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PlsfllFillMiL tB ana tuiiDii ml V lor - . LOlAUlilDnLU JLH . iOW. TFl" - ' ' vMWHUljlJ. n A W AIT TFOOITAnv a tm i mr a XT nrnnirnTin .. . I - a..iaisx.x, DAiuiiUAi, iaiiiH.Xi o, lyUU. KlAlJilUJN FAUJES. PRTPTT. . WTVTP nVKTO I . . -- tT SXXII., NO. 67..1. i'v PROFESSIONAL CARDS. I tiSM it'n-y Notary Pub- pa jiiri" .-t. , yii . rH T -Alt. rne, Notary (nl i' "i"iiiiinwf for Neaj York L I'd., M."Mnt St.. T.-1. Main n. I Itr.-Ui'lANS. TA 1 '"'I. Hmapathl Fra. - .;.. U I attention given t J, ". oiiti t ana raeldenc, Ln ft. ii-urly fin, Methodlat r nin.' rin'ir. w w u i, m., i to a, T t" I ; fliitxUjra, a u to Am'UNETK. , . l,,lM.N V. C Aral and 10 W T I t .Il ls ' T Klntf and llethel 8ta. ,1 ( u lut T. v r 'K .Ti U)N.-I5 Kutiuimnu . H ri.KVKtNH. M.D.-Offlf, ,Mf Kmmii hmum. 9 tn fl a. m.. b t I P m. . 7 In :W) p, m. ; 1L L t, t l-iiu Tf I. WhIU 3Mt. f ; nl lMUITIf.-)m' arxl r isr :rinlaj ami AUk flta, hunr, . I f It, I l 4 ami 1 to 1 I in n a. m , 3 la 4 an1 7 to I p. PMy. to l' J) . m. ; Tt UX f ITlftlA,-om. tUM Nuiiann Ti. WMtn I.' J, mc hour, to to I to 1 ami I o 1 p. m., aacpt . c. wTKrwt(ji:m.-oftia and ir, nr.tnu and Miller (Ma.; af- WyiM, It a m. ; t to I an 1 to WMla , rmruiNArir 1 run ronm. CUrilAM. Vtr1nary Mitrvaon i Inili mile Klnf H. fttahlM: I :; mila diy or nlicht promptly k.ri atori'titiaa, obttrtra and KAfNfrMA.-m, Hub Bla- k f, I a, m. U p. Trl. T7. rnnT -M..tt miH M tir.. or. Tori i ii'i ornra botira to 4 0R.H!4I AM. D D N.-Atakaa ajt ur toya Maaontq Tampta. ! am. a noura, a. nx la p. aa. n rit'llt.-fhila-lphi Dantal i v"-,; M.onio TainpM; Tat 113. r. WAf.f Ml. O. K. Wil.f. - - w a a" i w i t r t.: Ti. i. iNarriANcn. rn't.iTT MtTTirAt. f.trn in "'l1. O. of 1'hlU.UInhla... m oilman. O.noral Acnt; ." J'i't'l lildtf. i K. NiritofA.omra, Alakaa "t.. I'f. An.lrraon; ofllK hoiira, 1:30 n'Tt'tf. urrj TvniANCK co. f Nr.w tonic. " Korh:, A nt. Honolulu. AnntiTKcm. v.rr. a I'AOK, Afrhltarta and ir.im,a r....ma Arllnirton If .nr,i,,,. . t,. nkatchaa and J aiTaf aa fumlahad at Bhort BO- r.i; i n. i,n TT1 r"; Tii a i m iMh.t.ii-Muii. nt ni.a-n, rort t. MET DEATH II AJOFFIN QnnM!AAl O I Mntendent of the Imperial Mews, are . before It was sensational Suicide ofS52? "r,v " K" - ,h 28th Details of the Terrific tt a tnmese Ueneral. PEKIB'S POLYGLOT PAPER crease the number of Its pupils to at Ieat' 1G0, and it canvassers are now stumping the cou Urjr In order to per ade the people to neml their sons and Mothers to the Institution. Politics ami commerce are said to be the prin cipal subjects of study. ENGLISH MILCH COWS. The Ayreshlre milch cow.?, forty; in number, which were purchased ' In hngland by Viscount Kujinami, super TYPHOON AT I iiunuivunu Storm There. Englishmen To Start a Daily in beven Languages in China's Capital. i YOKOHAMA. Nov. 24.-A circum- stantl.il account of the suicide- of Shou-ahun. transcribed by an Osaka pnpr from a vernacular Chinese Jour nal, supplies an excellent proof of the pitiable state In which China and the Chinee have bcn plarl m conse quence of the present trouble. When the Russian troops, snvs th Chlne pupr, with the objwt of going from lUagoveschensk to the Interior of Man churia In order to protect the railway, asked General Shou for permission to march through his district the per mission was refused and the Russian detachment then tried to travel on the Amur, hut was at once bombarded bv Shou s army. The Siberian officer who wlsheil to see Shou. to obtain nermia- slon by peaceful means, wan also sim ilarly received. Shou had a trusted lieutenant and bosom friend named Wang, and this man. convinced of the Incompetency of Shou's troop to at.