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R U E F IS S E N T E N C E D .. NEWS U H 1 1 NATIONAL CAPITAL H ENEY AFTER C A L H O U N . N E W B O S S E S LIK E O L D . 8 * 1 » H » Will 8t*y In Fight er. Higher- U p « If H « Die« fo r It. Professor. Ford, o f Princeton, D raw s Parallels in History. Washington, Dee. 29— '" I am going back to Ban Franeiaeo to flniah Patrick Calhoun, and I am going to stay with the( graft proaeeution, even U they kill me. What ’• the differeae« whether one diea at 49 or A 9 t" Frauds J. Heney made this itate- ment today when naked what hia plana were. Although weak from the wound inflicted by Morria Haaa’ bullet, Heney profeaaee to have .loot none of hia enthuaiaam. He will not admit that the poeaible danger» of hia' poei- tion rob him of either eeait or determi nation. Washington, Dec. 31.— With James llryce, British ambassador, presiding, the American Political Science Society met here this week in its first annual gathering. The general topic for con sideration was “ The Increase of Fed eral Force and Power in the United States." One of the principal papers was by Stephen Leacock, Magill Uni versity, Canada, on “ The Limitations of the Federal Government." In the course of the discussion Pro fessor Henry Jones Ford, of Prince ton University, declared that neither the power nor the rffponsibility essen tial to democratic rule was embodied in the American state. “ The resem blances,” he said, “ that historians are now noting between ancient and mod ern bosses, grafters and spoilsmen rest upon substantial identities, affording a fine demonstration o f the universal principle that like causes produce like effects, irrespective of the intentions with which the causes are put in operation/' He asserted that efforts of reform ers were directed against conditions from which the power was gained rather than against conditions under which power was exercised. “ My wife ia very nervoua about pie,” he aaid with a amile. “ She feara •»ome other fellow will do a better job next time.1' Heney will eall at the White Houae thia afternoon in reaponae to a apeeial invitation aent to him by Preaident Kooeevelt. It ia rumored that he will give the preaident hia viewa on the utility of the eeeret aerviee in catch ing criminal«. C O L O R A D O BO R D ER T A N G L E . Congressm an Cook Says Government W as Misinformed. Washington, Jan. 2.— Representa tive Cook, o f Colorado, has been re quested by President Roosevelt to sub mit to him by next Tuesday morning, in time for the cabinet meeting on that day, a brief o f hia eontentoins and ar guments concerning the veto o f the bill fixing the boundary line o f 'Colorado, N e w Mexico and Oklahoma as the 87th parallel of latitude. Mr. Cook saw the president some time ago and aaid that the facta had been misrepresented to Attorney General Bonaparte, upon whose recommendation President Roosevelt vetoed the boundary line. Mr. Cook alleges that the Colorado Fuel <E Iron company is opposed to the border being located sa fixed in the bill. Arrest Murderous Reds. Washington, Jan. 2.— Three young N avajo Indians are in custody at the Ship Rock agency in Northwest N ew Mexico for complicity in the killing, on Christmas eve, near Ameth, Utah, o f four members o f their tribe and the serious wounding o f an Indian woman, according to a dispatch received at the Indian affairs bureau today from Su perintendent W . T. Shelton. Mr. Shel ton went to the scene o f the trouble last Saturday. One o f the Indians, it is aaid, has confessed to the killing. O f the killed two are women. N o cause is assigned for the tragedy. May Condemn 8ite. Washington, Dec. 30.—Dissatisfied with the high figures placed upon real estate offered to the government by agents for a site for a subtreasury building, the government, through As sistant Secretary o f the Treasury Beekman Winthrop, has threatened to secure property in San Francisco by condemnation. Secretary Winthrop has notified Baldwin & Howell., real estate agents for property bounded by Sansome. Clay, Merchant and Battery streets, partly owned by the Kohl es tate, that it must be placed at a lower price than $335,000 demanded for the site. Winthrop declares that if a lower price is not set, the government will secure other property in the block and will begin condemnation proceed ings, as the treasury department wants the property in that section. Harriman Money in Salton Sea. Washington, Dec. 31.