAN PIER S EIZED. about 16,000 tons displacement. lem growing out of the new tariff, j Two armored cruisers of about 14,- has decided to remove to Hong Kong. Franchisele»«« to Be Tried in the Courts to OOo tons displacement. Teit Validity of License. ISix gunboats of about 1,200 tons. BERTHOLF SUCCESSFUL. I Six gunboats of about 600 tons. San Juan, P. K., Nov. 4.—The pier I Six gunboats of about 200 tons. property of the New York A Porto Fulfilled the Object of His Jonrney to Siberia I Two colliers of about 15,000 tons. Rico Steamship Company has been —Secured 254 Reindeer. I One repair ship of about 7,500 tons. seized by the police in the name of I Six training ships of about 2,000 the peope of Porto Rico under orders Seattle, Oct. 31. — Dr. Sheldon tins. received from Governor Hunt. The Jackson, general agent for the bureau J Four picket boats of about 650 pier, which was erected under a of education in Alaska, has arrived tins. license of the war department, was in Seattle from the land of his labors, ¡Four tugboats. burned some months ago, and the having taken passage on the City of J While the above appears to be a company engaged in rebuiding using Topeka from Ketchian. He brings startling amount of naval construe- I the old pile foundation contending additional details of the exjteriences tjon to recommend to congress, it is ! that it still has rights under the of Lieutenant Bertholf, who was stated that it is after all, nearly a license of the secretary of war and it sent to Siberia to purchase reindeer repetition of the program submitted was simply repairing damage done by for thg government. to that body through Secretary Long the elements. The council ruled Dr. Jackson tells a different tale bi* the construction board last year, that the company had no right to do of the daring young revenue officer, and is even smaller than the aggre­ so without a new insular franchise. who, it now appears, was never in gate tonnage proposed to be author­ The action taken places the mat­ danger, and near starvation in his ised by the general or Dewey board. ter in a position where the governor long and tedious journey through I In each case it is explained the can pass upon the rights of the par­ Siberia. r» commendations are but the steps to ties concerned. The company has Lieutenant Bertholf left Washing­ be taken to carry out the general pol made an application for an injunc­ ton, D. C., last January, going to St. icy of providing the United Statet tion, will sue to recover damages and Petersburg, thence to' Irkutsk. with a modern navy of sufficient! will test the validity of Secretary From there he disapppeared on the strength and made of harmonious Root’s license under the civil re­ steppes. His mission, as seated units. This policy was thought out gime. above, was to procure a herd of rein­ carefully by the two boards, and if it deer of larger size than those now CASE BECOMES SERIOUS. is carried out as proposed, they de­ in Alaska. A revenue cutter was to ciare that the symmetrical navy final­ meet him and convey the animals, ly provided would be very much more Min Stone'« Abductor'« Are Holding Out and the lieutenant, to Alaska, but effective than the more numerous owing to circumstances, the govern­ for Full Sum. navies of several of the European ment could not send one, and it was states. Constantinople, Nov. 4.—I.ate to­ thought for a time he might perish. — day the case of Miss Stone again be­ ■ A short time ago there came a ATACKED BY BOERS. came serious. The brigands are still brief notice that he bad landed at holding out for the £25,000 ransom, Port Clarence with a herd of rein­ Kitchener Reports a Disaster to British—The and it is feared that should they per­ deer. He was not expected to return sist in their demand Miss Stone will for a year or more, but his usual re­ Loss Was Heavy. have to be sacrificed. Nevertheless, sourceful ability evidently brought London, Nov. 4.—Lord Kitchener the negotiations are still proceeding. him out earlier. He traveled across Has reported to the war office a dis­ Anxiety prevails this evening at the Russia and Siberia very rapidly, aster to the British, near Bethel,^East­ United States legation whence there going with trained guides in storms ern Transvaal in which two guns were has been an active exchange of tele­ often when many men would have lost nine officers were killed and 13 grams between Secretary Eddy and in some camp retreat. wounded and 54 men killed and 160 various points. Mr. Eddy had a long rested After leaving the railway, he tra­ wounded. Following is the text of conference with Sir Nicholas R. versed 1,500 miles of unknown Siberia Lord Kitchener’s dispatch : O’Conner, the British ambassador until near Orla, on the Okhotsk sea, I “I have just heard of a severe at­ here, who is actively assisting in the he found the breed of reindeer he tack made on the rear guard of Col­ efforts to bring about Miss Stone’s wanted, purchased 254 head and got onel Benson’s column when about 20 release. them to Baroness Korfg bay, where northwest of Bethel, near Broken So far from there being any con shipment could lie made. He then ■aagte, during a thick mist. The firmation of the rumors of her death retraced his steps to Vladivostock strength of the enemy is reported to circulating in the Bulgarian bonier under very trying conditions. In tiave been 1,000. They rushed two districts, it is said here that another one instance broke a trail through ns with the rear guard, but it is letter, written two days ago, has been snow waist deep for a distance of 100 Uncertain whether they were able to received from her. mile.