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Show NEWS SUMMARY. WEEK IX COXti HESS. The death ia announced of Emil II O February lub, the African explorer. Eggs are being shipped to Chicago from California to supply Chicago establishment. Western Oklahoma ia buried nnder the hearest enow since the opening to settlement. A general strike in the window glass plants located in southern New Jeraey is threatened. The Merchants' exchange of Oakland earthquake at Shamaka, have thus far been recovered. Trans-Caucasi- a, Some hundreds of forged Hank of England notes for 5 have been pot da circulation during the last fort-Eftg- The donations of companies aud individuals in Germany fur working people during the year 1901 reached 80,000 jtnarka. 'f (i diM-usne- at reached Hongkong. The cabinet crisis in Peru continues. The minister of war is impotent in the face of the situation. Fred Iteber, an apprentice boilermaker, was shot iu the right leg in a street fight in San Francisco. In Los Angeles Gottlieb Orth, aged 19 years, was struck by an electric car and probably fatally injured. The bodies of 800 victims of the have been ordered for a number of Japanese ofllcers who are accused of looting during the China Courts-marti- lUlsili on Again Unlay ilie the Imllun all.ill was most entirely to extraneous. t.iies. Mr. Hamilton, a Michigan Hejiubliian, enlivened the proceeding with an speech on trusts. The other sjieakers were Mr. I.ittle or Arkansas, who condition! in the Indian Territory ; Mr. Corliss of Michigan, who spoke on the lucitlc cable; Mr. Stephen of Texas, on statehood for Okiuhumu; Mr. Sulzer of New York, on increased pay for letter curriers: Mr. Fitzgerald of New York, on the educa tlon of the Indians; Mr. Jackson of Kansas, on the election of senators by the and Mr. Kewkmds of Nevada on the hill to redeem silver dollars In gold. Six a The senate continued the consideration of the Philippine tariff bill, the main speeches being made by Mr. liurrows of Michigan, for the bill, aud Mr. Money of Mississippi, ieo-pi- e, haa passed resolutions faroring Chinese exclusion. The Marquis Ito, who left Naples, January 25th, en route for Japan, has f 111. Horan. al campaign. A bill lias been introduced in the Maryland sonata appropriating 1100,000 for a stata building at the St. Louis exposition. Mrs. Anon Van Leuven was probably fatally and one other person injured in a runaway in sa-ver- Rad-land- s, Cal. While working in the corral of. a Slaughter house at Ronotna,- James l'redriii wus attacked and seriously injured by vicioua boar. A company composed of Boston and New York capitalists lias laid ont the ground for a new smelter at Grand Junction, to cost $100,000. The French steamship Canada has - arrived at Colon from Savanilla with 00 soldiers and 124 officers, among whom are three generals. News has been received of the murder of Rudolph Ilanaon, an American citizen at Port Lot, on the island of in the Caroline group, Connt de Luce nay, it ia aaid, will get a new trial on the charge of big- lonapi against It. A resolution offered by Mr. Tillman was adopted directing the civil service commission to transmit to the senutc a statement showing the apportionment of the employees In the various departments of the government from the several states and the District of Columbia, together with the percentage of employees In the departments. February XU. Hors. The house spent the day working on the Indian appropriation bill. Forty-tw- o of the slxty-tw- o pages were disposed of. Mr. Shermun of New York, chuirmun of tin Iniltun committee, a ho was in charge ol the measure, explained that the bill carried being f I, SIT, HI more than the estimates, but frCiiT.IM less thun the amount carried by the current law. Mr. Ilell of Colorado offered an amendment to appropriate fl.i, for the Indian school at Grand Junction, Colo. It was adupted. Sixat. With the exception of s few minutes given to routine business, the senate devoted Its entire session to the Philippine question. Mr, Pattersuu of Cotoru.lo, one of the minority members of the committee, spoke at some length, while Mr. Nelson of Minnesota and Mr. McCuintn-- r of North Dakota supported the administration's policy lu the Island. the jnry In the trial of Vernon Rogers, who shot and killed his sweetheart, Margaret Ilal-leon October 19th last, returned a verdict of murder in the second degree. The gorenor of Jamaica, Sir Augustus Heming, will again give up part of his salary in order to further assist the In Cleveland, O., n, colony out of its financial difficulty. Governor Ileining'u salary is 5,000 a year. The governor of Kentucky has offered a reward of $10.) for the arrest of three masked mrti who at Fulton several days ago dragged Bill Dooley, an inoffensive negro, from his home and murdered him. The Tuskegce negro conference, in session at Tuskcgee, Ala., last week, was the largest aud most successful gathering in the history of the movement, both as regards the number of negro farmers and prominent educators from all parts