THE MORNING OBEG-ONIAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1900. WITHOUT HER PROPELLER STEAMSHIP ELM BRAXCH DRIFTIXG HELPLESS AT SEA. Flavel as a "IVhcat-Shlppinsr Port Old Ships "With Xevr Xamcs and FlagK, The steamer reported off the mouth cf the Columbia a few days ago was un-. doubtedty the Erltlsh steamship Elm Branch. A report came from Port Town send yesterday that a steamer answering the deserlptpn of the Elm Branch hod "been sighted about 109 miles south -of Cape Flattery, with her propeller rone. Tugs have left In search of the vessel, and she will probably be picked up today. The Elm Branch, which Is under a time charter to the Pacific Export Lumber Company, of this city, sailed from Shang hai December a, and Is about five or six days overdue. The accident recalls a. similar one which happened to a sister ship, the Oak Branch, which Is also under charter to the Pacific Export Lumber Company. The Oak Branch lost her propeller down In the tropics a. few years ago, and drifted for nearly a month, her engineers meanwhile rigging up a staging over the stern and shipping a new propeller. "When It was finally an place the steamer had drifted so slose to a. dangerous reef that she was In Imminent 'danger of going ashore be fore the propeller was ready to move. Columns were printed about the adventure at the time, and the feal performed by the engineers is said to be the most difficult ever recorded in the annals of steam navi gation. IN DISTRESS OFF CAPE FLATTERY. The Elxa llranch Has Broken Propel ler Taers Scat to the Rescne. SEATTLE, Jan. 12. The British steam ship Elm Branch is off (jape Flattery with a broken propeller, and two tugs have gone to her assistance. The first news re j?ardlng the disabled steamer was a dis patch to the Merchants' Exchange, of this city, received this forenoon. It was .from Neah bay. stating that the steamer Elihu Thomson had just passed out After having sighted the steamer Elm Branch disabled and at anchor four miles off Flattery rocks. The Ellhu Thomson had given the Elm Branch a hawser, but soon after parted it and came In to report her. A dispatch was received this morning by Captain J. B. Llbbey, of the Puget Sound Tugboat Company, from some of his tug captains, and two tugs were im mediately dispatched to the relief of the steamer. These tugs are the Tyee, Cap tain C. T. Bailey, and the Tacoma, Cap tain H. H. Morrison. As the tugs left this morning, they are now outside, and will have no difficulty in picking -up the disabled steamer and bringing her In. The Elm Branch, Captain Iliff, is en route to Portland, Or., from Nagasaki, and is 25 days out today. She is without cargo. It is not known how long she has been disabled, but from her position it is judged two or three days. It would seem that, having broken down, she had at tempted to make the cape under some kind of sail, and had run up close and tried to enter. Flattery rocks are several miles south of the cape, and a somewhat dangerous locality. Last July the Elm Branch loaded at Port Blakoley for New Chwang, China, and afterward sailed with a cargo from Vancouver, B. C, for the Orient She is an iron steamer of 2065 tons. CXDER STEW FLAGS. Well-Known Grain Carriers "Which Have Lost Their Identity. High freights all over the world, and d fleet which is rapidly decreasing by na tural causes, does not prevent England getting rid of Tier old sailing vessels, and every week a few more of the T)ld-timers which have often figured in the" Portland grain trade lose the r Identity by going under new flags with new owners. Among those reported within the past month are several which are exceptionally well known in Portland. The Cambr.an Queen, which has made so many flying passages between Portland and the United King dom, now sails under the banner of Nor way, bearing the name Eayard. The Anamba, which seldom missed a season in this trade, was sold to the Portuguese, and will henceforth be known as the Africa The Knight of the Garter has been purchased by the Italians, and now bears the fatherly name Papa Emanuele, and the old bark Glengarry is Bailing un der the same flag, bearing the name Gcron ima Biancha. The littlo bark Alrlle, which has spent j an ner me muer tne .tsruisn nag, now becomes the Norwegian bark Superb. All of these vessels are under the flags of nations which send vessels to the Pacific coast, but the old British bark Firth of Tay has been sold to a nation which has never honored Portland by the presence of her ships. Thds venerable grain carrier Is now the Uruguayan bark Vllasar. Among all of the number of vessels which have recently changed their names, but a single one, the British ship Glenfinart, still re tains the flag under which ehe was launched and sailed for so long. The Glenfinart was sold on her last passage out from this port, and her name has since been changed to Harlech Castle. She is now en route for Honolulu from Lon don, and will probably be in Portland again before the end of 1S00. Two of the German barks now in port, the Magdalene and the Alsterkamp, were formerly British vessels, bearing the names Trade Winds and Flotow. FLAVEL'S FIRST WHEAT. Xcw Town at the Mouth of the River Sidetracks Astoria. The first shipment of