THE MORNING OKEGONIAST. WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1900. TALKED TO ROUGH RIDERS ROOSEVELT AT THE OKLAHOMA REUNION. Delivered an Expansion. Address He "Will Spealc Through Kansas and Missouri Today. OKLAHOMA CITT. O. T., Julr 3 A typical frontier demonstration and a rousing: welcome from Rough "Riders, cow punchers and citizens of all classes, white, black and red, were accorded to day to Governor Roosevelt, of New York. The second annual reunion of Roosevelt's famous regiment brought 10,000 strangers into this little Western city. Of the 1100, who originally composed the Rough Rid ers Regiment, about 200 were here to greet the Colonel. The surprising part of it Is that the city took care of her guests so welL Of course, there was some Inconvenience, but everybody was In the mood to take things good natur edly, and the second day of the Teunlon can be described at a great success, but with one distressing feature. That was an accident lo Clifton George, secretary of the local committee on reception, who was thrown from his horse, and is thought to have sustained fatal Injuries. The central figure was the New Tork Governor, and the guests of the city vied with each other in extending to him a true Western ovation. The Governor himself rode a black charger In the pro cession which passed through the prin cipal streets. He was cheered all along the lino, the c y. "Hurrah for Teddyl ' being the prevailing sentiment He was not attired in the garb of a Rough Rider, but wore a plain black cutaway coat. The brown sombrero and spurs on his boots alone marked him as the Col onel of his famous regiment. The pro cession "was formed of members of the Grand Armv of the Republic and the United Confederate "Veterans' Cavalry from Fort Reno, a band of redmen in their native garb, members of the Twen tieth Kansas, First Tennessee and Firt Colorado Volunteer Regiments and civic organizations of Oklahoma City and Guthrie. The exercises of the day were held at the fair grounds, and were presided over by A. H. Clasjtn. chairman of the local committee of entertainment. Governor Farnea, of Oklahoma, and Mayor "Van Wyckle. of this city, made welcoming addresses, and Mrs. N. A. Jennings, of New Tork. sang "The Star-Spangled Ban ner. Colonel Roosevelt rose to his feet when the first strains of the soul-stirring anthem were heard, and soon the entire assemblage of 5000 people was rev erently standing. The scene became dra matic when a Rough Rider unfurled the Stars and Stripes and waved the ban ner over the Governor's head. A temporary interruption, that threat ened to result in a panic, occurred dur ing Governor Barnes speech. One of the supports to the speakers' stand gave way, and it was thought for a moment that the structure Might fall, but the presence ofmlnd of the Governor and the owclals in charge averted any serious crush, and when it was found that the stand was solid after all. Governor Barnes continued in his speech. The introduction of Governor Roose velt was the signal for an extraordinary flemonstration, and at times he could scarcely proceed with his address on ac count of the applause. In the course of bis speech the Governor said: "I had never been in your territory until last night, but I feel at home here. You are bone of my bone, blood Of my blood, and to the home of your sons I am bound by the closest ties that can bind one man to his brothers. I hope to come down here often, and -next time I come, I hope to see you a state. You have got free homes, and now you need statehood. I know I don't have to say to you, least of all, to those who know me closely like xny comrades here, that I am with you heart and -soul to aid you In whatever you desire. "And I want today, first of all, to thank the territory and city, whose guests we are, for the magnificent hos pitality extended to us, and then say how glad 1 am that we had with us men of the First Colorado, who followed Gen eral Irving Hale: men of the Twentieth .Kansas, who followed Eunaton and Met calf, and men of the First Tennessee, men of the different volunteer regiments, and men also of those splendid regulars, who, in time of war and time of peace, are ever ready to do the bidding of our common, country. And I am glad to Bee here today representatives of the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry, beside whom we marched to victory on that blood-stained morning, two years ago last Sunday. 3ea of Oklahoma it Is 11 years since yott-had Oklahoma. Why are you here? Because you expanded into Oklahoma. This is not politics. This is a statement of fact. Wherever the flag is, and as Ions as there is aa armed foe against it, the flag stays there. Among the men of my regiment who are here today are men partly or la whole of the blood of the Pawnee, the Cherokee, the Chickasaw, and the Creek, the ancient red owners of tho soiL One of the men of that blood I promoted for gallantry in action from Second Lieutenant finally to a Captain. Ee was shot, and before bis wound was healed ho joined us at the front. And now that man has a commission in the army.