r; The ,'Heppner Gazette ! THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1901. THE HBGRO QUESTION. From Louis F. Post' Paper, 1 The, Public. In an article in the Century, Mr. JXrtnlon Jerome Dowd, a southerner, makes some "practical suggestions" regarding the negro He declares, as most south , erners do, whejLfiscuseing this ques yiion, that-itfie southern people un derstand the negro." This assumption we venture, with a good feeling and respect for those who adopt it, to most . seriously doubt. Both upon the gen eral principles of human association and from personal observation, we are if,; quite sure that the southern people do not understand the negro. This is not to say that the northern people understand bim. Thev do not. Though w their understanding of him differs essentially from that of the southern people, there is no real understanding in either case. In the nature of things f there cannot be. No man can under- stand another, no race can understand ' another, unless they associate upon j f terms of perfect quality. Rich north I erners for example, do not understand I the working classes of their own color J und race, among whom they live and 1 from whoso ranks many of them have 1 sprung. How much less,' then, should I the southern people understand the I . negro. That they understand him as I masters understand slaves, is doubtless " true. That they understand him as I superiors understand inferiors is also I true. That they understand him as ' people of one caste understand those I of another is likewise true, but they 1 do not understand him as a man. I They do not understand him as mem- bers of his own race do. They do not I , understand him as they understand I - their own white associates. We could ask for no better proof of this than the Century article by Mr. Dowd, an article which is both intelli gent and generous. Mr. Dowd com plains of the negro's clan spirit, and seem b to regard this as evidence of race inferiority. It is a familiar ground of complaint in the south. Yet in the very next paragraph Mr. Dowd ingenuously recognizes that spirit as eminently human as human, at least.for white men; or. at any rate, for southern white men. For he says: "It should be well understood by this time that no foreign race inhabiting this country and acting together politi cally can dominate the native whitos." What is that if not an .exhibition of einn spirit. Can it be doubted that the neero'a clannisbness has its root in the same human nature that develops the doctrine of white supremacy? Yet southerners whose views agree with Mr. Dowd's. claim to understand the neero. All through his article Mr Dowd reveals the conviction he holds in common with his sectional com patriots, and which prevails also in the north, that the negro's character istics are those of an inferior race. Yet he shows as clealrv, and all uncon sciously, as he describes the negro's environment, that those characteristics are due not to inferior race qualities but to inferior social opportunities One illustration will serve. Mr Dowd points out in allusion to the negro that "all their tastes lie in the realm of the obiective and the con crete." They cannot generalize. Their enjoyment Is in tbe spectacular, So much so that "factories employing negroes generally find it necessary to enanan Anavaf frino An 'nifflio f I u V ' ' ' But this does not describe a race of riec essarilv inferior intellectual qualities The inability ,ns white men suppose, of Wild races to trunk: except in tne ob jective and concrete, is fully accounted tor by the fact that their environment is too primitive to stimulate abstract thought. It does not prove inherent lack of capacity. And when so-called inferior races liviiiL' in civilized aur foundings also exhibit defective powers of abstract reasoning, the all-sufficient 'explanation is that they are held down to lower intellectual levels by the spirit of caste. Though they come in contact with the advanced race, it is only casually and in a subordinate manner. Their thought life is lived in their own primitive and repressive on vironroent. Though they are admitted up at the house, it is only to serve their real life is among their absolute equals. What Mr. Dowd attributes to inferior race capacity, are plainly only the phenomena of hardened dis tinction of caste. The same -results would follow the same conditions of caste if the negro were white and Anglo-Saxon. Do Tocqueville gives us a simple illustra tion cf the principle in his "Demo cracy in America" (vol. 2, page 66, third edition), where he says: "in ranee very tew pleasures are exclusively reserved for the higher classos; the poor are admitted wrier ever the rich are received; and they consequently behave with propriety. and respect whatever contributes to the enjoyments in which they themselves Earticipate. In England, where wealth as a monopoly of amusement as well as of power, complaints are made that whenever the poor happen to steal . into the inclosures which are reserved for the pleasures of the rich, they commit acts of wanton mischief." No doubt the wealthy English found an explanation of tbic rudeness in theory of hereditary inferiority ; where as it was truly, as JJe Tocqueville lm plies, an outgrowth' of caste. Whero easte exits, no theories of racial or hereditary inferioritv are admissible Where caste exists, the suoerior caste can make no well-founded claims to knowledge of the inferior. They may know their external peculiarities, but nothing more. An inferior caste never reveals itself, its real self, to the su perior. That the little white children of the south understand the little black children as well as they understand one another, we ' have no manner of doubt. But from the day that each discovers the impassable social