A 5 ISSUED IS tEKI-WKKLY SECTIONS, EACH TCESOIT AND FRIO AT. VOL. 49. NO. 37. SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1900. , FIRST SECTION EIGHT PAGES f r 1 - ; - ' , " " sL 4 v .A. . J' v .A.' FIRE HORROR : IN NEW YORK A Seven Story, Business Block Biown Into the Air. I 5 FLAMES RAVAGtD WHOLE STREETS II an J reds of Human Lives Beljeved to Have Been Lost Heroie Efforts of the Fire Department. NEW YORK, Oct. 2ft. To the long list of fir horror that hare, occurred Jn ami .irotiud Ihc rily nf XVw Turk wax added one tlay. by lire and an explosion 'which shook the lower end of Manhattan island like an earth quake, hurled a wren-story building Into the air, and set lire to" two blocks of buildings, with a loss of , life that only th' efforts of hundred of men, who wcr rushed! to the work of dig Kins awaj" the ruins a soon as the fire was extinguished, will .reveal. Tl'-Ma building or Tarrant & Com pniiy. maker of medical specialties; standing at the northwest corner of tJreeuwick and Warren streets. , and -tilled with rtjeiuji-alt look lire an: hour and i a quarter after. 12 o'clock this afternoon. One tire fomjaBj- had just arrived when the terrilie explos ion occurred, ami threw the' engine tcw- down the I stairway. The, fire men, realizing the danger of their jMisitiou. rushed out of tin? building to the street. Captain Ievanney order ed hi crew !svk luto the building again. They dragginl the line to the tloor way a second time, when came an explosion more terrilio than the first, "am! tlM' whole, crew was hurled across Oreenwleh street. Devanuoy w so Istdly injured that he was went to the hospital. In the meatiiue other engine that .had resimuded to the alarm, had collected and the firemen were busy rescuing . ieople from tbe surrounding .buildings. ! The firemen had already taken many gilrs tkiwu.-tlte only tire p njKn the building and more person had lHfii carried tlown lite eseaiie of the building adjoining. when , the fotve of ttw explosion tore away the wall 'of. the, big commission , store house fronting on, Washington street, ami caused them to collapse. Aiiw U'arre u street to the optioslte buildings the flaunt leaped, setting rtiein br. In m, momeut Warren xttect. wa cIioUihI with A niasit of debri. iiud tht whole place 4 wa aflame. A great explosion was fol lowed by & half .Ioxeii more, scarcely Jew Intense, and by a couutless ninii Iht of smaller e. Hy thi thiM the Ore aHaratu wa iiJrr'ving from i cviry dre-tiou. TIiu explosion ami fin together' -had uo.v assumed the, proiNtrtions of a great catastrophe, ami it wan thought that buii.lr.-ds of liven had been lost.. The oidy p'i!on known to liave l-vn kllhI. up to 's o'clock tonight, wax a man who tiled In the hospital an the result of an Injury received in the Htrvet. 4'hief 'rok-r say no fire meu an- milug. GERMANY IS AMBITIOUS. wouu r-PEfuinn' amf.uican CO.VI.lMi STATIONS- Her FJTrt Now IMreeteir Toward tletting a Ftiot-hohl In South Antcrlea-vMounH locirme. vtm vnttiv. n,t. 20. Any attempt oa HicHKirt of tSennany to establish a cm ling tat Mn in territory ofA en ill Im onnostnl by he Inlted States, aits a Washington 4'al to the Herald. Such action wouhl lie In violation of the principles of th Mon- rw tloetrino. A cabh tiisiwtcn i rom ii..t. tt Miuttn has tieen receive! con Trying a Tumor that the Vouer-nelan i.....,Pnn...i.i l considering the advls- abilitv of leasing to tb-rmany a. port ".. i.inul ir Margarita, and It i.. i rt..t.xi nnirh. attention. ... t;ermany I anxious to acquire sits f U co.tlIng .station in the Western .iL.H.ioi-.nv, It has lsn fnquenily rkiHirte.1 that she was endeavoring to establish a coaling station on Uie Itrailinn tvJt. but o negotiations t-en entered into. Xatal officers ti.at 4Jennanr-conld have only ... t.ieet in establishing a tiaval sta Hon In th Western IlemisplHre to prepare for Imst Hit k-s f aga Inst t oe FnittHl Ktate. Thff ' Vpitwl States is the onlv I'ower whose tomM'n.mj the Itetira 4Joveninent fears. hen 1 i.li t!.wriinMnt WOUld JlOt tHTtnit ithe actpiisUion of the lanlsh Wc-t lmll-s by any EuroiKait stale, reports ..... '..