Gold Hill news. (Gold Hill, Jackson County, Or.) 1897-19??, January 13, 1900, Image 2

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    GOLD HILL NEWS.
LA T E R N EW S.
'ACCUSED OF TREACHERY
English parliament may be convened
before
the end of the mouth.
r r B iiiH iD ■ T C R T IA T V R D A T .
A Missouri lodge of Hibernians de­
GOLD H IL L ... ................... OREGON. cided that it would not help the Boers. Pettigrew’s Charges Against
The Chicago baseball club will make
the Government.
its spring training quarters at Loa An­
geles.
,
An Ontario (Or.) man has a scheme A T T IT U D E TO W A R D T H E T A Q A L 8
for using the natural steam of hot
wells.
French’s losses at Colesburg are H o m « S e n s a tio n a l S t a t« m « n ta M a d » In
a l v « R e v ie w e i t h « Im p o rt
t h e S e n a t e - F i n a n c i a l I l « b a t e F o e t-
a a t H e p p e e le < a o f th e F a s t W e e h more than twice the number at first re­
a o n e d —K a e « U u e a tlo n in th e S o u lit
C e lle d F r o m th e T e le g r a p h C e le m a e . ported.
The Pacific coast has sent forward
Washington, Jan. 10.— During a dis­
over
$10,000 to the Lawton fund, and
The United States is ahead of Great
cussion
today of a resolution of inquiry
more w ill be sent.
Britain as a coal producer.
offered by Pettigrew, of South Dakota,
The Boers have refuse»! to allow the some sensational statements were made
The Montpelier tin-plate mill, em
American consul at Pretoria to act as in the senate regarding the attitude of
ploying 200 men, has closed.
British representative.
the United States toward the Filipino
Cubans are well pleased with Wood
The secretary of war has asked for insurgents. Pettigrew declared that
and say be is the one man for the task
$750,000 for expenses in sending the the government had attacked its allies,
Three persons were killed and sever Spanish prisoners home from Manila.
and thereby had beeu guilty of the
Injured in a tenement-house fire at Ne»
grossest treachery. This statement
California
wants
foreign
countries
York.
-forced to reduce the duties on canned was resented warmly by Lodge of Mas­
The staemr Gazelle was wrecked ofl goods through reciprocity treaties.
sachusetts, who declared that this gov­
the Flordia coast. A passing steamei
ernment had done nothing of the kiud,
The shipbuilding trust has not yet and that, not even remotely, had i’
saved the crew.
been organized. The amount of capi­ recognised the so-called government o
California capitalists are going into talization is not yet determined u|ion.
the Filipinos.
fruit culture in the states of Vera Crur
The Big Four railroad will resume
Morgan of Alabama discussed at
and Oaxaca, Mexico.
payment of common stock dividends length the race question in the South,
The United States will not prevem and will take over the Chesapeake <Sk basing his remarks upon a resolution
France’s attempt to settle her clain Ohio.
offered by Pritchard, Republican, of
with Santo Domingo.
Uncle Sam will press her claim North Carolina. He maintained that
Michigan has a sensation and see against Santo Domingo. France got to attempt to force the black race into
eral state officials have been indicted her money and now demands an a social and political equality with the
tor bribery and embezzlement.
white race was only to clog the prog­
apology.
ress of all mankind.
Rev. Dr. Edward McGlynn is deac
The Boers in a spirit of humor have
at Newburgh, N. Y. He succumbed named three prison streets in Pretoria
The house today ordered two Investi­
to Bright’s disease after seven weeks “ Ladysmith,” “ Mnfeking” and “ Kim­
gations as a result of resolutions intro­
A bill will soon be presented to con­ berley.”
duced by Representative Lentz, of
gress for a plan for another nationa;
England cannot understand why Ohio. The first is to bo an investiga­
park, to be located at the headwater« Roller's forces did not press a passage tion by the committee on postofiices
of the Mississippi.
on the Tugela while White was engag­ and post roads into the chargo that two
federal appointees of the president—
There will be a conference of t h t ing the Boers to the North.
