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y TELEGRAMS IN BRIEF. PEACE POINTERS. The Filipinos systematically Are npon Red Cross workers. The Filipinos intended to massacre all the people In and around Manila except natives, the 15th Inst. The house, by an immense majority, passes a bill appropriating $20,000,000 to pay for the Philippines. Leading advices from Iloilo state that no further fighting has occurred there, and trade is being resumed. Senor Agoncillo, the Filipino dele gate, arrived in New York, on his way to Europe. He was not molested. General Otis is expected soon to send troops to occupy the islands of Cebu and Negros, in the Philippines. Contracts for Improvements at San tiago that will employ between 4,000 and 5,000 men have been awarded. It Is alleged that 6,000 houses In Ha vana have been receiving city water without payment being made in re turn. By a vote of 213 to 31 the house passed a bill appropriating $20,000,000 to pay Spain for the Philippine conces sion. The natives of the village of Paco made an unsuccessful attempt to burn the quarters of the Ist Washington volunteers. •bjio lJaua{) Joj sjuaui -oaojniJ qi!M uijudjv joj JjtOA mum mojj punas urqqjoqs ijodsunji oqj, uuq puuioo -|9M sunqnf) aqj ajaqM ’Bnuapjno jb paAiJJB snq zuuiof) oui|Xßj\; oaQ SJUUIUUAOJd -mi anqnd joj subavh J° 31 il paMOjjoq an oj s| oOO'OOSTIt inoqv The war department has issued an order mustering out 16,000 volunteers, including all who are now In service in the United States. Deputy Annir caused a sensauon in the Spanish cortes by charging that the surrender of Santiago was fixed up by McKinley and Sagasta. The mayor and council of San Juan, Porto Rico, have resigned on account of an order Issued by General Henry regarding the killing of beef. The cortes reassembled at Madrid and held an exciting debate, in which the government was denounced for its conduct in the war with the United States. Senator Cockrell Berved nonce upon the republicans In the senate that the democrats would not permit the pas sage of the Hull army bill at this ses sion of congress. Rebel Incendiaries tried to burn Manila last night and fired on the American soldiers who fought the flames. Several Americans were wounded and 700 houses were burned. Sharp fighting took plane In the suburb* of Manila. The California volunteers fell back from Guadalupe to San Pedro Macatl, and efforts to drive the KUlplnos from the Jungles were fruitless. Japan Is selling arms to the Phlllp pjnos. United States Consul Wlld man haH Induced the Chinese govern ment to Impound 20,000 rifles and 2,060,000 cartridges stored at Nankin ready for shipment to the islands. Admiral Schley’s statement con troverting the charges of the navy de partment has aroused great Interest. Senators who are conversant with the facts allege that he Is the victim of a conspiracy on the part of adminis tration offlclalß. The taking of testimony by the court of Inquiry Investigating General Miles' charges against the army beef was continued yesterday. A number of office is who served In Cuba testi fied that the canned roast beef was unpnlatable and nauseating and the men could not cat It. They snid ije refrigerated beef presented no evi dence of chemical treatment DOMESTIC. —— ’ Chicago May wheat, 73MtC. Half of Nebagamon, Wls., was hfln'd. Another railway l to be built across Wisconsin. The cruiser Detroit was ordered to Nicaragua. Mrs. Sarah M. Clay, aged 9". Is dead at Beloit. Wls. Aunt Polly Patton died In Assump tion, 111., aged 80. Captain Joseph Bottrh, aged 82. la gead at Mont Clare, 111. Boys were born to Harry Payne Whitney and Edwin Gould. The New Jersey legislature will pre "iNtnt a sword to Sampson. Wageu of Pennsylvania Iron work ers are advanced voluntarily. The Amerlcan-f'ansdlsn Joint com mission adjourned till Aug. 2. A Hartford doctor raised a man from the dead by burying him 1n snow. Zita Monaghan, aged 68, a sister of the Loretto Order, is dead at Joliet. The pleasure yacht Gazelle was stork fast In the Ice near New Orleans. The society of Daughters of th* American Revolution met In Washing ton. Iron and steel bridge manufacturers practically complete their organisa tion. The railroad frtm Skaguay to the summit of White pass. Alaska, was opened. The report that Playwright Charles