fBIattsmouth Journal C IV. SIlKlin.iN, Publisher. PLATTSMOUTH. i i NEBRASKA. I The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC Four human skeletons, believed to e those of Mrs. William Bishop and daughter and two strangers with 'whom they eloped last spring-, were found near Francisco, Ala. The exchanges at the leading clear ing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 16th aggre gated $1,019,203,328, against 5949,954,499 the previous week. The increase, com pared with the corresponding week in 1S93, was L3. The twenty-first annual convention of the National Women's Christian Temperance union met in Cleveland with representative women present from every state and territory and from Canada. The International Christian Alliance convention met in St. Louis with del egates present from Canada as well as from different parts of the United States. The southern phosphate works at Macon, Ga., were destroyed by fire, the loss being 8150,000. Is a mine at Blackhawk; CoL, four workmen were suffocated by smoke. Eight men lost their lives by the capsizing of a barge at Charlotte, Fla. y Col. XV. C. P. Breckinridge will go on the lecture platform. Twelve business houses and nine residences in Columbia, Ky., were de stroyed by fire. It was said that 215 families of American Railway union men were on the verge of starvation in Denver, Col., because of the railway strike last June. James Sheaklev, governor of Alaska, in his annuaj report says tb,e people have enjoyed a season of unusual prog ress and prosperity and law and order has prevailed. The governor estimates the population at about 32.000. I In" one day four persons committed suicide in Leadville. Col. J. R- Mercer & Co., dealers in ferti lizers and farmers' supplies at Macon, Ga., failed for 8100.000. The trial in Chicago of Debs and the other officers of the American Railway, union under indictment in the United States court was set by Judge Gross cup for January 8. During the week ended on the 17th 444.000 head of stock were received at the Chicago stock yards, the heaviest receipts on record for six days. Italian laborers on a West Virginia railroad have received no pay for three months, and are creating a reign of terror. ' The new treaty between the United States and Japan was concluded in all its essential features. Bicycle champions of five foreign countries arrived in New York, where they will compete with Americans. John Ashby and John Ileverin were mortally and Police Officer Stuart seri ously wounded in a saloon fight at Owensboro, Ky. Southern congressmen question the legality of the new bond issue and threaten to make trouble for the ad ministration. Mrs. Josephine Weist. aged 80 years, was burned to death at Peru, Ind., by stepping on a match and igniting her clothes. Seven; large and valuable barns in Springfield, 111., were burned by in cendiaries. A mis re: ball received during the civil war was successfully removed from th? head of George Sackett at Creston, la. Two infant children of Mrs. Mageie Walker, of St. Joseph, Mo., were burned to death while alone. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 19th was: Wheat, 82,282,000 bushels; corn, 2,765,000 bush els; oats, 9,110,000 bushels; rye, 505,000 bushels; barley, 3,515.000 bushels. The weather throughout the north west was the coldest for the season in eleven years. Thermometers in St. Paul registered 10 degrees below zero. Br an accident at the new chamber of commerce building in Toledo, )., Fred Cronenberg-, aged 85. and John Hummell, aged 42, were killed. Marin and Antonio Adego, brothers, were burned to death in an incendiarv fire at Scranton, Pa. The village of Mudtown, Pa., was almost entirely destroyed by fire. George Kleinman, champion wing shot of America,-Avas defeated by Dr. Carver in a 100-bird shoot at Watson's park in Chicago. The El wood (Ind.) Iron and Radiator company failed for $200,000. A coal train on the Pennsylvania road went through a bridge near Lari mer, Pa., and eight men were believed to have been buried in the wreck. At Louisville John S. Johnson rode a mile, standing start, in 1:56 3-5, low ering the world's bicycle record a full second. Near Wellsville, Mo., Thomas Por tercheck killed his mother, sister and brother, set fire to the house and then cut his own throat. lie was insane. While miners were, removing slate from a remote portion of a mine at Haggerty's colliery near Wellston, O., they found in an old abandoned room the skeletons of four men. Two men and twenty-three valuable corses were cremated in the stables of A. J. Flanders in Boston. The Cook gang of bandits was prac tically cornered near Muskogee, I. T., by a band of Cherokee police. At the convention of the Knights of Labor in New Orleans the miners' del egations from Indiana, Ohio and Penn sylvania were unseated despite their claim that they represented many thousand knights. Interesting changes are