-'nd before the regular RusRian forces, tried by the use. of strong lan guage to bring Shou to repnt of his reckles prix-efdlnga. Shou remained Incorrigible, and the upahot of the matter was that the two boom friends became completely estranged, and the matter culminated In Wang's flight, his capture and finally his execution by Shou. The latter hail not many rtrya tr fwttlWe the Mend 1 towards whom h behaved In this way, for-on August 2!th Shang-cheng fell, and the news brought home o Shou with dou Ma) poignancy the correctness Wangs forecast. To atone for MAY LIVES WERE LOST l COPPER IN JAPAN. It Is reported. that Messrs. Boyes & Co., of Yokohama, have begun to work the Miyata copper mine in Hita-chl-mura. Taga-gorl. Ibaraki-ken. The lease of the mine covers an area of &80.000 tsubo, and It is said that the ore contains a large quantity of stil- pnate or iron. CURIOUS ACCIDENT. A sad accident occurred on th night of the 17th Instant to a farmer's fam-J lly at Hadano-rnura, Naga-gori, Saga mi. At about 9 o'clock on that day the wire (3b) of the farmer above men- tloned was frightened out of the house HONGKONG, Nov. 17.-In the special by the storm that shook the building .... , . violently, but again entered the housl e,Ution bt Hongkong Daily Press on in the hope of bringing away 'her hus- Saturday afternoon last we gave some . band. But at the verr moment that particulars of the disastrous effe'tn of through the breakers. However, both ' boats reached the upturned vessel In time and together saved twelve, while a number of others were lustily swim ming for the shore, carried forward with the swiftly flowing current east wards toward Murray pier. Second Engineer Thomson was one araone the iiiav iriitu me xoresnore ana two others touched ground ' at Pedder's wharf. It was well , on towards noon known that the carpenter Up to the time of going further discovery had been made, although the foreshore is being searched for some distance to the east jward and westward. The Canton River cost the contractors. Messrs. Punchard, Lowther & Co., 40,000, and as already tated in the Daily Press, her appar atus la of the most recent design and constructed upon the latest known sci entific principles of dredging either in sea or river water. When it is consid- WORDS OVER THE WATER The Wireless Telegram From La Paloma. . H0USeS Blown Down and Big ShipS ! red that in 15 or 20 minutes 150 tons Were Driven Ashore and Wrecked. could be put into her hoppers, which had a capacity of 75 tons, it may be I well taken for granted that she was an important accession to the deep dredg ing resources of the far East. The work of. raising her has already been commenced. FOUNDERING OF SANDPIPER. Among the vessels which have come to grief in the harbor was H.M.S. out in the the Kowloon pected to be delivered to the latter company In a couple of weks. The steamer Is to be placed on the Tarn-suI-Hongkong line. ROSETTA CHARTERED. they were emerging from the house, the typhoon by which the city was vis- sandpiper which was TvZ It collapsed, and the hnsband and wife . ,., . ' . , , .sanapiper. which as lying were both killed itvA ear,y ,n the morning of that day. man-of-war anchorage on U WW iipiv T tvpD Further inquiries go to show that the slUe She made signals of distress at Th Talnln Mar.V Mil of lif nd e damage to property about 'c,ock in the morning and the The Talnln Maru. now being con- , , F ' torpedo boat destroyer Otter went to structed at the Kawasaki Shipyard to even more erlous than was at first her asslstance. She was, however, un- the order of the Osaka Shosen Kaisha, anticipated. No part of the city has able to prevent her from foundering. nas almost been nnlShed and IS ex- escaped. Much of th U.hri haa in but bv maatcrlv spamanshln tiiipoKMlsil meantime been cleared away from the ln taklnS off th crew, damaging her streets, but on Saturday evidence of Dows wlth the floating wreckage in so the visitation was seen on every. handdoIngr- Lieut- Wilkin, who commanded 4kn f 1 1 11 . x 1 . . Wreckage was strewn on the lower 1 c a i" ue compumemea on me thoroughfares, broken branches trees man"er in which he handled his vessel. The Bteamer Roaetta, which was and small landslips on the higher roads AU nands were saved with the ex'cep purchased by the Toyo Klsen