Yamhill County Reporter SWEEP OF THE STORM. A Fearful Blizzard Itaglng in the At- lantic State*. CAUSED BY BRUTALITY. Sailor Taken Off the Stetson a Bavin« MailiaC. Portland, Or., Ft b. 2.—If the story of John Burke, w ho came around the of Dr. Ruiz ’ Widow Claim Horn on the American ship Geo. Stet­ to Be Pressed. son in the capacity of sailor, can be believed, the officers of this ship are guilty of the most barbaric cruelties IS IN NEEDY CIRCUMSTANCES that have been rejiorted at this port in many a day. The Stetson arrived at Astoria with a cargo of coal Thursday, being 74 days out from Baltimore, Ooiuprelieuaive Review of the Important r Woodford Will Soon Present where she took on cargo. Captain Happening* of the Punt Week C'uk„J Demand at Madrid—Indemnity Murphy is in command, and George From th«) Telegraphic Column*. . Harvey is first officer. Timinas Thompson, ex-minister to The victim of the brutality of the New York, Feb. 3.—According to Brazil, ex-representative, ex-secretary the Washington correspondent of the \ officers, and especially that of First of state, ami one cf the most prominent Herald, another demand is to be made Mate Harvey, is a seaman named Amos Democrats in California, cut his throat upon Spain for the payment of $75,000 Stone, son of a wealthy jewelry mer­ while temporarily insane at San Jose. indemnity to the widow of Dr. Ricardo chant of Boston. Stone is said to have The British Atlas Company, of Pana­ Ruiz for the murder of her husband in been taken off the Stetson at Astoria, a ma, has offered to purchase railroads a Guanabacoa jail. The state depart­ raving maniac, having arrived at this from ocean to ocean and steamers ment is preparing an instruction to condition as a result of the treatment owned by the government foi $1,500,- Minister Woodford, which will be sent he received on the voyage. 000 silver. The government demands in a few days, in which he will be di­ “Stone was singled out as the special $2,500,000. rected to call the attention of the min­ object of Harvey’s brutality soon after ister of foreign affairs, Sagasta, to the we left Baltimore,” said Burke in Word has been received in Spokane fact that this claim was presented last narrating his story, “Harvey, for from Washington that the committoe summer; that it has not yet been paid, some reason, knockel him insensible on agriculture has reported favorably nor, in fact, has a detailed answer been with an iron top maul, and as the re.it Senator Warren’s amendments for the received to the note addressed to the of us feared we would be treated like­ establishment of a division of irriga­ late Minister Canovas. Theonly reply wise we were at the point of turning tion in the agricultural department. made has been a formal acknowledg­ back four hours after we left port. As The monthly statement of the public ment of the receipt of the claim. soon as we saw what had happened, debt just issued shows that at the close There is reason to believe that the we scampered up the masts to turn to. of business January 31, the debt, less instruction which the department is The mate, however, informed the cap­ cash in the treasury, amounted to $1,- preparing will be more vigorous in tain, who bullied us into remaining 011,701,838, an increase for the month character than that submitted last sum­ with the ship. of $12,589,771. This increase is ac­ mer. The original note which accom­ counted for by the decrease in the Stone, as a result of the injury he re> panied the claim was courteous in tone ceived, was laid up for some days, 'lur­ amount of cash on hand. and appealed to Spain’s sense of jus­ ing which time he was given but little The most violent storm known since tice. Since its presentation the ad­ to eat. As soon as he had recovered 1851 swept the shores of Cape Ann ministration has made no attempt to sufficiently to venture out and reporj Tuesday night and early Wednesday press the claim, partly on account of for duty, Harvey kicked him off thed being sent to tho bottom by the Indiana tell of severe blizzards. The airship. and Mr. Churchill doesnot recommend “ After many failures we were suc ­ falling of a large weight of bullion wind is blowing a gale and huge snow it. although he says the only reason cessful. The ship actually flew, and from her deck to her hold. Six tons of drifts aie l>eing piled on the highways. why this government should continue we succeeded in steering it. I believe flour racks, piled in the hold, was all All trains are mon' or less delayed. A its hold on the islands is because it is that prevented the precious metal from report front Marquette, Mich., states the that the inflated sail idea is the one morally bound to do so by the course that is going to solve the aerial prob­ going through the vessel's bottom. As storm on the lake is fearful. pursued in the past. lem.” ______________ it was. the falling mars penterated five Mr. Churchill states that if the In 1801 the price of the quarter of the tiers. Third Mate Athens and In th« number of murders Italy leads loaf in England reached about 87 v» Unite'! States was to withdraw from Storekeeper Murphy were injured in the islands they would be divided by tho accident, and the mate was left at Europe. In the number of suicides cents. Thia was in the time of the Na- Russia is ahead. Germany and Great Britain. jwleonic war. Shanghai for surgical treatment. New York, Feb. 3.