-of tho United States over In the Philippines. Now, why was he with me? Because you had expanded over him; because you had treated him with Justice; because you had made one law the same for all men. Injustice and wrong ruin the nation that does it, and another thing does it even quicker cowardice, cring ing and shrinking from the work of the world, when the world's work has got to be done. We of the Rough Riders are proud of our Colonel, the present General Wood, proud of him not only because we remember how he formed us, not only because we remember how he led us in the fight at Guasimas, when most of us had not any ides, exactly how It felt to be in a fight, but we found out. But we are proud of him because he has been an able and upright civic administrator in Cuba; because we feel that our regi ment has taken the lead in famishing the sort of men who must be sent to the tropic islands that have become ours, if we are going to, as we must, make our role a blessing Indeed to those islands. "And I appeal to the people of the great West. I appeal to the men who fought in the Civil War, and to their sons, who came forward so gallantly to offer all that they had when the nation called again. Whatever their party did, I care nothing for their party, I appeal to them to see to it that the nation does not shrink from its work: that the flag which has so far been borne to honor shall be upheld forevermore as the flag of the greatest and mightiest nation of man kind, a nation that shrinks from no duty when duty calls. I have a right to ap peal, for I fought with a regiment from the West containing many men from the East, men whose fathers once wore the ' blue, others whose fathers wore the gray, a regiment In which we knew neither Easterner nor Westerner, nor Northerner nor Southerner, no distinction of creed or race or origin or occupation, but in which we treated each man on his worth as a man. We could get good work out of that regiment, because every man in it knew if he did his duty we would "stand by him, and if he did not do nls duty all the politicians In the land could not save him. "No nation, no matter how glorious its record, can exist unless It practices practices, mind you, not merely preaches civic honesty, civic decency, civic righteousness. No nation can perma nently prosper unless the decalogue and thtf'golden rule are Its guides in public as in private life. Don't get into that most foolish of attitudes of admiring mere smartness, unaccompanied by moral pur pose. "If we are going to make' this republic what it ought to be, insist that a pub lic man's deeds must square with his words, that in his performances he must make good his promises, or he has no right to appeal to you for confidence or for support, and when we have learned that lesson, when we make it understood that no ability, no capacity, nothing shall atone for the lack of elementary decency In public life, then we will put this nation where it should be, the greatest among the nations on which through 'the ages the sun has ever shone." At the conclusion of Colonel Roosevelt's speech he was presented with a magnifi cent sword and scabbard, the gift of the citizens of Oklahoma City. During the afternoon, the Governor was entertained at the fair grounds by exnoits of dif ferent sports in true Western style, in cluding mule races, Indian dancing and steer roping and tying. He was the guest of honor at an Informal dinner in the evening, and an elaborate display of fireworks ended the day's festivities. The Governor left on his special train tonight. Governor Roosevelt Is expected to' deliver some speeches tomorrow on the trip through Kansas and Missouri. A pathetic Incident of the reunion was the presence of Mrs. Captain Capron, widow of Captain Allen Capron. of Troop L, of Rough Riders. Mrs. Capron was seated on the platform during the de livery of Governor Roosevelt's address and the greeting between hnr and the Governor was very affecting. She carried in her hand the guidon of the regiment draped In plain black, and when the boys of the Rough Riders bore to the platform the colors of the regiment, she wept bitterly. Mrs. Capron came to Oklahoma especially to attend the reunion of the regiment in whose affairs her husband bore so valorous a part. CHAMPIONSHIP MEET. Seattle Athletic Club Woa From Multnomah. SEATTLE, July 3. The fifth annual Pa cific Northwest Athletic championship meet was held here today, being won by the Seattle Athletic Club by 80- points as against 63 points of the Multnomah Ath letic Club. Four new records were es tablished, three by the victors and one by Heater, of the visiting team. Heater raised the pole vault record from 10 feet 10 inches to 10 feet 11M, inches with a people who witnessed the contest. Paris, of Seattle, broke the 440-yard-dash record, lowering It to 52 2-5 seconds, from 53 2-3 seconds. In the one-mile bicycle race, Mlllhouse, of Seattle, reduced the record to 2 minutes 25 4-5 seconds, from 2:34. The fourth record broken was the mile relay, the time of which was lowered to S:41$i by the Seattle Athletic Club. THE NATIONAL LEAGUE. Scores of Yesterday's Ball Games in the East. At Pittsburg R H E R H E Pittsburg .... 2 5 lJBoston 16 0 Batteries Chesbro and Zlmmer; Lewis and W. Clarke. At Chicago R H El R. H E Chicago 9 14 1 'Philadelphia . 3 10 3 Batteries Griffith and Donahue; Bern hard and Douglass. At Cincinnati RHE RHE Cincinnati ...10 7 4'New York .... 8 14 5 Batteries Breltenstein, Stimmel and Peitx; Doheny, Hawley and Bowerman. Other Games. At Detroit Detroit, 5; Buffalo. 2. At Sioux City Sioux City, 3; Des Moines, 7. At Minneapolis Chicago, 8; Minneap olis, 8. At Cleveland Cleveland, 5; Indianap olis, 2. At Kansas City Kansas City, 2;. Mil waukee, 4. Rational Le&gae Standing ,. Won. Lost." Per cL Brooklyn ... z& 19 ,K5 Pittsburg ., t 33 25 5(9 Philadelphia ... 