SLAVERY IN THE PHILIPPINES. 4 By FRANK C. IJav&u, Island of Mindanao, April 20. I was offered four slaves here to Jay for tltjr tpii dollan. They were own ed by a. woman who claim! ehe is a ChriKtian, and not by one of the Ma haramcJan Moros. I went Into the woisan'a hou? and chatted with her for time about the human flesh on sale, and later on persuaded her to bring the : out In the yard that I might make a photograph of them. Three of tbera were boys, ranging In age from 11 to fc. The other was a girl of 12, the age at which girls are sometimes marred down here on the edge of the , equator. The smallest boy had noth ing on but a shirt, which barely reach ed to his waist, and the other two wore only coarse pantaloons extending from the waist to the knees. The girl was half naked, her only garment be In a wide strip o fdlrty cotton wrap ped about her waist and fastened In a knot. I bad a photograph made with myself standing beside her, and she rear bed Just to my shoulder. As 1 Blood thus the slave owner thought I wanted the girl and said "mucho bu eno," or very good, and told me that If I bought only her she would have to charge me more In proportion than she asked for the Job lot. She said the lit tle irlrl should be worth at least $15, and aeerned surprised when I did not Jump aX the bargain. I asked her where the slaves came from. She replied that they had been brought In from the mountains, hav ing been captured by one of the savage tribes In a recent war with Us neigh bors. She said they were Aetas. or aiind.inao Negritoes, and as I looked tit their black skins, thick noses and oensuous eyes 1 could see traces of African blood. I talked with the slaves through an Interpreter, but could not Kt any evidence of their being ill lined. They seemed Indifferent as to whether they were to be sold or not, and evidently hud no Idea that they -ould possibly object. Had I bought them I am told I would have had, ac cording to the custom which prevails In the country about here, power of life and death over them, and that 1 could have killed them without risk of . criminal Investigation. 4U-AVEIIT IN MINDANAO AND SULU Slavery i common among the people of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago, nd I am led to believe thai there Is a form of debt slavery In some of the J-tla-nds farther north. Here In Min danao there are not only debt slaves, but slaves by birth and by conquest. 1 liave been told at every place I have toppvd that slavery Is common, and that women especially are bought and eold. All of the Moro duttoes have nu merous stoves, and the richer of their subject have as many as they can support. The Vtnayans of this Island, at least, bave slaves, although It Is nominally .against the Spanish law. Htill human being are being bought and sold, and ;ven the officials have been accustomed to own them. I met this afternoon the x-preilente of the town of Duvao. He i is a rich Vlsayan, who has a large farm not far from here. He owns a number of slaves and keeps several In bis family as servants. 1 have been told that the Christians seldom sell .slaves, although they buy them, and hat It Is common for a man to pur ha children to bring them up to work about the house. Nearly all of the savages, of whom there are many, have their slaves cap Cured in war. It Is not an uncommon thing to kill the men captives and to CROWN JEWELS OF EUROPE. The imperial family of Russia pos esse the most valuable collection of treckm stones of any reigning house in the world. The treasure houses of .Asia have given the choicest gems to hla collection. The value of them is Inestimable. The finest diamond In the world, the Orloff. la owned by the czar. It was (bought for Catherine II by Prince OrlofT Jn 1778 at Amsterdam, and now adorns the acejjtcr of the czar. It cost the em press an annuity of 4,000 roubles. In ready money 450,000 roubles and a pat ent of nobility. The empress of Russia wears the npxt largest diamond In the world, and alio owns the finest emer alds. The Jewels In the possession of the Oreek church are worth more than the olleclions of all the crowned heads of Europe. The church has been accu mulating these treasures for many yemxn. The figures and pictures as well mm tbe tKly books In the Greek churches aue studded with gem of Immense value, and tbe church plate is so costly thai It Is impossible to estimate It value. The flnwrt pearl necklace In the world la owned by th Countess llenckel, and, constats f three famous necklaces com bined. It is valued at half a million lolls.ru. One of the necklaces formerly belonged to the ex-Queen of Naples, an other adorned the Virgin of Alakha. AniAher beautiful pearl necklace is owned wy the Duchess f Cumberland, It formerly belonged to the crown Jew ess of Hanover. It Is a string of penrls Ix feet In length, all exactly matched In shape. z and color. One wf the finest collections of pearls known Is ttiat ot the Queen of Italy. It Is so targe that she cannot wear all of the re we be owns, and as they lose their