..OCTOBER 5, 1895 ISSUED EVERY- SATURDAY - BV J. A. DOUTHIT, PubllBhar. SCBSCBIPTfOJf BATES. DAILY On Year by mail.....!.. Six Month. ? W Thro Moonlhj. .' - ! WEEKLY- On Yemr, by mall.. Six months..... ... $1.60 76 All Subscription! Payable In Advance. THE CRUEL CASE OF CUBA '" Uder date of September 18 a .corres pondent of the New York Sun writing f ronravana puts Cuba's case aa fol- A cable from New York brought us ' 'last week the good news that Presi- dent .Cleveland will soon consider in .full-the Cuban affairs. Heaven grant ' him a happy decision on behalf of lib erty and humanity! . a things are go-. Jng jn Cuba.it is a duty for" America " to act. The people who represent in " 'this New World freedom, justice and ' power cannot allow such a war as this supported by the untamable ferocity of Spain? If England interfered with the Sultan of Turkey to protect from barbarism the Christian Armenians, wh y cannot America teach the lutoler .... ; ko Spaaaird that . it is impossible to rule a colony In "the nineteenth cen- tury on the- patterns' of the fifteenth? . Cubans are under worse tyranny and vexations than Americans endured be fore independence.- - i ne-siana -is - 3 CnDn ah nfllHAra U'llH C have not the least sense of honor. From 1878 till today probably $300,000, 000 have been taken from the appro- r- - i . tions. - Now, when a state of war pre vails throughout the country, Spain ' has to spend from the Cuban treasury many millions more, finding that no navv exists and no fortress was built -? out of the old ones. As I stated in my former letter, the Cuban custom nouse ' t A,.1AA nt (tin nort daily. This. IB UC11 aUUUU U wwavvw w ' revenue amounts officially in the bud- 1 get to eleven millions. A private com in Havana offers to pay the gov ernment twenty-two millions for the right to appoint employees. But the Spanish ministers of the colony will - never consent, because they select for custom house officers their-own rela- tives and particular friends, who send to Madrid 50 per cent of their rob beries. It is a well-known fact that a r-i f . 1 ; i I , tne majority oi opanisu pvuuuauB live on tne irauas maue at tne cuaoom houses in Cuba and that the late Senor Cristino Martos derived from that . source $10,000 daily. And Cubans have , not even the right to a decent place in the civil service. Only to the rank of fifth clerk, that is to say with an ma nual sal&ry of $700, can the governor Ueneral appoint state employees in . . " ' Moreover, Cuba has to sell her sugar .- and tobacco to any market sue can ex cept Spain. To protect a few sugar 'estates in Malaga and the monopoly of . the tobacco company at Madrid, Intro- ductlon of those two principal pro uucub Ul Lilt? laiaiiu ro nuauiunjij i -i '', -i f . i 1 J A A T , xupitea in tne mutaer uuu. - nuu uj . ..... n.tnnnilUit f'llVlO Ifl ffWn W an outrageous law to buy all Spanish products, from Catalogna's'coarso linen IAJ Vtto bXXXa B UttU iiUIUi ASWB uw facts entirely justify a struggle for in dependence? ' These are' not the only griefs of poor Cubans. There is not a judge in the - island, neither in low courts nor in high ones, who sentences in accord- QUI.U niUU llUU BUl jUOW(.Vi fr itical party of Spanairdsla Union Constitutional controls all the coTTrta of justice. The mayor of Havana is - also a Spaniard; a apaniara was ms predecessor in officer, and not a single Cuban belongs, to the city . council. ' Political elections are useless.. The . census is systematically falsified to '. : prevent Cubans from obtaining their rights. Remonstrance Is of no avail. The minister, of the colonies Is too Dusy .to near tne complaints oi tne islands, appointing officers to the cus - torn house,' and selling Cuban bonds at 5 and 6 per cent to cover, the'- yearly deficits in the budget, and, now, to pay the expenses of the war.. So the 'debt of a population of 1,500,000 is $300,000,000. - Let us admire the candor with which the Spanish Prime Minister Senor Canovas del Castillo calls the insur gents bandits. Bandits if the, hero -of ' the Delaware was a bandit; if Bolivar was a bandit; if the brave soldiers of Ayacucho were bandits I How easily Spaniards call bandits all ' those who resist their spoliations! The case of the American citizen, Mr. Julio ' Sanguily, now imprisoned in a fortress at Havana, is a good sample of Span . ish .bigotry. Mr. Sanguily's crime to the Spanish government is that he was a general in the Cuban army during the last war. After peace was made; in 1878, Mr. Sanguily married in New York, resided there some years, and . became a citizen.' IJe never made ah' ' other attempt to revolt in Cuba, - When the war broke out again the 24th of February last, the first step of the Spanairds was to secure Mr. San guily in the Fortress' La Cabana. As no evidence could be found against him for conspiracy, he was accused as an abettor of the bandits, and tried before a court martial. Our consul in Havana respectfully protested against such behavior toward an .American citizen, and then Mr. Sansruilv's case was transferred to. an ordinary tri bunal. - But this change, in a Spanish colony, only means a change of form. Before : the ciyll . judge evidence brought against Mr. Sanguily was no more honest. Mr. Sanguily ' Is not guilty, but to satisfy Spanish revenge for his past, he must remain impris oned, no matter what outrage ' is in flicted on reason and humanity. Pleas lor a lair trial are not neara. as an old Cuban insurgent and an American citizen Mr. Sanguily. will- ever be a bandit for the Spaniards. - Under the same pretext