—The storm which began Sunday night swept over New York stato with great fury, and today was central in the New England states. Northern New York is Htiowhonnd, and the extent of damage in New Eng­ land cannot be approximated. Reports from Boston, with which placo com­ munication was established tonight under great difficulties, after that city had been shut off from New York for many hours, indicate sòme lose of life, and an immense amount of damage to property. Business has been at a standstill in many of the smaller towns; wires all over the country are down; roads are blockaded, and railway traffic greatly imjieded. The “up-the-state” residents have suffered with cold, which ranged sb low as 20 degree« and more below zero. At Albany, Troy, Saratoga and many other places in the state, as much as two and three feet of snow has fallen, and reports tonight are that the blizzard is utili blowing, the worst storm since the memorable one of 1888. Residents of this city have had to battle their way to business against a gale of wind that at times swept along at 40 miles an hour and carried sheets of snow with it. Much delay was caused to the rail­ road mail service, so that the northern part of the state has been practically cut off, and trains on the New York Central were from four to five hours late. From 10,000 to 20,000 men have been at work with thousands of teams on the streets clearing away the snow, yet there has been no appreciable de­ crease in the amount piled up in every direction. Portions of Long island suffered al­ most as much from the storm as the towns far up the state. The east end of the island has been blockaded by the drifting snow. The Long Island rail­ road waB completely closed today. Snow plows, driven by five of the most powerful engines of the road, are now battling with the drifts on the eastern section of the road, which may be clear by tomorrow. « m io B Picific Chairman Hitt on Hawaii’s Strategic Importance. PROTECT Secretary OUR Long viding tiie WEST Opens Bids Government COAST for Pro­ With an Armor Plant—Sixty-Nine Received. Chicago, Feb. 1.—The Post’s Wash­ ington correspondent sends this inter­ view with Chairman Hitt, of the house committee on foreign relation«: “The gist, in my opinion, in the whole Hawaiian situation lies in the strategic position of the little group of islands as a basis of operations for guarding our west coast. There is a strong resemblance in this case to the Bermudas, exeept that the Bermudas are not so commanding. That is, there are other island« to the south of them which would, in case of conflict, to some extent take their place with Eu­ ropean powers, even if they possessed the Bermudas. In the possession of the Hawaiian islands we would have what might be considered safety for our Western coast against the naval powers, except Great Britain, which could still get coal for her ships from the British Columbia ports and use that base for naval operations. The subor­ dinate features, the question of sugar, the character of tho population, the inode of government, etc., take up a great deal of attention, but I think they are of minor importance. “We have now by treaty certain ex­ clusive rights, but that is a terminable treaty. The Hawaiian republic is, theoretically, an independent nation, but is wholly incapable of defending itself and preserving its independence, and the moment that we come into a conflict, any naval power presenting itself will take possession. Once it is possessed by a power like Japan. Eng­ land or Germany, it will be the story of the Bermudas over again, only a stronger and more effective Bermuda on our Western coast. With a coaling station 3,000 miles out, we could double the time and length of effective cruises of our warships going out from San Francisco. Having no neighbor­ ing islands, it leaves the immense ex­ panse of the Northern Pacific utterly inhospitable to our opponents, if we hold it. It is thus of great value as a base for defense or for an enemy to operate against us, “I have thought for many years that these islands were of essential import­ ance to ue. The impression that I got when in the state department in 1881 remains with me. When the question of extending the reciprocity treaty was then under consideration, I was impressed with these facts. The sugar question and its branches is a matter of competing interests. Once incor­ porated, they all go into the hopper to­ gether, as completely as the beet root of Nebraska and the cane of Louisiana. ” DEFEATED IN THE HOUSE. The Teller Resolution Buried by a Ma­ jority of Fifty Votes. Washington, Feb. 2.—The house to- day buried the Teller resolution, de­ claring the bonds of the United States payable in silver, under an adverse majority of 500 votes. The Repub­ licans were solidly arruyed in opiMisition, with two exceptions—Lin- ney of North Carolina, who voted with the Democrats and Populists, ami White of North Carolina, the only col­ ored member of the house, who an­ swered “present,” when hi« name was called. The desertions from the Demo­ cratic side were MoAleer of Pennsyl­ vania, and Elliott of South Carolina. Both voted with the Republicans against the proposition. Speaker Reed, although it is not cus­ tomary for him to vote, hail his name called, and, amid the cheers of his fol­ lowers, went on record in opposition tc the resolution. The vote was reached after five hours of debate, under a special order, adopt­ ed at the opening of the session today. The limited time allowed for debate, and the pressure of members for an opportunity to be heard, was so great that the leaders on both sides were compelled to farm out the time by minutes. This detracted much from the continuity of the discussion, but it in some measure intensified the inter­ est in the galleries, which were crowded all day, and the combatants on the floor were cheered by their respective sym­ pathizers. Many of the senators from the other side of the capitol were pres­ ent to listen to the arguments. The majority, under the leadership of Ding­ ley. who made a carefully prepared speech, sounded the key-note of the op­ position, assumed the position that the last clause of the resolution was in reality a disguised declaration for tho free coinage of silver, while the assault­ ing Democrats, under the direction of Bailey, maintained that the defeat of the resolution was another step in the direction of the establishment of the gold standard, to which he alleged both the president and Secretary Gage had irrevocably committed the Republican party. The debate was at times fast and heated, but there were no sensational incidents, beyond the hissing of Rhea, when he said that, as the author of the ‘‘crime ot ’73,” the hottest place in hades would be reserved for the present secretary of the state. The vote on the resolution was: Ayes, 132; noes, 182. Today’s session of the senate lasted six hours, two of the general appropria­ tion bills—that for the army, carrying $23,243,492, and that for the legisla­ ture, executive and judicial depart­ ment, carrying $21,658,520—were passed, the latter, consisting of 121 pages, occupying the attention of the senate during the greater part of the session. After a brief executive ses­ sion the senate adjourned. CRIME OF IOWA BRUTES. Frozen Bodies of Mother and Daughter Found Near Burlington. Armor Plant Bid*. Burlington, la., Feb. 1.