barrier, from that moment their lives diverge. Thereafter each may know the other as master and slave do, as high caste and low caste do; but no longer friend knows friend. Louis Post's paper, "The Public." BRYAN'S PAPER, "THE COMMONER, The following introductory article appears on the first page of "the first issue of W. J. Bryan's paper, "The Commoner:" Weoster defines a commoner aa "one of the common people." The name has been selected for thia paper be cause the Commoner will endeavor to aid the common people in the protec tion of their rights, 'the advancement of their interests and the realization of their aspirations. It ia not necessary to apologize for the use of a term which distinguishes the great body of the population from the comparatively few, who, for one reason or another, withdraw themselves from sympathetic connection with their fellows. Among the Greeks "Hoi polloi" was used to describe the many, while among the Romana the word "pleba" was employed for the same purpose. These appellations. like "the common people," have been : assumed with pride by those to whom IS were applied, while they have hoen used as terms of reproach by those who counted themselves among the aristocratic classes. Within recent years there has been a growing ten dency in some quarters to denounce as emagogic any reference to, or praise of, the common people. One editor in a late issue of his paper takes exception to the phrase and says: , "This expression is an ill-chosen one and should have no lodgment in the vocabulaj-y of an American Patriot and statesman. If we sought its origin few would look for it in that specious demagogy which has evolved the pro fessional politician, arrayed country against towr,, the farmer and his sons and daughters against the business and professional men and their sons and daughters, capital against labor, and built up against neighbors the im pregnable barriers of prejudice and hate." 1 This quotation is reproduced because it fairly represents the views of those who criticise the expression. It has, however, an eminently respectable origin. In the same chapter in which Christ condensed man's duty to his fellows into the commandment: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself; in the same chapter in which he de nounced those who devour widows' houses and for a pretense make long prayers in this same chapter it is said of turn: The common . people heard Him gladly. .No higher compliment was ever paid to anv class. , The ' term, the common people, is properly used to describe the large ma jority of the people those who earn their living and give to society a fair return for the benefits bestowed by society those who in their daily lives recognize the ties which bind togeth )r the mass of the people who have a common lot and a common hope. Some times they are called "the middle classes" because paupers and crimi nals are excluded on the one hand, while on the other hand some exclude themselves because of wealth or posi tion or pride of birth. The common people form the industrious, intelligent and patriotic element of our popula tion; they produce the nation s wealth in time ot peace and fight the nation's battles in time of war. They are self- reliant and independent; they ask of government nothing but justice aud will not be satisfied with less. They are pot seeking to get their hands into other people's pockets, but are content it they can keep other people's bands out of their pockets. the common people do not constitute an exclusive society, they are not of the tour hundred; any one can become a member If he is willing to contribute bv brain or muscle to . the nation's strength and greatness. Only those are barred and .they are barred by their own choice who imagine themsleves made of a superior kind of clay and who deny the equality of all before the law. " A rich man; who has honestly acquired his wealth and is not afraid to intrust its care to laws made by his fellows, can count himself among the common people, while a poor man is not really one of them if he fawns be fore a plutocrat and has no higher am bition than to be a courtier or a sycophant. - The Commoner will be satisfied if, by fidelity to the common people, it proves its right to the name which has been chosen. GENEROUS LEGISLATORS. Solons at Salem Render .Justice to a Poop German Girl. By virtue of the generosity of the delegation from Multnomah county in the legislature, a purse was raised at Salem to pay the court feos for a writ of habeas corpus in the cose of a Ger man girl who was sentenced to the county jail for twenty-five days under a fine of $50 for the alleged stealing of some wearing apparel 'at Wood burn, Marion county. The potition was heard before Judge Boise, and the girl was discharged. She has-been assisted to some good clothing and several per sons, including the Multnomah dele gation, are interesting themselves to get work for her. The girl, whose name is Bertha Crader, had been work ing for a man in Woodburn, who failed to pay her according to a contract, and when she left she took a couple of waists with her of little or no value. The papers upon which she was ar rested were entirely faulty, and the whole proceedings 'aroused, considera ble indignation. INOCULATING THE SOIL. Kansas Experiments, Hade on a Large Scale, Reported Successful1. The principle of the microbe inocula tion of the soil for the purpose of forc ing the growth of certain of the legumes, or bean family, has been carried out in Kansas on the largest scale yet reported. - Leguminous plants assimilate free nitrogen for tbo air through the intermediary of tubercles on the roots, which are due to low forms of organic life. The Kansas soil, it was found, contained none of the organisms necessary for this absoprtion of