Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1902)
V IMCTCP IK IMI-WIMLT IECTIOXS, XACH TCESUAT AHO FBI DAT. 51tt YEAR NO. 47. OREGON STATESMAN TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1S 1902. FIRST SECTION EIGHT PACES. 1 - . i A HURRICANE AT ASTORIA L ' - ; . ; . , J - S ' The Wind Rtcchrd a Velocity of Oat Hundred nines PER HOUR LAST EVENING ONE MAN KILLED j BY THE' OVER 1 TURNING OF A SIDEWALK. . 'Ji- - V ' Great Alarm in Southern Mexico en Account of the Appearance of Vol canio Activity, and People Are Fleeing Earthquake Shocks in Trans-Caucasia "Have Killad Many -People Disturbance Continue. ASTORIA, Feb. 15. A gale is raging along the coast tonight, and one life wa lost in this city at a result of the storm. Capt. Hans Roustoff, while walking along Twenty-fifth gtreet, was instantly killed by tha overturning of 1 . .. ' . ' " ft. ... AL. sidewalk, which was caught by the a wind. At times the wind attained a velocity of 100 miles an hour. rut ' K , j ACTIVE VOLCANOS. : 1 hiii.i.fic.insro. Mexico. Feb.' J &. Orrat Irrn pr'evnilH here, as well us in i hliip 'I'lxiJI.i. it th- dlH.ovt-ry i,t v4...Milr Hiuoke uuitiK from lite :vpetlnj.' In lh mimmlt of Tcrn-ihicul .1 1. .!... The iflib- of the towns ti.itiM il linvnteii i iulli1lc to. dlxtant (,.rM .'l.irine'l are Hi V il this hew 1 iiik ifn It "I a' KUbtiTi.Hi'-.Wl dlUltb- MII4 f. i . ' ' Efthqv:alo In Russia, n.ikii-ftustlfin Trant-''Hucaslit, F-t. V.,. Tli" (H.Hl' t head 'f Hh.imtikii Icl- -r Ui.it Ihe towii imw (ilnnt i..mpt"i-l ,den(rny(Mi, tmly it iloaen jniiifn if.-lnif Jcft a(;iniIIHK. td that lite !'.! of II f" niiit -very ntfut. The ilmnli. lite unHur; Ihe bjifjii'-ks, and UW' tff.txiiry wen-destroyed, imd Si5,M (.,1, ,1.11 ,ir wiitiout fooiil uitl she! i r. Titf etirthiuaik shock, continued toil. I) . - ; " A Mob Feared, h fjiiihtic.'' ok., Fcti. 15. A heavy eiiu l A(in thrown around the county Jill i.f Mliilite county tnnluht. io protect Vli.lj.lms Trumley from a mob. At Jiuiv. Triiiitley shot W. II. Putrttk, killing him Instiintiy. Trumley uUeee it, ..1 t':i 1 1 ii k was iittltiutte with i: his Drank Wood Alcohol- Outline, n. T., Feb.-15.--Hecmie they could nt yet -whiskey Ne K . Shu, lltiah Miller, and Allen Olbsoit, !).!' India ni, limtik a fonroet ln of ' -wood ohl, Vnnllii, "olotne und Florida water; whUh killed thein. Charged With : Bribery. St. Imls. Feb. 1 ..-- Hrtbert M. Srty dofof New York, has been Indicted for btiUry by the tlraitd Jury." hb h is Intent ItMt'ln the intinli-lpal franchise lireiriiMrltlea. and u. bench warrant Is iKsued forhia arnt. Snyder In the promoter . wh'j pushed the tVntral Ti .ution billhruuRh the municipal u enilly. ! . 1 - !"''ha Bank Wrecker. . r ' rJetn.itFelv Fratik . Andrews. rx-polic niimMner, wax arraigned tod.iy on a warrant chanting him with nii..ipplyli'ir h funds of the wrecked "My Savings Hunk, to the amount of JL'oii.ooa and upward. His lxnd wart tlxed at $i:..00). This la the aoeond AMiriitiii sworn out for Andrews. He ,ts iirrtlKned: on the first warrant Monday nleht, '-and released under a Ji,it boti'l. i ? ; ' Shot Himself. . , . . ItMtto. Mont. Feb.: 15. A social to the Miner, from tJvincstoh, s.lys: "Jar,. Moorman, welt kmiwn atut thtx pl.oV, committed suicide last nltrht hy FhooUntr hlmwlf through the. head w ilh a ilfie." Used Gasoline. Seattle. Feb. IS. Mr. P. J. McIon il.l was frlKhtfuUy burned today, while ttylna; to kindle n fire wfth the aid of aw-iiu,-. The. oil i xploded and she w.ts Mrlruely bunted. - . A Patient Escaped.- Seattle, Fei. 15. 