wheat ever made from the new town of Flavel, at the mouth of the Columbia, will go forward on the steamer Arab, which is now taking coal at that port. There were nine carloads in the lot, or, to be explicit, 6S66 bushels, valued at $3550. The ease with which the big steamer went through, drawing about 24 feet, proves that this comparatively trifling amount could have bson taken aboard at Portland, without delaying the steamer any on the passage down the river, but as the vessel was much larger than any of the regular liners that have been coming here, it was thought best not to take any chances with her on her first trip. This additional 200 tons brings the amount of wheat and flour aboard the steamer up to 54S0 tons. Now that Flavel has shipped some wheat she can cons der herself on even terms wl h Astoria The latter port commenced sh p plng wheat 26 years ago, four vessels the Vermont, Allqulos, City of Dublin and Frank N. Thayer loading there In 1674. The business of loading full cargoes there was soon discontinued, however, as it was found to be cheaper to take the shp to the cargo than to take the cargo to the ship. Nearly every year since then there have been .small shipments from Astoria, but for Flavel the shipment just made comes strictly under the head of new business. It is known, indeed, that the channel is so changing that Astoria Is practically side-tracked, and such sh'p ments as are made In future down there will be made at Flavel. BOER VERSUS BRITOX. Relative Merits of the Combatants Forcibly Discussed. The South African war was among the subjects discussed in a down-town resort Thursday evening, and a couple of an dent mariners who went -down tp the sea in ships" about 20 or 30 year ago had hold of opposite ends of the argu ment "One Boer is good for six English men" was the Boer's first vol'ey with his long-range mouth. "You are a liar," promptly retorted his chum, who paused with, a schooner half way over the bar, and supplemented the remark with Ian- J guage which can not be transmitted 1 through the mails In printed form. The j uuci ;aiuz uatA waih a. iuaii;di uemwa- stratlon which gave the Briton a beautiful blaek eye. The latter was carrying a pretty fair "load," but even this failed to offset the advantage in weight which the Boer held, and In the hammer and toogs mlxup which followed the second eye was trimmed to match the other one, and there were divers and sundry other bruises which rendered the weaker party strictly out of it for the time being; Meanwhile the South African war Is a forbidden topic for discussion In the resort men tioned, and so far as the relative merits of the Boers and the English are con cerned, neither of the combatants Is sat isfied. SAD TALE OF THE SEA. Losses of Life From a "Family Ship" Hiot Yet for Home. ASTORIA, Or., Jan. 12. Captain Pritch ard. of the British bark Haddon Hall, that arrived in this afternoon from Pan ama, has a hard-luck story to tell, and in relating It this evening he could not j suppress sobs and tears, one is a lamuy ship, as the officers and nearly all the crew are from Carnaroon, North Wales, and have known each other since child hood. When the vessel left her home port about two years ago. she shipped six young men, whose parents the master had known, for years, and he naturally STEAMER J.A.M EtSER.. PHOTO. Wiiwiw.aiiMii'n''gJllllllliilw The steamer Mascot,, as she was stranded at Lewis landing. Wash., January 4. She was successfully floated on tho Cth, under direction of James Olsen, of the Portland Shipbuilding Company, under the supervision of Captain Charlta T. Kamm, the contractor, men and material ha.vlngr been shipped front this city to Lewis river for the purpose. The Mascot will be repaired immediately and resume her run without delay. She was brought up to Portland "Thursday night between two baiges. Both Captain Kamm and Mr. Olsen have had experience in this line, and Mr. Olsen is an old hand at the business, as he haa raised a number of sunken boats on the Upper Willamette. The company Is highly pleased that the Mascot was raised in such short order, it being only six days from the time the work was commenced until she was safely at the dock. The north fork of Lewis river just below Woodland is a Derfect nest of snags, enough to make a steamboatman'a hair stand on end, and the only wonder la that more boats are not sunk there. took a personal interest in them. Today there is but one of them alive. While passing through the islands north of Aus tralia a year ago this month, firearms were placed in readiness for use to resist the natives of the islands if they should attempt to board the vessel, as they had been reported to have done to other ves sels shortly before. No attack was made, but one of the boys in handling a pistol accidentally shot another in the head, killing him Instantly. Upon their arrival at Panama, yellow fever broke out on board, and three of the boys died from it. She made the run to the mouth of the Columbia from Panama in 57 days, and took Pilot Sanderson on board. This morning the weather was very thick out side, making It Impossible to take reck onings except by soundings, and as it was found that the vessel was within six miles of shore and It was