h. fKht V IT'S A COLD DAY WHEN WE GET LEFT." VOL. XII. HOOD RIVER, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1900. no. ai. HOOD RIVER GLACIER " Tubllfhed Every Friday by 8. F. BLITHE. " Teri"8 ot subscrlptlon 11.50 a year wlieu paid In ndvaiice, TIIK MAIL. The mail arrives from Mt. Hood at 10 o'o". ick a. in. Weiliiesdays and Saturdays; depart! the Bine day at noon. KdrClienowctli, leave! at 8 a. m. Tuesday!, ThninlRV! and Saturdays; arrives at 6 p. m. For White Salmon (tt aiih.) leave! daily at 8:45 a m ; arrives at 7:1a p. m. From White Salmon leave! for Fulda, Gilmer, Trout Lake and (ilenwood daily at 9 A. M. Kor B.naen (Wash.) leaves atu:45p. m.J ar rives at i p. m. Hn IKl'IK. At Kl'.L, UKHKKAH DKOREK 1-OPGE. No Ji b7, I. 0. O. F. Meets first and third Won dnyB in each month. Ml-S HTEt.LA RlCIUIlDSON, N. Q. " H. 1. HiBBAiin, Secretary. flAKBY POKT, No. 1, G. A. It.-Meets at A. 0. V. W. Hall seeond and fourth Satur.'ayi of ench month at 2 o'cloc k p. m. All Q, A. R. members invited to meet with us. M 1. Isknbkro, t'ommandor T. J. Cunning, Adjutant. CANBY W. R. C, No. 16 Meets fl rut Hatur dav of each month In A. O. U. V. hall at 2 p.m. ' Mrs. Adbua SriUNAHAN, President. . Mhs. Cksula Uckkb, Secretary. HOOD RIVER LODGE, No. 105, A. K. and A. if. M eels Sat urdav eveniiiR on or before euch full moon. G. E. W illiams, W". M. D. McDonald, Secretary. HOOD RIVER CHAPTER, No. 27, R. A. M. Meets third Friday night of each month. G. R. Cadtnkr, H. P. G. F. Williams, Secretary. - HOOD RIVER CHAPTER, No. 25. O. E. 8. Meets Saturday alter each full moon and two weeks thereafter. Mrs. Mart A. Davidson, W. jr. LETA AtSKMBI Y. No. 103, United Artisan!. U Meet! leeond Tuesday of eaeli mouth at Fiaternal hall. F. C. Brohius, M. A. D. McDonald, Secretary. WAUCOMA LODGE, No. 80, K. of P. Meet! in A. 0. l. V. hail every Tuesday nirlit. E. 8. Olingik, C. C. . Frank L, Datidson, K. of R. & S. RIVERSIDE LODGE, No. 68, A. 0.--U. W. Meets first and third Saturdays of each month. O. G. CHAMBERLAIN, M.. W. J. F. Watt, Financier. H. L. 11we, Recorder. TDLEWILDE LOIKiE, No. 107, I. O O. F. . 1 Meeli in Fmternal hull every Thursday night. A. G. Gbtchbl, N. G. H. J. Hibbard, Secretary. HOOD RIVER TENT, No. 19, K. O. T. M., meets at A. 0. U. W. hall on the first and third Fridays of each month.. J. E. Rand, Commander. IVERSIDE LODGE NO. 40, DEGREE OF , HONOR, A. O. U. W. Meets first and third Saturdays at 8 P. M. Mrs. Geo. P. Crowell, C. of H. Mrs. Chas Clabke, Recorder. fyf F. SHAW, M. D. Telephone No. II. All Calls Promptly Attended Ofllce npstairi over Cbpple'i store. All calls left at the office or residence will bo promptly attended to. JOHN LELAND HENDERSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, .ABSTRACTER, NO TARY PUBLIC and REAL. ESTATE AGENT. For 21 yeara a resident of Oregon and Wash ington. Ilia had many years experience in Ki alEstHte intmeis, as abstracter, searcher of titit-saud ageut. Salisiactiou guaranteed or no chitine. J F. WATT. M. D. Etoaii &ii A T X, W Cr Xm asnfip nil V equipped to treat-catarrh of nose and throat and diseases of women. Special terms for office treatment of chrome cases. Telephone, office, 125, residence, 45. H. ,1. FREDERICK CARPENTER AND BUILDER. Estimated furnished for all kinds of work. Repairing a specialty. All kinds of shop work. Shop on- State Street, tx-tween First and Second, p A PER HANGING, KALSOMINING, ETC. If your walls arc sick, or mutilated, call on ' B. L. HOOD. Consulttition free. No charge for prescrip tions. No cure no pay. 0H;m loin frm J A. -I. till 6. P. M., and all night if necessary. - gCONOMY SHOE SHOP. : PltlCE LIST. Men's half soles, hand sticked, $1; nailed, heat. 75c ; tecond, 50c J third, 40c. ), adies' hand Btitched, 75c; nailed, best, Ki-; Bfiond, i!5. 