entor if not always In the light gases ef t-hem adorn her dadies la wait CARPENTER. makes slaves of the women and chil dren. In four trlb-s which Inhabit the mountains near here slaves are said to be used for human sacrifices. These tribes are the IJagobas, Aetas, Guian gus and Tagacolas, who live on or near the slopes of Mount Apo. I have seen much of the IJagobas and the Guian gas In Davao and will describe them more fully hereafter. The Chinese merchants who do most of the business in the smaller towriB of the Philippines usually own one or more women whom they have bought. They do not marry them, but treat them well as wives, taking good care of their children. The chief slave owners, however, are the moros. They have the right to slaves by their religion and have held them for centuries. In the past they have carried on a great business in kidnaping men, women and children and taking them to Borneo and else where for sale. There are white men still living. who have been Moro slaves, having been captured by the Moros in their wars with the Spaniards. Accord ing to the Moro laws the father has the right to sell his children. He can sell his wife, and it he gets Into debt he can sell himself to pay It. The debts of fathers entail the slavery of the children, who agree to work for their creditors until the debt is paid. Dean Worcester, one of the commis sioners sent by the president to ex amine into the Philippines, quotes the prices of Moro slaves in the Island of Tawl Tawl at fifteen bushels of rice, and states that he was offered a girl of 15 for $3. My investigations are that these prices are too low. Some of the slaves 1 have seen here are es timated as high as $20 In gold, and $10 is thought to be very little for a grown up woman. Captain Hagadorn told me that he bought a slave girl for twenty Mex ican dollars and gave her her freedom. It was a case of sentiment on the part of the captain. It Is said that "all the world loves a lover," and this is especi ally so when the lover Is of the femin ine gender. This slave girl was In love with a young man of the village, but the man was poor, and as her master was needing money, he was about to sell the girl to a hated rival, an old Moro. The girl said she would rather die than serve him. Captain Haga dorn's heart was touched. He bought her and made her free, and she has since married the lover of her choice. The Idea that love does not exist among the slaves of the Moros Is a mistake. Cupid does not restrict his darts to any race, color or condition of servitude, and even the sultan of Sulu is powerless to restrain him. The sul tan has, you know, the right of life and death over all his subjects. They are really his slaves. He commands them and they obey. He has the right to seize any of the women, and he has a goodly number of slave girls in his harem. Not long ago a female slave connected with his household fell In love with one of his warriors. She was neither wife nor concubine, but merely a servant of the harem, and the war rior asked his majesty that she be given him as a wife. The sultan refus ed, and the two ran away and got mar ried. They were captured and brought back, and the sultan then said that the man mu.t die. The girl thereupon threw herself at the feet of the sultan anil begged that she be allowed to die with her lover. The sultan consented and the same campllan sliced off the two heads. ing. The King of Italy gave his wife a row of these pearls on the birth of their son, and every year since has add ed a fresh row, as the crown prince Is now 30 years old, the value of this col lection can be readily Imagined. Many of the precious stones now own ed by Queen Victoria formerly belonged to Indian princes. The famous Kohl noor came Into her possession on the annexation of the Punjuab In 1849. This stone can be traced with accuracy to the year 1304, when It was acquired by the Sultan Aladdin from the Rajah Malwa, In whose family It had been for many generations. In 1520 It passed by conquest to Humaimu, the son of the Sultan Babu, and later was used as the eye of a peacock In the marvelous peacock throne of Aurungebe. One of the rarest gems In Queen Vlc torla'B collection Is a green diamond o( marvelous beauty. It has never been set. She owns three crowns. The most artistic one, which was made over forty years ago, is of gold, literally cov ered with diamonds. It Is composed of 2,763 white diamonds and 529 rubles, be sides many smaller stones. Before this crown was made the queen wore a gokJ band studded with precious stones. THE ROUND AND THR SQUARE. The large, imposing woman founi her husband In the last saloon but one "Well, I've rounded you up at last!' she hissed. "Oh, I can square mysplf all right!" exclaimed the man, with a thin affec tation of nonchalance. He even affected to laugh, which ren dered him a more pitiful spectacle than ever. Detroit Journal. Rev. Charles M. Sheldon of Topeka, who Is now In Great Britain, Is In great demand there as a preacher aj,i speaker. MECKLENBERG DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. Charlotte, N. C, has Just been cele 'jiatiiig the 125th anniversary of the signing of the Mecklenburg declaration tl independence. This famous docu ment preceded by many months the ne drawn up at Philadelphia, and In or.sequence U the first formal expres sion against England formulated by the colonies. The old log court-house in which the band of resolute men met to assert their rights and the rights of their fellow citizens tl.