32 25 .561 Boston 27 28 .491 Chicago 26 30 .464 Cincinnati 24 31 .426 St. Louis 23 30 .434 New York 22 34 .393 Amateur Golf Tournament. NSW YORK, July 3. Walter J. Travis, of the Oakland, L. L, Golf Club, and R. C. Watson, of the Westbrook Club, tnet in the amateur golf tournament on the Garden City Golf Club links today, and Travis defeated his younger oppon ent by two up and one to play. Six pairs of golfers stayed 33 holes each to day, which meant that 16 of the eligible ones would be forced out of the tourna ment during the afternoon. While many of them had quite a follow ing of friends, the chief interest of the spectators was centered in tho match between Travis and Watson. Up to and including the sixth hole, Watson held his own, but from' that point Travis made gains which left him three up on the ninth hole, and when the round was com pleted, he had his lead Increased to five up. Travis was not as good as usual on the long game, but he did some remark ably clever putting, which is considered his weakest point in golt. Sporting; Notes. At the Seaside Athletic Club, Coney Island, Dave Sullivan, of Ireland, was disqualified in the 16th round of his bout with Kid Broad, of Cleveland, for hit ting low. The stewards of Washington Park Club, Chicago, announced that Barney Schrieber will be barred from the track hereafter, and will have to lose his horses on account of inconsistent racing of Fly by Night, who won the Oakwood handi cap Saturday after having finished un placed among poorer horses Thursday. Winners of the races at heepshead Bay were: Killashandra, Komara, Roll ing Boer, Gharentus, Flora and Jack Point. At St. Louis: Sam Lazarus, Cross Molina, Minnie Cabb, Wlethoff, Early Bird and Premus. At Newport, Villa "V.. Helma Clark. Pall Mall n. Ennonla and Peter Duryeo. At Chicago, Hermoso, Danger Line, Scheck. Sidney Lucas, Moroni and Primar. At Fort Erie, Eleven Bells, Miss Kringle, Fuimlnator, Earl Fonso, Frank Morrison, Sister Alice and Midnight Chimes. EARLY MORNING FIRE, i FirevrorSu Bet Fire to Residence of 3 D. Honeyzaan. This morning at 2:15 a still alarm called Out truck company No. 2 and fire engine No. 4, and the residence of J. D. Honey man, SS0 Fourteenth street, was dis covered on fire. The blaze had started under the roof and the rear of the house and roof were on fire. The cause of the blaze is attributed to Fourth of July fireworks. Twenty minutes active work was sufficient to quench the flames. The house was fully Insured. The damage is estimated between H000 and $1500. Woodstock: Sohpol. The Woodstock School Board recently re-elected Professor Miller, Miss Carrie McCabe and Mrs. Anna Read as teachers for the coming year? The district is in excellent financial condition, there will be a 10 months' school term, and the sal aries of the teachers increased. The years' work Just closed is one of the most successful and satisfactory In the .history of the school. The patrons and residents of the dis trict are well pleased that Professor Mil ler has been employed for another year. He is a most successful teacher, and a man of unsusal strong character, whose Influence for right and truth is felt in every home A special meeting of the voters of the district will be held at the school house Saturday evening, July 7, to elect a director to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of W. S.' Church, who has moved out of the district. COWARDLY CAPTAINS JfEW YORK, TUGBOAT MEN WILL BE PROSECUTED. Refused to Save Lives During; the Great Hoboken Fire Recov ery of Bodies. NEW YORK, July 8. One "hundred and two bodies have been recovered from the waters of the North River, up to 10 o'clock. The list Is growing hourly and tomorrow, when the tide is at Its lowest, it is believed that a great many more bodies will be recovered. The dead f tonight are distributed among the : morgues in Hoboken, Jersey City and I New York, and on the steamship Saale j there are three bodies which have not i been removed. All day long the work of searching tho NEW PRESIDENT WESTON NORMAL SCHOOL ..IMIIKBW i wiTnlFfhirWI WMBHsmW SKKKTBm HBH& SSSSk -3B8 sHaHiSBk IsHHli BssBHHslBBBBBftJNnBHDb. aSsHHssSsBL &3l SSSsHsJBRHsSBBMWgSuHHVHslBW XilBfiHHK iZ BBBBEBBBHBBPBsflBaBBSBBBBBBBflflBBB9saBBBBBVLiSSK DR. J. A. BEATTIE. WESTON, Or.. July 1. Dr. J. A. Beattie, the newly elected President of the Eastern Oregon State Normal School, at Weston, was born In Ohio In 1545. no wcelved hU edu cation In the public schooks of Ohio, Savannah Academy and Bethany Col&g. He has at tained the decrees of Master of Science, Master of Arts and Doctor of Laws, and his ex perience as a teacher extends over a period of 33 years. He has served aa City Superin tendent of Schools of Ashland, O.. and has been connected with Bedford College, Indiana; OsfcalcoKL College, Iowa; Cotner University, Nebraska, and the State Normal School at Peru. Neb. He now realms the Presidency of the latter Institution In order to accept the position at Weston. In connection with his other duties. Dr. Beattie has done a .treat deal of worlc In teachers' Institutes, and as a lecturer before teachers' gatherings generally. For the past four years he has been a member of tho Educational Council of the State Teachers' Association, of Nebraska, and of the Reading Circle Board.. As an instructor, his work has been principally along the linos of mathematics, psychology rhetoric and English literature, ethics, logic and pedagogy. Of the 33 years In which )he has followed the teacher's profession, 15 have been devoted to administrative and executive work: The selection of Dr. Beattie Is deemed an excellent one by patrons of the school' , The new'Presldent came ont from- Nebraska a few days ajo. and has been visiting his son, R. Kent Beattie, Professor of Botany In the State Agricultural Collvge, at Pullman, Wash. Ho has now returned to Peru. Neb., and will arrive at Weston In a.few weeks with