-Hilt fx i tlat tJermuay was t-vrin, trt establish a coaling station at Sent Catharina. Brazil Tinfl rettatrts were not confirmed- Ur- t..ll.l. the Venezuelan Charge .r' k'tri.i- jsavs that he heard not ! iug coutirmatory of tbe.reiort that Ti.ii. iiii- at leaslnz to krmany lHirt iu the! Island of MargarlU for as a roa I in z station, lennany s claims in VvnRela arise from Ihc construction of the trans- Ande.m itnir..-hl from Caracas - to Valencia Ihaus of these. tScrmany last year bud a hari correspondence with A ? ezisla. and notitv was given that the claims uinst be paid by January ' 11-ktl. , ' - ;: .- Margarita' Island would be ralnable . f:.iisiic as a bane. Itocause of its strMteiu' t'tosltion In th Caribln-au. It ,U near the mouth of the Orinoco Hirer, and could le nsel effectively in operations centering atut a Nicara gua or Panama CaaaL The Island has several deep harborst.' tltat eould be slrongrly for titled and easily held. - err yacht: hacks. - ' Talk Almt Changing Cour.. From Sandy Hook to' NVwport U Idle. New York. Oct.. 2ft. While there Is talk in wme quarter of transferring tle America's cup , ra-e to Xevort. the Journal tateM on the lst author ity that there !.- not the slightest ctiau-e of the raises being preseutt-l there. While tlie -oure oft Brenton's Itecf .. I JghtRhip in giMMl. it 1 not a ecxnl a one for a fa ir tet a rhe Kanly Hook course. Off I'olnt Jndith. LHock I-nd and Vineyard Sound four titles wonld liave' to W em-ouuteretl during a race, agaiit one or, two at Handy Hook. For" thU r axon. If uo ther r ajon. It wouhl le nufair to ask Sir Thomai I.ipton to acept isuch ft handi cap,, and there 1 not the' lightett chance of hi Iwing retjnt ted t do sk. ;':'" . ; Ko far nx wind--go. there is quite as miu-li chance for n bre'ze on Sandy Jlotik Ui August a at, Newiirt. tor hey hare t-alm day there juxt a.- they do nt Sandr Hook. While Tlx-re I Life There I HI. I was aftlictetl with catarrh: euld neither taste nor' smell and could liear but Jh tie. Kly'w Cream Balm cured It. Marcus H. Xhautz. Itahway, j.X. J. The Hal in reached nn wifely and tl)e eflrcct i.-t HHnrling. My son says the flrt applu-atiou gave dechbd i re lief. '- Iteift fully. Mrs. 1 Franklin Freeman. Hover. X. II. '.' '",' i ;j The Ilalnt doe Tjit irritade or cause sueezing. St4d by ilruggl.tst at SO ds. or mailetl by' Ely Hrotbera, 5G Warren New ork. . FOR flUNNERY PRACTICE. Xavy Department Froposes to Ici- lrove tm Effecttvcn'S3 of Xavy. New York. fk-t. 2ft. Imiwrtant ac- ion fr the Impnjveineut lot gnmery tractive has leen taken by the? Xavy K'iartmt?nt ujxiu the rtHwu mcud.it Ion of V Kejtr-Almlrnl' 1 s CrownlnbieId, Chief of the Hut can of Xarigation, .aya a 'Herald pecfal from Wahing ton. The department has Issued a general onk'r extending the course in gunnery Instruct Ion to each squadron of the Navy. ;- '" . -: . ' ' I ue new order estanusues an nv- stM'tor of target raft'iee who shall b present at ' the "lighting etlieieucy practice provided -tnd Hbiint a lonprt'lienslve report tliertKin. : It also constltntes a Intard of otlicert to Im known a tin lutrd of Uutuitry Instruct ions, who will iK'lcct aubjee; to the approval of the commanding (theer. memlK'n of the tran crew. lu lake gunnery Instruction cournes. Ireliniinarr . Instructions 'will be given; thenjinal praclk-e, with .small armx. TIten oil-calilcr practice wm Ik? held, and then the preliminary tar get practice uhlpR gun ttointers will iH-k-cleil, and tlioe liitrlng the high est pTCf'iitage wdl lie detailed at tlie earliest opiiortonity for the advancvl course provHt1! ror on; noaru a gun- iwry trainlus-sliip. 