oregonnews.uoregon.edu · V VOL. XXXIV. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1897....

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V VOL. XXXIV. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1897. NO. 33. "WEEKLY. MARKET LETTER. A BULKHEAD GIVES WAY.' A BIG EXPEDITION. OUTLOOK IS BETTER. SILVER WAS DROPPED TERRIBLE RAILWAY ftCCIDEKT HOST ON THE DflLTON TRAIL Epitome of the Telegraphic News of the World. TERSE TICKS FROM THE WIRES An Interesting Collection of Item From the Kew and the Old World In a ; Condensed and ComprehemiTe Form . .The food of San Francisco laborers is to bvanalyzed by the professors at the State University. The Fort Randall military reserva- tion, which contains over 100000 acres in South Dakota and Nebraska, has been opened to; settlers. Negotiations of the. Chinese govern- ment with the .Hooly-- - syndicate-- - for a . , ji'ijahof $80,000,000 have fallen through. tK.Tne is now negotiating ' ' with the Hong Kong & Shanghai bank. V The Washington state grain '.com no announces that it will not lower No. 1 wheat grade from 59 to 58 pounds' to the bushel, notwithstanding the agi- tation to that end in the eastern part of the state. . ,'. The Long Island coast for a distance of six miles, 'between Far Rockaway and Eockaway beach, was more or less damaged by a very, high tide. The Edmore hotel was damaged to the ex- tent of 25,000. ' Speedy, the professional bridgejUmp-er- , jumped from the Louisville & bridge in Louisville, Ky., before an audience of -- 18,000. Speedy made the jurrip'bf 180 feet in safety,-an- was mingling with the crowd a few minutes later. Frank Moon, aged 50 years, and Mrs. Wells, were fonhd-flea- at the bottom of a 80-fo- ot well on. Moon's farm.,., near Derby. Kan., having been asphyxiated. Moon had been overcome whild work- ing, and the wOmfta;. fearful. at his not returning; home, went- - to the well late at night to investigate and fell in." - . Admiral Matthews,. chief of ,' .'the bu- reau ' of yards and docks, in his annual report to Secretary Long, recommends the construction o.f four drydqpks of the best type. He recommends that con- crete docks be built at Boston,; Norfolk and Mare Island, and that , a floating dock be placed at either Key' West.Tor-tuga- s, or Algiers, 'La. The estimates for the maintenance" of the" yards next year aggregate $2,'364,2'62.'. "I ..," Following close nponi the recent an nouncement of a great; syndicate td con- trol the trade of Honduras comes the information- - recSrved from - reliable sources that a gigantic 'syndicate' iSin process of organization for the purpose of promotin'gfireet traVle between the United States and Russia. v The1 prdject' originated with Russian Merchants and has the sanction, if not the direct sup- port, of the imperial government. ' A dispatch" from M,anagua, iffcaia-gu- a, says John Augustine, an Ameri- can citizen, was arrested at San Carlos, at the month of the San Juan river, by . order of President .Zejaya's. brother, and, without' any pretense of a trial, was imprisoned in the penitentiary. Mr. Augustin'1 was formerly States consul at BTuefieTds,' Mosquito territory, and is at present in charge of the navigation company's steamers on the San Juarr.riveri ? ! - i ;' -, : John Griffith essayed "Richard III" at the opera house in Butte, Mont. In the closing scene" Griffith 'a sword struck John Fay Palmer, who was doing Rich- mond, in the face, cutting a - gush ex- -' tending from above one eye across the nose and cheek. The bone of" the nose was broken and a little more force would have penetrated the brain. Palmer turned his back to the audience and finished the scene Without any one knowing what bad happened. Sheldon Jackson," United. States su- perintendent of Alaskan schools, who has just returned ..from Alaska, says: There is but one solution to.the trans- portation problem in Alaska, ... and that is the reindeer. A special to the Kansas City journal from Muskogee, L T., says: ' The treaty between the Dawes and Creek commissions, which was concluded here last month, was rejected by the Creek council in session at Okmulgee. A patrol of dervish horsemen raided a village seven miles from Berber, kill- ing 11 men and capturing many women, children and cattle. A detach- ment of Anglor Egyptian, cavalry sent in pursuit of the dervishes overtook .them and routed them with heavy loss. The dervishes abandoned their booty and fled. ... . , . The body of William J. Lyons, an employe of the Pacific t5as Company, ,pf. San Francis.co, was found in the hills back of Berkley with a bullet-hol- e in his head.. - "He was short in his accounts and attempted to . burn his .books. to hide his brimel Be- ing discoverejd in this he&ikiiled . him- self in despair. '' "" Senator Morgan,, who;, has just re- turned from an extended: visit to Ha- waii, has expressed himsetlf as well pleased with" whfit he saw and the man- ner ' in which- - he, was efltertaiped on. the islands. He is more than ever en- thusiastic on the subject of annexation, and intimates that-Hawai- will become a part of tbfs", country befq're'the close of the ' . , John Falongos,' a resident of Clifton, Or., for the past six ySars; wats "killed by the caving of an embankment oh the grade of the .Astoria & Columbia River railroad. Klondike Party With - 245 Horses Leaves Yakima for Victoria. North Yakima, Wash,, Oct 27. One of the greatest of the Klondike ex- peditions yet organized made a prelim- inary start from this city today, through the. shipment of 10 carloads of horses, numbering 245 head, and 23 men, headed by J. W.' Cameron. They go to Seattle, and will sail tomorrow from Victoria by the Bark Colorado, which has been chartered and'- - espec- ially fitted for this purpose. ' Few sup- plies will be taken at Seattle othei than those shipped from Portland, the main outfitting being done at Victoria, where 125 head of cattle will be loaded. The expedition is backed by Boston capital, and the men employed are un- der one and two-yea- r oontracts. They will take the Dalton trail, and each animal other than those to-, be. used for saddle purposes will have an equipment; of pack saddle and sled.'- Even the cat- tle are to be used in the transportation of supplies. Permanent stations are to be established along the trail, and it is the intention to kill the horses when they are no longer of service for pack- ing, freeze the meat and, by means of sleds, take it to the gold-produci- re- gions, where from 30 cents per pound upwards is ' expected to be realized. Forty wagons will also be taken" for use in the first 18 miles after leaving Pyramid harbor, and then bobsleds will be utilized for transportation over the snow and ice. The men taken from here are mainly packers, miners and mountaineers, who are insured to all kinds of (hardships. Their contracts specify that they shall have sleeping-bag- s, rubber and canvas clothing, tents and everything necessary to give them' as much comfort as pos- sible in the region to which they are going. A provision in the contract of many of them is that they shall be outfitted for- - a year's prospecting on shares. Some think the plans are chi- merical, bnt those who are in charge of are Alaskan pioneers, who thoroughly understand 'their busi- ness, and the financial backing is un- questioned. "A GLOOMY TALE. Starvation and Death Staring: Many In the Face at Dawson. ' Victoria, Oot. 27. Miners who came down on the Farallon from Dyea, and who left Diwson City about 40 days ago, say that the day before they left Hansen, one of the managers of the Alaska Commercial Company arrived in a canone and told of the abandon- ment of the efforts to get food up the river. Fully 400 miners at once made preparations to start out over the trail, but the citizens' committee refused to allow them sufficient provisions for the journey, so, save those who had al- ready started, all will have to remain and share in the privations at Dawson. - Charles Fries, of Tacoma, who came out with Bert Woods and Archie Burns, says that besides the. famine, a mysterious disease has' broken out which is carrying off five men daily. Twenty-fou- r hours after the victim is attacked he turns black from the waist to the throat and in two days, in a ma- jority of cases, is dead. -- v On the way over the Dalton trail, which in many places runs along the Yukon's bank, Fries' party met many boats bound down. He estimated that about 300 boats are going down the river with from four to seven men each. The Fries party was the last to leave Dawson. At Five Finger rapids they fell in with the party headed by Kay Stuart, of New York, which left five days before, and caught up with the party made up of John. Fry, F. L. and J. Trippe and C. Holden, of New York, with an Indian guide. The party ran short of food and for four days none had any food save, an owl which they shot and some soup made from a rawhide strap which they were using in packing their goods. The Farallon brought down about f2d, 000 in gold. The Alaska Boundary. Washington, Oct. 27. It is believed here that, in view of the great promi- nence Alaska has achieved, owing to the recent gold discoveries, and the im- portance of definitely fixing the bound- ary line between our territory and that of the Dominion of Canada, the senate, when it assembles in December, will take early action on the treaty pending between Great Britain and the United States and marking off the 141st merid- ian. This treaty was sent to the sen- ate almost two years ago. '' The work of adjusting the differ-- , ences between the countries regarding the southeastern line has been in progre- ss-for two years. In 1893, each gov- ernment appointed a commission to survey the territory through which this line runs, and each made the geograph- ical maps of the country, which were submitted to the government Decem- ber 31, 1895. These' commissioners, however, had no power to propose a settlement. ' Their work was confined strictly to furnishing information upon which subsequent negotiations could proceed. ' :.' The' Forte's Demand Ignored. The porte has demanded. the recall of two- - American missionaries from the province of Aleppo, on the pretext that their mission for the distribution of re- lief is likely to cause disturbances. The United States legation has ignored the ' ' ' ' demand..' '. One-Metho- of Pacification. .Washington, Oct. 27. In his last weekly report td Surgeon-General Wy-ma- n, Sanitary Inspector Brunner, of the marine hospital service, .reports seven deaths from starvation in Hav- ana, for the week ended October 7, and g2 for the week ended October1 14. He also reports rapid increase in intestinal diseases, due to contracted food supply, and estimates that two-fift- of the total deaths of the city are due to this " cause. . . A Cold Send-Of- t for Weyler. Havana, Oot. 27. A dispatch to EI Diario de la Marina from Madrid- aayp that the government has cabled to Gen- eral Weyler strictly prohibiting any demonstration on the day of his de- parture for Spain, and intimating that, if these, instructions are not complied with by him, he will be held strictly accountable. ' ' ' ' ' " - - - .' ; John Weatbrbokj bachelor, farming .it five miles north of Laporte.Ind., and 40 years old, had never seen a railway carriage or street car until be visited" Michigan City. ... . Office of Downing, Hopkins A Co., Chicago Board of Trade Brokers. 711-7- Chamber Of Corns merce Building, Portland, Oregon. We have bad a very nervous, raai tive market in wheat the past week, but the undertone has been very strong at times, and prioes were up 5 cento over a 'Week ago. The news has been quite bullish - in tone, and foreigner have been liberal buyers of wheat for nearby shipment. ' . About the only thing that at all favored the bean wap the fact that rains had fallen moder- ately over the drouth stricken area, and that fall work was again in progress in the winter wheat sections. Receipts of wheat have been large, with an ur- gent demand for good milling wheat from nearly all quarters. Exports for the month of September were the larg- est on record, footing up 36,000,000, bushels. The American visible supply shows an. increase of 199,000 basbela' for 'last week, and now totals 24,639,-00- 0 bushels, against 67,285,000 a year ago. The fact that France has again been a large buyer of, wheat the past week has done much to stimulate, prices, and were it not that speculation' is very light we should have seen a far greater advance. Wheat is on a legiti- mate basis the basis of supply and de- mand but every one seems to be afraid, of it because they compare prices with; what they were a year ago, and many; prediot declines, but while the cash do-- ! mand is as urgent as it is now, and foreigners are buying. our wheat and, flour at the rate they are now doing, there is no cbanoe for more than slight! reactions and everything favors higher range of values. Wo feel very, bullish on the situation, and advise! our friends to get hold of some wheat! and it will soon show them : a geoelj profit. ' There has been more weaknetaj shown in corn than the most sanguine bear had looked for, and as holders be--' came easily frightened and throw thoir holdings on a market that was narrow1 and with light trade at the start, the result can easily be foreseen rather f sharp decline with shorts the best buy- ers. Receipts have been large. ;'.. Portland Market. Wheat Walla Walla, 80 81c; Val- ley and Bluestem, 83 84c per hushoL Four Best grades, 94.50; graham, $3,70; superfine, $2.60 per barrel. Oats Choice white, 84 86c; choice 'gray, 82 33c per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $19 20; brew- ing, $20 per ton. Millstiffs Bran, $14 per ton; mid- dlings, $21; shorts, $ 15.60 Hay Timothy, $1212.60; clover, $10 11; California wheat,' $10; do oat, $11; Oregon wild hay, $9 10 per ' ton. : ' - - Eggs 22 Jc per dozen. Butter Fancy creamery, 46 50c; fair to good, 3540c; dairy, 3585c per roll. .'':' Cheese Oregon, llo; Young America, 12$c; California, 9 10a per pound. Ponltry Chickens, mixed, $2.60 3.00 per doezn; broilers, $2.009.60; geese, $4. 00 5. 00; ducks, $8. 00 4. 00 per dozen; turkeys, live, 89c per pound. Potatoes Oregon Burbanks, 8540o per sack; sweets, $1.40 per cental. ' Onions Oregon, new, red, 90c; yel- low, 80o per cental. Hops 8 15c per pound for new crop; 1896 crop, 6 7o. Wool Valley, 1416o per pound; Eastern Oregon, 713jo; mohair, 30 22o per pound. Mutton Gross, best cheep, wethers and ewes, $2.502.60; dressed mutton, 6c; spring lambs, 6c per pound. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $4.60; lightand feeders, $3. 00 4. 00; dressed, $6. 60 6. 00 per 100 pounds. . Beef Gross, top steers, $2. 76 8. 00; cows, $2.50; dressed beef, 46c per pound. Veal Large, 46o; small, 5 60 per pound. Seattle Market. Butter Fancy native creamery, brick. 28 26o; ranch, 10 15c Cheese Native Washington, 10 12c; California, 9o. Eggs Fresh ranch, 28 80c. Poultry Chickens, live, per pound, hens, 11K; spring chickens, $2.60 3.00; ducks, $3.604.00. Wheat Feed wheat, $26 per ton. Oats Choice, per ton, $21 32. Corn Whole, $22; cracked, per ton, $22; feed meal, $22 per ton. Barley Rolled or ground, per ton, $22; whole, $22. Fresh Meats Choice dressed beef, steers, 6c; cows, 5c; mutton sheep, 6c; pork, 6)c; veal, small, 6. Fresh Fish Halibut, 4c; salmon, 4 5c; salmon trout, 80; flounders and sole, 8 4; ling cod, 4 6; rock cod, 6c; smelt, 24c Fresh Fruit Apples, 76c $1 per box; Sala way peaches, 60 60c; clings, 8040o; prunes, Xo per pound; pears, 75c$l per box. San Francisco Market. Wool Nevada 11 18c; Oregon, IS 14c; Northern 1416o per pound. Hops 11 16c per pound. Millstuffs Middlings. $3023; Cal- ifornia bran, $15. 00 16. 60 per ton. Onions New rod, 70 80c; do new ilverskln, $1.001.15 per cental. f Butter Fancy creamery, 27 38c; do seconds, 2526o; fancy dairy. 