fa 7 The .Heppner1 Gazettes!,; THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1901. UNO EDWARD'S OPPORTUNITY. (.'iw ,i - - As King Edward VII. looks back over what ' conventionality calls hisj "illustrious line" ho must be inspired with an ambition to make his own place on that roll one of some distinc tion, says Hearsts' Chicago American. And it ought not to bo a hard thing (.to do. The standard to be' reached is by no means appallingly high. In deed even flattery would hardly pre tend that the kings of England, on the average, had been a 'very admirable lot. William the Conqueror was simply .. a biahwavman on a iarge Bcale. Ho invaded England because he saw a good chance, and enriched himself and his followers with the plunder of the con quered. He was not without states manlike qualities, but in the pursuit of his ends he was utterly without scrunle. William Rufus was a tyrant so odious that the usually dispassionate Bishop Stubbs is moved to call him "a fou incarnation of selfishness; in its most . abhorrent form, the enemy of God and man." . Henry I. was a just, strong and able king, who kept the baronial bear gar- den of his time in order, hut his suc , cesser, Stephen, was a niero shadow of royalty, under whom trio kingdom tell into paralysis of government, anarchy . and utter ruin. Henry II. was another able ruler, whose talent for administration helped along the growth of the English constitution, but his wisdom did not , save him from a blunder in hit quarrel with llecket that brought disaster to himself and the country. . . Richard I. "of the',Lion Heart," waB cut out for a aero of romantic novels, and if lie could have been reserved ex clusively for that function he would have been an admirable character. Unfortunately, before (Sir Walter Scott and Mr. Hewlett could get at him he was making trouble for the English people, to whom his reign meant nothing but grinding taxation for use less foreign adventures. ' In John England had another falec, ' fickle, ' remorseless tyrant, whose talents, such as they were, were ex erted entirely for evil, who left his country a legacy of trouble that tormented it for three-quarters of a century, and whose only merit was that hii oppression forced his subjects to revolt and wrest the Great Charter from his reluctant hands. Henry : II. weak, bigoted, treacher ous, was little improvement on John. . Edward I. was a great ruler almost the only great one among the legiti mate kings of England. But even' he would not have measured up to the . stature of any one of half a dozen presidents of the United States, or any ono of half a dozen prime ministers of t England within the past century. Edward II. was another failure, whose imbecilities finally cost him hit throne and his foolish life, i Edward III. restored tho reputation of his house by the display of a char acter that was not below the average, and of abilities that wero perhaps, u , .. little above. He did so well for a king that he became famous, but if he hsd been born In a private station his gifts would never have raised hi in into notice. Richard II. was able, but ill- balanced, and lost his throne because he did not know how to keep it. Henry IV., not being a legitimate - monarch, had brains a neeesity for usurpers. They did not rise to the poiut of brilliancy, however, i ..( i. , Henry V. showed such ability in his short life of thirty-fivo years that if he had lived ho might have become ' really great. Among other things he might readily have conquered France, ' and left it so securely to his descen dants Miat the tings would havobeeu at half mast today in Paris as well as in ; London. I'oor Henry VI., the feeble phuntom of a king, had not strength enough to keep the crown his father's death put on his babv head. ' Edward IV., Richard II. and Ilonry VII. were all usurpers, with usurpers iihiiuI merits and defects. The pathetic figure of tho murdered child, Edward V,, thrown into this den of tigers, hardly counts in the history of Kng lish rovaltv. ' Honfy VIII.-' bluff King Hal" ' was' a ruffianly despot whoso tiroat mistake in life consisted is not having been horn in a, seraglio at Constan tinople insteud' of in an English palace. Edward VI. promised well, but his 'death at sixteen made it impossible to ell whether the promise was well founded. James I. wag a fussy, ridiculous old Jmtiecilo. , Charles I. had every private virtue and very public vice. He was every thing that a king ought not to ho. Charles II. had not even character enough to bo a tyrant. He was de praved as a man and worthless us n king. James II. was narrow minded, despotic and stupid, and lost the throne becausu he lacked the brains to hold it. ... William III. was a foreigner; and, , from the legitimist point of view, a usurper. Hence he mado a much better ruler than the average. .. The four Georges varied in character, from the domestic virtue of Georgolll. to the vietous blackguard ism of George IV. i hut they were all united in un varying incompetence. ,. William IV. was an entirely nn admirahle nonentity On. the whole, not counting the neutral tints, the English people have received from their kings since the conquest about 170 years of distinctly good government anil about 400 year's of distinctly bad. . Looking lack over the list,; Edward VII. can see no name that need dis courage emulation. Thero is no Wash ington in it, no Lincoln.no Gladstone, no Napoleon, or Frederick or Charlemagne or Caesar or Hannibal. To be sure the opportunities of a king now are not what thev once were. Edward VII. cannot mold the English constitution ss Edward I. did. He can not change the religion of the nation, as Henry