1. T. Mlnlnjr. an in wane .man on th4 vtay to the arylum at Stellj,iet.,nu eluded his a-uards on thf Kiramer Ftopla this mornln. and plutiRed Into the bay, , He wa rescued. mr. WilKINQ MATCH. Fifteen Out of the Fortythree Teams Starting Finiahod the Six Days' Contest. i NF.W YORK, Feb, ?S. wd as sembled at Madison 1M', !arden to night, to witness tht flnlsh of the tlx day w-Hlklne rnatchi tf the forty three teams which- errnmel the line on Muhday nlsht. only 'fifteen ' remalnM on the track at flnlslu The prise mon--y will be divided a follows: , Flral team: flOOO; se,ond. third, JT&ft; fourth,' - tH;- fifth, sixth, ieventh, SSOO; eishth, 1175; ninth, $!S; tenthltpS. lltelman and Cavanaufh, Oer- ! . . J. man-Irish tfiim, who bad been in the lead from the a Uirt, held their place wna ease, , THE GENMAN ADMIRAL Viaita the Kaiser New Yacht and la Pleated With It. . ' ' - 1 , 1 ' " NRW YORK. Feb. 18. Rear Admiral Count von Paudlssln. of the Imperial yacht Hohenzollern, Inspected the Ger man Emperor yacht Meteor, at Khooter Island today, and expressed the highest Admiration of the vessel. Hefore visiting the yacht, the Admiral called upon Rear! Admiral Rrfbley IX Ivvans, on board the battleship' Illinois. It was Von Raudlssln's first visit to an A.nerlcan battleship, and he made a careful inspection, declaring her to be a magnificent example of the most ad vanced ryiva.1 architecture. j 1 AN OREGON CADET Among Ten Graduates of Highest Stanting at Annapolis. ANNAPOLIS, Md.. Feb. 15. Oregon Is represented anions; the ten men of tin? highest standing in the graduating tjaaa of th United States Naval Acad emy, which nufnlx-r sixty, as the re sult of the semi annual examinations., which hate. Just been held. Following is the standing of, lhettrt ten, men; No. 1, Horace C. Klyce.: Arkansas; No. .2. Henry L-S. Wallace, Colorado; No. 3. Frank W. Sterling;, JllinoU; No. 4. " ' James O. HU-hardaon, Texas; No. 5. Woodruff, Michigan; No' 6, tw n fJamB . nilnols; No. i - . . .. ...... : . Oil- ford. Darst, W. Va.; No. . F.mery Sland, Wyoming;; N,o. 9, T. W.-Osburn, Oregon; No. 10, Clayton M. Summers, Pennsylvania, , KILLED i IN SrjOWSLIDE THREE MEN LOST THEIR LIVES IN IDAHO MOUNTAINS While on Their Way to the Thonder Mountain Mining District-Another Fatality at Buffalo Hump. r.KWJHTON, Idaho, Feb, J3.A spe cial from Oranjreville, ; Ida ho, to the Tribune sayj: A mlft'T artlved iodayifrom Warren lrinflnr the news of "thVdeath of three men who were caught In a snowsllde near the head of Smith Oulch, while en rou to Thunder-Mountain. The vli tlms. nre: I'.ert Titles, J. It. Camp b. , and It. M. Sayler. tf Welaer, Ida. Th" uiffi wcre.truvellnir overoft snow a fHt in depth, when the slide from the mountain entombed them. From IlufTalo Hump co.mes the n-ws that. Men Hamilton lost his life In a rnowsltde there last Wednesday, llatti llton was rntutht In nn nvatanC'he of snow a half mile wide. NO TRUTH IN IT. OMAHA. b. I Oehral Manser Holdildjrr, of the nurllnirton road, stat ed - today ..that there was no truth In the Wall- Walta, Waohlnfctnn. report, that his contemplates bulldliiK 'a line from Hltllnas across the Ulue Mountains, lo Milton. Orejrort. ; " BOUND FOR NOME. SI-JATTI.K, Feb. 15. Over 100 xmn senaem sailed tonltcht on the Ktearner Nmno t'lty, for V'aldes and IJUarnna. Many of the passengers nre on the way to .Nome 'lty, . Anmnjr them a,re members of the ireoloRlcal e-xpedlttAn. that will operate on the Copper a-nd White rivers. 