THE 'MORNING OBEGONIAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1901. MS THE JIM i Mitchell Wants to Know the Charges. "THEN HE WILL ANSWER Senator Writes a Letter to Fed eral Grand Jury. HE IS REFUSED ADMISSION Assistant District Attorney Heney Says He Is Willing for Him to Appear, but He Will Accord Hm No Special Privileges. SENATOR MITCHELL TO GRAND JURY. If, therefore, you will kindly advise I ra when all such testimony has been submitted on the part of the Govern ment, I ivjll then be 'ready to to be fore you in answer to any such charges as may be made, and I re spectfully ask that on my appearance before yon at the close of the Gov ernment's case I then be advised fully as to the precise charges, if any, made against me, and of the nature of the evidence submitted by the Govern ment in support thereof. And I also should bo glad, if not deemed im proper by your advisors, that the names of the "witnesses making the t same be submitted to me at that time. rrancls J. Heney'a Reply. Senator Mitchell will reccivo at my hands the same privileges "which I irould accord under similar circum stances to the humblest citizen of the United States, and I will at-all times advise the grand Jury not to indict any man, whether his position in so ciety is high or low. unless the evi dence In the possession of the Gov ernment is sufficient in my judgment to warrant and sustain a conviction by a trial Jury. I am ready and willing to permit Senator Mitchell to appear before the grand Jury and to ex amine him about ail the matters relating to which the Government has evidence, and with which his name is in any way connected. Senator Mitchell had a hard time with the Federal grand jury yesterday and has not as yet been allowed to appear before that body to hear what charges have beon or will be brought to connect him with the land frauds being unearthed. At 10 o'clock he appeared at the door of the juryroom and handed to the foreman a letter asking that he be allowed to ap pear before the jury to answer all ques tions which might be put to him In regard to his complicity in any fraud or con spiracy, but he affixed a clause to the effect that he would not go before the body unless he could be presented with the case against him, and suggesting also that he bo furnished with the names of the witnessos testifying to his detriment. Ho rIfo stipulated In his letter that he would not go before the jury until all of the case of the Government had been pre sented. The letter was considered by the jury and as a result the Senator was not called to give his version during the forenoon", us it had been promised to him that he should. In the afternoon the Senator ap peared again at the juryroom and asked to be admitted, but was met at the door by Assistant District Attorney Heney and told that he could perhaps be allowed to go before the jurors today at 2 o'clock. Mr. Hermann also takes the same stand as does the Senator and was given the same answer when he applied for admis sion yesterday afternoon. Far From an Agreement. The difference of opinion between Sen ator Mitchell and Mr. Heney seems to have taken a different turn and an agree ment is no nearer reached than it was in the first place. On December 38 Sen ator Mitchell telegraphed Mr. Heney, stat ing that he demanded that all charges against him be fully investigated, and he lurther demanded in bo many words that he be allowed to appear before the jury with his testimony. The telegram was as follows: Francis J. Heney. Assistant United States Attorney-General: I will be In Portland Sat urday morning next, and I demand a full in vestigation by a grand Jury of any and all charges, if any, against me. I ajso demand the right to testify concerning the same before the grand Jury. JOHN H. MITCHELL. At the time the telegram was received it tvaa understood that the Senator would be accorded no more privilege than would be given to any citizen, and this seems to J"5.6" '""ilt df the conference held between Senator Mitchell and Mr. Heney on Saturday. Before sending his letter to the jurv Senator Mitchell wrote to Mr. Heney ap prising him of the fact that he would communicate with the jurors. This letter vhlch was received Monday evening by Mr. Heney, was as follows: Portland, Dee. 26, 1004 Hon. Francis J. Heney, Assistant United States District Attorney, Portland. Oregon- Dear Slr-I will this evening, or tomorrow morning, send to IV. H. II. TVade, foreman of the Federal grand Jury, now in session In this city, a letter of which the Inclosed is a duplicate. I trust that you will agreo that I should be accorded the privilege I ask. I am ready and earnestly desire to go