John C. Graham, of Provo City, Utah,
governors of the arid states and terri
At Battle Creek, Mich., the body of
tones at Salt Lake January 17 to con­ Sherman Church, a miller, was found and Postmaster Orson Smith, of Logan,
Utah—are under indictment as jxjlyga-
sider the question of arid lands.
wedged under a water wheel. The mists, and whether affidavits to that
In Clay county, Kentucky, two met hands were tied and a weight fastened
effect were on file at the time of their
were shot and killed and four othei to the leg.
npi>ointment. The other is a general
participants seriously wounded in a
Elizabeth Gladstone, aged 63, has investigation of the military commit­
fight that started at a murder trial.
secured judgment in the superior court tee into the conduct of General Mer­
A Pacific Mail steamer arrived in at San Francisco against Joseph Board- riam and Ihe United States army offi­
San Francisco with a cargo of 9,614 man, aged 73, for breach of promise to cers during the Wardner, Idaho, riot*
tons, nearly twice as much as any ship marry. She sued for $500,000.
and subsequent thereto.
that had ever entered the Golden Gate.
Louise Masset, a French governess,
W H IT E H O L D S O U T .
Congressman Hopkins of the boost was hanged at Newgate, England, for
ways and means committee says there ' the murder of her illegitimate 3-year- I l i a A m m u n it io n la L o w a m i t h e S it u ­
w ill be no revision of the war revenue old child. It is said the existence oi
a t io n D e e p e r a te .
tax law at this session of the 56th con­ the child was an obstacle to a marriage
London, Jan. 10.—General White
gress.
she had in view.
still holds out, or did so 60 hours ago,
Attached to the annual report of the
Gold imports are helping England’s when the Boers, ousted from their foot­
secietary of agriculture is a recommen­ finances.
hold inside the works, suspended their
dation for agricultural experiment sta­
assault at nightfall.
England hat
Tod Sloan, the great jockey, is com­
tions in the government’s new island
taken heart.
ing West.
possessions.
The situation, however, is worse.
Money rates have taken a tumble The beleagured force must have ex­
A brother of one of the Boer generals,
pended large amounts of ammunition
who is visiting Chicago, says that if and may go lower.
Affairs of the Globe National bank, which cannot be replenished, and must
Britain crushes the Transvaal armies
have lost a number of officers and
there will be no peace, as the Boer» at Boston, will be wound up.
n,en, which is counterbalanced, so far
will fight to the last.
As a training-ship the Hartford will as the garrison is concerned, by the
sail
for
South
American
ports
with
General Greeley, the chief signal
greater loss of the Boers.
officer of the army and the well-known 400 boys.
General White still needs relief, and
Arctic explorer, was assaulted and
Christian science treatment allowed the difficulties confronting General
seriously injured by a messenger in his two children to die of diphtheria at Buller are as great as before. The for­
swn home at Washington.
Pittsburg.
mer’s unadorned sentences, as read and
A crusade against vice in New York
Heavy losses on both sides are the reread, suggest eloquently the peril in
Is contemplated.
chief results of recent hard battles at which the town was for 14 horns, and
how barely able his 9.000 men were to
Tagals are not friendly to Archbishop Ladysmith.
keep from being overcome.
Chapelle, now at Manila
Montana politics are getting much
The chief concern for General White
The Stanford football team defeated needed airing by the testimony in the is in respect ot ammunition. Sixty-
the all-Seattle players by a score of 28 Clark case.
sight days ago, at the beginning of the
to 0.
German vessel-owners regard Eng­ liege, his small ammunition was
The treasurer of Shelby county, In­ land’s recent seizures as a scheme to vaguely described as “ plenty.” His
diana, is short $125,000. His books kill competition.
artillery then had 300 rounds per gun.
are missing.
The released American prisoners Some of the batteries have been in ac­
Because he rode on a railway pass, were barefooted and in rags when they tion frequently since then, and all were
probably engaged last Saturday. His
suit has been filed against a mem be- arrived in Manila.
stock of shells consequently, must be
of the Kentucky election board.
Editor Stead has published a letter low, and this will make it difficult for
President Cole, of the Globe Nationa in London in which he gives some in­ General White to co-operate in a move­
bank, of Boston, which recently failed side facts of the Jameson raid.
ment by General Buller.
has returned and will stand trial.
A miniature battle of San Juan hili'
Y o u n g A m e r ic a W o n t h e D a y .
Peter S. Wilkes died at Stockton, was fought by Chicago youngsters.
Chicago,
Jan. 10.—Little Charles
Cal. He was a confederate congress­ The police intervened, but not before Hosworth tooted a tin horn on Sunday
the “ Spanish” officers were seriously
man during the last year of the war.
afternoon on the prairie at Western
wounded.