Spanish warfare in Cuba is fearfully savage. The government carefully conceals the facts to avoid foreign interference. When a Cuban soldier is caught is slain on the spot as a bandit. And now5 because the Cubans used dynamite to destroy some military railroad, the Spaniards are prepared to return the compliment, "treating tne coward in surgents as wild beasts" to quote the Havana. Spanish papers' own words. A cable from Madrid announces to-day that the aim of the government is "to annihilate the Cubans" before next .summer. Yesterday the same papers reported with delight the un fortunate fate of the Cuban Cantero. Seriously wounded in a battle near the sugar estate Altamira- he was sur-1 SATURDAY. rounded by the Spanish troops. De fenceless, he asked mercy. The Span ish Sub-Lieutenant, Ruizay Coca, bravely shot him. Beside this twenty five Cubans were killed in the province Sugua and Col. Sanchez wounded with a dynamite bomb thrown by the Span iards. When we think that those men treated as "wild beasts" are fighting for a human cause, for liberty, and per sonal dignity,- we cannot remain in different to such atrocities." The loa9t we can do is to recognize Cuban belligerency. We have reasons to do it. A general state of war prevails in Cuba, and the Cubans army is strong enough to resist a .hundred, thousand Spanish -soldiers. Let us -take this step in the name of civilization. Let us hope that President Cleveland will not lose the 'opportunity for such a glory! - A -MISTAKE X POLICY. The question of allowing tfce pastur ing of the Cascade Forest Reserve is again receiving considerable attention; owing to a recent decision made by Commissioner Lamoreaux'to the effect that sheepowners driving their flocks on to the reserve would be prosecuted for tresspass. The principal reason, or reasons, for there are two given, for this ruling are: 1. That the sheep destroy the un dergrowth, which if allowed to remain would protect the snow, keep up the streams in summer, prevent spring floods and retain the moisture in the ground; and 2. That the sheepmen set fires to the undergrowth and thus destroy mil lions of feet of valuable timber. - The premises are as faulty as the conclusions. There are probably half a million sheep that find - pasturage within the reserve for from three to five months of the summer and fall. Yet so vast is the area that unless the trails were followed by which the sheep enter the mountains it would be almost impossible to find a band of them. Through the heavier timbered portions a man might travel for weeks and not see a sheep. As for the under growth, all the sheep in the United States could hardly keep it down, and all the ravages the sheep have ever made upon it are imperceptible. As for the second proposition it will not bear investigation. Sheepmen do not set fires, and for the best of reasons they could not do so without endanger ing their flocks. Every summer Ore gon's timber suffers from fires, but they are not of the sheepmen's mak ing. Most of the sheep are pastured on the eastern slope of the Cascades, while most of the fires are on the western side. Most of the fires start from clearings made either by the set tler or the mill man. In the former case the undergrowth is slashed and fired intentionally and through care lessness the fire gets .into t!ve tinA-i and runs its course. The same thing happens where the mill men work, and where the torch is applied to get rid of the tops, or fires start accidentally. There are twenty fires on the west slope of the mountains where there are no sheep to where there , is one on the eastern side where the sheep are, If a fire is started by a sheepman it is srfe to say that it is unintentional, for his interests are in .the protection of the timber and undergrowth, not in their destruction. Another .prolific source of fires is the camper, the hunt ing and' fishing parties who have ac cess to the reserve, who ' are careless about their- camp-fires which being 1 of tea built by the side of some large log will burn for days, until finally a favorable breeze will fan the flames and start a destructive fire. The pas turing of sheep on the reserve does not damage it. As a matter of fact the reservation never should have been made; nor would it have been made except for the representations of a lot of city rod and gun people, and men witn mountain resorts, wno thought they had a snap. As it is the reserve receives ten times more dam age yearly from hunting and fishing parties than it does from the sheep men, sheep and all. A SENSITIVE INDUSTRY. Thursday's Oregonian gave some in teresting figures concerning the sheep industry -of this state, showing that the number in the state had increased from 436,362 in 1893 to 678,280 in 1895, a total increase in two years of 141,658. It gives as a reason, or at least as one reason for this increase "the departure of the horse from the range," saying among other things that "the fierce Dattie ior ieea wnicn nas raged over the hills of Eastern Oregon between the sheep and the cayuse, is now prac tically at an end. . Tne cayuse is gone and in its place the sheep is free to grow and multiply." As a matter of fact the cayuse is not gone, though go ing. Our great contemporary has jumped at the conclusion that the cay use has been tin-canned and run out of the country, because his flesh has been placed in the markets, and the Linnton abattoirs are using him. Such is not the case. Most of the horses that have been killed and canned as "Oregon Cay uses" are not true to the brand on the cans, being another ex ample of the wholesale fraud we have committed on our sister state to the north- Jade Switzler furnished most of the cayuses for the slaughter pens, and they came from Washington. At the same time it exemplifies the deli cate sensitiveness of the sheep indus try. The killing of cayuses did not begin until this summer, but the in crease in the number of sheep was made last spring, or, to be more exact, last fall. It will be Been from this that as an animal industry thermome ter the sheep may by long odds take the premium for mercurial disposition and characteristics. 