J- r -The Heppner Gazette THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1901. Lit WIS AND CLARK CENTENARY. Oregon must make preparation for eelebration in a proper way of the cen tenary of the expedition of Lewis and Clark; and Portland must take tbe ',; lead in such preparation, truly says th Portland Oregon ian. We have not too much time in which tggfc.,, 0 jmmenseintereat not only to prepare for this event. . Lewis and , t0 the 8tates of the old Oregon country Portland must take a first place in preparations in behalf of Oregon. How this ia to be done and best done is I matter for consideration. Oregon moreover is now a mother o states and celebration of this great cen tennial event is a feast in preparation as well as participation of which we believe her daughters will be glad to share. And in view of its national importance, the United States should be asked to assist and we think can be induced to do so. It may be made an NSW CENTURY TASKS. Clark tame down the umumoia river and passed the winter of 1805-6 near its mouth at, a spot fully identified by the Historical Society of Oregon. The Hoot has been marked and it is hoped the state of Oregon will purchase it with sufficient body of land in addition for a public park. .. Lewi and Clark . were the first Americans who came across the con tinent to the Oregon country and the Pacific ocean. Alexander Mackenzie twelve years earlier had come from Canada passing through the continent and over the mountains lrom Peace river which flows intr Athabasca lake and thence discharges its waters through the Great Slave river and the Mackenzie into the Arctic ocean. From the headwaters of Peace river Mackenzie passed on west to the .Won,, i which later took the name of Frsr river and after following this river for some distance struck directly ' west for the Pacific which he readied in Jul v 1793. Mackenzie was the first in An w hn crossed the continent to the Pacific ocean north of the Spanish possessions which at that time hud an ' indeterminate northern boundary. This boundary was fixed afterward at the forty-second parallel by treaty be tween the United states and f-pam. It was not the a.-qnisition of Louisi ana that secured the Oregon country to the United States; but the acquisition of Louisiana was the hastening cause of the exploration of tho Oregon coun try and thereforo of the expedition of Lewis and Cark. Our claim to the ' country rerv upon the right of Grav's discovery of tho Columbia river in 1702; but there had been no ex ploration and the world's knowledge of tho country was of the most limited and meager description. Upon the ac quisition of Louisiana it was perceived how desirable it was that our people should obtain knowlodge of tho country belonging by the usage of nations to the great river discovered by Captain Gray. , President Jefferson saw this perhaps more clearly than any other man o' rh time. To his prescience of thti importance of the country, to his f erception of the necessity of establish ng our claim npon it we owe tho ex pedition of Lewis and Clark. On the results of the expedition of Mackenzie and of the voyage of Vancouver the British government was already baaing a large and general claim to bov !. ereignty on the Pacific. Jefferson re solved to start an exploring expedition overland fom the United States for the purpose of strengthening the rights we had acquired through Gray's ' discovery and of anticipating fuither expeditions and - claims of Great 'Britain. Lewis and Chirk were not here too soon, for tho English already had other expeditions in preparation and their explorers were on the Upper Columbia, but a little later than the return of Lnis and Clark from the month of the stream. Simon Fraser in 180U-8 followed to the sea the river that hears his name believing at first that he was on the Columbia: and an other Enlishman, David Thompson ' whose name is perpetuated in the wel ' known tributary of the Fraser was tho first man who explored the upper ' courses of the Columbia which stream he followed as far down as the mouth 1 of the Lewis or Snake river. It was out of these conditions that the controversy tietween the United States and Great Britain known in our history as the Oregon question arose. Neither party ' was in truth able wholly to exclude the other but it was the expedition of Lewis and Clark that guv us the strength of our argu ment. The talk on our side of 'fifty four forty or fight" whs merely the cry of a party; sv rather the insolence of partisanship for Great. Britain claims rested on s basis too solid to be disposed of in this wv; and besides our claim of "h'ftv-four-forty" rested merely upon a convention between the United Stst's nnd Unssia through which the latter hnd named fifty fonr-fortv as the southern boundary nf her American possessions. !ut to this convention Hrr-nt Britsin was not partv, and she jutlv declsred that her rights could not tie concluded through any negotiation in which she had not participsted or In whose results she lisd n-1 promised agreement. The question therefore was still open as .. between GreHt Britain and the United States. Both uontitries had undonbtci calm. Great (iritaln by recession of Astoria to the tjniteil States afte the war of 1812 hud conceded to ns right in tlie country ; hut. that righ was undefined. It was the expedition of Lewis and Clark following Grav discovery thnt gave us our main hold Than the slow migration of our trad ers and settlers to the Oregon country grudnsllv established American in fluence here: and finally tho consider able migration of 184.1 gave Americans decided preponderance especially in the country south of tlto Columbia. But the boundary question drngged along, the British claiming as