Kaisha and' general debris on th Trva nt tlon of a man of the name of Bedford, from the P. O. Steamship Company, is niatsheds there ari- ?nanv in th minnv ?ne of the armorer's crew, Mtfiose body to be chartered by the Nippon Yusen larire and small, nil hH Mri. was subsequently recovered and buried Kaisha for use" on its Australian line, enced disaster. Strone- tn.n iipnhnno w,th the usual honors on Monday after- The charter contract is not, we under- posts in Des Voeux road were bent by noon- stand, to expire until April, 1S02. The the force of the wind to an antrle of 35 ! V COLLAPSE OF BUILDING. vessel in quesuon. iu De lanen ae- degrees and iron lamp posts had every- ' The typhoon was the cause of the col- iivery 01 oy me lusen iaisna on Le- where assume I the most cember 10th. and will be despatched shapes. The roofs of the houses along ious affair of this kind taking place In turn i uivuuauui. un me iui ui me the rraya. especially, had suffered Queen's Road Central. For some time same month. The Rohilla, another nioxt severely. In the harhor muh past a considerable mimhpp of nrt. steamer purchased by the Toyo Klsen damage was done, the native rrafi- men have been cneaepd at ivrns irr irr i.' -i i i . i , - - - - rwaina, 13 now unuergoing overnaui- esnec allv sufferlnir. manv hnt h.ino. and 170. whlrh oro hintr rphniu Moo u 1.1113 n'ln iuiiuu ui Lii u, uk unir and Dresumab V manv llv- loat ,166 and 168 had been razpd almost to will probably be put on the reserve The water early on Saturday morning 'the ground, but the second and top Ust, and be used for occasional trips rontHtnfH a i9r nnantitv ? toH floors of Nn i?n nam nn .t,nin ' - w -O V bAili la UJ1V J1C9 TV tTI Z ---O Sr " V, .3 VilV Ul IIV VYU1 n HLNTING DOGS. sunk Inside the Causeway bay break- underneath having been taken away, a a . t . . . 4 a 1 1 1 iooi nunting iogs are being largely w"r. a great number or native craft ine "ors in question were used as fought after of late by sportmen In f,f a,l were wrecked and sunk at seeping places by the Chinese work- of the capital and ln the provinces, some laumatl. The Canton day steamer men, or whom there were said to be 14 Ms lor them even taking the trouble of Hankow .was unable to leave for Can- At about G o'clock on Saturday morn- grnve error Shod decided to commit lordcrlng them from abroad, thus lon or Saturday morning and there lin& ine supports gave way and the suicide, and that In the unmanly man-1 spending several hundred ven. Under was no steamer for. Macao unt il 5 n m (building came down with a loud crash nef characteristic of the Chinese. Helthcse circumstances It 1.4 no wonder Residents who remember the disastrous A Chinese constable who was on duty derided to die by means of opium. He that we often near of cases of the typhoon of 1S74 say that hte wind was near by blew his whistle and No. 5 po wished his wife t share his fate, but! theft of such dogs. We understand Saturday was equally as strong, the Ilce 8tan being close at hand, Ser- ahe stoutly refused. She said that the that the animals stolen In the city are nly difference being that it did not eant Robertson and the other Euro- mlaery was of his own making, and I disposed of In the provinces, and vice last so long. - peans there were soon on the spot, to- that there was no reason why she I versa. About a week aeo Professor The first Intimation of rnueh wmiiipp Kther with a gang of coolies in charge should of her own accord suffer death ISoko Nagaoka. of the College of Ag- was given at 11:45 on the morning of of InsPectors McNab and Gould. The on account or It. Ills ons took the ricuiture, nad his favorite pointer stol- Thursday, the Sth Inst., when the rd "rsi m&n recovered was dead, but the SEMT WHEN 15 MILES OUT: Yacht is Carrying Expert Gray, to Look After the Island Stations. aide) of the mother; helr eldest broth-1 en, and now he has offered rf, they declared, had been killed I for Its recovery. In a battle with the Russians. That was enough to