blowing a gale, sail was taken in, and while doing so Robert Griffiths, another one of the hoys, fell overboard from the fore topsail yard. The alarm was given and lines were thrown to him, as he lay on the water, but he appeared stunned and made no effort to grasp them nor even a life buoy that was thrown by his side. First Officer Jones immediately began to get a small boat in the water, against the wishes of Captain Pritchard, as it was almost cer tain death to attempt it, but the boat was lowered in nine minutes, and Mate Jones and four of the crew rowed away Into the darkness in search of "Jumbo," as young Griffith was familiarly known. The boat was gone for nearly five hours, and those aboard of her were given up for lost, when they returned with the boat full of water and the mtn totally exhausted, but they had found no trace of the missing man. The sea was very rough, "but North head was sighted for a moment, and Gunderson then picked up his position and made the attempt to sail in. He was suc cessful, and as he got Inside he found the tug Escort ready to take him to a safe anchorage. Captain Pritchard then thought that his troubles were over and that he would load wheat for Europe and get home again. The first letter that he opened was from the owners of'the ves sel, telling him that she had been char tered to load flour for Jvpan, and it will be another year at least, before he will get near enough home to visit his family. Marine Notes. The Galena, Criffel and Magdalene are scheduled to finish loading wheat today. The steamer Columbia sailed for San Francisco last evening. The Elder will follow today. The United States steamer Perry arrived here Thursday afternoon. The officers of the vessel are: Captain "W. F. Kilgore, Lieutenants H. M. Sturdevant, C. "W. Cairnes and Eben Barker, Chief Engineer H. L. Boyd, and Assistant Engineer T. W. Ross. Domestic and Foreign Ports. ASTORIA, Jan. 12. Arrived British bark Haddon Hall, GO days from Panama Condition of the bar at 5 P. M., rough wind southwest, fog. Reported outside at 3:20 P. M. American ship Clarence S. Bement, from Shanghai; British ship Col ony, from Taltal. San Francisco, Jan. 12. Arrived Schooner Ivy, from Coos bay. Sailed Schooner Letitia, for Gray's harbor; steamer Signal, for Portland. Coos Bay, Jan. 12. Barbound Steamer Empire, for Areata. Seattle. Jan. 12. Sailed Steamer Czar ina, for Tacoma. Olympla, Jan. 12. Arrived Brig Tan ner, from San Pedro. Port Los Angeles, Jan. 12. Arrived Steamer Mlneola, from Nanalmp. Sailed Steamer San Mateo, for Nanalmo. Seattle Arrived January 11 Steamer Al-Kl, from Dyea; schooner Mildred, from Bedondo. San Diego Arrived January U United States ship Bear, from San Francisco. Cardiff. Jan. 12. Sailed British ship Leavernbank, for Santa Rosalia. "Yokohama Sailed January 5 British steamer Goodwin, for Tacoma, Port Gamble. Jan. 12. Sailed Ship Great Admiral, for Sydney. Liverpool. Jan. 12. Arrived British ship Bothwell, from Portland. Havre, Jan. 12. Arrived La Normandie, from New York. Copenhagen, Jan. 12. Arrived Island, from New York for Stettin. GREAT FRENCH PROJECTS TUNNEL TENDER GIBRALTAR AND RAILROAD TO THE ORIEXT. And a Ship Canal to Extend Front the Atlantic to the Medi terranean. Those who believe that the beginning of the new century is to be marked by a long line of gigantic works, for which the discoveries of the one now closing are the preparation, see In "The Canal of the Two Seas'r and the Mediterranean tunnel the first examples, of the coming wonders. France heads the projects, says a Paris letter In the Indianapolis Press France, that has shown the way so often, only to be outstripped by other peoples France of the Suez canal and Panama. This time, however, the work is for hur self and not for others. Tne tunnel that. by the courtesy of Spain and Morocco, Is j to unite her to her African possessions may have a military and Industrial out come undreamed of now. while the canal that Is to open up the Mediterranean to her as to no other power may make France Independent of Gibraltar. "From Paris to the Soudan without MASCOT SUNK IN LEWIS rU changing cars!" This is the cry of the tunnel's partisans. It is the answer of Frnce to Cecil Rhodes' conception, "From the Cape to Cairo!" "When Spain and Morocco grant the privilege, the work becomes a simple matter of French finance and French en gineering. On clear days you can see Gibraltar from Tangiers; and, wiiue the spot has not yet been made public, It is said that the European end of the funnel is to be not many miles from England's stionghold. "From Paris to Soudan without chang ing cars!" It is difficult at first hearing for even the enthusiastic French to real ize all that it means. This 12-mlle tun nel underneath the narrow Strait of Gib raltar is to unite, in, the most intimate way, all France's African possessions with the mother country. France is to be extended practically to the utmost con fines of her long-cherished, expensive col ony of Algeria "But this is only a beginning," says the Frenchman, glibly. "The projected railway line along the northern coast of Africa will extend to meet the line of Tripoli, and so continue to Cairo and the Isthmus of Sues, There another tunnel will be cut under