Tha Messenger Prints . the . wews an.l Ji nonjfht after by the peo ple of MeDowHI, Yancey, Bun. coml. liutberford, bark end otnT counties in Western North Carolina, and is there fore a Good Advertising Medium. Kats furnished on applicants. THE MESSENQZB. Virion, N. O. -lEJID OlDXil FO - JOB PRINTING TO THE MESSENGER, Marion, rt. C. Promptnt Accuracy, Keats as and Oood 8tock Guaranteed. Letter Beads, Note Hads, Bill HAada, EBTelop, Circular, Card. Poe tr, ramphleu, and any kind of Prlnttntf. 7 VOL. II. NO. So. MARION. N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 8. 1893. s. Tor Year i.i A.I.-aneo. l IS I i.Msc-tion That is Dailv I :A, What is the Cause HE WAR IN CUBA. tror find livery Shame Is Cpnn Almost Kvery Page of ! !'0 ilifig With Cuba. Welch, of Newberry, S. C., Co! 'i mhia State to ansewer the . 'I ;te tio'i iu its i.isue of tha 1' i . Ik ti cause of the war in I !".r i- what are the fact:-, the Af) fa- t ', which, led up to the dnb iu reply, answers aa fol- urj might e t;iven in one nauvernmetit. rcs-ion, an all-de-i uttor hooele.snoss a. on pain ii n;ie, coupled I'it'HtK of a tyrant-ridden i'i. i'Hf specihcatioiis jred, and i ; had give an extend from J;i itinni' a. fn im-i J li n of the royal fam- ! of v. Inch arrived nii-r.i )or of the ouii to prc-Rerc ;'-; I sovereign, ".st Vaix!e.,n. ' It ty, .,li:ch earned I. !: in- i e.-1 un title of ' 1 he i t !::: e a mol' ' this Julian ( '..'.ilinniu'' r.ATTLK nrr kwa. -sr-hle, now ..'uiamau id bC.-v.t' l'.a-. i '.-!! ; ' 'rn,ir-v'-:l: i vitli .-dniu'r.! !i':n li.iV'i !!;.-. w'ulo .ill: li'K'.iiiV, ill- 1 :ti rial.-'oll-tt; lh :-.t i-.ii'l Le I a. ( nt 1 1 1 r- pm : v. i -i tl, i!-.'il ri O-; IMld i.pir.t -v IllfV'tlt'lJ -;:jst-ii-S I i!. ; in I p I I V I I.. i a-iy -prant; 'I:i' Ut Whl' li uioiiy v.dili ai:. and ai- til' 1 - , par v A Ma-it; i i- l.-J in tb.' r-- .U V" .T-l-! '.'f l'"l :1 u. '.'a La iH otiv.- ma it:"'ra,.i"a f tho s :ism ot Spam. ri-t c-i l'.y- i i'i. Ml' t-h.- t".!i 11 . 1J'.:, r.fc.. ..'!!. hi d Oil :c.iU - ia 'C.r ! !.- ii" m -it t -T.ii u -t tul Ik" kp-h'.-an i.'Xil' 'i -aris a.-? t.-.-i- (. u! a. 1-1. - A a. ir- m u and or iii the !h' ;n-i up t l! , tiia: in the pr;-i. . !l-t- '.iri..-t- .'T- i a ii i y u.r.ii!t:'ii.i.i.r : Can HUU'-ii i'i.' :1r t !.-MVi.. -i n tl- ! l'.a- :'.ll: l; i tV.- c-rt .va .-ta'i r. 1 iu itl'ir.r' t ii.i r uv oi,lk;k. f s Attempt to Mob it- Number. male by fifty-five t:i t M aioi-v 'Lautey i nio.iu.-i Military .iv. ht on a riot that cl. I ; was charced '.'o-ino 1 on live ca avrion. The Leys -i ...tr taken luck. ;o brr.i aiout . r.t tempted to mob much uistmbauce to called in. It is cts v ill be expelled, indents it mnv On -.- t Iiaie lrop . cf 'iiinia, is- ie- is to raise military it i 1 1 for use in the - iices not think it 'o nuthorizo the form new organization. ;'.y in a position to ing Day. -. work: Ul tho .d and ng d;vs L'nited 207 ia i Inj? to crush th insurgent", Spain La i pent I ; to Cula 145,t 00 to;i.-i.- ....o n-r rno.-t favor- j i e l eomaiaiia---r-i but with iit-d-; or no rtisulr. I On tho other hind Cu.;i. uu br thy prpet- U'U ,ir pr-hcnloa cf th-j r-rh 'i:ion. has I 6en her trn.ln 1.'Crn-,P ,f.r r-r,,i s r...ln-. I an'1 a,!r Creoles desert ing to the Uuit-I jtntHj r.n 1 i,anih r.-iuidia-: a. .1 in r ' Uvc-jj havi been trebi-j-J in vain to rne.t I tho ever-meroa.