r ?- i - "-. y V tsf s .. , A Si THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY," APRIL 4, 1900. BATES IN MINDANAO Peaceful Occupation of Five Northern Cities. CASUALTIES IN THE PHILIPPINES Native Losses Far Greater Than TtaoM of the Americans aala- aldo Satd to Be In Singapore. MANILA, April 3, 6 P. M. General John N C Bates has peacefully- occupied Surigao, Cagayan, Hlgan. and Mlsamls. In the Isl and of Mindanao A number of rifles and cannon -were captured. The presence of the gunboats 1'orktown, Manila and Panay prevented resistance at Cagayan. Insurgent atrocities In Cagayan and Ca xnarlnea Provinces continue. Spaniards, Chinamen and natives have been mur dered. LOSSES IX THE PHIMPFETE3. Katlves Hare Xot Made Anr Cains Since the First of the Tear. WASHINGTON. April 2.-General Otis has cabled to the War Department, prob ably with a view of correcting erroneous impressions that exist In this country as to the state of the Insurrection In the Philippines, a summary of the rise of de velopment of the campaign since the first of the calendar year. His figures go far toward offsetting the belief that exists in Bome quarters that since the addition of guerrilla methods of warfare, the Insur gents have Inflicted more substantial losses upon the American armies in comparison with the punishment -which they havs themselves received. A significant sentence In the report dif ferentiates Insurgents and ladrones, show ing that Otis has taken cognizance of the fact that a consderable number of hos tlles are not soldiers under the rules of war and may not expect the same treat ment. The report, which Is dated Manila, April 3, Is as follows: "Since January 1 121 skirmishes In the Philippines have been reported, mostly light affairs. Our casualties were 10 offi cers and 78 enlisted men killed, 13 officers and 151 men wounded. Insurgents and ladrones loss In killed and left on the field, UK; captured (mostly wounded), H33; -email arms secured, 3051; pieces of artil lery, 165; large captures of other Insur gent property. "A number of Important Insurgent offi cers are surrendering and the situation Is gradually becoming more pacific. OTIS." IX XORTHREX LCZOX. experiences of a Small Band in Search of Acntnaldo. WASHINGTON. April 3. The War De partment has made public a number of reports of the movements of small expe ditions which started from Bangued Jan uary 21 last, on a scout through the mountains of Luzon In search of Aguln aldo. Colonel Hare, of the Twenty-third Infantry, had heard that an Insurgent General was In the neighborhood and be lieved that It might be Agulnaldo. So he started on the trail with Captain Ash burn, of the First battallpn of his regi ment, and M men, and was out five days, going as far as Bacooc This little expedition was characterized by many acts of daring and gallantry which form the subject of the reports. At one point near Donlnlay. the Insur gents had prepared an ambush. The sol diers knew of It and deployed, attacking the Insurgents from, the front and both flanks, killing one Lieutenant and nine men and capturing five prisoners and a loVTSr "ammunition. One man -wounded was the American casualty list. The wounded man, Sergeant-Major Wilson, Is recommended for a medal of honor, as were also First Lieutenant Jeffers and there "enlisted men: John C. Summons and Frank Miller, Company B; F. A. Murphy. Company D; J. A. Syzmore. Company C; Ray Brun stlne, William Smith. Paul Jenkins and J. R, Hawkins, Company A, and Cor poral G. C. Burke, Company M. A cer tificate of merit Is also recommended for Hospital Steward A. M. Coffey. Colonel Hare pays special tribute to the bravery of Sergeant-Major Wilson, char acterizing his act as one that "slmp'y exhausts imagination." With six or seven men he charged straight through the rocky gorge under heavy fire from the Insurgents at a distance of 40 yards. Col onel Hare says: "Wilson exhausted the magazine of his Krag and then saw a man not 30 yards from him. He was too far off to be sure of his-aim with his pistol, and he had no time to reload, so he made a dash for the man with his revolver. That Is when he was shot In the hip. Then Lieutenant Jef fers charged up the trail with seven men. At Its summit he had a personal encoun ter with three of the bandits. He shot one dead, knocked the other down with the butt of his revolver, while the man be hind threw his gun over Jeffers' shoul der and killed the other one." WRIGHT'S EXPAXSIOX VIEWS. Philippine Commissioner's Speech at a Farewell Banquet. MEMPHIS, April 3. General Luke F. Wright, of the Philippine Commission, was tendered a farewell banquet by 200 distin guished men at the Peabody Hotel. After thanking his friends for the sentiments ex pressed. General Wright spoke on the question of .expansion, and reviewed the purchase of Louisiana and the taking in of Florida. Texas, California and Alaska. General Wright continued: "We may assume, therefore, if there Is any force In the doctrine of practical con struction, that the power to expand Is In herent and inexhaustible. In short, that whatever additional territory the people of the United States think they need and can rightfully acquire, they may constitution ally take. In each Instance tho question .f Is one of expediency, and not of power, to be determined upon a consideration of all the attendant advantages of the transac tion. "I know of no one who Is certainly I am not a thlck-and-th!n expansionist. It would be both foolish and Immoral for us to pursue a policy of greed and ag gression, especially against our weaker neighbors. On the other hand. It would be equally foolish and short-sighted to fall to acquire, by