1 Best stock and work in Hooil River. C. WELDS, Prop. rpHE KLONDIKE CONFECTIONERY Ie the place to pet the latest and best in Conf ctioneiies, Candies, Nuts, Tobacco, Cigar?! etc. ,...ICE CREAM PARLORS.... COLE & GRAHAM, Props. p C. BROSiUS, M. D. " PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. - 'Phone Central, or 121. Office Honrs: 10 to 11 A. M.; 2 to I and 6 to 7 P.M. JT. HOOD SAW MILLS Tommssox Bbob, Pbops. ... .iHR AND PINE LUMBER..... Of the best quality alwas on hand at prices to suit the times. gUTLI E & CO., BANKERS. Do a general banking business. HOOD RIVER, OREGON. y A. COOK CONTRACTOR AND BUILDES Hood Rrvn, Obioon. Estimates Famished. Plana Drawn ' J. HAYES, J. P. Office with Geo. T. Prathcr. Bniirjeas will be attended to at any time. Collection! made, and an bi ttneas (riren to us will be attended . to peedily and reaniu made promptly. Will locate on good government lands, either tlm W"i farming. We are in twoen with Mm U. B. Land Office at The IiaUM. tiiTO us in From AH Parts of the New World and the Old. )F INTEREST TO OUR MANY READERS Comprehensive Review of the Important Hap penings of the Past Week In a Condensed Form. - The powers have agreed to the joint note. The Japanese gave Admiral Beards lee a reception. Chicago police will prevent the Gans McGovern fight. Santa Fe strikeis wish their differ ences arbitrated. - Five persons were killed in a train wreck in Montana. Fire in Pekin destroyed the quarters of a number of officers. Kitchener rpeorts a running fight be tween Dewtt and Knox. Gompers will be re-elected president of the federation of Labor. The Santa Fe repudiates its relations with the telegraphers' nnion. The American fleet in North China waters is reduced to two vessels. , The Irish Nationalist convention de clared for the abolition of landlordism. Washington's centennial anniversary was celebrated with imposing ceremo nies. Full particulars have been received of the tyhoon which recently swept the coast of China, causing a heavy loss to life and shipping. There are more than 40 cases ol smallpox in St. George's hospital, Kan- sas City. Only one death from the disease has occurred. a The city election at Astoiia, resulted in a sweeping victory for the Citizens' ticket, every candidate being elected by large majorities. Jospepb Benoit, a stage carpenter at the Grand Opeia house. Salem, Or , fell from a scaffold, breaking several ribs, and bruising his face and body badly. The accident was caused by the breaking of a board upon which ht was standing. The Lakeview and Ager stage was robbed about two miles from Lake view, Or. A lone highwayman accom dished the job. No' passengers were aboard of the stage. Two mail sacks' were rifled and a considerable amount ' of registered mail taken. Officers ars now workng dn the case. The will of the late Senator Davis, who died November 27. was filed for probate bv Mrs. Anna M. Davis, the widow. The will, made during the i senator's last illness, leaves all his estate to Mrs. Davis. Ihe estate li i valued at $25,000 in personal and 1 $40,000 in real property. ,, I Lord Roberts has left the Cape for Enlgand. . . I Holland refuses to intervene in the Boer war. .! Senator Clay spoke against the ship ubsidy bill. French troops have ceased looting Chinese observatories. Li Bung Chang claims to have abso lute power to negotiate. Chaffee protested to Von Walderse against German looting. The debate on the war tax reduc tion bill began in the house. The house of commons voted 410, 000,000 to carry on the Boer war. The Hay-Pauncefote treaty was again considered in executive session. A congressional committee was ap pointed to investigate the Booz hazing. The Philippine commission gavs merchants a hearing on the traiff bill. ' v $50,000 irrigation ditch will bi constructed at once in Moxee valley, Washington. Oregon delegation decides upon co tinuing contract for Columbia improvement. . rivei State Superintendent Ackerman re- commends that Oregon schools observ, John Marshall day. T The matter of developing Lower Nehalem coal is said to have been con - .irtflrfid in New York. A number of psuspe-cted o, " his visit to Cape Colony recently, aban. doned their schemes on learning thai they were shadowed. In his annual report, Fish Commis sioner Reid says value of fish output for Oregon is over $3,000,000. Outlawry in Kwang Si and Kwang Tuung is increasing. The officials appear to be losing their hold of ths it.mtinn and are powerless to restore order. Pirating