-.ms esi.;n;0i ani ri. iliac; ' d-i'ts I 41 The Britaimica's account ends two years before tho tlos-o of the war. lu tirou-'ntheinfnpnMfIf Mnrtjno i amrfl', wno iiad been sent over captain-creneral with full tiowers to conclude a peace on terra" acceptable to the insurgents, the to-called 'treaty cf Zanjon' was signed and the revolution ended. I his paper plelgvd Spain to eivo the Cubans the right of Buili-rK. luil representation in the Spaiish par liament administrative reiorin-i and so forth. Within two years after ward lieu. Carapos wa-i moved iuthecoite-s to reproach the povermuent for not car rying out its vie-lges to the Cubans. Ihey were, indeed, never fullillol in pood fa.th. As in many other cases, ttnaiu 'jnado the word ofYromise to the ear and broke it to the hope.' "Cuba did cet representation ia the Spanish curios, but tho fculfrao was so restricted for Cubans and enlarged for Spaniards that nearly all the members elected weio . Sjaniaris, and in tlio Cortes no attention was vouchsafed to Cuban Krievauces. As for local self povfirrnneut, liorewas none whatever. Cllicia! speculations inci eaced instead of diminishirjs:, the Spaniard:; lilliuna'l tho oihees. ihe eutiro cost of the war about s j .' ,b'J ),ijO'J was naddled uron ulta, and from a milhon and a half people .vi",0:jO,)-;i) to J?:'),0rX.O')) weio annually wrun' in taxe'', nine-tentns of whicji were drained nwa- to Spain. Cubans htd to ftujiport a .Spanish army ( I' occupation ii.nnberns 2),'-") men. i'liero were annual and inereain do licits in the revenues after all this tax ation, and r-i rated issues cf bonds wei o mi lo to c ver them. A deputy iu tl cottes dr-clared: 'Cuba is Mink nnd'jr an inundation of abiwv, and a p! (i ; ultra is impossible unless indeed tho extermination of the v. hole island ers bo decreed.' Tho hir.iorian l'rotuio r. P. r.var.. wrote: 'i he government is i:nim.i'jrin ably corruit, and tho rbcal policy op pressive and ruinous. ' Our former min ister to Madrid, Dr. Curr3 para-jhrai-ed O !ad;done's words and a-i'erttjd : ' i '.very honor an 1 every tshumo that co-Id dis grace the relations between a s.rong i t cotiutrj- and u weak one is written upon j ' alir.ort every a-o of Spain's dealings i ' with Cuba. ' .-".'.-ii was tho cdiiiucn ci t :ti'.T " l-.en. abouf ten years ft-.ro, .to-o 3 i a r t i , a youui: Cuban eiie, who as a !ad had been in:prio!ie.i in the African prison t d ( 'fut a ;:id o eon iiis wrists the f-cu of Spanish iiiiinacSe, inspired by t'auh a'id inctoniitiible esp:rruion f'.r tho iib t i i v of iiis co'tntrv, conceived tho plan of organizing bis fcllo -.resiles into c':ui)s i iind raising muds iu preparation for a iinui revtdt. Jle made this his life wc! k. 1'or five years tv uioro the:;.o H'nban evolutionary Circles' in the 1'iiited States, in Mexico, Central and South America, in 1. avis, and wherever c l?e the exi'e.- could organize, nnplid theu"seiv-)j with patient devotion to the task sat them by Maiti. In th riorida cigar factories they reirnlarly set np.iv! one day's wages each week, for the cuttle; elsewhere they adopted other ?nethids. V"iieu thi) time camo to tnke ihey ii:;d acouiun'.ated in-m ."' K, to .l,fa O.Lv . r.ud had smuggled into tho island sev eral tLotisii.n'1 titles and u .juautLty ci niiiUiuiiit'.on. "in Janr.arj-, on a day acgrcjtl upi ii. patriots rose in most of tbe p" r Mutes, and, imniediatelv til'ter, vcl erans of the J en Yearr.' war i'ean to , land on the coast from diuerut quiir teifl ( f exih taking with them lea?er bh t arm- and munitions. Iheretfolu- ( ti'. n Kpri.id liipi.ily ami scon cotili'f liel i the eastern ', io ince of Santiago. ?'iHrt; ; appi ured in person, with (lomez. Soon i filter ho feil in l,it:ie, lcadini; aid'argo. i iut the cause C which he liad tie voted 1 his lite and to whicu ins death was a ' sacrifice, went on to victory, ibis is the story. Lhe ca-us belli :s ninety ea: old. " vindications point to a strike of ten thousand diggers in the Monangahola, : 1'n. . river mines. Natural Irid-e dd. ' Mr. H. C. Cairuth, t weatbtJ I'oston man. has- abesut concludel negotiations for the pnvchae cf the famous Xa.ura! Ib ide pro; e:ty in llookhi idge c.