atone- for the foolhardy doings of their father, and they would rather remain behind and save from extinction the family of Shou. Aban doned by his wife ami children the a reward cone was hoisted, pointing downwards. Indicating a tvbhoon to the south of ihe colony. At 11:40 a. m. on Friday, the 9th inst., the red cone was taken SNOWFALL AT NIKKO. It 1.4 renorted that nt rhunll ...... ..... ,...,.. i W1 . , , . . . . assuming a very beau- ' mi"K on,i "oisieo. point ing to the snowfall of irlB inwards. a 'Kn that the ty- ko, nature is a tlful aspect ow the lfith and 17th drifted about one rNitNp:icn. N ru.r. A CO. ri...-tri, hna and 'I'i'i. i.Tr-rni- Holtarmakera, v v.. l"VK. r R.-Hurveynr and r-"nar. orfloa nW MtrKfl Mda., f CI tr ..ra taaan f,.f typawrlttna;! Itt'.v WiiUK.l.-rnatneem and nf- i i'pin. ami n'l.ir i I T n rxf.) plot pnw.f plant: f I?. S.r,aa Work; Tel. 15 'T TATttt. St. Am. n. C. B- a? It V Iraull rnr.. MI ' K. lf.inotnln; Tel. m. r"NTrtAcrronji. rVTV -Cintrac toe and Huttder. '"I "n,a flttln' Kpl.k .nr.f nr ;M'"l' "'top, 'ata Walk; real 1W Aa., near Kawalo. iCWRLRttrf. r- (Ma,- rnlMi Java! "i s lv.r.fT,iha. aea advt Inald. 'I'TICtANH, a u . . . "r.ir.FtT TOtlH RTM; ynu "nn t,.. tinn'l . ethar VMie avaa differ from I '"H't ar.aa ukaan lmnmMrl '"' ' thaw B. Ill ... MM ,. t - ii. iniri w..r " J " " K l.rr'A", OITICIAN, Iove ii "HOKRU. :'r.f irrii'at Ouean Pt.. Op i 1' '"I Co. AUr.NTH. ' 1 '""T'mirnt. iit.tpt.t f Kona. k, v . yrni a nmr, fvinaj .NfMitiAnirns. V I'lf Y 1 I'nMtn "tann:rpher. at InanfanrM dapt., around Tel. Main Q. " w t vvnn croup-. II '1. ivhi Uvea nar Amenl. v. N. v.. aaya: "Cham i I :.tfiit tr la th. beat ' ' , rvt. iida.l fl la m. fine iv fi.r rrnun and never N h"u ilven as amn "i hi. ir. r aven after 'sh hua developed. It will tm-k. This should h I "fid a bidlle nf th k.q.t nt hand ran-lf to ' ft i it i II ft 1 t at aaaa as Tr wf m V, r r !,.. it r.nnaon, Pmlth ; 1 1, I'.,. II,, "I u if The snow has foot deep, and It poor m sgulded old dlded Lontriuta magn,nrent,y wlth"'the gor to die alone He took bout f- geous autumnal tint still In Its glory Ituatd to the use of the drug, the UICH MAN S SECRET potUm did not have the expected ef-l A certain rich man who resides In phoon was within 300 miles. At 6:15 the same evening orders were received (next two were alive and four others were 'also living when they were ex ltrtcated and all six were sent to the hospital. The last one found alive had a most miraculous escape. It was about 11:15 when he was freed. His legs had ben seen protruding from the debris for some time and the police lit- from the observatory that the com- 't,e thought that there was any life left munity should be warned of what was ln hlm- 11 was found, however, on the coming by the firing of a gun. The removal of the bricks and mortar which gun. however, refused to go off and an surrounded him that his face was intimation was sent round to all th. pressed against a cross wall and that ect Upon him. II then ordered hlsllgu, Rlktizen, is one of the largest police stations with the result that all ihe had room to breathe. He was tak- servant to flr-a pistol at him. but the shareholders of the Japan Railway Were on the alert. Another warning en out Just In time. Altogether 14 bullet mlaaed a vital part and hit him Company, and as such, he enjoys the siimal was hoisted nt 7-an vf- to bodies were recovered eight dead and rn thai shoulder, for the hand of the privilege of traveling free In a first- white lights in a vertical line. This in- six alive and this being the number to servant trembled. Thereupon Shou class car or the company a privilege dicated bad weather and that the wind account for the police stopped work as put on full uniform, and laid himself I which he always uses. This rich man, waB extected to veer. At 7-in Sntur- soon as the fourteenth man was lown In a comn and again naue nis says our miormanx, onen reiuses mm- dav mornlne the tvohoon was signalled brought to light. aervsnt fire at Mm. The servant de- self the extravagance of buying a to b. east tlf lne (,))ony ana a iRnai THK peak district ... a. a I -..a a. I a. a-. an.. .. a V . V- A -1 - I A.. V. at . I riming inn muruerous vttkt. rmn a i iw "ar ,-u-ii ue nuns ii. iu ue ui u. hoisted at 8:40 a. m. showed that it sixth son wr-nt with a halberd to rne isman edition, and wnen he travels Was to the north of the colony help of th- servant anu sp-aru w.wi nia wi s sou xue omer memoers afterwards things began to quiet down -nf.