VIII. did. He cannot got his head cut off, as Charles I. did. But he can still exert the influence due to character and ability. '' He can make it unfashionable to squander the nation's wealth on sel fish amusements; he rau encourage a feeling of brotherhood, and a recogni tion of the duties the favored members of society owe to those less fortunate. ' He can promote good feeling toward other nations, and especially toward the great English-speaking nation on this side of the Atlantic. ft wis said to have been the in fluence of Queen Victoria that pre vented war over the Trent affair in 1801. Perhaps tho influence of Ed- VII. may be equally potent in g English statesmen to take a reasonable view of the .Nicaragua question In these ways even a king without actual power may make himself a his torical figure not to he dwarfed by any ot tiis predecessors who governed as well as reigned. POWER OF AN OCEAN LINER. What It Would Take to Run On If Propellod by Human Labor. In,tho problem o' the application of motive power to transportation as a form of production, in the sense that it increases the value or utility of a product, the significance of the develop ment of motive power transcends al most any other consideration, writes Professor F. R. Ilutton in the En gineering magazine. A somewhat im pressive example can be derived from the rough calculation of tho meaning that would attach to a transatlantic liner with a 20,000 horse power eneine were that engine to be replaced by 20, 000 horse power of human muscles. To run'night and day there would have to bo three relays of men at the tread milt or other appliance whicli would be used. Each eight-hour shift at each 10,000 horse power engine would be 100,000 mon.or 200,000 men for the two engines. Three shifts of 200,000 men would give below decks a population of a city of second grade. If the problem, moreover, were put; in the form of high-speed transporta tion, such as is represented by the locomotive condition, it disappears practically in the field of the unthink able. It needs, therefore, but a moment's consideration of the wide spread significance which the railroad bears to the modern economic method to bring out the debt which the modern community owes to the motive power problem. PIN IN HIS MOUTH ALWAYS. And When Tweod Died the Pin Was Still There Tobias Tweed, of Vailsburg, N. J., dropped dead one day last week in Dover and in his mouth they found a pin where all his days he had carried uiie. This strange habit of his was the marvel ot all who knew him. Ho was sixty years old, but nobody can tell of a time except in battle in the war that he had not a pin in his mouth. Night and day, sleeping and walking, eating and drinking, he had one there. Often times bets were made that he was without one. but Tweed, opening his mouth, would show the pin under his tongue, in his cheek or somewhere. A comrade who fought with him in the civil war said Tweed never went into battle without a pin in bis mouth. Once or twico in tho heat of tho tight he lost the pin and was in torment until he procured another. Ho had swallowed several pins and it is thought that possibly this caused his death. IMPORTANT TO LABORING MEN. An Eight Hour Day tor Minors and Foundrymen. The bill intordnced in tho Oregon legislature, by Grace, and passed Thursday, is one of importance to laboring men. It provides: ' That underground mining, wet min ing, 'dredging, smeltinir. foundry work and nil underground work and all works for tho redemption of otcb, shall bo deemed extra hazardous undertak ings and injurious to the life and health of persons employed tboroin. That hereafter it shall be unlawful for any person, firm, corporation, asso ciation, or combination of persons, firms, corporations or associations em ploying labor in any of the extra hazardous undertakings mentioned in section 1 of this act, to solicit or re quire any person or persons so employed to do or perform more than eight hours' labor for one uav's work. Violators of the act are to he deemed guilty of misdemeanor and fined or im prisoned. MARY AGAINST JOHN. He Slandered Her and She Propoiei to Got Even. Several weeks ago Miss Mary Baker secured a judgment of $1800 for slander in the circuit court, at Bay City, Mich. ,n'?ainst John Allard. Since that time tlie defendant has shown no dis position to pay. As a result a body warrant was issued for his arrest, and he is now boarding with Sheriff Kin ney nt the countv jail, his board being paid by Miss Baker, who is deter mined to get the money or punish her alleged defamer. Allard occupies a room on tho third floor of the jail, and declare ho will remnin where ho is until tho time expires, which will be six months. Miss Baker and Allard worked on a sugar beet farm, and she alleged that Allard told stories reflecting on her to some of the other men, and sho sued him for $5000 damages. Rats Like Sweet Potatoes. A veteran provision dealer is au thority for the statement that nothing will draw rats like sweet potatoes. Thev seem to bo able to smell this toothsome vegetable fr-ni afar and will come in droves wherever sweet potatoes are stored. In proof of his as sertion this dealer said that he never kept potatoes in his cellar with other vegetables, but placed tlioni up in a dry loft. Having a largo cold storage chest in his cellar ho had previously tried tho experiment of placing a basket of sweet potatoes inside, and al though the rats could not puncture the walls they did gnaw tho woodwork of the chest, trying to get at the tubers. Wheat In Bad Condition. The wheat crop in tho River Plata provinces of both Argentina and Uruguay is reported as being in a very bad condition by Consul Swalm of Montevideo. On the Argentina side in numerous instances a yield of not over 111.5 bushels to tho hectare (2. 