4I , . During the winter of 1SM7 Mr. James Reed, one of the leading citizens and merchants of Clay, Clay Co., W. Va.. struck his leg against n cake of Ice in such a manntr as to bruise it severely. It became very much swollen and (taincd him so hadjy that le could not walk without the am of crutches. lie was treatetl by physicians, ajso used several kinds of lluiment and two and a half gallons of whisky in bathing it. but nothing gave any ndief until he liegan using Chamberlain's Pain Italin. This brought almost ft complete euro in a week's time and he believes that had lie not used this remedy his leg wonld have had to be amputated. Pain Ralm Is tineqnaled for sprains. irttises and rhenmallsm. For sale ny P. O. Haas, tlrngglst, Bfate , street, Salem, Oregon. H, TO PROTECT SHIPPING. Congress Will Bo Asked to Establish an Important Weather Station. Washington, 'Oct. 2ft. Secretary Wilson probably will .ask Vmgress for authority to build a cable from the mainland to Tatoosli Island ",at the entrance to! Iuget Sound. Wash., and then establish a: iermanettt weather bureau and sliJp rciMirting station there. Tlnee the disont in nance of the station at -that point, the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and other P.-wlfle coast organizations have iietiflnunl for its re-estaUlisliniettt. nd the enlargement of the protection ,xt stibinlns!. esiH-clfllly f vessels hi dlstn-ss. The weather 'inspector rt'ijortetl fn.orab!y on the project, and the bureau mis rvoommeuueu n- IIOPS SOLD. Woltmrn. Oct. 2ft. II. ? I Bents. acting for M- II. Durst, has pur4iasel fifty bales of hois ot i. i. rsarour m 1.U4 cents a pound. This is the high est figun yet reached in th'M section. Most of the hoa nere are aom. mw .r t it l lioldtnsr with the-extweta- tlon of realizine 1 aid proisibly 20 cents, t W . . . . CASTOR I A lor Infaat and .Children. -; Tt3 Iti Yea Wzn ktezjt E::M Baxs the Blgaattiro of Tw Ice-a-weck Statesman ?1 a year. 7 THE PACIFIC ,, , NORTHWEST Its. Advantages as Compared iYitb California's Resources. OBSERVATIONS Of A TRAVELER & A. Clarke Writes A jraln of UU Trip JtcroMti the Continent and pme Conjpriaoua Oe Made. Having jilyen atbrk-f sketch of the journey by rail fron the farthest East, by the 1'niou '.Pacific route to the eastern line f Oregon. I am ituqited to word jiicture I lie various Hues through the Inland Empire and draw comparison of witat our' region fiosv-esses with the thousand utiles of mountain iateaux to the eastward can offer, with elevation of "l.ts'tt to 8,its fee, averaging, for the entire tlinlaiKv fwiii Ixsige V. tu Nebraska, to Huntington, in Kaker county. Ore gon. Hum miles, over 'ttKK) feet of al titude. All that distance the range Jntfiesis predominate ami iIm "cow boj is always in evidence. When we near tho Oregjiu line scems change, and while the stock man Is alway prominent, there are beaut if ub vallej-s, as the Hoise, Pay ette ami Weisei, where farms or chards and homes arc unsurpassed and the I towns and villages speak of prosperity ami social pmgress. Thia is also a region where fmit growing Is a feature,, for even the sage brush plains of Snake river have been, re deemed and 'irrigated, so transformed to fruitful orchards.!' And this Is but the commencement of progress fhat will in time redeem immense present wastos ami Create a productive r gion.. This is a matter I have studid from t lie work of the Oeological Sur rey, whose mission is to convert arid lands' to homestead.! Almost 'A year ago I was in B;tker couirty and at its ' rganiz:itiou was trado its county rfcrk. I then stndieti all the interests of the wile region; it fruitful t brads, ami mining tlis tricts, ami later traveled tbrotigh the fertHc valleys and mining dis tricts of Southern " ' Idaho 'as cM-res-iMimltnt for the NeW York Times, San Francteeo Bulletin and a .'Port land tlally, As we sjMtl oyer tlioc scenes on t lie rail, jlh luxurious cars, there taiiM. renHiiisceiM-es if the jsvn cl ftt Ion