-ir.ty, ; Virginia. The property embrace - a line estate of .several thour-and acre - iu a i dif.on to ihis great Virginia wnn.h-r. ihe land bridge belongs to t!:e widow of v oh Henry C. Parsons, whose mur der three vears ago at a C.ifton I ov-o ; hotel by v. luctor lioodinuu attracted so mucn attention. Only Sixteen iilip.;is Left 1 h rty-four of the fifty million dollar j cmergi-ncv fund for war purposes ac-j propriated by (.'ongress has already j 1 e?a expended. ; Sisteen Million in Claims. j Claim against Spain aggregating J Sl,;. 'i;Jv',0i'd :or injury and los incident j to the w ar- in Cuba have been filed with ' tne Mate Department by the citizens of j the United States residing in that coun- I try. They cover claims for personal' injury, imj risonmeut, lo-sof stock, burning of tugar plantations, etc. Tost Oflioe Hobbed. The postoHl'e at Aberdeen. X. ('. . was entered by burelars and tne saf. blew a up and "iT'L-bsd c; nosey, ataaiPd aso" jtw dry, HAS BEEN ID BP. TU CmJ.h pr, r:rfinir , ,ne Pan,sn aDtna bcemg that tho (J. S. Meant Business. WANTS TO RF-OPEN THE CASE. I'xpectcl I liat Every Demand of This Cou :try Will lie fi ranted The Io'ers of Europe Hrins Influence to Tie nr Upon Spain to Drins Peace Out of the Gathering War Clouds. Ilepresentatlvcs of the Six I'owcr Held a .Meet! is nt the liritish ICrnbassy in Washington. Wa-hiugton (Special) Swift as a cannon's flash tha Cuban situation was changed on the Cth. The galleries of Congress were crowded, Senators and ilcpreoentatives were auxious and agi tated, and even the diplomatic corp: w.vs in a ferment, awaiting a me-sage from tic- FrosiJeut of tho United States to the Congress of the people which might mean war, when, with excite ment at the very highest, liko an electric flash, the AVord was passe! that there would be no message today, ts fctuldenuess stunned tho public, which heard tho news in distorted forms, and amazed veteran members of Congress. Ultimately it became known that not only would thero bo no message today, but no message this week, and that it was at least a possi bility that the message written and ap proved might never go to Congress at all. The first reason for the delay was that. the administration received advices from Oeneral Leo, at Havana, indica ting that ad Americans could not be goLteu oft' the i -land tada3r, and would bo in grave peril if the message preced ed their departure. Tlirt second reason, and perhaps eoually potent with the other, slowly j drifted into public comprehension late j in the day, chiefly through tho medium oi piumsneu Associated press dis patches from Madrid, for extreme reti cence, was maintained on the subject by the few in Washington who knew the fact s, and even cabinet oilicers were un advised on the subject. This impel lent news was that the Spanish govern ment, after what had plainly been most exciting times in the inner Span ish circles at Madrid, had decided to reopen the case closed, so far as this government was concerned, by there tunai of Spain to make s-atisfactory re spou r-e to the representations raad6 by t lie United States last week, aad iu order to avert impending war, had de cided to mke concessions heretofore refused. What will be tho final outcome it is too early to say, but the aspect of af fairs c-rtainly is considerably more spe cific, and Fuliicient to renew the hope of the I 'resident in a eoiution of tha Cuba i question satisfactorily to tho American people, and one achieved without bloodshed. The details re main to be worked out, but it is ex pected that between now and the 11th a clearer light will bo thrown on the future by an action at Madrid, of which oim important feature at least is tho decla ration cf an armistice by the