N E W BE R G GRAPHIC. A D T X B T I8 IN O C olua...— ..... f t I C o l u m n . ......... Frol fMtloaal Carda... BATH . ..Twenty Dollart ____ Toa Dollart ........ Oat Dollar B eadlac K o tlta t W ill Bo l a t i r t e « a « «Ma B ato o t T oa Coate F o r U bo . advertíalos Billa Collected Monthly C H A P T E R X. Long since the moon has mounted the heavens; now it Is at its full. A myriad stars keep company with it, the hush of sleeping nature pays homage io i;. Sol­ emnly, slowly, from the old belfry tower the twelve strokes of midnight have sounded on the air. Vera, rising cautiously from beside Gri- aelda, who is, as usual, sleeping the sleep o f the just, slips gently on to the bare white across which the moonbeams are traveling delicately. Sleep has deserted her. Weary at last of her efforts to lose herself and her hate­ ful thoughts in unconsciousness, she de­ termines to rise and try what study may do for her. She steps lightly across the room, opens the door aud speeds with all haste over the corridor, gaunt and ghost­ ly in the dim light, down the grand old staircase, and enters a room on the left o f the library, where one day she made the discovery that comfort was to be found. Striking a match, she lights a lamp upon a side table aud proceeds to exam­ ine the book shelves. Taking down one that she thinks will please her, Vera kneels upon one of the deep window seats, looks outward, trying to pierce the soft and scented gloom. The opening of the door rouses her. It is quite an hour later—an hour forgotten by her as she read. W ith a sudden start she looks up, turning her face over her shoulder to the door, to see who can be coming in at this unholy hour. H er heart grows cold within her as she sees —Seaton Dysart! In silence they stare at each other. Vera, Indeed, so great is her astonish­ ment, forgets to rise, but sits there curl­ ed up among her furs, with a little frozen look of fear aud detestation on her per­ fect face. “ I have disturbed you,” says Seaton at last, breaking the spell, and speaking in a distinctly unnatural tone. “ I did hope I should have found pri­ vacy somewhere, at some hour,” says she, coldly. “ I came for a book,” says he, contrite­ ly. “ Now that I am here, will you per­ mit me to say a few words in my own defense?" "Oh. defense!” says she, with undis­ guised scorn. "Certainly, i would prove to you how entirely you hsve wronged me,” says he, firmly. " I acknowledge that once my father expressed a wish that 1 should marry you,” coloring darkly, "always provided you were willing to accept me; and I " —slowly—“ acceded to that wish.” "B ut why, why?" demands she, flash­ ing round at him. “ I do not wonder at your question. It seems impossible there should be a rea- *on,” replies he, coldly; “ for ever since the first hour we met you have treated me with uniform unfriendliness, I had almost said discourtesy.” “ There is a reason, nevertheless,“ says she, hotly. She has come a step or two nearer to him, and her large, lustrous eyes, uplifted, seem to look defiance into his. “ Your reason I can fathom—but your father’s—that, I confees, puzzles me. Why should he, whose god is money, choose the penuiless daughter ^ of the brother he defrauded to be---- “ “ Defrauded?” interrupts Seaton, with a frown. “ Call it what you will,” with an ex­ pressive gesture of her hand—“ undertake his defense, too; but the fact remains that the iniquitous deed that gave to your father what should have been ours was undoubtedly drawn up by ray uncle. I have heard all about it a hundred times. Your father hardly denied it to mine when last writing to him. His taking us home to live with him was, I sup­ pose, a sort of reparation. T o marry me to you, and thus give me back the prop­ erty he Btole—is that a reparation, too?” She is as pale as death, and the hands that cling to the back of the chair near her are trembling. But her lips are firm and her eyes flashing. It occurs to Sea­ ton, gazing at her in breathless silence, that if she could have exterminated him then and there by a look she would have done it. “ You degrade yourself and me when you talk like that,” says Seaton, who is now as pale as she is. “ For heaven’s sake, try to remember how abominably you misrepresent the whole thing. I f my father had a freak of this kind in his head—a desire to see you married to his only son—sorely there was no discourtesy to you contained in such a desire. It was rather—you must