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THE EVENING STAR. SS PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY, : *K 4 : ire ok ‘Tie Soveak sed AT THE STAR BUILDINGS, ca circulation e Evening 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue, Cor. llth 8, by s j is more than double that of any The Evening Newspaper Company, { : other paper in Washington, 7p eee er ie whether published in the morn- ‘The Evening Star is served to subscribers in the 3 ey } ing or in the afternoon. ¢ ra lpg ey RR 4 - As a medium for unobjec- ; Planter 2 cents each. | By mail—anywhere im the nited States or Canada—postage prepaid—50 cents th. Peaturday Sheet Star, $1 per year, with foreign ‘postage ‘Entered the Post ESE sarmce.| No. 13,807. WASHINGTON, D.°0., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1897—-FOURTEEN PAGES Rates of advertising made known on application. ee WANTS OF THE SOUTH| MANUFACTURED SENSATION |THE DISPENSARY LAW| tert sozter* Peranronn He Was Accompanied by a Number of Representatives and Diplomats. Alabama Republicans to Confer With the President. ‘Then Went Around and Told Corres- pondents About It—Located ‘by the Police. WILL ‘ASK FOR SOME OF THE OFFICES New United States Treasurer to Be Nominated Next Week. ee pa KENTUCKY MEN AGREE tionable advertisements it there- tees . fore stands unequaled and un- approachable, = TWO CENTS. 5 : At 8 o'clock this morning President Mc- Fate of YX Fi Wrote Threatening Letters to Speaker A x ; George Kauffmann, a Young Farmer Cate 7 = Subject of a Resolution by Senator pale sagivania MESS be ghcsent Scenes in the Camps of the Living Near Sterling, I. Hopeful Views of English Bimetallists Reed. Ss Sterling, : Tillman. at Philadelphia today at ‘the various ex- Pacificos. Expressed at Manchester. ercises attendant upon the opening of the Commercial Museum and the annual meet- Went to Guard His Father's Granary— ings of the National Maritifacturers’ Asso- y is Mi ted Remains Found JUDICIARY COMMIPTEE TO INQUIRE | cstion ana tne American Meateat Associs-| DRIVEN FROM HOME BY THE TROOPS} = =e= sins Fowna'tm JINDORSE THE WOLCOTT MISSION tion. : - Burning Straw Stack. 7 ‘The train carrying the party was a fine aa one. The private car of President Thomson 2 k fs like other public men in| Mr. Stewart’s Plan to Maintain a| was sent for use by the President, and| Effects of the Concentration Order STERLING, Ill, June 2.—Robbea, mur-| Prospect of Success Said to Be Speaker Reed. = the train was in charge of Tourist Agent 5 ceed i a red and cremated. This tells the awful s 4 high official station, has received threaten- Bell of the company. The train was made , _ [ae ing letters from time to time. but hes Treasury Reserve. Soa re apes EE ed of General Weyler’s. fate of George Kauffmann, a young farmer Brightest Since 1873. rever paid any attention to them. Yester- ident and his immediate party, another for living near here. He stood guard over h day, however, cne was received of such a the Cue ce two joel pecbere as Soe father's granary to protect it from thieves, G bi . , of the diplomatie-corps and for oth- 5 eee = a nx Rte than ordinary attention, and the ‘Speak. | TARIFF BILL IS TAKEN UP|r invited guests. ‘then thero was a spien | WHAT THE AMERICANS SAW | Who killed him at his post and sought to] KIND WORDS FOR AMERICA than ordinary attention, and the Speak- didsdining. car wanasin “erent: next-te the wipe ou! the evidence of their fiendish er’s private secretary, without Mr. Reed's eee engine, a baggage coach. ghe a party, —_+ - |crime with fire. —_—->+—_—_. knowledge, deemed it his duty to turn it including the President, téok breakfast on : There is no clue to the murderers, but * : A delegation of Alabama republican Jead-| over to the proper authorities for investi- ] In the absence of the Vice President, | the train. ft From The Star’s Special Correspondent. qaDGthoamdsaiaTen tie teen MANCHESTER, England, June 2—The ers has arranged to call on the Presfdent d that precautions might he | President Pro Tem. Frye occupied the| In President Thomson's car were Presi- MATANZAS, Cuba, May 24, 1897. Guorg eS Pac entiaacn teen VERe eee lor avec | enna (GAeeiiag er aks Gierialis Leases Sotlomy ancl thie 2 ntec: b h day. The bill dent and Mrs. McKinley, Secretary and SusKinlay has Soon through the adi a” Tans san & this week to talk with him about what che | taken to prevent a possible catastrophe. | Cbair In the Senate today. The nig | Mrs. Porter, Mrs, Saxton and Mrs. Bates. | President McKinley has s en 8 bias Kauffmann, a prosperous farmer liv- | opened here this morning. aS Fepublicans of that state may expect In the | ‘The letter was mailed in Washington. It | P48sed appropriating $100,000 for a public | Te perce er tho cobinct -Aeecre ae | eyes of his special representative, what the | ing about five miles north of Sterling. He | large attendance, including over fifty dele- Way of diplomatic and consular appoint-| stated that the “one-man power” must | building at Nashua, N. H. Kenna and Wilson—represented