471 acres) is expected, while in Urmtuav it is doubtful whether there will be sullieieiit wheat raised for home con sumption alone. Tho River Plata exwrta of wheat will fall at last 50 per cent below, those of last year. Insuraaee Against Strikes. In Austria there is a system of In surance against strikes. A" company has been formed which indemnifies its stockholder or patrons for all losses sustained by them from strikes in their establishment, whether volun tary, sympathetic or forced. The premium is equal to 3 or 4 per cent of the payroll, and the indemnity is 50 per cent of the wages paid for the week preceding tho suspension of work. The Preelous Metals. Wells, Fargo & Co. ' annual report of the production of precious metals in the states and territories west cf the Missouri river for the year 1900 credits Oregon with the following amounts. Gold dust and bullion by express, $1,. 246,564; gold dust and bullion bv other conveyances, $1,051,050; silver nullum by express, $131,420; ores and base bullion by freight, $5000; total, $2,43(1,34. KING EDWARD IN HISTORY. England's new sovereign takes the title of King Edward VII. It has been nearly 350 years since an Edward was on the English throne and 629 years have passed since the first Edward was firoclaimed sovereign of "toe right ittle, tight little island." With exception of the first great Ed ward there is little in the lives, the characters and the fates of his name sakes to inspire Albert Edward or to serve as a cheerful omen. Edward I. was a son of Henry III. . and achieved fame as a Crusader. At the request of the pope he led an army to the Holy Land, captured JNazareth and massacred all the Turks within its walls. He was in tho Holy Land when his father died and he was pro' claimed king, but journeyed home by easy stages, passing through Italy and France, and engaging in joust and tourney. Arriving in London he waa crowned in 1274 and promptly insti tuted important reforms of the feudal system, curbing tho barons and extend ing many liberties to the common peo ple. Mis long reign 01 35 vears was marked, by subjugation of; Wales and numerous fierce wars with Scotland He died in 1307, from the hardships and privations of army life, while leading his seventh invasion of Scot land, Of this king it is said "he com bined in a rare degree both the physi cal and mental qualities of a great general; and he is one of the few Eng lish kings, and perhaps the first, who can lay claim to the higher qualities of statesmanship. He has been called the "founder of English constitutional freedom." His son, King Edward II., who came to the throne in 1308, inherited none of the father's great qualities. During his reign Robert Bruce restored the liberties of Scotland. Edward raised an army of 100,000 men and tried to conquer the Scotch, but suffered crushing defeat at the famous battle of Bannockburn. His own queen turned against him, the nation flocked to her standard, and in 1327 the king was formally deposed by parliament and his son elected in his stead. In tho same year a plot was formed against the deposed king and he was cruelly murdered at Berkeley castle. The reign of Edward ill. was marked in its earlier stages by a bril Hunt record, but ended in lamentable weakness.. Ho received the crown in 1327, put the Scotch under tribute and laid claim to the crown of trance. In enforcing this claim he won the bril liant victory of Crecy, fought on French soil against tremendous odds. Under this king the national spirit rose to great height, but eventually the country was impoverished by the long wars with franco, in these wars his son, "the black prince," won the battle of .Poitiers. Upon tho hard times came the terrible scourge of the "black death," which swept away the greater part of the English people and loft the country in grief and desola tion. Edward's empire in France was overthrown, his people were in dire distress and the decay of his mental faculties left him the pitiable tool of mistress and designing ministers. He died in 1337. . It was 124 years before another Ed ward came to the throne of England. The land was scourged by the distress ing Wars of the Roses, between the rival houses of York and Lancaster, when the fourth Edward received the throne in 1461. He died in 1483, after a most tempestuous and checkered career. Of him'the historian has said : "The beauty of his person and free dom of his manners rendered Edward a great favorite with the lower and middle classes, but there appears to have been little in his character to awaken real esteem. His memory is connected with no act conferring any benefit of importance on his country." In his declining years he gave himself up to debasing excesses. Edward V., son of tho formor, was but 13 years of age at his father's death. His cruel and designing uncle, the duke of Gloucester, later King Richard III., secured possession of his person and imprisoned him and his younger brother in the tower of Lon don. Their deaths followed and 20 years later it was learned that their murderous uncle caused two paid assassins to smother them under pillows. The last King Edward, son of Henry VlII., succeeded to the throne when 10 years of ago, F'or plotting against him his brother was- executed on Tower hill, the young king signing the fatal decree. A few years later his protector was also led out to execution on a de cree signed by the vacillating child monarch. He died at the youthful age of 17, under circumstances giving rise to a suspicion that he had been poisoned, but it is