see that—a well-meant arrangement on his part. It was more,” boldly. “ He loves me; in wishing to see you ray wife he paid you the highest compliment he could. I defy you to re­ gard it in any other light.” “ You plead his cause well—it is your own,” ssys «he, tapping the back of the chair with taper, angry fingers. “ W hy take the trouble? Do yon think you can bring me to view the case in a lenient light? Am I likely to forget that you— you aided and abetted your father in try ­ ing to force me into this detested mar­ riage?” “ Pray put that marriage out o f your head,” says he, slowly. “ You hsve taken it too seriously. I assure you I would not marry you now if you were as »-ill- lug as yon sre unvilling. I can hardly put it stronger.” "When my grandfather left this prop­ erty to your father," she says, slowly, “ he left it purposely unentailed. Your father, then, »e r e you to cross his wishes, could leave you, as I have been left, penniless. To avoid that, you would fall in with any of his views. You would even so fsr sacrifice yourself as to—mar­ ry me!” Oh, the contempt in her tone! There is a long pause. Then Seaton, striding forwsrd, seises her by both srms sod tnrns her more directly to the light. The grasp of his hsnds is ss a vise, and __afterward—It seemed to her that be hid. involuntarily, ss it were, shaken her slightly. N E W BE R G GRAPHIC. NEWBERG GRAPHIC. ■ C a a O K IP T IO N Dae Tear Mr Montha..... Throe Month. BATH. *1 ■aheortpUoB F rloo F a ya h lo la r a r l a h l r la Adtra VO L. X IV . NEW BERO , Y A M H IL L concentrated tone. She can see that his face is very white, and that it is with difficulty he restrains himself; she is con­ scious, too, perhaps, of feeling a little frightened. Then he puts her quickly from him and turns away. “ Pshaw, you are not worth It!” he says, his manner full of the most intense self-contempt. C H A P T E R X I. A gleam of moonlight coming through the open window puts the lamp to shame, snd compels Vera's attention. How sweet, how heasenly fair the gar­ den seems, wrapped in those pale, cold beams! She can see It from where she sits on the deep, cushioned seat of the old-fashioned window, and a longing to rise and go into it, to feel the tender night-wind boating on her burning fore­ head, takes possession o f her. Catching up a light shawl to cover the evening gown she wears, she steals, care­ fully as might a guilty soul, by Griselda’s bed, along the dusky corridor, dowu the staircase, and past the servants’ quar­ ters, where a light under Mrs. Orunch’s door »-arns her that that remorseless foe has as yet refused to surrender herself to slumber. A small door leading Into the garden is close to this, and moving swiftly up the narrow stone passage that brings her to it she opens the door, and so closing it after her that she can regain the house at any moment, she turns to find herself alone in the exquisite perfumed sileuce of the night. How long she thus gives herself up to the sweet new enjoyment of life she hardly knou-s until she hears the ancient belfry clock telling the midnight hour. It startles her. Has she indeed been here so long? What if Griselda should wake and be alarmed for her? She moves quickly In the direction of the house, and at last, regaining the Inner garden, begins to think her pleasant so­ journ at an end. She has neared the shrubberies and in­ voluntarily turns her glance their way as they lie upon her left; Involuntarily, too, she seeks to pierce the darkness that en­ velops them, when she stops, and presses her hand convulsively to her breast. Who Is It—what is it, moving there, In the mysterious gloom? “ Don't be frightened. It is I, Seaton,” says a most unwelcome voice. “ A h !” she says. She is angry beyond doubt, and still further angered by the kno»-ledge that there is more of relief than coldness in the simple exclamation. " I had no idea you were here at all,” she says, faintly, after a pause that has grown sufficiently long to be awkward. " I am afraid I have startled you. I f I had known I should not, of course, have come here.” "Y ou make it very hard for me,” she says, with a touch of passionate impa­ tience. "That is unjust,” says he, roused in turn. “ T o make yonr life easier is my heart's desire.” “ Are you succeeding, do you think? Does It," with gathering scorn, "make my part smoother, »h en you compel me to see that you stay away, or only come here at hours inconvenient to you, be­ cause—because o f me?" She turns aside sharply, ami walks a step or two away from him. Somehow at this instant, the growing chill o f the early night seems to strike more sharply on her senses, and a shiver not to be suppressed stirs her whole frame. “ You are cold," he exclaims, coming up to her with a hasty stride. “ YVhat madness It is, your being out at this hour! Come, come back to the house.” She agrees silently to this proposition, and follows him across the grass to the small oaken door that had given her egress—only to find it barred against her! Beaton, having tried It, glances at her in mute dismay. “ Gruneh must have fastened it, on her way to bed. The bolt is drawn,” says he, slowly. “ Do you mean that I can't get in?” asks she, as if unable to credit so terri ble an announcement. “ Oh, I dare say it can't be so bad as that,” hastily. “ Only,” hesitating, as if hardly knowing how to explain, “ the front door is of coarse locked and chain ed, and the servants, with the exception o f Gruneh, all asleep at the top of the house; a late arrangement of my father's, as the original servantV quarters lie be­ low. I am afraid, therefore, that if we knocked forever. It would have no effect. However, I can try to do something, but in the meantime you must not stay out here in the cold." "Y ou may feel It cold. I don’t,” re­ turns she .perversely. “ Not so long as the moonlight lasts, shall I find It lonely either. I,” raising her unfriendly, beau­ tiful eyes to his—" I assure you I shall be quite happy out hers, even though I stay till the day dawns and the doors are open again.” " 'Happy” ” As he repeats her word he looks at her with a keen scrutiny. " A word out o f place, surely; given the best conditions, I hardly dare to believe you could ever be 'happy' at Greycourt.” "Happy or unhappy,” says she. with quick resentment, her mind being dis­ tressed by this awkward fear of having to pass the night from nnder any roof, “ surely it can be nothing to you! Why affect an interest in one who Is as hate­ ful to you as I am?” A little fire has fallen into her tone, and there is ill-sup­ pressed contempt in the eyes she lifts to his. Perhaps he is driven by it into an anger that leads to his betrayal. "H atefu l to me! Do you think yon are that, Vera?" says he, In a low tone, bat one full of fierce and sadden passion— passion long suppressed. “ Do yon hon­ estly believe that?" His manner Is al­ most violent, and as be speaks be catches hntb her hands in his. and crushes them vehemently against bis breast. “ I would to heaven,” he says, miserably, “ that ” Uow dare y o u f he says. In a low. | that were so!” C O U N T Y , OREGON, F R ID A Y , F E B R U A R Y A m If stupefied by surprise, Vera stands motionless, her hands lying passively In his. Bhe Is aware that he Is looking at her, with a new, wild, strange expression in his eyes, but a horrible sense of being po»-erless to resist him numbs all her being. Aud suddenly, as she struggles with herself, he bends over her, aud without warning lifts her hands and presses warm, fervent kisses on the small, cold hands. Then she is aroused indeed from her odd lethargy, and by a sharp movement wrenches herself free. "D on 't," she cries, faintly; "tt la In­ sufferable! I cannot bear it! H ave you no sense of honor left?” Her tone calms him, but something within him revolts against the idea of apology. He loves her—let her know It. l ie will not go back from that, though her scorn slay him. “ Thare is nothing dishonorable,” he says, steadily. “ I lore yon; I am glad you know It. Despise me If you can, re­ ject me as I know you will, I am still the better for the thought that I have laid bare to you all my heart. And now— you cannot stay here,” he goes on quick­ ly, as though fearing to wait for her next words; “ the night Is cold and damp. There Is the summer house over there,” pointing in Its direction; "go and rest there, till I call you." Vera hastens to the shelter suggested, and sinkiug down upon the one seat It contains, a round rustic chair in the last stage of decay, gives way to the over­ powering fatigue that for the last hour has been oppressing her. Reluctantly she does this, and quite unconsciously. Obstinately determined to fight sleep to the last, she presently succumbs to that kindly tyrant, and falls into one of the most delicious slumbers she has ever yet enjoyed. How long it lasts she never knows, but when next she opens her