the Suez canal Itself, and the railroad will continue on trium phantly along the shores of the Persian gulf, on, on, across the continent of Asia to Bombay." M. Berller, engineer of the Gibraltar tunnel, declares that the work will not cost more than 123,000,000 francs. "When the channel tunnel was proposed and they actually bored a mile or more of it before an invasion scare in England put a stop to everything the engineering diffi culties were the easiest disposed of. M. Berller's experience with the Seine tun nel and the Metropolitan Underground has put In his hands new methods and a corps of experienced lieutenants, and the fact that the work Is so near home will give the French Investor confidence that he might lack since Panama Canal of the Two Seas. It is proposed by taking advantage of tho present waterways of the Interior of France to make a ship canal from a well-guarded port on the Atlantic coast to as well-guarded a port on the Mediter ranean. From Bordeaux, up the Garonne river, the canal-boats that carry freight so economically throughout all France plod their way to Agen, to Toulouse, and then through the Canal du Midi, by a great lock system, climb and descend the watershed of the Atlantic and Mediter ranean by way of the formidable Neck of Naurouze- Below Carcasonne the Ca nal du Midi strikes the River Aude, and then starts off northeast along a winding route to Beziers, completing a great com plicated system. By way of the Aude the canal-boats descend to the Mediter ranean below Narbonne. The engineer of genius to whom France owes the Canal du Midi in old-time called the Canal de Languedoc was that Pierre Paul Biquet, first created Baron and then Count of Caraman by Louis XIV. as long ago as 1666. His grandson married the slsttr of the last Prince de Chimay before the direct male line became extinct, on which event the title was transferred to his descendants, now properly the house of Caraman-Chimay, Into which Clara "Ward, a pretty girl from Detroit, married only to abandon It in company of a Hun garian Gypsy violinist of the name of RIgo. This canal of Languedoc was the first great artificial waterway of Europe, and the 17th century genius of Pierre Paul Biquet shines as brightly at tha opening of the 20th century as ever. The hardest task of modern engineers will be to follow him over the Neck of Narouze, "the black mountain," where the cuttings must be 65 feet deep. Millions and mill ions it wHl cost to widen and deepen the old canal through this most difficult part of its route, "Where the canal-boats now drag their slow way the Canal des Deux-Mers wljl give passage to the heaviest man-of-war, whirled across France, tbrough hills and -valleys, not by mules, but by steam loco motives. Thirty-two feet deep and wide enough to permit two warships to pass each oth'er In it, will be the Canal des Deux-Mers. Contrary to what would seern the nat ural Atlantic terminus, Bordeaux Is pro--posed to be neglected In favor of what will be, practically, a new port. Arca chon, with Its great natural basin, lends .. ii"J Ipfesfii '1 ir W r I P 4& tf:K---k 1 Xvt ' itself ideally to the kind of fortification that would be demanded by a canal that -would, by the fact of Its existence, come to be the central strategic feature of the country, Arcachon, when the canal is finished, will be the Brest of today, a hundred times magnified. Bordeaux, that could never be made to give the necessary ease and security to a war center, it will thus find Its commercial port it Is. A branch canal Is to con nect It with the great canal; and, with out any of the inconveniences of a naval center. It will thus find Its commercial advantages immensely Increased. Today, at the end of the 19th century, France sees 80 per cent of her products carried under foreign Hags. Where French boats carry 2,500,000 tons, more than 120.000.0W1 tons are lugged around the world In Engi llsh bottoms. Another advantage of the canal as planned by the effervescent Gaul will be to furnish work for years to the French. workJngman, to the calming of- the" labor ing mind and the security of the republic. The calculations being for a permanent force of SO.O0O laborers, the partisans of the canal see In the fact the putting off of the dread labor question to a better era, when France shall be entering into the fruits of this very enterprise. Not a centime of the money wlli leave France. Some of the estimates as to cost are prodigious. Between one and two mill iards and a half 2,5CO,000,OCOi francs the accounts fluctuate. The route of the canal is straight from Arcachon to Agen, on the Garonne, S& miles of easy cutting, without a slngU RIVER 'M lock. It will probably enter the GaTonne many miles above Agen. The waters at the Garonne are themselves to be rein forced from the streams of the Pyrenees, which, it is thought, will save Toulouse and many another town from the period ical inundations that now trouble them. The Garonne, strongly banked up and be come the safe drain of these mountain torrents, will then take the fleets ofwai and commerce to Toulouse, the central arsenal of France. Then, from ever point, French railways will bring troops, provisions and munitions. Around Toulouse will be grouped canhon