1 . A BIG PURSE. SAN FISANCISCO. Feb. 1... KnnlC. earrytnc Ihe tolors of Caesar .Tmtn? and ridden I'ty I.ee Jaekwin, won th $l.000 Hurn handicap at Oakland to day. In the presence of over "otto peo ple. M'ttcn was second, apL Corrlgan, third, time. 2:10. KENTUCKY GIRLS ENDORSED. L I.ITTLK UOCK, Ark!. Feb. It. The Wriie Kock Memorial Chapter 'of the "IiatiKhtfis of the Confederacy." has adopted a resolution '.endoraina; the ac tion taken by hf ch ipter at Ijcklnstoa, Ky In opp!ltlon ti the play, of "Tnile Tom's Cabin."' ' ' - ! THE STRIKERS WIN. - TKlF.STi:, Fib. 15. The announce ment. that It had been decided to eon-' Cfil the demands cf th strikers had a tiartMUiiixina; effect on the rioter thl. eeninr. The total mtmlvr killed l six, und a sthre were Injured. DR. LEYDS DINED. ? UiNDoN. Feb. 15.4-A dispatch from Paris eays, Ir. Leyds, repres-iitatlv It Kurp of the -Tranav;ssl, was the KueSt tonight at a diplomat te dinner given by Waldeck-Itousaeuu, the French Premier. IN HONOR OF TILDEN. j I-:W TOKK. fb. 15.4lemocrais. prominent In this and other sections of the country, met at a dinner tonight by Invitation of the Hmuklyn Iemo- ralle Cluli, to do lionor to ths memory of Sam'l 3. Tllden. CONE TO REST. ( iLTM PI A, Wa sh.. Feb. , .1 Word h.ii been received from Kan -KranHari, nr.ih ilMth uf W D. jenains, son was Secretary of Slate of Washington j in 1S7.- He waa 60. year old. , ROOSEVELT 'ON SCHLEY'S CASE '1 The Pn stent's Dtclslsa UHI Ce a Ccraprcinhe EVENTS OCCURRING THE BATTLE OF WERE CONDONED. PRIOR TO SANTIAGO By the Promotion Recommended by the President and Navy Department The Admiral's Action Will Be Denominated as Courageous The Victory Was Won by All the Cap tain Against Chinese. ' WASHINGTON, Feb. 15. The Post tomorrow will say: "The President's views regarding Schley became gener ally known last .night. It : ( said he will not undertake to discuss, in his review, any of the events which qo cur red prior to the battle of Santiago, on the ground that, if Schley's conduct was reprehensible, it was-condoned'by the Navy Department and by President McKlnley, when Schley's promotion was recommended. As for the battle of Santiago, the President is inclined to the opinion that the victory was won by all the captains, and that the credit cannot therefore be given exclusively to Schley, although the latter acted courageously and, with the Oregon, succeeded in preventing the escape of the Colon." FRIEND OF CHINESE. Washington, . I'Ph. 15. Kx-l'nlted M tales Henator Thurston, of Nebraska, mailt an argument before the Senate Cotntnltteo on Immigration today, against the proposed Chinese exclusion till. He said the regulation or Chi nese immigration should !hj left to df plomntic negotiations. He contended that the Chinese tK)vernment would be willing to co-ojierate with the United Htatcs lit meeting our desires, und eald that It is far preferable to approach the solution of the problem In thut way, in view of the fact that we tire now asking of China more th;in ever before, while we are In a. position to give less. Governor Taft Talks. Washington,. Feb. 15. Hefore the Semite Committee on the Philippines, today, Ooyernor Taft, In reply to ques tions by Senator Comas, based uin th Democratic substitute for. the Phil ippine tariff bill, said that to turn the Oovernment of the archipelagos over to the Filipinos, as therein pVoposed, would In his' opinion result In anarchy anil In 11 disturbance of vested rights to such an extent as to render it neves sary for the United States to resume its control with nil the work to do over njMln that had been done in the hist two, years. He had no doubt, how ever, that the Filipinos could form a government, as they had done under Agulnaldo. The Census Bureau. Washington, Feb. 15. During the entire session today the Senate had under consideration the bill establish ing n. permanent Census Office. It was not completed, but the.aaTreethent was reached to take it up again Immedi ately after the executive session Mon 