negotiation or purchase, any needed territory which we think useful to our people." The speaker said that the argument against Imperialism seemed to him Irrele vant, as It sets up a man of eCraw to be knocked down. The only Imperator to whom our allegiance is due Is the will of the sovereign people, expressed In a man ner they hae subscribed. General Wright said It has always been his belief that the Island of Cuba should be a part ' of the United States. It Is so situated, as a glance at the map will show, as to be the key to the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. In our hands, the former becomes, as It ought to be, an American lake. It commands the Nicara gua Canal .when built. Continuing, the speaker said: "I do not subscribe to the doctrine that wherever the flag once floats It must float forever; but I do say that whenever the flag Is rightfully raised It should never be furled In violation of the dictates of duty and honor. To abandon these Is lands now, to my mind, would be a blot up on our good name among mankind for all time. When all opposition to our author ity is at an end, and not before, tha question as to how the Islands can be best governed becomes at once and always rot only a legitimate, but a highly Im portant topic for discission. There shall . be upon this, as upon all other Important matters, full and free Interchange of thought. "Permit me to say that I take It we are all agreed that whatever Is best for those. our new wards. Is to be first considered. Humanity. Justice and sound policy alike dictate this. We are further agreed that so far as It is In bur power to give it, they shall have the same civil and relig ious liberty, same rights of -person and property that we, ourselves enjoy; and finally, that wa are of one mind, that as speedily as can safely be done, they should have representative government on the lines adopted for our 'other terri tories, just now far we can at once go In that direction and Just what Instrumen tality of government shall be presently op erative can only be determined after In telligent and honest Investigation and in tha nature of things must largely depend upon the attitude towards us of the Fil ipinos themselves. "These and other grave considerations bar the United States from throwing oft the burden of the Philippines If it be a burden. The path of duty lies plain be fore us and we cannot honorably recede If we would." General Wright closed with an affection ate goooSby to his friends and asso ciates. May Enlist Filipino Musicians. WASHINGTON, April 1 In reply to a cable message received at the War De partment some time ago from General Otis, at Manila, asking for authority to en list native Filipino mus'clans In the vari ous regimental bands in the Islands, Adjutant-General Corbln has sent the fol lowing cablegram: "Secretary of War authorizes enlistment of competent native musicians In regi mental bands." Aaminaldo in Singapore. CHICAGO. April 3. A special to the Record from San Francisco says: News frpm the Philippines received by the transport Sheridan shows that Aguln aldo Is In Singapore. Singapore papers make mention of the fact and publish a short Interview with him. A GEOGRAPHICAL BLUNDER. The Larsre Tocantlns Hlver Is Xot a Part of the Amason System. A remarkable blunder with regard to one of the large rivers of South America has been, common In school and other geographies for years, and has given an Incorrect Impression of the mighty stream near whose mouth the City of Para stands. The Tocantina River has been regarded as merely a tributary of the Amazon, instead of being, as It Is, an Independent river basin. A geography Just published In England, for example, says that "the Tocamlns' forms a part of the Amazon system, being only divided from It by soma islands." Another British school geography published last year gives the area of the Amazon basin and Includes the Tocantlns In it. The French geogra phies likewise make the Tocantlns a part of the Amazon system. Writers on geography are only Just be ginning to treat the Tocantlns as an inde pendent hydrographic basin. It rises far to the south, and has a tributary, tha Araguaya, which Is even larger than the Tocantlns, The Joint streams form one of the great rivers of the continent, with a width, for a long distance, of two or three miles, but the river Is so Impeded by rapids that It Is not available for naviga tion until It widens Into the great estuary on which Para stands. Not a drop of water from the Tocantlns River mingles with the Amazon until both rivers are lost In the ocean. The Tocantlns reaches the Atlantic about 40 miles east of the nearest delta branch of the Amazon. The chief reason why the erroneous Identification of the Tocantlns system with the Amazon basin has so long been perpetuated seems to be that the Tocantlns basin Is closely related with that of the first Amazon tributary to the west. Inasmuch as both flow from the same slope and In the same direction. While, however, no water from the Tocantlns enters the Amazon, a little water from the Amazon does enter the Tocantlns through several narrow arms of the Amazon delta. This phenomenon, however, does "not make the two rivers belong to the same system. It Is not un common for water channels to connect two distinct river systems with one another; but we do not say because the Caslqulare unites the Orinoco and the Rio Negro tributary -of the Amazon, and the the waters of Lake Dllolo fcow both to tha Congo and the Zambesi, that the Orinoco and the Amazon nnd the Congo and the Zambesi, belong to the same systems. It Is, therefore, not correct to say that the Tocantlns