Mrs. Boattle and three daughters. t ruins was kept up. The officials of the North German Lloyd line were doing ev erything they could to straighten out matters and bring things into some sort of tangible shape. Their main efforts were directed to taking care of the sur vivors and to securing an accurate list of the missing. They looked after the transportation to Germany of the sur vivors who are In condition to go. Thoy also gave to them clothing and fed them. Official action was today started on the charge of cruelty against tugboat captains and also on the charges that they refused to rescue persons unless money was paid to them. Information was sworn to before Re corder Stanton, in Hoboken, todliy, by Ferdinand H. Ktrowse, uhdrd officer of ttjb Phancla, who charged -tftiat be tried to get aboard a tug from one of tho North German Lloyd piers and succeeded In boarding her, but was put off becameo he had no money. A sensution was arcated by an an nouncement from Mayor Fagan of Ho boken, tlhat he wlK prosecute eH tug boat captains against whom charges of refusing to save lite r the greaa dock Are can be substantiated. The Mayor says he wlH apply for warranto chargtng two tugboat captains with nwrdtjr and that he has evMenco that these nwsi used :boat hooks to keep drowning men from cEntbrng on tfbe&r tugs because the un fortucatea had no money. An effort Is aiso to be made to have the licenses of offending captains revoked. Up to the stoppage of work late last night 67 bodies had1 been; recov ered. Wrecking tugs today continued their work on the Main and Bremen, re moving cargo and debris and trying to reach the bodies believed to be In their holds. Many persons are known to have perished In these ships and the search for the remains will be kept up, but it la feared that any recovered will be unrecognizable. The body of an unknown man, thought to be ohe of the victims of the fire, was found at the foot of Essex street, Jer sey City, today Afto? dork aet night tire boeta of the searcberfl were provided with bulls eya Janrterne and electric hand torches, and the force at work was doubled, so, that no bodies might escape up or down the river. The turning of the tide Is tho time when bodies are started from the bottom and come to the sur face. The bodies began to appear Monday afternoon when tho tide began to run ebb, and they continued to rise until the tide had fallen almost to dead slack. On the return tide the guards were sent up the river towards the ThtngvaKo; docks to see that no bodies floated up the river. The guard will be maintained for several days. Many of the 4,1 bodies found during the first day's search rose to the surface of the water between the long lines of partly burned piles, which are now the only remains of the four great piers. The other bodies were dragged from the mud at the bottom of the river near tho bulk heads, and some nearer the river ends of the piers. Scores of men placed about the docks all day in rowboats were dragging the mud with grappling irons or poking with long -poat hooks. Some of the boats would come to shore with two and some with three bodies. Men were stationed at the Hamburg piers to watch for any bodies that might float down the stream and be carried towards the bay. The searchers Tor the bodies were volunteer workers. They prosecuted the search without promise of reward. The New Jersey naval reserves on the training-ship Portsmouth, to the north of the Valencia Club's boothouse, saw the body of a woman floating in the river and made attempts to recover It, but It was lost while they wers lowering a boat. A grocer named Boxbeegan, of Brook- lyn. went to Hoboken with the Idea of Identifying a friend. He viewed several bodies In tho morgue and soon after ward dropped dead. Supervising Inspector-General Dumont, of the steamboat inspection service, Washington, has forwarded a letter to the local Inspectors in this city directing that an investigation be begun at once of the charge that the captain of the tugboat Dandy refused to take men from the steamship Bremen because" they had no money. In his letter the Supervising Inspector-General said: "Wnile it seems almost incredible that any licensed officer conld be guilty of such chaxres as are alleged against the masier of the Dandy, yet the charge is &o circumstantial it seems that your office should take Immediate notice of It, so that if true such misconduct may be punished to the extent of your lawful authority." Professor A. E. Burgeon, of tihe Agricultural College, at College Sta tion, Texas, bad a ', thrilling ex perience on tho steamshlj) Bremen. He was visiting a friend named 'Wolf, a mechanical engineer of Hoboken. The Texan was very anxious 'to see the en- gine-room of an ocean steamship, and his friend, who was a friend of one of the engineers of the Bremen, secured per mission to pay a visit. They were down In the;engine-room, on the Bremen when the Are started. In an instant they found the usual means of egress cut off by the flames. They ran out into the hold and came to a hatch way, through which was suspended a rope. ' "It Is your only hope; professor; shin It." said Wolf. Tho professor tried to climb the rope, but It was beyond his power. "Good-bye, o!d man; you will have to go witnout me," he said, to Wolf. After a final embrace, tho athlete grasped the rope. He reached the air in safety, jumped overboard and was rescued by a passing ! tug. Down in the stoke hole, the professor found that he had many companions in misery. Ho counted about 30 engineers, firemen and coalpassers, all huddled In one compartment of the hold. After a whilo one