taking place on the planet Mars, according to Fercival Lowell, of the Lowell observatory. Lack of public confidence forced the Portland (Ore.) savings bank to close its doors with liabilities of $1,430,000. Nearly the whole of the business portion of Savannah, Mo., was de stroyed by fire. An attempt was made near Con neaut, O., to wreck the fast east-bound mail on the Lake Shore road. A track walker discovered the obstruction be fore the train came along. Marion Hedopeth,' who robbed a Frisco train of $20,000 in 1S92, was sentenced at Jefferson City, Mo., to twenty-five years' imprisonment. The fire losses in the United States during the ten months ended October 81 aggregated S109.S0fl,175. William T. Jones, a wealthy stock dealer at Bournville, O., was swindled out of $7,000 by two confidence men. Dr. Parkhurst and Mayor-elect Strong were the guests of honor at the 126th annual banquet of the New York chamber of commerce. A case of leprosy was discovered in Grand Forks county, N. D. The pa tient was confined in a lonely cabin. An annex to E. S. Jaffray fc Co.s New York dry goods store was de stroyed by fire, the loss being S360.000. Miss Frances E. Willard was unan imously reelected president of the Na tional Woman's Christian Temperance union at the twenty-first annual ses sion in Cleveland. James R. Sovereign was reelected general master workman of the Knights of Labor at their meeting in New Orleans. An Italian's carelessness caused an explosion in a mine at Collier's Sta tion, XV. Va., and seven men were killed and four injured. Fire in B. F. Wilde & Co.'s coal pockets at Charleston, Mass., caused a loss of $125,000. The eighth annual session of the fraternal congress opened at Buffalo, N. Y., with fraternal beneficiary or ganizations represented having 2,000, 000 members and an aggregate insur ance of about $2,400,000,000. Surgeons grafted 210 pieces of skin on Mrs. Florence Fitzpatrick, who was terribly burned several months ag3 in Chicago, and 800 more will be required. E. T-. Chamberlain, chief of the bureau of navigation, in his annual re port shows that the merchant marine of the United States comprises 23.5SG vessels of 4,644,024 tons. Arrangements were nearly com pleted for beginning construction of the American Methodist university in Washington. Wheelman Johnson lowered four records at Louisville, Ky. His time for the mile, flying start, was 1:47 U-5. Secretary Gresham authorized Min isters Den by and Dun to conduct negotiations for peace between China and Japan. A. Halloban and W. Downing, prisoners in the jail at Tahlequah, L T., fired the building and were cre mated. Rev. C. L. Paddock, of Macedon, N. Y., was given judgment for $10 against Mrs. William Bennett for a funeral sermon. Rev. II. S. Harrison, editor of the Advance, a Congregational weekly, was struck by a train at La Grange, I1L, and instantly killed. A special train over the Pennsyl vania road covered the 126 miles be tween Morrisville and Harrisburg in 104 minutes. Several slight shocks of earthquake were felt at Tacoma, Wash. The general assembly Knights of Labor in session at New Orleans de cided that lawyers and barkeepers were not eligible to membership. The most terrific and destructive windstorm known in twenty years did great damage at Dunkirk, N. Y., and vicinity. WrLLiAM Wickwier and his sister, who lived 5 miles south of Galesburg, Mich., were murdered by tramps. Capt. Philip II. Cooper, the new superintendent of the United States naval academy at Annapolis, Md.. is sued an order prohibiting hazing. Extreme simplicity marked the funeral of Robert C Winthrop at Bos ton. There were no pallbearers or words of eulogy. J. L. M. Pierce, of Yankton, S. D-, was said to have disappeared with 81, 000,000 secured from English capital ists on spurious paper. The national fraternal congress in session at Buffalo. N. Y., barred news paper artists from its sessions owing to the printing of a caricature of its president. J. D. Brown, a farmer living near Anrora, III, was robbed of $2,300 in Chicago by two colored women by the panel game. The dean and six students of Cott- ner university at Lincoln. Neb., were arrested for grave robbing. The report of Paymaster General Edwin Stewart of the navy for the fiscal year ended June 80 last shows that the total amount expended dur ing the year was $31,370,144. The Indian bovs at the Seminole high school at Eufaula, I. T., set the buildings on fire for the third time within two years. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Official returns show that the North Dakota legislature will be made up as follows: Senate republicans, 24; dem ocrats, 4; populists, 3. House repub licans, 50; democrats, 5; populists, 7. IIamh.ton Stuart, one of the editors of the Galveston News, died at his home in Galveston. Te. , aged 81 years. The official vote in Ohio at the re cent election gives Taylor (rep.) for secretary of state a plurality of 137,006. The official returns of the late elec tion in Minnesota give Nelson (rep.) lor governor a plurality of 60.567. Mrs. Milton Harrington, one of the six survivors of the Miltimore ma sacre in Utah in 1859. died in Delavan, Wis., aged 58 years. The official vote complete shows that the Missouri legislature will have a republican majority of 16 on joint bal Jot. The woman suffrage amendment to the constitution of Kansas was de feated at the recent election by a ma- I jority of 31,175. Reuben F. Kolb, the defeated popu list candidate for governor of Ala bama, issued a manifesto calling on his supporters to aid him in securing the executive office on December 1. Joseph Lewis, at whose shop in Man chester, England, Stephenson's en gine was built ia 1829. died in Kansas City. Pact. Conrad, president of the Louis iana and Honduras Lottery companies, died at New Orleans from heart dis ease. The official vote of New York gives Levi P. Morton (rep.) a plurality of 153,833 for governor. Adam Vanell, who served through the Blackhawk war with Abraham Lincoln, died at Santa Rosa, CaL Three counties in Kansas failed to cast 200 votes at the recent election and will lose their representatives. The democratic majority in Ken tucky at the recent election, as com piled by the secretary of state, is 2,173. FOREIGN. The ship Dauntless was reported to have been run down off Shelburne, N S., and sunk with her crew of twenty 81-T. Mexico was hurrying troops to the Guatemalan frontier and war between the two countries was thought to be imminent. Forty-seven persons took refuge in a church at San Procowio, Italy, dur ing an earthquake and were buried in its ruins. M. Francis Magnard, editor in chief of the Figaro, died in Paris, aged 58 years. Two thousands more Armenians were massacred by Turks at Sassan, and their bodies being left unburied caused an outbreak of cholera. It was reported that many American laborers who were duped by sharpers to go to Panama to work on a railway were in a starving condition. Rumors of a royalist attempt to restore Queen Liliuokalani to the throne caused uneasiness in Hawaii. Earthquake shocks continued in Sicily and southern Italy. Paltni and Seminary are in ruins. The death list is swelling. Impressive ceremonies marked the entombment of the remains of the late czar in the cathedral at St- Peters burg. A HUNDRED AND FIFTY Dutch troops were killed or wounded in an attack on Tjakranegara, Java. The Balinese loss was heavy. The Danish government issued a de cree forbidding the importation of live cattle and dressed meat from the United States. Japan declined the mediation of the United States, holding that China should make direct overtures for peace. The deaths caused by the earth quakes in southern Italy and northern Italy are now known to number more than 400. Anton Gregor Rubinstein, the pianist and composer, died at Peterhof, Russia, of heart disease, aged 64 years. The Yaqui Indians raided the vil lage of Soyopa, Mexico, and three women and two men belonging to the household of Peter Hernandez were killed in cold blood. Montreal is to have a world's fair in 1896. A London syndicate has agreed to furnish the necessary funds. Canada is said to be willing to cive Uncle Sam free use of her canals if he will pay for their maintenance. Jose Salvador Franch, the man who threw the dynamite bomb at the Liceo theater in Barcelona. Spain, on November 7, 1S93, killing twenty per sons and wounding fifty others, v.'aa executed by the garrote. LATER. William P. Hazen, the chief of the secret service of the treasury depart ment, in his annual report shows that during the year the total number of arests made was 6S7, nearly all of which were for violations of the stat utes relating to counterfeiting United States money. The amount of altered or counterfeit notes captured during the year was $21,300. The National Fraternal congress in session at Buffalo, N. Y., elected S. A. Well, of Pittsburgh, as president. The official vote of Wisconsin for governor at the recent election was: Upham (rep.). 196,452; Peck (dem.), 142,145; Powell (pop.), 25,613; Cleg horn (pro.), 11,090; Upham's plurality, 64,007. Fire at Eldon, la., destroyed the Rock Island chutes, 1.000 tons of coal, several cars and two residences. Total loss, $120,000. President Moraes issued a decree granting amnesty to all political of fenders in Brazil. While searching for a missing broth er a Mexican discovered near Chur intzia the bodies of thirty persons who had been murdered and hidden in a cave. The remains of Gen. John C. Fre mont were placed in the Rockland cemetery at Sparkill, N. Y. China sent an officer to Japan to ar range terms of peace. It was said the government was willing to pay $175, 000.000. Earthquake shocks left only twenty-four houses uninjured in Reggio Italy, and crowds of homeless people were forced to live on the streets. The Knights of Labor in