Is a part of the Amazon sys tem because It has a water connection through the little Breves River and small er streams with the Amazon. Naturalist Bates and other explorers declared that very little water from the Amazon enters Tocantlns through the Breves, but Bates told of a larger water Junction between the two river systems a little further south. This was a blunder, due to the email progress exploration had made, for the river of which Bates spoke Is a long trough, filled with Tocantlns water, with a few little tributaries of its own. Geographical writers are Just beginning to give the Tocantlns its proper place as an Independent river system. The Move ment Geographlque, of Brussels, had a long article In Its last number, pointing out the blunder. M. Reclus, in his de scription of the Tocantlns. In the Univer sal Geography, several years ago, treated the system as a distinct basin, and was one of the first geographical writers U give a correct Idea of It. A Brewer Talks on nops. Louis Hoepker. a representative of a St. Louis brewing company, was In the ctty yesterday. In conversation with tha officials of tho Oregon Hopgrowers As sociation he said that brewers are not re sponsible for the low price of hops. So far as , brewers are concerned, they are desirous that hops should be sold at a price that will make the Industry profit able to the growers. He says that the growers can blame themselves for the low prices, for In their eagerness to sell their product they underbid each other and thus established a price below the actual value of the hops. The brewers do not ask for a reduction of tne price at first demanded. All they would ask in any event Is that the price be maintained at a uniform standard. Mr. Hoepker ex plains that If his company buys a supply of hops at II cents and the next day rival brewing company Is offered the same grade of hops at 10 cents, his company has been Injured. They do not complain at being required to pay 12 cents them selves, but want all brewers to pay the same price for the same grade of goods. Mr. Hoepker expresses the opinion that growers make a serious mistake In giving agents a large number of samples to send to Eastern dealers. This practice encour ages the cuttlnc of prices and eventually works against the grower. He says the brewers are Interested In the prosperity of the hopgrowers, foe the hop Industry distributes money among a large number of people who buy beer. On his return to Missouri Mr. Hoepker will take with him a pair of Chinese pheasants. He says repeated efforts have been made to establish the pheasants in that state, but after a year or two sports men kill them and they must be started anew. The pair to be taken by Mr. Hoepker will be kept In an enclosure and protected until -the birds have multiplied in sufficient numbers to warrant their be ing turned loose, or until a protective game law shall be passed. Cap Town Mass Meetlntr. CAPE TOWN, April 3. At a mass meet Ing held today, at which 30.000 people were present, a resolution was passed amid great enthusiasm, declaring a solemn con viction that the incorporation of the South African Republic and Orange Free State Into the Queen's dominions alone would se cure prosperity and public freedom In South Africa. SANNAS POST DISASTER FLR'l'HHK PARTICULAKS OF THE LOSS OF THE BRITISH CONVOY. It May Wot Prevent he Advance of Roberts' Army The Field Marshal's Report, LONDON. Aoril X. Fuller news of the- disaster to the British Army in the neigh borhood of Sannas Post does not tena to Improve matters from a British -point of view, but with the dispatches so mys tifying. It is impossible accurately 10 por tray the present situation or foretell the ultimate Issue of Lord Roberts' attempt to retrieve the defeat. Tho War Office has posted a dispatch from Lord Roberts, reading as follows: "Bloemfonteln. April Z 10:30 P. M. In continuation of my telegram of March 31 there has been considerable delay in get ting accurate returns of the casualties, as the action took place 2 miles hence, the telegraph cable has been Interrupted sev eral times, cloudy weather has interfered with signaling, and although there has been no engagement since, the force is continually In touch with tho enemy. There were many acts of conspicuous gallantry displayed during the day. Q battery remained In action under fire at 1200 yards for some hours, the officers serv ing the runs as casualties reduced tno detachments. Several gallant attempts were made to bring In two guns, the teams of which had been killed, but at each attempt the horses were shot. The Essex. Munster, Shropshire and North umberland Mounted Infantry, Roberts' Horse, covered the retirement of tho guns from the position to the crossing of the drilt.tfound by the cavalry two miies further south, and withstood the deter mined attacks of the enemy, who In some cases advanced within 100 yards. "O Battery of the Royal Horse Artil lery was suddenly surrounded in the drift and the officers and men were an maae prisoners without a shot being fired. But Major Taylor and a Sergeant Major suc ceeded In escaping In the confusion. Five guns were captured at the same time. Further details tomorrow." Lord Roberts' dispatch seems finally to dispose of the early report of the recov ery of the guns, and the fact that the Boers remain In occupation of the water works Is taken as an Indication that they Intend to make a stand sufficiently long to cover the withdrawal of the guns and wagons to a place of safety, although the absence of definite Information regarding the movements of General French makes It difficult to estimate their chances of adding this crowning