sigi when Ij rx (e the trails of juountaiu and plain ' on horseback. The: region had realized all that was cxiHcterof if in the early tlmet and yet has made but a commencement in tlie litve of progress, tltat Is to' come. There Is no imrre Iwautiful spot on tlw earth not even the Yale of Chani ounl than t-he fJrand l'oitde V"1le Cratlled among the mountains ;it has become a home for many thousands and has cities, towns and villages that show refinement as well as pro gress, and Its industries f nily ' corrcs IMiud. Ixvokiiig hack Jhose years, memory has a r picturt of a tent pitched 'one May, on the overlooking hills near La t;raude. after a day's journey Iowu tlui river, oftn ue-k deei in ice water. ; as there was no trail through the all iiervading snows. We ' had "shoveled snow to make a liathway to cross tin Blue mountains by a new route. As the sun went down We reached I this salient ioiot ami looked over the - beautiful sii'tn of 'the valley, . shrinetl among its snow Ismnd ranges lsfore J4 Imw-; sesssl a si ngle home save , as Nez Ien-es wigwams were indicated ly , cnrl'tig wreaths of smoke. Iowtl?r t river was as nature left It: Fmatilla had bre and there an - adventurous settler; Walla Walla had become a village., br.t the Inland Empire was then scarce discovered to 'civilization. It Is worth while o have lived to see, the time when great, railroad sys tems hare tlevelotied tlw Juland Em pire: when the Iron horse nad the rlrer steamer compete for Its; trartic, and both are taxed to carry! tin world's markets 4he -mlUlons of bush els of wiieet to. feed tlte world's peo ple: when shipe and steamers ctme from earth's farthest shores,, over her widest oceans, to load this crain of a metroislis that was a struggling village -log houses planted. often anug gfeint sturaps when the writer landed there in Seytemlicr, 18oO. v.-; -.f'-' " '; '; '' ; East of the trascaws the traveler Unds rich fields and homes A hat adorn favored distrtets lit ' Idaho, Washing ton and Ongou. wlose pnslnct calls here-the world's ships and commerce. As he comes through those scenes. and down the eonrse of the River of the West, he sees orchanls and vine yard whose protluct Kwuis trains to supply Eastern cities with the choic est of fruit in season, ami curetl ami canned fruits later. This transforma tion of savage wiW to ctrilizatioa and omsrress many of its hare lived tn see and to reloiee at. TlWfalded 2,n or .Eden was net more lorely than were neny of tlMs seen s In th4r sta te of , nat ore. . S.' : '-i;.-There is nothing - more dpeeiving ihaa tlte journey down the Columbia. It shores are basalt precipices. to Wi ftet lilgb "Itock-rjbUtt and anebni as the Sun" with jlrifting ?aul left by the river flooils. Occa sional accretions of sandy loam cuake fruitful spots, but there are not over a thousand ecre of. arable soil to lie fonnd in a hundred miles of Its flow. Tl:e stranger who -comes " from the East ?- wonder stnK-k when told-that broa j cplands spread from the um- mft cf tLe?e -!lff. the richest wheat lands to be found, whose product htad-i great fleets "of merchantmen, that cross all earth's oceans, to "feed the peoples of Asia, Europe and Afri ca: whcic fields whose value rea-h "the; "diltb of Ormns and of I nd." lie 'looks mote kin.lly on the flomiing clitTs wheu . he barns what fei tile seres ther uplold. ' " The last hundred miles on 'the O. II. A N..is a fitting finish to the 32ts leiles of travel, for it includes the fearfnl rage of wafers at the dalles ot the Clumbiii, where an ichosita ble lava stirfjce ltses in. aroumi the trtter hell or waters: then -ouie The Dalles City, and a few miles of rare shore with t irchard-4 and homes fill the inieral Jifoiv we euter tb won derful gorge that for 7. miles reveals an tmsur.ias.