far south ' as the Columbia and " claiming as far north as fifty four forty, till the Anal settlement in the year UJ40. - The national importance of the Lewis and Clark expedition comes out strongly through examination of the ' subject and t-vt-n i this brief recital. It was that expedition that enabled us to follow np the claim based on discovery of the Columbia river and nablixl us moreover to anticipate the English in their further exploration I and discovery. It enabled us to hold the country west of the Rockv mountains nd south of the forty-ninth parallel to the United Htats. It gave us the looting that enabled us to negotiate with Spain for the southern boundrv of the Oregon country which was fixed , at the (ortv-second parallel. And as w were already firmly placed on tho , ' Pacific coast at the time of tho war ' with Mexico it was one of the direct sources of our acquisition of California ' by the double method of cotiqeest and purchase. Thus we have acquired on the Pacific a vast coast lino; we have established great, nnd, growing ' states supported hv a cordon of interior , states from the Mississippi westward: : we are In position for defense in war and for defense and aggression In trade: at o'ir Pacific ports we are nearest of all the great nations of commerce and olvilixHtlon tn the trade of tho Orient. The Lewis ami Clsrk expoditin to hl"h the grent results so plainly run hack stands therefore as one of the leading episode of our national his- ! torv. We must celebrate its centennial it in but to the entire United States. A PSYCHOLOGICAL MOMENT. Considered in the abstract, Governor Roosevelt's Carnegie hall sermon was sound doctrine. Envy, malice and covetousneas are ugly vices, but more odious in men of wealth and leisure than in men of poverty and stunted op portunity, and when Mr. Roosevelt re sorted to concrete application of his judgment to the poor, his discourse rang false. It was suggestive of ihe "pious" twang with which sleek and luxurious chan!ains have always been wont to harangue tho poor in times of popular distress and discontent. A recent address by former Mayor Ahram S. Hewitt of New York has a truer ring. It was an eloquent plea for the poor, urging that great wealth in volves great responsibilities and duties, Mr. Hewitt said : "Since 1840 our national wealth has increased five times as fast as our nnnnlntion. Who shall sav that with that wonderful increase in wealth there is not means in abundance to re' move all the misery and all the evil conditions among tho humble classes which at present are stains and sores on our body politic? "Tho advance of industry which h brought us this wealth beyond the wildest dreams of avarice has also brought on conditions which make it an absolute impossibility for some people to live decent, respectable lives. "The rich have not even begun to do what thev ought to do. Men that almost worship for their generosity nnd solicitude for those that have less are not giving in proportion to their woalth tho half that was given by their families a generation ago. "Have wo tho right to take all this wealth and do nothing to correct tbe ovi s created in its production; an you accept these millions and shut vour eves to the evils which weave themselves about the producers "Can anv one he content with sucn conditions? Good God! Is this the end to which we have been working all these centuries? For heavens sake, is this the result of our industrial de velopment, and must our prosperity as a nation be purchased at such a stag gering price? "II tiiene terrioie tenements, ineee overcrowded districts, these dark and foul dwelling places and all tbe attend ing miseries must go with industry, then I would to God that every indus trial center could be destroyed, as were Sodom and Gomorrah of old, and men driven baok to the land where they can at loast have tho breezes and the green grass and the sunshine and the blue of heaven to look up to. Is this an overwrought picture? We think not. It is the hard, terrible truth, and wnen set against it, Mr Roosevelt's stilted lecture strikes as drseord. 1 It our moral leaden must eneak o the poor man's envy. let their word be as pistol shots; hut let them speak in tho rolling tones of thunder to the groedy, grasping, scheming men multi-millions, wno covet the scant earnings and scantier savings of the country's toilers. At such a time, in the solemn sun rise of another century, men's minds and hearts are peculiarly adapted for the reception of profound moral truths. Ibis is the "psychological moment," when civilization gathers itself for the ascent of higher realms. It is wished that from every pulpit in America there might he reached next Sunday sermons pulsing with the spirit oi mr. Hewitt's address. Spokosinau-Reviow. to grow lution" by evolution and not by revo TO THE POORHOUSE. Tha Predicament of a Farmer Citizen of Grant County. Herman Worcester, aged 73 years, has just becomo an inmate of the Mult nomah county poorhonse. Ho had no other placo to go in his old age. Mr. Worcester settled in Grant county, Eastern Oregon, where he obtained a fair start years ago. Ho worked hard, it is said, nnd when he came to Port land in 1881 ho was independent, and had an opportunity to profit by the speculations in booming real estate. He handled his savings cautiously and placet several hundred dollars in the Portland Savings bank, where ha sup posed that it would always be sate. Hut tho upheaval of the unnatural conditions in the new community came, and his savings, like ninny others, wcro swept away. He never recovered enough to pay for u month's kooping. Tiie reflection that he was among the old-timers and that the chances of fortune went against him tho most dismal portion of the old