eyes with a nervous start, the first flush of rosy du»-n is flooding hill and valley and sea. Some thing lying at her feet disturbs all her preconceived fancies. It must have slip­ ped from her »h e n she rose. Regard­ ing it more earnestly, she acknowledges unwillingly that it is Seaton's coat, a light gray one. When she » ’ as asleep, lost to all knowledge of friend or foe, then he had come and placed that coat across her shoulders. Her eyes are large and languid with sleep broken and unsatisfied, her soft hair lies ruffled on her low, broad brow. She looks timidly, nervously, around her ns one expecting anything but good; her whole air Is shrinking, and her whole self altogether lovely. T o the young man standing in his shirt­ sleeves, half hidden among the laurels and looking at her, with admiration gen erously mixed with melancholy in his glance, she seems the very incarnation of all things desirable. He presses her hand and hurries her over the short, dewy grass into the shrubberies that form an effectual screen from all observation of those in the gar den beyond, and so on until they come to the small oaken doorway through n’hich she had passed last night, and which has proved more foe than frieud. Once Inside the longed-for portal, her first Impulse is a natural one; it is to run as fast as her feet can carry her to her own room. (To be continued.) C O A C H M A N K E P T HIS EVENTS OE THE DAY W. D. J E N K I N S DIES. He Was Secretary F R O M T H E F O U R Q U A R T E R S OF D IG N IT Y . In c id e n t a lly H la E m p lo y e r 1'ad H ie W a y in a R o u n d a b o u t F a sh io n . TliJ* la one o f the m any stories that are floating about town concerning a man v e ry w e ll known In the capital, who la spending the summer In E ng­ land, says the Washington Post. He has taken a country house over there fo r the season, and la livin g a grand seigneur with a troop o f dear only knows how many servants. These English servants, so their Am erican master has discovered, are quite un­ like the menials to whom he Is accus tomed In bis own country. T hey are specialists. Each one o f them Is hired for some one particular work, and pro­ fessional etiquette forbids them to trespass on each other’s preserves, H o w strictly they keep them each to his ow n work the Am erican did not know till, sauntering Idly out o f the house one day, be espied a watering can, which had been left by a gardener at a little distance from the mansion on the edge o f the drive. I t occurred to him that It would be amusing to play at being a gardener. H e would wateT the flowers himself. So, calling to a man servant, who happened to be passing, he bade him fetch the w ater­ ing can. The man straightened him­ self up and touched his cap. “ Beg pardon, sir,” he said, tn a tone o f respect not unmixed with surprise, " I ’m the coachman, sir.” “ AH right,” answered the Am erican; “ bring me that cnn.” “ Beg pardon, sir,” repeated the man, "but I'm the coachman, sir.” “ W ell, w ell,” said the American, know you’re the coachman. B ring me the can.” The coachman touched his cap again snd repeated his form er remark. IAght danmed on the American. “ Oh," said he, “ you're the coachman, are you? W ell, cearhman. you go round to the stables and have my four-ln hand brought round at once.” The coachman saluted and walked sw ay. The coach and four drew up at the door a fe w minutes later. The mas­ ter climbed In. "N o w ," said be, “ drive me to that w atering can." The order was obeyed. T h e horses paused a hundred yards do»-n the drive. “ G et down and band me the can, now ," ordered the master. A moment later he « a s contentedly w atering the floorers. H e bad the can, the coachman's dignity bad been pre­ served. and all waa well. T H E WORLD. 21, 1902. of State of Washington NO. 14. Addroaa, Oaarne, Mawbarf, Orafoa. NEWS OF THE STATE From 1897 to 1902. O lym pia, Feb. 17.— Word has been received hero from Ban Francisco that ex-Becretary of IT E M S O F IN T E R E S T FROM A L L T H E Y FAVOR P A N A M A . Engineers Before the Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals. P ARTS OF OREGON. Washington, Feb. 17.