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SUMMARY OF NEWS FROM WORLD OVER SHORT ITEMS LIPPED FROM DAILY PAPER DISPATCHES IURINl PAST WEEK. Review of Happenings in Both East ern and Western Hemispheres During the Past Week-National, Historical,' Political and Personal Events Told in Short Paragraphs. Mme. Sarah Bernhardt recently cele brated her 67th birthday. Christian Lulndberg, former Swedish plemier, died recently in Stockholm. Richard Groker will go to Florida, where he will remain until late next spring. Felix Zeim, the celebrated painter. died recently in Paris. He was 90. oears old. Clubwomen of San 1"rancisco are planning a system of pensioning wid ows with children. The most dreaded of all labor trou bles, a general teamsters' strike. threatens New York. Martin (Grifian, secretary of the American Catholic Historical society and a church historian, is dead. "After Tripoli. what next?"' is the question which is agitating the Swiss press and public. They fear ftaly. The imperialists have regained the, upper hand in Nanking and the dragon flag again floats over Kiang Yin fort. Mrs. Alexander B. White of Paris, Tenn., was recently elected president of the United Daughters of the Cana' federacy. Near Couderay. Wis.. mistaken, it is 6 supposed for a deer, Jorda Snadberg, 9 aged 4, was shot and killed by an un- t known hunter. According to figures compiled by the California state board of health, the deaths from tuberculosis there for the year 1910 were 4872. Unqualified indorsement of the Nau tional Country Life congress, to be keld in Spokane this month, is gives by Theodore Roosevelt. With his arrival in Boston 20-year old Frank lines of Halifax has com pleted 12,800 miles of a 15,000-mile walk that he is making for a purse. Churches, cemeteries and homes and gardens in and about Los Angeles wore battered by a windstorm which swept southern California early Saturday. For the first time in many years a woman was elected to head the Wiscon sin Teachers' association. The honor was bestowed ont Mrs. Mary P. RIlad fqrd. Chinese student clubs of 12 universi ties and colleges throjlghout the United States are protesting against the sug gested interference in the ('hinese revo lution. Comptroller of the Treasury Murray has undertaken to destroy by moral suasion the practice of banks of per mitting customers to overdraw their deposits. With the intention of joining the negroes in Liberia, an exodus from eastern Oklahoma has begun. Ten negro families left Saturday for Mon rovia, Liberia. Appeal direct to the supreme court of the United States from the decision of the commerce court on the Spokane rate case is planned by the interstate commerce commission, according to Washington (D. C.) dispatches. Late Tokio papers bring news of an explosion of powder in the drying room building of the Meguro government arsenal near Shinagawa, Tokio, which killed 11 men and destroyed much property. The two largest gold bars ever re ceived at the assay office in Seattle were recently received. One blar weighed 1780 Troy ounces and is valued at $31,000, the other weighed 1Ii84 ounces, worth $30,900. The shipment came from Fairbanks, Alaska. Prince Ching still acts as premier of China, although in a succession of edicts from the hand of "the emperor" the crafty Yuan Shi Kai has been be sought to some to the capital and take the post. Yuan reports that he is ,sick." C. W. Trickett, assistant attorney genorpl, who ias been conducting a campaign against liquor sellers and dis orderly houses in Wichita, was horse whipped in a hotel lobby by Mine. :Marie Zeah, a fortune teller, who claimed he ruined her business. Democrats Claim Good Record. Dodge City, Kan.-"The great battle of 1912 must be fought on the splendid record of the democrats in this, the Sixty-second congress, and upon that record we can win, not only next year, but for years to come." Thus spoke Champ Clark, speaker of the national house of representatives. here. Tie Election Decided. Canton, Ohio.