before the grand Jury as oon as you have produced be fore the Jury ail the evidence you have on the part of the Government, but not until then. Very respectfully, JOHN H. MITCHELL. Writes Letter to Grand Jury. At 10 o'clock yesterday morning the Senator nppoared at the grand jury room and asked for TV. H. H. "Wade, the fore man. TVhen Mr. Wade responded to his knock the Senator handed him the follow ing letter: Por0na. Or., Dec. 23, 1004. TV. H. H. ale, &q.. Foreman Federal Grand Jury. Portland. Or. Dear Sir: Street rumor in this olty for the past ten days and press dispatches from this city to all parts of the United States re to the effect that I am being charged with complicity with others in certain Oregon land frauds, and that the jury of which you are the foreman are investigating- ouch charges. I have- heretofore requested of the prosecuting officers. Hen. Francis J. Heney, Assistant United States Dtetrlct Attorney, and Hon. John H. Hall. United States District Attor ney, the privilege of going before your body for the purpose of answering, under oatb. any charges that may have been lodged with your body against me, which in any wise impli cates me In any such frauds. I. therefore, respectfully ask you, and through you your associates composing the Federal grand Jury now In session in this city, the privilege of going before you for the ourpose of answering, under oath, any and all- such charges that may haTO been made just as soon as the Government has concluded tak ing of each testimony as it desires to bring beiore you in support of any charges against me. If. therefore, you will kindly advise me when all such testimony has been submitted on the part of the Government. J will then be ready to go before you in answer to any such charges as rnay be made, and I rocpeottully ask that on my appearance before you at the close of the Government's case, as above suggested, that I then bo advised fully as to the precise charges, if any, mde against me, and. of the nature of the evidence submitted by the Gov ernment in support thereof. And I also should be. glad if not deemed improper by your ad visors that the names of the witnesses making the same be submitted to me at that time. Sincerely trusting I will be accorded this privilege, I am, very respectfully, JOHN H. MITCHELL. Strange Request, Says Heney. Mr. Heney wag seen In regard to whether or not the demands and requests of the Senator would be allowed by him, and consented to make a statement show ing his attitude on the question. Hereto fore Mr. Heney has disliked to speak for publication on any matter in which the future courso of the grand jury would have a part, but in view of the fact that Sonator Mitchell had himself raiaed the question, he said: I consider this a roost remarkable and extraordinary request, under the circum stances of the case. The grand Jury is an in vestigating body, and in the very nature of things no accusation Is made by it again? t any person, until Jt has fully completed its investigation, and then no accusation is made unless the evidence which has been presented to the grand Jury Justifies the finding of an indictment in the opinion of at least 12 of its members. I understand that Senator Mitchell la a law yer of considerable experience, and he must know that the custom of swearing members of the grand Jury not to reveal anything that takes place in the grand jury-room is based on the gravest reasons of public policy, and is very largely for the very purpose of not making known the evidence in possession of the Government, so that the ends of justice cannot be defeated by the destruction or per version of such evidence at the instance of persons Indicted for crime. Senator Mitchell will receive at my hands the same privileges which I would accord un der similar circumstances to the humblest cit izen of the United States; and I will at all times advise the grand Jury net to 'indict any man, whother his position In society is high or low, unless the evidence in the possession of the Government is aufflolent In my Judgment to warrant and sustain a conviction by a trial jury; and I will advise the jury not to indict upon the evidence of convictod persons, unless their evidence Is corroborated hy othor evi dence upon material points. In these investigations the grand jury has absolute power, by majority vote, to control the manner of conducting them, and can per mit Senator Mitchell or any other person to appear before them at any time that they deem expedient. Personally, X can see no rea son for extending to Sonator Mitchell any privileges other than those to which every other citizen is entitled under similar circum