'day. The great contest of the day was over'the transfer to the classified ser vice of the employes, of the Census Office, who are lo be retained in permn. nent establishment. It involved the entire civil service question and the debate covered 'much of the ground heretofore gone over in Congressional debates. ' 1 MRS. JEFFERSON DAVIS Visits the Legislature of Mississippi and Addresses the Me sneers. . JACKSON. Miss., Feb. IS. Mrs. Jef fron Davis appeared lefore th If l.elatuie of Missiaiippi today, and h-r presence caused a very affecting scene. She was-Introduced to the joint e ; n by Senator Cayce, who eulogised Jef ferson V its If. Mrs. I'atis burnt into tears when sbe attempted to reply. "Oentlewien." ?le siid. "I - ehafl al ways tenderly. love the people of Mis sissippi, who clung to the cause f the defeated men. I ran .ay no more. BRITtH CASUALTIES. laNIKN. .Frb. l..-The rauialty rei rorts oft the fight at Klip river, last Wednesday, show that our British of ficers and' twenty-nine, tmn were wounded and Itronwn k'lll1. - No de tails of the engagerut n't are given. j HIS LAST SONG. A Minstrel Shoots into .g Missouri Ami - die nee and Is Promptly Lynched. ST. IvOriJ. Feb. 17-r-A stteel.il lo the Ptst Dispatch from New Madrid, Mo., at s . a ta. I emt. a aa dtansaa-.kl .9 wmmMkA saa wsa 1 11.-11 i ni iiik 111 am fsii 1 ..- vat . men overisiwemd th, jtiler a.nd took a negro. Louis Wright, short distance from town and hanged him. Richard & Prtnglea neero minstrels gave an en- tertainment there, Saturday n'srht when an altercation arose between one of the musicians and some of the white town boys. Several of the boys under took to take the musician out, when the negroes on the stane bearan to shoot. Several whites In the audience were hit, but no one was eeridusly hurt. ' The negroes rait out the back way to their private car. which was soon surrounded by armed men, but no vio lence was done owing to the arrival of ihe town marshal. All the nearoes were put In Jail, end as the.fesult of an examination the name of the one who did, the shooting was discovered. He was lynched and the others will be released. Several of the prisoners were badly beaten Saturday night. . - . . THE RAILROAD MERGER. 'T. PAtru Mlnn.j Feb. 17-The state Senate, this afternoon passed a; bill, ap propriating 125,000 to pay the expenses of the legal contest against the so-called merger of the Northern Faclfic and Great Northern Railways . YOUNG TEDDY IMPR0VIN4. . v . . ohOTON, Mass Feb. jr. The pro gress of the Preaideht'v son in his convalescent from the recent attack of pneumonia, continues most favor able. 1 , . 1 THE MARKETS. 1MHTLANI. Or., Feb. 17. Wheat, Wlla Walla, VMjc. Tucoma. Feb. 1". Wheat, Itluestem, j',c; Mub, 61'ic. Sun Francisco, Feb. 17. W.heat cash. Chicago. Fib. 17. Wheat. May, npoe Iiik, 7sSl7ST4c; closing, 7ic. Ffax. Northwestern, $1.71. f NEW SETTLERS RATES GREAT NORTHERN JOINS IN GIV ING HOME-SEEKERS. Low! Rates to Willamette Valley I ... 1 V .- t Points All Northern Reads Have Now Included Oregon in the Iten erary Except the Canadian Pacific, PORTLAND, tirvut Northern Or., Feb. 17. The U the latest to an nounce common-iolut selllers' rates t the Willamette Valley, the coneessloi so lone and tierslstently fought for by Ocneral Freight and Passenger Agent R. It. Miller, of the SiUthern: PaCinti This annotinceihenl wns recelvel by Henry Dickson, .city ticket agent of the Oreut Northern, from F. I. Whitney, geit'Ti'il passenger and ticket agent, headouarters at Rt. Paul, this morning. With this annoum-einent also came the announcement of the resumption' of colonists' excursions to the Pacific Northwest, beginning tomorrow. ! , The telegram received from Mr. Whitney reada a follows: i "IleglnnVpg Tuesday, February- 1$. and continuing on the first and third Tuesdays of each month until May 29, inclusive, we will resume sale of round-trip homeseekers" excursion tit-kets at on fare, plus $2. this to cover, all territory up to and including Portland.