that part | “concentration” policy of Gen. Weyler| a5 twenty-two years old. gates from labor associations, mostly Lan- ments. They will ask that thelr state be | stop and threatened both the Speaker and| Mr. Tillman of South Carolina then | of the government. There were, however, | means. Mr. Calhoun has been among the| Farmer Kauffmann has two dwelling |cashire spinners and weavers. The lord given a pro rata share of these offices, an¢ | Mr. Dingley with assassination. It was | @8ked consideration for a resolution recit- commer srs laates poe Beene Pacificos or country people, who are hud | nouses with about a quarter of a mile be. mayor of Manchester presided and wel- Will at the same time suggest that they be | sigred “A Cuban.” ing the circumstances of the enactment of | SiTY, Department was represented by Chief | dled together by the thousands on the hill- | tween them. He left his old home for his |comed the delegates. Letters of regret allowed one or two real good places. Un- the South Carolina dispensary law, its ef- | Cjerk Michael and Prof. Prederick Emory, | sides of Matanzas. He has witnessed suf-| present dwelling. about a year ago, but | were read from Lord Aldenham, head of der the Cleveland administration Alabama | and that if the Speaker did not do his bid- | fect in redgcing intemperance, the recent | chief of the bureau of torcign commerce. | fering such as he never saw before in his | continued to use some of tie buildings at- | the firm of Anthony Gibbs & Sons, a direc- was given the Spanish mission, Minister | ding. he (the Speaker) would never leave | cecision of a federal judge overthrowing | Commissioner of Pensions H. Clay Evans life, such as he hopes never to see again, |tached to the former residence. Lately | tor of the Bank of England: the first lord the chair alive. : zi was a member of ‘the party. Among the Kauffmann discovered that thieves were mee eiitiuies the peek ylor coming from that state. In addi-| Ti was not tals letter which created the | the law and requiring the state to “reopen members of Congress were Representatives | 204 such as he never will see again outside | K@uftmann granary, located near the old | 0f the treasury, A. 3. ‘our; the pi tien, the state was allowed nine consulir | alarm. It was the fact that it was the] the bar rooms.” The resolution then di- Dingley, Grosvenor, Dalzell, Tawney, Mor- | Of this fertile island. It has been a revela-| residence. He asked ‘his ‘som Geome ‘ta | dent of the local government board, Mr. appointments, all of them positions of some | last of a series of letters written on the | rects the judiciary committee to consider ris and Newlands. A number of the mem-| tion to him of the way in which Sgpin | take up his night quarters in the deserted | Henry Chaplin; Mr. Alfred De Rothschild, worth. There are two prominent republi- pes paper, in ey Geri a = and report what legislation is necessary to Hee cence Reeth aid were pre makes war, a revela -a that could come | home let pet = ae the corsul general for Austria; the Duke of * o1 @ same general tenor. \- | Party. ie diplomatic corps was especially rege gan is vigils two weeks ago. is Le e and others. can applicants from. Alabama for dipl>-| been mailed’ from. New York. This_ one | Testore to South @sslie te panare Fee | dy reprecehion en he niki eee ay oo2 personal Soe z =o Heer pa ed ae = eee : a ae 28 matic places. These are Frank Kilpatrick | showed that the writer had come to Wash- | late the liquor traffic in its own way. South American’ republics taking a great le mists were hanging over Havana | hack to the other house for his breakfast. e es of Richport, who wants to be minister to | ingtcn, and the possibility that he might] Mr. Tillman spoke briefly in support of | interest in ‘he trip and the museum. Sunday morning when Mr. Calhoun and his | Yesterday he did not come at the usue] | the deepest regret at the death of Gen. Guatemala, and G. A. Sibley of Mobile, whe fear = ee reet el eee Speakon prs the resolution,saying the public impression pAmone those Si the Party Bete SS companions crossed the ferry and took the i The family waited some time with- | Francis A. Walker of Boston, — as - ith > retary, ir. len, to notify Tgeant-at- ney- omero, the Mexican minister; nor Men- ie out concern. Then his father became | “one of the greatest economic authorities is ambitious to go to Venezuela. Among | arms Russell. ‘The latter immediate con, | that the dispensary faw was & money: | Gonca, the Brazilian minister: Senor Gon, | fain for Matanzas. Consul Brice had been alarmed and started for the old house, ac- | of th nm, the consular applicants are Dr. Elber: | municated with Inspector of Police Hol. | making device was erroneous, and that it cla-Merou, the Argentine minister; Senor | there to confer with Consul General Lee | Sanna a started for the old the hivea | Of the century. Ha: with Montevideo as his ambition; linterger, and after some investigation, | had accomplished much good in regulating Gana, the Chilean minister; Senor