rtr iteMiM- ii.ir.ir BROKDHXE Tim riurxavs raram.. L THE BROAd-AXE;, tM tk QUh Ul- thi rioriirArm, THE BROAD-AXE, i IJa Bvarr Tim. Weee4 "WW TO THE LINK, LET THE CHIP ALL WHIRS THET MAT.' EUGENE, LANE1 COUNTY, ORE. IfaDNESDAYV MAY 24, 1899. VOL. IV NO. 2. SAME OLU DRUNK. 11 tutor j of American Copper headiaru Itepeats ltnelf. , Oregon City, May 12 In In the writer wcut to Springfield, III , 10 teuoive uu commission I it ihi VolunUer. army. Petri jt it) olJ Pick Yates was governor of that grtat and patriotic state. Thou eauds Of brave Illinois soldiers rere in the field fighting fjr the honor 61 "their nation and for the sUrry ting, that had wrsppt-d ita folds around our hearts within the past two years In a way which we had never before dreamed of. Thousands more of thorn were ly ing In hcnnred grave un South ern hillsides, and thousands of Illinois homrs were desolate by reason of the Iocs of loved one who had laid down their live that the nation might live. - Every me of thnae brave turn had gone willingly, nay, more, they had atriven with each other fur the opportunity to g", juxt as our brave , boye strove for the, chance to follow that Ji'iir old fl.ig in ths present war. The tear t)i;it w,-ro nhrd over the vacant chairs throughout Illinois were robbed of much of their bitterness by tho thought of glorious cause for which those I dear ones had fallen. The wholo of that grentft.Atoaasnlil.no with patriotism, and tho mirfortuneH which hnd IwUIh-n our armies had served only to add fuel to the flame, and our hrtve old. gov ernor heard from every , part of the atate earnest and ' patriotic worda cheering him on in his tnadra.il upholding of the admin istration in the almoat aaperhuinan work which it had been forced to undertake, just aa our own gov ernor of Oregon is hearing the words of encouragement today. There in the atreeta of the capital of niinola marched a procession of about SIX) men, gutherod by the utmost exertioa from all parts of the state, brought there by the Teaders of the democratic party in am attempt to manufacture olili csl capital, and along the ranks were banners and transparencies which read. "The war in a fail ure," 'Give us peace at any price,'' "Let tho erring si ate go in peaoe," Give ua back our boy," "Cease-this unholy war Upon our injured brothers." A brass band 11 them playing1 mi l ncholy dirges. The men upou tho sidewalk turned their back; tho women in the bouses ahut their doors.- Tho procession marched, the band played, the democratic managers presumably laud atich exponaca. na they had agreed to, the brave men of Illinois kept right on going t war, our bravo old governor kept right on supporting tho administration, the government kept right on prav ea ting the war to its glorious and successful termination, and we left thoee miserable, dirty cowards to hang up their banners and trans parencies until some future event should give theni another chance to glory in their cowardice, treason and shams and march beneath v Ihtm again. It seems as if the tine has oome. The men who carried those banners arc, it is to be hoped, all dead, but, unfWtu- , nately for the honor of our nation, they seem to have been, prolific. I would suggest to their oowardly progeny from whom we are now occasionally hearing that those banners have probably been handed down as heirlooms, and if they earch carfully in their garrets tbsy will find them. If thee "dastardly sous of dastardly sites" . will hunt them upend ''fall in," their wants will be atUtndod to and they furnished with a big picture of Aguinaldo to hnd the procession. As there is not a brass Land in the stale that would bo caught in their company, a choir of native Filipinos will be furnished to march- in front whistleing all that they can learn of the tune, "It's the Bams Old Drunk." C. E. Loom is. Rear Admiral Watson has been ordered to the Asiatic naval station to succeed Dewey. The .'resident at Hot Spring. 