Hoyt had been sent to a sanitarium is denied. J. Edward Addlcks gained three votes at Dover for the Delaware sena torship. The purchase of 260.000 barrels of . whisky by the trust has given It the I power to sway prices at will. | A hundred Chespeake bay oyster I schooners have been carried to sea by Ldrlfting Ice. ■lThe. North Dakota senate voted down create a state temperance! ”f, jrf*'\ : 4Bt' r. 1 ' nr company proposes to run automobiles on Fifth avenue. Chicago contractors have attached Lincoln park, Milwaukee, for work done for that city. Bray ton ’ves, the New York banker, paid $4,374 for a book which, he says, is worth only $2.55. Samuel H. Ashbrldge (rep.) has been elected mayor of Philadelphia by 110,000 plurality. Robert J. Burdett, the humorist, is to marry Mrs. P. C. Brfker, a wealthy widow of Passadena, Cal. Ricnard Croker said Tammany will restore Battery Park to the people and force the Manhattan Company to obey the law. The Manufacturing Investment Com pany of Appleton, VVIs., was placed in the hands of a receiver. Marie Obrey, 14 years old, of lies Moines, has confessed attempting to poison her foster parents. A Toledo, 0., farmer while insane drove his team full apeed into a crowd, injuring a dozen people. At Sacramento, Cal., a number of young men are organizing a colony to settle on the island of Guam. Another rich vein of gold ore is re ported to have been found In the Isa oella mine at Cripple Creek. The Texas railroad commission and the railroads of that state have made a compromise on the question of rates. Secretary Alger is said to be slated for retirement, and the president Is said to have already selected his suc cessor. Robbers looted the safe of a Santa Fe express car of $60,000 while the train was standing at Cherry Vale, Ka.i. Lev. Dr. Charles Dewitt Bridgman, rector of Holy Trinity Protestant Epis copal church, New York, died from grip. Attorney Charles B. Stuart is dead at Lafayette, Ind He was president of the board of trustees of Purdue uni versity. latest reports are that the damage to the southern fruit crop from the re cent blizzard was not so great as was at first supposed. Articles of incorporation have been filed at Trenton, N. J., for the Ameri can Cereal company, with a capital stock of $33,000,000. The New York assembly has passed an ordinance requiring all elevated roads to run trains every five min utes, day and night. Mrs. Florence B. Rogers testified in Ntw York at the Inquest in regard io the death of her mother, Mrs. Kate .1. Adams, from poison. Professor R. W. Wood of the Wis consin university has discovered a method of thawing frozen water pipes by the use of electricity. Horace A. Taylor of Wisconsin has been confirmed as assistant secre tary of the treasury and Colonel Mar cus P. Miller as brigadier general. The Tighland Boy mine of Bing ham, Utah, has been sold to capitalists In the standard Oil Company for a sum approximating $1,000,000. John T. McGraw of West Virginia has served notice on Senator-elect N. B. Scott that he will protest the lat ter's right to a seat in the senate. The wife of Levi Weinburg, of Omaha, claims her husband who re cently dropped unconscious on the street ayd was burled, was interred alive. The government and the reorganiza tion committee of the Central Pacific aud Western Pacific reachco an agree ment, and the old debt will be paid in full. John Rathberger, a wealthy German farmer who lived near Carro..con, 111., killed his wife and committed suicide. Mrs. Rathberger had begun suit for divorce. Lord Charles Beresford was given a banquet in Chicago, at which he made a speech, pleading for “ever ts; ing friendship" between Britain and America. The president sent to the senate the nomination of Attorney-General Cla baugh of Maryland to be an associate justice of the supreme court of the District of Columbia. The manufacturing company which operates sulphite mills at Madison and Appleton, Wls., has gone into the hands of a receiver. The property Is valued at over $1,000,000. George B. M. Harvey, formerly a Chicago reporter and ex-managlng editor of the New York World, has bought the North American Review. The price reported Is $225,000. Two contributions to the conscience fund were received by the United States treasury yesterday. One was 11 cents