Andrade, | @bout the distribution of the money for the man. They went to the house first, but Importance of the Election Here. post eh oe ee Jamaica, as | both he and the sergeant-at-arms came to | the paver eee West Virginia felt that | the Venezuelan minister; Senor Calvo, the | relief of distressed Americans. Advantage | there was no trace of the young ‘man. Continuing, the report said the most im- ranks te he Wants, and Mr. Farley, who | the conclusion that the letters had not | Mr. Faulkner of e “ he | Costa Rican minister, and the ministers | was taken of the opportunity to go out | They noticed that the straw stack had vent of the year was the election wants to go to Newcastle, England. been written by a crank, but by some one | the Senate should not be committed to the | trom’ Ecuador. Chine ‘and “Cerca. been ‘nearly ‘burned dogn’ ‘“Z2¢k 2d | portant event of the ye The Ala Sf xpect at least four or | desirous of perpetrating a sensational hoax. | Icng preamble reciting the effect of the a : quietly with him. It was a better way | Pett smouldering, and went to examine it_ | fT President in the United States, “when five consular places, and have a big field to] When Detectives Boyd and Boardman | law, ate. GOVERNOR OF NEW MEXICO. | than to go under official escort of Gen.| ‘They were horrified to find on the top of | Bryan polled 6,500,000 votes on the platform Fick from. They state that there is 10 | were assigned to the case they had ar idea | Mr. Tillman Tae ee a ee a Ahumada or Governor Palmerola. No|the smoking stack the body of yeung | of national bimetallism, and McKinley friction among the leaders of the various | that the latest letter was sent elther by a| to avold the term Judicial legis ia Parade was made of the departure of the | Kauffmann, burned to a crisp and with all | polled 7,000,000 votes on a platform pledg- factions in the state, and that the party | crank or by some one who wanted to manu. | characterizing the recent decision, ai bwsclothing Peonsumed: Stee ee ee has never been in a more harmonious con- | facture a story to sell to the newspapers. | substituting “judicial interpretation. Party. No advance notice of their coming | Poon clubbed and his skull crushed. His | i2& him to promote international bimetal- dition .Atessrs.| Vaughn and Youngblood, | Soon after they started the investigation | Mr. Hoar of Massachusetts, chairman of was served on the authorities at Matanzas. S was | lism. Miguel A. Otero Selected as a Com- promise Candidate. The President today:sent the following state ard national cummitteemen, res they became satisfied that the affair was | the judiciary committee, proposed a sub- nominations to the Senate: tively, will dictate the appoint. a fake similar to the sending of the harm- | stitute omitting all the preamble and sim- | nominations to the | 2 Wake, men. Their leadership is now un-| less bomb to the late Chief Justice Waite | ply directing the judiciary committee to] Interlor—Miguel A. Otero, to be governor Re ees pamons Alabama republicans, | some years ago. Following Speaker Reed | consider and report, by bill or otherwise, | of New Mexico: George H. Wallace, sec- and their influence in coming years is ex-| from the Capitol, in the hopes of discover- | what legislation, if any, is necessary tO | retary of New Mexico: William M. Jen- Pected to be more extensive than ever. ing a clue, the detectives observed a man | carry out OE ogy relating to | kins, secretary of Oklahoma Territory. 2 ed | commerce betwee i ; : Two New York Places. That he wae the sotto ar Tate tee | Mr: Tinos gecepied Abe eabetitute, and | “Mifuel A. Otero has « high Teputation in It was thoneht yesterday that the nom- | vestigation showed that this man had given | {t was agreed to. The South Carolina sen- | the southwest as a business man. He is ination of Ellis H. Roberts of New York to | information about the threatening letters | ater secured the poner ie ns Cees the son of the late-M. A. Otero, who was be treasurer of the United States to sue- | to certain newspaper correspondents and | sary law in the Record for the information, | the Gelegate for New Mexico in Congress 8 he said, of senators. “ ceed Mr. Morgan would go to the Senate | Sha’ nade inquiries. tthe detonate | The first formal notice of a tariff speech | for three terms. Mr. Otero was born tn today, inasmuch as the term of office of | working on orders trom Inspector Hollin. | Was made by Mr. Mantle (Mont.), who said | Miseouft “in” 1888" ana was educated at Treasurer Morgan expired yesterday. It is | berger, and had their cnief given the order | he would address the Senate Friday on the Notre. Dame, Indiana. During the build- throat had been cut and the head " It was simply a quiet trip for observation. | nearly severed from the body. A buliny | ,,TBe Teport then referred to the support all to have been given to international The railroad journey was a reminder of | hole showed that the murderer had shot preety by M. Meline. the French pre- the war. The forward car was