success to the blow already Inflicted. A dispatch from Maseru, Basutoland, dated Monday, April 2, says the Earl of Roslyn, who Is acting as war correspond ent for the Dally Mall In South Africa, and who left there April 1 on his way to Thabantchu. has probably fallen into the bands of the Boers. Messages from Springfonteln suggest the fact that the press messages are keenly censored, indicating an early advance northward, although there is a question whether the loss of guns and convoy will not delay the Commander-in-Chief's move ments. The alarming increase In the mortality among the Boer prisoners at Slmonstown has Induced the authorities to promise to remove to the mainland the prisoners who are not going to St. Helena. Driver Bradly. of the Canadian Artil lery, died April J, as the result of an accident. A dispatch from Pretoria announces the arrival of 28 prisoners, mostly residents of Ladybrand, who wete seized when the Boers forced the British to evacuate that place. The German liner Koenlg has again reached Lourenco Marques, this time hav ing on board 257 passengers, bound for tha Transvaal. An Interesting Item appears In a periodi cal caTled the Gem. giving the opinions of the royal family on President Kru gcr, culled from an album belonging to the Duchess of Fife. The Prince of Wales wrote: "Mr. Kruger Is a good Judge of to bacco, and a bad Judge of the English people." The Duke of Cambridge wrote: "I am an old man, and so Is Kruger. As he Is so am I, an old soldier. I have so many faults myself, how can I Judge another." The Queen wrote: "May God guide him and nil of us out of our troubles and diffi culties." The official list of casualties sustained by Brlth officers, near Bloemfonteln waterworks. Is as follows: Killed Northumberland Fusiliers. Major Booth: Roberts' Horse. Lieutenant Crowler; Army Medical Service, Lieutenant Irvine. Wounded Artillery. Colonel Rocherfod and five others: Royal Horse Guard. Lieutenant A. V. Meade: Roberts' Horse, three; Mounted Infantry, four. Missing Artillery, Captain Ray; Tenth Hussars, Lieutenants D. :(. H. Anderson, Pelham and C. W. H. Crlchton. TUB REPORTS DIFFER. V Discrepancies In the Aeconnt of the Convoy Affair. NEW YORK. April 3. A dispatch to the Tribune from London says: There are some curious discrepancies In unofficial reports of Colonel Broadwood's mishap. According to two correspondents, the Boers were under command of General Grobbeler, while , another names Reich man as the commandant. Then again, the Chronicle's account says that two guns are reported to have been recap tured, while the Times Indicates that the Boers got away. It Is Interesting, too, to note that while Lord Roberts speaks of the loss of seven guns, the Boers themselves say that they have captured only six. Of the Ave guns that are known to have been saved, four did not fall Into tho hands of the Boers simply owing to the fact that when the drivers were shot the horses stampeded out of action, but instead of galloping to ward the Boer lines, they made off In the direction of Bloemfonteln. and the arrival of the Ninth Division compelled a de tachment of Boers, which had been sent In pursuit to beat a hasty retreat. Indeed. It seems that except for Gen eral Colvtlle the whote of Colonel Broad wood's column would have gone under. He forced the Boers back and evidently without much opposition, as by the time he had got his artillery In position the only resistance that -was offered to the advance of his infantry came from guns firing shrapnel at too long a range. According to the Chronicle the Boers cut off the water supply of Bloemfonteln and destroyed the pumping gear, as well as the field telegraph, before they retired. The water works were, however, new, and the old supply of spring water Is still available. The British losses in artillery in the present war have been exceptionally heavy. Altogether 23 guns have been cap tured by the Boers, who on their part have lost only seven. CAPTAIX REXCHMAX IDENTIFIED. Doer Commander Is a Cnlted States Army Offlcer. NEW YORK. April 3. The Journal and Advertiser Assumes that the American named Relchman, said to have been In command of the Boers at the Bushman's Kop ambush, was Captain Carl Rdchman, U. 8. A. The Journal and Advertiser says: Captain Relchman was detached from command of a company of the Seventeenth Infantry when ordered to South Africa on January 5. He was sent to the Cape to report on all military operations, and Is virtually a United States representative. He reached the front about four weeks ago, and, like' the French and German attaches. Is believed to be helping the Boer forces In whatever way he can. Captain Relchman was born in Germany. He came to America In 1SH, and, the came year joined the United States army as a private. Within three years Relchman passed through the successive grades of Private, Corporal, Sergeant and Second Lieutenant, and after obtaining a. com mission, his promotion was rapid. At the beginning of the Spanish War he was made Assistant Adjutant-General, with the rank of Captain of Volunteers, and was In the Santiago campaign. On his promotion to a Captaincy in the regular army, he was assigned to active duty In the Philippines. He served at the front there for several months. Captain Reich man Is a graduate of Heidelberg Univer sity. A Washington dispatch said last night that the War Department had received no report recently from Captain Relchman. The report that he was fighting with the Boers was a. startling announcement to the 'Department. Captain Relchman is still officially 'connected with the United States Government, and such an act ot his might bring on