of t lie south. The Chilean government lias officially eonlrailicted rumors that secret negotiations have been iu progress with Argentina for the purpose of reaching a direct settlement on the boundary question without recourse to the British arbitrator. Eight detectives will be near Prince Henry during his time in New York city. It is the intention of the city authorities to so environ the Prince with guards that the possibility of accident will be reduced to a A, I', Christian, a telegraph operator at Galand, Wju, hud his arm hailiy crushed between the ears Saturday, T. F. AchciihHch, a prominent ranchman of Leo. Wyo., committed at Casper, hy taking morphine. Adieu-bae- li was despondent. Three carloads of saddle horses have been purchased about Dillon, Mont., by British agents for tlie use of tlie English army in South Africa. Jaek Waite, who served four years as deputy United States marshal during President Cleveland's last term, committed suicide in Butte last week. d The son of Jainei Smith of La Junta, Colo., while playing Indian with his companions, had one of his eyes shutout with an arrow. C. F. Repatli, county and city attorney of Lake City, Colorado, was fouud dying in his office from an overdose ol No cuu&e for suicide if morphine. sttii-id- e twelve-year-ol- known. Twenty soldiers of the Eighteenth infantry, stationed at Fort Bussell, attended church Sunday in Cheyenne. Tlie next day they were lined $2 each for not being present at the evening roll call. J. S. Aslley, proprietor of the Cheyenne Bottling works, was fouud tiead at his place of business by Itis wife. Physicians examined tho body and attribute death to heart disease, to which lie was subject. At the close of tlie 1901 school year county stqierinleudeutf in Colorado had on hand in their Tlie school funds $:.;:i..VS!i.o. school receipts during the amounted to The ministers of Cheyenne taken up the defense of tlie law and are trying to inaugurate a popular movement for its enforcement, unless tlie Supreme court of the state declaresit is unconstitutional. the fifty-sev- en are two claimants to the all the economic Ills of Americans by the United States of Am- tho application of their Internal remedy. lu the first place, they want an erica. One of them a Bourbon wants to empire, nut a mere kingdom. The title be emperor, while the other, a Stuart, of the propagandists oi Bourbonlsm is the Aryan Order of St. George of the wants The Bourto be There Lhrone of king. merely bon Is Don Carlos, a Spaniard, who is the foremost pretender to the Spanish throne, while the Stuart is Rupert of Bavaria, a German. Each of these gentlemen has a not Inconsiderable number of adherents, who want to see a throne set up in the klue room of the white house, with cither Robert I. or Charles I. upon it. These adherents live in Boston, mostly near the marrhy fens of Black Bay The courtiers and supporters aud generals of the king are banded together under the name of the Order of the White Rose. The White Ruses are practical. They know that in tlto-- e degenerate days a throne may not be taken by its rightful master hy the old and simple method of sending an assassin ahead to dispose of the temporary incumbent and following him in with a lmnch of musketeers. No, the populace must now be considered, and their wills molded so that they will consent to live under a king. As if it should ''take uny differ-vne- e what tlie plebiscite thought. Anybody who goes to tlie opera knows that the populace will stand for anything from a good tenor. The White Roses contend that wc as a nation throw off the yoke of King George of England, who was but a Holy Roman Empire in America. The Carlists hare no newspaper, but they have a Herald. He goes by the name of Messire F. G. Forsalth de Frunsac. A ntessire is a man pretty high among the Aryans. The has Issued his pronunclamen-t- o from Brussels, that city fraught with the fate of many kingdoms and more kings. As a medium of communication he has chosen the Revue Gcnerale, a leading magazine of that city, l.i part the paver of the way speaks thus: The royalists in America desire to substitute for a Democratic and Republican regime a monarchy in which tlie aristo racy shall not be the predominating power nor the middle class have quite the same power as tho aristocracy. For tlie establishment of the monarchy it la enough to depend upon the real disgust which inspires all educated and independent people at the corruption wiilclt prevails among the ruling politicians and in political affairs in the United States. It Is not to be brought about by appealing to the pour people and the laboring men who are now the slaves of tin inillionairt e. All the despots of the republic hatter the labo'ing people and build themselves up by using their power. The laboring classes pos- Herald-Marsh- al $3,170,-130.42- . February XI. Horse The houxe passed the Indian appropriation bill. No uuii'udnienls of importance were attached toll today. .The latter part of the lesson was devoted to the consideration of private claims bills, u number of which were passed. Sb.xatb. For more than six hours the senate hud the Philippine tariff 1,111 under discussion. Mr. Mute (Deui.) of Tennessee delivered a carefully prepared speech in opjiosiilon to the pending measure. He was followed by Mr. 