armored | the young man. mier, in the chamber of deputies, and and filled with soldiers. Other soldiers | under cus pineen tn ‘there fener weltente | Souched upon the mission to Europe ot were on the platforms. The passengers | to warrant their arrest. no evidence | Senator Edward O. Wolcott of Colorado, were mostly officers going back to their| The surrounding country is intensely ex- Sppeinioneen ‘ot the epectel ta on awer m4 posts. ‘The train was preceded a few hun- | cited over the brutal work of the criminal | France to which it incamments hoped ace dred feét by a pilot engine, or “explorodor.” aes friends of the young man are | co-operation will be accorded by leading This pilot engine is sent ahead to discover |" 7S Vengeance. Serene that an interationsl agresment dynamite. If it ts not blown up, the rega- sploderang i ee lar train may safely follow. The crew of Prospect Bright for Bimeta the pilot engine are stoics, and do not even The report concludes as follow: —_—_—_—_ AN INVESTIGATION UNLIKELY. som. hile Attitude of the Senate on Mr. TiL learned today that Mr. Roverts’ nomina- | they would have arrested the man. But wool schedule. ing of the T. & S. F. railroad he was | 'ecelve extra pay. Their only advantage is 's Sugar Scandal Resolution. the necessity for international bimetallism tion will go to the Senate next week, and | thé absence of — an order they dropped Tariff Taken Up. cashier and manager of the large firm of | that the single engine can puff at full speed It is likely that the Senate will refuse to | W2S "ever greater than at present, the - = 7 ot | the case temporarily. 2 that Mr. Morgan will hold over until that time. It will be remembered that Mr. Rob- erts was originally select: by the Platt men to be subtreasurer at New York to succeed Conrad Jordan, but that Secretary The tariff bill was then taken up. Mr.| Otero Calder & Company, and dater be-| through the deep cuts where attacks from came cashi Aldrich, who has been in charge thus far, | Bank of Las Venes. Dupe eee ayonal | insurgents are possible, while the train was not present, and Mr. Allison of Iowa|son administration he was. Clerk of the | ™USt Proceed slowly. and Mr. Platt of Connecticut sat together | court of the, pfourte ual ginsict, Mr. The Camp of Pacificos, Gage wanted Mr. Jordan to remain where | Davis, and the latter failed to find any | and directed the course of the bill. States marshal, with practicaly y-the oita | We had tho frst sight of an extensive he was. law under which the writer of the letter] Mr. Stewart (Nev.) preceded .the debate territorial indorsement. The fight for the | C?™P of pacificos at Campo Florldo, which ‘To make matters satisfactory to all sides| could be prosecuted. The sending of a pa OSTA See eons governorship became so werm,-the candi- | 1s an hour’s distance from Havana. Hun- ao Leche — foots mee paniet postal card or letter with threatening 000,000 and the retirement of bonds out of eatetue cao Here, Hi, HL. Price, B. F.| dreds of palm huts were spread out on capt it. This was the solstion f wha; | language written on the envelope is illegal, | the surplus above $125,000,000. Mr. Stew- | gent: §, waren ion of: “thé: Presi-.| either side of the railroad tracks. A barb- it s _the solution o! en | Dut no law against the sending of a letter | art stated that a previous amendment of. | deot; E. W. Collier, G. W. Wi » that | cq wir Bccretary Gaze and Senge prar between | of this character-could be found. ‘This | fered “ter hie mir Moe ne injecting the | Re was finally selevted ‘ag. &\ compromise | €4 Wife fence, eight feet high, was stretch- cpa Caos ee same question arose some time ago, when | silver question into the tariff debate, so | C@didate. : ft ot $4 along the outskirts of. the settlement. eae eene — oe Nowe Soe Ge threatening letters were sent to Secretary | that he preferred to strip the question of EGecree H. Wallace wes friginally a can-| Just outside the fence ran a deep ditch. On vos ition ts dent Cleveland an nator is. In the | ury reserve. 5 y s 5] little forts, n Behe Wnt ores ee att Bem Poen | case lof | Senator “Millal” thal threatenits | <The. consideration (ce the tari butt then | feats pig Lived in Opto urefl 1876, when | oe lockey cae a pte see ite, House several times this | language was written on a postal card, and | began with seneaute C, relating to metais| he removed to Missourl. He went to reside ut. _ Soldiers patrolled every- pansies este Net A oa ace rcs would | the offender was arrested and sentenced to| and manufactures of’ metals” The fet in New Mexico two years ago. He was| where, Looking down among the huts, meee Wadd icin Paeltwe tare prison in Baltimore for eighteen months. paragraph on fror. ore, etc., went over at Saat ie Choe during the Harrison | then at the barbed wire fence, the ditch, | resolution as introduced, so as to investi. | {he matter through, even without England, candidates for the vacancy are Andrew Hawked the Matter on the Row. the request of Mr. Quay. ‘The Paragraphs : the soldiers occupying the commanding po- | gate contributions to the campaign fund | tough i: would be only ‘political wisdom Jacobs and Walter Atterbury. Mr. Jacobs] It is understood that the man who wrote eds Meee BAR Ao LE sitions, it was no longer a mystery why the | of 1892 as well as the fund of 184, ond |‘ add our forces to theirs. It is certain ——___-e—_ € same in the House and Senate bills. SENATOR SMITH’: that the United St busines 4 is the organization candidate, while Mr. ests n ITH’S DENIAL, pacificos in the desperation of hi thus take in the campaign waere :he dem- | that the United States means business ani Atterbury is understood to have the back.