SPURN RHODES' GIFT German Students Unwilling to Ac cept Scholarships at Oxford. rimiM llciiiK liii ill for tln» Distribution of tlic Two Hundred Soliolnr nlii|>M iii iJio I nited Stmt en 111141 llritiMh ( olonicM. A commission appointed by Emperor William, consisting of l)r. Friedrich Schmidt, of the ministry of education of Germany, and l'rof. Kielhorne, lias been at Oxford making inquiries as to the arrangements for the reception of scholars from Germany, under the will of the late Cecil Rhodes. There are constantly increasing signs that it will be difficult to find German stu dents of the bust types who are will ing to accept tiie scholarships. The German hatred of the English seems as strong among students as in other classes. It was recently resolved at a representative meeting of all the German university corps or dueling clubs, which was held at Kosen, that the members of these corporations should have nothing to do with the Rhodes scholarships. Anyone with a ■ knowledge of German universities will appreciate what this means. Dr. George It. l'arkin, the commis sioner who is charged with the dis tribution of the Cecil Rhodes scholar ships in the British colonies and the United States, has returned to Amer ica from England. "There are some 200 scholarships to be distributed in the ! tates and colonies," said Dr. Park in. "1 have been at Oxford for several weeks trying to get the wishes of the Oxford authorities as to the manner of distribution. There are 21 colleges at Oxford, and each wants such schol arships as are awarded it to come un der its own peculiar rules of entrance, and so forth. Some prefer to have post graduate and others undergrad uate scholarships. For the next year 1 be kept busy visiting and con sulting with the leading educators of the states and colonies as to the best methods of selecting candidates for the various scholarships. Each of these scholarships carries with it $1,500 a year for three years, and it is an interesting question just what classes of men are going to apply for them. The first beneficiaries will go to Oxford in the fall of 11)04, conse quently the final awards will be made early in that year." WANTS MORE CRUISERS. German Fli»et Society I'rcMciitK F1 B "»•» Sliowiiuc Need of a Lf vio let hue, ten green parasols, 20 dozen handkerchiefs, 150 cravats of resplen dent and varied hues, ten waistcoats, 3' pairs of walking shoes, two pairs of slippers, "soft, silent and tremu lous, three revolvers, a dagger, a box of perfume, and one lapdog. A MIAHIIIarI \\ 01111111*11 U IIIIIN, A woman is advertising in one of the .Missouri papers "for a borne 'n n family where there are no chil dren, no washing, and good wages." She should explain, says the Chicago Record llerald, whether she will be satisfied with Brussels carpet in her room, or whether she prefers oriental rugs. Time lit U'liki* I p. A Philadelphia man died the other night while suffering with night mare. Really, says the Chicago R, . . ord Herald, the people of Philadel phia ought to wake up. Unleli lime on llunit lilp. A mile a minute is pretty fast, say., the < hieugo Record Her.■ )cl, but some of the living machine inventors hnv<* beaten even that on the way down. Dire I'oilUhmrut for Millnit, How would it do to punish the sul tan of Itaeolod, ask.the ( hicajfo Record Herald, by making hint keep bachelor's hall awhile? spr ) for tier tmm Ohio in 100 years old. It will have t'< In udmitted ».i t the ( lii< igo Rt e ord llei ild that she .« quite "pert" iu I one of her age. BAN ON SECRET WEDDINGS. The l'«»tur of (he "Little 1 linreli Around tile Corner** Announce* u \eiv Departure. Romance has received a deadly blow. "The lit t lc church a round the corner," in New York, has turned its back on it. Hereafter lovers pursued by angry papas; overnight acquaintances smit ten heavily by Cupid'sdarts; rough and tumble ladders of matrimony without previous training for the ordeal; in fact-, all unconventional persons, who want to have the knot tied with as lit tle ceremony as possible, will have to hunt another Gretna Green. Dr. George Clark Houghton, the rector, who succeeded