nitrogen. Accordingly tbo Kansas experiment station intro duced soil from Maine in which the soy bean was known to thrive. Crops were successfully grown and thia soil used for further inoculation of other plots. The experiments have now. been continued over several seasons, demon strating that the soil can be inoculated in a wholesale manner by this method. As a result the soy bean can be grown on Kansas aoil over a large area. The value of this plant liea not only in the forage crop it produces, but in its ability to extract nitrogen from the air,which is utilized to enrich the soil. Agulnaldo Interviewed. A correspondent of the New York World in the Philippines has inter viewed Aguinaldo, who ia quoted aa saying that he will continue to fight and that he lias no confidence in American promises. Aguinaldo's own words were : 'I have not forgotten their profes sions of friendship and of support given me by Dewey and Otis and all of them, and especially by Wildman. My army fought with and for them, to defeat the Spanish, and promises, most solemnly given, that we were to have independence, were made. All these solemn promises have been re pudiated by tbem all. No, amnesty means American slavery, and obedi ence to the will of McKinley. To accept amnesty means shame, infamy, slavery, degradation. Personally it means imprisonment for me. Until the Filipino nation shall have a gov ernment oi its own thia war will go on. oiena i nomas, zu years old, was crushed to death in Chicago bv the 1 x ; .i r ... . ... elevator in me ioung woman a Chris tian Association building. She had watched the inmates vaccinated by a doctor, fcbe took the elevator to her room, where she fainted, falling for ward, her head being caught between the car and floor. SUPREME COORT DECISIONS. ' Prof. Bryce has called the ' supreme court of the United States "the living voice of the constitution." While we are waiting for its authoritative word on the Porto Rican cases a retrospect of some of its most important decisions the landmarks of American constitu tional law has timely interest. National supremacy: In the first period of its existence, while John Jay and John Marshall were chief jus tices (1790-lssd), the supreme court a i ding decisions, taken in a body, all tend to establish one great - coustitu tional doctrine the supremacy of the federal government over the state gov ernments in all matters in which a conflict could arise as to the limits of their respective authorities. Thus in Ware vs. Hylton the court held that the United States by treaty could annul a state law. In Cbisholm vs. the state of Georgia it decided that a sovereign state could be sued in the federal courts by any citizen. The eleventh amendment to the constitu tion was adopted to counterpoise this decision. 1 . In Marbury vs. Madison it declared its power to adjudge any act of con gress to be null and void. It affirmed its power in the cases raised by Aaron Burr'a staff (arrested for treason) to issue writs of habeas corpus, and pro claimed that.no one could be guilty of treason by merely conspiring to subvert by force the government of the coun try. In Fletcher vs. Peck it ruled that a legislative grant made by a state could not be revoked. In McCulloch vs. the state of . Maryland, decided in 1819 the power of the federal govern ment to' create a bank was affirmed and the right of a state to tax any branch of a federal bank was denied. This famous decision was never re versed by the court but President Jack son closed up the United States bank in spite of it. ' Dartmouth college case: More popu larly celebrated than any of these de cisions was that in the Dartmouth college case (1819). The state of New Hampshire claimed the right to amend the charter which it had previously granted to the college and transfer its property to a hew corporation. The court derided that it could not do so; that a charter was a contract which no state had the right to impair. Daniel Webster's aplendid fame as a lawyer and orator began with his argument in this case. But as counsel for Harvard college a few years later he had the mortification, of hearing Chief Justice Taney deliver a decision reversing that which he won for Dartmouth col lege. This reversal was in the judg. ment on what is known as the Bridge case in which the court held that the state of Massachusetts had a right to nullify an old grant made to Harvard college in 1650. Regulation of commerce: Again in Gibbons vs. Ogden the court decided that congress had exclusive authority to regulate commerce in all its forms on all the navigable waters of the United States without any monopoly, restraint or interference by state legis lation. But this deoision of Marshall's was reversed by a later one of ' Taney's In the case of the city ot JNew York vs Miln in which it was ruled that a state legislature could impose regula tions upon the masters of vessles arriv ing in their ports and collect penalties for their non-observance. And thia reversal baa since been reversed. Again in the case of Craig vs. the state of Missouri the court decided that a state law establishing loan offices and authorizing the issue of certificates of stock was unconstitutional because they were "bills of credit which the constitution forbids the states to emit. Later in 1837 thia ruling was com pletely reversed in the case of Briscoe vs. the Bank of Kentucky. , , The Cherokee episode: Next in order of time among landmark decisions was that in the uherokee case. When Georgia in 1792 ceded her western territory to the United States the federal government agreed to extin guish the Indian titles to lands in Georgia aa soon aa this could be peace ably done. Aa the United States had by treatiea recognized the Cberokeea as a nation having their own laws and had guaranteed to them