28 24c; good to choice, 2032o per pound. Cheese Fancy mild, new, 12c; fair to good, 7 8c per pound.. Eggs Store, 18 86c; ranob, 86 88c; Eastern, 1638; duck, 20c per dozen. Potatoes New, in boxes, 80 70. Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valenoias, $1.60 8. 00; Mexican limes, $3.60 3.60; California lemons, choice, $3.60; do common, $1 2 per box. Hay Wheat, IS 15; wheat and oat, $1114; oat, $1012; river bar- ley. $7 8; beat barley, $10 13; alfalfa, $9.50; clover, $8 10. ' '' Fresh Fruit Apples, 868So part-larg- box; grapes, 2040o; Isabella,' 40 60c; peaches, 40 660; pears, $1.00 1.60 per box; plums, 86 40c At Osage, Kan., R. H. Lyons tarned a waste pool on his farm Into a fish pond ten years ago. Now ho has a chain of fish ponds worth $16,000 on the place, all stocked from, tho waato pool. -- ' ;' . y ..- Noah Roby, of New Brunswick, K. J., has just recovered his sight after being blind for ten yean. He Is tatd so be 135 years old, and hopes to break; the age reoord, , Spain's New Cuban Policy Is Regarded With Fsior. Washington. Oct. 27. Developments in Cuba, wjthin the next 30 days will definitely determine President MoKin-ley- 's attitude upon the Spanish ques- tion, but he expects no trouble. ; The administration looks with favor on Spain's change of policy, and believes the ministry is sincere in its endeavor to bring about a speedy termination of the strife in Cuba by granting substan- tial reforms. - v While not fully advised as to Spa'in's reply to Seeretatry Sherman's note, presented by 'Minister Woodford in September, its general character is Lknown here, and it is not anticipated by the president that any friction will arise between the two countries as a re- sult of the exchange of notes. ' The prime object the president had in view when General Woodford went to Madrid was bringing about Sn im- proved condition of affairs in Cuba be- fore congress. reassembjecL. Spain's re- ply' and her instructions to the new. captain-gener- al of Cuba will show an advanced step in that direction. But the administration is more con- cerned about the rapid change of policy than it is about the character of Spain's reply to Minister Woodford's represen- tations. The government has no reason to fear that' Spain will take an aggres- sive stand against the United States. On the contrary, it is sure of a note friendly and conciliatory in tone. The president realizes, however, the danger of further agitation by congress and a further disturbance' of our interests if something more substantial than these mere promises of Spain to grant genu- ine autonomy cannot be furnished when the new session begins. - It can hardly be expected that Gen- eral Blanco within a month after his arrival will be able to end the war, but if it can be shown that an advanced step has been taken in that direction, President McKinley may, by forward- ing the correspondence which has pass- ed and calling attention to an improved condition ' in Cuba, be able to pacify congress long enough to give Spain a chance to thoroughly establish her neV. reforms. Hence it appears that the wording of the president's forthcoming message depends mainly upon the im- mediate effect of General Blanco's ar- rival in Havana, the promulgation of an amnesty proclamation, of new auton- omist reforms and the abandonment of the reconcentrafo policy. FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. Ancient Document Found in Recently Unearthed Papyri. Denver, Oct. 27. Dr. Cobern, pastor of Trinity Methodist church, who has recently returned from England, tells of a wonderful papyri discovered last January, and gives out information whioh is new to the world. This "is that in the logia,. which was unearthed by Messrs. Grennfel and Hunt under the direction of Dr. Flinders Petrie,of Oxford university, last January, there' was found beside the notebook leaf, containing what purported to be . the sayings of Jesus Christ, a leaf from the New Testament. The leaf contained nearly the whole of the first chapter of Matthew, and was written exactly the same as our Greek testament of today. Dr. Cobern says that this is our earl- iest record of the Bible, and that in the 61 baskets of papyri that were taken out there may be found a copy of the scriptures. He also points out what a blow to infidelism it "might be, and what a strengthening of the Christian cause. He says there is no doubt of the genuineness of these findings;- - that such critics as Professor Harmack and Thompson have passed upon them and declare that they could not have been written later than 20) A." D. "h DR. NANSEN IN NEW YORK. Tendered m Reception by the American Geographical Society. '' . New. York, Oct. 26. Dr. Nansen, the Arctic explorer, arrived tonight on th Steamship Lucania. He was taken Off'' the steamer at quarantine. He received an. invitation to be present at a recep- tion tendered by the American Geogra- phical Society at Checkering ihall to- night." Dr. Nansen was due at the hall at 8:30 p. m., and arrived 10 minutes ahead of time. His entrance was the signal for the heartiest applause, the entire audience' rising to greet him. ' ' A gold medal was presented to Dr. Nansen from the Geographical Society. Dr. Nansen replied briefly, thanking the .society for the honor conferred upon him. He spoke in very 4air English. ' Lieuteant Peary and Captain D-- . L. Brainard, of the United States army, who was one of the party -- which, held the record for northern latitudes ' prior to the Nansen expedition, also spoke briefly;- - - , '"-T- 5 ' -- ": - Decision ReTersed. Carson, Nev Oct..27,T-Tb- e supreme court reversed -- the decision''"; awarding damages against the Western Union' telegraph Company to the plaintiff Burns. The; latter had urgent business at Lovelock, 'and telegraphed 'a friend from Grand Junction for money. Re ceiving no reply, he attempted to beat" his way oh a train, and falling pff, was seriously-injured.- He. then., sued ;the telegraph company- - for fai4ing.to-.d- liver his message., and received judg- ment, which has just been reversed;? '- -' .... Hot. Fighting: Probable. . -- . Simla, Oct 27. Official dispatches from KhangarbiW.jeceited t the advance upon bemagna pass on both' sides, in which the insuigent tribel are collecting in great force, and where furious fighting is expected to occur, will be resomed. tomprrow. The position taken up by the enemy is of the strongest description, t Tribesmen are expected to make the most deter- mined resistance to the advance of the British, troops. Fve Is Racing. 1 - New Orleans, Oct. 27. Numerically, this has been the worst day of the fever situation here.' As early as 7 o'clock thrs'evening the board of health showed' a total of 52 new cases, and there had, been 11 deaths. This is the highest L number of deaths in a single day. Havana, Oot. 87. The report that General Castillo,, the insurgent leader, had been killed in an engagement is confirmed. The body arrived hero at 5 o'clock this afternoon. Large crswds visited the morgue to look at the re- - 1 Two Men Were Drowned and Five In- jured One Seriously. Oregon City, Oct. 28. A terrible ac- cident occurred at noon today, causing the death of two men, and injuring Ave others. A gang of men had been working rliight and day for a week to remove a bulkhead, expecting to finish the work this afternoon. The bulkhead was 60 feet long, and extended from the power station on the east to the east wall of the boat canal on the west. At the lower end of the new extension of the power-hous- e another bulkhead had been constructed, and it was the intention to take out the old one, in order to let the water into the new section for the tur- bines. ' ' 5 The workmen had removed a consid- erable portion of the foundation of the old bulkhead, and today were engaged in taking off the nuts and cutting the bolts, intending to remove the entire wall tonight. ' The work gave way and a flood of water rushed in upon the workmen, filling the section. At first it was sup- posed that every man was drowned. An alarm was given and the water was drawn from the canal as soon as posssi-bl- e, as it" was found thaff the work of removing the mass of broken timbers and recovering the bodies of the drowned men would be facilitated by floating the mass of debris. After this was done a count of the men in the gang was made, and it was found that two men Anton Natterlinand Jacob Macomb were missing. These two men were evidently drowned, and are no doubt beneath the pile of broken timbers, which a large number of workmen are now engaged in removing. Natterlin an unmarried man, and Macomb leaves a wife and child. - Among the" five injured men, the most'seriously hurt are Carl Newberg, whose head was severely cut and bruised, and Harvey Little, whose left arm was bruised and whose head and face were badly cut. " '' :.. The three men who escaped unin- jured were: Jacob Weidick, Alvin Rich- ardson and Jacob Keane. Thomas Smith had his spine hurt and William W. Smith had one bone of his right leg broken. '"' The accident was&wing either to a miscalculation of he weight of the water behir.d the men or the strength of the bolts and, timbers. Upon 'the giving way of the wall the water rushed into, the lower section with terrific 'force, carrying the timbers and all be- fore, it to the lower section. , The men who escaped fought their way through the floating timbers and finally reached a point where they received assistance. .RESISTED ARREST. Pitched Battle Fought in Arizona With Fatal Results.' . Yuma, Ariz., Oct. 28. A pitched battle at Mammoth tank. 45 miles west of Yiirna, between Yuma county offi- cers and 270 Mexican railroad laborers, resulted in the death of five to seven Mexicans, the wounding . of several more, and the dangerous wounding of Deputy Sheriff Wilder, of Yuma. Sheriff Greenleaf, of Yuma, was called upon to arrest the ringleaders of a gang of striking Mexican railroad laborers. With his deputies, George Wilmer and James Jones, he.. advanced on the, strikers, when the. latter attack- ed them with rocks and- - revolvers. With the first volley from the Mexican's revolvers Wilmer fell. Jones then ran for the. section, foreman who had ac- companied the officers.' ' '.' , , ,. Jones in the meantime had secured a shotgun, Which he discharged, at . the advancing strikers. Three men fell and were picked up by tljeir comrades, who, -- continued to advance! . Another sh6t brought more-t- the ground, and a stampede followed.'- - ' -- '.Sheriff Greenleaf, who tad in the meantime conveyed ' the deputy, to,' a waiting train, called upon his men to board the train, which immediately pulled into Yuma. A posse of 25 men is being formed in Yuma, and will soon leave for the scene of the trouble. More and sensational developments may be expected. FIVE BRAVES" SLAIN i' Battle Between Colorado Game Frotec-tor- s and Indians. . jpifie, Colo.. Oct. orts .from Snake river are to the effect that Game Warden Wilcox attempted to arrest some Indians near Lily Park for vio- lating the Colorado game laws, and was fired upon by the Utes. Game. Warden Wilcox with several posses of deputies and ranchmen are after the Indians, and a further conflict seems inevitable.. The excitement here is intense, and parties are organizing to go to Wilcox's assistance, .fearing, a. , general uprising .of the Indians. . ' . . .The trouble commenced last 'week," when the White River, Uncompahgre,' and Uintan 'Utes began;' pburirig; over" the line from. Utah oh their a'nnual fall hunt. The White River Utes are ex- ceptionally ngly, and have .apparently been anxious to pick trouble' with" par ties of whites with .whom they have come jn contact. The Utes were in the Meeker massacre and h'aVe never been-anythin- but ugly and waiting "for' an opportunity to do mischief. There aije, several hundred of them novr in the. state.' Game Warden Wilcox with a small party statred out toward the Indian camp and approached' the camp undb- -' served. The game warden was resisted and . finally fired upon by the Indiana. Then a set encounter followed in which a number of Indians were killed'and wounded. It was reported that Warden Wilcox's party also suffered severely. " Brigadier-Gener- al Otis, of the depart- ment of the Colorado, says if the cir- cumstances warrant; troops will be ;sent to the scene of the trouble at once, ready o proceed at a moment's notice. 'A Conditional Concession. ' , London, Oct.28. The federated em- ployers at a meeting at Manchester are understood to have agreed to a confer- ence with representatives of the strik-- " ng engineers on the lines suggested by Ritchie, providing ""the" Teigbt-bou- r- de- mand is not presented, ''Victoria,:? Oct." 26. Bteamer' Evangelj'on theay from. PpJ-- t Angeles, this afternoon r picked - pp .th flahfeg loop Thistle bottom up. "$fie"fe was a big blow in the straits last evening, and it is thought that the sloop upset md her crew of two men were drowned. DEMOCRATS ABANDON LEADING ISSUE OF LAST YEAR. Couldn't' Stand Wave : of Prosperity - Sweeping Over the Country. Bryan and Towte Snubbed by Democratic Managers of Various States. E. F. Pabsons, Special Correspondent. Washington, D.C Further evidence from Ohio corroborates the statements that the silver question has been abso- lutely eliminated from the discussions there in the campaign. And silver was practically the only plank of the pem-ocrat- io platform adopted only three months ago. Mr. Bryan proposed td canvasB the state thorougly in the in- terests of silver and ' speak ; from every stump; Towne enter- ed the state with an idea of speaking for free silver many times, but for some reason Mr. Bryan has not kept faith with his assertions, and Mr. Towne has been peremptorily ordered off the stump by Allen O'Myers, McLean's manager, and this action has been sus- tained by McLean. Bryan, Towne and others who have been for the past two years laboring in the interests of the lilver trust, view this "turning down" with nothing less than .dismay, be- cause it means to them that the Demo- cratic party is abandoning the free coinage talk in every state where its managers see any real hope of success at the polls this fall. This general programme has been adopted in all states where there are campaigns, as' shown by various reports. When it came to a direct clash, as was the case the other day between Democracy and Bryan, Democracy won and Bryan was snubbed. The New Yorkers were about entering on their campaign and Mr. Bryan wrote urging them to keep free silver to the front in their fight; Chairman Jones, however, . advised them to eliminate free silver and his advice was followed. Silver is practi- cally tabooed in this fall's campaigns and the free silver men are excluded from participation in them. This seems nothing short of wonderful in view of the fact that only three months have elapsed since the silver leaders determined that tree silver should be the leading issue of this year," where state and local campaigns were to be fought. In Ohio, Iowa and Kentucky, as well as in other' states, it .was made the chief and in some cases practically the only plank of the' platforms. The Marylanders, under Senator Gorman's shrewd leadership, managed to save themselves from being obliged to later run away from the platform by strad- dling it at their convention, but in al- most every other case free coinage was the watchword of the state and local committees as much as it was of the Democratic national committee of last year. In Massachusetts, the George Fred Williams element of the Democ- racy adopted it, in" New York a seg- ment of the Democracy declared for it and in Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, Io- wa, Pennsylvania, Nebraska and other states it was to be the leading issue of the campaigns. But all