grave diplomatic diffi culties. The cables giving this report were banded at once to Adjutant-General Corbln. "Such a thing as this Is inconceivable," satd the Adjutant-General. "I cannot be lieve that Captain Relchman has done this without first forwarding a resignation to tho War Department. I have been asked several times today whether he had re signed. I cannot believe that he would take part In the Transvaal battles with out first -leaving the United States army. As I nave said, such a thing is Inconceiv able under military law. Captain Relch man Is one of the most conservative offi cers In the army. That was one of the reasons why he was sent to the Trans vaal." If Captain Relchman has Joined In the lighting, without first resigning from the United States army, ho will be liable to court-martial on his roturn. If he does not return, he will be dismissed from the servlco In disgrace, if it be found true that he Joined the Boers while still hold ing a commission under the United States. Reichman'a Position In Doer Army. WASHINGTON. April 3. War Depart ment officials do not believe the story that comes from South Africa to the effect that Captain Carl Relchman, Seventeenth Infantry, was one of the leaders of the Boers at the Inst fight between the Boers and tho English at the Bloemfonteln water works. Adjutant-General Corbln would not even discuss the possibility of the story being true. Relchman's brother of ficers, men who know him well, say that It Is very probable that Relchman occu pied some conspicuous point of vantage from which to view the fight, and his dis covery In unlferm by the British was tho basis of the supposition that he was one of the Boer leaders. Klpllnics Poem on Jonbert. NEW YORK. April 3. The next Issue of Harper's Weekly will contain a poem by Rudyard Kipling, on General Joubert, which was sent by cable from South Africa. Twq of the three verses follow: With thee that bred, with thou that loosed the rife, llo had no part whose hands were clean of gain; Bat subtle, strong and stubborn, gave his life To a lost cause i nd knew the gift was Tain. later shall -rise a people sane and great. Forged In itroag fires, by equal war made one. Telling old battles over without hate. Koblest. his name shall pus from sire -to son. England's Demand on Fortnnral. LISBON. April 3. In the Chamber ot Deputies today tho Minister of Foreign Affairs, Senhor Velga Blerao, announced that Great Britain had demanded of Port ugal consent to transport British troops through Belra, In accordance with exist ing treaties. Portugal has notified the Transvaal Government of Its decision. Tho Minister asserted that the relations be tween Great Britain and Portugal were "most cordial." Boers Hold the "Waterworks. BUSHMAN'S KOP. Monday, April, 2. The Boera are still occupying the water works, which the British shelled yesterday afternoon, the Boers replying. Cape Parliament Prorogued. CAPE TOWN. April 3. Parliament was further prorogued today. The Governor, Sir Alfred Miner, has returned here. BRYAN ON THE PHILIPPINES To His Efforts Ratification of the Treaty Was Dne. PORTLAND, April 3. To the Editors Senator Hoar some short (lme since pub licly mentioned the fact, which we all re member, that at the time the peace treaty was before the Senate for ratification, a majority of the Senate was in favor of Its amendment by incorporating therein a like declaration regarding the Philippines which Congress had made regarding Cuba, acknowledging their rignt ot self-government and dlsclalmlngany Intention of exer cising sovereignty, and that such majority would have made such amendment but for the fact that Colonel Bryan left his post of duty, and, hurrying to Wash ington, persuaded enough -Democrats to favor the treaty as It now stands, to se cure Its ratification, thus giving our Gov ernment sovereignty over the Islands. To be sure that Interference on his part was the very height ot Impertinence, and could not possibly be condoned, except upon the hypothesis xnat the Colonel really believed that the caudal appendage of the great Democratic party and of our great Tepubllc also has been entrusted to his hands by an all-wise Providence, to be used by him as a sort ot steering ap paratus. At all events, Bryan was re sponsible for the nonamendment of the treaty, and was, therefore, responsible for the unfortunate results following, and now after having been responsible for the establishment of our legal eoVerelgnty over the Philippines, he deliberately ad vises the abandonment of such sovereignty by turning the government over to the Filipinos, what would have been done at the outset, but for his Interference. Mr. Bryan, who has been Instrumental In getting our Government into trouble in the matter of the Fhlttpplncs, and who now proposes a remedy oat ot It, Is pur suing the very policy of the quack doctor, who always endeavored, no matter what tho complaint, to throw .his patient Into fits as; "was Just h 1 on fits," and Is exercising a species ot wisdom which has never been excelled In all history, except In the case of the wise man recorded by Mother Goose: There was a man la oar town And he was wondrous wise; He Jumped Into a bramble brush And scratched cut both his eyes; And when be saw his eyes were out -With all his might and main He Jumped Into another bush And scratched them In agalas X Y Z. si Davis' Resignation Accepted. WASHINGTON. April 3. The resigna tion of Webster Davis, Assistant Secretary of the Interior, was accepted today by Secretary Hitchcock by direction ot the President. The resignation. It la under stood, was sent directly to the President by Mr. Davis, but was referred to the Sec retary of the Interior to be accepted by him In the regular course. Secretary Hitchcock refused to make public the text of the letter ot resignation or that ot tho acceptance of It. in Reform In Mexico's Army. CHICAGO. April 1 A special to the Record from Monterey, Mexico, says: General Bernardo Royes, the new See retray of War, will soon inaugurate lmi portant and rar-reachlng reforms In the Mexican army. At present the army Is largely made up of criminals who are sen tenced td do military service. General Royes will abolish this practice of forced service, and establish that of voluntary enlistment ot recruits. The criminals will be placed In prisons. THE QUEEN IS IK IRELAND ARRITHD AT KTXGSTOWX IX A PEInXQ RAIX. Will Land From the Royal Yacht Today, and Drive to Dablln, Seven Miles Distant. LONDON. April S.