his uncle at the Church of the Transfiguration, has laid down the law. The game is too strenuous for l)r. Houghton, and, in the language of the stage, he "cuts it out." This is official, for he has published it in the Kalendar, the monthly paper of the church. Here is what he says: "This autumn has brought me a great many experiences and among them a large number of weddings, which I have been obliged to decline, because 1 did not know the parties. It is necessary that I should know the people who come before marriage, or they must be vouched for by persons whom I know, and they must have acceptable witnesses. There is a limit to the in terpretation of charity, and 1 limit 'secret marriages' and marriages tin supported by family recognition." " l"Iic little church around the cor ner has been famous for years as a place where any person pining for matrimony could get the knot tied without more bother than was legally necessary. A great many theatrical people resorted there for that purpose I and it came to be looked upon as the especial church of the theatrical pro fession. WILL SACRIFICE DESTROYER. Ilrltij.li Xnvy Tryl OR l» llreiak CoKtly \\ urnhip in Two to Detect W'euk llPMN in Construction. Naval officials have begun experi ! merits to discover why so many British torpedo boat destroyers are broken in two while at sea. The destroyer Wolf, launched in ISO", and costingsl,2so,ooo, will be sacrificed in the experiments. The destroyer was first balanced across a pile of timbers, with both ends of the vessel unsupported. It did not break in two under this strain and was next hung by the ends, leaving the center unsupported. The destroyer withstood both tests. The experiments are expected to prove whether a destroyer's hull is so weak, as was suggested in the case of the Cobra, that the back breaks when a wave lifts the vessel amidships or a ! sea lifts it in such a manner that the I wave Is hollow beneath the middle. The tests will be repeated, and if the ! Wolf remains seaworthy it will be | taken out in a rough sea for further j experiments. Vessels will stand by in case of accident. WANTS KISSING STOPPED. Virulnia liOfgiMlntor Propose* l.nvv IteiiulriiiK I'll.' lllclil n*« Certificate llefore o.seo ln tion IN I'eriui lited. In the Virginia house of delegates the other day Dr. R. B. Ware, a prac ticing physician, introduced a bill to ! make promiscuous kissing a misde ! meanor. It is the first measure he has ; presented except by request. The act ! reads in part ns follows: "Whereas, kissing- has been decided |by the medical profession to be a i medium by which contagious and in fectious diseases are transmitted frunt one person to another; therefore, lie it enacted by the general assein i lily of Virginia that it shall be unlaw | ful for any person to kiss another un | less he can prove by his family physi- I cian that he hasn't any contagious or j infectious disease." Violators of the proposed law will be fined not less than one dollar nor more than five dollars for each offense. MARCONI HAS A NEW RIVAL. Mi'ilini'r \rrlvea let llnlt iitiore After lteeelvinu' MCMMJIKCM 1,000 Mile* by Muirhend System. The steamer Vedamore, which is equipped with a wireless telegraph station, has arrived at Haltitnore an.l reported remarkable experiments with the'Muirhead system. Messages ! were received at a distance of 1,000 I miles at sea, but owing to the re ' strieteil power of the Imtterics oper ating the station 011 the vessel the electrician on board was only able I to transmit a message for a distance jof not exceeding 300 miles. The Morse alphabet is used in transmit ting the messages, and the charac ters are recorded on a paper ribbon ■ the same as a stock broker's ticker. HABY BOY WINS FORTUNE. Senator ( lurk** Offer of ■■ Million for llie I'lrxt !• rn IMIMOU L.oen to foil's Wife'* Hit by. A son has been born to the wift ■if \\. \. Clark, Jr., winning the ! fl,noil,ooo gift whieh Senator W. A. i lark offered to his MIIIM ami daugli I tcrs a year ago fur the first grand son presented to him. His youngest I daughter, Mrs. Morris, in New Vork, recently gave birth to a daughter, j Senutor ( lark, who is in Paris, ha* | been notified lis cable of the uri'ivul of the prize winner. tt<»ti«lM> Harmon). According to pre»ent advices then is .1 lurge crop of I hi-Mma* tree , says the 1 hicago Tribune, and a still linger crop of thing* to hung on ihsut. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 190 a. I THE DAYS OF STEAM. Not Yet Ended in Spite of the De velopment of Electricity. CorneliviA Vnnilerlillt lleclnreii That j I'.leelric ICuKinex Mimt Willi a I.OIIK Time llefore Siipplniitliijc Mi cum l.acoinoli ve». Cornelius Vanderbilt, millionaire, society man and railroad man, whose invent ions have revolutionized railway locomotives, now takes his place as one of tlie reviewers of the United States. His initial article appears in the North American Hevievv, dealing with the question of the use of elec tricity as a substitute for steam as motive power 011 the great trunk lines of the country, lie declares, in sub stance, that a change from.the pres ent system of motive power 011 the trunk lines is remote. "From tlie standpoint of those in charge of the railways in this coun try." says Mr. Vanderbilt, "there is only one object in view when a change is made in methods of operation. That object is the product ion of ail increased net revenue." Before any change from the present system of motive power is made, Mr. \ underbill declares, the result "must promise a more economical method j of transportation, or such an increase in the volume of traffic as will insure an increased net revenue." He declares the crews and motormen of electric trains should receive as h .gli wages as the crews and engineers of steam trains, and that a second man should always be in the cab with the motorinan, owing to the danger of accident to the latter. Mr. \ andcrhilt declares that power houses and substations would have to be so placed on electric roads as to de crease the fuel cost sufficiently to pay interest on the excess of capital over that required in the present svstem. I he possibility of doing this," con tinues Mr. Vanderbilt, "depends pri marily 011 (lie density of the traffic on the road. In most cases, it is an impossibility, and the further we ex tend the principle, and so place our plant as to decrease the fuel cost, the more difficult it becomes to find a rail -1 oad having the required traffic dens j ity." NEW ART METHOD DECRIED. ICiUKllxh 112 rillie Si«y« That Kafraelli'a Invention IK I) i *<•<»u rani to Geni IIN. The invention of Kaffaelli, the I' rench painter, for solidifying oil colors into cylindrical sticks resem bling pastels, so that painters in oil I may henceforth dispense with the j brush and palette, has already been j described. There is now open a remarkable exhibition at the Duran druel gallery of 72 pictures by more than 20 artists, all painted under haffaelli s method. Among the painters represented are: Haffaelli, Steinlen, Albert I'.esnard and Cheret! 15aITaelli claims that Titian's longing: Oh, that we might only paint with the colors we hold in our hands," has been realized. 'I he discovery does not meet with universal acceptance in London. Wil j liam Quiller Orehardson, I{. A., de- I ciares that this new. royal road to art i leads anywhere except to art. "It appears," lie says,"to be pastel painting in oil, and is practically oil ; crayon, but it won't do. It is a se lection and mixing of colors that makes the difference between the painter of genius and the duffer, and no artist of individuality is likely to adopt it." AND THE CAT CAME BACK. I'lli * Anliiinl Travelled KIO Milcx to Live I'p to the Tradition of It* S'pevieN. Walter P. Post, an insurance agent of ( tica, .V. V., moved to that city I from Slaterville Springs, near Ithaca, ! recently, and among the family po«- j sessions brought to Utica was a cat. j The feline did not take kindly to her j new surroundings, and ten days ago I disappeared. Kvery possible means j was adopted in an effort to recover the pet, but without result. The other day a letter was received by Mr. Post from former neighbors at Slaterville Springs announcing th? 