| t2¢ threatening letters took a duplicate | Mr. Jones of Arkansas took occasion, am BOEESaE oe ie ae sen Rerencitlioss ocrats won and the one last fall in which |©XPects success or the President would x ed | however, tc make a statement to show the = ee " * ing of the original McKink ff New | COPy of them, and when he was assured It is a Surprise to Some ‘Who Though: the republican; uccessful. This plan | Ot ave sent Senator Wolcott and his col York. The President will Tava Ltay doeete that the originals had been received by | bsurdity, he said, of keeping up the taxes fousht| would never get through that fence and | was petisfeerere: ‘o Se crepablionae Poe- | leagues to negotiate, and itis satisfactory They Knew. ' n these between these men. although there are five | Mr. Reed proceeded to hawk the duplicates | Quon had eect none Sena ESE | digmecen emphatic “denial made by Sen- | Scr0SS {he ditch beyond the range of th] cause they did not fear the contrast, but Eierom tant he erane aie pacts ve Giasncegntidates to pick from if he feels s0| sicng newspaper row last night, offering | and shipped larke aeoctieee boned: ator Smith yesterday that hé had engaged | Suyng croc, St Campo Florido were wan- | the democrats protested, and claimed’ that | Chequer. th mission.” Chittenden. te Be a ieen Foon SB: | for sale this great sensation which he him- | Mr. Jones reviewel the ainechetee of the F dering aimlessly around within their pen | their taciff bill had been investigated once Chittenden, H.-H. Sloan, J. C. O'Conner | S2fe"haa manufactured. ‘Copies of the let: | steel rel soe eto na geo lution of the | in sugar speculation duriig this Constes lilze (Suwon faniinais enrages tsitieat and the special committee had reported To Help the American Mission. and Charles Burrows. ters were put in evidence to give “verl- | price of steel rails 50 per cent, he said, and | OF at any other time when légistation: re- | ay Juraco and other stations further | ‘%@t nothing was wrong, and they did not | ne jetter of Lord Aldenham concludes; similitude to an otherwise bald and uncon- | why should a law protect producers’ who | lating to sugar was pending has eaused siimpecy were had of the pacifico. Small-| cot wee ee te Dut Om tala © 80C- | We should not relax our efforts to eecung s, i ive.” Some of the corre- | could by combination double their prices | surprise. . F. Attorney General McKenna has not yet a et LA Whe Noak-oi Onie® | 'onieteelraiies PI rprise. Mr. Smith was not compelled to pox has been very bad here, and no one the wisest soluti n, @m equal agreement cared to leave the train for a closer sight. with the United States, France and Ger- gccommended to the President who shall | jystice Waite refused to take the story. It | He spoke also of the effect. of this combt- | ™®*¢ the denial, and it ts to be presumed The people were not the only things to be many. If prejudice prevents this, we council can with confidence affirm that never since 1873 -have the prospects been so hopeful. In view of the serious attempt now making to secure a settlement on an international basis, it earnestly calls on all friends of monetary reform to re- double their efforts during the coming order an investigation into the charges brought by Senator Tillman in regard to the sugar schedule in the present tariff bill. Up to this morning there was some Prospect of an investigation, but. devel- opments in the last twenty-four hours have altered the plans. When Senator Till- man introduced the resolution asking for } ... ‘The greatest evidence of the progress of an Investigation it was referred to the | tne cause is shown in the famougeresolu- Senate committee to audit and control the | tion of the house of commons in March, contingent expenses of the Senate. This | 18%, and in the promises of the chancellor committee has only. three members, Sena- | Of the exchequer. Such promises are not tor Jones cf Nevada, Senator Gallinger of | ™ade and such resolutions are not adopted New Hampshire and’Senator Jones of Ar- | Without the certainty that they are con- kansas, and, as will be seen, it is com- | Sonant with the general wish of the na- Posed of one populist, one republican ard | tion. Our objects will be gained if the OnE eimbseat. United States and France or some other It was proposed yesterday to amend the | §Teat commercial nation agree to carry No Law Against