The Heppner Gazette THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1901. NATIONAL CAPITAL STORIES. Capt. Evan Howell, of Georgia, was talking to Senator Piatt, of Connecti cut, about insomnia. "Now, suh," he said, "I have a sure cure for insomnia and it is as simple as it is sure. When you go to bed and can't sleep get up and take a drink. Go back to bed and wait half an hour. If you do not go to sleep get up and take another drink. Re peat this, suh, at intervals of half an hour. If you do not go to sleep for four times," making four driaks, then, suh, if you are not sleep you will not care whether you sleep or not." A young man who came to Washing ton in search of a political office was importuning Representative Chanm Clark, of Missouri, to aid him. The applicant was exceptionally steadfast in his efforts and developed into a bore. "Look here, young man," said Con gressman ,;Chauip," "you were born in Texas. Texas is a great state, just full of opportunities. You have a legal education and you are enamored of politics. Take my advice, go there, mix in politics, practice law, and perhaps you may come bore to con gress." "Good Lord, Mr. Clark," exclaimed the Texan, "do you know anything about Texas?" "Not much except that it is a bij place with plenty of pasture land." "Well," said the aspiring youth, "there are 3,000,000 people in Texas; two million of these are men; 1,999,999 are statesmen and 1,999,999 are law yers, and every solitary one has hung out this sort of shingle: : JOHN SMITH, : : Attorney-at-Law : and : : CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS. : Senator Daniel, of Virginia, was making an eloquent address opposing a certain provision of the army bilL He had spoken at considerable length aid was denouncing the objectionable feature of the bill, when President Frye interposed: "If the gentleman will permit me I win inform him that the item to which he objects has been stricken out." There were many retorts discourte ous during the discussion of the river and harbor bill in the house. On one occasion Representative Fitzgerald, of Massachusetts, asked whether Mr. Hepburn would answer a question. "I will not," retorted Hepburn; "the gentleman from Massachusetts is too willing to interject his bland, simple and lisping brogue into his speech." Manitoba railroad, or the Great North ern, as it later came to be known. Mr. Hill's rise in the railroad world could not be termed "meteoric." It was a long, hard struggle. For 28 years he has been plodding away at his life work. But he stands now the conceded chief of the American railway world. He is the master mind over a consolidated system of more than 20,000 miles, bonded and capitalized for about one billion dollars. The figures are start ling: Great Northern (miles) 5,441.42 Norrtarn Pacific (miles) 5,20!' .03 St. Paul system (m'les) (i,C".7.l Giand total 16,981 .S9 Capital stock Great Northern f S0,05O,0CO Bonds subsidiary companies 2i,9 16,030 Capiial stock Northern Pacific 16i,COO,0'0 Bonds UK),8s7,0C3 Capital stock Si. Paul K2,51!l,C I Bonds 36,L'26,.;o But all this carries the system onlv from Seattle to Chicago. The Erie railroad, practically owned bv the same combination, has 2,271.03 "miles of system. Its capial stock is $171, 140,800, its funded debt $140,418,100. :: This double combination carried the transcontinental line to the Atlantic seaboard. The final trump was played when the Reading and Jersey Central deal put the combination in direct possession of the desired New York and Jersey City terminals. It would bo unwise. to told out to the American youth the extravagant suggestion that there is a fair prospect of his repeating the extraordinary achievements of this extraordinary man. Such stupendous fortune falls only to one man in millions, and may not be repeated at all to the rising generation. But the true lesson of Mr. Hill's life may fairly be held out to every American boy. It is this: That success, in pome degree or other, is the reward of the qualities which Mr. Hill has applied to his life work. He started by doing small things exceed ingly well. He has been industrious. energetic, careful, honest. Ho has used one success a stepping stone to an other. And over all we behold the man's marvelous patience. Spokes- man-jKeviow. CONDITION AVERAGE AMERICAN. "Boy," called Senator Hale, of Maine, addressing the attendant of the cloak-room, "have you seen mv rub bers?" "Yes, sir," responded the boy with a grin. "Well, where are they?" "You have them on, sir." Gov. Jones, of Alabama, is in town. He was born at Manchester, Va., and while here thought he would emulate the Chinese and pay his respects o the graves of his ancestors. He hired a team and was driven out to a burying ground. The governor meditatively purred at nis cigar, thought of the heroic deeds of the departed Joneses and was soliloquizing generally upon the glory of the Jones family. "There rests the dust of "my great-great-grandfather," said the governor, pointing out an ancient mound to his driver. " 'Deed it ain't, boss." said an old darky standing near by. "Dis ain't the white folks' buryin' ground'; dis is whar dey buried de niggers." The hurried and whispered con ference between Senators Clay and Bacon, during which the senate passed the reapportionment bill without either of them being aware of the fact, although the purpose of the consulta tion was to determine whether Mr. Clay should oppose it, recalls a similar expeditious piece of legislation which occurred in the Fifty-first congress, when