'safe arrival of the cat at their home ,111 that place in an emaciated condi tion. The distance from I tica to j the place where the eat returned is over 100 miles by rail, and the man ; ner iu which it made the journey is ! a mystery. BRIDE FULL OF LIQUOR. The Nov el Sin ucu l inn Device Jiite cra»fully Employed on the lie Iu in 11 Frontier, French customs officials at Aveti | ties, 011 the Belgian frontier, stopped ! a wedding party n few days ago for j the customary inspection. The bride's silence and rigid attitude aroused sus ; piciou, and on raising her veil the ..ilicer was surprised that the young ! woman showed no sign of resistance. ' lie was about to pursue hit inquiry when the driver of the earl whipped up mid their party \va,s soon beyond the official's jurisdiction. It W44 ! learned afterward that the "bride" nn made of /iiic aid Was tilled will) contraband honor. \•• s I 111 i 1144 lit tlnlrr. \ gun tliut will throw a pr>.j. -tile I weighing -•, .(> pounds a distance of j M milts is being mounted down mi j the New Jersey coast. Now 1 \clailiii I the Chicago Hccuril Herald, for uu jSlUi«.|- tL.it 11 Mill not p,cixe. HOME BRINGS BIG PROFIT. L.ady 4 lieyleNiuore'H I'l lie Country limine iu llertvick In <.really In Demand. Lord and Cheylesmore are now living in Lady Cheylesfnore's own pret ty house at North Berwick, after hav ing let it.for the whole season to American Ambassador and Mrs. Choate. Many people at London had a notion that Lady Cheylesmore had no money when, as Miss Klizabeth French, of New York, she married the present baron, but with her own money she built Cheylesmore lodge, deeming that the best investment and the one likely to bring the biggest profit in the long run. Her judgment has been vindi cated, for the house has been much in demand for the North Berwick sea son, and could easily have been rented the whole year round. Stocked with priceless old furniture of every known style, it contains much magnificent silver with historic asso ciations more suited to a museum than 1 to a private house. These, us well as the great collection of old pictures, rare engravings, prints and wood cuts which cover the tapestried walls, were all left by the late Lord Cheylesmore, who was one of the greatest connois seurs of his day. llis princely bequest j to the nat ion will be recognized as the most valuable of recent years, but, un fortunately, the national treasure ; houses of Kngland are already so over crowded that no room can at present i lie found for them 011 the walls of the galleries, so they are stored away in | special chambers and are only to be Been by applying to the curators. BRITAIN MAY AID MARCONI. if I'reaent Kxperimevits Succeed, tlie Company Will tii't Crovern iiien till l'on era. It is expected that British govern- I mental powers will shortly be grant | ed to the Marconi Wireless company | which will enable that concern to work I independently. At the present time the official regulations prevent any commercial wireless operations within three miles of English shores. The signaling station at the Lizard, which, it is said, was acquired through Lloyd's at an annual rental of £5,000, will be used merely for experimental pur poses. Before the success of Marconi in sending messages and signals from the Italian cruiser Carlo Alberto, a few | months ago, the English authorities were chary about recognizing the commercial utility of the system. Since the recent triumphs, however, negotiations have been carried on in London between 11. Cuthlitrt Hall, the manager of the wireless company, and certain post office officials, and it is thought that these will be successful. Messages have already been sent across the Atlantic, and the officials of the company are now merely waiting for Marconi's promised telegram from 'ape Rreton before announcing the immediate commencement of commer cial operations. HORSE-MEAT FEAST PLANNED. Only Assed, Hheuniatlc Animals Are to lie Cooked for Dinner ul lierlin. Distinguished members of the So ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of Berlin have been invited to a horse-meat dinner by the Fleischer Zeitung, a