The president has nominated General
and Wabansia avenues and immediate­
After a day’s bombardment, the ly 100 boys sprang “ to arms” at the
Rates, Young and McArthur for pro­
motion. Bates is to succeed Lawton. Boers captured the British garrison at improvised bugle call. A greet battle
Kuruman, Bechunaland, taking 120 had beeu arranged and the two armies
As a result of campaigning in the
prisoners, arms, ammunition and pro­ of 50 boys each advanced toward each
Philippines 14 soldiers are insane at
other in military fashion. A neighbor­
the Presidio in San Francisco. They visions.
The Boers whipped W hite’s forces hood feud started the matter, and un­
will be sent to Washington.
The situation at Ladysmith is be­ out of positions three different times, der the truce or a white flag the boys
had agreed to fight the “ battle of Sai
coming horrible. Twenty deaths in j but each time the Britishers’ gallantry
returned to the fray and recovered all Juan h ill.”
one day were reported by General
Many of the boys had rifles and shot­
the lost positions.
White. Entric fever and dysentery
guns,
most of them fiuloaded, fortu­
Our losses in the Spanish war were '
are prevalent.
32,296. The grand total of the volun­ nately. Those who could not get guns
The recent California earthquake
teer force was 223,235. About 24,000 had brooms or sticks. Some of the
caused inactive volcanoes in the desert of these were discharged or deserted. boys had revolvers. The two armies
to become active; made old gas wells
The total deaths were less than 4,000. threw themselves upon one another
at Yuma How again and caused fissures
with a fury little short of a real en­
Friendship between China and the gagement. While the battle raged,
in the ground.
Trunk lines have all advanced freight United States would be complete if the the patrol wagon from the police sta­
rates. Merchants have filed protests Chinese were admitted to the Philip­ tion came to the scene. Big policemen
saying that the new tariff w ill drive pines. Our trade with China increased charged the combined “ American”
business away iron New York, ship­ 40 per cent last year, all due to friend­ and “ Spanish” forces, and when the
smoke and dust had lifted, the fleeing
pers taking advantage of shorter hauls ship.
The shotgun quarantine has been re­ forms of the youthful warriors could be
to New Orleans and other ports.
Both houses of congress are after Sec­ vived in Honolulu. Bubonic plague seen disappearing toward all points of
On the battle-field,
retary Gage The legislators desire tc has a strong hold on the city. Two the compass.
know by what right the treasurer in­ more deaths had occurred by December wounded and moaning, lay several
creased deposits of government funds i 30 and there were seven new cases of boys.
The worst injured was “ Lieutenant”
in New York banks during the recent plague. The National Guard was
financial flurry there and correspond­ called out and they burned the infected Harry Johnson, 11 years old, and a
“ Spanish” ofticei, who was shot in the
district.
ence in the matter is asked.
back. The “ Spanish” commander,
French-Canadians believe their day
On her recent trip the steamer Aus­
“Genernal” Artie Standt, had a bullet
tralia would not accept steerage pas­ of redemption is at hand, and gloat wound in his left leg. Others had
sengers at Honolulu on account of the over British defeats in South Africa. slighter injuries, but none of the boys
plague scare. One death occurred on They expect complications to arise by were seriously hurt. Later the police
December 22, and two Chinese were which their independence will come arrested Emil Gustafson, aged 15, who,
found dead on Christmas day. These about. They do not want to be an­ they claimed, fired the bulleta which
fatalities started the plague scare nexed to the United States, saying this hit the two “ Spanish” officers
*
«gain.
1 would not better their condition.
ffi «EWS OE I WEE«
J IM E N E S
G ot
It
HAS
THE
B a ilo r T h a n
Ho
A p o lo g y .
M ONEY.
(a n
G o t th e
New York, Jan. 11.—A dispatch to
the Herald from Santo Domingo says:
I’resident J imines, who has been at
Mao«iris since Saturday superintending
the raising of the popular subscription
to pay the French claim, returned this
afternoon with 300,009 francs. The
claims amount to 280,000 francs. As
the popular subscription is larger than
the claim, the Dominicans are rejoic­
ing.
The return of the president under
such auspicious circumstances was
marked by patriotic enthusiasm and a
general flag display. Thu French
cruiser Cecile saluted the gunlsiat on
which I’resident Jlmincs returned.