'Spooner (Rep.) Ins brilliant defense of the Hepubllcsn attitude toward the Philippine Islands. Mr. Tillman (Dem.) of Suuth Carolina began a characteristic arraignment of the administration's policy in tlie Philippines, but had not concluded- - when the Sriiqto adjourned. February Sxxatx In XX. accordance with slong-tlm- e cus- tom on Washington's Ulnhday, the farewell address of Washington was read In the senate Immediately after the convening of that body at 11 o'clock. Mr. Hurruws of Michigan read the Immortal document. At the conclusion of the reading at 11:50 Mr. Lodge presented a memorial from the Massachusetts legislature of such an amendment to the Couxtltutlon aa would place It In Uie power of congress to enact laws regarding the hours of labor in the various states. The McLuurfn-Tillma- encounter tak- n amy, for which the jury in El Paso, ing place soon after, hut little other business was transacted. Tex., had given him four years. Bamon (ialingo, leader of the island February 24. Hour band of outlaws, who iu 1893 ambushed The house passed a bill to divide and killed Captain Jones of the First Texas Into four judicial districts, and also the Tawney resolution, calling on the secretary of Texas Rangers, has bceu captured. war for information concerning tho relief A representative of the United of sugar lands In Culm since t lie American occuStates Steel corporation denies the re- pation. It then transacted sumo business per tulnlng to the District of und later port from Sweden that the corporation took up tin: diplomatic und Columbia, consular approprihad bought iron properties in that ation bill. Tin; hill carries an impropriation of l.lWI.r.T-- . an Increase of fsj.iru over last country. year. It nu uuide the vehicle fur speeches on A blue hook containing particulars coiiinpe and i: her Irrelevant matters. trusts, of the expenditures of British ParliaPrince Henry spent lift ecu minutes watching elecmentary candidates at the last the proceedings In the house. tion shows that a total of $2,986,000 Sexatb After eight hours of tumultuous was expended. NORTHWEST NOTES. debate, the senate, shortly before 7 o'clock p m., passed the Philippine tariff bill by a vote os 48 to 28, a strictly party vote. Mr. Tillman and Mr. Mcl.nurin, the two senators from .South Carolina who on Saturday last were declared by the senate to be tn contempt beenuso of their fight in the cliamlier, were nut permitted by video or by veto to participate In the proceedings. The question us to their right tovntepre-ripilule- d a sharp debate, lusting nearly two The president pm lem. Mr. Frye, hours. held that tie- - two senators cuuld not vote, and ho was sustained by a majority of the senate. Dourer Man Acquitted of Munlrr Charge F. Flanders, who has been on trial at Denver for the murder of Mrs. Nellio Ilardifer, lias been acquitted by order of tlie court. The charge was that the two had decided to dio together, and that Flanders administered the poison to the woman and himself. Tlie court decided that the evidence was insufficient. Tim woman died hut Flanders lived. Mrs. Hardi for was the wife of a Denver conW. tractor. anti-gambli- Judge John Slaughter, assistant state librarian, is ill ut his home in Cheyenne, and while there is no immediate danger of fatal results, it is feared that bis great age will work against him. He ia 93 years old. He was the first white man to visit the site of Denver. It is said that Tom Horn, the scout and stock d. clive, confined in the county jail at Chyenne awaiting trial for the alleged murder of Willie Nickle, is growing very nervous and ia eating very little. Ilia trial will be beard some time during tlie early part of Mry. A hunter and trapper who has been operating in North park, Colorado, this winter brought in the pelts of four gray wolves to Fort Collins. The pelts and bounty brought liim over $200. The stockmen of North park are paying a bounty of $50 for each wolf scalp. Miller Olding, a lineman of Anaconda, Mont., while trying to connect a 2,000-vo- lt wire without his safety belt, received a shuck that threw him to tlie ground, receiving injuries from which he died several hours later. Oldings head was crushed and his back broken by the fall. While playing in tlie streets of Casper, Wyo,. Verne M older, the sou of Editor Mokler of the Tribune, fell into a deep bole. The cartli caved in about the boy and it was an hour before he could be extricated. The liul was badly chilled but otherwise did not suffer. Thomas looley, who is charged with tlie murder of Thomas Littlejohn, his and Mrs. Lydia Littlejohn, hia daughter, lias been li lie rated from tlie Butte jail on bail. Two bonds were furnished, amounting to $75,000, 1ooley has been in jail for nearly two years and his case