—The attor neys of F. H. Harriman are alarmed at the possibility of failure on the part of the congressional committee on claims to allow even a portion of the remuneration asked by the rail road king for work done by kis road in curbing the Colorado river, where it broke its banks and threatened Im perial valley. The claim has been re duced to $1,083,673.97, but there is no indication of desire on the part of the legislators to take up the matter. Epoch in Canal Building. Washington. Dec. 30—With the early arrival in Washington from Paris of Leroy Parks, the isthmian canal commissioner, will be signalized an epoch in the building o f the canal. The time has arrived, it is said, when the maxmum force has been em ployed. Henceforth the work in the canal zone will be confined'to excava tion and dam and lock construction. Winthrop Accepts Job. Washington, Jan. 1. — Beckman Winthrop. o f Massachusetts, assistant secretary of the treasury, has been offered and accepted the office of first assistant secretary of state under the incoming administration,, succeeding Robert Bacon, of New York who in lanuary next is expected to tem- norarity succeed Elihu Root upon the latter’s retirement. The tender was Diplomats Are Uneasy. made with the consent o f President Washington, Dec. 31.—The stir in elect Taft by Senator Knox, whose diplomatic circles caused by-the resig selection as secretary o f state was an nation of Ambassador Griscom has nounced several days ago. led to much speculation as to the fu ture of all of America’s representa Stamp Slot Machines. tives abroad. Although no statement Washington, Dec. 30.— If one can has come from Mr. Taft, it is not im drop a penny in a vending machine probable that a number o f the diplo and obtain a piece of chewing gum or matic officers abroad will be asked to a handful of peanuts, why not be able retain their positions. to drop in a coin and secure a postage stamp? This is what the postoffice Used 4,000.000 Trees. department wants to make a popular Washington, Dec. 29.—The native feature of its service, and it today an forests this year supplied 4,000,000 nounced that it is now prepared to Christmas trees, the forestry service es issue limited quantities of postage timating that one out of every four fam stamps in rolls of 300 or 1006 for use ilies observed the tree custom at Yule- in stamp-vending and stamp-affixing tide. Qifford Pinehot, United Statea machines. forester, upholds the Chriatmas tree cus tom and believes that it should be main Revenue Cutter on Trial. tained. Washington, Jan. 1.—The new rev Pinehot Starts on Mission. enue cutter Yamacrow, recently com- ■nleted by the New York Shipbuilding Washington. Dec. 31.— Bearing invi company of Camden, N. J.. is to have tations- from President Roosevelt to her official acceptance trial tomorrow President Diaz of Mexico and Premier v>n the Delaware river The Yama Laurier and Lord Grey of Canada to crow is of the Seminole type and is appoint delegates to the National Con intended for service on the South At servation Congress to be held here lantic coast, with headquarters at Sa February 18, Gifford Pinehot left vannah. Monday for Canada and Mexico. Dead Letter Sale. t4 Washington. Dee. 29— Over $2,000 more was realised by the postoffiee de partment by the Christmaa sale of dead letter packages thia year than last. "This year’s proceeds were $11,300. Under the law the money must be held for three years, during which time the -sender of any dead letter package sold may claim the amount at which it was knocked down. Engineers Go With Taft. Washington, Jan. 2. — Preaident Roosevelt has invited a number of en gineers to accompany President-elect T a f t on his trip to Panama this winter. James Dix Schuyler, o f Loe Angeles, and Arthur P. Davies, chief engineer o f the reclamation service, Washing ton, are among those honored by Roose velt. President Requests Trip. Washington. Dee. 30.— Representa tives Cushman and Humphreys, of Washington, left today with the house committee on interstate commerce for « trip to Panama. They will sail from Charleston, S. C., and the trip will consume about 13 days. The commit tee goes at the special request of President Roosevelt Squaring Away for Venezuela. Washington. Jan. 1.—The arrival of Special Commissioner W. I. Buchanan to treat on behalf of the United States with the officials of Venezuela, and the arrival of Admiral Arnold at La Guavra, is announced in messages to the navy and state departments here. Berrios Recovers From Injury. Maximum Term of 1 4 ,Years Given Deposed Bose. ^ San Francisco, Dec. 31.— Fourteen years in the penitentiary, th« maxi mum, is the sentence meted out to Abraham Ruef. who for four years di rected the political destinies of San Francisco as adviser of the adminis tration o f Eugene E. Schmitz, mayor of the city. Judgment was pronounced at the close of a day devoted to legal battle, wherein the defense sought to intro duce many reasdns for a new trial. When .Judge William P. Lawlpr had denied this and other motions involv ing delay, the defendant arose at the court’s command and stood unmoved through the recital o f . judgment.' There was no demonstration on the part o f the spectators during the pro ceedings in the court room, nor later, when Ruef, having entered the prison van in, the custody o f a deputy sheriff, started in the dusk on his long ride to the county jail. Before the adjournment of court no tice of appeal had been filed on behalf o f the defendant and the court had signed a writ of probable cause, which will act as a stay o f execution. In a trial that was prolonged through a