this happened within the last three or four months, and all these raticfitions of free silver by various conventions were before the passage of the Dingley tariff, law and the signing of that measure by the presdent. This occurred later, and what was the effect? Immediately the wheels of industry be- gan to revolve. It is useless to say they did not or that prosperity has not returned - to thousands of homes throughout the land. Immediately with the passage of that law, and in some cases in anticipation of its pas- - sage, factories began to resume and to increase their number of employes and , thousands of men who had been look- - ing vainly for work suddenly found it , and at good wages, too. The hum of industry was heard on all sides and the factories smoke began to roll out in black volumes. Employers began pay- ing out money td labor which they had been previously hoarding, afraid to em- bark in business ventures and the em- ployes began to demand the necessities of life from the farmers. Farm prod- ucts rose in price and laborers had the money with which to buy them. Not only wheat went up, in which there is a "shortage" abroad, but all other farm products advanced likewise. And, strange to say, simultaneously with these advances the price of silver steadily fell, reaching a low water mark never dreamed of by the Demo- crats, who were proposing last year to supply the country with 53-ce- nt dol- lars. Things reached such a state; sil- ver down to nothing, and everything else up and going up that there re- mained nothing to do but to drop the silver issue and forget it, although it had been made the leading issue in most of the platforms. And the ad- vices from all the states where there are campaigns being fought show that, this plan has been adopted with singu- lar unanimity. As stated, Messrs.' Bryan and Towne and others of that school are rigidly excluded from all' the important campaigns and only al- lowed to educate the people in those sections where tbey can't do any harm, while the Democrats are casting about for other issues, making their cam- paigns on a variety of misleading and d issues, personal abuses' and the like. The outlook forthe Democ- racy is not a pleasant one. Such "principles" as the single tax, the "government by injunction" idea, socialism and anarchism are substi- tuted for the semi-fi- at .money scheme which was the leading and almost only issue three months ago. Last year the Democracv had to abandon its old and time-honor- principle of free trade for the new and attractive one of free sil- - ver, and now all its promises broken and all its prognostigations of a year I ago unfulfilled and shown false, it is compelled to abandon that new idol for other "principles. ' "There is evidence of greatly en larged business in every important de- partment, more establishments having been set at work and more hands em- ployed, and while prudence still hin- ders speculative excesses, the progress toward better things is unchecked. Re- ports from .various cities this week show a very general progress and a continuing large distribution through retail trade. "' .'' ; ". ' Failures for the week have 'been 198 as against 276 in the corresponding week of last year, Dun's Financial Review, ' June 19, 1M7. Experiences of a Party of Returning Klondikers. WERE CAUGHT IN A BLIZZARD fliree Times They Ran Ont of Food - Rescued ' by Indlans-N- -- Gold Was vof Use to Them. Seattle, Oct. 26. Only the merest chance and the' lucky discovery of the balf-hidd- trail by one of their num- ber, saved six members of a party, headed by F. L. and Julius Trippe, from a horriDle death by starvation on the Dalton trail late in September. The party was headed by the Trippe brothers, formerly of Chicago, and in- cluded Charles Wilkes, of Whatcom; Charles G. Dugas, a . miner from ' Ju- neau; John Fry, of this city; W. Gil- lies, of Woodsmann, and a prospector living at Fort Wrangel. They left Dawson City for the States in a small ateamer, August 28, and after reaching Fort Selkirk prepared their outfits for the long and arduous journey over the Dalton trail.5. A week after leaving the Yukon river they encountered a deadly Alaskan blizzard. The trail was covered with snow and they lost their bearings. Their provisions ran out, and after groping for three days through a blind- ing snowstorm, they were finally res- cued by Indians and taken t& Dalton's trading post, where they were given food. . The experiences of the Trippes, who reached Seattle on the steamer Farallon today, would make columns of good reading matter. In many respects the 3tory they tell is not materially differ-s- nt from the experiences encountered by men nearly every winter in crossing the long, blizzard-swep- t range of coun- try lying between Five Fingers and the Chilkat mountains. Unquestionably, their plight was extremely serious, and their hazardous escape from death by actual starvation and exposure will be a warning to miners coming overland without experienced guides and plenty of provisions. '.-- As related by one of the party, the trip up the Yukon to Fort Selkirk Was without unusual incident. At this place they secured a rough map of the route over which they were to travel. With only 40 pounds ' of provisions each, they started over the trail, leaving Fort Selkirk September 18. The weather was clear and there had been but little snow to obscure the trail ovei the brush-covere- d range. They made good time for the first three days, but soon found that they would be unable to reach Dalton's raehe before their provisions gave out. Their only hope was to meet incoming prospectors and surveyors, . from whom theyTexpeoted to secure ehotfgh ,'food to take them to tl cache. On the third day from the river, 'it began snowing, and. the wind 'was icy cold. They struggled bravely on, making the best time possible until they reached Hoot-oha- i. . Here they met a party of four men, and secured three days' rations from them. " . Again they started for Dalton's post. The snow was getting deeper and walk- ing; was .extremely difficult.; Worse than 'this, the 'landmarks by which they expected to keep on the Dalton trail were becoming obscured by snow. Soon after leaving Hootchai, they found it impossible to keep the trail, and finally they found themselves wan- dering aimlessly over barren snow-cover- wastes, their bearings gone and their food- exhausted. Just aa it seemed as if they were des- tined to have the snow, for a shroud and end their lives ' in that God-forsak- country they came upon an Indian camp". Here they , purchased 15 fish, and with, that as theic'ionly sustenance, again headfed fot the, direction where tey. believed.Daltbjis' trading post was BiMiated.;j.:5CIie.sn'OW storm- had parti- ally ceased before they met, the Indi- ans. Their. simple,diet of dried ' salm- on was not encmgn to keep up their al- ready wasted energies, and - after an- other day!s traveling," 'they- - found that they werv- - opnfron,ted-;'witb- - danger as great asuevervVvf '' ': ..:.'. .". On'the second day: after leaving the Indian campy; they ran .out of , food for the third time;'The.trail was entirely covered with snow, and they were una- ble to locate the Daltpn .cache ".by. '..the directions-give- them' on the chart. They camped in the woods, and -- while one party: went dn. search of. the. trail, another smarted out with a gun after food. Tbey at last obtained'.two salm- on in a small stream, and they had these fijifiupper, and out of the scraps tnade bkfast the following day. This was the list food they tasted for three days, withi the exception'- - of an. owl which tfifey shot and made, into spup. Mi, TrippeVsaid tonignt that he was readyjto give; up as tne third day passed Witboiui; their having eaten . solid food, it was bitter bold, and only. by the ex- ercise of,;jwill power .were they kept from beufg frozen stiff. . Towards even ing of the third day in camp, Gillies discovered, the location of. the trail, and w ith; the help of " Indians "whom tney met',' ,they made - Daiton's trading post. Here they obtained the first real food they had for nearly four days. . After resting for ' two. days, they re- sumed their march to the Chilkat pass, and reached the end of their . journey without farther mishap.- "All -- of the men were very weak from their sufferi- ngs.,, and it will be several days before they are restored to their' accustomed' strength. jj - : Danville. 111., Oct. 26. Mrs.' Carrie Cbrnett,- - aged $2, a widow, , has been awarded; $54,333.33 damages for breach of promise. John Gernard, aged 71, a retired capitalist, is the defendant. StriWe; Threatened in Colorado.. DenvervOcti. 36.7-- A , special to the Republican-fro- 'Lafayette,. Colo., says: At a meeting of federation' miners to' clay, it was decided to close all the mines in this district next Monday, un- less the operators' consent to the ton- nage system of payment in all .mines. About 1,200 miners will be affected. Always wash kettles as soon as yon are through using them; they should not be allowed 'to stand until cold. ' The skin of the kangaroo, when prop- - ' ply tanned, never cracks. . Train on New York; Central Plunges Into a River. TWENTY-EIGH- T LIVES LOST More May Be Burled in the Wreck Dls-ast- er Wtal Caused by an Imbtgk- - tnent Giving Way Worst In Tears. ' i Garrison's, N. Y., Oct. 26. From the sleep that means refreshment and rest to the eternal sleep that knows no awakening plunged in the twinkling of an eye this, morning 28 souls, men, women and children. In the slimy bed of the Hudson river a train laden with slumbering humanity plowed, dragging through the waters the passengers. There was nothing' to presage the ter- rible accident which so suddenly de- prived these unfortunates of life. J . The New York Central train left Buffalo last night, and had progressed nearly nine-tenth- s of the distanoe toward its destination. The engineer and his fireman had just noted the gray dawn breaking from- - the east and the light streak of red denoting the sun's appearance, when the great engine, a servant of the rails, plunged into the depths of the river. Neither engineer nor fireman will ever tell the story of that terrible moment With hand npoa the throttle the engineer plunged with bis engine to the river's bottom, and the fireman, too, was at his post. Be- hind them came the express car, the combination car and the sleepers, and these piled on top of the engine. It is known that it was a trifle foggy and that the track was not visible, but if there was any break in the lines of steel it must have been of very re- cent happening, for only an hour be- fore there passed over it a neavy pas- senger .train laden with human freight. Neither is an explanation ready. . All is conjecture. The section of road was supposed to be the very best on "the en- tire division. There was a great,' heavy retaining wall all along the bank, and, while the tide was high yesterday, it was not unprecedented. What seems to have happened was that- - underneath the tracks and ties the heavy wall had given way. When the great weight of the engine struck the unsupported tracks it went crashing through the rest of the wall and toppled over into the river. ' Then there happened what on the railroad at any other time would have caused disaster, but now proved a very blessing. As the train plunged over the embankment, the coupling that held the last three of the six sleepers broke and they miraculously remained on the broken track. In that way some 60 lives were saved. Following is a list of the dead as far as ascertained up to midnight: " . Thomas Reilly, of St. Louis. .- E. A.' Green, of Chicago. W. H. Myers, of Tremont, N. J. Woman, unidentified. ' ; - Woman, unidentified. " Guiseppe Paduano, of New Yark. W. S. Becker, of Newark, N. J. - Unknown man, died wftileeing res- cued. ' -- " A. G. McKay, private secretary to General Superintendent Van Etten; body supposed to be in the wreck. John Fplye, engineer of East Albany; body not recovered. John Q. Tompkins,' fireman, of East Albany; body, nqt recovered. vWong :Gin and eight unidentified "Chinese. '. Of were. none;ex cept the crew of a tugboat passing with a tow.. They saw the train, with. its. light',' ; as if ' came flashing about the curves, and then' saw the greater part of it go into, the " river. ' Some of the cars with' closed :.wVndows'.'floated,'land tha tug,, whistling for help," cast-o- ff its hawser and started to the rescue. A porter jumped from one of the bars that remainied. on the track'a'nd'Tatf into the yard of. Augustus ' Carr's ' house, near which the .accident occurred, and stood screaming, for help, and moaning: ,'The train is in the river; all our pas- sengers are drowned 1" . .. - In few minutes Carr had dressed himself, and getting a boat, rowed with the porter to the, scene. As they' turned a point into thenJbank, .they came upon the express car and the" com- bination car floating about 20 feet from the shore,. but sinking , gvery minute. One man was taken from the top of the" car, and efforts .were,, made' to rescue those inside. A, few were gotten outi the passengers left on the trck making a human bridge to the shore to take the wounded on. ' . - ' The day coach and smoker had gono down in deep water. . a,hd 1 rescue was impossible.. Jn: the .latter. . co'acji 'the condition - must have .J.bef n fcorrjjj.. vThe,'.ar' turned .completvly-.:Over,'.- ": and the passenger end-o- f it was deep in.thfl. Water,, while the baggage end 'stood up towards the surface. The' men in that lower end must hive fought like fiends for a brief period, for the bodies, when ' The closing scene of the first day of this tragedy is drawn- around a common oar that stands near the--scen- e of the accident, where nearly a score of badly mutilated bodie,: none of them yet claimed b7 frieipds, .are lying in a long row, grewsome evidences'! th drgSster, the greatest that has,, ever occurred on the railroad. - ...-- . , Total number of ; known dead, 19; estimated number' of dead, 28. A TSavf iMal for Xuetfert. . Chicago, Oct. S6. State's Attorney, Deneen late. this, afternoon'.; decided to put Luetgert on .traaj for a second time, some day next week. New evidence, has been discovered,. it. is said, relating to testimony of three witnesses for. the defense. No arrangement was reached as to bail. . 'i - . pxpotr.Weyler.te- - Be Otoedient. , New!York; .'jOofc? 6.-p- special to the Herald from' Madrid ays: . At the ministerial" c6'uiicilT'iaj dispatch from Havana was read, stating that General' Weyler would' refuse to"' 'relinquish'-powe- r before October 30. Your' corre- spondent was requested to say on;1 be-1- '' half of the cabinet that no credence san be. placed in the .dispatch, , since,, acr cftrdisjg to advices received by the gov- ernment, the ministry anticipates nothing but obedience to its orders. A cattle dealer in Maitland, Mo., if pajnesGoodpaeture. 'JjUjiM A dispatch Ironl Madrid says there is much diseussjon at the Spanish capital on the subjept..of an alliance between ... Spain and Portugal, reported to.be in process of negotiation. The. Portu guese minister of,.. marine, who. is now in Madrid, .lias, expressed tne beliel that such alliance,. may. be accom- plished at any moment. ' It is said ' that the loss by fire in Windsor, N.-S.,- " will run into the- - mil- lions. Two people lost their lives in the flames. ' ! Recently information was sent out from Tacoma that a miner named John- son had died at the Klondike' with $30,000 gold in lis possession, and had left no relatives to claim it. . Since then letters have been reoeived at the local Alaska information bureau from a dozen different parts of the country, ' trying to establish relationship with a view to getting the dead man's wealth. The story was brought down by ig miners.