stances. I shall certainly not accord him any privileges which are based upon the mere as sumption that by reason of his official position ho is entitled to more or other privileges than other nonofflce-holdlng citizens possess. Ready for Mitchell to Testify. I told Senator Mitchell last Saturday that I would gladly permit him to appear before the grand Jury today at 2 o'clock, and that I woud then and there examine him about all the matters relating to which the Government has evidence, and with which his name Is in any way connected. I am still ready and willing to accord him this privilege, and slnco the recelpt.of his telegram from Washington of date December 18, I have shaped the cvl denco before the grand Jury and have sub penaed witnesses with this end In view, so that Senator Mitchell could testify beforo the grand Jury about all facts wjthln his knowledge relating to the matters under investigation, at the earliest possible moment after his arrival, and would thus be enabled to return to Washington and attend to those public duties which he pleaded were too pressing and urgent to permit hlro to come here and testify as a witness upon the trial of Puter, McKlnloy et al. No innocent man need fear this course of procedure before tho grand Jurors who are conducting these Investigations, and they are the final Judges of the weight and value of the evidence produced before them. PROSPERITY IN EASTERN OREGON. Evidence of Good Times as Reflected by the Record of Ellers Piano House Twenty-Four in One Little Town. Many people who pass the busy estab lishment of Ellers Piano Houso wonder whore so many pianos and organs are sold, and few stop to realize the immense territory that is accessible to Portland jobbing-houses and the thoroughly pros perous condlton of most of this field where Ellers Piano House and Its hus tling representatives are looking after business. The record of Mr. J. G. Gallagher, who looks after the business Interests of the Ellers House in Morrow County, can be cited to illustrato this point. In one little town alone, that of lone, he sold no loss than 24 fine pianos and organs, all within a v;ery short time, 15 being sold within a few days. Most of the instruments arc of the highest-priced stylos, valued at $300 to $550, and were delivered to tho following prominent citizens of that place, vlz.z A fine Kimball upright to Mr. Augustus Walker; Another fine Kimball fancy, exhibition style, to TV. R. Cochran; Still another Kimball of similar size to J. H. TVoolcry; ' And yet anothor to Mr. Seymour P. TVHson; And one of the boautlful Baileys was secured by MIks Maud L. Akors; And a similar one by Miss Alfa V. Ganger; Still another Bailey was sold to E. J. Pennington; And a fourth of the Baileys to Mr. It. McElllgott. A fine Schumann upright was bought by Mr. Louis Balzlger. The Public School Board secured a fine Kimball for the lone School: And two Esteys wcro sold to Mr. It. R. Gabell and Mr. Fred Ritchie. A Chlckerlng piano was sold to J. P. Lang: And a Kenwood make to Mr. Frank Griffin; TVhilo one of the many-toned TVeser or chestral pianos was selected by Mr. J. H. Reed; A lovely Jacob Doll went to the home of Mr. C C. Spcrry; A handsome TVeser was purchased by Mrs. Zeta King; Another one of tho same make went to the home of Jacob Boltzer. A Chicago Cottage was purchased by J. TV. Linn; An E3tey organ was the choice of TV. B. Nolan; A Kimball was also the choice of Mr. R. N. Hyman; Tho first Clarendon eold in lone went to the home of T. N. TVilson; A TVhltnoy & Homer was Mr. Edw. Yates choice. And another Clarendon was purchased, being the choice of B. F. Akers. Eilers Piano Houso secures its business from the "Western boundaries of Wyo ming and Montana, through the State of Idaho to "Washington and Oregon, and while most of the retail business Is han dled from the retail establishment on Park and "Washington streets, nearly all of tho business to the interior Is looked after direct from tho wholesale estab lishment at their big brick warehouses on the corner of Thirteenth and Marshall street where carloads of pianos are be ing unloaded and loaded for shipment al most daily now. Holiday Beach Rates. For the holidays the O. R. & N. makes the very low rate of Ji.OO for round trip to beach points. Dates of sale, December 23 and 30. Final limit, January 3. Par ticulars of C TV. Stinger, City Ticket Agent, Third and "Washington streets. CURSES ON RUSSIA H. S. Ellison Declares People Hate Their Country. SUFFER GROSS WRONGS Lecturer Who Lived Many Years . In Russia Draws Morbid Pictures of Conditions There Says Peas ants Are- Yet Barbarians. Forced to fight, tho wounded Russian soldier