'The increase of 141,000 sheep In Oregon In the two years past was caused by the killing of a lot of cayuses from Washington this summer, which increased the grass on the range and settled the battle. COWS FAR OFF. A notable illustration has recently been given of the tendency to think that what we have at home is not so good as something of the same kind that we can gel from a distance. The ne w etatehouse in Rhode Island is being built of Georgia marble while it is not, however good enough for similar use in Georgia as the new statehouse there Is to be built of stone from Indiana. Rural Northwest. The fact shows however that legis lators are much the same in both states. The trouble was not with the quality of the stone in either place; but the jobbers who had the pull, wanted the long haul on the material. Cows far off wear' long horns," and "Far fetched and dear bought pleases the ladles" as well as some others, who have the spending of the people's money. - BELATED MR. BRYAN. Until Mr. Bryan delivered his sil ver speech last night our advocates of free silver coinage could scarcely have realized the weakness of their propo salthat it meant distinctly - the sub stitution of the silver standard for the gold standard. Mr. Bryan has made a mistake in his endeavor to moot the Oregonian before the people of of Ore gon, lie is an ephemeral public speaker. The Oregonian is published here through the ages. The difference is great. Mr. Bryan will not be able to con vince the people of Oregon against the Oregonian. that we of the United States can make and maintain a value for silver, or anything else, different from that of the rest of the world. If he could come to live with us, which we fear he will not do, he would quickly find that we cannot be carried away by sophistries and humbugs. Oregon is in touch with the world. It is not a provincial, inland country, like that iu which Mr. Bryan lives. It knows its values and prices must conform to those of ' the world 'at large, and it cannot be carried away by the appeals of sophistries and de- claimers. Mr. Bryan has gained a name through the telegraphic reports, but he is not very formidable when he appears in person before the people of Oregon to assure them that the United States may not only be Independent of the world's values, but may make val ues for the world. In Oregon, Mr. Bryan would pass for a very shallow man. The people of Oregon do not wish to substitute the silver standard for the gold standard. They perfectly under stand the question. Th6y are not sil ver monometalists; therefore they are hot with Mr. Bryan, who doubtless is a good man, but who is talking on a subject which he does not at all com prehend. The above from the Oregonian of yesterday we most cheerfully indorse. We are pleased indeed to do so, be cause it is not often that that paper is so charmingly frank. If it would but stick to that text it would not so often be open .to the charge of inconsistency. But it will not do that. The moment it begins to treat of the tariff question it will deny seriatim the whole of the foregoing editorial. We do not make this statement through "blind partisanship" or to pose as a critic, of our contemporary's actions. When the Oregonian says : "We of the United States cannot make and main tain a value for silver, or anything else, different from the rest of the ' world," and again that: "Oregon is in touch with the world. It knows its values and prices must conform to those of the world at large, and it cannot be carried away by the appeals of sophistries and de claimed." We wonder what spirit of forgetfulness has touched its dreams, but realize that those statements are "for this occasion only." Theassert ions are profoundly true and -- we com mend them to their author as being worth defending. WHEN HARD TIMES BEGAN, In yesterday's Oregonian Judge Bronaugh says there will be no better times until "after tho appalling crash and crisis now impending over the political world shall have expended its fury." Judge Bronaugh backs up his position by referring to the "New Era at Hand," a pamphlet written by Mr. J. B. Dimbleby, and indorsed by Rev. Canon Marable, D. D., of England. The article is' too long for us to re print, but it contains a mass of figures aqd an array of unknown quantities expressed in the definitely indefinite expressions "A Time Times and a Half." "The Times of the Gentiles and similar mathematical posers. Mr. Dimbleby asserts that Nebo-polasser was the "Head of Gold" mentioned by Daniel. Should Mr. Dimbleby's contention prove true it would be a hard blow for our gold-bugs, for Nebo- polasser was the father of that famous Nebuchednezzar, who for seven years depastured the hills around Babylon and ruminated as royal persons seldom do. One would think that Mr. Bro, naugn need not go into yet more re mote times than that to show the be ginning of hard times, for a diet of grass for the king was evidence enough. It Is really a relief though, after