-rinir more op le-a his proetrated rather. wno ex- ot tne lamuy, ne never anows tnem and at 4:30 the black ro. takpn r-""" Wireless messages between a vessel at ea and the station near Diamond Head nave been successfully sent. The schooner yacht, La Paloma, which left Honolulu with Expert Gray of the Marconi sytem to inspect the stations on the other Islands, was rigged with a bamboo pole at her masthead, sur mounted by a wire connecting with instruments in the cabin. When fif teen miles at sea on the way to Molo- kai. Expert Gray began working his instrument, and the instrument at Waialae responded ' quickly with the following message ticked off in. dots and dashes on. the tape: - Fifteen Miles Off the Coast. C. W. Macfarlane: Pole at the masthead all right and will stand the sea. Heavy trades blowing and high seas running. Yacht doing very well and making good time. Manager Cross, Operator Hobbs and C. W. Macfarlane were at the ticker when the message came about 5 o'clock Thursday evening. Then the ' ticker moved on and the following message wa9 read by the operator: "Where did you 6tore " the nighty lamps?" The answer by Macfarlane was: "In the forward locker." ( Again the ticker reeled oft anothei strip which interpreted, read: . ."AlJ right; I have found them." V Yesterday afternoon a practical test1 was made of the wireless telegraph system between Waialae and Molokai. Superintendent Reynolds of th leper settlement, sent the following message, to be delivered at Kalaupapa: ' "How many cattle have you there?" The message was sent to Kaunaka- kai, and thence to Kalaupapa over the pali by horseback. An answer was hoped for last evening, but owing to probable delay In the messenger service, none came. This would have been the first prac tical outside business message sent over the system. s rlalmed that h was almost dead, and to get Into the same car with himself. ,,own. Sunday was a beautifully fine hade him snui inn comn. ims uui wnus lurm into a iniru-ciasa cur (iav In the Peak district a good deal of Shortly damage was done, most of the houses from the storm y windows being blown in or .out, while the roofs of lne, and the) coffln was next nailed I because he has to pay their fares down, thn dying man uttering an me hlle feeble gnatns which ceased In about two hours. The paper wnicn originally published this story says that It cot It from a person who had recently reached Shanghai from Amur A IlLOT ON THE SCUTCHEON - . in niini-iiuis ui ine wrecKHge, eic, FREAK Dr BENEVOLENCE-) was much in evidence. Mrs. Tel. wife of Mr. Teljiro Hirofa, DREDGER CANTON RIVER LOST of Takana-mura. Hyogo prefecture. Is ine amateur photographer taK- .house lost a' portion of the tiles nearly every The Peak hospital is badly damaged. The rain came through in torrents, flooding ! several rooms, and two or three win CAS A. VANE FOUND. As daylight on Saturday approached .dows were blown out and the porch i Sunken French. Transport Discovered in the Inland Sea. The sunken French transport Cara- vane, wnicn coiuaea . wixn a Japanese transport steamer, the . Yamaguchi Maru, in the Inland Sea on the night of the 24th ultimo, has been discover ed one knot northeast of Ogijima, where the sea is twenty-two fathoms deep. The body of Lieutenant Capi- talne, who was second in command of the transport, has been found on the coast of Shodzushima, and that of a sailor has been picked up on Ogishima. A Kencho officer with an escort had the remains of the deceased