lies on the battlefield cursing the country for which he has given his blood. The Russian peasant of today is the same barbarian and degenerate that existed in his country centuries ago; the passing time has not served to dull the edge of the savage cruelty so traditional of the Slav. He lives a life of total depravity, "Into which there does not enter one sin gle enlightening ray, and invariably hates the country he lives in. These were tho declarations made by Herbert S. Ellison, lecturer and poet, who spoke in the Y. M. C. A. auditorium last night on "The Empire of the Czar and the Russian People." Mr. Ellison's lecture was based on per- THE NEW YEAR'S OREGONIAN The best advertisement for the 1805 Fair that Oregon's people can send to their friends in the East, will bo a copy of the New Year's Oregonlan that will be published Monday morning next.- The illustrations of the beautiful Ex position buildings and the Exposition ground will bo made a special feature of the New Year's number. The paper wliL be mailed to any address in the United States or Canada, pojtage prepaid, for 10 cents a copy. Address The Oregonlan, Portland, Or. A- .. sonal knowledge of the country, gained and acquired by him during his long resi dence within the boundaries of the Rus sian Empire. He spoko with that earn estness which comes from a thorough knowledge of the subject, and during his lecture painted a word picture of Russia as it i3 today. that was In itself an edu cation for his hearers. In speaking of tho deplorable condition In which the Russian peasantry exists, he said; "There- is not a tribe, nor a remnant of . tribe, living within the confines and boundaries of the Russian Empire that has not suffered at Russia's hands; there is not a single people to be found in tho Russian Empire of non-Russian extrac tion that do not hate her. Not In the March of Progress. "With very few exceptions, the Russian of today is like his wild progenitor of the early Roman times, and little does it mat tor that so many centuries have- passed and so much advancement has been made Tales of the Street and Town The Strange Adventures of Billy Buckland. Billy Buckland is back from the Gulf of Anadir. Billy looks ruddy and rugged, but ho says he Is 20 years older and stiffcr than when he stowed away on tho Elder in OT for a free passage to Skagway. "Make your pile, Billy?" I asked. "Pard," roplled Billy, regarding me with great earnestness, "I had the equiv alent of a million dollars in the palm of my hand once. I lost it, and I've come back flat broke, as regards the lucre but I'm rich enough to wallow In luxuries all the rest of my life Tu-shar-uk?" "No." "TVell. the luxuries I mean to enjoy are sidewalks, morning papers in a warm reading-room, fresh potatoes, red apples, a clean shirt (sometimes), a gallery-seat at the show, a beer, with music beer! Think of It! And tho sight of a white woman's face, kids on the street, a cigar like this, a spring-bed, and pillows and " "Yes, I 'tu-shar-uk'; but what about that million dollars?" "Pard, its a long yarn. I could spin it from here to Point Barrow, but I'll re duce it to just a doublc-half-hltch over a bolayin' pin. "You know that oak-ribbed dory-lighter I bought from Lane at Nome, Spring of '01? TVell, me and my brother and Dan Hall, an ex-wbalerman, decked her, put in a cabin and cockpit and a couple of stout slicks, and rigged her for a sloop. TVe had a devll-of-a-job gettin' cleared from Nome. Cap Jarvls said: " 'Where you goin'?' " 'Capo Romanzof, Bristol Bay, Unga, Holy Cross Bay and all points In Bering Sea,' says I. " 'These Alaska prospectors are all crazy ' says Cap. "Nono of you can navigate; these waters are hell In "Win ter, and you'll never come back. How do you expect to get along, anyway?' " 'Christopher Columbus had a com pass, an old tub of a craft, and no chart. I've a boat that will turn double-sum mersaults, a good Compass and a Gov ernment chart, and If I can't go 'round this old pond as well as old Chris crossed tho Atlantic, you can tag mo for a Hoosler Chlchawker. "Well, he let us clear, and we went to sra. Shaped a course straight for Ihc steamer Charles D. Lane, aground be low the mouth of the Yukon. Found her, got alongside in the night, watchman asleep in the cabin, locked him In, helped Billy Buckland, the twelves to every luxurloos. ln5 wanted on board, filling every cubic half-Inch left for cargo on the 'Holl-bent' (that was the name of our boat); dropped a saw and augur through a port hole, so the watchman could help himself out, and got away beforo dawn, without his ever, having had a glimpse of us. TVe hit every out-of-the-way Injun village from Good Nows