— A lfred N oble, c iv il engineer and a m ember of the Commercial and Financial Happenings ol Im­ Btate W ill I). Jenkins Happenings of the P u t Week, Presented Mr. Jenkins left Olym pia a year ago for portance— A Brief Review of the Growth isthmian canal commission, was liefore the senate committee on canals. M r. N oble said it would l>e necessary to In a Condensed Form, Which Is Most C alifornia, »h e r e he was interested in an oil company. end Improvement! of tha Many Induatriea have Throughout Our thriving Commonwealth Panama and Colon in order to control sanitation. H e thought the conditions Com prehtiulvt Review of the Important Likely to Prove of Interest to Our Many city Baturday morning. W ill D. Jenkins was one of the prom­ Readers. Prince H enry U n ited States. died in that inent men of Washington. is on his way to the He was a — Late«! Market Report. native of Indiana, t>eing lorn in Tip|>e- The new furniture factory at Cor- canoe in 1841. A t an early age he vallis has started operations. nine W est and settled in Kansas, where F ire at Wisdom , Mont., destroyed Oregon horses have given 1 letter at 16 years o f age he established 120,000 worth o f property. service in the Yukon than any other. weekly newspaper called the Clarion. M artial law has been declared at Contractors are at work on the re­ Trieste, Austria, on account of riots. modeling of the lavatories in the state house. General B ell has st»«ip ed out the re- b elllion in Batangas province, Luzon. A gasoline lamp exploded at Adams, causing $4,000 damage in the fire that The treaty for the Danish W est In ­ resulted. dies w ill come up in the senate this week. Only 166 electors have registered in Y am h ill county, out of an approxi­ Because they could not get whiskey, mate total of 3,050. three Osage Indians in Oklahoma drank a concoction o f wood alcohol, vanilla, cologne and Florida water. The Republican congressional m ittee for the First district w ill in Portland February 20. A British force was caught in a Boer trap on the K lip river and two officers and 10 men killed and a large number wounded before they gained shelter. V olum e 39 o f the Supreme Court Rec­ ord w ill be issued from the state prin t­ ing office in aDout a month. John A . Johns, an Oregon pioneer of 1851, died at the borne of his son, south of Balem, aged 81 years. • W1I.L D. JENKINS. N O SUCCESS W I T H O U T IT . N o brilliant success in businesi is on record where the value of nevs- paper advertising was not recognized and employed with profit.—Oshkosh Times. *I.e»'is and Clark exposition stock has been increased to $500,000. T h e president w ill announce his de­ cision in the Schley case in a few days. Representative Tongue has intro­ duced a new irrigation b ill in ihe house. A company has been incorporated in California to develop the island of Mindanao, P . I. Troops have had to be cal led out in France to preserve order among striking leather workers. Bantos-Dumont’ s airship burst while he waB making a trial, and the inventor had a narrow escape from drowning. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., has passed the danger point in his sickness. The president has returned to Washington com­ meet Some few years later he established the Smith County Pioneer, which is now- one of the leading county papers of that state. In 1881 Mr. Jenkins came to Washington and located at Seattle, lie aided in establishing the D aily Chron­ icle aud hcl|>cd edit that paper w hen it was the leading state journal. In 1883 he removed to Whatcom and with others established the D aily R eveille. Later, he served three terms as mayor of that city. In I860 ho was cciuuih supervisor for Western Washington. Shortly after the formation of the Pop­ ulist party, in 1892, Mr. Jenkins be­ anie one of its leaders. In 1896 he was nominated by that party for secre­ tary of state and was elected. Since retiring from cilice a year ago, he had interested him self in oil ventures. About two years ago lie was stricken w ith a malady that puzzled the physi­ cians, hut later it was diagnosed as an abcess, and from this he has never re­ covered. He leaves a w ife and five children, three girls and two boys. M ERGING Big SAVING S Consolidation Scheme BAN K S. That Is Under Way at Cleveland. Russia expresses herself well pleased at the Anglo-Japanese alliance, but Cleveland, Feb. 18.