the grand Republican charge that there never was hard times until the Wilson bill became a law, to have attention called to a date anterior to that when times were equally hard. We are prepared to go the good judge one better though, and respectfully suggest that nard times began the day that our first parents were disposessed of the Garden of Eden and the ground was cursed for their sake.' The day Adam began to hunt mast for the fam ily dinner, and Eve to do tatting and patching to eke out the family ward robe hard times began, the -like whereof had never been known before, and have never been equaled since, Since that date hard times have ex isted for someone, and they always will exist for some. Industry and thrift are a sure panacea for hard times, but that kind of medicine is too high priced for a great many people, and times are and always will be hard for them . THE SYNDICATE'S PROFITS Probably no other act of President Cleveland's administration has brought him the censure, ranging from dissent down to abuse, that did the negotia tion, last February, of the loan of $65,- 000,000 with the Morgan-Rothschild syndicate. He was denounced for tak ing a less rate than the prior loan brought and, when -the syndicate an nounced the allotment of the bonds at 1121 for which they paid 104, vocabu laries were exhausted of their vituper ative words in characterizing the folly, the stupidity, the positive criminality of the president and his secretary In the transaction. When the bonds reached 122 the flood of criticism rose still higher, and some senator stated that impeachment proceedings should follow. Here and there was some man or paper that hinted that the president was a sharer in the apparently enor mous profits of the syndicate. But re cently, when the Ohio campaign ' re ceived its formal baptism, Senator Sherman commented on the humilia tion of the country in having to be- stow on a foreign syndicate so pronV able a piece of business. The more intelligent and candid por tion of the people, in and oat of the president's party, soon recognized this loan and its conditions as the greatest piece of financiering the country had ever witnessed. It broke the seals of distrust and let loose-the confidence of the business interests of the country. The revival that has been going on constantly since then began the mo ment the terms of the contract were known. It is conceded that the treas ury was within a few hours of suspen sion of specie payments before the loan was made. What that would have meant to the country no man can contemplate without a shudder. Con ceding to the syndicate all the profits that the most rabid critic ever gave them in handling the loan, the price would have been a mere bagatelle compared with the benefits. Now, however, the profits of tho syndicate are known. The members have made their mutual settlements, the expenses and losses deducted from the margin between price paid and price received, and the net profits of the syndicate are found to be $3,973, 625, or4.9 per cent. Of this sura f 174, 338 is from gains made in selling the foreign bills of exchange, supplied to prevent gold exports, estimated at not less than $200,000,000, the agreement with the treasury obliging them to do their utmost .to. prevent the gold out flow. The four leading houses, princi pals in the enterprise, assumed the risk of placing $65,000,000 of bonds not specifically payable in cold, on a market timid of all American securi ties, a selling, not an Investing mar ket, so far as our securities were con cerned: succeeded, turned the current of adversity into one of prosperity, for commissions amounting to less than $4,000,000. When wo consider the utter help lessness of tho treasury, under the vicious legislation that retained the Greenbacks, to prevent raids on the gold reserve; the calamity that would have ensued to all business and other interests from a suspension of specie payments; and then compare this with the industrial results that followed the placing of the loan, the profits of the syndicate, generous as they are, are a small price to pay for the dangers and losses avoided. In any consideration of the case it should not be forgotten that had there - been no greenbacks there would have been no gold reserve, and no loans to protect it; and whether gold went in or out would have been a matter of commercial and not of gov ernmental significance. Every criti cism of the loans is a severer criticism of the cause of them, the greenbacks. St. Paul Globe. A NEW DANGER. The American people looked on at first with mild-mannered amusement while the American heiresses were captured by foreign titles, or to put it more strongly while they purchased foreign titles; but lately it has caused genuine alarm. Hundreds of millions of dollars are captured annually by foreigners with titles, and tie money goes out of the country. Now a new danger somewhat on the same -lines threatens us. An Italian estate that carries with it the title of duke is of fered for sale for the sum of $7,000,000. It has been offered in turn to Rocke feller, Vanderbilt, Hobart and James Gordon Bennett, and perhaps to Frank G. Newlands, at present congressman from Nevada, leader of the free silver raptyof that state and son-in-law to the late Wm. Sharon. It was bad enough to lose our girls and their money, but if it 'comes to losing our millionaires of the male persuasion, something will have to be done.. We could stand the loss of the millionaires themselves, but the money is the serious' portion of the loss. Should the