-Arthur Turnbull, democrat, won the mayoralty of Can ton over Henry Schilling, socialist, by the toss of a coin, the recent election having resulted in a tie. NORITWSlT NEWS ITEMS. An explosion of gas in the coal fur nace of the heating plant in a business block in Kalispell, Mont., did great t~anage. Without having been impaneled to try a single tease the trial jury in the federal court was discharged Saturday at Moscow. At Provo, Tituh, Frank A. Clark. a resident, who, faced 'trial on a charge of robbery of A. Pearson of $2400, was found guilty. - paul Seheinmeister, a wealthy saloon g mau of Dairy, Oregon, is missing. When last seen by his relatives he had 1, $2000 in his possession. n A correspondence course in proselyt ing for missionaries and prospective missionaries has been arranged by otli cials of the Mormon church. The British Columbia herring fishery output this year is estimated at $2,000, h O00. The fish are salted, and most of theni are sold in Japan and China. At Baker, Ore., the United States t postofflce inspector has brought charges of maisappropriation of money received for money orders against Mplvin Alex aender. The hearing of Harold Sawley. sus pected of dynamiting the'school house stnve at Powderhorn bay, ~a- been set for November 21, in C'eer. d'Alene City. . The action of State Pure Food Inspec, for .Tames H. Wallis in enforcing the .pure food laws of Tdaho is receiving favorable comment in all sections of the state. Owing to lack of yard room. and to .reduce the stock of lumber on hand the Panhandle Lumber company shut 'down its sawmill at Spirit Lake, Ida.. for the winter. "Old" Bill Miner, one of the most notorious train robbers who ever oper ated in the northwest, was recently captured at St. Clair, a small town in Georgia, and placed in prison. Jacob Nance, aged 61, was killed Saturday afternoon by a steam train on Summit avenue about eight blocks from the center of Coeur d'Alene City. Mfr. Nance was sitting on the track. President L. C. Crow of the Farmers' Educational and Cooperative union has r called a convention of all of the offi cers of the union in Washington and Idaho, in Spokane, November 25. 1 Wednesday, November 29, has been fixed as the date for the assemblinI e of delegates from commercial clubs for the purpose of organizing the Federa tion of Commercial Clubs of the Tnland Empire. The Ilumbird Lumber company, at a Sandpoint, Ida., is testing a new stump 1 puller. Experience has shown that the v new machine, with a team and two men, will pull between 60 and 70 a stumps a day. d Thomas and George Misehe, aged 13: und 11 years, who stole a horse from \tntth. s of In Wh;t h fC..rn. .., n ,..,l * Matthews of Whitefish and a $40 sad dile from Mike Matt at IBigarm, pleaded guilty to grand larceny and were com mitted to the state reformatory. In furtherance of the Tdaho-Wash ington Development league movement a large party of Lewiston business men will leave November 2- and make a tour of all towns of the Camas prairie., the trip being made in a special train. Fire at Victoria, B. C., destroyedt Ite interior of the four-story brick build ing of T. N. Hibben & Co., wholesale stationery, entailing a loss of $100,000.. Records of the British Columbia Pio neer association were entirely de stroyed. Speaking before the students of the John Marshall law school recently, United States Senator W. L. Jones of Washington declared that in his public life he had never heard of a senator or representative who sold his vote or his influence. State superintendents of public in strrction in 12 states of the Union I have written to headquarters of the 1 National Country Life congress ex pressing unqualified indorsement of the aims and plans of the meeting to be 1 held in Spokane November 23 to 29. Judge Dunn of Idaho has handed down a decision in which he held that a dray company can accept for trans- 1 portation from a railroad company or express company at the office of such company, or any other common carrier, to the place of business or home of the consignee, intoficating liquors. "I hope every township supervisor and road overseer in the northwest will make it a point to be present at the sessions of the National Country Life congress to be held on Tuesday. November 28, morning and afteriioon, good roads day," said Frank W. Guil- 1 bert, vice president and secretary of the Spokane County Good Roads asso- 1 ciation. Money Couldn't Keep Him Alive. Los Angeles.