Transcript of oregonnews.uoregon.edu · V VOL. XXXIV. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1897....

Page 1: oregonnews.uoregon.edu · V VOL. XXXIV. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1897. NO. 33. A BULKHEAD GIVES WAY.' OUTLOOK IS BETTER. A BIG EXPEDITION. SILVER WAS

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VOL. XXXIV. CORVALLIS, BENTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1897. NO. 33.

"WEEKLY. MARKET LETTER.A BULKHEAD GIVES WAY.' A BIG EXPEDITION.OUTLOOK IS BETTER. SILVER WAS DROPPEDTERRIBLE RAILWAY ftCCIDEKT HOST ON THE DflLTON TRAIL

Epitome of the TelegraphicNews of the World.

TERSE TICKS FROM THE WIRES

An Interesting Collection of Item Fromthe Kew and the Old World In a

; Condensed and ComprehemiTe Form. .The food of San Francisco laborers isto bvanalyzed by the professors at theState University.

The Fort Randall military reserva-tion, which contains over 100000 acresin South Dakota and Nebraska, hasbeen opened to; settlers.

Negotiations of the.Chinese govern-ment with the .Hooly--

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syndicate-- - for a. , ji'ijahof $80,000,000 have fallen through.

tK.Tne is now negotiating' ' with the Hong Kong & Shanghai bank.