thought this sus picion was unfounded, and his death really resulted from consumption, hastened perhaps by overdosing by his physicians with mineral remedies. Though bright and precocious, thero is no evidence to warrant a boliof that if ho had lived his character would have developed strength or greatness. It would be manifestly unfair to measure English character of the present day by the follios, excesses and cruelties of this line of English kings und the advisers around tiiein. They belonged to the dark and middle ages, when superstition nnd ignorance chained all classes and gov ernment rested on "the simple plan that they should take who hav the power and thev should keep who can."' -Spokesman-Review. FIVE GREAT ENGLISHMEN. For England the great ended division of time is almost universally pro nounced magnificent, says Collier's Weekly. That is doubtless the fitting epithet with which to describe it. No other hundred years in all her history has even faintly resembled it for su premacy of conquest and assertion of national power. Judged by the show ings of other countries long perished, her greatness has reached its apogee. She is now, beyoud nil question, the superior of France and Germany. Alone in Europe Russia may be called her equal. But Russia is of yesterday, and England has had many a yester day since Boadicea crouched bleeding below the Roman rods. The nineteenth century is surely the most wonderful within the memory of mankind, and for this reason its human activities have been the most heterogeneous. Iverywhere in journalistic Great Britain we find it asked: "Who was the greatest Englishman of the nine teenth century?'' This can only strike the sensible as an idle question. Some are affirming Darwin to have been its greatest man. But this is quite as wrong as to declare that he was not its greatest scientist. The latter he so in contestably was that his name and fame tower above those of all rivals in the same field. But as a philosopher he diminishes to nothinir besirfa ho collossal personality of Mr. Herbert Spencer; for, indeed, Darwin was in no ethical, spiritual or sociological sense a philosopher at all. He simply "spoke right on." like Mark Antony in the play. He did not build either worse or better than he knew; he builded for the pleasure of building, and his - structure now teems to us immortal because of its peerless ma terial and splendid harmony. Ho and Herbert Spencer will both have their niches in the invisible yet palpable cathedral of earthly renown. These will not be far apart," yet they will bo equally lofty, perhaps, and yet clearly differentiated. One thing must always 1 : 1... ' I appeal uo tuuuuo, uy me wuy, 10 any tnougntiui oDserver ot the inconsistent and the inconsequent: ; Darwin is buried, of all places, in Westminster Abbey. His work struck the hardest blow at "inspirational" teaching which it had ever received. Voltaire's anathemas were almost baby-play be side it. And yet he sleeps among pre lates and zealots and saints. A proof, surely, of English liberal-mindedness; and a proof, as well, of his own calm, unbiassed, unaggressive, 'un polemic yet gigantic mind. Then the name of Gladstone has been put fervently forward by 1 host of ad mirers. Granted that Gladstone was the foremost English statesman of the century. As truly has been said, his career almost spanned tho arbitrary period of a hundred years, for he was born in 1809 and died in 1898. He remembered the rejoicings over Water loo, and twice be was a member of the same cabinet in which sat the Iron Duke. It was relatively late in' life that Gladstone became the unexampled reformer which chronicle cannot fail to affirm him. He was first attracted toward liberalism by a desire to study economic science. Placed by Sir Robert Peel on the board of trade, he there Btudied the tariff. How astonish ing is the reduction that when he ceased, in 1806, to be chancellor of the exchequer, he had so capably simplified financp as to free almost seventeen bunded commodities from customs dues. Volumes might be written, and will be written (Mr Henry Morley, his dear friend, is now concerned with one, upon the stupen dous force and blameless purity of his statesmanship. . . But, on the other hand, he lacked many qualities of in tellectual greatness. George Eliot once said ot him, it is reported, that he was one of the most uninteresting con vorsationalits whom she had over met. No special subject had special apparent ennrm lor mm; he knew everything and seemed to care for everyhing alike. As a writer he had the most ponderous and involved style; as a ontroversialist ho was literally no' where; and only the prejudiced will deny that our own brilliant Ingersoll. in the famous "North American Re view" contest, defeated him with an easy and signal success. Lovers of Tennyson declare that his light will burn, after all, the steadiest through future time. There is no doubt that iennvson is the one lordly Eng lish poetic representative. He made himaelt, in a sense, tho great poet that he afterward became. He was the heir-presumptive, as one might sav of Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats and even Byron, whose work in his youth he loved. What was best in all these predecessors ho studiously cultivated and strove to improve upon. Very often he was highly successful in such efforts. The slow years lapsed along. The age, that did not care for poetry, nevertheless began to care for his. With infinite zeal and industry, wedded to great natural capacity, Tennyson achieved the monumental place which he now holds. . . But who would presume to call him the greatest man of the nineteenth century? homebody once dignified a good Doet as a person who could do nothing woll except write verses. This is untrue, but 111 the case of Tennvson it is not entirely false. The gonius who reigned so long and so deservedly poet laureate of England was a man of exceedingly bad manners, ouite unuresentahle in ordinary cultured society, and one who drew his inpiration from solitude alone. To call him a great poet is like calling the sky blue or the grass green. 