-l wobder of mouuta.ii scenery. ' always changing -ami ever new. The tqwier river is a trnmuil flow through mountain vistas, with uowy paks g!eaitUug through the jb-e defiles. In the 'enter of the ttjnjie we View .the cataelysiu where the cascades rage and foam, and where ludbti! ftfide has l.x-atel the Bridge of tlie !mIs. Nowhere is this -ene suriiassed. except it may . te eji3llel In tlw passes of ihe Deti ret; & Rio ; ramie. While. -tltat may le tituiHr sublime, it has tlitTeretit features, lacking the fury of the cas cades tush of waters, and the ma jestic placidity of such waterfalls as the ' Mcbiioinnh 'ami Oneotita, that gis-e the lower river. lcaf iug the gorjre one is in a differ ent regku and climate. ' The sliore of the lower river aretiiOI sides wlwre hoircs and orchards grace the sivtie, while seowy iw.iKs add awe and sub linty to all the world tielow. At Portland we' -see the worUl's com merce iu ships waiting for cargo, while the local .trade Is tchowii in the multitude of river streams and small er craft that line the shores or ply tlie stream. Wlhen we cross the river' the scene Is'famMiar. for here. I built it saw mill, just where the steel bridge land-, in ISTil. wheu Hhtc was no house within sight and majestic oaks lined the river Imuk. What Western Oiegon Is. It need not to recite. There are no richer field, more beautiful si- nes. more tleliglitful homes, more refined jwojile. Its cities liave every modern -advantage; its Institutions, of len ruing tMpial tin' oldest states at the East; facilities for Imluslries exist In million lior-etiower that can le brought, to the line of the, Soutiieru PaclUc -railroad, tliat will in time-all U tnade useful in prisluctlon. Tliere Is no vegiottf flint offers more genHine indt'-ment. and yet. this Empire of the Xorthwest ttutst teVeKps but slowly. We have Immense . develojiment in traus)hrtat ion liues, with live great tt-niiscontluctital .systems at our tloors, wUile this bra ncli line enters every fertile dlstrtH. It is Irtu that - slnc picueer 'tfars ; the -oijnirv w't of the waters vf th Mls-sourl has ilcveloped .Imperial states that haw offered ad vantages nearer the East 1 bait , n gniK tint none of them have tlie 'world' 'ecuirttt'Ne at .command as we have: mme have such moderate and lieakhfvl cliuiate; such mineral Wealth; such- future eertainikis. And in the state of the farthest. Northwest there' is soch vnrhd possibilities as cannot be equalled elswheri. Why is it. then, that when tln Den ver train came In -at Cheyenne I was transferred from a full sleeper, lnmnd for t'alifornia, to ttecupy alone, the tourist sleeper that was to take t.lw Oregon Short Line for Port html? Cal ifornia may be the land of fruits ami tIow'rs; Its climate seml-tronlcal. sSoee of its valleys fertile, but. when eomyard with tlie North I'aciiic, lands ere not iisuallj- so reasonable In priei or sure to produce, while re ferring diKinths are frequent and the greater area of sol!. is less pnnluctive. It was apparent that-travel was dieei-tfil to the south that I have lscn templed to show tho. advantages of the north coast. Surely, fclie Colum bia river and Pitgct Sound, the west ern valleys of lktlh stales, ami the temjH-rate vlimaie of the scalsjartl, with the vast areas ami unrivalled production of the Inl.iml Empire, leave nothing to lie desirtnl, but more cnefilte development. . S. A. CLARKE. WERE ASPHYXIATED. Three Montana Miners Overcome by Powder Smoke. Pntte, Mont., Oct. 2ft. William Whit more, Robert Campliell and Chas. Blackle. three miners employed In the Smokelmuse mint, were asphyxiated this aftcrmsin, by rstwiler as. They had fired twelve shots, and went down sMn afterwards. The three Isslies were found by the foreman of tm mine in four feet: of water, at the Isittoni of the shaft. All of the men have fired many yean" in Montana,, and have been promin ent, in mining clrcks. ." A CHILI BURNED. Sheridan. Cifet. 