4 ' Hot Springs, Va., May 9. Pres ident MeJUnley has had a day of thorough rest and Comfort at the Hotel lI)inutiaU here. Official business did not intrudo to disturb Mm,nordid Importunate caller crowd ta seek his favor. The guests seemed to know that his obJt was freedom from exertion, and thi thy aecordud him. lie spent most of the dy in the apart ments set aside for bis party or on the wide porches upon wbi4i his windows cened. During the morning he once aiaolUd through the corridor to the hotel oRlce. After a nap and luncheon he enjoyed a social chat with Secre tary (iage, Kenutor Fairbanks, who came to see the secretary, and John C New, of Indiana poll's. A few minutes were given to Secretary Cortelynu and Stenographer Humes and later, garbed in a short sack coat and Itorby hat, the only chango from his daily dress, he started for a walk, with Secretary Gage on his right and (Senator Fairbanks on hi left. As they went along, the president's brisk gait ami long stridu, jovial dispoxi tion and-uprigLt shoulders gave an unimpeachable denial of k la laments that his health is impaired beyond n nect-ssity for a brief respite from tho tare of presidential life. a - -a The Salem Man's Letter. Capitol Journal: ''I have lost a good deal of love of country in the last year, and eopecially for Ore gon for she is the most ungrateful ! .i.i. I- . V. - :. v : niaio in viio uiiiin. f.vrrr rer ment here has received a cablegram from their legislature conveying a vote of thanks from the people to theni for their bravery; and every regimpntlh.tt has had a hard fight and lost men has received a dispatch from their governor com plimenting them on their conduct; and neirly every state, if not every one, has voted extra p.y to her UCV " '"""."'thor of "Pilgrim's Progress- was a but from Oregon never, word norl,- . a sign that she knows she has men here. Yet on the 2.th of February the Second Oregons made three charges on th trenches , that were veritible fortifications, and which many military men had said could ont be taken without artillery, but never a gun of artillery helped them. They fought all day and only stopped when the enemy hnd crossed a deep river and destroyed the1ridges behind them. We even drove them from their trenches scross th river by the heavy fire we jHJured into them, and early the next morning crossed the river and drove thvm from two more linca of trenches. This was done Hy the men from Oregon, done under trio heat of a tropic sun with the thermometer at 125 degrees or 130 degrees and little water to be had. And Oregon legislators in their great munificence propose to "give us first chance at state jobs." No one in the regiment had asked for any money or ex pes ted any from the atate, and nothing would have been thought of it if they had not proposed it themselves and then raised a howl. Well I suppose that is the reason we. received . no cablegram of congratulation either it would havo cost a few dollars to send it. Generous, noble hearted citixens of Orrgonl By the way, I suppose they expect as many of the boys as can conveniently die to do so, iff ordor to be in on that monument. Another thing noble T Oregon has done for her men she gave them old ragged wornout uuifornis and then charged theni 18.41 for them more than tho government chatgos for new ones. Other states presented their men with new outfits." He passed his plate, "Oh, Ted dy!'' sufd I, "Now many times have you had 'more tIoT" lie thought an instant, then gravely spoke: "I'm sure I can't tell. My picclomctot's broke." Experiments at Bandy Hook have demonstrated that wet gun cotton packed in shells may be handled with safety and thrown rom guns without rk ot pre 'mature explosion. H no I led. Beef Plenty Good Enough. Secretary Alger showed his met tle sgain when be raid at Ietrojt, while speaking of the achieve ments of our soldiers iu the late war: "Suj js!ng they had a little beef spoiled; what of itT If they had hud no bucf at all, they would hnvu had more than General 'Joe' U'h'M-ler and I had in that other war." That's iho way to treat the whole matter. Rotten beef or no beef at all; what is the oddsT Either was good enough for sol diara engaged in ao glorious a war. Anybody who asks why the army was not supplied with live beefJ or what the influence was which j compelled the commissary depart ment ti buy only canned beef, or who made money out of the canned beef contracts, is a bad American and- traitor, and no attention should Imi paid to bim. Under the Alger method of supplying an army, the soldiers should be thankful for anything' at all to eat. If they have only putrid Lx'tf, they should consols them avlves with the thought