- Or. j "We will also apply I2T. settlers' one way rates to all points between Port land and Ashland. Or., during the months of March and April.' h As all the Northern transcontinental roads,; with the exception of the Cftna dlan I'at'lflc. have now mot the. cotn-mon-iolnt rates into Fiaslern Oregon; made by the I'nlon Pacific and Its con nections, the Willamette Valley has ob tained the recognition she has so long iteen clamoring for. The Canadian Pa cific; although not yet heard from, wild meet these rates alo.; Of this there jls mo question, tis all of the Northern roads, unless engaged In a rate war, invariably pursue the sante iollcy THE DUEL MUST GO. Radical Member of the German Reichs tag Would Exterminate These Fighters in the. Army. I ItKItMN. Feb. 17. During the dis cussion today, in the Reichstag, of the military budget, Herr jVmtmann. R.id lysit, moved thiit measures te taken, to eliminate tlueUsts from the German army. Herr iiu!mann(iold he thought ICmperor Wilfiam us4d hts iweri of pardoning dur lists among the officers too freely, thus rendering the penalties attached to dueling lllusry. BIO MINING DEAL. RAfCTR CITY.. Or, Feb. IT. The greatest mining. deal In the history of fietrn reg.n wa cls-l"h;re teiay, by which the noted Red Hoy and"on crd mines of the Oranlie district were conwtlidated.' The capital stoikj la $3,000,000, t He Recommends Chamberlain's Cough t , - Remedy.-. - j "I have used 4'hatnberialn'S Cough Remedy or a number of years and have ti hesitancy in saying th.it ft l the- best remedy for coughs, colds and croup I have ever used in my family. I have -not wrde o express my m-fl'b-nee In this Remedy. Mrs, J. A. More. North Star. Mlih.r For sale by HTONK H IHll'tl TtRKS. j STANIHN! ROOM ONLY.The Jes sie Sfairtey Comjany. that favorite re p rtrtire aggngation, billed to at Iear at the New Orand e-ery night next week, the Sacramento IteVj say lo a. recent t ste: "The Jesle Shirty 'cwipany closed ita two weeks engagement at h tnnnle. Theatre last night to a rrowdt-d house standing room only te- ing aval able when the curtain up. , , went BIG BLIZZARDS ARE The Tell of Sc3w la New tzi Ptl!:itl;h!a IS THE HEAVIEST! EXPER ENCED IN MANY YEARS TRAFFIC SE- RIOUSLY INTERRUPTED. Streets Blockaded and Care Stalled and Conditions Generally Worse Than tOuring. the-Great Storm of 1888 ' '. . - ' I One Schooner Reported Wrecked on the Atlantie Ceait High Winds a Feature of the Ugly Weather. X NEW YORK, Feb. 17. N 9W York pity has borne the brunt of the fiercest snow storm that has struck thi of country since the great bli 1888. Beginning aoon after 1 xcard of: .1 . 1 id night the storm increased rapidly Lntil by day break the whole city wis com- pletely snowed under. The fall up to- 3 o'clock this afternoon va 9 310 inches. 1 - The congestion of traffic rrf the Manhattan strict ear lines was severe during the mortWtiK, when many of the avenues were blocked with lohg lines of stallct ca rs. On Broadway the whel traffic was confined to narrow lanes between hlh snow hills, and along the, cabs, trucks and 1 cars t rawled' at a snail's iwo-e, Thi' condl tions of irHftlc weie in every respect worse than In the. gre.it btlj-.zard of lSfii. At Philadelphia. Philadelphia. Fa., Fell, heavy siiw storm which begin section last night, teased at I this afternoon, the; fall of nnn the hewvlest In