(-n, stood, in Independence Square, and the site Is marked by a heavy iron plate recording the fact. Charlotte Is proud of Its distinction, and its school children are told again and again of the daring of the fore lathers which started them on the road to citizenship in an American republic. It was these Mecklenburg resolutions, framed May 20, 1775, that Jefferson de nied ever having heard of. John Ad ams also pleaded Ignorance of them. The latter wrote of them to William Bentley in August, 1819: "I was on social friendly terms with Caswell, Hooper and Howes, delegates from North Carolina to the continental con gress every moment of their existence in congress; with Hooper, a Bostonlan, a son of Harvard, intimate and famil iar, yt-t from neither of them did the slightest hint of these resolutions ever escape." To Jefferson he wrote: "You know that if I had possessed such a paper I would have made the walls of congress echo and re-echo with It fif teen months before your Declaration of Independence." In spite of this lack of knowledge of these Important writings on the part of eminent statesmen close to the stirring days of the revolution, the document did exist, and it is due to the legislature of North Caroljna that It was ferreted out. The committee appointed by It for the purpose eventually got trace of an abridged copy of the original reso lution. Peter Force, compiling his American archives, was another Instru ment in making their existence known, and In 1847 Dr. Joseph Johnson found the set Intact In the South Carolina Ga zette of June, 1775, and George Ban croft afterward found them capled in the state papers office of Lendon. The remarkable point In connection with these resolutions is that North Carolina, remote from the Boston tea party and one month away from news of the battle of Iexlngton, took It upon Itself to openly assert Its scorn of Brit ish rule. The night preceding the sign ing wa san anxious one for the general committee gathered In the little log house perched upon stilts. The crowd outside waited patiently for results. It know Abrlham Alexander had called the meeting to order and that Dr. Eph- ralm Bevard was clerk. Rev. H. J. Balch, accustomed to writing, was nam ed to draw up resolutions, and he had for assistant William Kennon. The crowd never deserted the square. All night It stood within call of the narrow 3oor. Knowing neither fatigue nor hun ger, It hailed with a mighty shout the announcement that the final word had been agreed to. The news came at 2 o'clock In the morning. The resolutions were Imme diately read to the excited throng out side. They were as follows: "Resolved, That whosoever directly or Indirectly abets, or In any way, form or manner, countenances the Invasion GIRL ELOPES WITH A PAINTER. Fltchburg, Mass. (Special.) One would have thought that William F, Ruderhan was handicapped for win. nlng the love of a society girl. He was In overalls and they were spattered with paint. So were his shoes. There were specks of paint even in his hair and moustache. He was painting her father's house. Miss Alice N. Snow was the daughtet of Charles W. Snow, paying teller ot the Boylston National bank, Boston. The family home Is at Newton. In sum. mer they occupy a house at Rlndge, N. H. It was there two summers ago that this romance of the ladder and scaffold had Its beginning. The daughter of the house looked up from her books and flowers to see a paint-bespattered man whipping . his brush to and fro over the window frame. She bade him "good morning," and noticed that he blushed as he re turned the salutation. Conversation strengthened these Im pressions. Miss Snow discovered that the young painter had mental gifts. He knew nothing about her little world of society, but a great deal about the big world of which hers, ahe now saw, wi an Insignificant part. Thev fell In love. When Mr .and Mrs. Snow learned of thli they hurried their daughter back to Newton. Ru derhan went there, too. ' He and Miss Snow had many clandestine meetings. Once or twice he made bold to call at the house, but was not cordially re ceived. On the last of these occasions he proposed formally for the hand ot hi! sweetheart. "Never!" said Mr. Snow, and "Nev. erf he repeated to his daughter, and Never, never, never!" reiterated Mrs. Snow with all the emphasis that nn angry mother could weight the word withal. Ruderhan continued to communicate With hli sweetheart as often ai he could and struggled hard to Improve his condition. He came to Fltchburg a of our rights as attempted