on the West river ii ,hat detachments of the Sixth, Eigh increasing. teenth and Twenty-sixth regiments Owing to a lack of proper facilities1 have been active near their stations, inihe w ofMleeraph, caused by the ' The insurgents losses during the last TZ LL collision occurred on 10 day. there have been five ki led the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, in tne Asciius- ij, j p wnicn several yersinia wuo iuuoui; fatally injured. . ... i i. five BCUSOrH WPltJ tiwaou v b ui .. . t k tne oeurBju icloioiw - e Section, Joseph Manley has resigned as chair- mittee years. Electric coal-cutting machinery it - . - . . - , .... rapidly displacing hand work and othe, varieties of mechanical raining appli - ances in the collieries oi Gteat Britain and the United States. LATER NEWS. Loot sent to France will be embar goed. ' American wheat visible shows a de crease. The Monroe doctrine may be applied to France. The Bjers were defeated in a battle at Orange river. A third negro was lynched by the Houkport, Ind., mob. In the sinking of the Gneieenau, 136 persons were drowned. There is no prospect of passing the Eubsidy bill this session. The steamer Alpha was wrecked on the Vancouver island coast. Major-General John G. Parke died at his home in Washington. The Porto Rico case is before the United States supreme court. . Congressman Boutelle was placed on the retired list of the navy. The military commission begins its investigation in the Booz hazing. Freeh instructions sent to Conger will clear the way ol all obstacles. A cure for strikes was discussed by the arbitration oonfereneo at Chicago. Preparations are being made for de velopment of natural gas near Rosalia, Wash. A Washington county farmer was murdered by a shot fired through his window. The official report of the finances of the Paris exposition, shows a loss of 2,000,000 francs. The Oregon supreme court decided that the Portland vehicle license ordi nance was invalid. . Five cases of what is believed to be bubonic plague have developed in Tucu man, in the Argentine Republic A resolution was introduced in the United States senate for an investiga tion uf the conduct of Judge Noyes in Alaska. The officials of the Santa Fe and the officers of the different trainmen's organizations will hold a conference in Chicago, Seven hundred Boers have crossed from Orange River colony into Cape Colony near Aliwal North, and have reached Kaapdal. President MoKinley expects to ar- range his Western trip so as to be in San Francisco to witness the launch ing of the battleship Ohio. Fire in Cleveland, Ohio, destroyed five out of seven buildings of a machine company, causing a property loss of over $500,000, and throwing 1,100 men out of employment. The war revenue bill has been passed by the house. Railway telegraphers threaten to boycott the Santa Fe. Lord Kitchener has called for all available English troops. , Eneland has awakened to the new seriousness in South Africa. Colonel ' Tullnck's expedition failed to find the Chinese treasue. At Rockport, Ind., two negroes, who had murdered a white man were lynched. The German training ship Gneisenan foundered near Gibraltar and 100 were drowned. A large Boxer force is said to be approaching Peking with the intention of attacking it. The senate cannot considered the army and appropriation bills until after the holidays. John Addison Porter, McKinleys former private secretary, died at his home in Putnam, Conn. The British admiralty is arranging to test various inventions for steering torpedoes and submarine boats. The Oregon Historical Society pro poses to hold a great fair in 1905, in commemoration of the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific coast 100 years ago. . ; - . As a result of a mysterious poisoning case at the Forsyth mines, near Mar ietta, Ohio, four persons are dead, four dying and two others serirously ill. Five unknown men who asked the marsha i, W - " ""r.'TTlL - T7, V ' tnen nroite iuw a uw gtQreg , ' The building occupied bv the con I ... l. t. - A. Xnvfnll ZZyV T. the Norfolk models and plans of the construction department. Telephoning without