Speaker Reed was earning his title ol "Czar." A contested election case was up and the resolution expelling the sitting member was ready for a vote. All the democrats with one exception left the hall to prevent Mr. Reed from counting a quorum. The one remaining on guard duty at the proper time raised the point of no quorum and then left to pave a talk with his associates outside. As the objecting member disappeared through the door a republican ad dressed the chair and said that as the point of no quorum had been with drawn, the vote could proceed. The speaker put the question and the mem ber was unseated. Another vote and the contestant was given the seat. When the democrats returned to the ball the member whoee seat had been taken from him was amazed to receive a note from the speaker requesting him to vacate his desk so that it might be occupied by his successor. LEGISLATIVE NOTES. Senator T. H. Johnston .has intro duced a bill constituting the governor. secretary of state and state treasurer a commission to build a portage rai way between The Dalles and Celilo and making an appropriation therefor. Adjutant General Gantenbein, of the Oregon National Guard, has prepared a bill for the reorganization the state militia and providing for annual camp, held and cruise encampments every year. Representative Miller, of Arlington, representing urant, uiiliam, Sher man, Wasco and Wheeler counties, proposes, in a Din mat lie nas lntro- duced, to re-establish a state board of r.iilvoad commissioners. The board is to consist of three members and tin ir salaries are fixed at $2500 per annum Reapportionment of the state has be come a live topic and may cause a big fight before the legislature. Senator Steiver has introduced a bill making rauicai cnanges in trie present cum bersome scheme of apportionment. It does not look so much like a gerr manner as me present act. Dr. Andrew C. Smith, one of the senators from Multnomah county, has introduced a Dill to authorize the nort of Portland commission to issue 4 per cent bonds in the sum of $400,000, the proceeds to be used in the construction of a dry-dock. It is said ot Portland to ttie discredit of that city that it is the only port of any consequence in the wnoie country that is without such a valuable adjunct to its shipping iacuities. If we wish an accurate measure of the century's progress we must answer these two questions : What was the condition of the average American one hundred years ago? What is the condition of the average American today? i To get at the truth of progress we must put great lortuues, great isolated mental achievements, great depths of poverty, great isolated crimes, in their proper perspective. We must hunt out the middle American, the average American, and compare him wnn tne average American ot the year i8ui, slaves excluded. ine average American ot lw years ago lived in a miserable and squalid hamlet of about five hundred inhabi tants, a collection of log huts, isolated from the rest of the world by incon ceivably bad roads, completely shut in all winter long. He was a com bination of farm-hand and artisan, do ing the coarsest work, toiling at least thirteen hours a day. The average American of today is a citizen or a town ot about Jour thous and inhabitants, situated near a city ana connected with it by a railroad. He is a skilled laborer, owning small piece of cultivated ground upon w new stands a comfortable cottage, r e works not more than eight hours a day, and tools enable him to work not only infinitely better but also greatly more easily than did his pre decesaor of the year 1801. Let us take up these two Americans under the several heads that describe conditions: ine average American ot luu years ago uvea upon a diet ot coarse bread, coarser than any we now have know ledge of; a few of the coarsest vegeta hies, salt meat several times a week, iresn meat not so oiten as once a week 1 1 I ... i ins meais, cooueo in grease, were served upon pewter dishes. He had neither glass nor china. The average American of todav has good bread in abundance, a great variety of vegetables, the most of them unknown a century ago; a great variety ot rruits, the most oi them nn known a century ago; fresh meat three times a day, and that in great variety desserts of various kinds an abun dance of food fairly well cooked and served upon many kinds of dishes. heavily plated spoons, knives and forks, glass blown into elaborate designs, china of an excellent quality ana attractive to the eye. The average American of 1801 was drseed in a pair of leather breeches. usually inherited from his grandfather; a coarse check shirt, a red flannel jacket, an old felt hat. a leather aDron dripping with greasy dirt, a pair of darned yarn Btockings, heavy patched snoes oi tne stinest leather, this wag his habitual attire. The average American of todav has at least two suits of clothes, one for occasions," made of excellent ma terial, fitting him fairly well and worn lor about a year as "first best;" the second suit, the slightly damaged 'first-best" suit of the year before. He wears a white smrt, changing it twice a week, and cl anging the collar and cuffs three times a week. He has several neckties, two pairs of shoes, frequently changed; several suits of underwear, at least two hats and two overcoats. His wardrobe is about equal in extent and far superior in uaiiiy to me wardrobe or a prosper- I ous smaii mercrjam or luu years ago, and it is renewed about five times as often. "My son iedeadj-I know he'sdead," wailed