all the lands not hitherto ceded it could not legally disturb tbem in their possessions Georgia passed laws extending herlawa and jurisdiction over the Cherokee people and dividing up their domain among the people of the state by lot. Thia proceeding was finished in 1830. Appeals to the government by the Cheorkees for . protection under their treaty rights called out the response from President Jackson' that "a state ia sovereign in its own domain" and that the United States could not inter fere. A Cherokee convicted of homi cide in the Indian lands being sen tenced to be banged under the laws of Georgia the case went to the supreme court which in 1830 granted a writ of error requiring the state to show cause why the matter should not go to the Cheorkee courts. President Jackson is quoted as saying: "John Marshall has made the decision now let him execute it." The writ was disregarded and the Cherokee was executed the first instance of the nullification by atate of laws of the United States. Taney 'a Dred Scott judanent: A caae which created a far more Profound im- preeoion waa the Dred Scott affair in 1857- In 1834 Dr. Emerson of the United States army took Dred Scott, one of bis slaves, with him from Missouri to Illinois where slavery waa prohibited by statute and thence to Fort Snelling in what ia now Minne aota where it waa prohibited by the Missouri compromise. Four years later he returned to Missouri. Learning that bia residence in free territory gave him .a claim to lreedom Dred Scott in 1848, having been whipped by hia master's ordera, brought suit in St. Louis against him for assault and battery. This action raised the ques lion oi ma ireeaom. Alter many mutationa in the case, during which Scott changed masters by being pur cnasea oyj. r. a. eaniora, oi -ew York, the matter got to the supreme conrt in itsaa. On March 6, 1857, Taney read the decision (Justices McLean and Curtis dissenting), which waa that Scott waa not a citizen of Missouri in the sense in which the word "citizen" ia used in the constitution ; tbat the lower court had no jurisdiction in the case; that Scott bad no right to cue and that the judgment of the lower court must be reversed and a mandate issued directing the suit r be dis missed for want of jurisdiction. The decision went further than this, bow ever; touching on the slavery question in its Droaa political aspect, and here in lies its historical importance. It denied the right of congresa to control slavery in the territories and declared tbat the Missouri compromise of 1820. prohibiting slavery in the Louisiana territory north of 36 degreea 30 minutes, waa unconstitutional and void. In passing, the popular fiction that Taney declared that negroea "had no righta which the white man waa bound to respect" ahould be once more exposed. Taney, never said so. He did say : tbat in a previous century negroea were on that footing, and he said truly. , .' Contrary rulings on liquor laws: In 1847, in the case of Pierce vs. New Hampshire, the court decided that a atate might prohibit the manufacture or sale of liquors or their importation from another atate, even though such liquors had been brought into the country from foreign countres , under the authority of an act of congress. But in 1889, in the Original-Package case (Leisy vs. Hardin), the decision of Taney in Pierce vs. New Hamp shire was reversed, and state laws in terfering with the importation of liquors "in the original packages or kegs" were declared unconstitutional. By a large number of decisions the court in the reconstruction period upheld the war amendments giving equal rights to the negroes, but it de clared Charles Sumner's civil rights bill an unconstitutional exercise of the power of congress. The greenback cases: We come now to the great legal-tender decisions. A suit brought in 1864 to compel the pay ment in coin of s note made in 1860, two years before the legal-tender or greenback aut was passed, went to the supreme court, and in 1869 that tribu nal, through a majority of its mem bers, declared that the law of February 25, 1862. the greenback act, waa un constitutional so far aa it made the greenbacks legal tender for debts con tracted prior to its passage. All the democratic members of the court, to gether with Chief Justice Chase, con curred in this decision. The three re publican justices dissented. In 1870, one democratic justice having retired in the interval and two republicans (strong and Bradley having been ap pointed, . the matter came before the court again, and the earlier decision was reversed and late (1884) in Julliard vs. Greenman, the court even went further and decided that congress bad power to make its note legal tender without limit in time ot peace or war Income tax decision : Last but not least memorable in the list of great question on which the supreme court has see-sawed in its decisions is that of the income tax. In 1868 by unani mous decision, the court declared the levying of an income tax upon corpor ations to be valid, and in 1880 in Springer vs. the United States it again unanimously voted tbat an income tax essentially like the one enacted by congress in 1894 was constitutional. But on May 20, 1895, by a vote of five justices to four . the income tax was declared to be unconstitutional. And the fact is historic though not clearly accounted for that only a few days before the decision was announced one of the five justices (Justice Shiras) was ot tte contrary opinion, the court, therefore, stands on this question as having twice unanimously decided that an income tux is constitutional and once by a bare, majority of one that it ia unconstitutional, and the majority of one changed his mind within a week of casting his vote. The question will probably come up again. - Mr. Justice