and the other 90 cents in Canadian fractional currency. A steamer with 161 bodies of un claimed dead, (he accumulation of two weeks at the New York morgue, was unable to reach the city burial ground and returned the bodies to the morgue. Mrs. Edith Poppleton, aged 29, su pervisor of nurses at the Baptist hos pital at St. lrouis, died of pneumonia She was the daughter of Brigadier General Samuel _i. Holabird, U. S. A.. retired. Admiral Schley has furnished a statement to the senate naval com mittee In which he declares that Ad miral Sampson's criticism nf his delay in locating Oervera’s fleet at Santiago Is unjust. Agnes Gordon Soutter of New York, widow of James T. Soutter. a wealthy bajiker, and the mother-in-law of Kev. Morgan Dix, rector of Trinity church, died of old age. She was in her eighty fourth year. Roth houses of the North Carolina legislature have passpd anew elect.on law. in the form of a constitutional amendment, which, if adopted, will it Is estimated, disfranchise 80,000 colored voters. Francis H. Ha wo, head of the New York great china and g'ass exporting house of Bnwo & l\i#.teri is dead^il Germany, aged 65 years, of apoplexy. His personal acquaintance throughout the United States was very large. Four of the crew of the Hamburg- American liner Bulgaria have been landed at Baltimore. They were try ing to launch a boat from the dis abled steamer during a storm, when it broke adrift and they were picked up by the steamship Vittoria. No thing is known of the fate of the Bul garia. FOREIGN. Russia deprives Finland of its last remaining rights. The steamship Umbre is ashore near Pindeen, England. A son and heir has been born to the khedive of Egypt. M. Emile Loubet was elected presi dent of France by the national assem bly. His election was followed by dis order In Paris. A joint protest from the United States and Great Britain to Germany is under preparation in regard to Ger many’s action in Samoa. London underwriters who Insured at bigu risks ships overdue from the storm a-e making fortunes by the safe arrival of almost all of them. Baron Paul Julius de Reuter, found er of Reuter’s Telegram Company, who 1s over 80 years of age, is lying at the point of diath at his villa at Nice j News is received from Berlin that ; Xavier Scharwenka, the famous pian- I ist, 'has suffered a paralytic stroke and ! is not likely to regain his powers. The British govwnment is investi gating the purchase by M. Mentor, a I Frenchman, of Anticosti Island, at the ! mouth of the St. Lawrence river. The Cunard line steamer Pavonia, which was disabled at sea, was towed | ro St. Michael's in the Azores, by the I steamer Wolviston, from Baltimore. A conflict, said to have started in a ! question of taxes, took place between ' Russians and Chinese at Ta-llen-Wan, China, and 300 Chinese were killed. Lady Curzon, wife of the viceroy of India and daughter of L. Z. Leiter of ! Chicago, has been decorated with the imperial Ordir of the Crown of India. A conflict has occurred between the escorts of the boundary commissions sent out by France and Brazil to ex plore the boundary of French Guiana. A campaign of terror has been start ed in Paris by the antl-Dreyfusfltes to frighten the new president into follow ing his predecessor’s course on revi sion. Special correspondence from Rome states that Archbishop Ireland is still being honored in official circles there, but opposition to 'his policy finds vent in some quarters. The duke of Orleans has unexpect edly arrived at Brussels, and It Is said he considers the moment opportune for a monarchist attempt in France. Three millions of the duke’s portraits are being distributed. Sir George Ferguson Bowen, privy councilor, a former governor of Hong- Kong, of New Zealand and of Queens land respectively, and author of Thirty Years of Colonial Government, died at Brighton, England. According to the semi-official Ham burgiseher Correspondence, the Ger man foreign office, complying with a petition of Germans in Samoa, has re quested the Washington government to supersede Chief Justice Chambers. Koloman de Szell has been intrusted with the ask of forming anew Hun garian cabinet In succession to the ministry presided over by Baron llanffy, who announced Saturday the ministers’ intention of resigning at the close of the parliamentary session. Max Regis, former mayo? of Algiers and editor of the Anti-Juit, has been sentenced to three years’ imprison ment and to pay a fine of 1,000 francs for press offenses and glorifying murder and pillage at meetings In Al giers and Paris.’’ M. Philllppe, man-1 aging director of the same paper, nas! been sentenced to eight years’ imoris-! onment and to pay a fine of 100 francs on the same charge. WISCONSIN LEGISLATURE. Madison, Feb. 20. -The legislature reconvened for a short evening session after its recess since Friday. In the upper house Senator Dennett, whose factory was burned at Port Washing ton, was granted leave of absence for one week. Senator Welton offered a resolution thanking Gov. Scofield and his officials and the natioual guard for their prompt response to the presi dent's Call for troops. The following bills were passed: giving state boaru of agriculture full control of tu6 fail grounds and granting police powers to officers and employes of state in stitutions on grounds thereof. The following bills were killed: requiring successful plaintiff to reimburse de fendant for Improvement on real es tate and relating to the discharge of prisoners held for tort. In the assembly the following meas ures were killed: Joint resolution No. sa. relating to the jurisdiction of cir cuit courts; the bill making an ap propriation to William Wolton. was killed. Madison, Feb. 21. —The senate re fused to adjourn and go on the ex cursion to Green Bay to view the reformatory though most of the sena tors went; but the assembly took the adjournment, and will meet again Thursday evening. Neither house did much. Senator Mills’ bill ob ligating county officers to file state ments of ail fees received was for warded to a third reading in the sen ate. An invitation was received from the governor of Ohio ksking the governor and legislature to partic ipate. in the cenlenr.ary of Ohio state hood. It was referred to a committee. Ithe North Dakota senate petitioned for uniform action among the states for the election of United States sep ators by popular vote. The assembly concurred in Senator Welton’s reso lution thanking Gov. Scofield anu tne Wisconsin troops for the course In the Spanish war. In both houses many petitions were received favor ing a 2-cent passenger rate on rail ways and for no change in the game laws. Madison, Feb. 23. —Both houses met but did little. The assembly killed the bill requiring the state to pay the expense of prosecuting of fenders in state institutions. Dodge county wanted a change so that It could be relieved, the prison being located therein. A resolution was Introduced authorizing the state to se cure title to all State Historical prop erty. The senate killed a bill for the abatement of fences erected only to annoy. Madison, Feb. 23. —At the evening session of the assembly Mr. McGrath won a victory by carrying the Gilmore bill to a third reading. It provides that the state Bhall bear the expenses of trials for offenses committed at the state institutions Instead of the coun ties in w’hieh the institutions are lo cated as is now the case. Madison, Feb. 24. —At the morn ing session the assembly passed to a third reading by a vote of 58 to 25 the bill to make Uie Evening Wisconsin the official state paper. A memorial to congress was adopted favoring the naming of some cruiser Milwaukee. No action was taken on the bill creat ing a board of barber examiners fur ther than laying it ever for a week. A bill was passed requiring the state medical board to register all “repu table” doctors in practice prior to July 1, 1897. The board wanted to compel all doctors to register, but Mr. Orton proposed an amendment as above and it went through. The vote on the amendment was 38 to 28 and on or dering the bill as thus emasculated to a third reading 45 to 41. Among the assembly bills killed were the fol lowing: providing for a state pur chasing agent and for a state road commissioner, requiring all passenger trains to stop at county seats and amending the devorce laws. In the senate Senator Baxter, for the committee on claims, offered a joint resolution calling for a message by the retiring governor at the close of each biennial term, setting forth the condition of the state’s affairs, and embodying recommendations