V The Washington state grain '.com no

announces that it will not lowerNo. 1 wheat grade from 59 to 58 pounds'to the bushel, notwithstanding the agi-tation to that end in the eastern partof the state. . ,'.

The Long Island coast for a distanceof six miles, 'between Far Rockawayand Eockaway beach, was more or less

damaged by a very, high tide. TheEdmore hotel was damaged to the ex-

tent of 25,000. 'Speedy, the professional bridgejUmp-er- ,jumped from the Louisville &

bridge in Louisville, Ky.,before an audience of -- 18,000. Speedymade the jurrip'bf 180 feet in safety,-an-

was mingling with the crowd afew minutes later.

Frank Moon, aged 50 years, and Mrs.Wells, were fonhd-flea- at the bottomof a 80-fo- ot well on. Moon's farm.,., nearDerby. Kan., having been asphyxiated.Moon had been overcome whild work-

ing, and the wOmfta;. fearful. at his notreturning; home, went- - to the well lateat night to investigate and fell in." - .

Admiral Matthews,. chief of ,' .'the bu-

reau 'of yards and docks, in his annualreport to Secretary Long, recommendsthe construction o.f four drydqpks of thebest type. He recommends that con-

crete docks be built at Boston,; Norfolkand Mare Island, and that , a floatingdock be placed at either Key' West.Tor-tuga- s,

or Algiers, 'La. The estimatesfor the maintenance" of the" yards nextyear aggregate $2,'364,2'62.'. "I ..,"

Following close nponi the recent announcement of a great; syndicate td con-

trol the trade of Honduras comes theinformation- - recSrved from - reliablesources that a gigantic 'syndicate' iSinprocess of organization for the purposeof promotin'gfireet traVle between theUnited States and Russia. v The1 prdject'originated with Russian Merchants andhas the sanction, if not the direct sup-

port, of the imperial government. '

A dispatch" from M,anagua, iffcaia-gu- a,

says John Augustine, an Ameri-can citizen, was arrested at San Carlos,at the month of the San Juan river, by

. order of President .Zejaya's. brother,and, without' any pretense of a trial,was imprisoned in the penitentiary.Mr. Augustin'1 was formerlyStates consul at BTuefieTds,' Mosquitoterritory, and is at present in charge ofthe navigation company's steamers onthe San Juarr.riveri ? !

- i ;' -, :

John Griffith essayed "Richard III"at the opera house in Butte, Mont. Inthe closing scene" Griffith 'a sword struckJohn Fay Palmer, who was doing Rich-mond, in the face, cutting a -

gush ex- -'

tending from above one eye across thenose and cheek. The bone of" the nosewas broken and a little more forcewould have penetrated the brain.Palmer turned his back to the audienceand finished the scene Without any oneknowing what bad happened.

Sheldon Jackson," United. States su-

perintendent of Alaskan schools, whohas just returned ..from Alaska, says:There is but one solution to.the trans-

portation problem in Alaska, ... and thatis the reindeer.

A special to the Kansas City journalfrom Muskogee, L T., says:

' Thetreaty between the Dawes and Creekcommissions, which was concludedhere last month, was rejected by theCreek council in session at Okmulgee.

A patrol of dervish horsemen raideda village seven miles from Berber, kill-

ing 11 men and capturing manywomen, children and cattle. A detach-ment of Anglor Egyptian, cavalry sent inpursuit of the dervishes overtook .themand routed them with heavy loss. Thedervishes abandoned their booty andfled. ... . , .

The body of William J. Lyons, anemploye of the Pacific t5as

Company, ,pf. San Francis.co, wasfound in the hills back of Berkley witha bullet-hol- e in his head.. - "He wasshort in his accounts and attempted to

. burn his .books. to hide his brimel Be-

ing discoverejd in this he&ikiiled . him-self in despair. '' ""

Senator Morgan,, who;, has just re-

turned from an extended: visit to Ha-

waii, has expressed himsetlf as wellpleased with" whfit he saw and the man-ner

'

in which- - he, was efltertaiped on.the islands. He is more than ever en-

thusiastic on the subject of annexation,and intimates that-Hawai- will becomea part of tbfs", country befq're'the closeof the '

.

, John Falongos,' a resident of Clifton,Or., for the past six ySars; wats "killed

by the caving of an embankment ohthe grade of the .Astoria & ColumbiaRiver railroad.

Klondike Party With - 245 HorsesLeaves Yakima for Victoria.

North Yakima, Wash,, Oct 27.One of the greatest of the Klondike ex-

peditions yet organized made a prelim-inary start from this city today,through the. shipment of 10 carloads ofhorses, numbering 245 head, and 23men, headed by J. W.' Cameron. Theygo to Seattle, and will sail tomorrowfrom Victoria by the Bark Colorado,which has been chartered and'-

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espec-ially fitted for this purpose. ' Few sup-plies will be taken at Seattle otheithan those shipped from Portland, themain outfitting being done at Victoria,where 125 head of cattle will be loaded.

The expedition is backed by Bostoncapital, and the men employed are un-der one and two-yea- r oontracts. Theywill take the Dalton trail, and eachanimal other than those to-, be. used forsaddle purposes will have an equipment;of pack saddle and sled.'- Even the cat-

tle are to be used in the transportationof supplies. Permanent stations are tobe established along the trail, and it isthe intention to kill the horses whenthey are no longer of service for pack-ing, freeze the meat and, by means ofsleds, take it to the gold-produci- re-

gions, where from 30 cents per poundupwards is '

expected to be realized.Forty wagons will also be taken" for usein the first 18 miles after leavingPyramid harbor, and then bobsledswill be utilized for transportation overthe snow and ice.

The men taken from here are mainlypackers, miners and mountaineers, whoare insured to all kinds of (hardships.Their contracts specify that they shallhave sleeping-bag-s, rubber and canvasclothing, tents and everything necessaryto give them' as much comfort as pos-sible in the region to which they aregoing. A provision in the contract ofmany of them is that they shall beoutfitted for- - a year's prospecting onshares. Some think the plans are chi-

merical, bnt those who are in charge ofare Alaskan pioneers,

who thoroughly understand 'their busi-ness, and the financial backing is un-

questioned."A GLOOMY TALE.

Starvation and Death Staring: Many Inthe Face at Dawson.

' Victoria, Oot. 27. Miners who camedown on the Farallon from Dyea, andwho left Diwson City about 40 daysago, say that the day before they leftHansen, one of the managers of theAlaska Commercial Company arrivedin a canone and told of the abandon-ment of the efforts to get food up theriver. Fully 400 miners at once madepreparations to start out over the trail,but the citizens' committee refused toallow them sufficient provisions forthe journey, so, save those who had al-

ready started, all will have to remainand share in the privations at Dawson.- Charles Fries, of Tacoma, who cameout with Bert Woods and ArchieBurns, says that besides the. famine, amysterious disease has' broken outwhich is carrying off five men daily.Twenty-fou- r hours after the victim isattacked he turns black from the waistto the throat and in two days, in a ma-

jority of cases, is dead. --

v On the way over the Dalton trail,which in many places runs along theYukon's bank, Fries' party met manyboats bound down. He estimated thatabout 300 boats are going down theriver with from four to seven men each.The Fries party was the last to leaveDawson. At Five Finger rapids theyfell in with the party headed by KayStuart, of New York, which left fivedays before, and caught up with theparty made up of John. Fry, F. L. andJ. Trippe and C. Holden, of NewYork, with an Indian guide. Theparty ran short of food and for fourdays none had any food save, an owlwhich they shot and some soup madefrom a rawhide strap which they wereusing in packing their goods.

The Farallon brought down aboutf2d, 000 in gold.

The Alaska Boundary.Washington, Oct. 27. It is believed

here that, in view of the great promi-nence Alaska has achieved, owing tothe recent gold discoveries, and the im-

portance of definitely fixing the bound-ary line between our territory and thatof the Dominion of Canada, the senate,when it assembles in December, willtake early action on the treaty pendingbetween Great Britain and the UnitedStates and marking off the 141st merid-ian. This treaty was sent to the sen-ate almost two years ago. ''

The work of adjusting the differ-- ,ences between the countries regardingthe southeastern line has been in progre-

ss-for two years. In 1893, each gov-ernment appointed a commission tosurvey the territory through which thisline runs, and each made the geograph-ical maps of the country, which weresubmitted to the government Decem-ber 31, 1895. These' commissioners,however, had no power to propose asettlement. ' Their work was confinedstrictly to furnishing information uponwhich subsequent negotiations couldproceed. '

:.' The' Forte's Demand Ignored.The porte has demanded. the recall of

two- - American missionaries from theprovince of Aleppo, on the pretext thattheir mission for the distribution of re-

lief is likely to cause disturbances. TheUnited States legation has ignored the

' ' ' 'demand..' '.

One-Metho- of Pacification..Washington, Oct. 27. In his last

weekly report td Surgeon-General Wy-ma- n,

Sanitary Inspector Brunner, ofthe marine hospital service, .reportsseven deaths from starvation in Hav-ana, for the week ended October 7, andg2 for the week ended October1 14. Healso reports rapid increase in intestinaldiseases, due to contracted food supply,and estimates that two-fift- of thetotal deaths of the city are due to this

"cause. . .

A Cold Send-Of- t for Weyler.Havana, Oot. 27. A dispatch to EI

Diario de la Marina from Madrid- aaypthat the government has cabled to Gen-eral Weyler strictly prohibiting anydemonstration on the day of his de-

parture for Spain, and intimating that,if these, instructions are not compliedwith by him, he will be held strictlyaccountable. ' ' '

' ' " - - - .'

; John Weatbrbokj bachelor, farming.it five miles north of Laporte.Ind., and40 years old, had never seen a railwaycarriage or street car until be visited"Michigan City. ...

. Office of Downing, Hopkins A Co., ChicagoBoard of Trade Brokers. 711-7- Chamber Of Cornsmerce Building, Portland, Oregon.

We have bad a very nervous, raaitive market in wheat the past week,but the undertone has been very strongat times, and prioes were up 5 centoover a 'Week ago. The news has beenquite bullish - in tone, and foreignerhave been liberal buyers of wheat fornearby shipment. '

. About the onlything that at all favored the bean wapthe fact that rains had fallen moder-

ately over the drouth stricken area, andthat fall work was again in progress inthe winter wheat sections. Receiptsof wheat have been large, with an ur-

gent demand for good milling wheatfrom nearly all quarters. Exports forthe month of September were the larg-est on record, footing up 36,000,000,bushels. The American visible supplyshows an. increase of 199,000 basbela'for 'last week, and now totals 24,639,-00- 0

bushels, against 67,285,000 a yearago. The fact that France has againbeen a large buyer of, wheat the pastweek has done much to stimulate,prices, and were it not that speculation'is very light we should have seen a fargreater advance. Wheat is on a legiti-mate basis the basis of supply and de-

mand but every one seems to be afraid,of it because they compare prices with;what they were a year ago, and many;prediot declines, but while the cash do-- !mand is as urgent as it is now, andforeigners are buying. our wheat and,flour at the rate they are now doing,there is no cbanoe for more than slight!reactions and everything favorshigher range of values. Wo feel very,bullish on the situation, and advise!our friends to get hold of some wheat!and it will soon show them : a geoeljprofit. '

There has been more weaknetajshown in corn than the most sanguinebear had looked for, and as holders be--'came easily frightened and throw thoirholdings on a market that was narrow1and with light trade at the start, theresult can easily be foreseen rather

fsharp decline with shorts the best buy-ers. Receipts have been large. ;'..