scheme work it is liable to cauje some rare combinations. Just imagine the new Italian duke fresh from Amer ica, with an Irish brogue, a German accent, or that rich Yankee nasal twang peculiar to Americans, monkey ing with the soft. sibilants of the Ro man tongue. Imagine the Irish American satisfying his thrist with light wines, his hunger with macaroni and cheese, or Frank G. Newland's chewing a 16 to 1 garlic and washing it down with liberal libations of sweet oil. The American duke would be no great acquisition to Italian society, but he would be an everlasting source of amusement for the whole world. GIFTED WITH GAB. Rev. Edward Davis, of California, preached a sermon in Salem yesterday. Mr. Davis is the preacher who recently gained considerable notoriety by waltzing in his pulpit to Illustrate the harmlessness of dancing. He has the reputation of being a very florid and picturesque speaker, and we judge by the alliterative sound and fury of his sermon, that his reputation is well earned. A close perusal of said ser mon fails to disclose any reasoning power but suggests that some sur charged onomasticon blew up in Mr, Davis' vicinity, and a large portion of the disseminated lexicon penetrated his brain pan. Here is a specimen of his glided nonsense: "A political communism that does not affect social morals, is in theory an illusive day dream, in practice a vexatious night mare. An ideal conception of an im perial democracy can be ungoverned by the despotic hand of an insidious, but inimical traitor. Cursed be the self-damnable deductions of the dema gogue; and heaven's anathema against the extortions of the Simoniac." EDITORIAL NOTES. There will be no more prize-fighting in Texas. The governor of that state, so far has risen to the occasion, like a trout to a grizzly-king, and will prob ably continue to do so. Recently in a test case, the Texas courts decided that there was no law against prize-fighting in that state, and the short-haired fra ternity grew enthusiastic therefor. Governor Culberson held that if there was no such law there should be, and so convened the legislature for the purpose of passing such a law, with an emergency clause putting the law in effect at once. The legislature met Tuesday, and though the sporting ele ment boasted that it could control the legislature its boasts proved idle. Yes terday the bill passed making it a fel ony to participate in a prize-fight, and it passed with only six dissenting votes. . There is only one bad feature about the matter, and that is that the fight will have to be finished in the newspapers. The defense of Durrant so far has been a pyrotechnical display of soar ing promises and falling sticks. His attorneys have managed his case with a skillfuiness that looked at from the defendant's side is almost criminal. fThere is not a thing they could have done to assist tne prosecution, that they have neglected, and few if any moves that could have been made to aid the defense that they have not neglected. Their confident assertions as to what they could and would prove have . turned out to be the emptiest of boasts. By leading the public to be linve thev could prove so much, when in fact they could prove not one of their assertions, has caused what before in many minds was doubt to become a fixed certainty, and the general belief is that Durrant is guilty. The fact is evident though that he has not had an attorney to defend him. ' TELEGRAPHIC. THE STORM ON THE LAKE Reports of Casualties Continue to Come In. Chicago, Oct. 1. Many reports of damage to property and the loss of a number of lives on the lakes in the storm of Saturday and Sunday were reported here last night. . One. local fatality is reported, that of Captain Andrew Johnson, of the schooner John Raber, who was drowned off Dale Park while endeavoring to reach land to secure a tug to save his vessel. Leaking like a sieve, with the sailors worn out with an all day's work at the pumps, and with its rotten sails blown to ribbons and its halyards streaming in the wind, the old schooner John Raber drove close to shore off Dale Park, Indiana, And cast anchor Andrew Johnson, the owner, wanted to save his vessel it was built in 1848 and ordered out a small boat, manned by three sailors, tried to reach shore to secure a tug. A huge breaker over turned the boat when about a mile from shore. Johnson failed to reach the boat, and last night his body lay alone and unattended on the sands, waiting a coroner's verdict. The three men stuck to the boat and reached shore. Captain Weed stood by the ship with two sailors. They were rescued by the South Chicago life savers after midnight, after four hours' hard work. The following are additions during the past 24 hours to the list of boats missing or lost. John Raber, asboreat Whiting, Ind several reported lost. George Nagan, waterlogged; taken in at St. Joseph; probably total loss. Lily May, barge, wrecked at East Whitefish point; barge gone to pieces. City of Paris, on shore on Flat rock, in Cooper harbor, Elma, schooner, reported to have foundered in Munising bay. The crew and John Thurston, wife . and child were lost. Bliss, towed barge; two masts gone and deckload; towed into Chicago harbor. C. B. Jones, schooner foundered off Whitefish point; crew supposed to have been lost. Two un known schooners ashore at Grand island, Lake Superior. Steamer Ma toa and Massabuck, of the Minnesota line, thought to be ashore at Keweenaw point, Lake Superior. A Badly Damaged Heart. San Francisco, Oct. 1. Casper Simmer has commenced suit for dam ages in the