-,. This he accomplished by rid­ remove them. I fear our casualties ing the reindeer ahead, under saddle, Were heavy. Colonel Benson was TRAIN ROBBERY ATTEMPTED. taking turns as they became exhaust­ wounded, but not seriously. A re­ ed with the continued effort. Arriv­ lieving column will reach him this Plot to Wreck North Coait Limited in Mon- ing at Vladivostock, Lieutenant Bert­ morning. ” • holf chartered a Russian tramp tana Unearthed. , Later Lord Kitchener telegraphed steamer and returned to the point •s follows: St. Paul, Nov. 4.—Northern Pacific where he had the reindeer located, j “Colonel Barton, who marched secret service men are working on loaded them safely and landed them from the constabulary line yesterday, what they believe was a plot to wreck in excellent condition at Port Clar­ reached Benson’s column early this and rob the North Coast Limited ence, where they are now being morning unopposed. He reports that train two weeks ago near Deer Lodge, wintered. Colonel Benson died of his wounds.’’ Mont. The imted was late in reach­ ing Butte west bound, and it was run­ Four Malted Schooner Aihore. Iowa Bank Burglarized. ning fast to regain its schedule. Port Townsend, Wash., Oct. 31.— Matlock, la., Nov. 4.—Early today Near Deer Lodge the engine struck the Bank of Matlock was buiglarized a pile of bridge timber upon the As a result of last night’s storm, a by six men, who secured about $2.000. track. Every coach in the train four-masted schooner is ashore an Of this amount $300 was in silver, except the observation car was de­ Smith Island, and seas are breaking iour of the men acted as guards railed. Both the engineer and fire-1 over her. A re[>ort was brought here Outside while the other two went in­ man stuck to their posts, applied the this evening by the steamer Lydia side. The safe and vault were shat- air brakes and the train was stopped Thomi>son, which passed the scene W?red by dynamite and the building within its own length, all the coaches of the disaster late in the afternoon, badly wrecked. There is absolutely remaining upright. Evidence has but, owing to the heavy seas, was un­ no clew,and no effort was made to fol- been obtained that the timbers were able to approach close enough to Itiw the robbers, because all were intentionally placed on the track and ascertain the name of the vessel. leavily armed. The total loss in the detectives have succeeded in j Shipping men say the stranded ves­ money and damage to the safe and connecting the men in the plot. No sel is the E. K. Wood, from San Pedro, bound for Whatcom. Building is over $4,000. arrests have been made. Addition of Forty Vessels Is Shamrock Not for S*l*. Jimiic* Wsntt Bo«r Colonlito. Queenstown, Nov. 1.—Sir Thomas Lipton, who arrived here today on board the White Star line steamer Celtic from New York, said to a rep­ resentative of the Associated Press that the report that the Shamrock II was for sale in New York was quite untrue, and he intended racing her in American waters next season. He reiterated his purpose to again chal­ lenge for the America’s cup and ex­ pressed himself asbeingquite satisfied with the manner in which the Sham- rock II had been sailed. New York. Oct. 31.—Czolgoaz was hanged in effigy at Hampstead, L. I., tonight with elaborate ceremonial hisses, catcalls and groans. Moses A. Baldwin Post No. 44, G. A. R.. marched with the elaliorately con­ structed effigy to Smith's hotel, where it was swung up to a tree and many pistol shots were fired at it. Rockets, Roman candles and red fire were burned, and under the swinging effigy a fire of tar barrels was started. Wiil Expose Rsinmaken. Boer Commando Surprued. Plague Death« at Liverpool. V Chief Gillespie's FOR JETTY. Recommendation for the Columbia River. Washington, Nov. 1.—The recom­ mendations of General Gillespie, chief of engineers, compare with the recom­ mendations made by Captain Langtitt, in charge of the river and harbor work in the Northwest, as follows: Captain Ge neral Langtitt Gillespie Mouth of the Columbia........ ffxO.Wo I000.O00 90.000 Canal at Cascades ................. l.'«U,U00 Columbia and Lower Willam­ ette ........................................ 72X000 32'».000 ;ed. Citi­ zens generally closed their stoics and offices, and are in pursuit of the Negro. Butte, Mont., Oct. 31.— Butte was struck by a blizzard early this even­ ing. The temperature drop|>ed sud­ denly nearly 25 degrees, and a fine snow, almost of the character of.hail, began falling. The wind, which blew a gale, was bitterly cold, and there was considerable suffering in various ]>ortions of the city where no provision had been made for the appearance of winter at such an early date. Big Orang* and Lemon Crop. London, Nov. 1.