three years, wind accompanied the snow night thet wind Is r dlin4nlshi greatest fall of 'snow oct urre. lantlr City, which was -the c the storm this morning. The liiireau tin-re reirls that "1 fell, ami that the mjikfntutn v the wind was thirty-four mile May reiKrtel a snow fall of ) In this city 11 inches of snow 7. The In thi o'clock w Itelhg A high but to- g. The at At nler if WeMlh.r inches Klty of t.'ape inches. was re - corded at the Weather Hureanf, and in the. Interior of Pennsy lvania. ll ie snow fall reiiorta vary fnmtn one to.i WHh the exception of the s Inches. randlng of the sihminer Anna Murr iy. nr the Indian River!! Inlet 11 fe saviug station, from Chlneote;igue, . Vs., to Rarnega.t? N J., no vessels are In distress. i rciorted HOPE OF BOERS. They Will Arrange for Aiding the : South African Sufferers!. Paris, Feb. 17. Dr. I.eyds, the Kuro pean agent of the Roers, who Is now Jh this city, was questioned by the Asso elated Press -orresiondent to lay re garding the object Of theTmlssldn to the I'nited. States of the Itoer delegates. M e ss rs. Wess-1 a a n 1 Wol m a rep s. ' He replied that they were merely going to America in ' respotnse to Jnfltatlons from American uro-IJoers. with . the view of reaching nn; arrungeihent fojri me uamiiui?on iir luna.t ami twiner as sistance conlributed ty the prntIeXf the t'nlted States toward t!he Ioer cause. - :-.', .. " i i .. In other quarters,. however, th Im pression olrtains that the Jonriiey is prompted by the (development t of the Anglo-Oerman rmtrversy r'n to the attitude of the power previous to the Spanish-Amerlcam War, Whijeh, the members of the. Hoer delegation be lieve, baa produced s change of senti ment In the Cnl'ten ttates j toward Or eat Uritaln. TJie Ibwrs hofMi to ulil Ixe this suptxmed revulsion ff fe-llng in an endeavor to get l"nltll States Government to modify Its attijlude to ward mediation. What Kruger Expects.!' London, Feb.?. In a fitspatji h from Amsterdam the correspondent of the Iafly Mail sjiys Mr. Krug.-r experts. fa vorable ruJKt from t li" tour) of. the Cnited States of Wolwiarena and. Wes sels, and lhat they Intend toj exploit diplomatic disclosure In the msttef of the . Spanish-American .War jdlsptit. Wessrls and Wolrnarena eiief to bind at. New1 York simultaneously with Prince" Henry. Tlie fvwr delegates will visit New York, f hlUdephla. Roon. Chlcagfi, New Orleons, f!t. Ixiula and H.ti Fran i co. -1 A TROOP TRANSPOR 4 IT. SAN FTrAHrr'lS'o; Feb. 17. The trnsjiort Meade arrived today thfrty tw days front Manll with tt 12"9 Sfddiera wte terms I of servilt. have expired. Four deathstoecurre't during the voyage. - ' i - . BOARDING OFFICERS Immigration Inspectors Discharged Because ef Cerruptionj. m,;i .WASIIINOTON, Feb; 17. Thp Tres ury Ixpartmenl .today 'eonelided Ihe invesiUati-ja into tlie charcf-a made agalnrt vsiiotif fmnrdgratlott trsctors, a ting Jt boarding fTlf era it ?fef York. The Investigation has 'resulted In the discharge of two pf the jfnspert or agajnttt whom charge w fere. . yre- RAGING York f erred Albert Wank and Herbert Sax too. Six other accused otTKUl are. to te retained In the service, but the Commitsloner at New York has Urn ordered to reprimand them. " r - 1 "' 1 11 iSSiw Si ism a m - " - j if -j-- r PORTLAND LABORING MEN Denounce the Chamber of Commerce Resolutions Regarding the Imml v geatien of 'Chineaew- 9 m .-!!'' ." ItiRTJASfD, Feb. 17. A mass meet Ing at the F.xpoeitlou ..building to night, largely compsed of I.itring men, denounced the resolution recent -ly lotted ty the -Trustees 'of the Portland Chambr of Commerce favor ing the unrestricted lotnitgrntiitti of certain ll.t sees of favored Chlnesw CHINESE MINISTER DEAD. ST. PETERSRl'Iia. Feb. 17. Yang Tu. the Chinese Minister to Russia, died tday. Yang tu was formerly Minister at Washington. A RICH STRIKE. ROISK. Ida. Feb. 17. News, received under, date of February S3.