Bay clean to the end of the Aleutian Archipelago, trading with the natives, and tumbling and toss ing through tho stormiest TVinter in them frightful waters. "Back to Dutch Harbor in the Spring of "02, we had to count out my brother. He'd been hurt by the stove breakln loose from its lashin's one gale. "That was an awful time. Tho stove tore from end to end of that little four-by-nlne-foot cabin, smashln everything. It was too lively and heavy to hold fact was we had been havln' all we could do to keep ourselves from floppln" from beam to beam and fore and aft. My brother got both arms broke before Dan and I got a turn with a rope 'round the stove. "Got a tip at Dutch Harbor 'bout buckets-full of nuggets somewhere in from the head of Holy Cross Bay, which emp ties Into the Gulf of Anadir, coast of Siberia. Outfitted for a year's prospect in', and mo and Dan sailed them SOO miles straight to that bay, gettin there in June. "We traded some on the coast, and got a bunch of nine-foot whalebone from the Chuk-chees they're a bad lot but one of us always kept on watch wltha 00-40. Then we heard something that made us think the 'money-rock' was 'way 'round on tho north side at the head of a river putting' into Kolluchin Bay. So we drove tho Hell-bent sou-east to Bald Head, and -ML. by tho human race in progress and civ ilization. "The Russian of today is capable of com mitting Just as many monstrous and out-, rageous crimes as his sire of old. Na tions, like children, grow and develop firsf their physical nature, then the mental, moral and spiritual strength, but it is only the physical part of her national be ing that Prussia has developed so far." In speaking of the present war, Mr. El lison can see nothing but the downfall of Russia, and attributes this to the lack of any civilizing force. In tills connection, he said: Dying Call Imprecations. "Forced, the young man of the many races, tribes and peoples will march with the countless regiments of tho Czar to meet an untimely death in China, in Manchuria, in Turkey, or elsewhere, but when dying, far away from their native homes, relatives, families and friends, victims of Russian tyranny, despotism and oppreslon, oven while fighting In her behalf, they will not forgive her. and with their last breath will they pray to Heaven for her destruction for injuries sustained, "wounds received, and suffer ings endured from the cruel and heartless Muscovite." . POSTAL STATION ENLARGED. Increased Business at Sub-Station A Causes Change. Substation A, of the local postofflce, will be removed from 131 Grand avenue to 92 Grand avenue, on January 1. The new location will bo in the Model drugstore and Dr. H. TV. Little will be the clerk in charge of the station. Feeling that the increasing work of the station required more attention than he could devote to it, J. TV. SIngletary, the present clerk, tendered his resignation a short time ago, with the request that he be relieved on January 1. The depart ment has just accepted the resignation and wired Postmaster John TV. Mlnto yesterday to -make the necessary trans fer. The new location will provide larger quarters for Station A. MIDSHIPMEN GET LIQUOR. Watchmen at Academy Gates Can not Stop All Contraband. ANNAPOLIS, Md., Dec. 27. The Naval Academy authorities discovered that prep arations for tho drinking of a large amount of Intoxicants during the holidays had been made by some of tho midship men, the liquor to bo obtained through academy attendants. "Watchmen wore placed at the gates to inspect persons east to Indian Point, then straight nor' east through Bering Strait, follerln' closo in the Ice pack goln back with the Sum mer' current. East Cape on the port bow, we headed nor'west with fair winds, clean to Kolluchin Bay, gettin' there July 4. way a head of any whaler in the Arctic that year. "It was the Fourth, so we run up an Uncle Sam's- necktie, fired the 30-40, and put dead low tide on our last pint of Dutch Harbor Hootch. "Wo was kltln' along, nico upder jib, and main and fous'le, when we sighted an Injun boat Just to lec'ard. Nobody seemed to bo in it and we overhauled it in no time. TVhat d'ye think we found? An old whiskers of a white man, 'bout all In for shortage of grub, dirty and 'bout half covered with ragged old reindeer skins for clothes. He seemed scared to death at first, but too weak to put up a fight. Then he caught sight of our Fourth-o'-July col ors and I thought he had 'em in the coco. He threw up his hands, uttered a funny bark of a cry and fainted dead away. TVe got him aboard, brought him to, and in a couple of days he was In pretty good shape." "Who was he?" "That man was an escaped Siberian po