national organ of the Ger man butchers, whieh says it desires to measure the sincerity of the society in issuing its recent appeal to the public to eat more horse meat, so its to be merciful to animals unfit for work, which will be relieved of their suffer ings if the consumption of horse meat is made more popular. The Fleischer Zeitung lias not yet received any ac ceptances to the invitation. The pa per promises to put up as good a horse intai feast as an accomplished cook can produce, but the only material must be an aged, rheumatic beast, such as the society desires to emancipate. No young colts will do. BERNHARDT EATS OLIVES. Tlie French \ctreNM Said to Indulge ilel ween \c!m 10 Improve Her \ nice. The secret of Mine. Sarah Bern harrtt's golden voice has been finally discovered. A Paris Figaro reporter met an olive vender at a Mont Marte cafe, who claimed to be the divine Sarah's regular purveyor. Taunted as a liar, In: produced an autograph letter, reading thus: Theater Sarah Beri.turdt.— : : Permit M l*oliveseiler to trier : : theater every ever.li.K : SARAH. The itinerant vender volunteered the information that Mine. Kern linrdt buys unsalted olives nightly for her dressing-room and eats them between the acts. 1i» If n I i I n \ ! An excited Halifax paper has in formation of n plot 011 the part of t'nele Sam to annex Canada, and calls for an army of snn.ooti to repel the Yankee invaders. If you doubt this, says the Chicago Tribune, \mi can goto Halifax and nsk the editor, i tar Should Tube l're<-a ul ion «. The sultan of Turkey has sent- an letter to the e/iir asking the latter tn visit h i 111 in (install tinople. If Nick ies, say* the Chi cago Record Herald, he will consult his own inlere in by having a uiniir. pocket put iu his undershirt. To Tread Untitle t.round. It l« !'• he pre*,ll,„ ,>.n the nr>' (Hani.) f'nctor.v I M II II ilili II K hii Instrument Which In to Ccitst SIO,OOO. On the order of a Philadelphia store for a customer, believed to be Charles M. Schwab, the steel mag nate, a Roxbury (Mass.) factory is building what will be probably the most elaborate and expensive piani constructed in this country in the last .10 years. The price will be SIO,OOO. The in strument is a marvelous middle-sized grand, of Louis XVI. design. The case i- gilded and decorated ornately with foliage after tin? Watteau pat tern. Just when the piano will be ready! for delivery is not known, but it is understood that when Mr. Schwab returns from his health-seeking trjp j abroad il will be reposing in the par- I lors of the wonderful new mansion lie is having erected in New York cH y- INDIANS USE BREAKFAST FOOD >lr-inh«*rM of the li In ninth Trlho I til ice Seriln of n Specie* of \\ nter Illy. Breakfast footl unknown in the modern markets, but which litis been in use by the Klamath Indians since aboriginal times, has been discov- j ered by Frederick V. Cohille, liotan- ' ist of the department of agriculture, who says it is more palatable and more nutritious than many of the; patent foods now in common use. I 11•• food consists of the prepared sc 'ds of the "woeus," a large yellow ! water lily, which grows in the Khi - I mailt marsh on tin- Indian reserva- | thin of the same name in southern Oregon. % Terrible »■*«•. The llritoiis whipped the liners, but the latter are ifcttiiii; a terrible re-! vruge, nits the < hietigii Kecord llei aid. They're nil writing books and ► elluitf tlieiu to thri Kn^lish. It !«•••• lli- I »«•••• ii Un »112, Al the stale fair in Syi.n u-c there was a rate bet*ecu two (lot k« of g« i„» dritto by v> uUieU. SUBMARINE BOAT TESTED. \rw llritifth llont I'rovcm In II«• n Mar* vel, anil Away A lie ml of the Hoi i ivll f diamonds. 11l the luce at her neck will ivt enormous diamond spray. Her neck hue and the pendants ami brooehe* on her corsage were of unusual bril liance, while her chaplet of uruutrv* flower* was fastened with u diamond and ruby brooch. llliroirr) of IH A in*• nif *•> A diamond di-cmery who h is pti.li • hly the most important »in«'i that at Kimhcrlcy has been made nt Kl aunfiHitein. S< Neu diamond* found there in three •bullovv hole*. 15