of the engineers opened a coaling port and dropped him out Into the water. He was picked up by & tug and sent to a hospital. m The work of removing the car go from the Saale was discon tinued today, and a gang of 35 men was put to work preparing tho ship for pumping out. Divers weresent down to J cover the'portiholes that were broken, aril u. uuuiuer ul uuuerraaKers commencea to remove rivets from the Iron work that now covers the ways to tho steerage hatchway. When this hatchway is opened up, It Is expected that a number of bodies will be found.. The fine on the Main has been put out ana wnne tne upper works will have to be rebuilt, tho hull of the vessel is in pretty fair shape. The plates of the hull above watar, altfhough burned off, have not sprung any leaks, which shows her bottoms were not much affected by the heat. The Bremen, beached alongside of the Main or the WetfcowJwn flats, rests on her port side. The visible part of her lines, the upper works, looks a deplora ble wreck, but her hull Is nearly all right The powerful derrick Monarch is keep ing the Bremen from keeling over to port. The Kaiser Wilhelm der Gross, the only vessel of the fleet in port to escape the flames of Saturday, sailed today for Bremen. On the verael And on all the piers and shipping and along tho river the flags were flying at half-mast. The piers were crowded with people. The steamship sailed at 10 A. M., with cabins and steerage full. Emperor William's Sympathy. BERLIN, July 3. Tho officials of the North German Lloyd Company have re celved a telegram from Emperor William expressing sympathy with the company In the calamity that has befallen it. Foreign Sotes. The English House of Lords passed the Australian commonwealth blin The Consul-General of Colombia at New York denies that the rebels In his coun try are making headway The United States training-ship Buffalo, which left Malta June 30. on her way fo Manila, arrived at Port Said yesterday. 'From one and one-half to three inches of Tain has fallen over the whole drouth stricken portion of the Colony of Queens land. The Khedive paid a state visit to the City of London yesterday; afternoon, and lunched at the Guild Hall, after the wel coming ceremonies had been carried out in the art gallery QUAINT TOWN OF TAKU DID?rT AMOUNT TO MUCH AS A FORTIFIED POST. Desolate Surrounding aad Business of Comparatively Little Import ance Climate Ifot Castrating. The town of Taku, which has Just been captured by the allied civilized nations, is a military settlement rather than a city, says Marghertta A. Homm in the New Tork Post. It is situated at tho mouth of the Peh Ho. the chief river in the province of Chi LL It was origin ally a fishing village, and a favorite ren dezvous of pirates and, smugglers. Even before the first war of China with Eng land it was fortified in the antiquated style so dear to the Chinese heart. The old fort is still In existence, and is won dered at and laughed over by the few who visit the place. The walls are made of brick and earth and are reinforced by mud banks made from the oozy soil of the neighborhood. Originally It was armed with smooth-bore, muzzle-loading 32 and 64-pounders. It was a stronghold according to the standards of the last century, but under modern conditions practically worthless. It was neatly de scribed to a party of friends by the late Captain Gridley, of the Olympla, as "the most satisfactory cattle-pen on the Chi nese Coast." During the war between France and China In 1SS4-1SS5 the old fort was greatly strengthened by earthwork batteries on both sides of the river, and by a number of Krupp and Armstrong guns. It was the intention of tho Chi nese commander-in-chief to use Arm strongs exclusively, but the Britsh agent refused to pay any commission Jo the Chinese officials or to give receipts for amounts larger than those he received. Negotiations were therefore broken oft with him, and the remainder of the arma ment supplied through Chinese intermedi aries, who furnished Krupp guns at fig ures satisfactory to themselves and the purchasers. "Quaker" Cartridges, Wooden Gun". The corruption which marked this of ficial huslness was Illustrated soon after the breaking out of the war between China and Japan, when over 1000 cart ridges In stock turned out to be clay neatly molded, silvered, and japaned, so as to be almost Indistinguishable from the real article. Two of these "quaker" cartridges were exhibited in Yokohama among other relics of the International contest. It Is said by old residents of Tien Tsln that at least two of what seemed to bo the largest-sized Krupp guns were made of wood, painted, sil vered and carved so as to be perfect Images of the steel and iron weapons of the famous German Ironmaster. There Is no harbor to Tarxu, It being upon the low coast of tho Hoang Hal, or Yellow Sea. The settlement consists of barracks, officers' quarters, a small custom-house, and a. lot of poor Chinese houses or hovels. The land is a port of the delta t of the Peh Ho. This river, though small, brings down an enormous amount of silt, andkls steadily shoaling up the sea beyond. Although the Yel low Sea Is rather turbulent, the fierce river Is moving the bar out steadily. The charts show this movement very clearly. Those of the early part of the century make the bar about three miles from the shore, in 1S50 it was about four anu a half-miles, and today it is six miles. At this distance from the land there Is only 12 feet at low tide, excepting in the four channels. The bottom Is mud, the soft and so free from rocks that the coasting captains who ply that part of the Chinese waters