justice court against Rob ert Scholy. He claims that Scholy robbed him of the affections of his wife and Induced her to file a suit for divorce, which was denied. The suit cost him $100 in lawyers' fees. In ad dition to this sum he demands $199.99 in payment for a lacerated heart. MONOTONY BROKEN. Unexpected Sensation In the Durrant Case Yesterday. san DRANCISCO, Oct. 1. An unex pected sensation developed when the trial of -Tneoffore Durrant was re sumed this morning. Before proceed ings were begun Judge Murphy said he had been informed that last Friday one of the jurors had been approached on the subject of the trial during the recess of court. After commenting on the gravity of the offense, which, he said, bordered on a serious crime, the court asked Juror I. J. Truman to take the stand. - r. Mr. Truman said tnat while he was riding in a street-car last Thursday he was approached by H. J. McCoy, gen eral secretary of the .Young Men's Christian Union. In speaking of the trial McCoy said to the juror: "If you don't hang Durrant we will hang you." The statement of the juror created a sensation in court, not only on ac count of the objectionable remark it self, but on account of the local prom inence of the offender. Mr. Truman said McCoy's remarks had no effect on his mind whatever, and he was .confi dent there was no intent to influence him. . rne court was not inclined to over look the indiscretion of Secretary Mc Coy. He said the prominence of the offender made the offenso more re markable, and ordered McCoy to ap pear in court . at 12 o'clock next Wednesday and show cause why he should not be punished for contempt. District Attorney Barnes was ordered to make out papers in the case at once. Robt. W. Martland, the gas-fitter whose examination was begun last Thursday, was called to the stand to continue his description of the sun burners in Emanuel church. His tes timony was of a technical nature in tended to show the likelihood of the escape of gas under certain conditions, Just ten weeks have passed since the trial commenced, and the weary length of the case still seems to stretch inter minably out. It entered today upon its eleventh" week, with the case .for the defense just .barely presented. There is no telling how long it will last. Any number of witnesses have been summoned for the defense, just how many the attorneys refuse to disclose. How many more they hope to discover between now and the resting of their case, they are entirely unable to state. At the rate they are proceeding it will take longer than it did for the prose cution to present its case. Following the presentation by the defense, comes rebuttal, and sur-rebuttal. with wit nesses on either side whose names are legion experts on chirography, gas, medical lectures and reputation, jew elers and carpenters galore and mlcro- scopists whose whole attention will be given to reddish stains on doors and shoes. it is certain tnat it will take many many weeks before the fate of Durrant is entrusted to the jury, and in those weeks much that is exceedingly breezy, if not sensational, must crop up. Meanwhile, the attorneys, detectives and writers of anonymous letters are busy. Another one, presumably a woman signing, "who knows.-"' has written a letter to Mayor Sutro to the effect that Durrant and two other men murdered Blanche Lamont in Golden Gate Park, and that Minnie met her death at the bands of unknown. Judge Fee's Resignation.. PENDLETON, Or., Oct. 1. The an nouncement, that the resignation of Circuit Court Judge James A. Fee, of this district, has . been tendered to Governor Lord, is made. The resig nation created great surprise here, even to the judge's intimate friends, who had been given no intimation of his intention of leaving the bench. Judge i ee served one lull six-year term and one year on the second. He was elected first in 1888 as a Republi can over . Judge Ramsey, now a - resi dent of tho Willamette valley. His occupancy of .the bench brought him J the highest respect of the people of Eastern Oregon, and he leaves the office with a splendid record. Stephen A. Lowell, who was a can didate last winter for United States senator, is being supported by the lo cal bar to a man. Petitions, letters and telegrams are being sent to Gov ernor Lord to appoint Lowell to the position. Judge Fee gives business reasons for his resignation. Banks Ordered Closed. Jefferson City, Mo., Oct. 1. The Bank of Monett and Bank of Purdy, Barry county, have been closed by secretary oi btate Leseur upon noti fication by the bank examiner of their insolvent condition, and are in the hands of receivers. This makes 13 banks closed by the secretary of state since the execution of the new bank examination law which went into effect on the 1st of July, besides half a dozen that anticipated examination by making assignments. ABOUT THE ARMY. Official Order Detailing Miles to Duty Washington. In Washington, Oct. 2. Secretary Laraont issued an order this morning, detailing General Miles to duty in Washington, as general of the army, and General Ruger, now on special duty at Washington, to the command of the department of the east, with headquarters at New York. In anticipation of the assignment of General Miles to command of the army at Washington, orders were is sued today making some important changes in the officers of the adjutant general's office. Colonel Thomas M Vincent, who has been Lieutenant General Schofield's chief of staff, is relieved from that duty and assigned to duty in the office of the adjutant- i general In charge of the