that when AlguY himself waa a soldier in the war of the' rebellion, he had no beef at all. Alger by the way, betrays a inugnificent "nerve" when he refers to his own war record. New York Evening I'jst. ow Don't Don't snub a loy lecause he wears shabby clothes. When Kdi son, the inventor of the telephone, first entered Ronton, he wore a pair nt vllmr !itin liriMwOirn in the ... . . r Don't snub a boy because bis home in plain and unpretending. Abraham Lincoln's early honle waH a log cabin. . Don't snub a boy because of the ignorance of his parents. Shake- spcare, the world's pott, was ths son of a man who was unable to Write his own name. Don't siinb a boy because be 'chooses a humble trade. The au- Don't snub ft boy because of physical disability. Miiton wa blind. Don't snub a boy because of bis dullness in lessons. Ifogsrth, the celebrated painter and engraver, was a stupid boy at his books. Don't snub sny one; not alone becanso some day they may out strip you In the race of life, but because it is neither kind, nor right, nor Christian. Greek Thoughts. Worse Tbah Death. The Neapolitans in general hold drunkenness in very great abhor rence. It is said among them that a nobleman, having murdered an other in a fit of jealousy, waa con demned to suffer death, llis life was offered him on the sole con dition of sayiug that when he committed the deed he wss intox icated. He exclaimed, "I would rather suffer a thousand deaths than bring eternal disgrace on my family by confessing" the disgrace ful erime of drunkenness." He persisted, and was ex eon ted. May tUry the llatehet Attorney L. B. Cox of Portland a . . m wno nas just returned Irotn . a month's trip through the East, ex presses me opinion ih.u some leader will arise before the next presidential campaign who will be able to unite the warring democrat 10 factions under one banner. He believes that tho gold bugs apd the ailverbuga will march side by aide and tnat the Issue will bo some thiug of greater importance than tho money question. Trusts and expansion, Mr. Cox believoa, will figure more promin ently as campaign issues in 1000 than the issues that have divideI the democratio party in the past and that upon these new issues democracy will present a solid front. Legal proceedings fjr man slaughter havo been Instituted against Christian science healers In New York, based upon the death of patients under their care. ' TRAIN WRECK. The EofflM b4 Fife Losvled Cin;Wrre Derailed. J ftowburg BvU. Another fatal train Wreck eeeur e edon the Southern rac.B4 near Uleobrook Saturday. At 11:15 the news was wired t tie office at Hosehurg that No. C2, the fast freight, southbound,' which left Roseburg at 8:80 p. n. pulled by one of the big A. & 0. engines, No. 18, wss In the- ditch. The eiew that went out on her was Conduc tor E. A. EverVftt end Prakemsn J. W. Tynan and B. R. McDaniels; Engineer Jams McCalley wa at the throttle and James Merritaan was his fireman. As soon as Can due tor Everlon conld hurry back to the telegraph office at Riddle, six miles awny, he -'wired the news te the sgent at Roseburg. - A wreck ing train was at once mad up and placed in charge of Conductor C. L. Minkler and Kngineer Fitch. In the absence of Dr. Twitchell, com pany surgeon, the train pulled ont to pick up a doctor , at Myrtle Creek, Dr. B. F. Fallin being laker, from there. At Riddle this train was met by An improvised train consisting of a caboose and engine in charge of Conductor Gregory and Engineer Hendricks, carrying the dead body of Engineer McCalley and Fireman Merriraan who was injured. The trainmen tell the story of the wreck in subttance as follows: The engine and five loaded cars left the tiark on a carve about six miles south of Riddle at point known as1 Rattlesnake Point and plunged over a perpendicular bank about 25 feet high, stopping upon a gravelbar at the edge of Cow creek. The engine turned over twice and ft carload of flour piled ! on top of it. The Unk was bottom side on with Fireman Merriman underneath. When Conductor Ev erton rushed in through the smoke and steam he found Kngineer Mc Calley standing erect holding to the reverse lever with one baud and the other over his mouth. On be ing carried out be looked at his terribly scalded hands and chest and exclaimed: "My God, this is awful!" He only