conveyed to Kobe, where they were buried with all appropriate rites. It is now known that but three of the ill-fated vessel's crew liave met their death, having been struck down and killed fcy the falling of the Caravane's mast shortly after the impact.. The rest, eighty three in all, including Capt. Diacre, have been landed at Kobe. A court of credited with a strange yet highly thoe ,n tnA neghborhood of tne Dock carried completely away. Des Voeux commendable eccentricity. If we may Extenslon Works heard cries proceed- an Cameron Villas suffered consider- no i-u.il ii. on- una mien ucru paint-u Jnfr from the harbor and it soon b- ao'y. roors, windows ana veranaas in to see children going home from their -nTarpnt ,hat .nmMhir7 ha,i he. 'some cases all being damaged. The Tha shameful conduct of an un-1 school ln the village, dripping wet, in h-v.., 'Chalet and Dunford on this occasion known assistant Interpreter or me rainy weather, bhe lately had about ruver, which recently arrived here from ot ofr wlth very little damage beyond Army, mougn unoouoieu.y u-.u, r oruei Paisley, where she was built by Messrs. inquiry into the disaster is being held by the Japanese marine authorities. severe reprehension, may be consider-land the name of the school printed on ed a less serious than similar conduct! them, and unknown to anybody took on th cart of a regular officer. And I them to the school. Subsequently she urh a case has Jeen made public to h9 said to have offered to donate ten r,ok encurnbrances and overhead our regret and Indignation, be It said. nh-t.tetitenAnt Tokusuko Jlmbo, or rh Eighteenth Company of the Elev enth Regiment of the Hiroshima Di vision has been sentenced by a court martial to three months major con- nment for a very dlsgracerui act, Fleming & Ferguson of that city. Dur ing one of the fitful gusts of wind the ponderous craft with her massive der- gear had failed to maintain her equilibrium and had, almost without any warning, the loss of plaster and the inrush of water through some of the windows and the roof. The old timber houses known as Stokes Bungalows escaped all harm, and Dunottar sustained lit tle damage beyond the destruction of some of the Venetians 'and the smash- umbrellas to the school annually in the future. POLYGLOT NEWSPAPER. i listed to port and capsized. As to the in of a number of panes of glass. The TS Irnvnrn 1r.Min11a Mi. nrprlse number of rrew workmen and Iroof of the police Station at Mount A AaTT WCII RUnu JUUI IIOIISV. a " -- - " ' " Tln9. rin Khma valnablo asetat.' others On board at the time It was Im- ,oougn was paniauy einypeu oil. otew a " lil C0 W n v ii aa wiiv uauuavav ' . . ance It was our good fortune to secure possible on Saturday last to give any , xerrace wuu.u nave Bui .l i-apiy i v. tnan ti. In 10Q7 ai-nurnte fiirnre It va known thattnaa noi me winu wnen ai me neigni iaiuug iaii . uia u uv,, , .. .. , . . i. i i- i -nrn I'.intnin Si-ott who wns in pnmmami nf . of its fury first unroofed ana then de- the accused had received In trust a .' nf .i,,-. Vftar a her. waa aboard, as also were the chief molished the whole of the servants' .. r . Chlnimnn nnmed I " ., , ... . - - - - iiri-iaiu iim ; Unnor nf iinlnu character under the engineer. Mr. White, the second engln- Choil five- lumps of gold eacn vaiuwi ai . t. rin Times Th -na- eer. Mr. Thomson: the carpenter. Mr. mnn. II- on.rtH ha trol I v ... . w anout yu. i th. nrosnectus "will h la- Mcllroy. and the majority of the crew It h him. wnen nis regimeni wa ur WCCKS ago. na .Milltlo. f.nf.annt.rl In It would annear that all on hoard were bungalows on Mount Gough hill when, shortly after, he got a furlough, in fae pr,nted ln chl- apprehensive of danger as the elements !flt the force of the storm and had . . i - m . . . n a tii tti r.a 111 i.n i ,i - . ... , t i , rr. . . na iiMiK lour ui iuo . ... . .... , quarters at Nos. 4, 5 and 6. The per sonal effects of the servants had to be abandoned for the time, as they only and Intended