-A small iron-bound box, found at the head of the gbed on which A. H. Odell, a recluse, ,aged 80. and a relative of former GObvernor Odell of New York, was found dead, is held by the police. The box, it is believed, contained papers disposing of $500,000 worth of property. Evidence at McNamara Trial. Los Angeles.-Masses of twisted iron and photographs of great girders will play an important part, in the MeNamara murder trial in determining the cause of the explosion and fire which wrecked the Los Angeles Times building a year ago with a loss of 21 lives. GREAT TORNADO SOTH11 WISCONSII SEVEN LIVES REPORTED LOS AND HUNDREDS INJURED SATURDAY NIGHT, Damage to Crops and Proper Amounts to Hundreds of Thousan. of Dollars-Vicinity of Orfordvil Buffered Most-Michigan, Minneso, and Canada Heavy Losers. At least seven lives were lost ar scores of persons were injured, some f tally, in a tornado which swept Roe county, Wisconsin Saturday evenin, Hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of damage was done to crop buildings and other property. Dozens of families whose homes wei destroyed sought shelter in sheds , other small structures out of the pat of the storm. In other instances man persons found themselves without a roe tq shelter them and because the floode roads made travel impossible they wer forced to pass the night in the ope fields. Measures for the relief of the storm stricken communities at Orfordvillc Hanover, Milton Junction and Miltoi have been instituted by citizens o Janesville and Beloit, but much suffer ing necessarily must ensue. A cold wave followed the storm ani sleet and snow added to the misery o the survivors. Loss of Lives. The greatest loss of life was at Or fordville. There Mrs. John Clowder, 8( years old, was killed, as were also a father and two daughters of a family whose surname is Smith, and a Mrs, Broede. At Milton one person, as yet unidentified, is reported dead. Amy Korban, 8 years old, was killed when her home, Just north of Janes ville, was demolished. Footesville, Magnolia, Pewaukee and rther villages are also reported to have suffered severely from the storm. The storm broke with a fury never >efore equaled in this part of the coutn ry. Farmers and villngers were aught entirely unawares. A high wind sad prevailed during most of the after oon. About 4 o'clock the cloud low red and became black as night. Farmers who were in their fields heltered themselves as best they could, nd man yarrived home to find their uildings destroyed and in, some cases rives and children missing. The storm passed almost as quickly s it came up, and' left the country esolate. The roads were almost inm assable, but messengers were pressed ato service and made their way to anesville and Beloit as swiftly as pos ible. Orfordville is equally distant rom both these cities, and assistance ras hurried to the stricken villages. Tn the vicinity of Orfordville the storm. Fierce in Minnesota. Winter rode in Saturday night on n wind that cut like a two-edged sword. Out of the northwest blew a gale which was driving rain, snow and sleet alter nately. Many trains are icebound. Snow 15 Feet Deep. Barnesville, Minn., reports snow drifts 10 to 15 feet high, and all east bound trains delayed. Southern Minnesota is storm-swept and snowbound. Advices from Fargo, N. D., state that practically all wire communication was abandoned by telegraph companies in North Dakota. Six inches of snow is reported. Millions of Bushels Wheat Lost. The weather at Winnipeg is reported to be the severest on record at this time of year, and it is said millions of bushels of wheat are frozen in shock. Fully one-fourth of western Canada's 200,000,000 bushels of wheat, it is esti mated, is lost. Also in Michigan. Owoso, Mgh.