national convention at New Orleans decided that none but the American flag shonld be carried in their parades. Robert Fitzsimmons was exonerated by the coroner's jury at Syracuse, N. Y., from any criminal intent in the death of Con. Riordan. In. attempting to separate Thomas and Michael Neill, fighting in the street at Cheyenne, Wyo., Charles Brultar killed them both. Mas. Mary Kennedy died at Ash land, HL, at the age of 100. H. D. Morgan, treasurer of the United States, in his annual report says the net ordinary revenues for the fiscal year ended June 30 were $297, 722,019, a decrease of $88, 097,609 as compared with the year before. The net ordinary expenditures were $367, 525,674. Including the public debt the total receipts were $724,000,538 and the expenditures $698,808,652. PUBLIC FUNDS. United States Treasurer Morgan Submits His Report. A Redaction la the Ordinary Hcraiari of the Uonrnmciit Impairment of the Gold Reserve fHher Topics Touched Upon. Washington, Nov. 23. The treasur er of the United States, Hon. D. N. Morgan, has submitted to Secretary Carlisle his annual report. The fol lowing is a synopsis of the document: The net ordinary revenues for the fiscal year ending June 30, cents omitted, were .W,722. 019, a decrease of SS8,0tt.6O9 as compared with the year before. The net ordinary expendi tures were 367.525.27-.!. a decrease of tl5.U52.fi74. The total receipts on all accounts were t24, 006.538. and the expenditures i88.55i At the close of business on June 30. 103. there stood on the books of the department charged to the treasurer a balance of 1738.467, 655. Adding to this the receipts on all accounts elves (1,462,474.003 as total to be accounted for, and deducting the expenditures, leaves a balance of (763.565540 on June 80. 1WW. In addition to these balances, however, there were other liabilities, arising from the postal revenues, from disbursing officers and from other sources, which brought the total to (776,041.808 at the former date, and to S04.854. 753 at the latter. A tier setting aside the amounts treated as unavailable, the principal of which are the deposits made with the state under the law of 19C6. there remained the turn of (746,538.655 in 1W3 and the sum of (775.310. btfj in 1M4 represented by live assets in the several offices of the treasury and mint, to gether with deposits in national banks. Of these balances the sums of (581,593. 82J and 1616.155.83), respectively, were on deposit for the redemption of outstanding certificates and treasury notes, leaving$I61,9U!,735 and f IM 154. 739 as the balances on account of the cencra fm. lie states that the lowest point touched by the reserve was (52.180.500 on August 7, lst'l Prior to July. 12. the gold reserve was but little affected by withdrawals of coin, thero never having been - any considerable de mand for the redemption of notes. Kvcn when gold exports were heavy the metal furnished by bankers from their vaults or was obtained from the treasury for gold cer tificates, of course without impairment to the reserve. During the last two years, however, the treasury has been called upon to furnish nearly the whole of the requirements for ex portation, and there have recently been con siderable withdrawals for other uses. The treasurer rirHrVs that the Impairment of the golJ reserve rendering necessary the Issue of bonds in February was caused chiefly by tbe depletion of the treasury resulting from insufflotent revenues. Even when the supply of paper had become so reduced that the treasury was obliged to pay out large sums of gold in the ordinary disbursements the coin was freely returned in the revenues. The proceeds of this loan were (.S8.C60.0U0 in gold coin and certificates, but during the month of February there were redeemed (W, 00.0U0of notes in gold, presumably to meet subscriptions to the loan, so that the net gold proceeds were about ..tOO,000. This, to gether with a gain of (l.DOUOOJ In gold from ordinary sources, brought up the reserve during the month from f6j.uu0.0u0 to (106.5) 10,000. while the net assets of the treasury, with an excess of f 7.000 000 of expenditures over receipu for the month. Increased from (125.0OO.0tf) to (177. Ouo.uuO. EHirlng the succeeding months till the end of the first week in August the re serve was affected by deficient revenues and withdrawals of gold for export, the move ment abroad having been stimulated by the necessity which the treasury was uuder of furnishing to exporters new full weight after the supply of old pieces had become exhausted. With reference to the retirement of treasury notes the treasurer says that prior to August. 