a woman in General Corbin's office yesterday. "And how do you know, madam?" inauired the general. "I saw him killed!" "You saw him killed? I thought you said he was in tho Philippines." "But I saw it in a dream. There was a crowd. He was in the center and the black men were beating him to death. He's dead! I saw it with nay own eyes." "I guess you are slightly mistaken," said Mr. Corbin, "this list savs your son has just arrived at Ran Francisco 0n..T.tra?8port itf half his regiment." It that is so," said the distressed woman, "I'll never believe in another dieam." ''Nor would I," remarked General Corbin. "You'd be surprised," he continued, 'how many people see their relatives in the Philippines killed in dreams. Just to satisfy some of them we have cabled out to ascertain, and in no one instance bas the dream come true." JAMES J. BILL'S GENIUS. Twentv-eight years ago James J. Hill entered on his extraordinary rail way career. It was just after the severe panic of 1873. A little bankrupt road ran out of M. Paul to St. Cloud, a I distance of 50 or 60 miles. It had been started by the aid of state bonds, and some Holland capitalists were beck of the venture. Mr. Hill be lieved that these Holland bondholders eoald be induced to scale down their bonds to the real value of the line, and events proved that he was right. He got the ear of Canadian capitalists, among them the present Sir William Van Home, and there was the Itfgin tngofthe St. Paul. Minneapolis & Oregon's Pan-American commission. consisting ot resident A. r. Tint Treasurer H. B. Thielsen, Secretary J H. Burgard, Assistant secretary George jl. feaeiee, ana A. J. Johnson, Is L. Smith tnd Mrs. E, T. Weatherred i i. . i ft . .... . uhm Buurnmeu a arait or a Din lor an appropriation of $30,000 for Oregon's exhibit at the Buffalo exposition. The bill has been put in the hands of Sena tor llowe, of Yamhill county, for in troduction in tho senate, and in the hands of Representative Stewart. Representative Schumann, of Mult nomah. has prepared a bill that will. if enacted into law, tend to discourage the loaning of public moneys. The bill makes the borrowing of public money from tho state, or any town or other public corporation, grand larceny, punishable by a fine equal to the amount borrowed, or imprisonent in the penitentiary for from one to 15 years. Exceptions are made of funds for the loaning of which provision is already made by law. MARK TWAIN AND BISHOP POTTER. The Humorist Glad He Did Not Vote for McKlnley at the Last Election. Mark Twain declared at the City uiuo umner, new lorit, last week, that the war in the Philippines had polluted the American flag, and that he is glad that he did not vote for the uuio man at the last election. Mr. Clemens referred to national politics, saying: "I said to myself that it would not do for me to vote for Bryan, and l rather thought I know now that McKinley wasn't just right on uns rnnippine question, and so I just didn't vote for anybody. i ve gui mat vote yet, and I've kept it clem, ready to deposit at some other e'ection. "Itwati't cast for any wild cat financial theories, and it wasn't cast to support the man who sends our boys as volunteers out to the f hilippines, to get shot down under a polluted flag." v Mark Twain and Bishop Potter were t' a guests of the City club at the d' u ci; and, speaking after Bishop Po:: , Mr. Clemens said: "T'.ie bishop has just spoken of the widespread lust for gain, the lust that does not stop short of the jail. We know that this country could not exist if this lust were universal. In business life, out of fifty men, forty-nine are clean. Then why is it that these fortv nine men cannot have their will? "It Is because the fiftieth man, the dis honest one, is thoroughly organized and the forty-nine men are" not. "Gentlemen, you must organize, organize, organize. Now, if there is some way to bring your force to bear the force of the forty-nine then this condition must vanish." The average American of 1801 lived in a shanty with four rooms at moRt. It was furnished with a verv few coarse articles, the bare necessities a rough table, a few forms called beds, upon which were spread straw, often with no covering; a few forms called chairs, with no covering at all. Th rough floor was strewn with sand There was no glass at the windows There were no facilities for bathint? and the only facilities for washing the hands and face were buckets, used at tho well or on a bench behind the bouse when used at all. There were no stoves, no coal, no matches. The average American of todav lives in a neat cottage, painted outBide and in. with glass windows and outside blinds. Carpets are on all the floors except the kitchen floor, which is of smooth boards. The kitchen furniture is better than the best furniture of man many aegrees a Dove the average American of J801. There is elaborately upuoisterea rurniture in the parlor, very ccmionabie rurniture in the Iiv ing rooms, including good beds with mattresses, sheets and blankets. IPL. . . . me average American ot 1UU vears ago was barely aoie to read and write He rarely saw and never read either book or newspaper. He knew a little theology and some politics, but he followed blindly his preacher and his betters." His soeech was lunornnt, his expression dull and lifeless, his mind torpid, groping in a thick foz of ignorsnce and superstition. The average American of todav reads the newspapers and reads honks. Ha does some thinkimr. is informp1 nn only about what is going on in his town but also about