and ammunition factories. From Toulouse to Castelnaudray the route of the great canal is along the olo Canal de Languedoc, of Clara Ward's an cestor by marriage. The old canal abounds in locks. To lift it up 200 feet, in one stretch, there are 17 of them. The, de scent of the Aude-300 feet requires more than 50. It is in its cuttings and lock:, that the projected canal is to be most , extraordinary. Sixteen locks are planned t to do the whole job of the watershed tha; has its apox in the dreaded Col de Nau rouze, and they are to be the answer oi French engineering science to the lamen table failure of Panama, j At the beginning it was seen that ordi nary locks would not serve; with then j the passage would require at least six days. One way of diminishing their num berit is estimated that 200 would be nec essarywould bo the old-fashioned plan i of keeping the canal to the low altitudes j of the plains and then, arriving at the j Col de Naurouze, to pass through It In a giant cut. It would be a cut of 500 feet deep. To avoid the necessity of this al most Impossible engineering feat, thej have imagined a prodigious novelty, the ship elevator and the moving lock. Wonderful Contrivances, The ship elevator is a great metallic reservoir that moves up and down hill on a great number of railway tracks, oper ated much after the manner of a funi cular. There will be one at the top of the slope, another at the bottom. Each will receive a ship. The weight of the lightest will be balanced by the addition of moro water. Then. ."the equilibrium being at tained. a comparatively moderate force will be sufficient to disturb it. Up will go one reservoir and down the other! Notn ing could be simpler! "Where ordinary locks are to be used, the same principle of metallic basins bal ancing each other, side by side, Is to aw exploited, for the sake of the expedition. They are to be such locks as-the world has never seen. Once through them and into the Aude river, it will be plain tow ing straight to Narbonne, which Is al most on the Mediterranean. Here is an other naturally protected port, like Area choix a geat basin, Impenetrable by a hostile fleet. This ends the tale of the Canal of the Two Seas, and the vivid imagination ot the Gaul again takes hold. "Imagine It constructed," cries the Frenchman. "Then imagine the Mediterranean tunnel In full working order. In that day France will "have become the mistress of the Mediter ranean. She will give passage to her Rus sian ally's fleets at pleasure. Spain, en tering the French republic on an advan tageous basis, her commercial and Indus trial renaissance is accomplished. Po litically, "France and Spain, now one re public, balance Germany. Algiers, too, will have become French soil, while from the far-off Soudan come interminable trains loaded down with precious raw ma terial. All Africa will come to know France as the great near country. From her corneT, isolated Italy cannot but be sorely tempted to join the republic, fol lowing Spain. The old dream of the con federated Latin states will be accom plished by Industrial and commercial mo tives. The confederation absorbs North, em Africa, Including Egypt. It control the route to India and China." Only one thought troubles the Imagina tive savants who thus look Into the fu ture. They hope Germany and England will not have Invented "flying machines by the time the Mediterranean tunnel ana the Canal of the Two Seas are con structed. Do en It. Yonkers Statesman. Bill Hear that fellow? He sings to keep the wolf from the door. J1J1 I should think he would be emi nently successful. LECTURE ON TRANSVAAL BY COLONEL, ONCE AN OFFICER IS THE BRITISH ARMY. Says England's Chief Fanlt Haa Been Vacillation and the Lack of a Settled Policy. WASHINGTON, Jan. 7. Colonel F. F. HUder, who was once an officer in the British army, and now employed in the bureau of American ethnology In Wash ington, and who was for many years the private secretary of Senator Watson C. Squire, of Washington, Is one of the au thorities upon facts and features of the British possessions in Asia and Africa. He has just delivered, a most Interesting lecture on the Transvaal before the Na tional Geographical Society, of Washing ton, In the course of his remarks he sald: "The Transvaal Is an elevated plateau, lying within the outer rim of the vast South African tableland, between 4000 and 6000 feet above sea level. In consequence of this great elevation It enjoys a health ful and. Invigorating climate. The winter half of the year from March to Septem ber is dry and ccol, especially during the nights. The days are often as warm as in summer. During these months cold, sharp winds blow from the south, and tne mountain ranges are often covered with snow for several days. Sudden changes of temperature often produce influenza and Inflammatory affections; but, in snlte ot these, the mortality Is low. "The Transvaal has an area of 119,139 square miles, and In 1S9S its population was estimated to be 1.091,156, of which number 345,367 were whites. The white population has. however, been largely In creased by the rush to the gold fields. Boers Few in Nunrher. "The number of Boers included in tha enumeration of white inhabitants is prob ably less