18t3. the treasury had been able to provide for the redemption of treasury notes In silver dol lars out of the holdings of free .silver, no that there had not been, up to that time, any impairment of the total amount of the silver fund accumulated under the act. Oa the 3d of that month, however, the silver dol lars and bullion in the treasury had become reduced to the amount required by law to be retained for the payment of outstanding treas ury notes and certificates, and the de mand for the redemption of notes continuing In consequence of the scarcity of small denominations of currency, it became neces sary to draw upon the dollars coined especially for that purpose. The silver fund being thus impaired, tbe notes so redeemed were can celled, la order to preserve the required equal ity between the silver In the treasury and the notes outstanding. The total amount of the notes retained in this way. up to October 31, was (4 7VJ.434. To the end of September last the total re demption of United States notes in gold since the resumption of specie payments were (181. 8 JO ,1)00, and tbe total redemptions of the treas ury notes In gold from their first issue were (68,5J0.0(J. The two important events of the year affecting the condition of the public debt were tbe issue of J50.O0O.OW of 5 per cent, bonds to replenish tbe gold reserve and the stoppage of the purchase of silver bullion by the issue cf treasury notes. The amount of the new Issues of United States paper currency put into circulation dur ing the year was I350.bo9.190. having been ex ceeded but once, in 1892. The amount of worn and mutilated notes redeemed was (3l9.0u2.290. This also has been exceeded but once, in ltrjl The total paper circulation reached Us highest point in May last, when It stood at ll.175.000.0oa Since then, there has been a slight contraction, caused chiefly by the gradual redemption and retire ment of gold certificates, the Issue of which was suspended, as the law requires, when tbo gold reserve of the treasury fell below 1100 000.000. Notwithstanding a change In the regulations. whereby senders of national bank notes for redemption were required to bear the charges of transportation, the redemptions were the heaviest since 1886. amounting to (105.000.0u0, or more than half of the average circulation. The management of the Columbian exposi tion having finally declined to defray the ex penses of recolnlng tbe Columbian half-dollars, which have found their way Into . tbe treasury, they have been offered to the public at par in exchange for gold or gold certificates, and a considerable sum of them has been dis tributed In that manner. The Isabella quar ters In the treasury are retained for the requi sition of the board of lady managers of the ex position. The amount of counterfeit sliver coin and fractional currency detected at tbe offices of the treasury during the year was (10,500, an In crease of (JO0 over the year before There was an increase daring the year of II . S52.250 In the face value of the bonds held on account of the sinking funds of the Pacific railroads, which amounted, on June 30, to (,8, 600,000. Will Bead flpe to Hawaii. Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 2a The An niston Pipe k Foundry company has received notice it has been successful In bidding for 8100,000 worth of iron ewer pipe for the city of Honolulu. MUSICAL POINTS. Geohok Henschel has written. Stabat Mater, which will be given in Albert hall this winter by the Royal Choral society. A new string sextet, by a boy of six teen named Bernhard Ivohler,' recently created an extraordinary sensation at Cologne. A manuscript mass by Bellini is re ported to have been discovered in Italy. It has been 6ent to the Naples con servatory of music to have its genuine ness passed npon. GEN. BOOTH. The Founder of the Salvation Army Talks of Ills Mission to America. Chicago, Nov. 2a Gen. William Booth, the picturesque founder and present head of the Salvation army, met the representatives of the Chicago newspapers in the rooms of the Press club Thursday morning. Gen. Booth had just arrived in Chicago over the Michigan Central road from Saginaw. Gen. Booth began by telling his hosts in a general way the object of his visit to America. He had come to see what more could be done in the furtherance of the army's work here. He also wanted to see the American people, explain to them more fully the object of the army and the principles of his social scheme, get the prayers of more of the good people and get a little more of the rich people's money. With reference to his social scheme, he was asked how he proposed to solve labor difficulties. Be said there was only one way, and that was to ' transfer the surplus of laboring men. If in one 6pot there was work for only I 1,200 men and 1,500 men were looking for jobs, the 800 who were left idle, in order to secure employment, would offer their services' cheaper. This would cause strikes. The remedy in such a case would be to remove the surplus of help to some less thickly populated portion of this country and give to each man a portion of ground to till for himself. Here the general was interrupted and asked if he did not consider the