his country, and even to a certain extent about foreign anairs. His expression is aleit. His mind is awake and active. While his speech is ungrammatical, his vocabu lary is large and he knows the meaning of a multitude of words and forms opinions based upon a multitude of ideas. In information he is ahead of all but a few thousand of the Ameri cans of 100 years ago. In intelligence ne is aneaa of all but the most en it ened class of the year 1801. from and are springing from the average American. And he himself is an independent citizen, voting, with the secret ballot, courted by the politi cians, respecting himself and respected by others. All the machinery of our civilization is for him for he is also the average consumer whom every purveyor of commodities seeks to reach and to please. If we go to other countries we find the difference bewteen these two average men still more startling. But we need not look bevond onr own shores. What could be more significant; man mis contrast Detween ignorant, ragged, poverty-stricken, down-trodden average American of 1801 and intelli gent, well-informed, well-clothed, well-fed, well-housed, property-possessing, self-respecting and respected average American of today? And the work of uplifting began less than a century ago. What astound ing results! What unimaginable prospects. CENTRALIZATION OF POWER Extract From a Recant Address of Bishop Potter. Bishop Potter, of New York, in a recent address, said: ."Nobody who has followed the his tory of this republic can be insensible to me enormous change in the relation of the population of this land to its great business centers. Two leading cities of inferior she in the state in which I live during the last decade have actually lost in population, and the community surrounding them have lost still more largely. The growth, on the other hand, of two or more large centers of population of America is enormous. There are startling facts in our history. In other words, tlu drift of the most active men and of the youth of the land for educational or other purposes is increasing to those g.-eat centers. More than ever they b'. kethe note, more than ever they ti"i tLe pace. "I want to speak to you about the relations of such a factor as this to communities in our municipal and national life, which ought to be re membered. One of these I believe to be the curious decay in that life, whether it is national or municipal, of the influence and power of the indivi dual. That great political revolution which began in France, which had for its actors Rousseau and the reBt, stood for the emancipation of that older world, tor the freedom of the individ ual life and mind. "There bas been at work during the 1 j. ner . "w . - last to years in tne united IStates prominently, 1 think, certain great tendencies toward centralization of power. You see it in the domination Receiver Clark, of the Chosen Friends, says the total liabilities of which the receiver has accurate knowledge at present are $774,749. In addition to all these claims there are protested checks for large amounts, which will bring the total indebted ness far In excess of $800,000. To meet this heavy Indebtedness the re- ?JJr.hM !" Ill trery t present l-WO in cash. The society may be able to pay three cents on the dollar. Magazines, books, carpets, curtains pictures, wall naner. a niano. lamrw and gas. coal, heated rooms, hathino appliances, water in the house, toilet articles, changes of clothing these are a few, only a few, of the luxuries indoors for the average American now. adays. And a century ago he had only a very few of what we now call the ab solute necessities. The people of the slums are in JuiJ in comnflriiinn with the average AufVic.n of lfiOl. Then there are n.r.jd and lighted streets, fairly good roads, street cars, parks, libraries, reading rooms, en- tertainment? and a score of other putlie utilities that dive a variety and ease to the life of the poorest which were not within reach of the richest a century ago. So far as geli-esteem and th putpum of others are concerned, the contrast is the most impressive of all. In nit of the Declaration of Independence, at the beginning of the nineteenth cen tury, the average American was in bis own opinion and in the universal opinion a low fellow, with whom def erence bordering on servi'ity was a duty. Poverty and ignorance and lack of opportunities prevented him from claiming and exercising the rights that were theoretically his. Today our greatest men are sprang October IV of capital, in honest aggregations of money, which makes it possible for three or tour individuals in the back office of some bank to create in half an hour a convulsion in the financia markets of the world "You see it in the concentration and organization of the great industrial en terprises which have startled the world, not alone with their enter prises, but with their renins nml ability. Tho difficulty in modern lifn is with the organized forces that touch the individual life. Thov are so creat and so rich, and so many handed, that for the individual to stand up against u.riu is something more than ordinary iniiage win aare to attempt. That n the whole tendency of our modern life As the result of it, a conviction has come to pass, which exists widely not only in such communities as yours and mine, but all over this land, that mere uoes not exist a man who is nn a puichasable man. About a year ago thero came into my study in .New York some one whom I had never seen, a stranger, whose name upon his card I did not recog nize, and whose errand I could not vine. 