10 call him a great man is conspicuously to err. Macaulay, too. has been montioned. and there are all round reasons why ne snouiu Dear on toe paim. He was horn in isoo, and he died in 1856. He died, also, a bachelor, though with a character of unblemished repute. This tact ot his bachelorhood tells somewhat against Macaulay on the , emotional side, for in a great man we want the heart and brain to have fulfilled their functions with correspondence if not parity of effort. In the life of Macau lay, so admirably writton bv his nephew, Sir George Trevelyan, we re ceive certain hints, no more, of an early attachment. But there, as it seems to me, every chance for cavil ends. He loved his sisters (who were probably very lovable women) with an enauring tenuernees. lie was a man who shrank from the acquirement ot largo wealth, and thonch his salafv of ten thousand uounds a vear, while he served in India with such noted poli tical distinction, might easilv have been retained for many seasons, he voyaged back to England, if I mistake not, after it had only been paid him twice. Ho was a scholar of the most prodigious equipment; ho could not merelv read Tacitus and Thucvdides at sight, nut he would tuck Homer. Vir gil, Lucretius under his arm during an atternoon wain and treat them as ordi. nary readers would treat English or French novels. He was transcendent in conversation, and shone so radiantly whilo exercising this gift that some of the listeners whom be fascinated bv it accused him of being a monoloeist. Never a professional pol itician.be still made two or three of the most able speeches ever heard in the house of commons; ami whenever he spoke mere me laziest meniDers, Bearing be forehand of this event, would flock to hear him. He has enriched English literature bv some of the most stirrini; and eloquent ballads ever written, ballards which even the perfunctory monthings of schoolboys have been un able to spoil, and on whose solidity of merit the ill-advised sneers of that ex cellent and scholarly critic, Matthew Arnold, have fallen harmless. Here is but the rough sketch of Maeaulay's noble record. Amplified, detailed, filled in, it makes an important, if not an undeniable, "bid" for its subject. But, then, what about his powers as a historian? Well, one can only add that ono does not envy the reader who has failed to secure immense pleasure from the "History of England," or failed to place it among the few thoroughly entrancing books of its class which fate has ever permitted him to peruse. The democratic senators and their eo-orkors. in the senate at Washington who are opposed to the ship subsidy bill have reached a decision to con tinue debate upon the bill at present with the hope of being able to keep it going until it will become necessary for the republican majority to take up the appropriation bills and other measures which should pass before the 4th of March. ,, GENERAL NEWS. . California wines aro higher and the prices of them have been advanced by dealers from 5 to 8 cents a gallon. There is a shortage. Governor Nash has telegraphed the directors of the Saengerest Athletic Association at Cincinnati that the Ruhlin-Jefferies. fight cannot be held in Ohio. It is reported that Lord Kitchener wishes to send 10,000 Boer prisoners to India. He proposes to locate them in the state of Milgira, Province of Orissa, Bengal. The war department was informed by cable that Lieutenant Colonel Charles B. Schofield, of the Second cavalry, died at Matanzas, Cuba, Fri day night of heart disease. William Gibson, the alleged child murderer, is on trial at Catletteburg, Ky. The jury was quickly im paneled. Tho people are waiting the result without excitement. According to tho Berliner Post eight new German warships will be placed in commission this year, including the battleship Wilhelra der Grosse, with a displacement of 11,152 tons. After a spirited debate tho Arkansas house, by a vote of 46 to 37, refused to expunge from its records a resolution previously passed expressing sym pathy with the Filipinos and Boers. International Masonic machinery was set in motion at Wichita, Kansas, to get President Diaz to attend the Twentieth century Scottish Rites jubilee of the Southern jurisdiction in April. Connie Sullivan, who 10 years ago was the bantam weight champion, is dead at his home in New York of pneumonia. Sullivan was a pupil of Jack Dempsy, and trained with many cnampions. At Vaveriy, Kan., a whisky sales man representing the Merchants' Supply company, of Kansas City, was arrested for taking orders for whisky. He was convicted and fined $200 and 60 days in jail. Adjutant General Corbin has Been informed by General MacArthur that the transport Meadfe sailed from Ma nila F'riday with the Eleventh United States cavalry, consisting of 24 officers and 546 enlisted men. By a practically unanimous vote the municipal assembly in tst. Louis passed a bill providing for the issuance of $5,000,000 bonds, beaiing 83 per cent interest, for a world's fair to be held in St. Louis in 1903. Judge Brown, of the United States district court, New York, has granted a discharge of bankruptcy to F. Tennsyon Neely, book publisher, who filed a petition in bankruptcy on Octo ber 2, 1899, with