man's lot. Ho has a brother whose whereabouts are unknown. Great Tasks for the New Century" are outlined in the World's Work for anuary. In these undertakings in the United .States, in Europe, Asia and Africa, the trade routes of the world will be changed, and a new direction given to social and political develop ment which will profoundly affect ivilization. First in importance is the isthmian canal across Nicaragua. Public senti ment ls.unanimous in its tavor, money aud plans are ready, and it is prob able thattne nrsyear oi me new cen tury will witness the beginning of the greatest engineering task of the age. The canal will be iuu.ui mnes long and enable the largest vessels to pass from Atlantic to Pacific and ascend and descend a continental divide over 100 feet in height. Other American undertakings will open tbe great lakes to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the sea to the Hudson river and New York.to the Mississippi and the gulf; thus enabling Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago and Duluth to ship unbroken cargoes by way of the St. Lawrence, the Hudson and the Mississippi. the sea. Another curious water way is an in land Atantic coast passage from Boston to Galveston. Texas, and the Rio Gnnde river, which forms our Mexi can boundary. A series of canals be- fins at Boston, cuts across the state to uanton river and Narragansctt bay, with an inside passage as far south as Chesapeake bay. Interior channels ohviate the necessity of coasting vessels rounding dangerous (Jape Hatteras; the Dismal Swamp is to be widened and deepened; a ship canal cuts Florida; Louisiana swamps ana uayuus are dredged, short channels supply the breaks in tne lexan miem uu me Mexican boundary is gained. By means of this system the United States will have the greatest stretch of pro tected water in the world, a powerful stimulus to trade in times of peace, and of untold value in war, when small war ships and entire fleets of tornedo boats could pass irom norinern waters to the gulf without going out side at all. , . In England a new 28-toot canal ib projected between Southampton and London. France plans a canal con ner.timr the Atlantic with the Mediter ranean hv ioinintr the headwaters of J j . i the Loiro and the Rhone aud by deepening the channels of these Titers, I fi .1 . . a .1,.. Allaniin twnan wmcn now miu mo iinauv v...... and the Mediterranean sea. This canal will be wide and deep enough to float ships of war and the largest merchantmen. The voyago irom me west to tho east and southern coast of France would be shortened by 1000 miles.. England's control over the Mediterranean, which had been as sured by the possession of the fortress of Gibraltar, would bo broken by this new interior water way. German has designed a syttem oi commercial canals connecting all parts of the interior of the empire. The Kiel canal was primarily a strategic work, but the new canal from L,auen burg on the Elbe to Lubeck on the Trave is for commercial convenience. Russia is far ahead of ner neighbors in her schemes. A 29-foot ship canal is to connect Riga and St. Petersburg on the Baltic with Odessa on the Black sea. A second artificial channel of equal depth will join the Black and Caspian seas. The importance of these water ways commercially and politi cally to Russia will be of inestimable benefit. Henry Norman has aptly termed the trans-Siberian railway "the greatest material undertaking the world has Been since the building of tho great wall of China." But Russia has already in mind another railway line leading directly from her trans-Caspian possessions through tho heart of Persia, giving her a port on the Persian gulf, and still anotnor nno is projected lrom the Caucasus west ward to Constantinople, while a third is to connect Mew in Central Asia with Herat for Kandahar and the Arabian sea. Geat Britain, quick to recognize the significance of Russia's moves, en deavors to offset them by an all-British railway to China from the Mediter ranean to the Yang-tse. British fore sight in the person of Cecil J. Rhodes purposes to build tho (Jape-to-airo railway 6000 miles long froai end to end of Africa. France, not to be out done, is interested in a scheme to con struct a trans-Saharan load, which would enable the French army to travel in a fortnight from Algiers to the uttermost limits of trench posses sions in Africa. Tho execution of most of these great enterprises is either in .the hands of the Anglo-Saxon or those of the Russians. AMONG TBE MAGAZINES. "Great Achievements 'in Modern Bridge Building." by Frank W. Skin ner, associate editor of the Engineer ! ing Record, appears in McOlure's magazine lor January. vnne one oi the oldeet of the "engineering arts, bridge building is one of the newest in the principles and methods which it follows today. Modern methods of construction developed with the first metal truss bridge, which was put up about 1840. llauy of the great bridges of tho world have been built within the last quarter of a century. In 1803 a bridge with a span of 320 feet was thrown across tho Ohio river. It was a remarkable feat at the time, yet today a single span 1710 feet in actual construction haB been extended and a number of bridges have been designed by ablo builders that have a span of nearly auuu ieei. During a single liietime uie an of bridge building has attained to a poriection anu a iiuai einuumu, dj,o Mr.. Skinner, that is comparaoie who the progress of architecture through all tho centuries since the time of the pyramid builders. It has reached a point, however, where it musi await the invention of some new material to afford it scope for any marked advance. Improvement in the manufacture of steel is a great factor in the exten sion