-Queen Victoria, who left Windsor Castle last night en route for Ireland, arrived at Holyhead at 9:10 A. M. today. The authorities of the place, offi cers of the warships In the harbor and a guard of honor awaited the arrival of Her Majestey. When the Queen alighted, she was presented with the usual address ot welcome. She gave her reply to Lord Denbigh.-who handed It to the officials. Later, tho Queen embarked on board tha royal yacht Victoria and Albert, which, pllotedxby the Irene, escorted by the royal yacht Osborne and cruisers Gallata and Australia, steamed out of the harbor for Kingstown. v Arrival at Kingstown. DUBLIN, April , 12:20 A. M. In spite of the rain that was falling and the huge puddles ot water under foot, the arrival of Queen Victoria, in the Royal yacht Vic toria and Albert, off Kingstown, was the occasion for much enthusiasm, although this did not take an organized form, ow ing to the fact that Her Majesty came sev eral hours ahead of schedule time. It had been officially announced that the Queen would reach Kingstown at 5:30 P. M. Tues day. Instead of 2 P. M-, but at the latter hour the Victoria and Albert loomed up through the haze and rain and was greet ed with the thunder of 21 guns from each ship of the British Channel Squadron. Thousands had poured Into Kingstown regardless of the pelting rain, which luck ily ceased about S o'clock, and they braved the cold winds and mud until midnight. The celebrations were confined to an Il lumination of the war vessels, and to a few flroworks here and there. A shining shamrock stood out against the blackness of Dublin Bay, and torn the Jackles clus tered on the decks of the squadron came strains of "God Save the Queen," which were taken up with a will by the patient crowd on shore, and when "Soldiers of the Queen" floated across the quiet water, the spectators on Kingstown pier Joined in with equal fervor. Although all political conditions are represented In Kingstown, there was no attempt at a counter demon stration. In fact, tho evening's fireworks. ranging and cheering were not marred by any hostile note, and the entry of the Queen Into Dublin today (Wednesday) will probably bo a repetition of similar friendly conditions. In Dublin Itself, seven miles from Kings town, the epithet "Dear Dirty Dublin" was never before presumably better Jus tified than yesterday. Dublin was bedrag gled. Its finery, which rivalled London's Jublleo decorations, drooping sadly In the steady rain which, according to weather prophets, will be repeated today. How ever, last evening, when the showers ceased, Illuminations, such as Ireland had never seen, lighted up the streets and were viewed by crowds so dense that In eeveral thoroughfares traffic was Impos sible. The castle was gay with a dinner party, including the leading Irish nobility, and a spirit of good-natured revelry prevailed over every quarter of Ireland's capital. Will Dlsembnrlc Today. Tho Queen will disembark some time be fore noon today, and will drive from Kingstown through the city, reaching the Viceregal lodge about 2 In the afternoon. Another sword-bearer has been secured In the place of James Eagan. who for nine years was Imprisoned for political offenses. By the exerclfe of tact, political consider ations have been either kept entirely In the background or banished entirely. Of the Dublin evening papers yesterday, the Telegraph, which belongs to the Free man's Journal, alone strikes a note which approaches the discordant. It says: "Political considerations must chill to morrow's reception. The Nationalists have too much respect for tho rights of minori ties to Interfere with Individual expres sions of opinion, but the antl-Brltlsh pas sion will never die out until the aspira tions of Ireland aro satisfied by repara tion of the fraud and wrong perpetrated a century ago." John Redmond's Independence says this morning: "While deprecat'ng any manifestations of dtsree pect. It must be known that those who do make a demonstration In honor ot the Queen's visit are not In any way what ever Irish Nationalists, and do not repre sent Irish Nationalist sentiment." Coming from the organ of the leader o( the National party, this Is rather severe on the Lord Mayor of Dublin. ODD FACTS IN POLITICS. Only One Prominent Chairman Ever Became President Eleven Xorth- ern Votes Cast for Jeff Davis. Thero is some Interesting history in connection with National conventions of tho two dominant parties with which the politician of the new generation may not be familiar, says the New York Sun. Only one man who presided over the deliberations of a National convention has been nominated for the Presidency while he was present In the convention. This happened to Horatio Seymour in the Democratic National Convention held In New York in 18C8. He va cated the chair when the sentiment of