'Sir ' said he. 'I am from such and such a part of the country in that part of the country a fiercA political campaign is now in progress. One of your clergy (it was in a trri. tory and not in a city) is attacking from the pulpit the moral character and moral standards as a gentleman, candidate there for a very high office, whom 1 represent. "I said: 'I have not any clergymen out in mat part of the world. I have no more jurisdiction there than you have. He said: 'Perhaps noj, in the sense you mean, but it is one of your men.' " 'What do you want me to do, saw 1. ! want you to stop it,' said ne, -and 1 am authorized by the dis tinguished gentleman whom I repre sent to Bay that if you will stop it, he win make it worth your while.' liT !.. 1H . ,r. ... x ieii nice saying: -it will come high.' I got UD and walltml in tho aoor. i opened it and stood thnrn He looked towards it a moment in some perplexity, i said, 'Does it not occur to you, sir. that this intrvfw is at an end' He went out "1 mention that incident, as a nrW oi me statement l have mnria Here was a person in a distant, nar't of the country, a candidate for a very th position, who had not. Ua smallest hesitation in sending an emissary to me with an intimation that if I were prepared to silence a speaker who was saying disagreeable things, that money would be put up to make it worth while. The appalling fact is that from the top to the bottom of our social struc turethe judge upon tho bench, the legislator in the halls of leiislatioii the magistrate in the law courts and the policeman on his beat, are all be lieved by the great majority of tho people to be purchasable men. That uch suspicion should exist is itar.lf a disuonor so deep and damning that no community ought to be willing to rest in it lor an hour. " GENERAL NEWS. A $200,000,000 steel and wire trust is in process of organization in New York. Fire in the McBean dry goods store in Phoenix, Arizona, did a damage of T.)U,uuu inursaay morning. Secretary Root is a victim of the la grippe. There are thousands of cases of the uisease in Washington. Samuel H. Warwick, the inventor of Root beer, at one time a millionaire, died penniless at the alms house in Philadelphia a few days ago. The officiating ministers in the late Vanderbilt-French wedding at Newport received $5003, one of them $3000 and the other $2000, for the marriage fee. Dun's reivew for last week shows the failures for the week were 32 in the United States against 242 last year and 43 in Canada, against 40 last year. John W. Griggs, attorney general of the united States,was elected a director of the Trust Company of America in New York to fill a vacancy on the board. President Kruger is undecided whether to visit America. He wiil do so if assured that President McKinley will receive him officially as president of the Transvaal. Marvin Kuhns, the desperado, who has terrorized northern Indiana for two weeks and defied the officers of two states, was captured at Greenhill and is now in Logansport jail. The American Association of Gen eral Baggage Agents adoumed at St. Augustine, Florida. Portland, Ore., was selected as the place for the next annual meeting in Juno 1902. The railroads failing to make a satisfactory rate the G. A. R. annual convention will not be held at Denver this year as has been announced, but instead, at Cleveland, September 9. The board of supervisors oi San Francisco county are considering nn ordinance which will probably be passed, requiring street railways to carry school children at half-fare rates. Union Pacific flyer No. 1 was wrecked at Aspen Hill, Wyoming, Wednesday, and 13 persons were hurt, none seriously. The chair car and diner were thrown down an em bankment. General Andrew Jackson McKay, a distinguished veteran of tho civil war, died in New York. Ho was quarter master general on the staff of General George W. Thomas in the nrniv of the Cumberland. It is understood in London that Tom L. Johnson, the American street rail road capitalist, lias bought the linker street end Waterloo underground rail road from the London St Globe Finance Corporation, Ltd. James A. Mount, who retired Mon day at noon from the office of governor of Indiana, died very suddenly Wed nesday night in his apartments at the Denmson hotel in Indiannpolis. The rouble was heart disease. The republican members of the Minnesota legislature at their caucus unanimously nominated M. E. Clapp of St. Paul for senator to succeed Sena tar Davis, deceased. Moses E. Clapp H 49 years old and was bom in Delphi, i mi. OUR RACE FOR MONK Y. Europeans Are Wis Enough to Rest Prom Business Cares Aftsp Reaching Middle Lire. "II it is not true that we Americans regard money-making as the work for which lifo was given to us, why, when we have millions, do we go on strug gling to make more millions and more?" writes "An American Mother," in the January Ladies' Home Journal. "It is not so with the older races. The London tradesman at middle age shuts his shoo, buvs an e. in the suburbs and lives on a small i-1 j ne or snends the rest of his lifn n lor'ng it in poultry or fancy garden ing. The German or Frenhman seldom works when nast sixty. Hn ph his last years to some study o hobby- music, a microscope, or it may be ominoes. you meet him and h is wife, jolly, shrewd, Intelligent, jog ging all over Europe, Baedeker in hand. They tell you they 'have a curiosity to see this flno world before they go out of it.' " The lone higwhayman who held up and robbed two