liaiblites of $359,531. The city of Galveston, through com mittees, is about to ask the legislature of the state of Texas to pass certain laws repealing the charter of that city and providing for its future govern ment and the refunding of its indebted ness. Many of tho republican members of both houses of congress are trying to avoid the necessity for an extra session of congress, but the president proposes to call one if certain legislation is not acted favorably upon before the closo of F'ebruary. A lively war is in progress against the slot machines in Kansas City. The grand jury has considered the cases and District Attornoy Hadley is proceeding vigorously in the matter. He is determined to drive every slot machine out of the city. John Ishan, known as Young Botus, an Indian, while intoxicated, kicked and beat his wife to death at Truckee, Calif. He was captured with his boots covered with blood. Crowds are on tho streets discussing tho affair and a lynching may be attempted. Mrs. Mary Green, who seemed familiar with tho methods of Mrs. Carrie Nation of Kansas, wrecked a Boston barroom and was sentenced to serve a term in the house of correction. She not only laid the bartender low with a plate, but also broke the bar ware. Lady Racbael Charlotte Fiztgerald, eldest daughter of the Earl of Dun- raven and Monnt Earl, died at Adare Manor, the Earl's seat, . in Adare, county Limerick, Ireland, bho gave birth to a son January 20, and was supposed to be doing well. Her death was unexpected. Paddy Donovan, the Philadelphia pugilist who has been on trial at Belvidere. N. J., on the charge of manslaughter in causing the death of frank Welch, another Philadelphia pugilist, during an exhibition light at Philippsburg, N. J., on New 'ear's eve, was acquitted. Saturday night a young white girl between 13 and 14 vears old, Rosaline Fenllan, was raped by a negro,' Warren Matthews, near Ocean Springs, Miss. Matthews was arrested. At 9:05 that night a mob took Matthews from the jail. Ho was carried about a mile back of town and hanged. Right Rev. Henry Y. Saterlee, formerly of New York, and now Episcopal bishop of the District of Columbia, is planning to establish in Washington a home where poor girts of good character may be trained' by experienced housewives into competent servants, housemaids, cooks and nurses. The United States transport Mc Pberson ran about half her length on a reef eight miles west of Matanzas in a fog Monday, while on her way from New York to Matanzas. All tho pas sengers were transferred in the ship's boats, and the freight was unloaded. The vessel will he a total loss. General Christian Dewet, that greatest cavalry leader of modern times, in one week captured $925,000 in gold and 130,000 khaki uniforms enough to last the army four years. ' He has also captured over 100,000 horses and 6000 prisoners. Ho and his forces alono have inflicted on the British losses over $25,000,000. Owing to the fact that the senate and the house will meet jointly the 13th to canvass the presidential vote, a number of members of both houses are cancell ing engagements to make speeches on the 12th. Several such engagements bad been made for speeches in honor of Lincoln's birthday without taking into account the important function for the 13th. The successes of the I Smith African! General Dewet in his enponntprs with I the British commanders has led Ger man sympathisers with the Boer cause to look un the perioral' fnmilv tno In this their investigations have not borne much fruit. All that thev have been able to learn is that the name Dewet is neither German nor French, but it is often met with in Belgium. At the weeklv meetino of the Motrin. dist preachers of Philadelphia a petition to President McK adopted offerine succestions as' to tho government to be established in the I bilippmes by congress. It declares 111 favor of "absolute civil and mluinna liberty, with a the Ipl'I and mriNtitn. tional protection which such liberty enjoys in this republic, and "a free ami unaectamn school system." The purchaso of the .Southern Pacifte by Union Pacific intereBts required $70,000,000 in cash. Mrs. Samuel Wolcott, 79 years ".of age, mother of Senator E. O. Wolcott, of Colorado, died iu Long Meadow, Mass,, Monday. - Belgian capital has acquired a con trolling interest in the American un dertaking to construct the railroad from Canton to Hankow, in China. Henry Arthur and Clifford Chris tian, two young men who had been ar rested for interfering with a dance, were burned to death in the jail at Columbia, Mo. . . , Typographical Union No. 6 has de cided by formal vote to withdraw the boycott against the New York Sun and to take no further hostile steps against that newspaper. - The trial of Frank H. Hamilton, the newspaper reporter, for tho murder of Leonard K. Day, the young million aire, was begun In tho district court at Minneapolis, Monday. Twelve of the 1G Chinamen recently arrested at North Burke on a charge of unlawfully entering the, United States have been discharged. No government othcial appeared at the hearing. Tho United States government has adhered formally to tho Brussels convention for the prevention and restriction of the sale of spiritous liquors in certain regions of Africa. Tho announcement that Senator Hill is not a candidate for the presidential nomination 01 his party in f 1904 mado by the Albany correspondent of Leslio's Weekly in the current issue. It is said that the matter of reduced rates for tho Epworth league national convention to be held at San Francisco next July has been placed in the hands of the presidents of the' western' lines Vice-President-elect and Mrs. ..Theo dore Roosevelt