than 100.COO. In the whole of South Africa the number of non-Boer white inhabitants, including English and other foreigners, is 3S5.000. Those of Dutch descent number 431.000." England's opponents in the present war were described as follows: "The Boers of South Africa are the descendants of the original Dutch and Huguenot colonists. Severed from the civilization of Europe 2C0 yeara ago, they have not kept pace with the progress that has" been made there, and are Intolerant and backward In their Ideas. They have developed Into a sturdy, self-reliant people, great hunters, and men well fitted to cope with the savage anlmajs,and savage men with whom they have had to contend in their colonization of the wilderness. They have been for the most part stoefcraisers, and the scar city of pasture scattered them over a 'vyjde area. "Like all frontiersmen they have devel oped a remarkable courage and spirit of independence. They havealso grown into a passion for solitude and Isolation, out of which has grown not only their im patience of control, but a neglect 6f the graces, amenities and even the decencies of civilized life, showing little traces of their descent from the cleanest and neat est people of Europe. Living entirely in the open air, and mostly In ,the saddle, they are strangely Ignorant. They have no literature and few newspapers. What reading they do Is confined almost entire ly to the Bible. Their religion is the somber and stern Calvinism of the 17th century, hostile to all new light, thorough ly Imbued with 'the spirit of the Hebrew records of the Old Testament, and with vary little of the Christian spirit of kind ness and mercy taught In the New. The Slavery Question. "For years the Dutch and English lived In amity. But in 1834 a law was passed In England abolishing slavery, much to the disgust of the Dutch", who held to their old biblical notions about slavery. They resented what they considered an in fringement ot their, property rlghts.vlt Is true the British" government granted them a compensation, but the amount was less than the- current value of slaves In the colony, and the Boer farmers thought themselves robbed. When the law was put into operation, In 1835, they determined to leave the colony, and made what is still referred to among them as the great trek.' "They settled in what is now known as the colony of Natal, and attempted to es tablish an independent government a pro ceeding which was objected to by the British government on the 'grounds that people who are still considered British subjects have no right to attempt to form an Independent state on territory that, while it had not formally been declared to be a colony, was under British protec tion. It was, therefore, proclaimed to bo a British colony, and the Boers again migrated, some settling In the Orange river country and the others crossing the Vaal river and founding the South Afri can republic. "The history of all the troubles that have arisen between the Boers qnd the native tribes on tho one hand and the Boers and the British government on the other Is too long and too complicated for an evening's discussion. There has been fault on both sides. So far as the Eng lish are concerned, the main cause of the trouble which has arisen lies In vacillation and the want of a settled policy. "The history of the past half century In South Africa should be a very useful sub ject of study for the statesmen and poli ticians of the United States. It demon strates clearly what is the inevitable re-, suit of making a foreign policy the spo'rt of party politics. With all the blessings of government by popular representation, It has weaknesses, and this Is not the least of them. Beer Twa'm nt of Nat vcs. "Toward the natives the Boers have al ways been harsh and tyrannical a sur vival, perhaps, of the consequences of t'heir long connection with negro slavery and the struggles they have had with the Hottentots, the Kaffirs and the other tribes. The English have always treated the natives wlih proper humanity and kindness, and the government regulations for their management are excellent. Tho danger Is that private cupidity and the struggle for wealth may Induce the white men to override or evade them. "The supreme question in the develop ment of Africa Is not the Increase of the power or prestige of England, Germany, France or any other European nation. After the present war clouds have been dissipated the future of South Africa will rest largely on tho question of equity and Integrity In the treatment of the na tives. If these principles are strictly ob served there lies a bright prospect before the country and Its people, both white and black. But If the white man closes his eyes and does not recognize the hand writing on the wall, he may receive a rude awakening." Lynching:) in 1800. Chicago Tribune, Dec. 31. There have been 107 lynchings in the United States during 1$9. Of these, 103 were in the South and four in the North. Of the sufferers, S4 were blacks and 23 whites. Forty-four persons were lynched for murder, 11 for complicity in murder, one for arson and murder, 11 for rape, six for alleged rape, andone for rape and murder. It Is apparent that rape is not the paramount cause of Southern lynch