Pullman sleepers on the Northern Pacific between Sand Point and Athol on the morning of September 22, was James McLain, alias Tom Stratton, alias James Wat son, one of the five men convicted at North Yakima and sentenced to five years in the Walla Walla penitentiary for robbing a freight car at Kiona It is stated that articles of agreement lor a tight between Kid McCoy and Tom Sharkey will probably be sianed in San Francisco and the forfeit money win be placed in the hands of Al oiiuui, siaaenoiuer. February za is the date. William II. Crocker of San Fran cisco, has offered to defray the expense vi u ouiar euupso expeuiuon to be Sent by the university ot Calaifonna, from the Lick Observatory, to Sumatra, to observe the total eclipse of the sun May 17. The Call says that back of a steam ship company organized in this city with a capital of $12,500,000 is a plan to colonize Mexico with Oriental laborers. The promoters propose to em ploy 1,000,000 Chinese in all kinds of industry. In joint convention Wednesday the Michigan legislature verified the vote taken in the senate and house, m:-' Senator James McMillian was form- ally declared ejected United States senator for the term of six years from March 4 next. The coal mineis' strike in Colorado is rapidly producing a serious condi tion of affairs in Denver and other por tions of the state. Three hundred men were added Wednesday to the number ou svriKB in ine state, raising the ag gregate to 1000. Juan Lopez, la workman at the topper (jueen smelter, at TucHon, Arizona, was burned to death hv moiten copper wnicti lei; lrom a swing ing pot under which he stood. His clothes, were set on fire and us hodv l M.I.. J' .11 1 I .1 . . uurriujy uiHiigureu ny mo metal. Xf -I o . .more man nu.uuu pension c aims n the office of Milo B. Stevens A Co, were destroyed by fire in Washington city. Many of the papers were to he used as evidence in attempting to secure favorable action by tho nens'uri ofico on claims and can not ho replaced. Rev. Dr. Loren Laertes Knn. nun oi tne oldest preachers of the Met ho dist Episcopal church, and the author oi several books relating to that denomination, is dead of bronchial pneumonia at Evanstori. III. Dr. ir.it was born in Nelson. N. Y. in S'.i. Lord Roberts, who was entertained orivatelv at a dinner in London Iiv united Service club, the guests in cluding the Prince of Wales, the Duke of York, the Duke of Cambridge and some 300 officers, his issued from ttie warolllco a stirring appeal to tho coun try for a prompt response to tho call for 5000 yeomanry. C. F. W. Neely.who is charged with the embezzlement of public funds in Cuba while acting as financal agent of the department of posts of that island, will be taken to Cuba in a few davs. John D. Lindsay, counsel for Neely, who made the legal fight against the extradition of the prisoner, says that no further steps will be taken in Neely's behalf. The congressional investigation of Vie West Point military academy has i...lght fruit ratther unexpected! v. .uurnay nigru wnen tne congessmen weie hurrying their inquiries to a termination, cadets of all four class.. I eld a meeting and unanimously de cided to abolish hazing of every" form as well as the practice of "calling out" fourth classmen. Andrew Campbell, one of tho con victed murderers of Jenniu llosschietter, is slowly breaking down in the county jail at Patterson, N. J., his face showing unmistakable s' is of collapse since the verdict of l.'.o jury was delivered, adjudging him guilty of murder in the second degree, with McAlister and Death. John Wiser and John .Marsh of Niagara Falls. N. Y.. attempted to crohs Niagara river above the falls. They lost control of their boat and we e carried into the rapids. Wiser, who was unable to swim, was swept over the falls and drowned. Marsh, after a desperate struggle in the icy water, was rescued by persons along the shore. Warren Leland, jr, died at the Hotel Greoble, New York, Monday, of which ho was the proprietor, ot Bright't disease James P. Sterrett, former justice of the supreme court of Pennsylvania, ia dead at his homo in Philadelphia from the effects of a carhunph? 11a was 78 years old. With her face disfigured beyond recognition and her flesh on hands and feet eaten by rats, Mrs. Norah Hannigan was found dead at her home, in Chicago. She had been dead sev eral days. The Washington correspondent of the Daily Mail says he understands it is practically certain that Great Britain will accept the amendments of the United States senate to the Hav Pauncefote treaty. ery cold weather is being ex perienced at this time in Cuba. Even snow in reported on the tall mountain, aomeming mat very seldom happens. A temperature as low as sixty degrees is unusual in Cuba. According to tho Petit Blue, a Brus sels newspaper, bubonic plague is raging among the British troops in Cape Colony, and many deaths that are attributed to enteric fever and dysen tery are due to the plague. Jt is true that when the president signs the law which passed the senate and is now before the house the stand ing army of the United States will be raised to 100,000 men a fixed charge upon the nation of at least $100,000, 0IJ0 a year. Congressman Bailey of Texas is or ganizing a syndicnte at Jacksonville, Fla., to control tho cattle trade in Cuba. It is stated by those interested in the plan that the recent visit of the Texas statesman to Havana was for that purpose. Acceptance of 40 cents on the dollar by the creditors of W. L. Strong & Co., of New York, is recommended by the