of this branch of construction. Other materials have been used, but stone bridges have never extended to spans oi more than zou ieei. vvooaen bridges above 200 feet in length and those of combined wood and iron have not exceeded 300 feet. Cost is rather to be a factor in limiting bridge spans than mechanical difficulties. Steel has no competitor as a material for great bridges at the present day, and even with steel the cost of construction increases approximately with the square of the increase of the span. Every bridge is a problem by itself. Each span is a separate engineering feat. In a popular way the writer ex plains some of the difficulties to be overcome and the problems to be solved by the coraputor of the plana and the builder of a bridge A graphic account is given of rearing the super structure in the face of wnids and floods. Thrilling hair-breadth escapes of workmen recorded, and the story of the four great bridges at Niagara, is told, all by means of anecdote and well selected illustrations. The famous Forth bridge in Scotland boasts of two 1700-foot cantilevers, which are the longest trussed spans in the world. This gigantic structure weighs over 300,000,000 pounds, was seven voars in building, cost $16,000,- 000 anil scores of human lives. The workmen are interesting factors in modern bridge building, and their faithfulness, endurance and daring are of an heroic order. Only in late years has the great. increaso in construction caused it to become a specialized call ing, the men being trained to this particular occupation, and they, as well as the designers of the structures, are entitled to high rank as engineers. Nearly all the workmen employed in replacing the Niagara suspension bridge were floating mechanics and laborers unacquainted with bridge work, yet they did tho work well, so perfectly was it planned and so skillfully di rected. William II. at home, as a man in privato lite, ana nis personal interest GENERAL NEWS. Admiral Dewey is confined to hio home in Washington by an attack of la grippe. A bill maki.ng kidnapping a capital offense has been introduced in the leg islature in Tennessee. There is a famine in the province of; Shanei, China, and it is said five million people are starving. A resolution was adopted by the Missouri house of representatives memorializing cnngrens to allow the Filipinos to establish a government of their own. General MauArlhtir reports the sur render of Delgado, commander in chief of Iloilo province, Panay. He also reports that other important sur renders are expected during the next few days. On Tuesday a bill granting a pension of $50 a month to Horatio N. Davis, father of the late Senator Davis of Minnesota, passed the senate. Mr. Davis was a captain in the commissary department. The state department will be called upon to act in the Neelcy case. Under the law the warrant of extradition must be issued by tho secretary of state when he is satisfied of the sufficiency of tho application. A fine stick of Oregon pine 115 feet long, has arrived at Lawley's yacht yard in Boston. In a finished state it will be the main boom of tho Lawson yacht, one of the boats building to compete for the America's cup. , The interests in control of the New York Central have under consideration a plan of merging the Big Four rail road into the New York Central sys tem. The ownership of the Big Four is vested absolutely in the Vauder bilts. A Cincinnati paper received replies from 27 governors in regsrd to prize fighting, and only one the governor of Nevada states that he would anow tne Jeffries-Ruhlin fight in his state if it can not be pulled off in Cincinnati on February 15. Scott Wilke, who served in the lower house of congress two terms, begin ning with 188H, and who was assis tant controller of the currency during President Cleveland's last term, is dving at his honm near Hurry, Pike county, III. William l Fishback died at lus home at Indianapolis Tuesday. He was one of the best known lawyers in the Middle West, and had been prominent in the affairs of Indiana tor halt a. century. In 1861 he became the law partner of ex-Presiaent Uenjamin Harrison. James Maloney, a well known Chicago sporting man was killed at Manila by an Australian prizefighter. The murderer then committed suicide. Both had fallen in love with the same girl. Maloney s wne and tnree cnua- ren at Ohicago are leit penniless. After a protracted series of experi ments, a Chicago physician is said to have succeeded in perfecting a method by .which human bodies may bo cremated with the use of liquid air, at a cost which is nominal in comparison with the present expensive methods. The confederate veteran camp, of New York, will hold its 11th annual dinner in honor of tho memory of Robert K. Lee at the Waldorf-Astoria January 18. Bishop Thomas U. Dud ley, of Kentucky, will respond to tbe toast. "The Memory of Kobert E. Leo." Congressman -Frank Clark died at p PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS, i ' bin home at Peterkboro, N. H., Wed-: ' nesday night, of quick consumption. Ex-Governor J. W. Leedy, of Kan William Woolsey, a Maryland j fas, the last fusionist governor, is now died and eft 150.000 a resident or Seattle. MAO MOOSE RAIDS A TOWN. Crazed Animal Injures Man and Kills Cattle at Farrlf, Minn. One man probably fatally injured, three dogs and two cows killud and suv tirai hundred dollars' worth ot prop erty destroyed is toe result oi tho visit of a crazy moose to the little town of Farris, four miles from Cass Lake, Minn., on ew l ear s dav. The am mal appeared in tbe streets about noon and charged directly at a little knot of men standing In front of the only store in town. Every one made a rush for safety, John Olson failed to escape and was