the convention turned to him. but he was virtually present when nominated, appear ing afterwards to declare that he could not be his party's candidate, but consent ing later. Only one man since the birth of the pres ent Republican party has been the nomi nee of his party and elected President after h was the presiding officer of the National convention of his party. Gover nor McKlnley was the permanent chair man of the Minneapolis convention. In 1S93, which nominated Harrison and Reld. He was nominated four years later at S:. Louis. Only four members of the present United States Senate have been permanent presid ing officers of National conventions. Gen eral Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut, presided at the convention which nomi nated Grant and Colfax at Chicago in May, 1868. Senator Hoar presided over the convention which nominated Garfield and Arthur at Chicago In June. 1S80. John M. Thurston, of Nebraska, was perma nent chairman of the convention which nominated McKlnley and Hobart at St. Louis In June, 1S96. Donelson Caffery, of Loulslna, Is the fourth. He was presi dent of the Sound Money Democratic Con vention which nominated Palmer and Buckner at Indianapolis in August. 1S96. He la also the only former ex-Confederate who has served as permanent chairman of a National convention. Horatio Seymour, who presided over the National convention ot his party In New Yrk In 1SS8, by which he was nominated, was also permanent chairman of his party's convention which nominated Mc Clellan and Pendloton at Chicago In Au gust, 1864. Mr. Pendleton was present In the convention which nominated him, and accepted the honor in the convention. In the Democratic National Convention which nominated Franklin Pierce and W. R. King at Baltimore in June, 1S52, ot which John W. Davis, ot Indiana, was permanent chairman, Jefferson- Davis re ceived 11 votes from the Illinois delega tion tor Vice-President. It Is a curious bit of political history that the President of tho Confederacy should have receive such a vote from a Northern state. In the Democratic National Convention which nominated Buchanan and Breckin ridge In Cincinnati, in June. 1S36. four can didates were placed in nomination Bu chanan, Pierce. .Cass and Douglas In the shortest nominating speeches ever deliv ered. The four speeches made exactly 77 words. Breckinridge was preient'when he was nominated for Vice-President, de- DON'T NEGLECT YOUR KIDNEYS Weak Kidneys Caused by Over-Work, by Lifting or a Strain. if! To Prove What Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy Will Do For You, Every Reader of The Oregonian May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. It used to btveonsfdered that only urinary and bladder trou bles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modem science proves that nearly all diseases have their beginning in the dis order of these most important organs. The kidneys filter and purify the blood that is their work. So when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your entire body is affected, and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or "feel badly," begin taking the new dis covery, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kid neys are well they will help all the other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone. The mild and Immediate effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, is soon realized. It stands .the highest for Its wonderful cures of tho most distressing cases. Swamp-Root will set your whole system right, and tho best proof ot this 13 a trial. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re sponsible for moro sickness and suffering than any other disease, and if permitted to continue fatal results are sure to follow. Kidney trouble Irritates the nerves, makes you dizzy, restless, sleepless and irritable. Makes you pass water often during the day, and obliges you to' get up many times during tho night. Causes puffy or dnrk circles under the eyes, rheumatism, gravel, catarrh of the bladder, pain or dull ache In the back, joints and muscles, makes your head acho and back ache, causes Indigestion, stomach and liver trouble: you get a sallow, yellow com plexion: makes you feel as though you had heart trouble; you may have plenty of ambition, but no strength; got weak and waste away. If your water, when allowed to remain undisturbed In a glass or bottle for 24 hours, forms a sediment or settling or has a cloudy appearance, ot if small" par- cllned In a speech and later accepted. The permanent chairman of this convention was John E. Ward, of Georgia. It Is the custom to select as permanent chairman of a National convention a man who Is In office at the time. The Demo cratlo convention have observed this cus tom less frequently than the Republicans. In the convention which nominated Cleve land and Hendricks at Chicago, In July, 18SI, W. F. Vilas was presiding officer. In the convention which nominated Cleve land at St. Louis. In June, 18S8, P. A. Col lins, of Boston who has never, held any Important elective office, was permanent chairman. It to a common political error to refer to the Chicago convention which nom inated Garfield and Arthur as that which had the longest session. That convention was In session seven days. The Charles ton convention, of 19C0. In which the Demo crats met, "was In session In that city 10 days. Caleb Cushlng. of Massachusetts, was permanent chairman. As la known to political students, that convention failed to nominate, and adjourned to meet at Baltimore two months later, on June 13. There It nominated Douglas and Johnson, the latter of Georgia. But there was an