advisory committee appointed to inquire into the affairs of the linn of which the former mayor was the principal member. The liuenos Ay res correspondent of the Times says: Official statistics esti mate the exportable surplus of wheat flour at 1,700,000 tons. Trade circles re gard this as an exaggerated estimate, believing that tho surplus will be about 1,200,000 tons. Culiforn in's orango crop (his season promises to break the previous animal record. There will be bewteen 19,000 and 21,000 carloads sor Eastern ship ment. The great bulk of the product is credited to the citrus belt, which has Los Angeles as its shipping center. Martin Wright, late social candidate for governor oi Utah, who was en route to Los Angeles wilh his two sons, was instantly killed by the accidental dis charge of a revolver which fell from his pocket while lie was preparing dinner at their camp noar St. George, Utah. Charges have been filed witii Gov ernor Nash against Colonel Zimmer man of the Fifth regular Ohio National Guard, by Major Dodge, and it is expected that a court martial will be the result. The charges include false entries on tho muBter rolls and failing to account for public funds. Judge Henry of tho circuit court naiidud down a case of national impor tance at Kansas Citv when, in a writ ten opinion, ho decid'ed that the state of Missouri, represented by the state board of equalization, bad no right to tax the franchise of the Western Union Telegraph company. President McKinley, in the case of George II. Shiffter clerk and, teller of the First national bank of Lebanon, Pa., sentenced May 18, 1899, to five v-ain jii mo puiinumiury tor misappli cation of funds, granted a coinmnf iit.inn of sentenco to two years. Tho amount of tho defalcation was very small. The American Window Glass com pany and tho Independent Manufactur ers association have agreed to close their plants until April 1. insthml F June 1. Eighty factories and about 30,000 workmen will be nlWtnil. Tho object of the shut down is to cur tail production and maintain prices. After victimizing Mavor Tlarrir.rin and several hotels in Chicago and other largo cuies, as me ponce assert, 11. F. Allen, alias W. (). Perry, railroad man, lawyer, politician and alleged representative in the Texas state legis lature, hns been arrested on charges of obtaining money under false pretenses. J. W. Thompson, a consumptive who arrived in San Francisco from British uoiumbia on the steamer City of Cali- lurina, was not allowed to land, on ttie ground that he was afilictod with a contagions disease. This is the first in stance where a person alllicted with consumption has been denied a land ing at that port. Tho McCoy-Sharkey fight, which was scheduled for next month in San Francisco, has been declared off, owing to tho refusal of tho board of supervisors to grant a license to tho Twentieth Century Club for a light in which McCoy was to bo a principal. The club is now trying to match Root and Molfatt. Marcus Saner, the man alllicted with dropsy at Hamilton, Ohio, who was revived after apparent dissolution by the infection of a solution of sodium chorido on January II, is still alivo. Since his resuscitation Saner has steadily gained in vigor nnd the acute symptoms of his dropsical affliction are disappearing. A warrant was issued by JiiHtico Kinney for the arrest of Albert M (trt of Clifton Citv. M with kidnapping tho of Mrs. Ella Bunch. Tho motive I'nr tho alleged kidnapping is not apparent. Mrs. Bunch is in verv moderate cir cumstances. Mooro is ii stock buyer and lives at Clifton Citv. Frank Jannseii. a barber of Hi ton, Pa., went homo drunk from a ball, and in a iniarrel with his witV threw a lighted lamp at her. Tho bed was ignited, and the ir 7veHr.nh! Itnu burned to death, iMrs. Jannseii was probably fatally burned. Her sister, Maggie McDonalJ, was seriously burned. The house was destroyed. The agitation in Chicago against tho I billboard nuisance has resulted in the passage by tho city council of an ordi nance providing that all slLMihoards and billboards more than three feet square now within 200 feet of any park, park boulevard or driveway bo declared a public nuisance and torn down, and that such boards bo pro hibited in tho future. pacific northwest news. H. W. Scott, editor of the Portland Oregonian, has returned from an ex tended trip east and south. The steamer Dolphin.in Seattle from Alaska, reports that the Daily News plant at Dawson was destroyed by lire January 10. J C. L. Reeves, the leading barber of Sumpter has filed a petition in bank ruptcy. Reeves in his petition says he has no assets, but $1000 in liabilities. Monsignor Martinelli. who visited in l ortland last spring, will soon be made a cardinal, so says the Washing ton correspondent of the New York lb lit. 50 at John Ferry, of Seaside, a man years of age, is under arrest 'uiwiiu. vtiai rii n ii ii nn nonnn it- Josephine Ringville, a girl 14 years of age. Mary Miller, aged 13 years, died in Portland of typhoid fever1. She was the only child of George,. M. and Liechen M. Mi.ler, formerly of Eugene. Lane county. " The $5000 subscriptions required to assure the location of the new Western Oregon college of the Methodist Epis copal church, south, at Roseburg have been subscribed. John Allison an, O. R. & N. Co. en gineer, who was taken ill at The Dalles some days ago, has the small pox. Mr. Allison cannot account for his contraction of the disease. The remaining assets of the Portland Savings bank are to be sold at public auction. The bank went into the