ings It was once. Georgia heads the list with 28. Then Mississippi follows with 14, Louisiana with 13 and Arkansa with 11. Of the four Northern lynchings, three were In Kansas and one In Pennsylvania While it is deplorable that as many as 107 peraons should have been put to death otherwise than In accordance with the forms of law, yet there Is some comfort to be drawn from -the fact that the record for 1S99 Is the smallest In 15 years, and falls below the figures for 1S98 by 20. These statistics go to confirm the opinion," based pn other evidence, that the South is growing ashamed of Us lynching record. (jTfOR clearing the complexion of unsightly eruptions, and preserving, purifyiag "Yn" and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands, nothing so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective as Cuncuiu. Soap. It removes tho cause of disfiguring eruptions, loss of hair, and baby blemishes, viz-: tho clogged, irritated, inflamed, or sluggish condition of tha Ponss. CijTtccitA Soap combines delicate emollient properties -derived from Cuticuba, the great skin. cure, with tho purest, o cleansing ingredients and most refreshing of flower odors. Kb other soap, however oxpB9lve, is to be-compared with it for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. It com bines in One Soap at O.vn Price namely. 25 Cekts tho best sJjjq and. com plexion soap and tha best toilet and baby soap in the world. SoH Ihrmjsheut the" world. Pivrrnt nco jisd Cusu. Cos?., Solo Propi., Ccticcsa Rxuxmzs. "All bone the Skla. Sculp, llir, and Hands," In. and is realizing the danger of tolerating a resort to extrajudicial methods to punish crime. These methods, If submitted to. create In the long run more crime thaa they suppress. FEDERAL REVENUE PROBLEM Wisdom of Leaving It Open Until Late lnthc Session. WASHINGTON. Jan. 6. (Special corre spondence New York Journal of Com merce.) The republican leaders are pur suing a conservative course. In deciding to adjourn the settlement of the problem of revenue reduction until later in the session of congress. . The fact has become clear that the subject cannot be dis missed absolutely at the present tirao until the next session, as was believed to be possible down to a recent da:e. Events may prove that some reduction of taxation is absolutely required. The probabilities, indeed, rather favor th:3 proposition, but there is a chance that some unexpected events in the workl'3 money markets or the demands upon tne treasury may check the rapid accumula tion of the surplus which is now going on. It will be much clearer by April or May whether revenue reductions are ab solutely required than is the case at pres ent. A simple bill abolishing some of the more obnoxious of the stamp taxes and tho special license fees upon industries could then be brought Into the house and passed. Its consideration in the sen ate might prolong the session several weeks, and would afford the democratic minority a good opportunity for campaign speeches and for amendments favoring free raw materials and a moderate Income tax, but any political capital gleaned by the minority In this way would be trifling in its value compared to the capital they would derive from a treasury growing every week more congested as the presi dential election approached and a money market growing in consequence unduly stringent. 6ne of -the awkward features of the situation Is the fact that a small reduction of taxation early in the summer would take effect so late and reduce the Tevenue so little that It might not serious ly check the'dangers feared, while on the other hand a reduction large enough to bring the revenue down to the expendi tures under present business conditions might prove too great a reduction for con ditions when business is less active. One of the first questions to be deter mined, as a preliminary to the reduction of the revenue, is the amount to be ex pended and appropriated during the next year or two. Chairman Cannon, of tne house committee on appropriations, who usually tries to keep well within the lim it of safety, anticipates very large ex penditures during the coming summer and following years. There are several im portant appropriations made at recent sessions of congress which havo not yet been drawn largely from the treasury. There are the river and harbor Improve ments, whioh will have to be provided for by continuing appropriations: there ars about tll.COOCOO authorized or appropri ated for public buildings by tne last con gress, of which only a little has yet been spent, because of the usual delays in perfecting titles to sites; and there are the large naval appropriations which have been authorlzqd, but under which the con tractors have not yet been in a position to demand payment. These items ana the increase of the military force will swell materially the future average ex penditure of the United States, even in timo cf peace. How much this Increase will be Is beyond the ability of any one to calculate with precision. Additional light will be thrown on the subject withm the next few months, especially In regard to the cost of tho military establishment. An Important matter which has not yet been seriously taken up is the fortification