It. This afternoon Inspector Hollinberger held a conference with District Attorney year. Lerd Aldenham’s letter of regret say: Assintant Attorneys Gencral. _ Republican Senators Confer. When this condition tecame known yes- terday afternoon, a number of the republi- be assistant attorneys for the remainder | is understood, however, that the young | nation, and that on wire nails, in raising | tat he made it voluntazily. That he of the places under him. Only two of | man succeeded in selling his home-made | the price to American consumers, while | Should solemnly and formally dispute a 1 seen. I write of them as things, ‘becaucs t. | Should do our best to second the efforts of these have been filled and the demand is | S€8ation to one or two papers. a ies Ca Ee tarbeiteaes theca el PMc on ue under the present military policy they are | ter soataustrihene Seatnamaat “of crieeraeyes at tne Sasneuner and thas great for the others. Mr. McKenna is Fae aaa dition, he asserted, which should arouse : t , | BOt considered human beings. The other | <<," at 5 make the American mission successful.” gcing slow and intends to distribute these PAYING FOR INDIAN LANDS. the people from ocean to ocean, until they | M&tion that it had never dtzurred to them Michigan gave a dinner at his residence, on |" ‘The letters of Mr. 2 Balfour and Mr. Chap- nae et eetane aad the | Vermont avenue, and had as his guests a| lin express continued sympathy with the A Large Number of Warrants Signed | Jones said the iron trade was no longer an | a denial is calculated to bewilder those wh evidences of ruin—cane | jarge number of the republican senators, | bimetallic movement. “na et ihe Seme time get compe- |" py Austatant Secretary Vanderlip.. | potest mais ear ae grown to giant | think they know something atous, tro | elds burned over, bare wails and chimneys The affair was a social one, and a most Br. McKenna has practeat on eenera! | assistant Secretary Vanderlip’s first duty | proportions, until the Uniter Siete: ten nae sugar scandal of the time of the Wilson | cf “Ingenios” or sugar mills, heaps of ashes | enjoyable entertainment. And after dinner ex-Attorney General Richards of Onto. ea | in his new office was to sign 728 per capita world tn iron production. Bil and might raise a doubt as to whether | and blackened moftar, the absence of all| he only subject, formally discussed was has been intimated in The Star, but has | warrants in favor of Nez Percet Indians ae eet eC spoke: generally | there ever was any sugar. speculation by | signs of life except close to the stations se S cS sf . ¥ the Senate committee cn Contingent ex- “In the office Gatarthe conrad to re- | in payment of lands ceded to the United] Hp maintained that suc cases eee, | any one in public Ife. “If Mr. Smith's | ong torts, Everywhere could be seen what the office until the close of the a ab as equally as possible among the stamped to pieces these cembinations. Mr. | t0 doubt, naturally causes syrprise. Such ——— GOULDS SAIL FOR EUROPE. clerk, who was an e: el - penses. It was intimated that the commit- ss étaw cousta i States under an agreement ratified by an | goods were being shipped abroad in enor-| rator, formerly acer bers Nay Aig coe Seemed to be great bamboo bird cages. | tee wculd report adversely on the Tillman | NEW YORK,June 2.—Mr.and Mrs.Georze ColsaelSamte Maen Boyd of North | act of Congress of August, 1894. The war-| mous quantities, and that the tariff on the famous banking and broker's establish- | These were the houses of the people who | Tesolution and declare that no investiga-|J. Gould, with their five children, sailed Carolina, Who took the oath of office yes- | rants were made out in the names of indi-| TW material embarrassed this trade. ment, had not died, and. could now he | tilled the sofl. These houses had not been | tion was necessary. It was also under- S assistant attorney general, is a | yidual Indians and aggregated $162,608. All f North Carolina, and has been an d influential republican In that on the American line steamship St. Louis Mr. Caffery’s General Speech. Sra ie eee ubatantiate Mk: Smith's de- | burned. Instead they were unroofed, the | #004 that since the refusal of the demo- r% for Southampton today. Mr. Gould sald ial, a = crats to allow an investigation of the cam- = . the names are long and grotesque, and| Mr. Caffery then branched into a general | sofence of some she at Oe et deen; | Weather boarding, If it might be called | Crate, ° slew, an inve committee would | he would be away for about two months. eee - -| Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie were also ate sine a ” many of them are unfit for publication. | speech against the bill, reading from manu-.