wires wss sue cessfully accomplished by transimit- tino the voice across the Mississippi Minneapolis, a distance of over 1,000 feet. Advices from Ho Ilo report that the American troops have been northward j oarward for several days and feveu wounded ana 4U "V"""; Americns have lost two killed , " , . and three wounded. i Prairie chickens are said to ba more t . annndant in western Kansas than for years During the past five years the state . n. ) Una Tin ha and mflffl is a loresiry reseivMnu". Former AmbaaiIor to Italy W. F. rsnr has been uecoiiueu iiu Draper ha Dee ; f rder ol ,M AntiM hii li. lrfn ilecoifttea wim we ; oi iia, ' I embassy to Rome. t in n . I Clements Force Defeated Boers Under Delearey. by WERE HEAVY LOSSES ON BOTH SIDES English Forced to Abandon Their Position General French With Reinforcements Mas Gone to the Rescue. London, Deo. 17. Lord Kitchener reports that, after severe fighting at Nooitgedacht, General Clements' forces were compelled to retire by Command ant Delarey, with a force of 2,500 men. Five British officers were killed. The other casualties were not reported. Lord Kitchener's official dispatch to the war office is as follows: "Pretoria, Deo. 15. Clements' force at Nooitgeducht, on the Magahes' Berg, was attacked at dawn today by Delarey, reinforced by Beyer's com mando from Warmbath, making a force estimated at 2,500. Though the first attack was repulsed, the Boers managed to get to the top of the Mag- alies' Berg, which was held by four companies of the Northumberland fusi liers, and were thus able to command Clements' camp. He retired on Hek- poort, and took up a position on a hill in the center of the valley. "The casualties have not been com pletely reported, but the fighting was very severe, and I deeply regret that Colonel Legge, of the Twentieth hus sars, ana captains wouean, oiuraoon and Atkinson were killed." Lord Kitohenor also repor Jiat the Boers made an attack' and were re pulsed at Lychtenberg, and that Gen eral Lemmer was killed. Attacki upon Bethlehem and Vrede were also repulsed, the Boers losing 10 killed and 14 wounded. Vryhetd was attacked December 11. Sniping continued when the message wv dispatched. The scenes at the var office today recall those witnessed in the early stages of the war. A constant stream of excited people filled the lobbies, ail seeking details of the disaster. The absence of the names of any of the offi cers of the Northumberland fusiliers in General Kitchener's dispatch leads to the foreboding that the four com panies of the fusiliers mentioned are in the hands of the Boers. The war office officials evidently expect a heavy casualty list, but they are hopeful from the fact that the dispatch does not mention the capture of the Northum- berlands that such a great catastrophe has been escaped. Orders were issued at Aldersnot, Malta and other military centers to dispatch all the available mounted in fantry to South Afiica. ' It is reported that General Knox, co operating with the British column at Reddersberg, - has stopped oeuerai Dewet, and that a battle is proceeding. The report adds that many of Gen eral Dewet's followers have been cap tured. The scene of the fight is ominously close to Pretoria. Nooitgedacht u only 22 miles northwest of Pretoria. :'-1 ' , English Loss Heavy. London, Deo. 17. Lord Kitchener reports that 18 officers and 555 men are missing from General Clements' force. They consist of four companies of the Northumberland fusiliers. .Tndr inif from the messace theso were captured hy the Boers. Elements casualties December 15 amounted to five officers and nino men killed and many apparently wounded. , French Goes to the Rescue. Johannesburg, Deo. 17. The battle still continues within a few miles from Krugersdorp. General Clements baa asked for reinforcements, and mounted men under General French have already gone. , There have been manv casualties on both sides. It is estimated that the Boers number 2,800, Montana Town Shaken. Guthrie, Mont., Dec. 17. -The In habitants of the town of Cashion were awakened this morning by a peculiar wave-like motion and trembling of the earth. Manv of