Harlan, dissenting from the opinion judgment of May, 1895, used , these memorable words: "I hope it may not prove the first step toward ' the sub mergence of the liberties of the people in a sordid despotism ot wealth." The court's sweeping powera:' Theae are but' celebrated specimen cases showing the sweeping power's exercised by our highest tribunal. It is the most powerful court in the world. In interpreting the constitution it has overruled alike acts of - congress, the legislatures and the supreme courts of sovereign states, and in doing so, as the foregoing instances show, it has often reversed itself and sometimes reversed its reversals. How it will in terpret the constitution aa applied to the rights and powera of the United States in acquiring, holding and gov erning the new islands taken over from Spain is obviously not less uncer tain than how long the decision, what ever it may be, will stand. TAXABLE PROPERTY IN OREGON. ', Umatilla County Stands Fourth In Taxable Wealth. Oregon has taxable property valued at about $120,329,293, a alight increase over 1899. At the time this table waa made up, Lane, Polk and Multnomah countiea had not reported to the secre tary of state, and estimates are made of their assessments. The final figures will not materially change the aggre gate valuation here given; . County. , , 1900. 1899. 2,776,7(10 2,620,272 4,867,900 2,5o,io6 1,460,646 2,069,171 1,715,789 602,413 4,057,890 I,ii06,;x.4 9!il,36S 2,333,780 8,371,7(16 1,119,3(15 1,477,973 1,4(15,617 6,398,940 701,841 6,726,100 1,188,273 7,923,018 1,209,149 81,0,19,771 4,400,640 1,F33,805 1257 ,041 6,889,038 3,6-11,305 1,060,608 3,143,102 8,288,210 84,677 Bilker I Denton.; Clackumaa 2,880,255 2,624,762 4,'.K4,841 2,6M,OIG ' 1,477,850 2,05,9O3 1,68,82 603,V32 4,223,215 1,002,198 ' l,:l,:iS0 ClatHop.... Columbia.. Coos Crook...... Curry Douglas... Gilliam.... Grant Harney.... Jackson . . . 2,241 ,156 3,230,914 Joiephlne 1,11(8,863 Kiamain i,ns;su Lake 1,5411,264 Lane 6,490,000 Lincoln 684,678 Llun ,6S4,06n Malheur 1,667,765 Marion 7,7.1:1,018 Morrow 1,U7,7Sl Multnomah 32,904,642 Polk 4,400,000 Sherman 1,864,603 Tillamook 1,818,728 Umatilla 6,684,999 union Wallowa...., Wasco Washington. 3,987,782 1.124,6118 8,129,829 3,303,735 608.782 neeler. Yamhill 4,770,106 Totali... .112Q,329,23 1120,282,879 City of Salam Won. , The suit of the Pacific States Tele phone and Telegraph company against the city of Salem for an injunction re straining the officers of the city from collecting the tax due on telephones under an ordinance of the city council, was decided by Judge K. P. Boise of the equity department of the circuit court in Salem, in favor of the city. The ordinance referred to was passed last August, and levied a tax of Scents a month on each telephone instrument in use within the city. The tax be came due on September 1, but the com pany refused to pay the amount or furnish the olficers with a list ot the instruments in use. At a meeting of the Catholic club, of New York, an organization of high chnrch Episcopalians, at which Itev. Harry Wilson, of London, and Clifford Kelway, of the Church Review, the organ of the Catholic party in the Church of England, were preaent.it waa decided to publish an American edi tion of tbe English Catholic organ in Philadelphia, with an office in New York, and to join the Catholic parties in England and America for a wr on Protestantism, and especially on the low church Episcopalians. From tbe moat trustworthy sources it ia ascertained thero ia no foundation whatever for the rumors frequently ap pearing in the German presa that Em peror William ia largely indebted to Herr Krupp and other German capital GENERAL NEWS. The legislature of Indiana has adopted electrocution as the mode of capital punishment. Lieutenant Taylor ot the United States revenue launch Penrose was drowned at Pensacola, Florida, Wednes day night. Li. Hung Chang gives the United States credit for the relief to China caused by the signing of the joint note oy tne powers. An extra session of congress ia nrob- able, in view of the president's urgent recommendation of legislation concern ing the i'liilippitie islands. The sultan of Turkey, who is much affected by the death of Queen Vic toria, has wired King Edward VII. an expression of sympathy at his loss and felicitations on his accession. Charles F. W. Neely, who is charged with embezzling the funds of the Cuban postorhce, will sail for Havana on tbe 26th inst., on the steamuhip Mexico, to stand trial for bis alleged crimes. Premier Roblin at Winnipeg stated that the Manitoba . government was making attempts to purchase the Northern Pacific railway in Manitoba, but (o far, he said, nothing definite has been done. Because her husband had sold her chickens and bought whisky with the money, Mrs. William Towns, at Hart ford, Ind., after having horsewhipped Towns in a crowded street, endeavored to wreck a saloon. Wednesday was the anniversary of the battle of Rolling Prairie, near Little Rock, Arkansas which. was fought January 23, 1801, between the 11th Missouri cavalry and the Union forces. Eleven were killed. A warrant of removal was granted at Los Angeles in tbe United States dis met court lor the return to Indian Territory of Jeff Davis, an Indian, who is wanted lor the murder of Henry uarlisle, December 15, 1UUU. J. J. Hill and his party of guests are booked to leave bt. Paul, on a snecial train, on March 1, for Seattle. It is said this train will represent more wealth .than was ever gathered on one train in the history of the world. T. C. Chandler, aged 68 years, died at his home at Liberty, Missouri, from , a stroke of apoplexy. He was born in Virginia. lie served through the civil . war in the confederate army, and was adjutant under Colonel E. W. Rucker. . Judge Clements at