| as to whether they have been victims of a | that, taken off and the poles and rafters | report unanimously against an investiga- bg maleate ta me = Ase SE The warrants will be sent to the Indian | script. dream and have been doing Mr. Smith | left. If peace ever comes they may be plod Present time. ss soni Ee passengers by the St. Louis. Mr. Carne- ee agent at the Nez Percez reservation in} In the main his speech was a@ protest | Violent injustice. Sy thatched with palm and again be habit-| thar’ they wpuptcans as the eee egncluded | gic stated that they were going to Clumy, A Mise See warace. Idaho for distribution, and care will be| against an increase of duties on necessaries | _URfortunately this clerk ‘or private sec- * Scotland, for a holiday. He could not "ee a -e ff able. But now they must shelter no one. ported, and against an investigation. They , The delegates from the McKinley and 5 hat ‘Sinesancoat ve the nepotietion c€ of life and on raw materials. He did not Pere cere dane nanae ene te It is impossible to overlook the complete- | decided that as the committee was entirely | Say how long he would be away. Hot onmae ate Campaign) Club sf this | his warrant. ‘The average mall of Assist-| mention the sugar schedule. mous Senate sugar Investigation, his tes- | ness of the military defenses along the line presi arp enc —_ penton 5 aa | Omer ee ee, wed scaly: tas thier aatenican Gk (aetna ocean League | 2t Secretary Vanderlip’s office is 00 let-| | Progress on the bill was then resumed, | timony was not taken < It-cras sald at he os the Mhevann ilies Wvees Sin bee Ty party represented in the Sen-| pew, president of the New York Central te, their action could not be taken as| railroad; Charles H. Cramp, the Phila- ters, 't today he was compelled to write| and the paragraphs were agreed to on time that he had beer notified to appear a ; ublican Clubs at Detroit on July Hep signature over a thousand times. | round iron in coll or rods, beams, girders, | before the committee, but that the notice | {8 fortilino, with sentinel on the lookout | partisan one, and that they were only = 5 ain following ths ee " delphia ‘ship builder: Mra. | George |W. ave 2 veme: &c., boiler or other plate iron or steel, had been recalled. It is regarded as un- the watch tower and w! soldiers gar- | fol ¢ recommendations of the com-| Childs of Philadelphia, Countess Pappen- have starte@ a movement for B. H. ES ees is regal mitt uy Free this mon: rt fortified. Even ee. . heim, Lieutenant A. M. Thackara, United rner for ——— of the ieague, and if MINNEAPOLIS ORDERED HOME. uation: Ties Seeetes Loses peena Des. that testimony Braet sees c samen atti’ Settles the Question. States consul at earee gel E. denned they can get his consent will present his Eecussion Brose ot peragran! re-| Of course, Mr. Smith knows better than 7 e = and ten members of ramatic com- name, beyond all doubt, as a man fully | She Will Return to League Island and | lating to hop band and Scroll iron, includ-| does any one else what the facts in the | “ers are numberlese. Admirable prepara- This conclusion seems to settle the ques- for the presidency of ihe league. Join the Reserve Fleet. So far there have been few names sug- gested as successors to President Wood- . but it is well known that there eat rivalry for the position. Mr. Warner is the only vastern man so far tion of another investigation, for if the | 4% —+-— republicans vote against the resolution, DR. MILBURN EXCUSED. with the ald of the members of the com- mittee and several democrats who are t known to be opposed to it, it will be car- Spend His Vacation <aefeat - re ried, and the matter will be dropped. It is NEW YORK, June 12.—The Rev. Wm. H. Sahara has its oases and Aquacute 1s 8! hardly probable, however, that s yea amt Milburn, D.D., the blind chaplain of the green spot hereon ees aor Say, voo wulbe SES oe i Senate on | United States Senate, has been excused by The country around it has no! n devas- e¢ question of an inves! ion, for, under | ... 1 the tated. ‘Phe sugar mills are not bare walls | the circumstances, knowing that the report | Vice President Hobart from service for session, the Rev. Dr. and smokeless chimneys. There are fields aoe sire: will be sustained. the | remainder of the ing the bands used in baling cotton. Mr. | case are, and his denial must be accepted, | tion, it all seems, to resist an invading The triple-screw cruiser Minneapolis, | Vest pointed out that the McKinley rate | but sometimes information» comes in such | army, but we had not looked for it in a which has been cruising in the eastern | was 1 2-10 cents; the Wilson bill made cot- pidirect nianer ss 10) make se epze de province which is officially reported as Mediterranean for several months, looking | ton ties free and the Senate bill now pro- | Mal 0 aees cone pacified. after American interests, has been ordered | Posed to make the rate 7-10 cents per Cs la ee heme. She will be lald up in ordinary at | Pott, woe ot ute wee ceprossed that the TREASURY PROMOTIONS. rrp tego Maat he could | the League Island navy yard alongside her | Vest said Pak Poe ves Virsinia delegates to ‘begia with, hese | sister ship, the Columbia, and, Ike her, | Mr. Milis of Texas also opposed the rate, | Changes Tee oe the support of a lerge number of personal | will form part of the reserve