—A t three meet­ hopes the United States is not a party ings held during the past week, the to it. prelim inary arrangements were com­ Commander Booth-Tucker, of the Sal­ pleted in this city for one of the most consolidations in the vation A rm y, has taken the oath of a l­ gigantic hank legiance as a citizen of the United history of money and hanking in Ohio. In general the plan contemplates the States. consolidation of nearly all the t-maller Lord K itchener made a concentrated savings hanks in Cleveland and w ill movement of all available troops against eventually absorb a number of hanks Dewet’ s forces, nut the Boer leader in nearby towns. The elim ination of managed to slip through the lines. the smaller savings hanks means their Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., is nearly out absorption into one great associated hank to lie located somewhere in the of danger. heart of the city, with a capitalization The senate w ill construct a new ol more than $1,000,000. A t Orst no tax reduction b ill. new capital stock w ill lie issued, but The oleomargarine b ill lias been the capital stock of all the (tanks going into the associated bank w ill lie turned passed by the house. into a pool to form the capital stock of The Anglo-Japanese alliance was the the combined hank. It is planned to work of M arquis Ito. include in the consolidation from the The dowager queen of Italy w ill make start all the sm aller outlying hanks In the city, some 15 or 20 in number. It a tour of the U n ited States. is noL probable that the names of the S ix men were killed and six fatally hanks interested w ill lie announced un­ injured in a battle in Kentucky. til all have signed the agreement. T h e work of developing the P h ilip ­ CLEARED OF YELLOW JA CK . pine islands w ill consume years. The increased demand for lumber in Eastern Oregon lias caused Raker C ity m ills to enlarge th eir capacity. Th e state printer has an extra force at work getting out the blanks, ab­ stracts, ta lly sheets, etc., to be used at the coming state election. The state land hoard lias not yet finally disposed o f the application of the P ilo t Butte Development Company for a contract to reclaim aridjland. V ery little of the 1901 prune crop re­ mains in the hands of the growers in the W illa m ette valley. Growers who are still holding their crops want 4 % cents per pound. absolute control of the cities of were favorable for yellow fever during most of the year on the isthmus. There is no yellow fever in as far as he knew. M r. Noble said lie Nicaragua, considered the price of $40,000,000, asked by the Pan­ ama Company for its property, as fair and reasonable. The expense of oper­ ating the two lines proposed would be practically in proportion to the lengths of the canals. “ Taking the whole proposition, do you consider the Panama proposition better than the Nicaragua proposition?” asked Benator Hanna. “ I think it is ,” promptly responded the witness. Colonel Peter C. Haines, an engineer and member of the isthmian canal com­ mission, said that neither the Panama nor the Nicaragua route combines all the advantages, Dut that each presents some good points. The Panama route, for instance, was shorter, while the Nicaragua route was more desirable from a sanitary point of view. Upon the whole, he said, he favored the Pan­ ama routo us combining more advan­ tages than any other. He thought, he said, that the engineering difficulties could, with the building of the Bohio dam on the Panama route, be overcome, but he admitted that some problems would result in that connection which never have !>een solved. Colonel Haines said, in reply to a question, that if the proffer of the Panamu Canal Company to dispose of the property to the United States for $40,000,000 had been made before the report of the commission recommend­ ing the Nicaragua route was made, he then would have lieen in favor of adopt­ ing the Panama route. Ashland is to lie the western term in­ us of a new telephone system which REPLY T O S C H L E Y ' S APPEAL. is to reach into Eastern Oregon through Klnmath and laike counties and into President Will Announce His Conclusions in a Few Days. Modoc county, California. W ashington, Feb. 17.