Portland Market.Wheat Walla Walla, 80 81c; Val-

ley and Bluestem, 83 84c per hushoLFour Best grades, 94.50; graham,

$3,70; superfine, $2.60 per barrel.Oats Choice white, 84 86c; choice

'gray, 82 33c per bushel.Barley Feed barley, $19 20; brew-

ing, $20 per ton.Millstiffs Bran, $14 per ton; mid-

dlings, $21; shorts, $ 15.60Hay Timothy, $1212.60; clover,

$10 11; California wheat,' $10; dooat, $11; Oregon wild hay, $9 10 per

'ton. : ' - -

Eggs 22 Jc per dozen.Butter Fancy creamery, 46 50c;

fair to good, 3540c; dairy, 3585cper roll. .'':'Cheese Oregon, llo; YoungAmerica, 12$c; California, 9 10aper pound.

Ponltry Chickens, mixed, $2.603.00 per doezn; broilers, $2.009.60;geese, $4. 00 5. 00; ducks, $8. 00 4. 00per dozen; turkeys, live, 89c perpound.

Potatoes Oregon Burbanks, 8540oper sack; sweets, $1.40 per cental. '

Onions Oregon, new, red, 90c; yel-low, 80o per cental.

Hops 8 15c per pound for newcrop; 1896 crop, 6 7o.

Wool Valley, 1416o per pound;Eastern Oregon, 713jo; mohair, 30

22o per pound.Mutton Gross, best cheep, wethers

and ewes, $2.502.60; dressed mutton,6c; spring lambs, 6c per pound.

Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $4.60;lightand feeders, $3. 00 4. 00; dressed,$6. 60 6. 00 per 100 pounds. .

Beef Gross, top steers, $2. 76 8. 00;cows, $2.50; dressed beef, 46c perpound.

Veal Large, 46o; small, 560 per pound.

Seattle Market.Butter Fancy native creamery,

brick. 28 26o; ranch, 10 15cCheese Native Washington, 10

12c; California, 9o.Eggs Fresh ranch, 28 80c.

Poultry Chickens, live, per pound,hens, 11K; spring chickens, $2.603.00; ducks, $3.604.00.

Wheat Feed wheat, $26 per ton.Oats Choice, per ton, $21 32.Corn Whole, $22; cracked, per ton,

$22; feed meal, $22 per ton.Barley Rolled or ground, per ton,

$22; whole, $22.Fresh Meats Choice dressed beef,

steers, 6c; cows, 5c; mutton sheep,6c; pork, 6)c; veal, small, 6.

Fresh Fish Halibut, 4c; salmon, 45c; salmon trout, 80; flounders and

sole, 8 4; ling cod, 4 6; rock cod,6c; smelt, 24cFresh Fruit Apples, 76c $1 perbox; Sala way peaches, 60 60c; clings,8040o; prunes, Xo per pound;pears, 75c$l per box.

San Francisco Market.Wool Nevada 11 18c; Oregon, IS14c; Northern 1416o per pound.Hops 11 16c per pound.Millstuffs Middlings. $3023; Cal-

ifornia bran, $15. 00 16. 60 per ton.Onions New rod, 70 80c; do new

ilverskln, $1.001.15 per cental. fButter Fancy creamery, 27 38c;

do seconds, 2526o; fancy dairy. 2824c; good to choice, 2032o per pound.

Cheese Fancy mild, new, 12c; fairto good, 7 8c per pound..

Eggs Store, 18 86c; ranob, 86

88c; Eastern, 1638; duck, 20c perdozen.

Potatoes New, in boxes, 80 70.Citrus Fruit Oranges, Valenoias,

$1.60 8. 00; Mexican limes, $3.603.60; California lemons, choice, $3.60;do common, $1 2 per box.

Hay Wheat, IS 15; wheat andoat, $1114; oat, $1012; river bar-ley. $7 8; beat barley, $10 13;alfalfa, $9.50; clover, $8 10. ' ''

Fresh Fruit Apples, 868So part-larg-

box; grapes, 2040o; Isabella,'40 60c; peaches, 40 660; pears, $1.00

1.60 per box; plums, 86 40c

At Osage, Kan., R. H. Lyons tarneda waste pool on his farm Into a fishpond ten years ago. Now ho has achain of fish ponds worth $16,000 onthe place, all stocked from, tho waatopool. -- '

;' . y ..-

Noah Roby, of New Brunswick, K.J., has just recovered his sight afterbeing blind for ten yean. He Is tatdso be 135 years old, and hopes to break;the age reoord, ,

Spain's New Cuban Policy Is RegardedWith Fsior.

Washington. Oct. 27. Developmentsin Cuba, wjthin the next 30 days willdefinitely determine President MoKin-ley- 's

attitude upon the Spanish ques-tion, but he expects no trouble. ; Theadministration looks with favor onSpain's change of policy, and believesthe ministry is sincere in its endeavorto bring about a speedy termination ofthe strife in Cuba by granting substan-tial reforms. -

vWhile not fully advised as to Spa'in's

reply to Seeretatry Sherman's note,presented by 'Minister Woodford inSeptember, its general character is

Lknown here, and it is not anticipatedby the president that any friction willarise between the two countries as a re-

sult of the exchange of notes. '

The prime object the president hadin view when General Woodford wentto Madrid was bringing about Sn im-

proved condition of affairs in Cuba be-

fore congress. reassembjecL. Spain's re-

ply' and her instructions to the new.captain-gener- al of Cuba will show anadvanced step in that direction.

But the administration is more con-

cerned about the rapid change of policythan it is about the character of Spain'sreply to Minister Woodford's represen-tations. The government has no reasonto fear that' Spain will take an aggres-sive stand against the United States.On the contrary, it is sure of a notefriendly and conciliatory in tone. Thepresident realizes, however, the dangerof further agitation by congress and afurther disturbance' of our interests ifsomething more substantial than thesemere promises of Spain to grant genu-ine autonomy cannot be furnishedwhen the new session begins. -

It can hardly be expected that Gen-

eral Blanco within a month after hisarrival will be able to end the war, butif it can be shown that an advancedstep has been taken in that direction,President McKinley may, by forward-

ing the correspondence which has pass-ed and calling attention to an improvedcondition ' in Cuba, be able to pacifycongress long enough to give Spain achance to thoroughly establish her neV.reforms. Hence it appears that thewording of the president's forthcomingmessage depends mainly upon the im-

mediate effect of General Blanco's ar-

rival in Havana, the promulgation ofan amnesty proclamation, of new auton-omist reforms and the abandonment ofthe reconcentrafo policy.

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT.

Ancient Document Found in RecentlyUnearthed Papyri.

Denver, Oct. 27. Dr. Cobern, pastorof Trinity Methodist church, who hasrecently returned from England, tellsof a wonderful papyri discovered lastJanuary, and gives out informationwhioh is new to the world. This "isthat in the logia,. which was unearthedby Messrs. Grennfel and Hunt underthe direction of Dr. Flinders Petrie,ofOxford university, last January, there'was found beside the notebook leaf,containing what purported to be . thesayings of Jesus Christ, a leaf from theNew Testament. The leaf containednearly the whole of the first chapter ofMatthew, and was written exactly thesame as our Greek testament of today.

Dr. Cobern says that this is our earl-iest record of the Bible, and that in the61 baskets of papyri that were takenout there may be found a copy of thescriptures. He also points out what ablow to infidelism it "might be, andwhat a strengthening of the Christiancause. He says there is no doubt ofthe genuineness of these findings;- - thatsuch critics as Professor Harmack andThompson have passed upon them anddeclare that they could not have beenwritten later than 20) A." D. "h

DR. NANSEN IN NEW YORK.

Tendered m Reception by the AmericanGeographical Society. ''

.

New. York, Oct. 26. Dr. Nansen, theArctic explorer, arrived tonight on thSteamship Lucania. He was taken Off''

the steamer at quarantine. He receivedan. invitation to be present at a recep-tion tendered by the American Geogra-phical Society at Checkering ihall to-

night." Dr. Nansen was due at the hallat 8:30 p. m., and arrived 10 minutesahead of time. His entrance was thesignal for the heartiest applause, theentire audience' rising to greet him. ' '

A gold medal was presented to Dr.Nansen from the Geographical Society.Dr. Nansen replied briefly, thankingthe .society for the honor conferred uponhim. He spoke in very 4air English. '

Lieuteant Peary and Captain D-- . L.Brainard, of the United States army,who was one of the party -- which, heldthe record for northern latitudes '

priorto the Nansen expedition, also spokebriefly;- - - ,

'"-T-

5 ' -- ":

- Decision ReTersed.Carson, Nev Oct..27,T-Tb- e supreme

court reversed -- the decision''"; awardingdamages against the Western Union'telegraph Company to the plaintiffBurns. The; latter had urgent businessat Lovelock, 'and telegraphed 'a friendfrom Grand Junction for money. Receiving no reply, he attempted to beat"his way oh a train, and falling pff, wasseriously-injured.- He. then., sued ;thetelegraph company- - for fai4ing.to-.d-liver his message., and received judg-ment, which has just been reversed;? '--'

.... Hot. Fighting: Probable. .--. Simla, Oct 27. Official dispatchesfrom KhangarbiW.jeceited tthe advance upon bemagna pass onboth' sides, in which the insuigenttribel are collecting in great force, andwhere furious fighting is expected tooccur, will be resomed. tomprrow. Theposition taken up by the enemy is ofthe strongest description, t Tribesmenare expected to make the most deter-mined resistance to the advance of theBritish, troops.

Fve Is Racing. 1 -

New Orleans, Oct. 27. Numerically,this has been the worst day of the feversituation here.' As early as 7 o'clockthrs'evening the board of health showed'a total of 52 new cases, and there had,been 11 deaths. This is the highest

L number of deaths in a single day.

Havana, Oot. 87. The report thatGeneral Castillo,, the insurgent leader,had been killed in an engagement isconfirmed. The body arrived hero at5 o'clock this afternoon. Large crswdsvisited the morgue to look at the re--

1

Two Men Were Drowned and Five In-

jured One Seriously.Oregon City, Oct. 28. A terrible ac-

cident occurred at noon today, causingthe death of two men, and injuring Aveothers.

A gang of men had been workingrliight and day for a week to remove abulkhead, expecting to finish the workthis afternoon. The bulkhead was 60feet long, and extended from the powerstation on the east to the east wall ofthe boat canal on the west. At thelower end of the new extension of thepower-hous- e another bulkhead had beenconstructed, and it was the intention totake out the old one, in order to let thewater into the new section for the tur-bines. ' '

5

The workmen had removed a consid-erable portion of the foundation of theold bulkhead, and today were engagedin taking off the nuts and cutting thebolts, intending to remove the entirewall tonight.