Sigourney, Iowa, overruled a motion for a new trial in the case of tbe state versus Sarah Kubn, and sentenced Sarah Kuhu to spend the remainder of her natural life at hard labor in the penitentiary at Anamosa for the killing of her hus band by poison. The Josiah Morris bank, at Mont gomery, one of the oldest private banking institutions in Alabama, did not open its doors for business Satur day. The capital stock of the bank is $100,000. Deposits are believed to be heavy. The assets and liabilities are not yet known. At the instance of tbe attorney gen eral, the war department today took steps for the preservation of law and order at' Muskogee. The war depart ment has telegraphed General Jb'itz hugh Lee, authorizing him to act in hia own discretion in the matter of aending troops. Dr. Blunt, Texas state health officer, has issued instructions from Austin for the inspectors at the state lino to en force a ' rigid quarantine against Bakersfield, Calif., whero a case of the plague ia said to have appeared and to make the rules stringent'as apply ing to San Francisco. The Rio Grande freight depot in Colorado Springs, Colorado, was burned Saturday morning. Watchman L. C. Wells waa found dead in the buiding, lying in a pool of blood with a revolver near hia right hand. It is suspected that he was killed by buig lars, who then fired the building. Judge Bundy, in the Henry county circuit court at New Castle, Indiana, overruled a motion for a new trial in tbe case of John Diehl, the rich manufacturer of Akron, chared with the responsibility for the death of Miss Mary Farwin, a year ag'i, and the defendant waa sentenced to 14 years in the Michigan city prison. General MacArthur has ordered the deportation to the United States of George T. L. Rice, editor of the Doily Bulletin, a marine journal. Rice will sail on the Pennsylvania Monday. The order characteriea him as a "danger ous incendiary and a ' menace to the military situation" because he accused the officer of tbe port of Manila of grafting. Estimates made by the beat-in formed persons in the financial field fix the value of Queeu Victoria's private estate at something betweon $50,000, 000 and $60,000,000. Parliament upop her accession granted her $1,925,000 a year. This sum, it was estimated, would maintain the royal cstabliNh ment and leave the sovereign $400,000 for private money, or personal ex penses. . The destruction by bush fires in Auh tralia, according to mail advices by the steamship Aorangi, have been ap palling. While manv people are dropping dead Irum heat apoplexy, the thermometer running up to 115 and 120 in the shade, hundreds upon hundreds of families have been burned out, and many have made miraculous escapes. A aubcommittee of the house coin miteo on banking and currency re ported favorably aa a subsitute for the Overstreet currency bill, a bill provid ing that the treasury shall pay gold on demand for silver or other claea of money, in aiima not less than $50 and the silver and other forma of money thus received by the treasury shall be placed in the reserve fond. Clark Bel), president of the Medical and Legal Aid aociety, has announced that hm aociety baa determined to take up the Maybrickcase at once, and that the chances are now more favor able than ever for the pardon or acquittal, after fair trial, of the Ameri can woman under sentence of life im prisonment in England charged with murdering her htiHhand by poisoning. Grace Anderson baa brought suit against Charles J. Anderson in Han Francisco for divorce on the ground of cruelty, and he brought auit against her to recover 40 United States govern ment bonda of the par value of $40,000, cash amounting to $22,000, and gold duHt and nugget worth $19,000. It ia a romance of the Klondike where An derson made hia fortune and picked up hlswife, Tbe report of Representative Ovcr atreet of Indiana, upon the bill which he waa authorized by the banking com mittee to report to the house "to main tain the parity of the money of the United Statea1' declarea that the bill "reafflrma the declaration of the United Statea government to maintain tbe parity of all forma of money with the gold standard of value and makes proviaiona whereby the parity of the ailver dollara may be maintained by tbe exchange for gold at the treasury upon the demand of the holder." By a vote of 315 to 35 the cily council of Chicago defeated Mayor llarrigon's plan of repealing the midnight saloon closing law. ! ' Verdi, the composer, died at Milau, Italy, Sunday morning. He died un conscious witli his relatives and . close friends gathered around his bed, Another death from bubonic plague has occurred among, the members of the crew ot the British steamer Frirarv which left Alexandria Decem ber 22 for Hull, England. , Tho illuminations in honor of the marriage of Queen Wilhulmina to Duke Henry of Mecklenburg-Schwerin have beon postponed until February 1 out of respect to Queen Victoria's funeral. Representative Hull has introduced in the house a bill for the payment of travel allowances on thejjdischarging of the. army volunteers,' oilicers and Men, who re-entered service in tho Philip pines. The ministry of war of Russia has completed the draft of a law to regu late the military service in .Finland in conformity with the system adopted in the empire at large. It is expected that it will be put in forco early in the year. ;i (. , V ., . Senator Hoar, from the committee on judiciary in the senate, reported favor ably the bill granting a charter- to the Federation . of Womon's clubs. . The incorporators mentioned in the bill include many women prominent in club life. . , ! . The special service held in the Ger man church of Constantino on Sunday in honor of the anniversary of the birth of Emperor William was fol lowed by the inauguration in i