them rushed into the streets, so badly were they fright ened. No damage was done. . Increase in Wages. Calumet, Mich., Deo. 17. Commenc ing January 1, the Calumet & Heola Mining Company will increaso the wagee of its 4,000 employes 3 M per oent. Last March the company raised the wages of its employes 10 per cent. Paddy Ryan Dead. Albany, N. Y., Dec. 17. Paddy Ry an, at one time champion pugilist of the world, who was deteated oy Jonn L. Sullivan, in their famous fight in Mississippi some years ago, died at his home in Glens Falls, N. Y., this after noon. , Earthquake In Missouri. Jophn, Mo., Dec. 17. An earth quake shock lasting nearly a minute was experienced in tbie city at 7:45 o'clock this morning. The motion was from north to south, and of quivering nature. No Lives Were Lost San Francisco, Deo. 17. One of the severest storms , which has ever visited San Francisco broke over the city at an early hour this morniug and continued until noon in fitful gusts, rain and wind sweeping over, the city with unusual violence, and being ao cowpanied by thunder and lightning, rather unusual occurrence in this; oart of the country. At one time rain fell in such torrents that many thought a cloudburst was imminent. DEWET EVADES KNOX. General Kitchener Reports a Running Fight With the Boers. London, Dec. 17. Lord Kitchener cables the war office from Fretoria un der date of December 12 that General Knox reports from Helvetia that he is engaged in a running fight with Gen eral Deet, and that the onemy ii mov ing towards Reddershurg, where there is a column ready to co-operate with the other British foroes. Lord Kitche ner in another dispatch reports that Boers attacked the post near Barberton. The British casualties were three killed, five wounded and 13 taken pris oners. The captured men have since been released. The Boers rained the River ton road station December 11. They are being lollowed up. General Kitchener's message indi cates that Dewet has again evaded Knox. After the latter had foiled the Boer general at Coomnssie drift, the Boers seem to have doubled back, crossed the Caledon rivei elsewhere, and turned thence northwest in the direction of Reddersburg, the memor able scene of the British disaster in April, when Dewet captured the Brit ish Rifles. Tragedies on Shipboard. San Francisco, Deo. 17. The Brit ish ship Crown of Scotland, whioh ar rived today, 130 days from Penarth, Cardiff, had three tragic entries in her log. November 24 John Warrington atabbed P. C. Haglnnd, bis shipmate, while the latter was asleep in his bunk. Leaving bis sheath-knife in his viotim's breast, the murderer ran up on deck, jumped overboard and was drowned, despite efforts to reach him with a lifeboat. No one ou board of the ship knows of the motive. The second tragedy occurred August 1. Salvatori Servis fell from the foreyard, struok the deck and fractured his thigh and received internal injuries which caused his death. Correcting an Extradition Treaty. Washington, Dec. 17. A treaty has been concluded between the United States and Great . Britain amendatory ol the existing extradition treaty aud intended to correot certain Imperfec tions in that instrument, developed by went experiences. The changes do not materially affect the scope or prin ciples of the existing treaty, the chief item in the list being provisions clas sifying as a crime subject to extradi tion the obtaining of money under false pretenses. At present the treaty makes extraditionable the reception ol money obtained under false pretenses aud omits the principal in the crime, constituting a manifest absurdity. To correct this the amendment is made. Grounding of the Garonne. Seattle, Dec. 17. Letters have been received in this city announcing the eionnding of the United States trans port Garonne on the northern coast of Luzon. She struck twice, being res cued both times by the Sforktown The second time the yorktown's cable caught in the Garonne's wheel, causing a further delay of 12 hours. The let ters also tell about a hard march of the Amerioan troops under General Hall. The line of march was over steep mountains for a distance of 