other Democratic convention, held by the seceders from the Charleston convention, which also met at Baltimore a. few days later, on June 23. and nominated Breckin ridge and Lone. The Republican National Convention of the same year met at Chicago in May and nominated Lincoln and Hamlin. George Ashmun. of Massachusetts, was perms nent chairman of that body, and Horace Greeley appeared as a delegate, from Ore gon. Another Republican National Conven tion preceded the Lincoln and Hamlin con vention four years. It met at Philadelphia In June. 1S36. and nominated Fremont and Dayton. Henry 8. Lane, of Indiana, was permanent chairman. This was the first Republican National Convention to nom inate candidates for the offices of Presi dent and Vice-President, although It was a continuation of a preliminary conven tion held at Pittsburg In February ot the same year, where, strictly speaking, the Republican party first met in National convention. The Republican National Convention which renominated Grant and selected Wilson for Vice-Presidential candidate, met at Philadelphia In June. 1872. Thomas Settle, of North Carolina, was presiding officer. In the next Republican National Con vention, which met at Cincinnati. Hayes and Wheeler were the nominees. Edward McPherson. of Pennsylvania, was perma nent chairman. In the next convention of the same par ty at Chicago, in 1SS0. both candidates were selected from the delegates. Garfield wns chairman of the Ohio delegation and Ar thur was a delegate from New York. Both became President. There Is no similar In cident In the history of either political party. John B. Henderson was permanent chairman of the convention which nom inated Blaine and Logan at Chicago. In 1SS4. Morris M. Estee was permanent chair man of the convention which nominated Harrison and Morton, at Chicago, In 1SSS. McKlnley, as has been noted, was per manent chairman of the convention which renominated Harrison and named Reld as Vlce-Prcsldentlal candidate at Minneapo lis in 1S92. In the Democratic National Convention tlcles float about In It, It Is evidence that your kidneys and bladder need immediate attention. Swamp-Root Is the great discovery of the eminent kidney specialist. Dr. Kilmer, and Is used lit the leading hospitals; recommended by skillful physicians in their private practice; and is taken by doctors themselves who have kidney ail ments, becauses they recognize in It the greatest and most successful remedy for kidney and bladder troubles that science has ever been able to compound. If you have the slightest symptoms of kidney or bladder trouble, or if there is a trace of It Jn your family history, send at once to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blngham toij, N. Y who will gladly send you, by mall, immediately, without cost to you. a sample bottle of Swamp-Root and a book containing many of tho thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. Be sure to say that you read this generous offer In Tho Port land Dally Oregonlan. Swamp-Root Is pleasant to take, and 19 for sale tho world over at druggists' In bottles of two sizes and two prices fifty cents and one dollar. Remember the name, Swamp-Root, and tho address. Blngham ton. N. Y. which nominated Cleveland and Stevenson at Chicago, in 1SS2, W. L. Wilson was permanent chairman. In the convention which nominated Bryan and Bewail, at Chicago, In 1SD6, Senator White, ef California, was perma nent chairman, and Bryan was. the sec ond Democrat present in convention to receive the nomination for first place, tha other being Seymour. The time consumed by the principal Na tional convention Is as follows: Demo craticCharleston, 1300, ten days; New York, 1868, six; Baltimore, ISIS, five; Balti more, lS3i five; Cincinnati, 1SSG; five. Re jrabllcan Chicago, 1SS0. seven days; Chi cago, 1SSS, seven; first Lincoln convention, Chicago, 1SS0, throe; second Lincoln con vention, Baltimore, 181. two; first Grant convention, Chicago, 1868, two; second1 Grant convention. Philadelphia. 1872. two; McKlnley convention, St. Louis, 1S3S, two. Seven of tho principal Democratic con ventions were held in June, two in July, two In August, one In April, one In May. Ten Republican conventions were held la June and two In May. s Walked Blindly Into the Trap. LONDON, April tr-The Cope Town cor respondent of the Times, telegraphing Monday, says: "Apparently there was not a man ahead of the convoy with orders to look out. but the escort trotted quickly behind, and only discovered that something was wrong af ter half the convoy had been captured." 3 Your Lnrer Will be-rcpseoVto Its .natural -datles and your biliousness, headache and constipation be cured It you take Hood's Piiis Sold by all drnsjslsts. 2S cents. BEECHAMS Act like magic strengthening the Mus cular System, restoring the long-lost Com- TkTlkYInn hWnorinr KcV 4Yia 1... iji Appetite, and arousing with the Rosebud 2 of Health the whole physical energy of 9 the human frame. One of the best guar- S auiees k mo rervotJ3 ana uemiitated is that Beecham's Pills have the Largest Sale of any PatentMedicine in the World, and this has been achieved without the publication of testimonials. K) cents and 25 cents, ot all drag stores VIN MARIANI Marfan! Wine World Famous Tonic It is found especially useful In Nervous Troubles. Dyspepsia. Malaria, Anaemia, loss of Sleep. Consumption. Oierwork. Iadlgeatloc. La. arlppe. Xervws Prostration. General De bility, Tardy Convalescence, Leas of Blood. Impotency, Melancholia. TCiroat and Lung Troubles, Seosickcess, All Wasting Diseases and After-Fevera. Soli by all Druggists. Refuse Substltoes. 1 I - A&idutiafeffjfe ami &bi&ES&a28fa!&:m4Sli .-"--