of several ports in the Philippine and Sulu Islands for permanent military and naval posts. Chairman Cannon appreciates the fact that such posts ought to be created, in order to enable the United States to take a resolute stand if our treaty rights are threatened In China, but he doubts whether the necessary Information from military and naval experts on the sites and the defenses required will justify ac tual appropriation for such work tins year. Another element which will affect the treasury policy will be the enactment or the pending gold-standard bill. The sen ate bill provides for setting aside at once a gold reserve of 515O.0CO.C-CO, while tne house bill, in specifying a lower minimum tfjEerve, provides that the fiscal balance shall not be reduced below S50.0C0SC0. It Is probable that the senate provision for a reserve of $130,000,000 will become law. Upau the basis of the daily treasury state ment January 4. showing a cash balance of $231,353,026, the setting aside of tho proposed gold Teserve would leave in the fiscal branch of the treasury H31.3G3.C2C. This Is much more than is required fo ordinary operations, but the national banks are carrying as deposits $SS,37SVie5. leaving the actual working balance of the treasury, after setting aside the reserve, about what the house bill fixes, as the minimum. The enactment of theso two limits would permit the application of the money now in national banks to the re demption of bonds, but would not permit further reductions In the cash held. The ways and means committee will be ab:e to proceed much 'more intelligently in re ducing taxation after the gold-standara bill ha become law. and It is known ox arctly how the fiscal balance will be af fected by the gold reserve. If the sec retary of the treasury pays away the present deposits of public money In the banks as premiums upon bonds exchanged under the refunding plan, these bonds, will be released from the custody of the treas ury and will become available for the in crease of the bank-note cixcutaHon. The bonds now held to secure public mnev, both In tha treasury and In New York, are about $97,000,000, and the bank-not circulation could be increased by near'Y the whole of this amount if the bond were all released and became tha bas s ot note circulation. JUDGE FOR YOURSELF. Take a trip to Chicago by either of tha routes offered by the O. R. & N. Co.. and you will come back convinced that the O. R. & N. trams are as good as th best. By patronizing the O. R. & N. Co. you are given the choice of two routes to Chicago either by the Great Northern to St. Paul, or by the Oregon Short Line and Union Pacific to Omaha, and the North western from there to Chicago. A solid vestlbuled train Is ran through to Chicago by the tatter route. Th's train is first class in every reapeet nuod with the latest-improved sleepers, both first and second class, carries a dlr.e" clear through, has a library car attached, and. in fact. Is equipped with all the latent improvements which tend to make traf -Ing comfortable. Full mlorjnatkm re garding rate and connections can be rid of Mr. V. A Schilling, 254. Washington street. Auuthcr Xlslit ItalHbov. PORTLAND, Jan. 11. (To the Editor " I saw in your Issue af yesterday a com munication from T. S. Dean, of Spring field. Or., In which he states that he sav; a rainbow at night. I recall a phenome non of the same description that I saw in November. 1882. in Portland, about o'clock in the evening. The condition' were very similar to those that Mr. Dar describes, only that I noticed the color faintly discernible, but inverted that la red appeared on the outside of the ra.n bow, and the violet Inside. This was r.o doubt due to the double refi-action caue 1 by the light coming from the moon in stead of directly from the sun. J. E. MARTIN c i The professional plcture-hanfrer Is now a reg ular adjunct ot art storea fa larse cities. IN TABLET FORM-PLEASANT TO TASc. Disease fallaupon man like a pall, ahrondinflr hi Ufa in ll3raatlQom.Dr.Burhartfs Vesetublo Compound dlspolsairpaln and Kladdona tho hoart-Kover bocotao j' C !..,. ?,., oj ,nn ran nrrwurn this ftmOu3 remedr: even tnrwa without mean- Red not deapair IOr L Will K1VU lucut uiiimuoo ...-.-- lf0T Si years i navs oeun a , rarer u. oiumauu nuu" ..... ...... Liver Disease. Jiy UfovniHa burden to me. Dr. BurVhnrt't Voftetabl' Compound cured me la tnreo momns. XHV i. w. wuur, wuuarasounr, aj. For Bala bv all druinrMa. Thlrtr days' tawtnwnt fni- " Rnvpntr davi treatment 50c. ; Six moatub treatuientJl.OO. M&iv' trial trmiment fr K. wlskBIUrkHAKT. Cincinnati, 0. Demands a certain supply of natural Elec tricity. If this is denied her. she cannot give to the general organism the power to perform the natural functions. Whn vicious practices deprive her ot her right", weakness and debility of the - organs re sult. ONLY GIVE HER A CHANCE To recuperate by applying new life to the body In the shape of my Dr. Sanden Elec tric Belt, which cured 80CO sufferers lar year, and you will be restored. Call or write for "Three Classes of Men." DR. A. T. SANDEN Russcl Bldg. Cor. Fourth and Morrison Sts. FORTLAIVD, OR. ORIce Hours: 9 to 9: Sundays. 0 o 1. 'ITtapson's Es Water &BMPnUNB. NO IViORE hSi COPYRIGHTED V& NATURE