—The dead Washington, Feb. 1.—Proposals were and frozen bodies of Mrs. Fanny Rath- opened today in the office of Secretary burn and her 12-year-old daughter of the Navy Long for the construction Mary were discovered this afternoon in of a government armor plant. There pools of blood at their lonely home were 69 bids, covering every phase of west of this city. The woman’s head the advertisement. There were only had been split open with an ax. The two bids to furnish a complete plant, body of the child was found in a bed­ and only one of these named a figure. room off the kitchen with the throat The Hungtington, W. Va., chamber cut from ear to ear. Evidences of a of commerce offered to follow specifica­ horrible struggle for life were present tions and build the complete plant for on all sides. Evidently the girl had been brutally assaulted by the mur­ $3,325,905. Another offer to supply a complete derer, and her torn clothing indicared plant came from the John P. Holland she had fought desperately for her Company, of New York, but no figure honor. Having accomplished the deed, was named, the company simply offer­ her assailant had cut her throat. The ing to do this for a sum of money and girl’s hand showed cuts received in at­ within a period less than estimated by tempting to defend herself. Blood was the armor board in its report. The scattered ail over the bed and on the bid was accompanied by the expression floor. The body of the woman was of an opinion that armor should be ex­ found to be badly eaten by rats, and cluded in the construction contracts of presented a horrible sight. all vessels, by which policy congress Several arrests have been made, and and the country would understand the the police are actively engaged in run­ full cost of ships and their protection, ning down several clews. It is be­ the price of armor would be reduced, lieved the crime was commited several and its delivery expedited. days ago. The woman was a widow of Another proposal that commanded good reputation, and quite poor. some attention was the bid of the Mecca of the Powers. Reailic Engineering Company, of Co­ lumbus, O. This was a very compli­ Constantinople, Feb. 2.—The Rus­ cated proposhi to supply each of the sian auxiliary cruiser Saratoffam, be­ numerous buildings, furnaces, etc., re­ longing to the volunteer fleet, with 12 quired, as well as 150 acres of land, at quick-firing guns and 1,600 troops on sums specified in each case. A special board, passed the Bospborous yesterday point of interest about the bid was an on her way to Vladivostock. According accompanying offer from the chamber to a dispatch to the London Times, of commerce of Columbus to donate from Odessa, cabled to the Associated $500,000 to the govern ment in the event Press last night, the Russian volunteer the bid should be accepted. fleet will convey in the quickest time It will take some time to schedule practicable over 10,000 Russian troop» all of the bids, but as soon as they can to the far East. be arranged they will be sent to con­ gress by Secretary Long for the informa­ Aged Couple Murdered. tion of that body in case it desires to Grayson, Ky., Feb. 2.—“Virginia embark the government in the manu­ Bill” Riley, an old citizen of Elliott facture of armor. county, aged 80 years, and his wife, Steamboat Inspection in Alanka. about 70 years old, were murdered Washington, Feb. 1.—Secretary Gage tonight at their home, ami robbed of today sent to the house a recommenda­ from $800 to $1,200. There is no olew tion for steamboat inspections in Al­ to the murderers. A maul was the in­ aska. He points out that the tide of strument used. travel to the Klondike fields has result­ ed in the establishment of an extensive San Franisco, Feb. 2.—Hnlda John­ steamboat service on the Yukon. He son, aged 3years, was run down and says suitable protection resulting from killed by an electric car this evening, the inspection of steamers should be in front of the residence of her parents. given the traveling public visiting the The child attempted to cross the track Klondike region, and he submits the in front of a rapidly approaching car, bill to accomplish that end. when she was struck. To Strengthen Spain’s Navy. Hl« Horne Fell I pun Him. London, Feb. 1.—The Madrid cor­ respondent of the Daily Mail says the government will ask the next cortes to vote £8,000,000 for strengthening the navy. San Francisco, Feb. 1.—George Slankard, manager of the Wild West show at Central Par», weas seriously injured today just before the time for the exhibition to begin. He was thrown from hi« horse which fell upon him, crushing his head against the ground. He sustained a fracture of the base of the skull. His oondition is critical and his recovery is doubtful. Frank Beckwith, watchman in the employ of the Ontario & Western rail­ road, was shot and killed by a tramp whom he attempted to arrest in the freight yards. The homicide was Ed­ ward Simpson, a former inmate of the The wheat crop of India i« harvested Elmira reformatory, out on parole. | usually in February.