think little of FUnnlns aground in this -neighborhood. For many years enterprising merchants have kep powerful steam tugs at Tien Tsln, and they make a handsome profit In towing vessels up and down the Peh Ho, and In pulling luckles3 ships oft the number Uess shoals within the bar. A Desolate Landscape. Taku Is exceedingly desolate. Though the soil Is very rich and vegetation grows with rapidity, yet the poverty of the people compels them, to utilize the small- cat pieces of vegetable matter. In tho Fall the writor has noticed the natives gathering all the dead leaves, and just before the first frost they dug up all the roots, even the grass roots, dried them, and put them by for fuel. From October until April, therefore, the ground is as bare as a newly ploughed field, and the endless expanse of clay, sand and silt forms as lugubrious a background as the eye could rest upon. So thorough is this robbery of green things that the land birds go to more favorable districts, and even such winged creatures as the wild ducks make but a short stay in their long flight to warmer climes. The natives of Taku belong to the same type as those of other towns in Chi Li and Shan Tung. They are much larger, heavier, and stronger than those of the south, who give U3 S9 per cent of our Chinese population, and they nre of much lighter complexion, many of them having gray or hazel eyes, brown and even dark red hair They ore proud and more inde pendentandoftenmore unruly than their colleagues In the south. In size and stature they compare well with the ave--oge American. Through this district Is found a strain of very tall and powerful men, who, according to their own leg ends, are descendants of a famous Mon golian horde that camo from the north several thousand years ago. It is this breed which produced Chang, the star giant of Barnum's moral show in the years long gone by, and Chang's sister, a colossal maiden eight feet four inches in height. The climate of Taku cannot be recom mended from any point of view. In Win ter it is bitterly cold, and all communica tion is shut off by a wall or great ram part of Ice at sea and drifts of snow on land. For three months the place Is thus buried alive. During the Spring rains the territory is a miasmatic marsh, and, during the rest of the year. It is hot, dusty, insect-ridden and uncomfortable. From Taku an excellent military road runs to Tien Tsln. It owes Its existence and fine condition to U Hung Chang, who. during his 'long official residence there as Viceroy, bestowed more care and labor upon the thoroughfares of hla Jurisdiction than any other Viceroy. While tho road is not equal to the im perial post road, which runs through the empire, it is much better than the aver ago Chinese road, which goes up and down hill with no regard to safety or comfort. It seems to have been flagged in the beginning of history and not to have been repaired since. Any good points about it are due to the millions of feet, brute and human, which have traversed its surface, and the rain and wind, which have brought dust and debris to fill up Its Inequalities. The Peh Ho is a stream which resem bles some of the rivers flowing into tho Gulf of Mexico. It twists and winds like a serpent and changes Its channel with regularity and dispatch. It Is always nav regularity and dispatch. It Is always navigable to light-draught boats, and during the Spring, to steamers of 20 and 21 feet draught There is a river popula tion as upon every stream In the Celes tial Empire, but on account of the bitter Winters and the Spring freshets Its hab its are very different from those which prevail on the Yangtse and the Si Klang. In the early Fall the Junkmen draw their clumsy crafts high up on the banks and build around them walls of mud. Fre quently the walls will be higher than the gunwales. The first frost changes the mud to crystalline hardness, making It a capital defence against cold and storm. This practice has been copied by civilized nations, and many aro the men-of-war, English and American, which have gone into mud quarters during the Winter at Tien Tsln station. Our own people have developed the Chinese practice into a science and have won the admiration of the Mongolians. One Winter tho Palos, A and superior to the best English brands of Porter, Stout or 'alf and 'alf, being more mellow and pleas ing. The one perfect American Porter. Prepared by AnheuserJBusch Brewing Ass'n St. Louis. U. S. A. Brewers of the Original Budweiser, Faust, Michelob, Anheuser-Standard, Pale-Lager, Export Pale, Black & Tan, Exquisite and Malt-Nutrine, which was a light-draught gunboat, ran on a mud flat at high tide. A mud wall, eight feet high and 10 feet wide, was built all around It. Between the walls and the boat the sailors put straw, and on tho straw a coating of mud eight Inches thick. From the port and starboard gang ways they ran out wooden platforms to the top of the wall and thence a light bridge to the land. Over the deck they built a barnlike structure containing win dows, and covered all the joints with pa per. While building the deck cover the early frost converted the mud into ada mant, and so gave them an outside wall to their craft which was proof against cold, rats and thieves. They next made a skating pond along tho wall, and there during the Winter they held high carni val. Jnnlc Trade Crushed by Steam. At one time there was a large Junk trade on tho Peh Ho, especially of big freight Junks, bringing rice, beans, bean cake, bean-oil, and foreign goods to Tien Tsln. This was almost wholly destroyed by the coasting steamers. At the present time two