Hippo d'ome Square of the fountain presented by the kaiser. , - , , , . . . , Preliminary skimi8hing in a battle for about $450,000,000 has already be gun in Washington. Holders of the Cuban war bonds, issued by Spain to raise funds for the prosecution of the wars in Cuba, are again moving to get their money back. , . The body of Jacob Kuntz, a hermit, waa found in a miserable cabin near Peoria, 111., Sunday: The body was clad in rags. On his person was' $458 in money and a deed to 80 acres of valuable land. Ho had literally star,veu Iiimself to death. The report of the Indiana legislative committee charges' that ' Mrs. Sarah Keeley, superintendent of the Indiana woman's' prison and irirl's industrial school,' has been guilty of stripping girls naked and Hogging them with many lashes on their nuked backs. Judge Dale of the district court at Wichita insisted that Mrs. Mary E. Lease must positively be present when her petition for a divorce is taken up. Her attorney sought to have the court grant her a divorce without putting her to tho expense of a' journey from New York. ' William J. Bryan's great grand mother, who is still alive at the age of 98, at 'New London, Ind., is Mrs. Mary Gano Cobb, tho descendant of Franics Gcrenaux, a Huguenot refuee of 16KG. Rev. John Gano, one of tho revolu tion's "fighting chaplains," was her grandfather, , , . , ; . The Burlington has ' announced a round trip rate of $10 between St. Paul and Chicago1 for the inauguration of President McKinley. 'The lines east of Chicago will piake a rate of 1 cent a milo for the round trip. As yet the transcontinental lines have made no concessions. ' ' -' The anthracite coal operators and miners in Pennsylvania, were much stirred up by the report sent out from Indianapolis that the United Mine Workers, now holding their national convention there, had decided to invite tho oporators of the antbracit? region to meet their miners in conference and decide upon a new wago scale. The severe weather '..continues throughout Germany. Tho damage seoins to have boon greatest in the East Frisian district, Lear and Enulen, whore ice floods have wrought enorm ous injury, although there ban been little loss of life. Tho new harbor at Lear has been destroyed. .Government aid has been nuked for U,0(K) people. THB HOUSE OF CASTELLANE. Fart or the Riddle of the New Century's Social Sphinx. It is worth while to think about Casiellane; He inoariH much. He is a part of the riddle ot the new cen tury's social sphinx. It is the Castellanos that have saved the world, through all past history, from the domination of a few great fortunes. A robust bandit chief would under take to found a family. Ho would pile up gold in iron chests, he would take mirteages on the landB of hia neigh bors, and to secure all this to his de scendants forever he would tie up his wealth with strict family settlements. Then he would die and for some generations his estates would grow by tiieir own vitality. His descendants would live for enjoyment and their revenues would nupport them in idle luxury. , , . . . j At last, along would enme a Can tollane. Luxury would not satisfy him. He would be poasesaed by a rage for extravagance. He would throw away bis fortune with both bunds. He wouhl cut down the family forests, mortgage , the . ancestral acres and empty the iron treanure boxeH. . So liko the humble earthworm which breaks up the clods into fertile soil for the farmer, the Castellano has had his nlace in the economy of nature. Is be going to accomplish the name re sulta hereafter? We have seen that ho can dissipate a fortune of $15,000,000 in a few years. An expenditure of two or three mil lions a year is so well within bin capacity that it affords no foul test of his actual powers. But suppose hn had a Rockefeller in stead of a Gould fortune to deal with. How would it bo then? ' Mr, Rockefeller lias taken prenau lions against tho early appearance of a Castellane in hia family. That there will bo one sooner or later there can be no reasonable doubt. Supiioce, when. he appears, he finds himself in posaesiion of a fortune of a billion dollars, aecurely invested at 4 per cent, and returning an income of $10,000,000 a year, what will be tho chances of his performing the social function! that have been performed by hia xind in all former apes? To disHipate auch a fortuno within tbe period of one spendthrift's ac tivity, which could hardly bo expected to cover moro than twenty years, would require an expenditure of at least $70,000,000 a year, nearly $1,400, 000 a week, or $200,000 a day. That would be $20,000 an hour, if a work ing day consisted of ten hours, or over $:() a minute, or $5 a second, Could a man keep up that page for twenty years without resting? If he spent only $40,000,000 a year he would be living on hia income and his princi pal would not diminiph. If he apent $:10,000,000 annually hia estate would actually increase. It will be audi a test for the Castel lanea aa they have never yet had to face. If they fail, the world will have i tlnd aome other method of re ducing tho inequalities of wealth. Hearnt'e Chicago American. , PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. The tax levy in Portland this year for all purposes will reach 40 mills, or four per cent. Mrs. Minnie Page Hosmer died at her home in Silverton, aged 33 years. A husband survives her. ' Monday fire caused a $2000 loss in Edward's . furniture store in Portland. A 8tove pipe waa the cause Mrs. George F. Elgin, aged 34 years, died, at Corvallis, of pneumonia. She leaves a husband and four children. An automobile is to run , between Portland to Sandy and on the Clacka mas river. It will take a trip daily. A strong effort is being made to move the capital from Olympia to' Tacoma. A constitutional amendment is