bo severely tramped by the moose that ho will probably die. After leav ing tho man tho animal turned his at tention to a lot of dogs that were at tacking him and rapidly killed three of their number, his sharp hoofs cut ting them almost to pieces. By this time several rifles had been turned upon the mad animal aud manv bullets found a lodging place in his body, These seemed but to increase the aimer of the brute, and he started on a general raid. Two cows walking along the street attracted his attention and he attacked them, killing both in short order. After the brute had smashed things generally ho was killed. "A Wonderful teat of Advonture" is also described in the January number of the World's Work. A young bng lishman, Ewart Scott Grogan, has mado a journey the whole length of Africa from the cape to Cairo. With a friend, Arthur Henry Sharp, he landed at Beira, tho port of Rhodesia, ostensibly on a big game expedition. Both wisely kept silent concerning their secret purpose. Eighteen months afterward Mr. Grogan sot foot on the platform of the railway station at Cairo. Half the distance he had come alone, Ins friend turning back when tho deadlv Dinka swamps were reached. Mr. Grogan followed tho line of the projected railway to a cer tain degree. His only guide was a com pass, and tho worst foe he met the awful masquito of the Dinka swamps. Two of his negroes were litorally bitten to death and sucked dry by them. This traveler has brought back a vast amount of scientific information which he publishing in book form. Sauerkraut For the Army. A large quantity of sauerkraut will purchased for the army in the Philippines. Bids were received by Major W. L. Alexander, purchasing oimmissary officer of the department of the lakes, on IWemher 20. for sun- plying troops stationed in and about ' on its way and western ideas displac Aiaiiiia with .'o.ixiu gallons ot saner kraut, and it will 1 shipped from Poutney Bigelow gives the renders o! the New -Year's Harper's monthly a peep into "My Japan," which be says has just enough of the original flavor left to satisfy the most jaded of tourists. The sketch has a personal tone, being tho result of his experi ences, while visiitng his triend. Kotaka, in Tokyo. Kotaka, who had lieen educated in America, was a grandee of Japan, a governor of one of the great ports and ranked high in the peerage. lie dressed as for "Piccadilly" and his drawing-room contained European furniture, but Kotaka's wife was a remnant of old Japan. "She floated into the room like a feathery whiff from a magical screen or fan. There was no European nonsense about her. I cannot tell what she wore, but the general im pression was one of exquisitely dainty hands, nose, ears, mouth and chin"; eyes of infinite capacity, a gorgeous broad sash and a single long silk gar ment, open at the throat and of a color suggesting th xqnistte Hteel shades of the sky before a typhoon. Like others who have iione before in the colonies and commerce of the nation, and its art and schemes for education, ia the gist of a paper on "The Kaiser as Seen in Germany," by Ray Stannard Baker, in the same magazine. This writer finds that American ideas of the Gorman emperor are curiously colored by the influence of comic papers. In fact, he ia not a large man, neither tall nor broad in tho shoulders, but it seems to be the natural bent of the human mind to aHEOciate majesty with physical bigness. "And William, who' knows the psychology of royalty to the seventh shading, has built high on this feeling." Photographers state that when ar ranging for groups the kaiser always manages to have his pictures taken so that he looms up in impressive dignity above all the others. Even in smaller pictures of tho cabinet size the camera has been moved so close that Ihe kaiser's face nearly fills tbe plate, giving an impression of extraordinary hugeness One thing the photographs fail to record is a singular sternness of the face in repose. "Square, iron jaws, thin, firm lips, a certain sharpness and leanness of visage, a penetrating eye, all speak of invincible determination, pride and dignity. Indeed, herein lies the force of personal majesty, for William, how ever much one mav smile at his passion for roval display, has many of those splendid attributes of char acter which would . make a man great in any sphere of life. ihe kaiser is ies a great king and more a great man. I tie longer one remains in Germany, and the more be learns of William and his extraordinary ac tivity, the deeper grows this im nression." Not long ago an American scientist attended a reception given by the kaiser in tho roval palace, in which William appeared in robes of royalty, preceded by chamberlains bearing the crown and insignia. Afterward the professor is said to have remarked "I am a republican to the backbone, but 1 heliove that if monarchs are nec essary they should be monarchs to the last bit of gold lace, just as William is kaiser." The story was repeated to the kaiser, who laughed heartily, s.V' ing; "That is exactly what I believe, Dom Pedro ot Brazil illustrated the folly of trving to be a republican on the throne." His people criticise him for talking too much. He expresses his senti ments too frankly to suit the cautious type of German "diplomacy. War any where in the world excites him greatly He cares nothing for social functions unless they have some specific purpose, II s navv and his desiro for commer cial expansion are his greatest in tnrests. Express companies may fall into the hands of the rid road financial powers. third class trooper per day. Count much in airship, tho and man Lin- Mr. "The World of Graft," or the realm of the criminal, by Joslah Flynt and Francis Walton, is represented by the hrst of a