in rela tion thereto. This is in compliance with a recommendation in Governor Scofield's message. The resolution went to the committee on state affairs. Senator McGlllivray’s bill providing for the distribution of state patron age according to population of coun ties was reported without recommen dation By the committee on state af fairs, of which he Is chairman. Bills adversely reported were: authorizing county boards to put clerks of court, registers and sheriffs on salaries; re quiring voters to show receipt for poll tax; and requiring a residence of thirty days in the district before vot ing. CONGRESSIONAL NEWS. Washington, Feb. 21. —The anti scalping bill was finally disposed of for the present session by the senate, that body displacing the railroad measure by taking up the army reorganization bill and making it unfinished busi ness. Mr. Freye reported from the com mittee on foreign relations an amend ment to the sundry civil appropriation bill for the construction of a submar ine cable in the Pacific ocean. . amendment increases the subsidy to be paid every year for 20 years to $175,000 and extends the time in which the contracting company is to be given time to complete the line to the Philippine islands to January 1, 1902. The bill fixes rates on gov ernment messages at one-third the rates on private messages, retaining the provision that they shall be car ried free during 20 years; and fixes a rate of 25 cents per word on private messages to Hawaii and $1 per word on such messages to the Philippines, the press rates being one-fourth of these amounts. Washington, Feb. 22. —The discus sion on the Hull-Hawley army bill was begun in the senate. Mr. War ren (rep., Wyo.) supported the meas ure anti Messrs. Mitchell and Cock rell (dems.) opposed It, while Mr. Proctor (rep., VL) addressed the senate in favor of some amendments which he proposed. Mr. Mitchell (dem., Wis.) said that the only material change from the present system was in the artillery. He took up the de tails of the bill outlining his objec tions to the arguments in favor of them one by one. He advocated a change in tne organization of the staff of the amy as a very necessary re form, and criticised the committee for not including a provision on this point. The bill was also defective, he said. In failing to arrange the status of the adjutant general toward the commanding general. The postcffice appropriation bill was passed after a brief debate. Washington, Feb. 22. —The house reached the last page of the naval bill and adjourned with a point of order pending against the provision fixing the price of armorplate at $545 per ton. Washington. Feb. 23.—The house in augurated the custom of listening to the reading of Washington’s farewell address. Two hours were devoted to the naval appropriation bill, but seemingly only the threshold of the debate upon the cost of armorplate has been passed. Boutelle’s amend ment fixing the maximum price of ar morplate at $545 per ton, but restricting the provision to the appropriation made in the present bill was ruled to be in order. A bill was introduced reviv ing the rank of admiral and vice-ad miral and naming Dewey and Schley as the persons to fill the respective positions. Washington, Feb. 24. —During its en tire session the senate had under con sideration the river and harbor bill. Washington. Feb. 24. —The naval appropriation bill finally passed the debate, most of which was spent upon the question of rehabilitating the naval academy at Annapolis in ac cordance with the scheme inaugurated by the appropriation of $500,000 in the last naval bill and the proposition to increase the maximum pric#to be paiu for armor plate to $545 per ton, ine ex isting law limiting it to S4OO. Upon both propositions the naval commit tee suffered signal defeats. Mr. Walker (rep., Mass.) offered an amendment providing that the government should not pay more for armor plate than any foreign government paid. This was carried, the vote being 112 to 48. The Hopkins’ amendment fixing the price of armor plate at $445 was adopt ed without division. Mr. Moody (rep., Mass.) then created a furore by offer ing an amendment to create the rank of admiral of the navy. Uproarious applause greeted the reading of the amendment. It was carried with rous ing