has attracted widespread attention The United Smelting and Refining companys smelter at East Helena, Mont., has received a shipment of silver ore which is believed to be tlie richest ever made in the state. The ore assays $4,000 and is approximately silver. The shipment is made from tlie London mine at 7 - eight-year-o- ld son-in-la- one-quart- jyjTT CARJLCkJ usurper of the throne of England, and never a real monarch. In casting off George we did not therefore forfeit our allegiance to the true British monarch, for George was not the true monarch. Our allegiance to the reigning house of Great Britain, the Stuarts, never having teen declared forfeit, still obRobert la the leader of the tains. Therefore he is Stuart house the real king of Great Britain. Therefore he is the real king of America as well, and he will unite the g races into one grand kingdom, the like of which the world has never seen, comprising every foot of territory, over which floats the Union Jack or the Stars and Stripes. There will be Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Eucland. Ireland, Scotland, India, tlie lhilippines, Hongkong, Ceylon, Pierre Leone, the Gold coast. British West Africa. BritWest ish Guinea, British Indies, of the Suez and control GibPorto canals. Rico, raltar, Hawaii, British Borneo, tlie Sandwich Islands. In a few years Cuba and South America would probably gravitate in. What a navy the union of the two powt rs would have! Such Is the argument of the White Roses, as announced in tlie Royal Standard. And they believe it. Tho Carlists are not so much on external policies, hut they expect to cure to-da- y. English-speakin- Fa-na- er 's "V.-Mrs. Clara Malvern was shot to dentil at her home in Snohomish, Wash., last week, but whether it was a ease of suicide or uinrdcr tlie coroner's jury has not yet decided. Joe Malvern, a piano player, went home in an intoxicated condition mid began a quarrel with itis wife, during which a shot was fired. Malvern claims itis wife shot herself. The Colorado Fuel and Iron company at I'uehlo will soon undertake the largest storage reservoir scheme in the state by building a stone dam across the entrance to the Beulah valley. The water will supply the steel works. v f v s I'esponiilbUltieS. The members of the Aryan order are ready at any moment to set about the reorganization of political affairs in the United States. It always rests true to the traditions of monarchy, and this is also true of that important clcmert, the descendants of noble families who s.re living in Canada and the Ui ited Plates For them the true pretender is Den Carlos, who represent the French royalty which in-It uled the o'der of nobility in America. '' m and Baconian believers in the authorship of the Shakespeare plays, is a of Detroit. Mich. For some time she was an assistant to Dr. Owens in 1ms Pi:;kespi;vrran researches, wherein he endeavored to demonstrate the Ha? cunuin theory of authorship. Mrs. Gallup's professed application oi the biliirral cipher of lh'con to tht plays and to works of Spenser, Mar in we, Greene, IVele, Burton and Iopi and the unearthing thereby not onlj the buried secret of Baffin's authorship of these works, but also his illegitimate kinship to (jtifou Elizabeth, hat made her the subject of much unfavorable criticism. res-itln- it Nio-har- t. In Kingston, Jninnicu, tho political troubles ham hecti revived hy the withdrawal off tlie people's representatives from tlie legislative council in consequence of tlie threat of tlie government to carry tlie budget, not with standing uny opposition whijli may ho offered. The partisans of General Matos, the leader of the present revolution against President Castro of Venezuela, who nnder tho cotuand of Uenerais Kiera and Tenaloza, lately landed pn tho Venezuelan coast near Velade Coro, were defeated by tho ; government troops February 17th, the greatest number and have the majority of the electors, and in behalf of their pretended interests they always are appealed to by the.dema-gigue- s of both parties. But in reality the sole interests considered are those of the monopolies and trusts. The middle classes, on the contrary, are neglected and despised, and are beginning to believe the predictions of tlie monarchists that the present condition of things cannot exist lon? without the government becoming an oligarchy, which will be brought about hy the concentration of capita in the hands of a few millionaires who will run things for their own be nt lit. It is this peril against desire to offer a which the Royaiii-tsafeguard by substituting a monarchy for a republic, and replacing a government irresponsible anil changeable with one stable and conscious of its 8088 ; ' V : - s ;) I'rnnut for Squirrels. The Central Bark authorities in New Mrs. Wells Gallup, whose recent York have bought a number of bushels work on the blliteral cipher of Francis of peanuts that are to be fed to thf Bacon haa excited much controversy in scores of squirrels that live in the park England between the Shakespearean trees. |