-Two dead, several badly injured and damage to $70,000 at least is the toll collected by the small sized cyclone which swept Owoso. SETTLERS GIVEN TIME TO PAY Secretary Fisher Orants Extension on Reclamation Projects. Extension of time in which settlers on government reclamation projects can make payments on their entries and water rights applications has been granted by Secretary of the Interior Fisher. He rules that no steps would be taken until after March 16, 1912, to enforce forfeiture for failure to make payment on all entries and water rights applications on which payment becomes due in December. Tariff Talk Cuts Revenues. The discussion of tariff schedules in congress and action reducing duties were responsible for the $19,0,000,000 de crease in customs receipts for the fiscal year 1911, according to the report of Treasurer McClung of the United States. On account of increases in re ceipts from other sources Mr. McClung pointp out, however, the receipts were $701,000,000, calling attention to the fact that the year closed with $77,600, 000 as working balance in the tre:,aslry. Writing a syllable at a time, a type writer invented by a Belgian newspaper man has a speed of from 125 to 150 words a minute. OTHER MARKETS. Dispatches concerning market quota tions, conditions and phases are as fol lows: Chicago. Cash quotations were as fellows: Flour-Off about 15c. Rye-No. 2, 9c. r Barley-Feed or mixing, 80c@1.14; fair to choice malting, $1.16@1.26. Timothy seed-$13@15.25. Clover seed--$14@20. Mess pork, per bbl., $15.62/.@15.75. Lard, per 100 lbs., $9.12i%@9.15. Short ribs, sides (loose), $8.10. Butter, steady. Creameries, 24.',@' F 32c; dairies, 22@28e. Eggs, steady. At mark, cases included, 17@20c; firsts, 25@27c. Cheese, steady. Dairies, 141,x e @14 3.4c. Twins, 14 a 15c; Long Horns, 14 3-4@l 5c. a Cattle, steady for best, others weak. Beeves, $4.65@9.10; Texas steers, $44 5.15; western steers, $4.35@8.25, stock era and feeders, $3@5.80; cows and I heifers. $2@6; calves, $5.50@8.50. Hogs, market slow to steady. Light, $5.60@6.30; mixed, $5.80@6.40; heavy, , $5.80(i6.40; rough, $5.80@6; good to choice heavy, $6@6.40; pigs, $3.65 i( 5.25; bulk of sales, $6.10@6.35. Sheep, market slow to weak. Native, $2.50@3.85; western, $2.7503.85; yearl ings, $3.70@4.40; lambs, native, $:.75(i 5.85; western, $3.75@5.80. New York. Hops firm. Hides unsettled. Leather firm. Petroleum steady. Wool quiet. Raw sugar easy. Muscovado, 89 test, 4.69c; centrifugal, 96 test. 5.12c; mo lasses sugar, 89 test, 4.37c. Refined easy. Spot coffee quiet; No. 7, 15 5-8c; Santos, No. 4, 14 3-4c; mild quiet; ('or dova, 16 1-2@19c nominal. Standar4 copper, firm. Spot and' No vember, $12.15@12.35: December, $12.20 @12.40; January, $12.25@12.50; Feb ruary, $12.25@12.55. Laice copper, $12.50(Uc12.62 1-2; electrolytic, $12.500@ 12.62 1-2. and casting, $12.25@12.37 1,2. Tin-Easy; spot, $41.30@42.20. Lead-Dull; $4.25@4.30. Spelter-Dull; $6:30@6.50. Antimony-Dull; Cookson 's, $4(ax 8.12 1.2. Tron-Quiet; No. I foundry northern, i $150,15.25; No. 2, $14.75@15; No. I 1 southern and do soft. $15@(15.50. Bar silver, 56 1-2; Mexican dollars. 46 1-2c. Portland. Wheat-Track prices: Club, 79@80c; bluestem, 82@83c; fortyfold, 80@81c; red Russian, 77@78c; valley, 79@80c. Butter-City and country extras, solid pack, 35 1.2e. Cattle-market steady. Choice steers. $5.60(4 5.95; good to choice, $5.25@5.50; I choice, $4.40@5; fair to good cows, $4(d) r 4.25; extra choice spayed heifers, $4.75 g @5; choice bulls, $3.75@4; good to choice bulls, $3.25@3.50; choice ealves. $7.50@.7.75; good to choice calves, $7.25 @7.50; choice stags, $4.50@4.75. HIogs-market steady. Choice lightt hogs, $6.85@7; 'good to choice hogs, l1 $6.50@6.75. 