'

The work gave way and a flood ofwater rushed in upon the workmen,filling the section. At first it was sup-posed that every man was drowned.An alarm was given and the water wasdrawn from the canal as soon as posssi-bl- e,

as it" was found thaff the work ofremoving the mass of broken timbersand recovering the bodies of thedrowned men would be facilitated byfloating the mass of debris. After thiswas done a count of the men in thegang was made, and it was found thattwo men Anton Natterlinand JacobMacomb were missing.

These two men were evidentlydrowned, and are no doubt beneath thepile of broken timbers, which a largenumber of workmen are now engagedin removing. Natterlin an unmarriedman, and Macomb leaves a wife andchild. -

Among the" five injured men, themost'seriously hurt are Carl Newberg,whose head was severely cut andbruised, and Harvey Little, whose leftarm was bruised and whose head andface were badly cut. " '':.. The three men who escaped unin-jured were: Jacob Weidick, Alvin Rich-ardson and Jacob Keane.

Thomas Smith had his spine hurtand William W. Smith had one boneof his right leg broken.'"' The accident was&wing either to amiscalculation of he weight of thewater behir.d the men or the strengthof the bolts and, timbers. Upon 'thegiving way of the wall the water rushedinto, the lower section with terrific'force, carrying the timbers and all be-

fore, it to the lower section. , The menwho escaped fought their way throughthe floating timbers and finally reacheda point where they received assistance.

.RESISTED ARREST.

Pitched Battle Fought in Arizona WithFatal Results.'

. Yuma, Ariz., Oct. 28. A pitchedbattle at Mammoth tank. 45 miles westof Yiirna, between Yuma county offi-

cers and 270 Mexican railroad laborers,resulted in the death of five to sevenMexicans, the wounding . of severalmore, and the dangerous wounding ofDeputy Sheriff Wilder, of Yuma.

Sheriff Greenleaf, of Yuma, wascalled upon to arrest the ringleaders ofa gang of striking Mexican railroadlaborers. With his deputies, GeorgeWilmer and James Jones, he.. advancedon the, strikers, when the. latter attack-ed them with rocks and- - revolvers.With the first volley from the Mexican'srevolvers Wilmer fell. Jones then ranfor the. section, foreman who had ac-

companied the officers.' ' '.' , , ,.

Jones in the meantime had secured ashotgun, Which he discharged, at . theadvancing strikers. Three men felland were picked up by tljeir comrades,who, --continued to advance! . Anothersh6t brought more-t- the ground, and astampede followed.'- - ' --

'.Sheriff Greenleaf, who tad in themeantime conveyed

' the deputy, to,' awaiting train, called upon his men toboard the train, which immediatelypulled into Yuma. A posse of 25 menis being formed in Yuma, and willsoon leave for the scene of the trouble.More and sensational developmentsmay be expected.

FIVE BRAVES" SLAIN i'

Battle Between Colorado Game Frotec-tor- s

and Indians.. jpifie, Colo.. Oct. orts .fromSnake river are to the effect that GameWarden Wilcox attempted to arrestsome Indians near Lily Park for vio-

lating the Colorado game laws, and wasfired upon by the Utes. Game. WardenWilcox with several posses of deputiesand ranchmen are after the Indians,and a further conflict seems inevitable..The excitement here is intense, andparties are organizing to go to Wilcox'sassistance, .fearing, a. , general uprising.of the Indians. .

'. .

.The trouble commenced last 'week,"when the White River, Uncompahgre,'and Uintan 'Utes began;' pburirig; over"the line from. Utah oh their a'nnual fallhunt. The White River Utes are ex-

ceptionally ngly, and have .apparentlybeen anxious to pick trouble' with" parties of whites with .whom they havecome jn contact. The Utes were in theMeeker massacre and h'aVe never been-anythin-

but ugly and waiting "for' anopportunity to do mischief. There aije,several hundred of them novr in the.state.'

Game Warden Wilcox with a smallparty statred out toward the Indiancamp and approached' the camp undb- -'

served. The game warden was resistedand . finally fired upon by the Indiana.Then a set encounter followed in whicha number of Indians were killed'andwounded. It was reported that WardenWilcox's party also suffered severely.

"

Brigadier-Gener- al Otis, of the depart-ment of the Colorado, says if the cir-cumstances warrant; troops will be;sent to the scene of the trouble at once,ready o proceed at a moment's notice.

'A Conditional Concession. ',

London, Oct.28. The federated em-

ployers at a meeting at Manchester areunderstood to have agreed to a confer-ence with representatives of the strik-- "

ng engineers on the lines suggested byRitchie, providing ""the" Teigbt-bou- r- de-

mand is not presented,

''Victoria,:? Oct." 26. Bteamer'Evangelj'on theay from. PpJ-- t Angeles,this afternoon r picked - pp .th flahfegloop Thistle bottom up. "$fie"fe was a

big blow in the straits last evening,and it is thought that the sloop upsetmd her crew of two men were drowned.

DEMOCRATS ABANDON LEADING

ISSUE OF LAST YEAR.

Couldn't' Stand Wave : of Prosperity- Sweeping Over the Country. Bryanand Towte Snubbed by DemocraticManagers of Various States.

E. F. Pabsons, Special Correspondent.

Washington, D.C Further evidencefrom Ohio corroborates the statementsthat the silver question has been abso-

lutely eliminated from the discussionsthere in the campaign. And silver waspractically the only plank of the pem-ocrat- io

platform adopted only threemonths ago. Mr. Bryan proposed tdcanvasB the state thorougly in the in-

terests of silver and ' speak ; from everystump; Towne enter-ed the state with an idea of speakingfor free silver many times, but for somereason Mr. Bryan has not kept faithwith his assertions, and Mr. Towne hasbeen peremptorily ordered off thestump by Allen O'Myers, McLean'smanager, and this action has been sus-tained by McLean. Bryan, Towne andothers who have been for the past twoyears laboring in the interests of thelilver trust, view this "turning down"with nothing less than .dismay, be-

cause it means to them that the Demo-cratic party is abandoning the freecoinage talk in every state where itsmanagers see any real hope of successat the polls this fall. This generalprogramme has been adopted in allstates where there are campaigns, as'shown by various reports. When itcame to a direct clash, as was the casethe other day between Democracy andBryan, Democracy won and Bryan wassnubbed. The New Yorkers wereabout entering on their campaign andMr. Bryan wrote urging them to keepfree silver to the front in their fight;Chairman Jones, however, . advisedthem to eliminate free silver and hisadvice was followed. Silver is practi-cally tabooed in this fall's campaignsand the free silver men are excludedfrom participation in them. Thisseems nothing short of wonderful inview of the fact that only three monthshave elapsed since the silver leadersdetermined that tree silver should bethe leading issue of this year," wherestate and local campaigns were to befought. In Ohio, Iowa and Kentucky,as well as in other' states, it .was madethe chief and in some cases practicallythe only plank of the' platforms. TheMarylanders, under Senator Gorman'sshrewd leadership, managed to savethemselves from being obliged to laterrun away from the platform by strad-

dling it at their convention, but in al-

most every other case free coinage wasthe watchword of the state and localcommittees as much as it was of theDemocratic national committee of lastyear. In Massachusetts, the GeorgeFred Williams element of the Democ-

racy adopted it, in" New York a seg-ment of the Democracy declared for itand in Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, Io-

wa, Pennsylvania, Nebraska and otherstates it was to be the leading issue ofthe campaigns.

But all this happened within thelast three or four months, and all theseraticfitions of free silver by variousconventions were before the passage ofthe Dingley tariff, law and the signingof that measure by the presdent. Thisoccurred later, and what was the effect?Immediately the wheels of industry be-

gan to revolve. It is useless to saythey did not or that prosperity has notreturned - to thousands of homesthroughout the land. Immediatelywith the passage of that law, and insome cases in anticipation of its pas- -

sage, factories began to resume and toincrease their number of employes and ,

thousands of men who had been look- -

ing vainly for work suddenly found it ,

and at good wages, too. The hum ofindustry was heard on all sides and thefactories smoke began to roll out inblack volumes. Employers began pay-

ing out money td labor which they hadbeen previously hoarding, afraid to em-

bark in business ventures and the em-

ployes began to demand the necessitiesof life from the farmers. Farm prod-ucts rose in price and laborers had themoney with which to buy them. Notonly wheat went up, in which there isa "shortage" abroad, but all otherfarm products advanced likewise.And, strange to say, simultaneouslywith these advances the price of silversteadily fell, reaching a low watermark never dreamed of by the Demo-crats, who were proposing last year tosupply the country with 53-ce- nt dol-

lars. Things reached such a state; sil-

ver down to nothing, and everythingelse up and going up that there re-

mained nothing to do but to drop thesilver issue and forget it, although ithad been made the leading issue inmost of the platforms. And the ad-

vices from all the states where thereare campaigns being fought show that,this plan has been adopted with singu-lar unanimity. As stated, Messrs.'Bryan and Towne and others of thatschool are rigidly excluded from all'the important campaigns and only al-

lowed to educate the people in thosesections where tbey can't do any harm,while the Democrats are casting aboutfor other issues, making their cam-

paigns on a variety of misleading andd issues, personal abuses' and

the like. The outlook forthe Democ-

racy is not a pleasant one.Such "principles" as the single tax,

the "government by injunction" idea,socialism and anarchism are substi-tuted for the semi-fi- at .money schemewhich was the leading and almost onlyissue three months ago. Last year theDemocracv had to abandon its old andtime-honor- principle of free trade forthe new and attractive one of free sil- -ver, and now all its promises brokenand all its prognostigations of a year I

ago unfulfilled and shown false, it iscompelled to abandon that new idol forother "principles. '

"There is evidence of greatly enlarged business in every important de-

partment, more establishments havingbeen set at work and more hands em-

ployed, and while prudence still hin-ders speculative excesses, the progresstoward better things is unchecked. Re-

ports from .various cities this weekshow a very general progress and acontinuing large distribution throughretail trade. "' .'' ; ". ' Failures forthe week have 'been 198 as against 276in the corresponding week of last year,

Dun's Financial Review,' June 19,

1M7.

Experiences of a Party of

Returning Klondikers.

WERE CAUGHT IN A BLIZZARD

fliree Times They Ran Ont of Food- Rescued ' by Indlans-N- --Gold Was vof

Use to Them.

Seattle, Oct. 26. Only the merestchance and the' lucky discovery of thebalf-hidd- trail by one of their num-ber, saved six members of a party,headed by F. L. and Julius Trippe,from a horriDle death by starvation onthe Dalton trail late in September.

The party was headed by the Trippebrothers, formerly of Chicago, and in-

cluded Charles Wilkes, of Whatcom;Charles G. Dugas, a . miner from ' Ju-

neau; John Fry, of this city; W. Gil-lies, of Woodsmann, and a prospectorliving at Fort Wrangel. They leftDawson City for the States in a smallateamer, August 28, and after reachingFort Selkirk prepared their outfits forthe long and arduous journey over theDalton trail.5.