will go to . Washington March 2, and during their stay there will be the . guests of Mrs. Roosevelt's brother-in-law and sister, .Commander and Mrs. Cowles. . Bernett Riplev, of Henry countv, Kentucky, was indicted as an accessory to the murder of William Goebol and was arrested at his home and corried to Fronkfort. He is of a distinguished lamily and - is a larmer. Dr. Frank W. Guneaulus severed his official, connection with the Armour In stitute, Chicago, when his resignation as president went into effect. His suc cessor has not been selected. Ho resigns so he can devote all his energies to nis church. . ' t ; 4 Terry McGovern hns been matched to fight Tim Haggerty, of Australia, who, it is claimed, is the champion of his class in that country. Tho fight will take place April 30, at 126 pounds, for a purse of $5000, at a place not decided upon. The consolidation of the largest furniture companies in Grand Rapids, Mich,, is now practically assured. The combination will, include 14 of tho leading case-goods plants, representing assets of $5,000,000, with a total out put of $6,000,000 annually. The cut nail pool hns nnnuunced an increased prices of five cents a keg, to go into effect at once. Cut or all style iron nails have been sell ma: tor oix months at $1,95 a keg in carload lots to jobbers, the net once advanced the quotation to $2 per keg. In the Utah legislature the senate adopted a resolution naemorialiaing congress to ' call a convention . for the purpose of amending the constitution of the United States, to provide for the election of United States senators by tne direct vote 01 tho people By : an explosion ; of 700 quarts of nitro glycerjne at the magazine of the James Belt Torpedo company, four miles northeast of Alexandria, Indiana, Percy Fort, a carrier, with his team of horses, were blown to atoms, not a vestigo having since been found. ' ' Two hundred and fifty saloonkeepers were arrseted in Chicago Monday, charged with r keeping ' their places open on Sunday, it is said this action is but the forerunner of what is in store for every saloonkeeper in Chicago Who sells liquor oh; Sunday. uuring uer stay in uiiicago, JMme. Sarah Bernhardt took out a life in surance policy for $100,000, naming her son-- Maurice Bernhardt as the beneficiary,- The annual premium will be $7800, Notwithstanding the madame's 57 years, the examining physician reported her to be in excel lent physical condition. Rev. Jospeh Kellar, secretary to Rt. Rev. Bishop Starkey, pastor of Trinity Episcopal mission in Arlington, N. J., and chaplain of the First New Jersey regiment, was shot and seriously wounded by Thomas B. Barker in Arlington Sunday. The shooting, it is said, was the result of a disclosure made by Barker's wife, although Kollar denies the accusation. The military government at Havana, will demand a cash bond from C. F. W. Neely, the alleged defaulter. What the amount will be has not been stated, as Neely's lawyer absolutely re fuses to deposit cash, fearing it will be seized. The charges will aggregate an embezzlement of over $100,000, with the possibility of the amount be ing materially increased. John G. Woolley candidate for presi dent the United States on the pro hibition ticket in 1900 while com mending the course of Mrs. Nation in Kansas deprecntes her proposed visit to Chicago.. Mr. Woolley takes the position that the saloons of Chicago are licensed by the law and that no one has the light to interfere with them except the state legislature. Eugene I. Gowell visited police headquarters in Chicago a few davs ago' and announced that he was the" long sought for Charlie Ross. He says- he was brought un in Los Angeles, Calif., bv Carrie Robbins, who ho believed to be his mother. She married ono John or William Gowell, and Roei took her husband's name. The fact that ho was only an adopted child was told him by his half-brother Clarence. Some years ago ho left home, and has since traveled about the country. Mr. and Mrs. Gowell still live in Los Angeles Some time ago he told his story, in Logaasport, Ind., and was adjudged insane for his pains. Saved His Brother's Llfs. . Grant Hinkel callmitlv feet into tho Willamette river, nenr the eastern end of the steel biidge at Portland, Sunday morning early, and 8ved his brother. Jnsnnh Minimal from drowning. Grant is 34 years old', and Josenh 43. The hrnthnm ifw walking across a trestle railroad bridge to reach Joseph Hinkei's scow, where they proposed to sleep, when Joseph, who was intoxicated, full into the water 40 feet below Ihem. "Murder," he yelled, and without waiting to divest himself of his clothing, , Grant dived, and supported his brother until assistance arrived. At tho police station where tho men were taken Grant Hinkel suffered from hysteria, and he wept and cried for his brother who said: "Don't worry about me, Grant I'm not drunk. It's anuther fellow." The brothers own a ranch; near Nehalem, and Joseph Hinkel was formerly a fireman on the Albina ferryboat. . j PACIFIC NORTHWEST NEWS. Mrs. L. D. Small died at the family home in Salem Tuesday. Joseph Holman, a cook, died Sunday at St. Mary's hospital, Walla Walla., There is a i growing' sentiment in Walla , Walla -and ' throughout ' that county in favor of removing the, state capital from Olympia to Tacoma. Receipts of the Portland postofEce for January, 1901, wero $21,405.79. The receipts for the samo month last year were $20,014.48, an increase this ' year of $1391.31. Charles M. Thompson won out on all three counts in tho divorce Suit against his wife, Erminio Thompson, by tho decision handed down by Judge Clelland in Portland. - ' J. A. Long has been found guilty at Portland of robbing