fleet. This Pe orem a Piers A eoNen eae Promottor: b been made! as’ follow: friends from throughout the country. who | movement was cecided upon some time 4 motiors have pas follows 5 will be delegates at the convention. It is | ago, but was delayed on account of the war pine pera beets Why was this distinc-| in the Treagury Department: of waving cane. The palm huts of the | surctg, "ii merely. by a viva voce vote, re- ce thon President’s pastor, kindly grgued that his election would strengthen n Turkey and Greece. in view o! wud : park ana substituting. the republican party In Marylin aud Vir-| the cessation of hostilities, It was ‘con- | Re asked. Why did the north receive tres bev eaee a Sse 7 trom | Country people are yet thatched eneael acest oe phe, gillman resolution of | “pr xriburn, with his daughters, sails on Ginia, and that It would lead to the re-| cluded by Secretary Long that the Minne- Binaing twine, rae the cotton ties of the | ment—. pa encry, Penpage re comfortable homes, with broad porcl as on! the Germanic Ju.e 9 for a irip through moval of the headquarters of the league to | apelis was no longer needed in the Levant, | *auth were taxed? $1,600 to $1,800:.A. 8. Bryan, Penngyivania, | yngersloping roofs, peep out under the } disc England and Stotland, during which he ‘ P Mr. Bacon (Ga.) called on the committee | from ; grazing this city. id he yesterday issued an order for her fi $1,400 to $1,600; J. W..Butcher, Dis- the hills. Cattle are on The coming meetirg of the league is| heme-coming. wheat an ert’, Uistinction between the ° pie trict of Columbia, from ‘te, $1,400; d in the basins. Men are ~ hi $1,300 the uplands an Fecognized by republicans throughout the Se ae Erowers of the south. "="? °°" | srigg “E.R. Jennings, Wisconal, from | We, umiands and in, the basins, Men are Gat Mcilintay bes Totaled ee SIGNED BY THE PRESIDENT. There was no response, and Mr. Vest of- | $1,000 to $1,200. red loam. We guess the cause of it all in it to a large extent and is known to be fered an amendment to strike cotton ties| Office of auditor for War, _——- vorable to the idea that at the coming | Commrensional Acts Receive Presiden-| from the dutiable list. John C, Baxter, Ohio, tro STIMONY WAS DAMAGING. | tinier od ‘the keynnte of the republican Seek, Someerae. ‘The amendment was defeated, yeas, 21; Aas division; N. C. Boe: 2 Amnouneed, lg campaign of next year shall, to some ex-| The President has signed the act making | nays, 28; and the paragraph was agreed to hears Blind Chap} of the Senate Wi A Pleasanter Sight. t Baron von Tausch Told Witness He tent, be sounded. At this convention] appropriations to supply an urgent de- | 28 reported. lev ¢ Hind Spies im the Palace. Chairman Dingley, General Grosvenor and po On the Vest amendment on cotton ties, 3 : regiments are announced. as a great many “other ‘republican iw -zrs | Acleney im the printing and binding nave | Messrs. Pritchard (N. C.) and Deboe (Ky.} | F. 8. Deland, Col. Jacob Kiine, to the 2ist Infantry; | BERLIN, June 2—In the trial of Herr-von will make addresses and will practically | Priations, and the act amending the act| were the only men from southern sections rymple, Ne Kieut. Col. Ezra P. Ewers, to the 9th I. | Tausch, the former chief of the secret po- make the issues for the congressional cam-| relative to procuring steamers for the| voting in the negative. Messrs. Harris Cone t . in paign of next year. There will devolve} transportation of grain to the starving | (Kans.), Heltfeld and Kyle voted with the clerk upon the clubs of the league the respon- as to permit the Navy De- | Cemocrats in the affirmative, and Messrs. sible duty of bearing the brunt of the next | PCr Of Indi, 801 as to permit foreign regis. | Jones (Nev.) and Stewart with the repub- campaign. These clubs will be alded by | ter in the relief work. In anticipation cf a the negee ive. ss aan . the republican national and congressional | tho President's action, Juége Advocate Gen- ie paragraphs on sheet pen aoe eel Deicke =e committees, but they will to a large extent | cra; Lemly already had given instructions | Were ——— CA reported, ams ents | reinstate feme! be the orgenization which will make the | to the officers at New York, and bids were Eee y Mr. White a ene ae ——_ i iceired ‘be the most prominent sarneat | to be opened this afternoon fer the supply | Wilson rates, being rej ou Personal Mention, - ae nee fee the presidency. of the | of two suitable preoereihe erS A contest arose over tin plate in para-| Gen. J. M. wise chief of engineers, has league shall go to a man of ability and (POSES ETS graph 130. The House from in political sagacity. Mendnalr desma: Lieut. F. G. Kalk, 5th Infantry, has been . : detailed to duty at the Iowa Wesleyan Unl- Senator Deboe and the Kentucky pollti- | verayy, relieving Capt. Chas. L. Hodges, clans have agreed upon D. N.-Commingore try, who will join his company. for collector of internal revenue of the | The order relieving Capt. C. B. Murray, sixth district, completing thé slate for the :