lived a few min utes. Fireman Merriman was taken out unconscious and upon regsining consciousness only re membered that Jim called to bim not to jump. He is badly bruised about the head and L tegs but his injuries are not considered danger ous, lie was tsken to Mr. Cur rier's boarding home and is under the care of Dr. TwiU.kclL One of tffo men who were steal ing a ride on a car of lumber was instantly killed and the body was leil out there awaiting the orders of the coroner. At preeeut r.othicg is known as to his identity. Of the eighteen cars in the train five went over the bank, but the track waa not badly torn up and was soon repaired. Abused Stage Home. A recent traveler through . East ern Oregon, who does not like to have his name mentioned, thinks there is much work for the Oregon Humane Society among the stage routes and along the freight wagon highways, as hordes are frequently overworked, underfed, and abused, contrary to the statutes made and provided in such cases. On one stage line, he says, horses are doily compelled to travel 30 mjles with out rest or feed, and in the long "single line" freight teams, many horses show positive signs of misuse.' He thinks tho cans of over working horses by stage companies lies In the fact that mail contracts bare been taken by Eastern parlies at figures so low that good stock and good treatment are out of the question. As to .freight . teams, drivers hare so long looked upon horses as cheap affairs, to be at leisure, that many hare lost all feeling for the brutes. He area a big field for humane work among these teamsters, but thinks stage' drivers are not to blnme, and can not do otherwise than "pound 'em on the back" while schedule time has to lie made with an insuf ficieut number of ill treated horses. Betf, Jlccf,. Boef. Secretary Alger's remark about "Joe Wheeler and 1" remind one Jour influence to hare them sent of the now popular poem, "Hoch J home Many ' of the in fear they der Kaiser." Joe Wheeler's wsri"ill never" see God'" country record, wat first class, even If he (again. .Colonel Strtseoberg clrew- did fight on the losing ride. If Alger didn't get beef to cat .during the war of the rtbelllon, it was because it wasn't served at the hotels at which he htopped while absent without leave from his com mand, the Fifth Michigan cavalry. Perhaps the fact that he couldn't get bees' caused bim to resign and go horn before tho war was over. Joe VheIer, it may be remarked, fought right .up to Appomattox. U.. Alger would, resign just once more, the people could cheerfully forgive him, but theic seems to be no prospect of him doing anything so thoroughly sensible. The Tug. Now Bre're Tug ar'nt you ashamed? Moral. . Many a great event has been swung upon the performance of & small deed; many a drooping soul hss been inspired to nobler living by a kind word ' spoken in season. To wear the white rib bon, to be one of fonr or five who band themselves together sgaiost this iniquitous liquor business, are vtry small things to do; -but can wo fathom thej'depths of in fluence that the bow of white may exert or the lives this email band may win Crom the ways of sin? Giving your mite for the susten ance of the cause, sending ycur small sprigs of . dainty flowers to brighten the lives of the sick, or devoting a few minutes each week to scattering the truths of temper ance to. those indifferent to or blind concerning the true fact of intemperance thess are all trifles w . v. ard we mniaimM say paragingly ak, "Of what valu ere these . small exertions?'' a K we T.-OU1U tear ood , veil irom the unseen results of human action The encouraging features of good conduct reets in the fact , that it- final result id subjective as well a; objective. In truth, all conduct ends in this dual manner, whether it Ve Sod or bad. A word spoken or deed executed affects the per former with -a force equal to that exerted upon the external world, thus applying to moral conduct the philosophic principle concern ing action and reaction. Union Signal. The Subjection of the Filipinos. From the New York Eveninc Post detailing a lecture of in-rgeant Frits Andreas late of the United States Volunteer Signal Corps, de livered in Brooklyn, N Y, recently we publish some extracts : Some mountain scenes g'xve an idea of the ravines and jungles into