to sell them under an aaanmed name for a little over 1.700 ven tr a broker In the city. The mat hsftnc reached the ears of the gendarmes, the younir man was ar rested and handed over to a court tn.irtla.1. which ha passed upon him the above mentioned sentence and has a a. a . rf-a I A - -X IL M - A 3 A. nese, Japanese, Engllsn. irencn, uer- neisnieneu in meir iury lowurus me man, Rusolan and Italian." The morning. It must have been very scheme may appear rather too ambl- shortly after the dredger had fallen a tlous, but we believe it Is well suited prey to the elements and turned turtle to the unprecedented condition of life that the lookout man on the Tamar ob- ln the Chinese capital. At all events served some of the Canton River's crew the experiment Is worth trying, and clinging to the bottom of the vessel, we heartily wish the novel venture all which then resembled a cigar-shaped TV . t Vi n varAV will rtyit f t IT f fl A nf rnn 'a 1 jvr.lj'sti. nlan moreiver ordered the jumps to re re- k pn Mex,can doiiarg per year, and reported the sight of the struggling turned to the rightful owner. dollar ter month. The manager seamen and boats from both vessels JAPANESE STUDENTS IN CHINA. wJ1j be tne editor's brother, Mr4. J. with volunteer crews put off to the res- The To-a-Dobunkal's School at Kan- Cowen, formerly of the London Thnes. cue. It was at the greatest risk that " . .. . l ... . . . v r- m , . . . . . . ii. I. . nreaent educating iwenii we may state n wasuai hjii mi. hip minars iaier, wnn ner crew 01 Jaoanesn boys maintained at the Jap- T. Cowen is now on a short visit to five under Queen's Harbor Master Rut- ines novernment expense, or atitniS country 10 purcnase type anu ma- ht. seeming at every moment to meet that of local offices or prttate lndl-chlnery for hit paper. He will shortly with a similar fate to those they were idiiils The school has decided to In-, return to Peking by way of Shanghai, about to save, forged their way t also sev eral windows blown In. The new house in course of erection for Mr. H. W. Slade, which was nearly ready for the roof, has been reduced to a gaunt ruin and the works on the adjoining site be longing to Mr. Turner are much dam aged. One of the coolies employed in the erection of these houses was killed by the falling debris and his body was not recovered until Sunday morning, when it was dug out and taken to the police station at Mount Gough. A LARGE SAILING SHIP ASHORE There Is nothing fresh to report for the Wanchal district beyond what has nlrendv been published. The American - Red Iantem Society. HONGKONG, Nov. 17 According to a Shanghai . native paper, near the be ginning of the last moon many mem bers of the Red Lantern Society are supposed to have taken refuge In the city of Chengtu (whither it will . be remembered, the Empress Dowager is said to contemplate flight), and one cicuiug cue luuautiauu vi uio piavv were startled by the sudden exhibition of red lanterns in all the principal thoroughfares. The officials imme diately put out proclamations forbid ding the display, whereupon the lan terns vanished as mysteriously as they had appeared, and the officers to in vestigate the matter, could obtain no clue. A strict watch has since been maintained. (Continued on Paga I) Japanese Antiquities. Coolies engaged in digging the foundations of a proposed four-story annex to the American naval hospital on the bluff at Yokohama made a rather interesting discovery on Sun day, says the Japan Herald. They had descended some little distance when the earth suddenly fell in and revealed an underground chamber which, on further examination, was found to be about seven ,feet in height, and of suf ficient area for five Japanese mats to be spread comfortably. The walls were hard, smooth, and blackened with smoke, but no utensils or relics of any kind were brought to light. These un derground chambers are frequently discovered in Japan, and are supposed to be of great antiquity. N'ni, wttolaial (antf. (