litical convict. He'd had his tongue ampu tated, but understood Chuk-Chee, and Dan knew that, like his mother lingo, for ho had a Chuk-Chee wife once, so we got his whole history and details of his es cape by as-kin' him questions that he could answer with a shako or a ood of the head. One day ho was 'slz'n' up our stove and seemed all at once much Interested. He mado a fuss and kept polntln to tho stove and to himself, makin signs. TVe guessed all sorts of things, to which he only shook his head. Finally Dan asked him: " 'Do you mean that you can make iron like what that stoi'e is made of?' "Ho nodded his head and grinned. Dan jumped up so quick he bumped hla head against a deck-beam. " 'Know what that means, Bill?' he yells to me. 'That's why his tongue's cut out. He's a life convict who must have been workln' in one o' them big Russian iron manufactories in tho Siberian iron region. Russian Iron- is tho moat wondorful Iron in' tho world; tough as wrought, and it won't rust Russian government secret, guarded like the Czar's hide. There's a standing reward from English and Amer ican manufactories of 51,000,000 for that process. "Maybe we didn't take extra care to be nice to our friend after that. He promised to glvo us the formula, but we didn't hurry him 'bout wrltln it out. He was a Moscow Jew, by tho way. TVe decided to put back for Nome, as grub was too short for threo and we'd 'bout concluded there wa'n't much in the tip 'bout the nuggets. "One morning, just as we rounded Cape Serdze, we run smack in sight of a Rus sian cutter, comin' north, early, to catch poachers. TVe sheered off quick, and Lev inofsky seemed to go wild with fear. " 'Get him to write out tho formula quick,' says L and Dan talked to him in Chuk-Chee, and gave him. a pencil and notebook. Meanwhile the Russian spotted us and changed her course. Levinofsky sat on the cabin roof staring at the cutter. He looked desperate and made signs that he would jump in the sea before the Rus sians came up. The brands on his hands and forehead, he knew, would give him away. All at onco he began to write as fast as ho could work his stiff old hands. The cutter came on, signalled, then fired a shot across our bows. Just as Dan was sayln" 'It's no use, and I was puttln'the wheel over, the Russian cut loose again. Tho shot carried away our starboard maln riggin', part of the port fore-rlggln', halt the cabin-roof and all that was mortal of poor old Levinofsky. The note-book and pencil went, too. "Dan and I put up a bluff to the Rus sians when they overhauled us. Made 'cm think we belonged to the new Russian American East Siberian Development out fit, out scoutln for 'em. They got us both drunk on their Russian hootch, then when we got sober we found they'd repaired our boat, so we were glad to cut loose and get across to Uncle Sam's waters. "The Hellbent, after two years Iam bastin', wasn't good for much more, so we sold her to a Chechaco outfit at Nome for double what she cost us. Then we hit faro for a month before It hit us back In the S. Plexus. I worked my passage to Seattle on a lumber bark, and here I am, whero I shall stay, rolling in luxuries for the rest of my life." LUTE PEASE. GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER coming In, and were successful In finding considerable quantities of liquor, which was confiscated. A quantity of it was smuggled in, however, and several ban quets were Interrupted in different quar ters. As a result, the prison ship Santo is full of offending midshipmen, and three have been recommended for dis missal. TRUNK AND SATCHEL LOCATED Nothing Will Be Done in Chadwick Affair for Some Days. CLEVELAND, Dee. ?7. Contrary to ex pectation, the Inquiry In connection with tho Chadwick receivership case was not resumed today. Recolver Loescr stated that nothing more would be done in the matter for several davs. "Wo have definitely located the trunk and satchel that were taken from the Holland House, In Now York," said Mr. Looser today, "and they will be brought here within a day or two. Aside from wearing apparel, thero is, I understand, little of value In cither the trunk or the satchel." Continuing, Mr. Loeser, said: "Wo had today intended to examine Henry TVuerst, the Elyria, O., jeweler, who holds about 520,000 worth of Mrs. Chadwlck's jewels as security for a loan. Wuerst has made a full statement of just what ho holds, however, and has ex pressed his willingness to surrender them whenever the loan is made good. The jewels will be appraised later, but the impression is that they are worth no more than the sum advanced by TVuerst to Mrs. Chadwick. Odeil Will Prevent Delay. NEWBURGII. N. Y., Dec. 