2ft. The Naze from an open tirtilace Igrritetl the clothing tf a little K-ytUr-old girl of Jann-s Xor r1s. living iu tin- fmHIiills atsire Wil larrdrta, ou Saturday. She ran scream ing to her mlottier.'who was banging Up oum clothes outside. Tlie -hild was frighrfnpy burne1. ami bin little hoie for Uerreevvery is entertained. -.'V .;, ; The Appeilttr of a Coat ? Ja'ewvied by all poor dyspeptic whose Stomach and Liver are out of or W. All such fchould know rJiat Dr. Kings Nrw Lifrf P.lls, the wonderful Gtomach ad Liver Remedy, gives a sptendki appetite, sonnd digestion' and a regular bodily habit rhat insures per fect beabh and great energy. Only 25c. at Dr. S TONE'S drug stores. : Twloe-a-week Sta teaman SI a year. WAS ASSAULTED Elmira, New York, Hoodlums Insult Their GovernorThe Police Looked On. ! In Otn.r Cltici the Bepnblicao SUnJarJ-Dearer Was Deceived nthasiani Ilia Coart(,sy and Constdt-ration for (ha Sou of Blelard Croker. ELM IRA, X. Y.. tVt. 2!. For t he first time in New York state. ami in the lioitK of the Demoeratie candidal for !oernoK HThedore IbCosevelt was nss.tulHMl in the streets of Ebuura tonight, on, his way to' his place of meeting. He was in a carriage with former State Senator Fassct and at several imiuts along the'. route was pelted with eggs and vegetables, and greeted with the vilest epithets. Ha tsat . In dignified silet.ee while the police hKikiil m tpilcstvut ly. During bis campaign in the moritiug In was also assaulted Mrsouafly. ami a bitter, fight ensued. In the place of meeting the Jovermir lwd uo interruptkiu. After It was over he sit id: It was misty conduct; the conduct .or i uoouiums. II1S COURTESY. Elmira. N. Y. .OcU 2ft.-Governor RtHisevclt tinislied the first-day of his second wtvk'j campaign in this state by ait invasion tif the home of . the Dcmttcratic candwlate for tlfoveriior, John M. Stnnehtield. In lili.ua. tlie ttovcrimr's reepthm was of the most friendly nature, .and he paid a com pliment to one of the college then, the son of Richard t'roker. by refusing to ei.. as he has generally tlone at other slops, make a iierxoual attack upon tlie Tammany leader. His" welcome, in Elmira was a great political k?ui oiist ration. BRYAN'S WORK. , N w York. (Kt. 2ft "And T ant feel ing tolerably well. I thank you." This was Mr. Bryan's response, wheu i ".:r 4w. : 7?. ? CHINA'S BIGGEST ARS13NAL. SAD DEATH AT SEA A. A. BA8IIOK KNOCKED OVERBOARD IN BKKIKU SEA Tbl!on Bit Way Heme from a rraltUM Proapvctlng-Trip In tb Interior of Alaska. - "Messrs. fiilbcrt Bros., of this city, yestcnlay received a letter front Seat tle that conveyed sad" news to one family in this city. The letter was written by H. P. Wilbur, of Chlco. Montana, a returuing Alaska gald hnuterand It gave the tlefalls of the death at sea, by neeident, of A. A. Bashor of North. Salem.. The uuforu nate man. who liad gone to Alaska to lietler his fortunes leaves a wife and three children, two daughters, 2ert rude and Chkie, and one sou, Elmer, all of them residing In North Salem. He Was 43 years old, and belonged to tin Hnbliard' lodg of Odd Fellows. TlM family was last evening apprised of the death of the husliaml ami fa the;; by Rev. W- C. Kantuer. pastor of the First Congregational "hurcb. TtMs text f the. letter receivetl ly Cilbert Bros., is as follows: I regret, to inform yoti of the mis fortune that has befallen a family of your town. A. A. Bashor, of your place, was ht at sea. on a trip from Brist ol Ba y to I n tch II a rTsr uo 1 he early itart of this month. There was a rarty of its wlio had . U-n up the Xusuayak river and its tributaries, ou a prospecting trip. Ou our return about th last of September we were all looking for some way to get out, when a small ehner came there and offereil to carry - eleven person to Dutch Harls.r. - . . ? "Jlr. , , Bashor ami myself were among the party; of eleven who-' took Isage. Wlien some distam-e east of L'ulvik Pass. Mr. Bashor was knock ed overboard by the swinging of the fork of t the, mainsail