45 miles, takinz in all six days. At the conclusion, 165 men were under niedi cul treatment for several days. Search for Hidden Gold. Pekin, Deo. 17. A few days ago the British troops were notified of the existence of a large amount of treasure 20 miles northwest of here. Colonel Tnllock and 100 men left today to in vestigate the truth of the report. Colonel Tullock requested, however, that 50 extra men be detailed. It is believed that a large amount of gold and valuable's were buried at that point bv nersons connected with the Chinese court during the recent flight, The information regarding the treasure was received from a former court olu eial. ... " " ' ; '-' -. Trial Trip of the Alabama. Philadelphia, Deo. 17. The Unit ed States battleship Alabama sailed today from League Island navy yard for New York, where she will await further orders . She will make a trial trip on the run, which will begin as soon as she passes out to sea. After the sea trial is completed the vessel's course will be shaped further out to sea to avoid shipping, as all of her guns and turrets are to be tested. If the leport is satisfactory, It is probable that the battleship will be ordered to Hampton Roads to join the North At lantic squadron. Anti-Foreign Plot In Hong Kong. Hong Kong, Deo. 17. The city was placarded today with statements incit ing the people and the members of the secret societies to unite and rise during the month of Januiiry and drive out all the foreigners. Crowds gathered about the placards, but no actual outbreak is reported. Wisconsin's Vote. Madipon, Wisconsin, Dec. 17. The total vote ol Wisconsin, as officially canvassed, as 425,161. SlcKinley's plurality was 106,581. LaFollette, Republican, for governor, has a plural ity of 103,745. Oxford Beats Cambridge. London, Dec. 17. The annual Rug by football match between Oxford and ; Cambridge took place today at tne Queen'a club. A magninoent game was won by Oxford by , two goals to a goal and try. There waa a large and fashionable attendance. Nordeitskjokfs Expedition. i rhrixtianin. Dec. 17. The Antarctic : Tne(iLinr, headed dv Dr. Otto Nor- ienkgjold, will leave in August. mm on a m Last of The Famous Steamer Alpha. NINE PERSONS WERE LOST WITH HER The Vessel Struck Rock at the Entrance to Union Bay, on the East Coast of :.. Vancouver Island. Vancouver B. C, Deo. 19. News of the worst marine disaster of the season in British Columbia whs brought here tonight by the steamer Czar, from Union bay, on the east side of Vancou ver island. The steamer Alpha was wrecked on a reef near the entrance to Union bay aud not a vestige of the 1,000-ton steamer remains. Her man aging owner, oiiptain, purser, three en gineers, two able bodied teamen aud a stowaway were drowned, and the rest of the crew of 84 were saved by the pluok of an unkown member of the ship's crew, who swam in a raging soa from the wreck to a lighthouse with a line around his waist. The Alpha was valued at $45,000. Her cargo comprised 750 tons of salt salmon and 850 tons of coal, con-, isgned to Yokohama, and valued at. $80,000. The. total iusurauce on the ship and cargo was $65,000. It is two weeks sinoe the Alpha first started trom Vancouver for Japau. After she had been four days out she returned to Victor partly disabled, and accusations of tampering with her engine's were made. Some of the crew and several of the officers left the steamer declaring that she had been improperly loaded, and one ol the offi cers was tried and suntenoed to six weeks' imprisonment for desertion. Last Saturday the Alpha left Vic toria for Union to repleuish her coal supply. A teriifio gale was raging and late Saturday night the steamer ran on a rook at Bayuos sound, at the en trance to Union bay. She was quiokly dashed to piece, and all would have perished hud not one of the crew mane the desperate and successful effort to swim with a line to the lighthouse ou Yellow island. In the raging sea only part of those on the ill-fated ship managed to reach safety, the officers and owner remaining on board last and failing to reach the rock. The 25 sur vivors remained on Yellow island, which is