which our troops must plunge if they undertake to suojugnte the whole of Luxon. Sergeant Andreae waa the first man in the United States service to penetrate the in terior of the island. In bis opinion the only, way to bring it under control would be to span it with a cordonof " troops -who should ad vance in unbroken line towards the north, crushing the natives as they went. This would require at least ten times as large an army as is now in the Philippines. Incidentally the lecturer men tioned that the Filipinos were now being supplied threfftgh Chinese sgents at Hong Kong with arms manufactured by American firms. In reply to questions askefl after the lecture by persons in the audi ence, Sergeant Audread said that while many of the inhabitants of the Philippines were savages it was not such we were fighting, but rather the most intelligent and patriotic class. To a question about the United States army the reply wss: "It is a splendid body ot men. The American soldier wins because of his individual initiative; he feels ho is something mora than a machine. But in spile of success the men want to come home. AU the letters 1 receive from comrades express this desire. (icuoralOlis misrepresents the facts when he says that the volunteers want to stay." Iu an iutcniew with an Evening Post reporter, Sergeant" Andrea said: "All the letters wc receive J from oof comrades bee; ni t use lated among his nuxt a paper, divided into two columns, one for the names of men who wished to go home if their services were ro longer needed, the other for the names of those who wislted to be sent home in any ease. All but two put their names in the second column, which so displeased Colonel Stot:nb Tg that he did not forward the petition to Washington as he had agreed to do. . - "Sergt D p Morgan, of the signal corps, writes to me: H is a shame to slaughter these people as they are being slaughtered. No wonder they can't shoot, for . our navy throws its -search-lights in their faces. We can see them, while they can see nothing.' Another member of the corps, writing ef the Filipinos' courage, says: 'They fight like lions.'" (Jnite Refrefihfng. Ten years of domestic trouble and quarreling in an Atchison family have all been due to the fact that the wife, upon returning from a three months' visit out of! town, foond a hairpin in her hug land's room. His conduct had been faultier before the discovery, but that didn't explain away the hairpin, and the man has been on the witness-Aland every minute of, the ten years intervening. rants 1 aes Dewey. The Broad-Axe ia at a loss to account for such conduct on the' part of the wife about a hairpin being found in her husband's room. The Broad-Axe knows of a safety pin being found in a husband's room on the return of his wife from a three months visit out of town. Has'nt the husband a right to use either kind of pin, if busi ness demands it,' witho'ut kick from the wifn especially if she lias just returned from a tLree months visit to some fashionable watering place? Now say. Some Spotted-tall Methods. Commended to the consideration of Recorder Dorris of Eueene. One James Turk wss this morn ing brought before Recorder Judab, upon complaint of a South Salem lady, charged with trespass, he having slept in an unused barn upon premises occupied by her. The man is a fisherman, who bad been in the mines south of here, and is on his way home to Astoria. He plead guilty to the charge, but as to all appearances, be was not a rank hobo, but a hard work ing man out of luck, Recorder Ju dah withheld formal arraign ments and save the man rtil 2 o'clock to leave town. This case cost the public not one cent for court expenses or boarding the prisoner, whereas a bill might have been run up " for about $12 court fees and 25 days' board in the county jail, or the city mulcted in a board bill for 20 days. Thus - doth - the - spotted tailed, mongrel city administration graft the public treasury. -Salem Journal. Weather Bureau. . WESTERN OKKtiON. For the week ending Monday, May 15, 1S90. ,: ' Weathkr. Cool, cloudy weather and frequent rains prevailed during the past week. The mean' tem- perature averaged 50 deg., which is 2 deg. lower t'jan for the preceding week and 9 deg. lower than for the corresponding week latt year. The maximum "temperatures