— One of the The heavy rains in Southern Oregon principal subjects discussed at the cab­ have turned the Rogue river into a rag­ inet m eeting today was the reply which ing torrent. Borne damage lias been the president w ill make to the appeal done in the lowlands. Th e water is o l Adm iral Schley. The president lias higher than for 12 years. given a good deal of attention to the The annual school meetings which matter, and it is understood that in have heretofore been held on the first the course of a few days, probably by Monday in March w ill this year be the m iddle of the week, he w ill bo held on the third Monday in June. ready to announce his conclusions. School officers whose terms would, un­ The president outlined his views of der the old law, expire next month w ill the Schley case by reading his first continue in office until June. draft of his decision. Some modifica­ Pendleton has decided to adopt a re­ tions were made in it today, and in trenchment policy, the first act of which view o f the fact that it is subject to further, and possibly im portant changes was to let one policeman go. in text, members of the cabinet hack Ashland is investigating the matter their indisposition to discuss it by the of a comprehensive sewer system for asse;tion that it is unsafe at this tim e the city. An estimate places the cost to predict what its exact effect w ill he. at $20,000. It ¡ h a lung document, and one of its features is the clear and concise presen­ A company is being organized to con­ tation of the facts regarding the Santi­ struct seven telephone lines from Pen­ ago fight as given the president by dleton to the small ou tlyin g districts the captains engaged in that battle, which are not at present supplied. who recently were summoned to the A petition is lading circulated in and W h ite House to confer w ith him . The around Baker C ity asking congress to decision is couched in the president’ s set aside Crater lake and adjacent land usual vigorous tone. sufficient to make a national park. C O L O M B IA W A N T 8 A C A N A L . The price of hops continues to ad­ vance steadily. Buyers around Balem are offering 13,4 cents per pound, but II th* United Statei Dota Not Build It, the growers in most cases refuse to sell Europeans May. at that price. Monterey, M ex..F eb . 14.— Colom bia stands ready to duplicate any conces- Partland Markets. aiona Nicaragua is w illin g to make. W h eat— Quiet. W a lla Walla, 63® 63 Vie; bluestem. 64064 4 c ; Valley, There need be no question about the Has title of the Panama waterway. The 6314c. Bean for 100 Yean. United Btates can have it w ith a guar­ B arley— Feed, $19©20; brewing. anteed title. Havana, Feb. 18.— Major W . C. G or­ $20®21 per ton. Colom bia is w illin g to g ive the ges, chief sanitary officer of Havana, Oats— No. 1 white, $1.1001-25; gray, United States full control of the terri­ says the principal work of the sanitary $1.0501.15. tory through which the canal passes. department for the past year has had Flour— Beat grades, $2.8003.40 per It wants the canal b u ilt, and in the for its object the extermination of y el­ event the United States sees fit to ac­ low fever, and that he has many rea­ barrel; graham, $2.50 02.80. Mlllatuffs— Bran, $18 per ton; mid­ cept the Nicaragua route, the govern­ sons to believe Havana has been actu­ a lly purged from the disease. During dlings, $21; shorts, $20.50; chop, $17. ment of Colum biu'will take'steps to in ­ terest European powers in the con­ the past 100 years, M ajor Gorgas says, H ay— Tim othy, $11012; clover. $7® yellow fever has lieen epidemic in H a­ 7.60; Oregon wild hay, $5®6 per ton. struction of the Panama canal. These declarations were made tonight vana, and all sanitary measures that Potatoes— Beat Burbanks, 90c®$1.25 have been taken have had no effect. per cental; ordinary, 7 0 ® 86c per cen­ by General Rafael Reyes, Colom bian General disinfection, as carried out for tal, g row ers' prices; sweets, $1.76® delegate to the Pan-American congress, ami in all proliability the future presi­ other diseases, had been tried to no 2 per cental. dent of Colom bia, who is among the purpose, but yellow fever disappeared Butter— Cream ery, 2 6 0 2 7 4 c ; dairy, visitin g Pan-American delegad— «dio upon tlie introduction of the system 18@20c; store, 11 ©18c. are at present the guest* ot this city. based on the k illin g of infected mos­ E rrs — 20®21 t ic for fresh Oregen. General Reyes stated th »t he Lad not quitoes, on the theory that by such Cheese— Full cream, twins, 13® fu lly decided, but intimated that he mosquitoes only could the disease lie 1 3 4 c; Young Am erica, 14©15c; fac­ would return to Colom bia w ith in the transmitted. Since September 28, tory prices. l ® 1 4 c leas. next few »'eeks and take the presi­ 1901, not a single case o f the fever lias Poultry— Chickens, mixed, $303.50; dency. been reported, and this condition ia no hens, $4®4.26 per dozen, 9 0 10c per unusual that, in the opinion of M ajor pound; springs, 10c per pound. $3® Quacn ef tht Navy. Gorgas, it puts aside all question of 3.50 per dozen; ducks, $6.50 0 7.60 per New Y ork, Feb. 14.