by the par liament of Great Britain, is an enemy to his country, to America and to the rights of men. "Resolved, That we, the citizens of of Mecklenburg county, do hereby dis solve the political bonds which have conected u with the mother country, and absolve ourselves from all allegi ance to the British crown, abjuring all political connections with a nation that has wantonly trampled our rights and liberties and inhumanly shed the in nocent blood of Americans at Lexing ton. , , "Resolved, That we do hereby declare ourselves a free and independent peo. pie; that we are and of right ought to be a sovereign and self-governing peo ple, under the power of God and the general congress; to the maintenance of which we solemnly pledge to each other our mutual co-operation, our lives our fortunes and our most sacred honor. "Resolved, That we do hereby ordain and adopt as rules of conduct all and each of our former laws, and the crown of Great Britain cannot be considered hereafter as holding any rights, privi leges or immunities among us. "Resolved, That all officers, both civil and military. In this country, be enti tled to exercise the same powers and authorities as heretofore; that every member of the delegation shall hence forth, be a civil officer and exercise the powers of Justice of the peace, issue process of law and determine contro versies according to law, preserve peace union and harmony In the country, and use every exertion to spread the love of liberty and of country until a more general and bette rorganlzed system of government be established. "Resolved, That a copy of these reso lutions be transmitted by express to the president of the continental con greps, assembled in Philadelphia, to be laid before that body." In quaint letterings after these come the names of the signers, Abraham Al exander, Thomas Polk, David Reese, John Pflfer, Adam Alexander, William Graham, Robert Harris, James Harris, Era Alexander, Richard Barry, John Davidson, John K. Alexander, Henry Downs, Nelll Morrison, Charles Alex ander, Walghtslde Avery and Benjamin Pat ton. It is to these signers that Charlotte this year raises an imposing monument. It is to the men whose signatures Btood for the demands of a people bound to be free that a beautiful granite shaft has been reared. A bronze plate on one side shows the list of these names, Above the plate Is a large hornet's nest, the county emblem, typical of Its unrest during the period of the revolution, The monument has been put on historic ground, being on the spot once occupied by Queen's college, the first in the United States. In this ground also the bodies of many of Cornwallls' soldiers found a resting place after their en counters with the patriots. All the military companies of the state joined In the unveiling ceremonies on May 20 for, as all of North Carolina was In terested In the framing of the heroic resolutions of more than a century ago, so al lof North Carolina rejoices in the honrs paid the men who stood for lib erty and the right to make a standard under which all should live free and equal. year ago. At first he continued to work as a painter. Then, thinking that a business experience might open tho way to wider field, he became a clerk In a grocer's store. Afterward he en tered H. C. Deane's machine shop, but his wages were only $ a week. Impatient of further delay the lov. ers a few days ago planned an elope, ment. One day Mr. Snow went to his Bos. ton bank, leaving Mrs. Snow In charge of the house. Not long after Ruderhan drove up in a hack. When "ne essayed to enter the house he was met by Mrs. Snow, who warned her daughter not to leave the house. For the time being there was a dead lock. Then the two women went up stairs, and It Is understood that the mother locked the daughter in a room. She managed to escape, and In a few minutes came rushing out of the back door, jumped Into the hack, the driver whipped up his horses and "they were soon being driven hurriedly away. Jt was at first planned to take a train for Boston. But the thought of possibly encountering Mr. Snow caused the lovers to change their plans. They went by trolley to Waltham, wher they took a train for this city and went to No. 4 Wlnster street, the home of Herbert D. Wellington, where Mr. Ru derhan had a room. A messenger was sent for the Rev. W. O. Conrad and In a few minutes the ceremony was performed. Mr. and Mrs. Snow reconciled them selves to the Inevitable and extended s blessing to the young people, They will The consecration of the Rev. Dr. Henry Granjou as bishop of Tucson, Ariz., will take place In Baltimore soon Cardinal Gibbons will be the conse crating prelate. Bishop-elect Granjou was selected by the pope to succeed Bishop Bourgade In the see of Tucson, Bishop Bourgade having been promoted to the archbishopric of Santa Fe. THE BOXER TROUBLE IN CHINA. BY A CHRISTIANIZED CHINAMAN. Ann Arbor, Mich. (Special.) A Chi nese student at the University of Mich igan, S. C. Yin, has wiltten, from the native standpoint, his view of the