necessary. ... Traffic Manager ' S. W. Eccles will shortly leave the service of the Oregon Short Line to accept a position with the smelter trust. Thomas Dugan, aged 8 yeara, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Dugan, of Walla Walla, died after a few daya sickness at his home in that city. The Idaho senate has acted favorably upon a resolution on the initiative and referendum, submitting an amendment to the state constitution. A great many counterfeit silver dollars are in circulation in Portland. Street car conductors have collected several of the bogus issue. John Wolff, the 18-year-old boy who killed Sheriff Summers, of Madison " county, Montana, from ambush, has been captured, after an exciting chase. R. H. , Bishop, of the Southern Pacific bridge builders, was struck on the head by a falling timber at the Harrisburgijridge Monday, and aeri ously iujufed. . The roundhouse of the Spokane Falls and Northern railway, at Spokane, was destroyed by tire Wednesday morn ing. Lors, $150,000, fully insured. It will not be rebuilt. Good promising ledges of gold ore have been discovered near Morof Sherman county. One of them is with in a few yards of the Columbia South ern depot at that place. James Chapin, one of Oregon's earliest pioneers, died at hia home near Forest Grove of heart disease. Up to a short time before hi? death he was in bis usual health. Mrs. Sylvester Reeder, aged 40 years, Ukd at her. home near Greenville. Shu had been a resident of Washington county for 25 years. A husband and, live children survive her. E3' Goorgo Lang,' formerly ticket agent for the Union Pacific at Salt Lake, and later at Portland, has been made gen eral agent of that company's" freight and passenger department at Los Angeles, 1 The secretary of the interior has ap proved the contract bewteen the gov ernor of Alaska and the state of Ore gon for the care and treatment in the Oregon insano aslyuni of insane persons in the district of Alaska. John Bronti, reported as John Reen. waa adjugud insane at RoBeburg and put in jail, awaiting the taking of him to the aslyum, whore he committed suicide. He believed he was followed by detectives from the old country. F. J.' Smith, the junkdealer and second-hand man, was placed on trial in Portland Wednesday on a charge of buying stolon property from two boyg, knowing or having good reason to know that the property had been stolen. Two hundred signatures were ob tained in Walla Walla to a petition ' asking that county's representatives in the legislature to oppose the Preston railroad commission bill and to work tor the passago of a rate bill instead. Mrs. Anna Curry, wife of John W. Curry, a clerk in the census office at Washington, D. C, died at Medford Tuesday. Mrs. Curry was a daughter of the late 'Francis Plymale, whose death occurred at the same place about a year ago. William Baskett, the rich London banker who died a few daya ago, had relatives in Polk county, Oregon, the late Mrs. E. C. Cross being a Miss Baskett. Her brother, G. L. Baskett, formerly a Salem druggist, ia now a resident of Idaho. The Pacific Sheet Metal Worka, at Astoria, haa received orders from three Alaska 'canneries for 5,000,000 salmon cans, sufficient for 100,000 cases. The cans are to be shipped dur ing the month of March, and will go on vessela direct from here. The United States consul at Val paraiso, J.F. Caples, of Portland, Or., ima resigned. The United Statea minis ter, Henry Wilson, of Spokane, Wash., is coming to the United Statea on leave of absence Mesara. Caplea and Wilaon will both sail on tho next steamer from ValaraiBO. James P. Finnican, who died Satur day, in Portland, was a well known railroad and mining man. He waa born in New York in, 1844, and came to Oregon 25 years ago. He waa assistant superintendent of construction on the O. R. it N. when the road waa built from The Dalles to Portland, i Because he had wronged a yonng girl in Minneapolis aome few yeara ago Frank 11. Hanley, of Seattle, and a bridegroom of but five hours, swallowed a dose of Btrychnine Sunday at bia moms in a lodging house and expired in the arms of hia bride. With hi lapt breath Hanley managed to gaap, mi to the terrified woman: "I am, not worthy of vou." Then he fell into, her arms and life waa extinct. Tho Bhooting affray at GeiBer, Baker county, waa thoroughly investigated.. First, Garrison, tho saloonkeeper whoi did the effective work, had a hearing, and waa adjudged to have acted in. self-defense and was discharged, and then Orwell, the "bad man" had hia turn in court charged with assault, with intent to kill, but he waived examination and was held for thai circuit court with bonda fixed at $.300, John Rapor, a respected citizen of Garfield, Wash., lies at the point tt death, and Jrank Madden, who aa-. saulted him with a beer bottle, w8g taken to the county jail at Col fa Mon day night for aafekeeping. FeeDng has never been as intense in Garfield gjn(.e the murder of Lanford SCinmerg by Ed Hill, who waa lynched by a mob. Madden wanted Baper to allow a friend of hia, who was drunk, to aleep in hia office, and Rp.per refused. Cities and towns along the Ohio river have begun a crusade against tbe negroea. The entire trouble dates back to the lynch inga of tbe negroea at Rock port and Boonevllle for the mur der of the white barber, Simmons, at Roekport one night last month. Every Btrango negro who cannot give a satis factory account of himself ia to be sentenced to the rock pile. Thia action is takon to chock an obaoxious class of negroea. ,, The president sent a message to con gress recommending' the appropriation of $1()0,00 for the payment of the claim of Spain for Sibutu and Cagayan ialanda, In the Philippine Brchipelago, in accordance with the terms of the treaty recently ratified by the senate .1 4 'i