series of papers which will appear in McClnre'a during the year. "The Revenge of the Four" is told as a true story of the relations between politics and ptunder, and Is illustrated with drawings from studies of types in the rogues' gallery. If a true story from the "under world," it is , but another proof that truth is as strange if not stranger than dime-novel fic tion. No doubt onnsnal interest will be aroused in the criminal classes by revelations such aa these, as the editor says, but it is questionable- if they educate the public taste for a higher Mr. Biaolow felt tho fascination of ; prade of rtNdinvr., if they do not sow uapnn. i n trmininuu periuti is well ing many native customs, so he serves, and "when we, therefore, ob de- ( loon, ami rnlohrntH it in h manner and on a oomm-nsnrate with its ', Chicago. With it will be sent 150,000 j plore the fading away of old Japan, it national and fii-forical iniortnce. I two pounds cans of roast Wef, ti0,lM:l ' may be a consideration to reflect that Oregon of course, must take the lead in i pounds of bacon and (12,600 pound of in the fields of painting, music and the the preparation for this event andjliain. 'drama, at least, the Jap is prepared dime-novel mischief in the form of so-called studies in sociology. Mr. Flynt promises to make public the criminal's side of how crime might be suppressed which he incidentally gained from original sources, Th sooner the law-abiding classes gain this Bwrot the better. Preliminary steps toward such an ob ject are said to have been taken under the guidance of J. P. Morgan, James J. Hill and others who are fighting prominently in tho recently reported railway deals. As a portent to tho forced resigna tion of Prof. George E. Howard, bend of the department of history in Loland Stanford, Jr. university, the resigna tions of Prof. W. II. Hudson, of the Knglish department, and of Prof. C. N. Little, of tho mathematics depart ment, were tendered Tuesday. Announcement was made in Wall street Saturday of the authorization by the kingdom of Saxony of a new 3 per cent loan for 80,000,000. It is ex nected that subscriptions toward this loan will be received in New York in much the same manner as. in tho case of the Bavarian loan offered last week. Thousands of people visited the im mense oil well near Beaumont, Texas, on Sunday. The Sabine & East Texas railroad ran passenger trains to and from the well every two hours So far the flow of oil has not been gotten under control. It is estimated thnt 00,000 barrels of oil has been wasted on the prairio. Mrs. Lulu Prince-Kennedv, who shot and killed her husband, Philip H. Kennedy, on Thursday evening, two days after he brought suit to have their marriage, which lie asserted had been forced, set aside, has been bound over to the grand jury, at Kansas (Jity, with a recommendation that she bo held for murder in the first degref. Eliiah W. Blaisdell, one of founders of the republican party, who is said to have been tho hrst to propose the name of Abraham coin for the presidency, is dead. Blaisdell had been a resident of Rock ford, 111., for 47 years and during the time was newspaper publisher, author, lawyer, real eftate dealer and politi cian. Louis Currier, at Albany, N. Y., cut his wife's throat with a razor, crushed the skull of his 12 year-old son with a baseball bat, then blew his brains out with a revolver. The only indefinite thing about the item is as to whether he nsed a high-priced wagon tongue, baseb&ll bat or just an ordinary one, painted yellow, witn black and green stripes. Oriental advices state that the Chinese viceroys of the southern prov inces are paying American, English and French indemnities for destroyed mission property. The French have received $275,000 for the burning of Catholic missions in the Canton pre fecture. Tho claims are being paid with money raised by special assess ments on rich gontry and the releasing of gambling monopolies. The recent retirement of Professor Ross from the Stanford university is now followed by tho resignation of j Professor Howard, the head of the de partment pf literature. It will bo re called that daring the Ros incident! Professor Howard took a strong stand in Ross' behalf, asserting his dismissal was duo to corporate influence. Pres sure was brought to bear upon him and he handed in his resignation. i Copies of general orders from thej Philippines received at Washington) cbow that a large number of native! Filipinos hae been convicted of mur-1 der and other crimes and sentenced to j be hanged or to long terms of im-1 prisonment. In one case the accused ; belouged to an orstanixed mob which, t under the name ot ijuaruia ae iionor, gom)ern part nau lor lis ciei'iarmi iiiieuuuii mu mm- ; der of peaeefnl and unoffending vic tims if found necessary to gratify either a desire for revenge or a feeling of envy against the rich. I farmer, has nmt to his county to Iniild good roads with, j A barge with thirty men loading steel Friday at , the Carnegie works, near Pittsburg, colhipaKed and eeven men were drowned. The taking of tho Canadian census will begin Monday,' April 1. All per sons living at midnight,1 March .31, will be conn ted. The Wisconsin university law school, which was closed on account of a stnnllpox scare, was thoroughly fumi gated and reopened Friday. The mail from Deraarara brings a report ot large nnds oi diamonds in tne interior ot British (Jumna. A company has been formed in England to work the claims. Kirk B. Armour, nephew of the late Philip D. Armour, and head of the Armour interests in Kansas City, is critically ill at his home with pneu monia in Kansas Uity. , John B. J. Lang, believed to have been the oldest Free Mason ' in tho United States died in Chicago Wed nesday aged 100. Lang joined tho order in Scotland in 1820. 