7 Sheep-Market steady. Choice yearl- d ing wethers, $3.60@4; choice twos and threes, $3.20@3.35; choice mountain lambs, $4.25@4.50; good to choice lambs, $4@4.25. San Francisco. Wheat-Steady. Barley-Firm. t Spot quotations-Wheat, shipping. $1.47 1-2@1.52 1-2. Barley-Feed, $1.95 @1.97 1.2, brewing, $2.02 1-2@.2.05. Oats-Red, $1.75@1.90, white, $1.85@ 1.87; black, $1.650.1.75. Millstuffs-Bran, $27@28; middlings, $32@35. Hay-Wheat. $13@20; wheat and oats, $12@17; alfalfa, $9@11. - Liverpool. Close: Wheat-December, 7s 2 1-2d; c1 March, 7s 2 1-2d; May, 7s 1 3-4d. Weathl- I er cloudy. h Pacific Northwest Wheat. Tacoma.-Bluestem, 83c; fortyfold, 81e; club, ROe: red Russian, 7R@70e. Portland.-Track prices: Club, 79(~I 90c; bluestem, 89@83c; fortyfold, 80 c 81c. Lewiston, Tdaho.-Bluestem. 73e; fortyfold, 71c; Turkey red, 70c; clubl,, 69c; red Russian, 68c; oats, $1.30; bar- I ley, brewing, $1.60; feed, $1.30. AT SPOKANE. Prices to Producers. The following list may be taken as a I fair standard of prices paid to pro ducers for the commodities named: Fruits and Vegetables-Potatoes, $1 1 cwt; cabbage, $1 cwt; apples, $1@5 t box; California red onions, $1.75 cwt. I Butter-Ranch, 20c lb. 1 Eggs-Ranch, $7.75 case; .eastern, ] $6.75 ease. Hay-Baled oat hay, $14 ton; wheat hay $15@16 ton; alfalfa, $13 ton; tim othy, No. 1, $19 ton. e Grain-Oats, $1.35 cwt; barley, $2.30 I cwt; wheat. $1.25 swt. (Hay and feed prices are f. e. b. ears, t Spokane.) Poultry-Live hens, 13e lb; dressed, g 16e lb; live springs, 13e lb; dressed. V 16e lb; old roosters, 9e Ib; dressed, 12e . lb; live geese, 13e lb; dressed, 16c lb: live ducks, young, 13c lb; old, 13c lb; dressed, 18@22c lb; fancy turkeys, 20, p 'b; dressed, 25c lb. b Retail Butter, Eggs and Flour. p Best creamery butter, extra fancy, 45e lb; eastern brand, 35e lb; best 1 ranch butter, 35e lb. a Strictly fresh stamped, 45c and 50, doz; eastern fresh, 35e, 40c and 45c doz; storage eggs, 35e doz. sI Foreign, first grade, $2.15 for 49 Ibs: 2 XXX Montana, $1.85 sack of 49 Ibs: k Big Loaf, Olympia, Red, White and Blue, $1.40 to $1.50 sack of 49 lbs: Ceretana and Kalispell, $1.85 per sack $ of 49 lbs; Climax, $2.15 per sack of 49 Ibs; Sapphire, hard wheat flour, $1.75 per- sack of 49 lbs; graham, whole wheat and rye, 85e per 24 lbs, 9-lb sack tc for 35c; rolled oats, 45@50e per 9 lb sack. Sugar cane, $7 and $7.50 cwt; sugar syrups, 65c to 90e gal; best Vermont maple syrup, $1.25 to $1.95 gal; honey, ec 20e each or 3 combs for 50c; strained, 7c 15e, 30c and 50s can; coal oil, best, lb $1.65 per 5-gal can; Pearl oil, $1.50 per st 5.gal can. Coffee-The price of coffee r TAFT FINALLY FINISHES TRiA LAST DAY SPENT IN GOINI THROU5I TENNESSEE AND VIlGINIA, Traveled More Than 16,000 Miles and Delivered Over 850 Speeches to Orowds Estimated to Contain 8,000, 000 People-Preparing Message to Congress. Bristol, Tenn.-His second long swing around .the circle practically con cluded, President Taft rushed through Tenneysee and Virginia en route to Washington. At Bristol, the last sched uled stop on the trip from Knoxville, where he spent Saturday morning, Mr. Taft was a little less than 300 miles from home. He reached the capital Sunday. He will. take a day or two of rest before beginning the work of writing his third annual message to congress. The message, friends say, will be one of the most important he has ever written. The presidential train has covered more than 15,000 miles, and if automo bile trips were to be included in the calculation the mileage would easily top the 16,000-mile mark. The president has delivered close to 350 speeches, passed through about 30 states and been seen by crowds that .r. Hilles estimates at more than 5,000,000 persons. Saturday the president's last day on the road, was given up to eastern Ten nessee. Knoxville got six hours of the )resident's time, and on the way to Hristol he made speeches from the rear ~nd of his train at five small towns. 