Chinese, four Japanese, six English, and one German line of steamers call regularly at Tien Tsln. and at least two tramp steamers visit It every week. As a single steamer will bring from 10 to 50 times as much cargo as a Junk, the decadence of the junk trade is easily understood. The Junkmen, who even to day are a powerful element in the work ing classes, are very bitter against the foreign devil and his vessels, and even more bitter against the Chinese mer chants, who are now so largely interested in steam navigation. It must be remem bered that these coasters are manned by Chinese crews, chiefly Swatow men, with Malay quartermasters. The Swa tow men speak a language uttterly unin telligible to the people of Chi LI, who re gard them as foreigners of a worse type than those who have red heads, I. e., English or Luzon men (Spaniards), or Flower-flag men, that is, Americans. A Chinese steamship sailor receives ?S gold a month, while the junkman, even in his palmy days, got but ?1 or $1 50. To the resentment occasioned by the destruction of the business is added the Jealousy produced by seeing a rival receive what Is to him a princely salary. This may account In some measure for the fact that most of the disturbances of the pres ent insurrection have thus far taken place on the great internal water-ways, which have been so profoundly affected com mercially In the past decade. Xativc Soldiers. The native soldiers at Taku are no bet ter and no worse than those of other ports. At one time when LI Hung Chang was in power In Chi LI they were well drilled, and were thoroughly familiar with modern weapons, but during the war with Japan his famous army corps was broken up. and when he was displaced and de graded the efficient organization which he had created at Tien Tsln and Taku was utterly demolished by his conservative rivals. Only one regiment and a brass band remain at Tien Tsln to tell the story of their former greatness. For the last five years the Taku garrison has consist ed of poorly dressed, poorly fed, and poorly drilled raw levies, with their pay generally six months In arrears, and with no medical attendance excepting that which they could secure from a medical missionary. Many of them have never fired a rifle nor handled a cartridge. So far as Is known, they have never used the big guns, the only firing they have done being the salute from a light fleld pleco whenever a man-of-war passed the forts en route to Tien Tsln. The pres ent officers are on a par with the men. Under the conservative administration of tho Empress Dowager, all the foreign drillmasters have been discharged from the Imperial service, and their places filled with graduates of the Manchurlan Military College at Pekln. This school, its system and graduates, would be ridic ulously funny If they were not so piti able. Their chief text book upon military science is a literary classic more than 1000 years old. It abounds In such extra ordinary recommendations as these: "A wise General plays sweet music be fore going Into battle In order to lull his enemies Into a deep sleep." "A good Commander should insist upon his men practicing with the bow to shoot backwards as they ride on their horses, and should at times lead In the exerclso himself." "No General should go to war without taking with him an extra red umbrella and an extra umbrella-bearer." These graduates are supposed to have mastered horsemanship, bow and arrow, tho spear, the sword, and martial music, these being even today the chief features of the Manchurlan curriculum. The Taku garrison is supposed to con sist of 5000 soldiers commanded by a Ti Tal or MaJor-General. If Taku Is like most of tho garrison cities of China, the 5000 soldiers existed only on paper, ex cepting so far as drawing their salaries from the National treasury was con cerned and are represented by 1100 or 1200 poor wretches no more entitled to the name of soldier than tho little New York boys who parade up and down the street with wooden guns and paper hats. The Prohibition Convention. Chicago Inter Ocean. It seemed to ,be the prevailing opinion among the delegates that the way to promote the holy cause of temperance was to slur the Government and Insult the President of the United States. But the charitable view is that the majority of the delegates, Influenced by the causes set forth above, lost control of them selves, and that, advantage was taken of their hysterical condition by the pro fessional politicians. The dupes of these professionals seem to have conceived the idea that the canteen is not an institu tion that has come down to us through tho decades, but rather a recent device lnyented by William McKInley, of Ohio, for the purpose of debasing the American soldier and demoralizing the American army. They have evidently a vague idaa that tho canteen is something in the nature of a tin pall or "growler." From tho remarks of several delegates It ap pears also to be a common belief In the convention that William McKInley Is never quite so happy as when pouring strong liquors or serving foaming beer to his callers. Getting Hla Properties. "Gimme a pair of Ions, yellow chin-whiskers," said tho man with the sun-burned face and' slightly rural air. "Detective, eh?" aslced the costumer. "Naw. Summer boarders are coming next week., 'and I've sot to rlt On a make-up for my part." Indianapolis Press. fmi y& "The American Porter," is without an equal as a re freshing beverage, ERRORS IN QUOTATIONS XT IS BOTH TJNWISB AKD VJSSATM TO RELY OX THE 2IK2IOB.T. Jingle of Earl of Boieomaos. Creft Ited to Pope Quotations T2ia Are Constantly- Abased a ,j The longer