1 Faced by tho prospect of total blind ness and told she was beyond all medical help, Margaret Donovan,', 26 years old, who resided, with her aunt, Mrs. Mary Donovan in Chicago, com mitted suicide Friday. Kansas City physicians carrying on tho crusado for" compulsory vac cination begun recently, on Thurs day began a house to house can vass, vaccinating every ono who could not display a good scar. . Senator Daniels amendment, allow ing volunteer officers the grade of cap lain as well as those of first and 6econd lieutenants, was adopted by tho senate Thursday to the surprise of the war department, who opposed it. Tho army canteen is to be abolished. The senate by a very decisive vote, concurred in tile house provision rela tive to the army ennteen. Only 15 votes could be mustered in opposition while 34 were cast in favor of it. " There is dismay in the camps of the rival candidates for the fenntorliip in Minnesota over a petition circulated among the members ai-kinz them to pledge tnemselvcs to vote for James J. Hill, president of tho Gnat Northern road., . . ' V ; , Director of the Mint George Roberts in his annual report shows that the coinage of the paet ' year was in excess of any previous year in the history of the service, aggregating f 141,351,n0, as compared with $136,855,676 in the last fiscal year. The London Daily Mail publishes a two column article, signed by Mark Hanna, discussing the aspects of the merchant shipping in tho United States and giving his reasons for sup porting the bill now before the United States senate. The Boursen Courier denies the state ment in a dispatch from New York that Germany is trving' to place a loan of 600,000,000 markii in New York and London, and also denieR that a part of the Bavarian railroad loan will uo placed in those cities. Through rates ftom the twin cities to the coast have been cut by the Northern Pacific, Soo Pacific nnd Great Northern. Tho north coast rate on 30 day transportation was cut from $60 to $50; between eastern terminals and Spokane it was reduced from $50 to $42.50. Mrs. Mackey has paid 20,000 francs arrears of taxes sinco I89S to save from sale by the government the church of St. Joseph, on the Avenue Hocho, Paris, tho PaHSsionate : fathers and chaplains having appealed to Ameri can and British .capitalists for assis tance. Mrs. Mackey is tho wife of Jqhn W. Mackey, of Bonanza mine tame. It is announced that tho Canadian department of militia has completed arrangements for recruiting 1000 men for Baden-Powell's constabulary in South Africa. Tho men will be paid from the time of enrollment in this country. The term of enlistment will, bo for three years 'and the pay of a Airship Possibilities Zeppelin has , accomplished the way of constructing on but it is quite probable the credit of solvjng the problems of aerial navigation may be gained by this conn try instead of Geimanj-, for according to recent reports Professor Langley hag a ship which he claims can carry six men and travel at the rate of 100 miles an hour. He is now waiting for some one to turnish him with the money to perfect it, and it is not likely he will have to wait long, for good authorities consider his machine much more prac ticable than that of Zeppelin. The race is evidently close, and 'tho end may be reached much sooner than is now expected. , The Marion county tax levy for 1900 is 16.3 mills. No sheep or scalp . bounty tax was levied. A $50,000 fire occurred at Dawson, Alaska, on the 6th inst. It started in a building occupied by Cribbs and Rogers. It is rumored that C. S. Miller has made a rich strike at his Captain Martin mine, on Granite creek, about five miles north of Granite. General Manager George J. Mohler, of the Columbia Southern, has tendered President Lytle his resignation, to' take a better position with another transportation company. Quite, a demand is being made by taxpayers in Lane county for an amendment to the present laws regard ing the collection of taxes, making the taxes payuble in two installments. , Ed Turk, of Sumpter, has given $1000 bonds at Canyon City for appear ance before tho circuit court. He is charged with embezzlement of $2575.84 belonging to Ah Yow, a Chinaman. The foreign wheat shipments from Tacoma for the first two weeks in Jan uary aggregate 1,222,846 bushels, valued at $674,661. This exceeds the shipments during any one month in 1900. Henry Carpenter, the son of Mrs. Dr, Murray Blumauer.of Portand, died at Long Beach, Wash., a few days ago, of heart failure. His mother accom panied his remains to San Francisco for burial. . ' J. C. Miess, a well known resident of The Dalles, died very suddenly Tuesday night from acute congestion of the lung, aged 60 years. He came from New York to The" Dalles fifteen years ago. Mrs. Mary Smith, widow of the late Green Berry Smith, and mother of John Smith, Corvallis, died Tuesday night, aged 71 years. She was ill only since iaBt Wednesday. Her malady was pneumonia. I. G. Chapman, a saloon keeper at Haines, Baker county, is under arrest for selling liquor to minors. He sold liquor under a government license only, the people of Haines refusing to allow him to have a county license. The depositors of the defunct Port land Savings bank may hope to see the affairs of that institution wound up within the next six months, and to receive, if all goes well, within that time dividends amounting to 15 per cent on their claims. The bank failed in 1893. W. W. Carter, who worked as a brakeman on the Northern Pacific railway during the summei of 1898, previous to which time he was a cook in the Northern Pacific restaurant, in Spokane, is reported to have made $50,000 in a grubstake investment in tho gold fields of