farmers one of the most miserable classes in tbe world to-day. He re piled: "One of the most miserable, but the trouble lies In the fact that the farmer of to-day farms for tbe market Instead of farming for himself. If he would eat what he raised he would have plenty and still something to market. Then he would be Independent. A man has an In stinctive liking for a piece of lacd all his own, and if be could be taught to run his farm on the proper plan he would be thoroughly inde pendent. Independence would bring content ment and among all tbe classes of people of this earth there is a no more happy community than a contented peasantry." The great evil in America was the government, he said. Majorities were generally foolish in their opinions. However, he did not indorse mon archies or aristocracies. He favored the government which controlled the Salvation Army, which he 6aid was not military in the strict sense of that term. It was a government of love. The wisest and best men should be at the head and the others to obey; that was the plan. It was David's idea of government, and it was his. The reception to Gen. liooth by the ministers of Chicago in the afternoon at Willard hall was a remarkable occasion. Every seat was filled long in advance, and. a dense throng stood in the vestibule and aisles Every pastor, theological professor and religious worker in the city seemed to be present, and the interest and en thusiasm were something remarkable Gen. Booth made a thorough explana tion of the plans and methods of work of the Salvation Army. Gen.. Booth delivered his lecture on "Darkest England" at night at the Auditorium. The great theater waa crowded from floor to ceiling by an intelligent, eager and enthusiastic au dience, who laughed and wept and cheered from the beginning to the close of the exercises. The lecture was preeeded by a pa rade through the streets of all the forces of the army in Chicago. The place of rendezvous was the Columbus statue on the lake front, from which point the Salvationists of both sexes, to the number of 500, marched with martial music, torchlights and bril liant banners. TO BUY BONDS. Canadian Gold in Considerable Quantity deceived In New York. New York. Nov. 2a The New York agency of a large Canadian institution has received from its correspondents at San Francisco 8250,000 in prold with in the last two days, and $500,000 in gold has been shipped by the Bank of Montreal to its agency in this city for the purpose of subscribing to the gov ernment laan. A Wall street banking firm with Paris and San Francisco con nections is also receiving small parcels of gold from California. New York, Nov. 2a It was reported Thursday that after a protracted con ference a syndicate was made up dur ing the afternoon to take one-half of the 850,000,000 government loan. President Stewart, of the United States Trust company, and his friends to subscribe for the other half. The new syndicate is said to comprise the Chemical, Park, Importers and Traders, the Chase, the Fourth national and the Bank of Com merce. These banks are among the largest holders of gold, and if they take the loan the treasury will be a large gainer of the yellow metaL KNIGHTS OF LABOR PLANS. Kesotutloos Adopted at the w Orleans National Convention. New Orleans, Nov. 2a Knights of Labor had a busy session Thursday. Resolutions were adopted that the legislatures of the various states be memorialized to enact laws providing for the creation of state labor bureaus; that all trades men shall affiliate wjth organizations of their own trade; that in labor pa rades no flags except the national col ors shall be carried, and that a plank be inserted in the Knights of Labor preamble against gambling in farm products or options. Rodewlg Befuses to Testify. Battle Ckkek, Mich., Nov. 2a The examination of the alleged Grand Trunk train wreckers was resumed Thursday. The men have also been arrested on the charge of conspiracy. At the examination Bodewig and Knowles the prosecution's most im portant witnesses, refused to testify and the examination was adjourned to January 2. The men were taken to jail. . Moraes Orant Ceneial Amnesty. Rio de Janeiro, Nov. 2a President Moraes has issued a decree granting amnesty to all political offenders. WILL PAY DEARLY. China Said to Have Offered Japan av Wu Indemnity of 175, OOO.OOO. Hiroshima, Nov. 2a It is reported that China has intimated that she will offer to pay a war indemnity of 100, 000,000 tee Is (about $75,000,000), and in addition pay all the war expenses in curred by Japan. Tikx This, Nov. 2a The chief of the imperial customs here, De Ting, who was recently summoned to Pekin in order to confer with the govern ment as to ways and means for raising money for the war, has lef y for Japan in order to arrange terms of peace. i Washington. Nov. 2a In accord ance with a suggestion of Japan, the state department has notified Minister Dun