A week after leaving the Yukon riverthey encountered a deadly Alaskanblizzard. The trail was covered withsnow and they lost their bearings.Their provisions ran out, and aftergroping for three days through a blind-

ing snowstorm, they were finally res-

cued by Indians and taken t& Dalton'strading post, where they were givenfood. .

The experiences of the Trippes, whoreached Seattle on the steamer Farallontoday, would make columns of goodreading matter. In many respects the3tory they tell is not materially differ-s- nt

from the experiences encounteredby men nearly every winter in crossingthe long, blizzard-swep- t range of coun-

try lying between Five Fingers and theChilkat mountains. Unquestionably,their plight was extremely serious, andtheir hazardous escape from death byactual starvation and exposure will bea warning to miners coming overlandwithout experienced guides and plentyof provisions. '.--

As related by one of the party, thetrip up the Yukon to Fort Selkirk Waswithout unusual incident. At thisplace they secured a rough map of theroute over which they were to travel.With only 40 pounds ' of provisionseach, they started over the trail, leaving

Fort Selkirk September 18. Theweather was clear and there had beenbut little snow to obscure the trail oveithe brush-covere- d range.

They made good time for the firstthree days, but soon found that theywould be unable to reach Dalton'sraehe before their provisions gave out.Their only hope was to meet incomingprospectors and surveyors, . from whomtheyTexpeoted to secure ehotfgh ,'food totake them to tl cache. On the thirdday from the river, 'it began snowing,and. the wind 'was icy cold. Theystruggled bravely on, making the besttime possible until they reached Hoot-oha- i.

. Here they met a party of fourmen, and secured three days' rationsfrom them. " .

Again they started for Dalton's post.The snow was getting deeper and walk-

ing; was .extremely difficult.; Worsethan 'this, the 'landmarks by whichthey expected to keep on the Daltontrail were becoming obscured by snow.Soon after leaving Hootchai, theyfound it impossible to keep the trail,and finally they found themselves wan-

dering aimlessly over barren snow-cover-

wastes, their bearings gone andtheir food- exhausted.

Just aa it seemed as if they were des-

tined to have the snow, for a shroud andend their lives ' in that God-forsak-

country they came upon an Indiancamp". Here they , purchased 15 fish,and with, that as theic'ionly sustenance,again headfed fot the, direction where

tey. believed.Daltbjis' trading post wasBiMiated.;j.:5CIie.sn'OW storm- had parti-ally ceased before they met, the Indi-ans. Their. simple,diet of dried ' salm-on was not encmgn to keep up their al-

ready wasted energies, and - after an-

other day!s traveling," 'they- - found thatthey werv- - opnfron,ted-;'witb- - danger asgreat asuevervVvf '' ': ..:.'. .".

On'the second day: after leaving theIndian campy; they ran .out of

,food for

the third time;'The.trail was entirelycovered with snow, and they were una-ble to locate the Daltpn .cache ".by. '..thedirections-give- them' on the chart.They camped in the woods, and --whileone party: went dn. search of. the. trail,another smarted out with a gun afterfood. Tbey at last obtained'.two salm-on in a small stream, and they hadthese fijifiupper, and out of the scrapstnade bkfast the following day. Thiswas the list food they tasted for threedays, withi the exception'- - of an. owlwhich tfifey shot and made, into spup.

Mi, TrippeVsaid tonignt that he wasreadyjto give; up as tne third day passedWitboiui; their having eaten . solid food,it was bitter bold, and only. by the ex-ercise of,;jwill power .were they keptfrom beufg frozen stiff. . Towards evening of the third day in camp, Gilliesdiscovered, the location of. the trail,and w ith; the help of " Indians "whomtney met',' ,they made - Daiton's tradingpost. Here they obtained the first realfood they had for nearly four days.

. After resting for ' two. days, they re-

sumed their march to the Chilkat pass,and reached the end of their . journeywithout farther mishap.- "All -- of themen were very weak from their sufferi-

ngs.,, and it will be several days beforethey are restored to their' accustomed'strength. jj - :

Danville. 111., Oct. 26. Mrs.' CarrieCbrnett,- - aged $2, a widow, , has beenawarded; $54,333.33 damages for breachof promise. John Gernard, aged 71, aretired capitalist, is the defendant.

StriWe; Threatened in Colorado..DenvervOcti. 36.7-- A , special to the

Republican-fro- 'Lafayette,. Colo., says:At a meeting of federation' miners to'clay, it was decided to close all themines in this district next Monday, un-

less the operators' consent to the ton-

nage system of payment in all .mines.About 1,200 miners will be affected.

Always wash kettles as soon as yonare through using them; they shouldnot be allowed 'to stand until cold. '

The skin of the kangaroo, when prop- -

' ply tanned, never cracks. .

Train on New York; Central

Plunges Into a River.

TWENTY-EIGH- T LIVES LOST

More May Be Burled in the Wreck Dls-ast- er

Wtal Caused by an Imbtgk- -tnent Giving Way Worst In Tears. '

iGarrison's, N. Y., Oct. 26. From

the sleep that means refreshment andrest to the eternal sleep that knows noawakening plunged in the twinkling ofan eye this, morning 28 souls, men,women and children. In the slimy bedof the Hudson river a train laden withslumbering humanity plowed, draggingthrough the waters the passengers.There was nothing' to presage the ter-rible accident which so suddenly de-

prived these unfortunates of life. J

. The New York Central train leftBuffalo last night, and had progressednearly nine-tenth- s of the distanoetoward its destination. The engineerand his fireman had just noted the graydawn breaking from- - the east and thelight streak of red denoting the sun'sappearance, when the great engine,a servant of the rails, plunged into thedepths of the river. Neither engineernor fireman will ever tell the story ofthat terrible moment With hand npoathe throttle the engineer plunged withbis engine to the river's bottom, andthe fireman, too, was at his post. Be-

hind them came the express car, thecombination car and the sleepers, andthese piled on top of the engine.

It is known that it was a trifle foggyand that the track was not visible, butif there was any break in the linesof steel it must have been of very re-

cent happening, for only an hour be-

fore there passed over it a neavy pas-

senger .train laden with human freight.Neither is an explanation ready. . Allis conjecture. The section of road wassupposed to be the very best on "the en-

tire division. There was a great,' heavyretaining wall all along the bank, and,while the tide was high yesterday, itwas not unprecedented. What seemsto have happened was that- - underneaththe tracks and ties the heavy wall hadgiven way. When the great weight ofthe engine struck the unsupportedtracks it went crashing through therest of the wall and toppled over intothe river. '

Then there happened what on therailroad at any other time would havecaused disaster, but now proved a veryblessing. As the train plunged over theembankment, the coupling that heldthe last three of the six sleepers brokeand they miraculously remained on thebroken track. In that way some 60lives were saved.

Following is a list of the dead as faras ascertained up to midnight: "

. Thomas Reilly, of St. Louis. . -

E. A.' Green, of Chicago.W. H. Myers, of Tremont, N. J.Woman, unidentified. '

;

- Woman, unidentified. "

Guiseppe Paduano, of New Yark.W. S. Becker, of Newark, N. J. -

Unknown man, died wftileeing res-

cued. ' -- "

A. G. McKay, private secretary toGeneral Superintendent Van Etten;body supposed to be in the wreck.

John Fplye, engineer of East Albany;body not recovered.

John Q. Tompkins,' fireman, of EastAlbany; body, nqt recovered.

vWong :Gin and eight unidentified"Chinese. '.

Of were. none;except the crew of a tugboat passing witha tow.. They saw the train, with. its.light',' ; as if ' came flashing about thecurves, and then' saw the greater part ofit go into, the " river. ' Some of the carswith' closed :.wVndows'.'floated,'land thatug,, whistling for help," cast-o- ff itshawser and started to the rescue.

A porter jumped from one of the barsthat remainied. on the track'a'nd'Tatf intothe yard of. Augustus ' Carr's ' house,near which the .accident occurred, andstood screaming, for help, and moaning:,'The train is in the river; all our pas-

sengers are drowned 1" . ..

- In few minutes Carr had dressedhimself, and getting a boat, rowedwith the porter to the, scene. As they'turned a point into thenJbank, .theycame upon the express car and the" com-

bination car floating about 20 feet fromthe shore,. but sinking , gvery minute.One man was taken from the top of the"car, and efforts .were,, made' to rescuethose inside. A, few were gotten outithe passengers left on the trck makinga human bridge to the shore to take thewounded on. ' . -

' The day coach and smoker had gonodown in deep water. . a,hd

1 rescue wasimpossible.. Jn: the .latter. . co'acji 'thecondition - must have .J.bef n fcorrjjj..

vThe,'.ar' turned .completvly-.:Over,'.- ": andthe passenger end-o- f it was deep in.thfl.Water,, while the baggage end 'stood uptowards the surface. The' men in thatlower end must hive fought like fiendsfor a brief period, for the bodies, when

' The closing scene of the first day ofthis tragedy is drawn- around a commonoar that stands near the--scen- e of theaccident, where nearly a score of badlymutilated bodie,: none of them yetclaimed b7 frieipds, .are lying in a longrow, grewsome evidences'! th drgSster,the greatest that has,, ever occurred onthe railroad. - ...-- . ,

Total number of ; known dead, 19;estimated number' of dead, 28.

A TSavf iMal for Xuetfert. .

Chicago, Oct. S6. State's Attorney,Deneen late. this, afternoon'.; decided toput Luetgert on.traaj for a second time,some day next week. New evidence,has been discovered,. it. is said, relatingto testimony of three witnesses for. thedefense. No arrangement was reachedas to bail. . 'i -

. pxpotr.Weyler.te- - Be Otoedient. ,

New!York; .'jOofc? 6.-p- special tothe Herald from' Madrid ays: . At theministerial" c6'uiicilT'iaj dispatch fromHavana was read, stating that General'Weyler would' refuse to"' 'relinquish'-powe- r

before October 30. Your' corre-

spondent was requested to say on;1 be-1- ''

half of the cabinet that no credence sanbe. placed in the .dispatch, , since,, acrcftrdisjg to advices received by the gov-

ernment, the ministry anticipatesnothing but obedience to its orders.

A cattle dealer in Maitland, Mo., ifpajnesGoodpaeture. 'JjUjiM

A dispatch Ironl Madrid says there ismuch diseussjon at the Spanish capitalon the subjept..of an alliance between

... Spain and Portugal, reported to.be inprocess of negotiation. The. Portuguese minister of,.. marine, who. is nowin Madrid, .lias, expressed tne belielthat such alliance,. may. be accom-

plished at any moment. 'It is said ' that the loss by fire in

Windsor, N.-S.,- " will run into the- - mil-lions. Two people lost their lives inthe flames. ' !

Recently information was sent outfrom Tacoma that a miner named John-son had died at the Klondike' with$30,000 gold in lis possession, and hadleft no relatives to claim it. . Sincethen letters have been reoeived at thelocal Alaska information bureau froma dozen different parts of the country,

' trying to establish relationship with aview to getting the dead man's wealth.The story was brought down by ig

miners.