Alaska; Mrs. O. E. Farnsworth, of Heppner, it is reported, h'as fallen heir to $100, 0H0 through the death of an old bachelor uncle nt Akron Ohio. Hia name was Smith, and he left property valued nt $200,000, and Mrs. Farns worth and ber sister were the sole heirs. William Caplinger, a veteran of the Mexican and civil wars, died at his home in WoodlaWn, near Portland, a few days ago, after a lingering ill ness, He was born in Shelby county, Kentucky, December 12, 1822, and at an early age moved with his parents to Montogmery county, Indiana. .He came to Oregon in 1890. ' One bent of the Southern Pacific hridgo across the river at Harrisburg, Linn county, gave way under a long pawengor train, and as tbe train was stopped ' one long coach spanned the chasm.1 Part of tho train was pulled on lo Junction Cityand part to Harris burg and the one car left in its precari ous situation. A hand-to-hand fight for possession of the count?, treasurer's office took place at the court house in Spokane between the forces of A. L. Smith, re publican, and Goorge Mudgett, demo crat. Smith's frienda took possession early, locking all the doors. Mudgett will be 5 shillings jumped in through the window and let in his deputies, smith still holds the fort. In recognition of the O. R. & N. Co.'s efforts to establish a steamship line between Portland and Hawaii and the Philippines, the directors of the Portland board of trade appointed a committee whose duties shall be to call upon the merchants and induce them to give to O. R. & N. company the preference in the matter of traffic. Treasurer-elect Mudgett scored a point in the county treasurership contest at Spokane. Judge Richardson issued an injunction directing ex Treasurer Smith and his deputies to cease all interference with Mudgett, to surrender all moneys, books and public property, and quit all inter ference with the plaintiff in the collec tion of the public funds. ( At Starkey, near the line separating Union and Umatilla counties, the logging camps are all busy banking 20,000,000 feet of logs for the Grand Ronde Lumber company. Lohrn's camp will put in 4,000,000 feet, Rich ardson's 7,000,000 feet, Combs' 2,000,- 000 teet, Sullivan's 2,000,000 feet, Mike Nelson's 2,000,000 feet, Riley's 1,000,000 feet, Briggs' 1,000,000 feet, Young's 1,000,000 feet. A passenger train on the Astoria & uoiumoia Kiver railroad ran into a Clifton a about mid- Where Are Smith's Heirs. Ypsilanti Smith, the Terre Haute recluse who left $10,000, may hae left blood relatives hi New England, but none has been discovered, says a Bos ton dispatch. His wife was Caroline Seale Davenport of Cambridge, and of her surviving relatives only two have been located. They are Mary C. C. Goddard, a school teacher of Cam bridge, who is a first cousin, and Wil liam .Davenport, secretary of t'ie state! water board, who is a' son of a first cousin. Both announced that thev i landslide near would filo a claim to the property and it remains for the courts to decide if their relationship is sufficiently close to make them tbe legal heirs of Smith's property. Hid Hli Money Away. Indications are that Michael Bick ner, who died very suddenly at Prairie Depot, Ohio, some days ago, was worth $50,000 or more, though . at the time of his death very little of his property was in sight. He was a wellshooter and dabbled in oil production. While at work some days ago he was stricken with apoplexy and died without re gaining consciousness. The relatives began to look around for some of the money, and np to date have discoveed about $3O,D0O in banks and strong boxes about the country'. It is thought that he concealed other sums, and a search is being made about old build ings on the premises. The Way to Keep Cider. Cider will keen if it is boiled, re duced at least one-third, and then bottled. A raisin, or a few mustard seeds, may be put in the bottle previous to pouring in the cider. The corks must be fastened with wires. and the bottles be placed in a cool closet. January Ladies' Journal. dark, Home Many goats continue to die in the of Polk county, and in a few cafes sheep have been as serious ly affected. U. 8 Grant, an expert on diseases of goats, says that the death of both the goats and sheep is dne to worms. night Saturday night. The enigne was dnraried and rolled into the river. Engineer W. -M.Scott remained er the enigne and was killed. . His body has not been recovered and it ia sup posed to be under the engine in the river. Fireman James Davis was also thrown into the river but was rescued. He is now in the hospital at Astoria Buffering from a broken hand and several bruises about the body. The westbound Northern Pacific pas Bengor was wrecked- at 7:30 Sunday morning at the mouth of Pelah canvou, seven miles from North Yakima. Seven coaches wero thrown from the track and badly demolished. The in jured are Hugh P. Hall, knee bruised and leg sprained ; E. D. Burge, San Fiancisco. leg. bruised Drabiiia Endirne, Buda Pest, arm bruised; P. McEIwIel, mail clerk, elbow dislo cated; G. W. Turner, Seattle, colored porter, knee cap smashed, and Harry H.Collier of Tacoma, editor of the Pacific Poultryman, bruised on body. George Mohard, collcetor for the Trades and Labor Assembly, left his home in South Butte with $300 to turn oyer to the treasurer. When a abort distance from his home he wag ac costed by two masked men, who or dered him to throw np hie bands. In stead of complying Mohard aturk one of the robbers in the face with his. knuckles and other robber fired a shot, which pierced Mobard'a left long. As, he fell to the grouud the men relieved him of hia money. The injured man, was able to get op and walk to a saloon across the street, when the polic were notified, bnt they have not, caught the men. i