the safe of the Blue Mountain Ice company in that city several weeks ago. His wife re fused to testify in the case. Mrs. Ellen Hubbard, a prominent Clackamas county pioneer, residing at Carlton, died Saturday. She left nine children. Her husband, the late Charles O, Hubbard, died about a year ago. Multnomah county's tax levy this year for county purposes will be 5a mills, 4 for general expenses and for roads, which on the valuation of $32,630,987 will produce a revenue of $179,519., Mrs. Eliza Geer, the wife of Her man Geer, died at her home at The Cove, Union county, Tuesday. Sho leaves a husband and two sons, Judd Geer, 'deputy fruit inspector, and Blaine Geer. '' A rally of strength by Frank and MacGinnis in the senatorial contest in Montana resulted in a tie vote, the ballot being: Mantle 31, MacGinnis IS, Frank IS, Cooper 8, Coburu 5, ecatterinH, 8. The members of the Idaho legislature have canvassed the proposition to visit the Oregon legislature, and it is almost certain the trip will be mado. Lead ing members of both houses eay they favor the plan. Eleven prominent citizens of Centra lia were arrested, charged with incit ing riot. In the effort to prevent liquor selling ou Sunday, it is charged, they endeavored to get evidence by peeping over a transom. Jacob L. Myers, a Mexican war veteran, died at the Soldiers' Home at Pvoseburg, aged 79 years. He was one of thy oldest members of the home, having entered the institution soon after its opening. It is reported that a syndicate of Eastern captalists have opened nego tiations for the purchase of the Cougar mine, located about three miles north of Granite and owned by J. W. Larkin and D. R. livans. ' Tho seventh annual Carnot medal debate between Stanford university and tho University of California was won by W. A. Morris, of Stanford, who ia a senior in history, and regis ters from Salem, Or. In a qnarrol between Floyd Vaughan and W. A. White at Eugene, Vaughan stabbed White three times in the shoulder, but tho wounds are not seri ous. ..White spoke of Mrs. Vaughan iu an objectionable way. David Monnastes, a resident of Port land since 1852, died at his home, in that city, Sunday, at the age of 81. Ho had been in his usual good health until about tiirea.weeks ago, when he as attacked with la grippe. The United States transport Sheri dan arrived at San Francisco, Wed nesday, 27 days from Manila. She re turned in haj last and bason board 27 officers and 640 men of the Thirty seventh volunteer regiment. E. B. IJanley, formerly of Harney county, where for many years he was engaged in tho cattle business, has re turned from the Klondike country where he went several years ago, being associated there with the famous Jack Dalton. The Astoria citv council Mnnrlau mm. ning passed an ordinance granting to luaiuu rouru, r. n. Bioices ana U. tl. VsmQ a 75-Ve.ir Rtrent. T.lilumw fravw.l.iaa 011 certain named streets, being a con tiuous route lrom the eastern to the western limits of th city. The Corner Stone of the r.rnmatnriiim of the Portland Cremation Association was laid Tuesday at the grounds of the OrCL'OIl CitV milwnv Him, Sullan by the Masonic grand lodge of Oregon' in uie presence 01 a large gathering of residents from Portland and t.h nr. roundinge. . , , TWO fimnlovUfl ft a rinnffllntnv Vf fli., 1 .' " " v. " .."n.ui.iui yj x ,m Northerh Pacific Tnm H arriaAii and Shorty Taylor, were burned to death in a cabin four miles above Kendrick, Idaho, Monday., The men had been in iveiiunuK ior some days on a pro tracted spree and were drunk when they returned to their cabin. Philemon Vawtai- the neat known mnnPAmnf thin 01 - I w-.jvi 111110 bvjvijuu, died at tho home of his Bon, E. J. Crawford, in Eugene a few days ago, aged 86 years. He camo to Oregon in isai lrom Madison, Ind., where he waa born and -raised. H maHo v,a - across the plains with an ox team, in company with 22 wagons. Mrs. Martha TCerna a 1852, died at her home at Woodstock near Portland. Thnro, i . iiuUj j wauuttijr u9 after an illness of four weeks. She was norn in marion county, Ohio, in 1828. Afterwards she mnvoH to Indiana, where she was married to J. A. Kerns. In 1852. in a wagon draw'n by oxen, they journeyed west- waru, ana arrived in Oregon the latter part of that same vear. RELIEF FOR VOLUNTEERS. The Men of Second Oregon Volunteer May Be Reimbursed. The bill introduced in the Oregon legislature by Poorman. and passed in tho house Thursday as reported that day in the East Oregonian, to reim burse the enlisted men of the Second Oregon volunteers and Battery A for clothing issued to them by the state of Oregon and compelled to. pay for the same, is as follows: "Section 1. That the sum of $12, 000, or so much thereof as is necessary, be, and the same is, hereby appro priated from any money in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated to reimburse the enlisted men of tho above commands. "Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of the adjutant-general of the state of 'Oregon, without extra compensation, to pay to each and every enlisted man of the above commands, or his legal repesen tatives, the amount paid for state clothing by him, as shown . by tho muster-out rolls of those commands now on file in the adjutant general's office, not to exceed the sum of $11 to any one man." Mrs. Mary Crow, aged 90 years, died at her home at Lorane, 12 miles from Cottage Grove, Thursday night. Wits her husband, John Crow, she came to Oregon in 1S52. She was born in Kentucky, moved to Missouri, from there . to low, . thence journeying across the plains to this state. For 48 years she had resided at the scene of her death. Her husband, John Crow, died in 18fi9. .