period of nearly four months Ruef was convicted, Decem ber 10, o f bribing John J. Furey, an ex-supervisor, to favor the award of an overhead trolley franchise to the United Railroads. This was one of 114 indictments returned against Ruef by the Oliver grand jury, which heard 16 supervisors confess the acceptance of bribes in several matters involving public service corporations. One o f the many incidents that tended to make the trial o f Ruef re markable was the shooting of Assist ant District Attorney F. J. Heney by Morris Haas, an ex-convict, whose past record was exposed by the prose cutor after the would-be slayer had been accepted as a member of the jury. Haas subsequently committed suicide in the county jail. _____________ v i - — W A R C L O U D A G A IN . ' “ Banzai” and "H o o ra y " Can’t Keep Peace In Far East. Tokio, Dec. 31.—Although the re ception given the United States bat tleship fleet by the Japanese was pro nounced one of the most pleasant and interesting incidents of the world cruise an<l went far toward easing the strained relations between the two countries, and although much good feeling has followed the recent publi cation of the agreement between Sec retarv of State Root and Ambassador Takahira. the consensus o f opinion among Americans in the orient is that unless the temporary good will is im mediately strengthened little o f politi cal value will result. While no diplomatic crisis is ex pected to develop between the two countries in the near future, owing to the condition of the finances of Japan, vet the fear is being generally ex pressed among Americans here that the apparent sincerity of the welcome to the fleet and the sympathetic tone of the five articles recently exchanged between the two powers may deceive the people of the United States into believing that no danger to the na tion’s interests now exists in the far east, any failure at this time to build up the position of America on the Pa cific. the naval strategists declare, will ultimately result in national disaster. That a compelled peace is the only certain peace which will come to the east, despite the protestations of friendship by Japan, is the universal belief o f those men who are experi enced in oriental politics and who. in case of trouble, will be entrusted with the defense of the national interests. D IS A S T E R IN C O A L M INE. Four Men Dead and 26 Entombed In Prcahontas District. Bluefield. W . Va„ Dec. 31. — Four men are known to be dead and prob ably 25 more were entombed as the result of an explosion which occurred in the Lick branch colliery, owned by the Pocahontas Coal company, the largest coal mining concern in south western Virginia. It is not known ex actly how many men were in the mine at the time. The men leave the mine after what is known as the “ running” and many of the 52 at work were not in the mine when the explosion occurred. Eigh teen of the entombed men have been taken out of the colliery alive. • The rescuing parties have been un able to get into the shaft because of the fire and smoke. Anti-Semites Rage in Finland. St. Petersburg. Dec. 31.—Basing their action on ancient and obsolete anti-Semitic statutes, the Russian authorities in Finland have inaugu rated a wholesale persecution of He brews and are driving them from their homes into the fields to starve and freeze. Reports o f terrible suffering and appalling loss of life com e.from all parts of the dependency. The weather is extremely severe and the hunted Hebrews, stripped of their household goods and unable to secure food, herd together on the snow cov ered fields and die. Washington, Dec. 31.— Senor Bar rios, the Guatemalan minister of for eign affairs, who recently was serious China Wants Loan. ly injured in an automobile accident, Pekin. Dec. 31.— For the purpose of called at the White House Monday and sailed fdr home on December 30. developing the Canton-Hankow rail A bandage across the face was the road. the Chinese government has di rected its foreign agent to attempt to only trace of his injury. place a loan with British, French, Ger man and Japanese banks. The action Treasury Buys Silver. follows the failure of the government Washington, Dee. 29.— The treasury to float a domestic loan of $5.000.000 today purehased 100,000 ounces of sil to pay shareholders o f the national ver for delivery at New York, 78,000 telegraph system. Fearing a second ounces for delivery at New Orleans and failure to secure money for the road, 60,000 ounces for delivery at Denver, the government has deemed it pru at 49.i*8e per fine ounce. dent to raise money outside China. Advance O regon Postmasters. Washington, Dec. 30.— Am ong the 280 fourth-class postoffices which will be advanced to the presidential class January l are the following in O regon: Canyon City, $1000; Central Point, $1100; Oakland, $1800. N o New s From Consul. New Haven, Conn., Dec. Friends here have received no from Dr. Arthur Cheney, o f class of 1889. Amerjcan consul at sina. 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