— The battleship chance. dozen; turkeys, live, 110124c; Illin ois, which today dropped anchor dressed, 14®16c per pound. Mutton— Gross, 4c per pound; off T om pkin sville after its final trial Hundreds Were Killed run from N ew port News to New York, St. Petersburg, Feb. 18.— The latest dressed, 7 0 7 4 c per pound. H ogs—Gross, 5 \ c ; dressed, 6 4 0 7 c has proved herself the queen of the news received here from Shamaka con­ per pound. firms the appalling character o l the navy. In every test she has surpassed V eal— 8 4 ® 9 c per pound, dressed earthquake at that place, and adds the Alabam a, the Oregon, and even her B eef— Gross, cows, 3 \ © 4 c ; steers. siater ship the Kearaarge. The tests that 300 corpses have already been taken ont ol the ruins. The piles of 4 0 4 4 c ; dressed, 6 4 © 7 4 c per pound were rigorous and fu lly demon st rate«!, Hops— 1 1 0 1 2 4 c per pound. wreckage are so vast that the search is her officers say, her snperiority over neceasarily slow. Most of the victim s W ool— N om inal. Valley. 13015c; other vessels of her class of which the mohair. country can boast. Her maintained were Mussulmans. The survivors are eastern Oregon. 8 0 1 2 4 c ; speed was 15.7 knots. encamped ontside the ruins o f the city. 2 1 0 2 1 4 c per pound. The rebel gunlioat Libertador cap­ tured and sank a Colombian gunboat. Havana Is in Balter Condition Than It Renewed riots in S|iain have resulted in the death of a number of people and the injury of scores. T h e im perial German yacht Hohen- zollern has arrived at New Y ork , one day earlier than was expected. Northern Pacific switchmen at Mis­ soula, Mont., are on strike. Young Teddy Roosevelt is silgh tly better, although the crisis has not yet passed. San Francisco chamlier of commerce favors the admission of Chinese mer chants. England and Japan have formed an alliance for the preservation of China and Corea. Colombia offers the United States a guaranteed title to a waterway for the construction of a canal. Governor T aft favors bringing some native Filipinos to this country and ed ucating them. The Marquis of Dufferin, ex-governor general of Canada and ex-viceroy of India, is dead. Fire at Springfield, 111., did m illion dollars damage. A new geyser has been fonnd Yellowstone National park. over in the T aft strongly opposes the im|g>rtation of Chinese to the Philippines. John H ill, a planter st West Baton Report Is Confirmed. R«mge, L a ., baa given to the Louisiana Washington, Feb. 18.— The state de­ state university $25,000 lor the erection partment has receive«! cable advices of an alumni building and library. confirming the report that the ransom N o Book o f In s tra clto n a . Herliert Biekneee was aent to ja il Ten thousand dollars have been con­ money for Miss Btone has been | «id to W ea ry W atklna— I see here In the Fort W ayne, Ind., for contempt the brigand captors. It ia not known tributed to the national fund for a Mc­ paper about bow to git on a trolley court. H e persisted in callin g on bia when her release w ill occur, but it is K in ley mem orial by the working men car and off. w ife, who is suing for divorce. understood that the brigands have of Homestead, Pa. H ungry H iggins—I bet you won't tee Peter Quinn, aged 35, who inherited made a condition that they shall have no piece about bow to git on and off England's imports of iron snd steel o f freig h t car*. That kind o f tblDg a fortune from bia father, squandered a period of a*week"or ten «lays in which are increasing, w h ile the exports are com et by nature, er It don't come at it in high liv in g and baa just died In to make sure of their safe retreat be­ (ailin g off. British trade papers are fore the prisoner is given up. New Y ork, a home lest wanderer. a l l — Indianapolis JournaL alarmed. A farmer ami w ile, liv in g near New Y ork, received a legacy of $5,000 from a man whom, as a hungry wanderer they befriended 16 years ago. Captured Thirty I M anila, Feb. 15.— Captain W illia m Swain, of the F irst infantry, in an en­ gagement w ith insurgenta at Paranaa, Samar, recently captured 30 bolomen and 4 riflem en. ican casualties. not known. There were no A m er­ The enemy’ s loss is I t has been learned that two hfnira before the fight, Lnkban. the insurgent leader, was with the natives engaged by Captain Swain's command.