- from the foreman of the Hold Ridge Company; at Thunder Mountain, announces that the tunnel being run on Falrvlew No. 3 has openeil a great ore dcHlt. He do'S not give the! valued, but says that the ore pan wn In free gild, ad thtt tt t Itst1hi 1 that In the Dewey prop erty two-miles east. - ... I - -- "t MANY NKW mIDDJN;-WHl go up in Ha I em In 1902. and air the bull, led will rttntlnue- to find a very: c-mtplete slock, of gna-erles at Ihe popular gro vel y store of ltranson & Itgau. 1' ft'.! fllEY WILL NOT SUBMIT HAWAIIANS ARE ANGRY AT DEL EGATE WILCOX'S ACTION In Endeavoring to Establish "Nation al Laxaretto on MoloVei A Mass Meeting ' Held to Protest 'Against the Measure.' IHNJLl'M KeU .-A maaa meet, iig w-as held last night, under tto huh. pices of ,the Republican territorial Central Committee. o protest 'ag-ilnst the bill rH-enlly Introduced', tnlo Con gress by lelegate Wlleox; providing for Ihe CKtabllebment . of a patioiml l.miretto at . Motokal. Tlo loeellng was targ'-ly aitembil. " Rfpresetitatlves from the. commercial -tnlerest'a and va rious . prominent eoph tHir j.i-c-hl. Tb greatest lnter tt was ttiiUen In the' pna-eeilings by the natives. Iseveial of thHr lendrs ticing heard In iojHifloii to the no-asurc. THE W1LLARD MEMORIAL AT W. C. T. U. ROOMS. Aaj Eacelleat Program Bn6tfd on Sunday Afterweon . Severaf M1- isterv Delivered Addresses.. 4 IIITT .1..... J. I'-'HIfi .Mif.. afternoon,, the- im-morlal. sert Ices In honor of , Miss Frances K. Wiltard, were well altendetl and an excellent program was rendered. " After congregational singlg of several p.pu!nr. Iiyums, and prayer, the following numbers were rendered: ' -".The Croflc psalm",. M rs. Reeves. yThe Wotk Ot'. s On",.Rv. Henderson 'Solo...... Kale O'Fljhg le-d Intd. Widening Ways'.. ..... ... .. .. ...-. .. .. ......... .Rev. M ivillof Reel t a t Ion ......Mrs. Wall- Instrumental Mudc Little (Hits An after meeting wj held to give m!I ladles present; who-dslri to Join "the C. T. I., an opHrtiiblty to do so. arid sj-veral at cessions ate rcl'orted. AN ADMFNISTRATOR" - APPOINTED YESTERDAY To Administer Estate ef a Man Whs ': n:j sj;l.:.- a c:.i . , count Filed and Set For Hearing. t"poh'ietitlon of Philip I. tavage, the Marion county probate tmrt yesterday appointed Corge Orfswotd as'adoilni tratorof the estate of Frank Havag, deceased; w h't dlel In Coos cunty, Mictiian. on Augut 27. l'-si, iesvfrK prtfef ty in this -ounty of the jrtoabl vlue of t3t'I. ' A bond In the sum -i Jt'HiO wsn required of the adntlnl'trator and Fr.d Hurst, KranK !rby and Wll A-.M'eores were sppolnted' sp praisers. . f Thomas J. Daii, guardiaul of . Ihe persons and estates of, Henry K, Davis and Hurt on , Iavis. mitKrs. fiii Ms fl n -tl account upon the estates and he was discharged frooi bis truxtl and his i"n4rm. rfl-sMd from furtliier IUM1- iy. . : . IK IMPROVING. MIm Acnn Kurt' who hsa b n quite III for nr!y two we-fcj, ai toiprmfnif snd for th past,' few days has been able to rit up for a wblle faf h day. though It will be some time bof.sre h can lave lh liouve' Ml- Kurtx has pot. eniyed god health for some time, nhe Mvtng se.v eral years ago gratuitously nursed an invalid ft lnd. now' deceased," who had suffered a stroke of rarIyils. and be. Ing thus engaged Miss Kurts received ft Injury, to her spfnv, causing r-ttw plications from whl'h she has suffered eve! since. Mix Kurfa'a friertda verv much regret h-r misfortune snd hope for ber early recovery.