a rock 200 yards wide, until Sunday night, when the sea modorated somewhat and a sloop was able to call and tako them to Union. But the storm which had wrecked he ship had also prostrated the wires, and so no tidings of the shipwreck reached the ontxide world until the little steamer Czar brought the story to Vancouver tonight. The Alpha gained notoriety Inst spring when, as a Canadian ship, she landed freight and passengers at Nome in defiance of the instructions of the treasury department, and, it is said, against the advice of the British em bassy at Washington as well. She was chased on ber return trip from Nome by a United States revenue cutter, but managed to show her pursuer a clean pair of heels. TROUBLE FOR FRANCE. The United States May Have Occasion to En force tne Monroe Doctrine! New Yoik, Deo. 19. A special to the Times from Washington sayss The territory until recently in dispute be tweon Brazil and France, and which has been decreed to belong to Brazil, my shortly become the object of a dis pute between Franc? and the United Sates, should the Monroe doctrine he violated. The territory lying south of French Guiana in the state of I'ara, and containing 100,000 square miles, was claimed by Brazil aud France, and Switzerland was made arbitrator, iler decision was in favor of Brazil. It if now reportetd that some French finan ciers, anticipating that the decision would be favorable to France, hat already invested their capital in thi teriitory. They are now, it is said, trying to engineer a deal by which tne French government will buy this land from Brazil, The state department has absolutely no knowledge on the subject. Its at tention, however, has been called to the matter, and the attempt of the French capitalists to secure government aid in getting their money back will be watched with interest. There is hard ly any question, it is said at the de partment, that such action would be a violation of the Monroe doctrine, sua would call forth a protest from the United States. As long as the claim was in its orig inal form, France might have main tained that she was simply recti ryiniz her boundaries, aud that the United States cannot object to that. Even in that case a rectification of boundaries which involved an area of 100,000 square miles would be closely scrutin ized. France has. however, forfeited the right to make that clHim by sub mitting the matter to aribtration by Switzerland. The territory has been officially decreed h the Swh-s tribu nal to be outside cf trench Outana. Woman Suffrage in Porto Rico. ' San Juan, Porto Rico, Dec. 19. I the house of delegates today, Desearte introduced a bill gianting unrestricted suffrage to women on the same terms as mei.. ' - Storms in British Columbia. Vancouver, B. C, Deo. 19. Storm of unusual severity have destroyed portion cf the diking in the delta dis trict of Bri(ih Columbia. The dam age to property is considerable. LYNCHED BY A MOB. Vengeance Dealt Two Negroes In Indiana- Authorities Were Overcome. Rockport, Ind., Deo. 19. Two ne groes, Jim Henderson and Bud Kow lands, who waylaid, murdered and rob bed llollie Simons, a white barber, early this morning, were lynched to night in the jail yard by a mob of 1,500. The negioes were arrested soon after the murder occurred, aud al though Rowlands' clothing had blood 6tains on it they claimed they were in nocent. In the meantime Sheriff Clemens, of Union county, Kentucky, arrived with a trained bloodhound. When the dog was placed on the trail he followed it to the house where Row lands lived, six blocks from the scene of the murder, and went baying to the bed the negro had Occupied. This was enough for the excited citizeus. Within a lew minutes a mob of a thous and howling, bloodthirsty men with sledge hammers, ropes aud guns were on the way to the jail. Sheriff Anderson and bis two depu ties made a stand and attempted to proteot the prisoners. The o Ulcers wore seized by the leaden of the mob and disarmed. The sheriff, although locked in a room and placed under guard, stoutly refusod to give up the keys or tell where the prisoners were hiding. The inub made a