ranged fcoiu 50 deg. to 70 deg. and ths minimum from 34 deg. ta 43 deg. Frosts .occurred Friday morning. The total rainfall for the week ranged from 0.1 C of an inch in the southern counties to over one inch along the coast. Cuors. The reports Indicate that injury has been done to the prune crop, especially to the Italian variety. From some sections the reports indicate an absolute failure; from others, that a fair crop will mature. The bloom was as full as usual, but when the fruit began to i-el it also began to fall iroui the trees. The Italian is t!ie principal variety of prunes' grown, "and a short crop in that variety means jt J . sLortnjre in the total crop. That actual condition Cjuoot bo deter-, mined for a week or two note. Tho injury is supposed to have ,bee'n done oy Xhe "February frel7 assisted by the celd rains el -April and May. The peach crop now promises to be good in the southern counties, nut rot an average In the northern counties. Cherries J are setting fairly well; while dropping prevails, a good orop ia expected. Apricots and quinces are undoubW edly injured and a shortage will result. Pears and apples appeat to be. in about normal emditioat Strawberries are ripening in the southern counties. The first box waa received on the 11th inat irean? Roseburg. AU bemee promise a normal yield. ' - The (Train crop is in good eon ditlon; fall and winter sown grain are making slow, but strong, growth. Spring plowing and seed ing continue. Much of the low land is yet too wet to plow. - Un less adverse conditions pievail dar ing June, the grain crop will be as good as it tnually is, the tprieg acreage being greater than in nor mal years. Warmer weather lees rain and more tunshine are greatly needed. Glippiijgs ari Goryrrerjt. Brigadier-General Charles ' P. En pan who.was court-martialed for n'8 attack upon General Miles be fore the wtr investigating commis sion, has been cxpi-lled from the Loyal Legion by a vote of 100 to 40. The Loyal Legion ecbos the sen timent of the multitude of Ameri can citizens. -In Ms?sachixetts the avers ire pay of male teachers is 144.80 per month; of female teachers, I52J20. In Boston the average pay of male teachers is fzoi.60; ot female teach ers, 173.33. In Wyoming where women Tote it has for many year been the law that men and worsen in the employ of the state shall re ceive equal pay for equal work. In Utah two years a no the news that full suffrage had been granted to Women was quickly followed by the announcement thntthe Utah legis lature had passed a bill, by which female teachers in the public school were to receive the same' pay''ae male teachers, provided tbey held certificates of the same grade. in ounce of exjeriment-ia worth a (on of theoroy. - The Wotuau'g Journal. We see no reason why our moth ers, wives and sisters should not recti ve the same pay as our fathers and brothers, provided, tbey per form the same service . for similar work. ' The election on May JO, 189S at Horrodsburg, Ky., at which the majority was against the sale of liquor, and the validity of which was disputed, has been declared valid by the court of appeals. " 'I And this too jn a state where it is said Bourbon whiskey has Vim out of mind been used as a common bevercge. The world mores. ' Roicburc Review: Col Frederick Funston, the Kansas officer soon to be promoted to a brigadier getteral- p man being a hero and a patriot aod not worabJppiaav Mark Hanna aud the gold standard. ' t ' -We hardly think President Mo Kinley can be charged with a fail ure ' to reward merit as it, ha developed during ibis watt ou account of the poll ties ot the sol diar. Let the o&sea of JTritatiugU fCee and Joe Wheeler . stand as eetdfence of the preiident'e sincerity in the promotion of Fred,Funlont aod It' ua not grudge praise when aird wTtesu due. , , i The municipal council ol Vienna, Austria, has sppropriated f 00,- 0U0 for the.esUbJUhmertt.ef an eleclrie light and power, plant for both public sal private use, . , " .- i ,i. The Rosttburg S JJiers' Home is how filled to -ita. utmost capacity, there being 00 members iij that institution. Tbe proposed laundry andchael will not be built this year on account of the shortage of funds, the reduction f"i h ppro priation from 12,000 ' io'flO.OOO by the late lecmUture seriously haaipefiuj ojieraUous.