at Tokio and Minister Denby at Peking to transmit such direct offer as China may wish to make to Japan. As the cable directions were sent Tnescay, sufficient time has not yet elapsed to determine whether China will consent to make an offer direct and definite, as Japan insists must be done. ' A cable from Japan states, however, that China has intimated her willing ness to pa' an indemnity of 100,000,000 taels, and in addition pay all the war expenses incurred by Japan. As the war expenses reach 150,000,000 taels the total offer of China would be 250,000, 000 taels. The tael is the Chinese silver coin, worth about 75 cents at the present exchange, so that the whole payment would be approximate ly 175,000,000 American. The amount is regarded here as quite large, and it is believed arrangements between the two nations could "be effected on terms providing for a smaller war indemnity. Yokohama, Nov. 23. The Chinesa Pie Yang squadron is reported to have shelled the Japanese troops marching on Port Arthur. A des perate battle between the Chinese and Japanese fleets is said to have fol lowed. The result of the engagement is not known. Washington, Nov. 2a The navy de partment has an official cablegram an nouncing that the Chinese battleship Chen Yuen, the most formidable ves sel in the Chinese navy, was damaged by a torpedo on leaving Wei Hai Wei on the 18th inst and was beached, and is now useless. Commodore Lin, in command of the Chen Vuen, commit ted suicide after the disaster. It would appear from the facts in the cable that the ship fell a victim to one of the torpedoes planted by the Chinese themselves to guard the en trance to Wei Hai Wei, which was the last of the great naval strongholds of the empire save Port Arthur, now tottering to its fall. It was as well that Commodore Lin com mitted suicide, for he would doubtiess have been decapitated as the result of his error. It is believed here that this loss has deprived the Chinese navy of its offensive power. There remain the Ting Yuen, another powerful battle ship, and a few lesser ironclads, but without the aid of the Chen Y'uenthey would hardly dare to make an offen sive campaign, and probably will re main in port to assist in the defense. EXONERATED. A Coroner's Jury Kefnses to Hold Bob lit zlm mon. Stracuse. N. Y"., Nov. 23. The in quest touching the death of Cornelius Riordan. who was killed in a sparring bout with Robert Fitzsimmons in the H. R. Jacob's opera house last Friday night, was held Thurs day night before Coroner Roberts and a jury. The jury brought in a verdict finding that Riordan was killed by an accidental blow delivered by Fitz simmons during a sparring match, and exonerating the latter from all blame. Strong testimony against Fitzsimmons was given by Dr. D. M. Totman, who attended Riordan. He testified that tbe blows delivered by Fitzsimmons alone caused death. All the members of the police force and local pugilists who saw the fight and were present at Riordan's death swore that the blow struck by Fitz simmons was a light one, and that they thought the man was shamming to avoid punishment. They thought his death was caused by alcoholic ex cesses. District Attorney S. J. Shove says that despite the verdict of the cor oner's jury he will present the case to the grand jury of Onondaga county. WISCONSIN'S POPULIST VOTE. Increase in Two Tears from 9,60 to Over X7.000 Official Return. Madison. Wis., Nov. 2a The most striking thing about the official re turns filed with the secretary of state is the great increase in the populist vote of the state during the last two years. Their vote this year for governor is almost three times that of two years ago. In the two years the vote lias increased from 9,640 to over 25.000. A careful estimate of the results of the recent election based, on the official returns received from, fifty-five counties shows that Upham's vote will be over 51 per cent, of the. total number polled. The democrats cast for their 6tate ticket a little less, than 89 per cent, of the total vote.. The populists have over 7 per cent, of the whole vote and the prohibitionists less than 8 per cent The official vote of the state for gov ernor is: Upham (rep.), 196,45a: Peck (dem.), 142,145; roweu (pop.;, zo.oio; Cleghorn (pro.). 11,098; Upham's plu rality, 54.30". The returns show that the net republican pluralities exceed those of Gov. -elect Upham by 12,226. Bemalaa of Oen. Fremont Interred on tie Bank nf the Haitian. Sparkill, N. Y., Nov. 2a On the cre6t of a high hill commanding a view of the Hudson rivet and the coun try to the west of 1 for miles, and miles, the remains of Gen. John C Fremont were on Thursday placed at rest The remains of the man whose name was once a household, word had been in the receiving vault here since March, 1891, when they were transferred from Trinity ceme tery. New York, where they had been placed after the funcxal on. July IS, 161K).