as, the vessel was trying to go atmirt ia - quite a strong gale.' Timlsrs and boxes were thrown overboard ami a boat wait gotten off. bat to no avail. Mr. Bail or was talking with one of the; party, named McMuilen. .of going 1o White Horse, so be (McMulk-n took charge ATlSIOMC ' ' ' - '-: '! " . - IV tth told tonight that he bad made thirty leeches during- the lay and thus broken , lii own record fiir- sjeih making. As a rule the .ieeches were hot so long as oh most occasion, but they exeeedeo! iu liumtier by uiuti or ten those of any previous il.ty 'during, the pies nt iMiniuigii. ami by three the highest itumiier made in tlie cam paign. U- any one day. In 1V.. Beginning at -'ItalubrMge in the In terior of the state, "at t o"clo-k in leoruiug, he spoke twenty im lime, iu New York ..City he nuiiK' ioue sHH'eii. ami iu ltrMklyn durlns the iiiglit he made eight speeches; makiOg .thirty in all for the 'day and 'night., Mrs. Rryjn ae.-niip.iuied lir Iju baud during tin day, ami she receiv ed almost as , much applause "as! l did wheir sh' apisitred In-fore jibe crowd-asu'iftl.led to hear hiuw ',lh. crowds were gem-rally large iu ro portioa to tin- population. ' TO THE Jll'ltUKWS. New York. Oct. 2ft. -The last 'sjWcii" made by William Jennings Bryau, ou 5lauhat'iau Island , 'hiring the ptvjeiit cintaigit . was made tonight to the Hebrews of the East .-aide. In many'; resiieets this was one of t is most re markable Scenes of the- ea llipl I Ull Without the fireworks which 'attracted the" crowds- to the Madison Sqfiare tJardv-n galheriugs. with a knowledge the the Presidential -candidate Welti. I not ssak more, than H or l.-" 'minute.,., the fmwds begali to ."'gather on! the East side at the Hamilton Fish, park: a t 4 o'cloek. Tlt Mnost conservative, t'stimatcs of the crowd tiv tlie number at. at least. .M.on. Aetoniing to th. )Mople who have lived all their lives oil the East, lIe, no "prevloti erent has ever caused such a demonstration in that section of tlie city. T of bis "" effects and will, I iiresume, write you ir his family. I had no heart to break siieh news to. his w1fo ami children, ko write you as I had often heard him ssak of you during the two months wo were together, ! "I came iu last evening on the South Portland. 1 think Sir. .Mc.Mullen ami the rest will Is in tishty or soon thereafter tut the steamship - Robert Dollar. There was alo tin , ttoard a member of the Odd Fellows, who. I Ihink... will coinmuuicate with htx lodge. - ; , "In concluding I will say that I have never known a more pronounced ease of presentiment. Mr.'Baslior was Iieartl to Kay, several days ls-fore i the acident, that h hardly thonghti ho would ever sts his family agaiif. "I hoie to g-t tin to tuy home to morrow, tChlco, M out ana). If I can give any information further then I have hero given, will do no at any time."-. ,:'-. DELINQUENT INTEREST.-The trcsisurer of Malheur 'county yester day paid $72..'7 to flu State Treaur cr. In full payment fur Interest! 011 J.-llnqtH-nt taxes for-. lite ye.tr lHft!. On the ifttb of Ikwuihcr, 1S!7. Rer. S. A. iHuiahoe, pastor M. E. Church. South. PL -. Pleasant. W. Va., con tractcil a severe cold which was at tended from tho ls-ginning by violent c0ugUing. He says; "After resorting to a nniuln-r of so--ailed 'apei-lues,' usually kept In the hotise,. fo no pur Mje. I purchased a bottle of Cbani lTlalu Cough Remedy, which acr ed like" a charm. 1 -. most, cheerfully recommend It to the public." For Rale by F. (J. Haav druggist, Salem, Oregon. i TREASURE SHIPS. Two Steamer Come from Nome With Piles of tiold.' j. Seattle, Wash. Oct.- 2ft. The long overdue steamer . Robert Iollar . ar rived here from Nome touiztit. with 'XAi passengers and $l.iNH.tMHi iu gold tlnst. She. was hlayeI by storm. The steamer Ohio arrived this af'er, norm front Nome, with 427 passengers and $2."iMJt In gold dus. Bean tt v t&i Ici Ram AIm fcaJ EifMtar f VTr