27. Governor Odcll, whon told at his home here of tho delay at Albany In granting an extradi tion warrant for the arrest of Dr. Chad wick, said: "It is the dcfilre of the executive de partment of the State of New York to act In entire harmony with the Ohio of ficials in this matter, and I will see per sonally that there Is no unnecessary de lay." Purchase of Pearl Harbor. SAN FRANCISCO. Dec. 27. Word comes from Honolulu that tho United States has paid over tho sum of $SO,000 to the owners of lands at Pearl Harbor, com pleting tho purchase of the land desired thero for the proposed naval station. Governor Carter has named Delegate to Congreso Kalanlanaole. Secretary of the Territory A. L. C. Atkinson and W. L. Hall as Hawalia's delegates to the Ameri can Forest Congress, which is to meet in Washington on January 2. Hall Is a forester of tho National Bureau, who vis ited Hawaii some time ago to report on conditions here. Secretary Atkinson has sold a second Jl.000,000 of Hawaiian bonds for J1C00 premium, slightly better than the last sale. They run 15 years and bear 44 per cent Interest. Honolulu sportsmen arc discussing the enactment of a game law to protect tho game on this Island. The agitation Is a result of a recent trip of some dove hunt ers, who shot over 2000 birds in a morn ing's hunt. Not In With Patterson. J. H. Mooro, who served as a Deputy Sheriff under William A. Storey, com plains that he has recently ben mixed up with J. B. Moore, who is associated in business with the notorious Bob Pat terson. J. H. Moore says he desires his friends to understand that he is not in partnership with Patterson and that the report that he is the other Moore has caused him more trouble than anything- that has happened for a long time past, and he will be glad when he hears tho last of it. BUSINKSS ITEMS. If nbr Is Cut One Twtfa. E cure and use tH&t old and -well-tried rsae47. Mrs. Wlns!owa Soothlnj Syrup, for ehU4ra teetblnr. It soothes the child, softens the arusu. ilai all sals, cure wind coll ud diarrhoea. THE GRAND PRIZE AT THE STLOUIS EXPOSITION WAS AWARDED HUNTER BALTIMORE ' ; BECAUSE OF ITS SUPERIORITY OVER OTHER BRANDS AND FOR THE HIGHEST ORDER OF MERIT IN ALL THE ELE MENTS OF A PERFECT WHISKEY r I 'Sold at all first-class cafes and by jobbers. WM. LANAHAN & SON, Baltimore, Md. Z N 2 o - 5 j u fJ J p TAKE NOTICE ! Dr. B. E. Wright, the Painless Dentist, will give away the $900 Automobile on Thursday evening, Dec. 29, at the Lyric Theater, corner 7th and Alder streets, at 7:30 o'clock, P. M. Be sure and be present with your coupons, as it will pos itively be given to some coupon-holder in the house. Come now to have dental work done and get coupons. DR, B. E. Wright's Dental Office 342J Washington Street, corner 7th I. W. HARPER WHISKEY "ON EVERY TONGUE" GRAND PRIZE AX ST. LOUIS WORLD'S FAIR Gold Medals at Paris, 1900; Chicago, 1S93; New Orleans, 1885. By unanimous verdict of the world's best experts, I. W. HARPER Is the world's best Whiskey. BERNHEIM DISTILLING CO., Louisville, Ky. potency thoroughly cured. No failure. Cure guaranteed. YOUNG lUKiV troubled with night emissions, dreams, exhausting drains, bashfulness, aversion to society, which deprive you of your manhood, UNFITS YOU for BUSINESS OR MARRIAGE. MIDD LB-AG BD MEN, who from excesses and strains have lost their MANLY POWER. BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES, Syphilis Gonorrhoea., painful, bloody urine. Gleet. Stricture. Enlarged Prostate. Sexual Debility. Varicocele. Hydrocele, Kid ney and Liver troubles cured without MERCURY OR OTHER POISONOUS DRUGS. Catarrh and rheumatism CURED. Dr. "Walker's methods are regular and scientific. He uses no patent nos trums or ready-made preparations, but cures the disease by thorough, medical treatment. His New Pamphlet on Private "Diseases sent free to all men who de scribe their trouble. PATIENTS cured at home. Terms reasonable. All letters answered in plain envelops. Consultation free and sacredly confidential. Call on or address DR. WALKER, 181 First Street, Corner Yamhill, Portland, Or. GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER GRAND PRIZE WINNER HIGHEST AWARD Twenty Years of Success In the treatment of chronic diseases, such as liver, kldnoy and stomach disorders, constipation, diar rhoea, dropsical swellings, Brignt's disease, etc Kfdney and Urinary Complaints, painful, difficult, too frequent, milky or bloody urine, unnatural discharges speedily cured. Diseases of the Rectum Such as piles, fistula. Assure, ulceration, mucous and bloody discharges, cured without the knife, pain or confinement. Diseases of Men Blooa poison, gleet, stricture, unnatural losses, im-