one follows the businewefi writing tho more entirely he becamss convinced, by withering experiences, of the unwisdom and unsafety of quoting from memory, says tho Rochester Demo crat and Chronicle. The man who quotes, without refresh ing his memory or correcting his distinct impression of the passage quoted by ref erence to the text, will, In nine cases out of 10, bungle his quotation, even If It be of a passage so familiar that to inclose it in quotation marks seems almost an In suit to his readers. Indeed, the more fa miliar the passage the more entirely cer tain you are that you recollect it per fectlythe surer you are to get it wrong. For the words that are so familiar to you are, most often, not the words of the author, but merely the popular colloquial version, practically certain to be incor rect, of the author's words. By trusting to your momory of such passages you not merely risk mangling them which fault. If you cling to the popular version, la likely to pass unrebuked but you also risk miscrediting them, ascribing them to some author who didn't writo them; which fault Is most unlikely to escape unrebuked by some superfluous busybody. A Frightful Example. Hero Is Paul Leicester Ford, In his "Janice Meredith," furnishing a frightful example of the danger of quoting from memory. A man of wide reading, who ought to know better a "literary feller," who ought to set a good example of cor rectness In quotation to common folks he falls Into one of the commonest and most frequently corrected of familiar misquotations. He had occasion to quote these lines: Immodest words admit of no defense. Or want of decency Is wont of sense. (Being "entirely familiar" with them, as everybody is, the advisability of veri fying his impression of them did not sug gest itself to him. He confidently quoted from memory, and so, of course, mis quoted them, writing "want of modesty" for "want of decency," and erroneously ascribing their authorship to Pope. To do him justice, he doesn't mention Pope by name, but refers the authorship to "the reigning poet of the eighteenth cent ury." The Chronicler thinks it fair to assume that by "the reigning poet of the eighteenth century" Mr. Ford meant Pope. At any rate, he certainly couldn't have meant the real author of the lines, the Earl of Roscommon. For tho Earl of Roscommon was never "tho reJgnintr poet of any century, nor any sort poet of tho ISth century, because ho TiV been dead and buried 18 years when the ISth century began. Mr. Ford had prob atory never read tho author's own wordsw That Jg no reproach to Mm. Probably nobody now alive has ever read the. Earl of Roscommon's "Eioays in Traaslatedi Verso." So Mr. Ford thought tho lines were Pope's; because they sound Hka Pope, and because almost everybody thinks they are Pope's. He followed tho multitude with unquestioning faith, and because, to quote another line of the Earl of Roscommon's; "The multitude i always in the wrong" in regard to quo tations he earned hia little reminder that every author receives sooner or later of the wiodom of verifying one's quotatloni before letting them into print. "Familiar 911s Quotations. Somo ono with time enough for th necessary research couJd write" a very entertaining essay on "Familiar Misquo tations." There are a host of them. The Chronicler probably baa a great many of them stored away in hds mind, ready at the first favorable opportunity to faros themselves lnta Chronicling In the guise of quotations and get him. into trouble, but he only knows a. very few of them for what they are. There is tho remark that "if a man were permitted to maJce all the ballads ho need not care who Should make tho laws of a Nation" publicly misquot ed a dozen times every day In the year, and as often erroneously ascribed, to Fletcher "of Saltoun, aJways, for soma unknown reason, called "Old" Fletcher of Saltoun in this connection. Then there Is- The mind Is Its own place, and In ltsalt Can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven. Most persons aro now aware that the haunting Idea that theso lines are Shakes peare's is a delusion and a snare, but they are still almost Invariably misquot ed thus: "The mind Is Its own place, and of it3elf Can make a hell of heaven, a heaven of hell." Then there are "Go& tempers the wind to the shorn lamb," as to which It Is most difficult to rid yourself of the Im pression that it must oe somewhere in the Bible," although you know better; and, on the other hand, "Evil communi cations corrupt good manners," which ap peals to most persons as a proverbial saying of unknown origin, although It oc curs in a chapter of the Bible than which no other is more frequently read In pub- lie. These, with the Earl of Roscom mon's lines, already referred to, about complete the Chronicler's list of quotation traps from which he Is fairly safe. As you see, the list is short. It could easily bo extended. For any one can procure plenty of material for a long and enter taining essay on "Familiar Misquota tions" by writing down, from memory, all the familiar quotations he can think of, and then verifying thm with ha aid of an authoritative "Dictionary of Quotations." Sapphires of Many Hues. New Tork World. It used to be supposed that a perfect sapphire must be of a dark, rich blue tint. Now the discovery of a new sapphire mine in the Rocky Mountains, where stones were found varying in their shades of color from a light steel blue to the deep blue tint and again from a lovely amethyst to a ruby red, has changed all that. These new sapphires have become the rage. They touched the whole color 3calo of blue, red and purple,