't Greenville the president caught a glimpse of the home and the burial )lace of Andrew Johnson. Before he boarded his private car in inoxville the president called on Mrs. V. GC. Brownlow, widow of '"Parson'" 3rownlow, one of the famous gover ors of Tennessee. Mrs. Brownlow is -2 years old, but her mind is alert and he chatted with Mr. Taft for several ninutes. Every president of the United itates who has visited Knoxville since lie civil war has called at the Brown aw home to pay his respects and Mr. 'aft did not wish to leave until he had lone so. For the last dinner on his ear the resident, Mr. Hilles, Major Butt and )r. Thomas L. Rhoades, Mr. Taft's phy ician, who have made the long swing LVRUU.y, nwrc aervou Witn Tennessee the ear by citizens of Johnson City. HE GETS BAOK EYESIGHT. Rushes to Save Daughter, Falls-Blind for Seven Years, Now Sees. San Francisco, Cal.-A fall, sustained when he rushed to the aid of his daugh ter, who had burned herself on a hot stove, brought back the eyesight of Henry Penniman of Paris Valley, who had been blind for seven years as the result of a runaway accident. Penniman was dragged over a plowed field on his farm seven years ago, and when he was picked up he was blind. Saturday he heard his daughter's cries for help and while groping his way to the kitchen, fell over a chair. When he rose he could see almost perfectly. Doctors who have examined him say the shock of the fall has restored some optic nerve which had been injured in the runaway accident. CHANGES OF NAVAL OFFICERS Rear Admiral Winslow Goes to Naval 'War College at Newport. Several important changes in the de tails of naval officers have been an nounced. Rear Admiral C. MoR. Wins low, now supervisor of New York har bor, is ordered to the naval war col lege, Newport; Captain T. S. Rogers, !ommander battleship Georgia, to be president of the naval war college; 'aptain .. Oliver, now at naval war ollege, to command battleship New rampshire; Captain M: Johnston, com nander of the navy yard; Portsmouth, o command the Georgia; Captain J. C'. .eonard, detached as president of the general courtmartial, New York navy rard, te command Portsmouth navy rard. B has a pair of tan shoes and is ap flying tan polish to them. A says he is laekening them. But B says he is olishing them. Which is righti as advanced, now at 25e, 30e, 35c, 40c nd 45c per lb, all according to quality. Retail Meat Prices. Dressed Poultry-Hens, 20e lb; quabs, 45e lb; ducks, 25e lb; geese, be lb; broilers, 50c and 75c each; tur- I 'eys 30e lb. Retail Fuel Prices. Fuel-Tamarack and fr, 4-foot wood, t 5.75 per cord; pine, 4-foot wood, $5 and t 5.25 per cord; sawed tamarack and fir, t 2.75 rick; sawed pine, $2.50 rick. Coal -Carney, Sheridan, Tabor, $8.25 per in; Rock Springs and Owl Creek, $8.75 n or ton; Monarch, $8.25 per ton. , Wholesale Meats. a Dressed beef steers, 8'1A to 9e lb; j3 >w beef, 7/2 to se lb; hogs, undressed, d SIlb; dressed pork, lie lb; bacon, 20c q ,; short loin beef, 22e Ib; shoulder ti ;eak, 10e Ib; hindquarter, 13e Ib; b Imp, 10%. Ib; loin of beef, 17c lb. b T.L SPORTING NOTES. lgast should dispose of Welsh on kegiving day without much effort Jim Flinn, conqueror of Kaufman and Morris, is barnstorming in Okla homa, meeting all comers. The Spokane Amateur Athletic ('lob Indoor Baseball., league, composed of upon the 1911.12 schedule. Battling Nelson, former lightweight champion, recently stopped Ton mmy Moore of Chicago in nine rounds. Packey McFarland and "Hnarlem Tommy" Murphy will fight 20 rounds in Sat Francisco Thanksgiving day. At the Yale-Princeton football gamtr this week, spectators will he denied the privilege of smoking. Afraid of fire. "One Round" Hogan of California and "Knockout" Brown