pres ent crisis in China. Yin is a bright, intelligent Chinese and is manifestly familiar with the hstory and condtions in his far-away country. He says: There seems to be no doubt that the present trouble in China in connection with the Boxers movement occupies more of the world's attention than even the South African war. The trouble in China, however, is not a surprising one, for the intelligent Chinese themselves have fully expected such an outbreak after the unfortunate coup d'etat In which the young emperor was dethron ed and the dowager empress regained power. The landing of German troops at Shang-tung and the occupation of Kleu-Chow bay by the Germans ac counts for the first existence of the present Boxers society. It must be ad mitted that the Chinese are remarkable for organizing secret societies, but it is equally true that secret societies in China do not live long, and they are formed simply on the demand of the people for self-defense or mutual bene fit. Being human beings, the Chinese cannot tolerate gross Injustice or injury to their person and property, and it was from the injury of these poor people jf Shangtung and its neighborhood suf fered at the hands of the new invaders that a new society was formed with the avowed object of revenge. Without regarding the right or Inter est of the eople in the vicinity of Kiau Chow bay, our new Teutonic invaders determined to have everything accord ing to their own way. Troops were to be stationed; the soldiers were to have drinks from the breweries of Bremen; they were to haye a good time at least once a week to wipe off that gloomy spirit of being so far away from home. Railroads had to be built, but no money or compensation of whatever descrip tion was to be given to the titled own ers of the land through which rail way tracks passed. Shangtung is rich in mineral re sources, but poor in agriculture. Every Inch of ground is cultivated. The sur face of the soil having been used for aultlvation from time Immemorial, the poor farmer has to try his best to get manure for his farms in order that he ind his dear ones at home may nave a morsel to save them from starvation. Every foot of ground counts; the loss ot an inch of land available for rais ing crops means the loss of a handful of rice that can serve for one meal to that farmer's little boy. These railroad tracks, the sign of Christian civilla tlon, devastated hundreds and hun dreds of acres of land without giving the sufferers the slightest consideration. Sunday comes. The soldiers are enti tled to have a time. They must not be Jeprived of having a "happy good Jully" with the fair sex as they used to have at home. The native women may not exactly suit their fancy, but still they are better than none. Drunkenness, debauchery, wholesale oppression brings the people to their sense that if they are sons of man they have to stand up for defense. Complaints are now laid i before the German authorities and find their way to the pigeon holes. One or two cases might be called up, but of what avail? It is a case between the conqueror and the conquered. The Chinese regard all those who do not wear queues the same as they do foreigners. To them there Is just one class of foreigners, namely, those who do not wear long hair. Germans, Eng lish, Americans and all are classified under this head. It Is hardly necessary to mention that the common people of China are not able to distinguish an American TYPHOID AND Of all the maladies which beset the modern soldier, typhoid fever Is the worst. The duty of seeking how best to exclude from camps this dreaded visitor has long been recognized by the med ical students of military establish ments. Two English surgeons. Prof. A. E. Wright and Major Leishman of the Army Medical School at Netley, now believe that they have found the means for waging a more successful fight against it than was ever before possible. These surgeons are hopeful that vac cination, an innovation in treating ty phoid, may be used advantageously against It. In support of this theory they report a series of experiments made with British soldiers in India. There were selected for inoculation 2,835 men, of whom 27 were afterward attacked by the fever. The percentage of cases was less than 1 per cent of the number vaccinated. Among 6,640 unvacclnated troops that were under observation 213 cases occurred, or fully 2 per cent. These figures are not conclusive. A still larger number of Inoculations might show different results. At best the statistics Indicate not that absolute immunity can be secured, but that vaccination In the manner prescribed may lessen the chances of an attack. Hut, while It would be premature to assume that a complete demonstration has been afforded of the efficacy of the treatment in question, some of the med- ical journals point out several disad vantages under which the experiments were conducted such as the difficulty of obtaining a supply of vaccine and of preset vlng It thus suggesting tbe poa- from a German or a German from