determined but un successful attempt to break in the jail door. Finally they secured a telegraph pole, and using it as a battering ram caved in the side wall of the juil. Ihe door of Rowlands' ceil was then quick ly bvuken in with sledge hammers and he was dragged from the jail to the east side of the court yard, where a noose was placed about his neck. He was given time to make a statement, in which he implicated Jim Henderson aud another negro. Rowlands then begged piteously for mercy, but the mob quickly swung the confessed mur derer to a tree and riddled his body with bullets. Leaving the dangling body of Row lands, the mob rushed back to the jail and burst open the cell occupied by Henderson. Before the bars yielded to the blows ol the sldge some one in the orowd fired upon the terrified negro as he crouched in the far corner. It took but a few moments to get at Hender son, and the negro, more dead than alive, was dragged at the rope's end to the court house yard and swung to the tree beside the body of Rowlauds Fir ing a parting volley at the swinging bodies, the mob, eager for another vic tim, hurried away to catch the other negro implicated by Rowlands. He Was found at a hotel where he was em ployed as a porter. The negro esoaped to the roof of the building, and Mana ger De Bruler succeeded in convincing the mob that the porter had nothing to do with the crime. The mob then dispersed, apparently satisfied with its work of vengeance. , Simons was .nurdored in the most brutal manner, one square from the main street of the city, as he was going to his home from bis barber shop at 3 o'clock this morniug. He car ried the receipts of the day's work, a ' fact of which the negroes were aware. They attacked him from behind, strik ing hira over the head with a heavy club into whioh a large nai' had been driven. Although. , terribly beaten, Simons made a desperate fight. His cries attractod two boys. The negroes drove them away and accomplished their original design, securing a bag containing something over $40 from their victim, and made their escape. When others arrived Simons was dead. His skull was crushed in and his head and face beaten to a pulo. The spike on the club had punctured the skull in four places and penetrated his brain. Walter Evans, one of the young men who attempted to rescue Simons, and who afterwards witnessed the lynch ing, has become a raving maniac. The dead man's wife is prostrated, and it i believed she will die from the shock. Earthquake In Cuba. Santiago do Cuba, Deo. 19. A sharp earthquake shock was folt here about midnight last night. It was the most severe that has been rfxperienoed in several years, and oreated a panic at the San Carlos club, where a" giand ball was in progress. The shock was preceded by a dull sound like a mine explosion. Two shocks followed, the former being quite severe and the lat ter scarcely perceptible. The club rooms became scenes of frantic com motion. Several people rushed into tne streets. At Mono Castle a liberty ball was in progress, American ladies present expressed great interest in the earthquake, whioh was the first they bad experienced, but displayed no tear. FlgMihg In Colombia. Kingston, Jamaica, Dec. 19. Ad rices from Colon, Colombia, today regaiding the fighting between the gov ernment troops and the insurgents at Tumaco, say that the withdrawing in surgent force was not dispersed. On the contrary, fears are entertained that this bodv of rebels will effect a junc tion with the force operating around Beuna Ventura. Both sides lost heav ily in the battle of Tumaco. When the government foroes destroyed the rebel steamer Gaitan they aiso de stroyed a large lot of ammunition. ; , Found Dead In His Cabin. Hillslioro, Oregon, Deo. 19. An drew Bahlberg, an inoffensive farmer residius near Reedvilte, was today found dead in his cabin. The dead man had a bad contuics on the fore head. He had recently sold some pro duce and was supposed to have consid erable money in the bouse. It is gen erally twieved that he was kill! for bis money. The coroner will hold so Inquest in the morning. "I 1 if ' Vf. in If' it i V. 1 : K i.