information bureau. Colonel S. Heck, who has been General Miles' adjutant-general at New York, is ordered to Washing ton to fill the place vacated by Gen eral Vincent. IS GEE HOP A CITIZEN? Collector Wise at San Francisco Decides He is Not. San Francisco, Oct. 3. Among the passsengers on the last trip of the Rio Janeiro was a coolie named Gee -Hop, who was returning from a long visit to China. Gee Hop claims to be a cit izen of the United States, and pro duces documents to prove it, among other things a passport issued by the department of state bearing the signa ture of James G. Blaine. Collector Wise, however, says he is the sole judge as to the landing of Chinese, and he refuses to recognize Gee Hop's credentials. The matter will be taken to the United States courts and a de cision will be watched for with inter est. The coolie is a bright, intelligent fellow, and his answers regarding his voting show he is familiar with the af fairs of this country. He furnished the collector his original naturaliza tion certificate. It was issued by the court of common pleas at Camden, N. J., on May 8, 1890. The testimony upon which the certificate was granted was furnished by Mrs. F. E. Nash, who testified that Gee Hop had arrived in this country before his 18th year, was of full age and had resided in this country altogether five years. Gee Hop took the usual oath to support the constitution and renounced all alle giance to the emperor of China. Gee Hop also presented " to the col lector his pasport issued by the de partment of state. It bears date of May 12, 1890, and is signed by the late James G. Blaine. It is in regular form, requesting, on the part of the government, "to permit Gee Hop,, a citizen of the United State?, safely and freely to pass, and In case of need, to give him all lawful, aid and protec tion." A -description of Gee hop forms a part of the passport, together with his own signature. Collector Wise, in ruling on Gee Hop's case, decided that a certificate of naturalization -or a passport from the secretary of state does not make a coolie a citizen of this country oren title him to reside here under the pres ent exclusion act Under authority conferred by the last congress the col lectors of , ports of entry are made the sole judges of the rights of coolies land who claim to be merchants or set up claims of residence other than that of being native born. In this case it will be alleged by the attorney for Gee that the certificate of naturalization is evidence of a judgment of record, and the only way to prevent the applicant from landing is to set aside that judg ment. Whether this can be done re mains to be determined. AWAITING EZETA. The People of Salvador Ready to Receive him With Bullets. San Francisco, Oct. 3. The steam er Cella has arrived from Salvadorean porta. Captain Johnson reports that the little republic, the control of which is so ardently desired by Antonio Ezeta, is In a state of feverish unrest. Rumors have been thick at all the ports at which the Cella stopped con cerning the coming of Ezeta to capture Salvador. A warm reception awaits him. 'They are up in arms there," said Captain Johnson. "At Acujutla, La Libortad and La Union tho bench is full of soldiers, . and at other ports there were guards, all waiting for htm. "They told me the friends of Ezeta were suffering for his acts. JSo less than half a dozen wealthy men were in the chaingang, but what charges were made against him I oould not Jnd out, "Guitterez, the president of the re public, had an interview with the presidents of Honduras and Nicaragua at La Union, while I was in Salvador. The president and his generals, about 25 in number, came back overland to El Triumpho, and I carried them to La Libertad. What the conference was about I do not know." Acsording to Captain Johnson, Bus- tamente, Ezeta's aid, was shot, and there was no boiling oil poured on him. It Is said that Ezeta has many friends in Salvador, but that they are afraid to open their mouths lest they be im prisoned. These have faith in their leade'rs return. They think he can get assistance from Diaz, of Mexico, and with this backing, Barrios, of Guatemala, will not dare oppose him, so that ne wiu oe a Die to- marcn through Barrios' country and get into Northern Salvador. Over Fifty Vessels Lost. . London, Oct. 3. Much additional wreckage has been washed ashore in the vicinity of Ilfrancombe, on the north coast of Devonshire. It is thought several vessels foundered in Bristol channel during the recent gale. This would make the number of crafts lost over 50, and may consider ably increase the loss of life, previ ously estimated at only 24. TELEGRAPHIC. CHINESE O 1NNIBALS. Horrible Outcome of a Feud Between Villagers. San Francisco, Oct. 2 Two largo villages, Pien Cheng and Tang Chenir, distant seven miles from Ty Saml, in the Canton province, China, were re cently the scenes of shocking deeds in cannibalism and wanton destruction of productive property. The Swatow correspondent of the China Mail on August 29 forwarded the details of the fight between the two communities, which was precip itated by a row over water rights. By a night attack the people of Tang Cheng cut the sea embankment and let in the water so as to destroy a large part of their enemies' rice, then almost ready for cutting. Reprisals followed, and, though the villages are distant only 20 miles from the two district cities, Hao Hong and Loik Hong, the fighting continued a month, involving many villages and causing a large number of deaths. The worst feature, however, is this: By one side three, and by the other four, prisoners were taken alive. These men were killed and eaten seven in all. It was not in this case as others, an eating of the heart only. Every eatable portion was consumed, most of it being given to the children of the villages. Although not unprecedented in that district, such an act is unusual, and led to the appointment of a special deputy to inquire into the case. STUDENTS ON THE STAND. Durrant's Classmates Asked If They Answered For Him. San Francisco, Oct. 2. The de fense in the Durrant case opened this morning with the calling of the stu dents from the senior class at Cooper medical college to ascertain if any one of them answered for Durrant at Dr. Cheney's lecture on April 3. Ten students were called during the first hour after the court opened up, and In reply to the stereotyped question of Attorney Dueprey as to whether they had answered for Durrant replied in the negative. District Attorney Barnes embraced the opportunity to obtain notes of the lecture and the note-books were intro duced in evidence and will probably take an important part later in the trial, when the prosecution will at tempt to prove that the notes of the lecture which Durrant now supposed 'to have in his possession were not made at the lecture. As there are 74 students in the c'ass of which Durrant was a member two days may "be consumed in examining witness. At the close of the morning session 42 students of the medical col lege had had been examined, but noth ing of importance had been devel oped. It fs expected that all or the afternoon session will be occupied with similar witnesses. A THIRD -RECEIVER. Andrew F. Burleigh Named by Judge Hanford. Seattle, Wash., Oct. 2. In the federal court this morning, and in the presence of the largest aggregation of lawyers that has ever assembled in this city. Federal Judge C. H. Hanford, with State Supreme Judge John P. Hoyt, by his side, refused to accept the resignation of Oakes, Rouse and Payne as receivers of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, but removed them because of their failure to comply with an order made in the case a few weeks ago, and named Andrew F. Burleigh, of this city, counsel for the Oregon Improvement Company, aB receiver of the Northern Pacific property in this state. He directed Burleigh to give a bond in the sum of $300,000, and to take charge of the company's affairs at once. When court convened Judge Han ford remarked that the old receivers had been directed to file with this court new bonds, to give an accounting of their past acts, and to answer tho charges which had been preferred against them by Brayton Ives, as presi dent of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. The receivers had resigned and therefore the bond was unnecessary It was the desire of the. court to. know whether or not the other conditions of the order had been complied with. Assistant-General Counsel Bunn, of St. Paul, arose and said that they had not been, and he was authorized to say that they would not be. The court then said that he would not accept their resignations, but would remove them and appoint Burleigh receiver. president .Brayton Ives filed a new and very sensational affidavit this morning, charging that Henry Villard, a month before the Northern Pacific road was placed in the hands of a re ceiver, had authorized his personal counsel to take steps to place it in the hands of the receivers, and had given it out that Henry C. Payne would be one of them. TO DECEIVE ENGLAND. China's Recent Action Declared Merely a Trick. London, Oct. 2. Sir Halliday Mc Cartney, counselor of the Chinese le gation here, referring to the accept ance by China of the ultimatum of Great Britain, has made a statement to tho effect that the punishment of the viceroy of Szchuen for failing to pro tect tho missionaries was decided upon before the ultimatum was presented, and tho Chinese minister at London received notice of the issuing of the decree at 2 P. M. Sunday. It is under stood in official circles that tho action of China does not affect possible claims for indemnities and demands for re forms made by Great Britain. Professor R. E. Douglass has written the Times that Viceroy Liu Ping Chang was degraded last November, and it is now thought the action of the Chinese trovernment is merely a trick to deceive Great Britain. At St. Bridge's church today a fare well service was held prior to the de parture of 100 missionaries for foreign stations. Twenty four, including 15 women go to China. Hanged in Effigy. Reno, Nev., Oct. 3. A dummy with large placard with the word "Dur rant" on it, was found suspended from railroad crossing sign on West street this morning. Who the perpetrators of the affair are is not known. No vicious talk has been indulged in by Reno citizens. Shot bU Wife. Chicago, Oct. 3. Edward Moe, a prosperous tradesman, sdos ana ia tallv injured his wife today at the North Market street hotel, to which she had gone with Peter Nelson, a friend of her husband's. ' Breaking down the door of their room, Moe im mediately began firing. Nelson made his escape. THE GABLAND STOVES AND RANGES HRG TH BEST IN THE WORLD. We respectfully invite all those who are in need of a Cook or Heating Stove or Steel Range to call and examine OUR NEW LINE And get our prices. We have a very large assortment to select from; we can give you splendid bargains this year, and WILL GUARANTEE TO SAVE YOU HONEY Simply because we are satisfied with making very small profits. 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