a Russian. The only thing they know la that they have suffered wrongs at th hands of the foreigners and these wrongs have to be redressed. The so ciety of Boxers or rather its predeces sor was organized under the name of "Io-Ho-Chun," meaning society of righteousness and harmony. The word; chun literally means "fist," but here it Is used in a differense sense, and a too dogmatic translation would render the word meaningless. The society is also known as "The Tai-Tau-Hoe" the Big Sword society. This name is undoubt edly given to it by the outsiders and! not by the society itself. Such a nam is 'Big Sword' is of common occurrence among the different organiations whose end has to be accomplished by force. More than thirty years ago there wan quite a disturbance in Southern Chins, caused by a secret society known asr the Small Sword society. A name aa such is certainly vulgar and must be regarded as having no particular mean lng attached to it indicating the aims of the society. From the neighborhood of Saangtnas this hostile spirit against the foreigners) spread north and west till It reached the present seats of trouble. One fact, is worth remembering, and that is that hostile spirit was primarily against the Germans only, but the people being ig norant of the particular nationality ta which a certain foreigner belongs, hos tile acts were done to the British as well as to any other nationality. There is another important factor which has added to the cause of toe present trouble. It is too sad for u to mention, but it is too grave for u to omit. I mean the indiscreet acts of some of the missionaries. The Chinese government, like all other governments,, hates to see people of other nations dic tating to her what action she can oe cannot take in dealing with her ownr people, although the latter may hava accepted the Christian faith. Through a careless Investigation before adnxit- t rur cm man t , hs ( V, , 1 r-( h a man fT notorious character, and to the persist ent objection of allowing him to be handed over to the native authorities to be dealt with as is deserved, the hat red of many Chinese communities)' against the missionary body is greaOy intensifled. We do not propose to ques tion the right of the missionaries In, protecting their converts, but we do-' doubt the wisdom of the apostles to. act In such a way as to incur unnec essary enmity .of the natives for th mere sake of defending men who are; deserving of punishment in any com munity. under whatever government. Another cause of the trouble arise from a misunderstanding of the good) will of the medical missionaries. In deed, a European doctor commands the profoundest respect such as no other missionaries can expect to have from the Chinese people, rich and poor alike. And yet there has been a constant un kind feeling towards a medical man In. the fact that numerous ridiculous re ports have been spread among the peo ple bringing forth to show them that these medical missionaries are charged with offensive missions, such aa gath ering the hearts of human beings to he sent home to the scientific institution for researcn work. The Chinese being), superstitious to the extreme, and beinsr strongly prejudiced against the mutila tion of the dead body, easily submit themselves as victims of such absurd reports. Bishop Potter, in a speech at commencement exercises in New York, told his audience that during the first two years of his ministry he kept Sv saddle horse on a salary of $000 a year by doing the grooming himself. THE SOLDIERS. 4. t slbility that under other conditions the showing might be more favorable. The vaccine matter used In the anti typhoid experiments was prepared in accordance with the second of Haff klne's methods. Cultures of the microbe were made, with the object of taming; them gradually, and then they were killed by raising the fluid in which they were contained to a temperature of r centigrade, or 140 Fahrenheit. One per cent of lysol was added to assist in preserving the fluid. The amount used: for Inoculation was from .5 to .75 cubic centimeter. A slight disturbance of the system followed this treatment, but not enough to amount to real sickness. Further evidence that some effect- bad been produced was found upon exam ination of the blood. In what Is knewn to the profession as "Wldal's test the admixture of a drop of the patient's blood with a drop of fluid containing typhoid germs the same result would be attained, the paralysis and clotting, of the germs. The president has pardoned i serving a five-year sentence in the Georgia penitentiary for sending ob scene lettrs through the malls. He wag convicted on the evidence of handwrit ing experts. Now another man has been found guilty by the same experts with the aid of other evidence to have been the guilty one. Pittuburg Chronicle: "No, Mr. Home wood," said Miss Beachwood, firmly but kindly, "I cannot be your wife, but I will be a sister to you." "Very weil, said tne young man. resignedly, "wis) you assume my name or shall I yours."