—Lord Kitchener London, Oct. 31.—The local govern­ M ashington, Nov. 4.—Professor M i 11 is L. Moore, chief of the weather , in a dispatch from Pretoria says ment l>oard has issued a statement bureau, and his assistant combat the Colonel Byng suprrised a Boer com­ that two persons died from the plague theory of the efficacy of shooting as a mando October 25, and captured 22 in October at Liverpool, according to means of destroying hailstorms and prisoners, including Field Cornets •ay none of the report« of experiments Spanneberg and Onisthuisen. Colo­ the bacteriological tests made after Three suspected cases in Europe has shaken their opinion. nel Fortescue, the dispatch adds, had the deaths. Professor Moore will issue a report a day long running fight with Muel­ and all who have been in contact ■hort’y on the subject, elaborating his ler’s Boer command, Octolier 27, with the suspected persons have been views of the investigations and ex­ ; northward of Balmoral. He killed placed under observation. |The board periments that have been conducted four Boers a 11 captured 54 prisoners, says that the plague was at first ¡thought to be influenza. | 36 wagons and much stock. along these lines. ASTHMA CURE FREE! Paris, Nov. 1.—‘‘The entire French Mediterranean squadron left yester­ day afternoon,” says the Toulon cor­ Taft Bros. Medicine Co. Feb. 5, 1901. respondent of the Figaro. “While Dr. Gentlemen: I was ttoubled with Asthma for 22 years. I have tried numerous remedies, but they t-aveall failed. I ran across your advertisement and started with atrial bottle. I found re­ one division put in at Iles d’Hyeres, lief at once. I have since purchased your full-size bottle, and I am ever grateful. I have family another, composed of three battle of four children, and for six years was unable to work. I am now in the best of health and am business every day. This testimony you can make such use of as you see fit. ships and two cruisers, proceeded to doing Home address, 235 Rivington street. 8« RAPHAEL, 67 East 129th st., City. the Levant. Two thousand troops will be added to this for*e. “Admiral Caillard’s orders are that if complete satisfaction is not given by the Ottoman government to all Do not delay. Write at once, addressing DR. TAFT BROS.’ MEDICINB the claims of France he will seize the custom house of the port nearest CO., 79 East 130th St., N. Y. City. the squadron. It is believed his destination is the island of Mitylene J S. ROSCOE, or Salonica. The island commands the entrance to the Dardenelles and UMBRELLAS the Gulf of Smyrna.” Several morning pajters confirm Re-covered and the Figaro’s Toulon advices. Ru­ mors to the same effect were current Repaired in Paris late last evening, but the for­ Full line of repairs and all repair work done eign office professed to know nothing In the best style. South side Third Street near regon about the matter. B. Blizzard at Butte. Czolgosz Hanged in Effigv. Kingston, Jamaica, Nov. 4.— The British ship Darien, from Liverpool for South American ports, arrived here today from Colon, Colombia. She brought reports that business continues at a standstill at Colon. Merchants here are arranging a meeting for the purpose of requesting the imjierial government to take steps to have a large number of Boers permanently settled on the Island of i Jamaica. 1 I $600,000 San Francisco, Oct. 31. — The orange and lemon shipments to the East from Southern California last season aggregated 22,500 cars. It ia expected that the shipments tbia season will not fall abort of 26,OOq cars. The orange crop of Northern California also promises to largely exceed that of last year, and a feeling of general satisfaction prevails in consequence. «o union P acific DEPART Chicago Portland Special 9:00 a. m. Atlantic Express 9 p. m. Spokane Flyer 6 p. m. S p. m. Daily Ex. Sunday 8 p. in Saturday 10 p. m. TIME SCHEDULES ▲ RRIVI CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH P ennyroyal pills Salt Lake, Denver. Ft. Worth, Omaha, Kan­ 4:30 p. m. sas City, St. Ixiuis, Chicago and East. Salt Lake, Denver, Ft. 8:40 a. m. Worth. Omaha. Kan­ sas City, Bt. Ixiuis, Chicago and East. Walla Walla, I^wistor. Spokane, Minneapo­ lis, St. Paul, Duluth, Milwaukee, Chicago and East. OCEAN STEAflSHIPS All Bailing date» sub­ ject to change. For San Francisco— Sail every 1» days. Columbia River Stmrs To Astoria and Way- Landings. 7 a. m. Safe. Al warn reliable. LadlM, rnk Druggist foe CHlCHMTr.R« BNtiLIIIH In Bod and Oold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no oilier. Refkae dangerous ■ «tea Ci­ tation« and Imitations. Buy of your ImiggiM, or send 4r. in stamps for Particulars, Testi­ monial* and •• Belief for Ladle«,** in letter, by re torn Mall. lO.OOOTeeUmouiala. (fold by all Druggist«. CHICHB8T1R CHB1CIOAL OO. PA. 4 pm. •10« Madison AR|«are. 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