The guulmat answereti the salute. No
steps have Iteen taken by the French
consul further than entrusting the case
to Admiral Richard. No disorders
have occurred, but the (stpular senti­
ment is against a|<ologizlng to France.
The people are urging the government
to prepare a system of defense, as the
overthrew of the government would be
menaced at the first evidence of weak­
ness.
In raising the popular subscription
many ladies offered their jewelry. One
Spanish and one Italian merchant have
incurre»! the dislike of the |>eople for
their failure to subscrilie. The arrival
of the French cruiser Cecile created
considerable excitement. She reached
Santo Domingo yesterday afternoon,
but did not salute as she entered the
heritor. The situation here is tntuquil,
and the government has urged the peo­
ple to show no hostility to France. It
is reported that France will send two
additional warsliijis to this island.
D EED
OF
M u rd e re d a
A
C R A ZY
DOCTOR.
H ick I n f a n t ( l iv e n
E x a m in e .
H im
to
Hampton, la., Jan. 11.— Dr. G. W.
Appleby, for several years the leading
physician at Bristow, Butler county,
last evening, in a tit of insanity, kille<l
a 10-months-old child of Henry Wear-
ly, of this place, while making an ex­
amination of it in another physician’s
office.
The doctor took the child in his arms
and handled it so roughly that the par­
ents protested, but to no avail. He
suddeuly put bis thumbs under its
chin, and with his fingers on top of its
head, crushed its face in so that the
blood gushed ont of its nose and mouth.
Then he seized the child by one foot
and began swinging it around his head,
resisting all efforts of the terrified par­
ents t« stop him, and it was not until
help was gotten that the child was
taken from him. It was quite dead.
The insane commission was con­
vened, and at midnight Dr. Appleby
was on his way to t ie hospital for the
insane at Independence. Three or four
hours after the occurrence he seemed
comparatively rational, and said he
knew what he was doing when he
killed the child, but could not help it.
The cause of the insanity is supposed
to be religious excitement.
T r a n a - F a r l H e C a b le . /
Washington, Jan. 11.—The house
committee on commerce gave a hearing
today to Messrs. Hchrymser and Bay-
lies, president and vice-president of the
Pacific Cable Company, ot New York,
relative to the laying of a trans-Pacific
cable. Mr. Bay lies contended that the
cable should be maintained under pri­
vate ownership. The plan of his cable,
as outlined, was for a line to Honolulu,
Midway islands, Guam and Luzon,
with a branch line from Gnam to Ja­
pan, a total of 8,285 miles. Admiral
John Irwin (retired) and Francis B.
Thurber, president of the American
Export Association, spoke in favor of
private ownership of cable rentes. The
committee fixed January 23 for a hear­
ing of government officers relative to
the cable.
B a d ly In N e e d o f B e t t e r R y e s .
New York, Jan. 11. — A dispatch to
the Herald from Berlin says: The Ber­
liner Tageblatt learns that the Bunders-
rath and the »tencral carried to East
Africa machinery for a larger distil­
lery. Part of this was a large wrought-
iron tube, of large diameter, which
probably was mistaken for a cannon.
His Brilliant Oration In tht
Senate Created Sensation.
R E P L IE D TO BY S E N A T O R HOAF
T h « L a t t e r D e r la r e d T h a t t h « W a r W a t
I l a « to
M n K In le y 'a
P r o e la u ia llo u
N o t to A m e r ic a n O p p o s itio n .
Washington, Jan. 11.—“ That man
little knows the common people of tht»
republic, little understands the in­
stincts of our race who thinks we will
not hold it forever, administering Just
government by the simplest methods.”
This sentence was the keynote of «
speech delivered in the senate today by
Beveridge, the Jnnior senator from In­
diana. It was the maiden spetwh in
the senate of about the youngest mem­
ber of the body. The announcement
that he would deliver an address em-
tsidyiug his observations in the Philip­
pines attracted an unusually large
nutnlier of auditors to the galleries.
On the floor of the senate every aenator
in the city was in his seat and scores of
representatives came over from the
bouse.
The occasion was inspiring, and
Beveridge rose to it brilliantly. Ilia
oration—for properly It was an oration
—waa deeply interesting. It was re­
plete with striking sentences and well-
arranged information. Spoken with all
the earnestness, vigor and eloquence
of a fine orator, enthusiastic In his sub­
ject, who rose at times to his subject
with the powdr of iiassionate dramatic
utterance, the speech created a pro­
found impression u,sm all who heard
it.