cheers. The naval bill was then re ported to the house and passed. The senate amendments to the military academic bill were adopted. The bills now go to the president. Washington, Feb. 25. —After a ses sion of nharly eight hours the senate passed the river and harbor bill by the decisive vote of 50 to 3. The sharpest contest arose over the Nicaragua canal bill amendment. Mr. Spooner (rep., Wis.) offered an amendment to the Nicaragua canal amendment as fol lows: "That if the president shall be unable to secure from the govern ments of Nicaragua and Costa Rica such concessions as will enable the United States to build and perpetually own and control the said canal the president is authorized to negotiate for the control, right to construct, maintain and perpetually control some other canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and the president is required to negotiate for the abro gation or modification of any and all treaty obligations, if any such exist, as shall in any wise interfere with the construction, ownership and perpetual control of any such canal.” The amendment was agreed to. The committee on military affairs reported the compromise army reor ganization bill. It authorizes the president to maintain a regular army at a strength not exceeding 65,000 enlisted men and to raise a force of not more than 35,000 volun teer infantry. The increase in the regular and volunteer force shal. continue in service not later than July 1, 1901. Washington, Feb. 25. —During the general debate upon the army appro priation bill in the house Mr. John son (rep., Ind.), who made severa notable speeches violently attacking the policy of the administration dur ing the consideration of the army re organization bill a fortnight ago, rp turned to the assault and deliverei against the president and some of his advisers the most scathing philippi. heard in the house for months. EASILY LED. O'Flagherty—Shure, thot Dunniga. has no opinions worth havin' at all, a all. He’s the most aisiiy convince mon Oi ever knew. O'Toole—Phwat makes ye say so? O’Flagherty—We had a shmj.ll disl. pute over a bit av an illecthin bet tii two av us had made, an' Oi’m a nagi: av he didn’t own up Oi woire roigh before Oi'd more than blacked the tw ois av him and broke his jaw, th< putty-brained spalpeen. FACTS OF REAL INTEREST. The presidential term in France it seven years. The average duration of human lift is about 33 years. There are more Germans than Irish in the United States. The first mint of the United State* was established 1n Philadelphia in 1792. The total number of communicants of the Catholic church throughout the world is 230,866,533; of Protestant churches, 143,237,625. The gold production of the United States for 1898, according to the direc tor of the mint, was $65,782,677 —a ga'n of more than $8,000,000 over that of 1897. WHEAT OR HUSK. One tramped rhe fells from dawn to dusk. The winds of God about him blown: One struggled in the sounding street. In all the seething crowd alone. To one the day was living wheat. To one ’twas but an empty husk. FRFF Upases ri\LLjpagg !* C COODS Etc - ht FREE on application Retail at Wholesale Prlcas. CaSpEt! ' DRAPERIES “llmm"n Ch SET*, etc., shown in colors. People alI iver the woHH ’? PS ’, D,MME * Because It brings to them ElftT FLOORS EACH 205 goods In compact form to select f7om ®° FEET) °j JOHN M. SMYTH GO..tf 14S 150. 152. 154. ,36. ,38. 160. ,62. iC* ,06 West Madison St!. CHICACO.H Ah exceptionally severe epidemic of influenza or grip prevails at Copen hagen, Stockholm and Chrla> —— Hy~ ' 4 Durability is fetter Than Show The ‘wealth of the multi millionaires is not equal to good health. Riches without health are a curse, and yet the rich, the middle classes and the poor alike have, in Hood's Sarsaparilla, a valuable as sistant in getting and main taining perfect health. It never disappoints. Scrofula "Three years ago onr son, now eleven, had a serious case of scrofula and erysipelas with dreadful sones, discharg ing and itching constantly. He could not walk. Several physicians did not help for sixteen months. Three months’ treatment with Hood’s Sarsaparilla made him per fectly well. We are glad to tell others of it.” Mrs. David Laird, Ottawa, Kansas. 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