hands of a receiver in 1893. Its credi tors have realized very little. What is supposed to be hog cholera or swine plague has made its appear ance in the vicinity of Moscow, Idaho, and a ready a number of hogs are re ported to have died from the disease. The promoters of the Northwest in-' emational industiial exposition, to have been held in Spokane in the summer of 1902, have altered their plans so as to postpone the affair one year. . A young woman named Burgess died in Walla Walla Wednesday from an operation for cancer. She recently came from Illinois. She leaves two bro hers, living at Clyde, near Walla Walla. W. A. Lewis, for years a well known attorney in Spokane, and whose family move in the highest social circles, is wanted for alleged embezzlement of $144 lrom a client. The lawyer is missing. Miss Jessie May Clark, aged 17 years, stepdaughter of Walter Newell, died in Baker City Tuesday. The deceased was a victim of typhoid fever and her illness covered a period of several months. Peter Miller, a Southern Pacific sec tion boss at Canby, was killed near there, Wednesday, by an extra engine. Miller was riding over hia hpoU a irieycio wnen he was run down me engine by Charter bills for the following mt.iH wero passed by the senate at Salem : bummervillo, Union county; Silver ton, Marion county; Baker City, linker county; Canyonville, Douglas county, and Roseburg, Douglas county. Mrs. Ann Crocker, 77 years old, who was aken to the county poor farm, at lortland, a few weeks ago from a ,,0UH5 out 011 tlle Macadam road, died Monday night at the farm. She had heen paralyzed, and was entirely help less. ' The trial of William E. Spicer, on a charge of disposing of grain valued at j.."-", jui wniuii no nau issued ware house receipts to the Spokane & East em Investment company, is on trial in the criminal department of the state circuit court in Portland. Three armed man entered Shadow's saloon at North Yakima early Wednes day morning, holdup the bartender, llamfer, and robbed the drawer of a hundred dollars. Thev also secured seven hundred from Pydurn and Mabry, who wero running gambling games. Neal White, a pioneer settler in the lalouso valley, and a resident of Col- iA, eastern Washington, for nearly 30 years, died Sunday, aged 76 years. 1 nor to his coming here for permanent residence, Mr. White passed a few years in the Willamette valley. Governor Hunt of Idaho sent a mes fago to the legislature urging that body to memoralize the United States senate to adopt the resolution sub mitting a constitutional amendment providing for election of United Statei senators by direct vote of the people. Mrs. Eliza E. Paquet, wife of laquet, the Portland boat builder.died at Los Angeles, a few days ago. Her remains will bo brought to Portland for burial. She was born in Clacka mas county in 1858, her father being Coleman Buckner, a well" known pioneer. P, P. Callahan, a railroad man and highwayman, lies dying in the hospital at Spokane. Callahan entered the Alois saloon, robbed tho till, then ran down the street. In the darkness ho plunged over the Great Northern re. taming wall, falling feet. Both jaws wero broken and base of brain badly injured. Charles Tracey, tho man who struck Captain Johnson, mate of the steamer rtio Dallas City, of tho Regulator line, because the latter refused him work, plead guilty in Portland before Judge George to a charge of simple assault. When Johnson was struck by Tracey he was knocked down utrftrir,,, k; , ., ft ii-mi mm iruciuring ins skull, has fully recovered. He On the 1st of each December of tho decennial year and tho intermediate fifth year a census of the population is taken in Germany. A striking presentment made in the enumeration just completed is that of the marked increase of population in the manufac turing cities of tho empire in the last five years. Whilo Berlin and Hamburg show an increase of but 12 per cent, ureuipurg s population increased GO 1'osen 8M, and Mannheim 43.1 cent. A CHOICE . SET OF CHESSMEN. Representative Taylor- Receives a Girt From the Orient. Representative Tavler of Ohio will henceforth devote himself to the study of chess, because he has just received a present of a set of chessmen, prob ably among tho finest in the world, says the Washington correspondent of the Pittsburg Dispatch. The pieces are made of ivory carved in the finest stylo of tho part, the king and queen being pieces about six inches high. I hey aro of Chineie manufacture, and the donor is an officer on duty in the Philippines. There is a vagus sort of notion among those who have seen them that they came from the imperial ialaco in Pekin, but of course the idea is erroneous, because America did not participate in tho looting of Chinese palaces. per It is reiortedj that Dr. W. J. Grivons will soon bo suspended as superintendent of the Idaho state asy lum for the insane, Dr. William F. Smith, of Mountain Horn, supplanting him. A Chinese Legond. Tho following Chinese legend ac counts tor tho invention of the fan in a rather ingenious fashion. The beautiful Kan-Si, daughter of a power ful mandarin, was assisting at the fast al lanterns, when overpowered by the 'n; " " compelled to take oil her mask. As it was against all rule and custom to expose her face, she held her mask before it and gontly fluttered it to cool herself. Tho court ladies present notice1 the movement, and in an instant 100 of them were waving their masks. F'rom this incident, it is said, came the birth of the fan, and today it takes tho place of the mask in that country.