of New York have been matched for a 10-round bnot. The first eight hours of keen racing failed to alter the lineup of the eight teams in the six days' bicyelo race at Buffalo. According to an eastern paper, the retirement of Frank Klaus, via a de feat pt the hands of Bob Moha, leaves the field open. A decision of Circuit Judge U. V. Blair, in Missouri, upholding bowing exhibitions in Joplin, practically af feeted every athletic club in Missouri. Harold S. Brautigan, Tacoma high school distance runner and former bas ket ball captain, has been named as alternate appointee to the West Point military academy. Moving forward the date for begin ning the world's baseball series next year to October 7 will not change the number of games to be played by either of the. big leagues-154. After shifting preliminaries about in an effort to present the best posiible lineup of talent for the big Vancouver Spokane mitt-mat smoker, which will open the P. N. A. interclub season i, Spokane Friday night, Matchmaker Cisco Bullivant of the Spokane Ama tour Athletic clutb announces a 13-bout program, consisting of four wrestling and nine boxing bouts, four of which,. divided into three boxing and one wrestling, comprise the interelub head line division. Northwest Football Games. Spokane 11, Tacoma 6. Idaho 5, Whitman 0. O. A. C. 6, W. S. C. 0, ('nlifnwn';i 91 -enC A .l / i ....1...\ Queen Anne 10. Aberdeen 5. Weuatehee 96, Ballard 0. Eastern Football Results. Princeton 3, Dartmouth 0. Carlisle 18, Harvard 15. Yale 15, Brown 0. Cornell 6, Michigan 0. Chicago 9, Northwestern 3. Pennsylvania 23, Lafayette 6. MINING NOTES, Porcupine, Ontario, is develotlng into a great gold camp, German mining experts last week in spected the Germania mining camp near Deer Trail, and expressed satisfactiow at the showing of tungsten ore, The discovery of a second beach Halu at Blue City, 60 miles to the eastward of Nome, has given a new lease of life to prospecting in Seward peninsula, During the last week the British ('u lumbia Copper company treared 10,80; tons of ore at its Greenwood smelter, making,a total for the year to date or $522,545 tons. The Gold Cube Mining company. linee miles northwest of ('hewelah, Wash., has encountered an ore body after ruu ning a tunnel 150 feet. The four-foot `vein of chalcopyrite ore carries silver running about $20 to the ton. What will eventually be the main working tunnel of the Stewart mine, jpear Kellogg, Idaho, now is in ]OWS feet. It will be 2000 feet long whoe it reaches the main ledge, at an added depth of 500 feet below the presest main working tunnel, Henry L. King. secretary-treasurer of the W.-K. Mining company, who has just returned from an Inspectios of the properties between Madison and Rogers, in Kootenai county, Idaho, re ports the main ore vein has widened to 44 Inches at the bottom of the shaft, now down 100 feet. Recent development of the property of the Sterling Silver Lead company at Metaline, Wash., by a crosseut tun nel, has exposed one ore shoot over 80 feet wide at a depth of 75 feet, do clares W. W. Warner, president and general manager of the company, who has just returned from a trip of in spection of the properties. P. E. Peterson, a young mining engi seer of Butte, Mont., has devised a plan for utilizing electricity for the smelt ing of zinc ores. He has built an ex. perimental plant at Butte, in which, by the use of his electric furnace, lhe !aves 95 per cent of the mineral con tents' of the ore, against 85 per cent. the maximum which can be saved by the retort process. The coal mine at Corbin, B. C., is anique. It has developed two coal neasures of such unusual thickness -hat nothing like them is to be found inywhere else. The second seam is uat now being got into shape for pro luction. It will be mined on the iuarry system, with steam shovels, and he management expects to mine and oad the coal on the cars at a cost of ietween 25 and 50 cents a ton.