Beveridge is scholarly Hnd refined in
appearance, with a striking face and
figure. Throughout his speech he was
easy and natural, and entirely free
from mannerisms. He s|sike rapidly
and with great earnestness. When he
declared, with deep solemnity, to those
“ whose voices in America have cheered
those misguided natives on to shoot our
soldiers down, that the bhs>d ot these
dead and wounded boys of ours is on
their hands, and the Hood of years can
never wash that stain aw ay,” there
was a deep, although suppressed sensa­
tion among his auditors.
At the conclusion of the sjiee.-h, tre­
mendous and unrestrained applause
swept over the galleries, and it whs
notable that Secretary of the Treasury
Gag«;, who occupied a seat in the sena­
tor’s gallery, was a jiartieipant in it.
I
R e p ly to B e v e r id g e .
Hoar (Rep. Mass.) replied briefly to
Beveridge. Although he did not enter
fully into the merits of the question
under discussion, be did not feel that
some of the Indiana senator’s state­
ments ought to go to the country un-
challenged. He declared that not the
American op(>osition to the war, but
the president’s proclamation to the Fil­
ipinos, was responsible for the hostili­
ties. He ridiculed Beveridge’s state­
ment that the Filipinos were not capa­
ble of self-government, and quoted
General Otis’ re|>ort to show that they
were.
There was no session of the house
today.
BA TTLE
IN
A
CO URTROOM .
T h « B e s u lt W h i T h r e e M e n K i l l e d a n d
T w o S e r io u s ly W o u n d e d ,
Vicksburg, Miss., Jan. 11.—Oak­
ridge, a little hamlet 18 miles north­
east of this city, was the scene this
morning of a desperate fight, in which
three of the best-known residents of
the county were killed. The dead are:
A. D. Holland, R. H. Htephenson and
Dr. Otho Austin.
Dr. James Anstin, his son Otho Aus-
tin and his son-in-law R. S. Stephen­
son hud been arrested on an atlidavit
sworn out by Holland, charging them
with whipping one of Holland’s negro
tenants. Jnst after the 0)>euing of
their trial this morning in Justice
Gridin's court at Oakridge, the shoot­
ing began, but who fired the first shot
is not known. When the smoke of
battle cleared away, Holland Ktephen-
sou and Otho Austin were stretched on
the floor dead, and Dr. James Austin
and a young son of Holland were seri­
ously wounded.
New York, Jan. 11.—A dispatch to
the Herald from Brussels says: The
Boers played an amusing trick on the
English at Ladysmith.
The latter
think they destroyed the creusot cannon
B o e r S y in p u tlilite r a B o y c o tt« « !.
“ Long Tom.” The truth is that the
Victoria, B. C., Jan. 11.— Indefinite
Boers removed the cannon and substi­
tuted a trunk of a tree, which was charges of pro-Boer sympathy have re­
sulted in the boycotting and serious
■mashed by British shells.
embarrassment of a large number of
Belgian and Swedish citizens, who vig­
D e w e y ’ s B o u n ty C la im s .
Washington, Jan. 11.—The claim of orously repudiate any treasonable con­
Admiral Dewey and the officers and nection. Captain Victor Jacobsen,
men of his squadron for bounty arising who was rejorted to have originated
out of the destruction of Montojo’s fleet the Transvaal aid campaign, hnd his
in Manila bay was argned before the fine sloop bored and scuttled at her
court of claims today. The question moorings last night. He and others
at issue was the total amount of the are offering substantial rewards for the
bounty to be paid. The contention of identification of their enemies.
the claimants was that the force of the
R in g C a r e e r K n d e d .
enemy was superior at Manila bay.
New York, Jan. 11.—Terry McGov­
ern tonight wrested the featherweight
P r u s s ia n D i e t O p e n e d .
Berlin, Jan. 11.— At the opening of championship of the world from George
the diet today, Prince Hohenlohe, im­ Dixon, who had defended it for nearly
perial chancellor, read the speech from nine years. To save Dixon from a
the throne, wherein it was shown that knockout, Tom O’Rourke, his manager,
the finances of Prussia are in a satisfac­ threw up the sponge in the eighth
tory condition. The speech concluded round, when the negro was staggering
with promising the greatest possible helplessly, bleeding and weak, but aa
attention to the interests of agriculture. game as a dying gladiator.
1