Queen iiegent of Spain. This armistice, it is e xpected, will lead to ultimate indepen dence of Cuba from Spauish rule, but by what intermediate f-teps, perhaps evening the governing powers donotat this time kno"v. Much, it is supposed, i v. ili di end upon the Cuban insurgents I and the people of the two countries of j the United States and Spain. '1 he powers of Luropo. material and moral, it is known, have brought to bear all their influence on the government of Spar i and still are actively at work seeking by the wi? e?t and most politic course necessary in view cf the circum stances and sentiments of thetwogrtat nations involved to biing pence (tit of the- gathering war clouds. All the capi tals of Lnrope have been n communi cation to this end, a fact evidenced by the assemblage at the British embassy in this city yesterday of the representa tives of the six powers of Europe who then aud there were ma le mutually ac- p.iamted with what has been done abroad and with the desire cf t:io-e who accredited them to Wash ngton that thev should work in accord iiere. this conceit, however, in tho Uniie.l States, uot to go beyond a mild tender c f good offices to secure peace and de- i ley a definite declaration of war n hos i tihties finally become inevitable, j The improved condition of affairs was retiected throughout all puVbcquarters. j It was manifested at the Vh.te House, among cabinet otlicers and at the e-:n-i bassies and legations, including the ! S :tn:?a legation. At the latter estab ; hshmcnt reaor Polo sail that while he j i.ould not disclose any of tho n.forma ; ti- n reaching him in an official char : acrer. he felt that the strain of a few j h iirs ago wa materially lelieved, and I that the prospect for i eace looked much i lighter, rie in no v. ay connrniei. nor would he even discuss, views entcr tt'.ined in orfieial quarters that Si ain was slowly but surely yielding, and (..mined Lis utteiances to the genera! -fatenitc. thot conditions w ere lm. rov- the ur.ccitaiuty following a great disappointment was the condition ex-j-tmg at the capitol at the close t f the dav. xv hen tho expected did not hapi en. reratois and meml ers were at s a as I t xv i. a: xvas coming next. While the j Mf'vj.-e was awaited, thero came a hurried summons of leaders cf the i Senate and House. The;.- were iuf rm ; e l tha: the mes.-age was to bo withheld i-.po-.i the information received licm ' C onsu! -iJeneral Lee. The reasons he ! gvo were' d.;-?;ueJ entirely fatisfactr-iy j cy fill, ftudsecaicr rftrinefcrar-i 9 ried the news to that body. That the danger to American lifo was considered sufficient rea-on for non-action ap r-euted ri the postponement of all p: oposid meeting 'anon. s to consider the sit- . 'resent From Mr. .JciT.-rson Davis. Mrs. JefTerson Davis has sent to the a l:es of the Confederate Museum the et of furniture u-cd by her and i rsi leiit I avis during; their occntanevot ;he building known as the wh.te hon e i the Confederacy. This will be i laced in what was the President's ihamber, which is now the South arolina room. It was in this room that Winnie L'avis was born. TnnuuunuuihiE COUNTRY. The South. There are sa:dto be thirteen cases of smallpox in Columbia, ti. C. The Plant Line eteamers will enforce quarantine regulations on passengers from Havana. Near ML Jackson, Shenandoah coun ty, Va., Miss Nettie Peace was thrown from a wagon and, killed her neck be ing broken. By an explosion of boilers in the Wheeling Y. Va.) Steel Works, David Gleary was killed and several seriously iajured. The Confederate Veterans of Berke ley county, W. Va., have named their camp, consisting of 125 members, 4 'Fitz hugh Lee Camp." The annual convention of the West Virginia Editorial Association will open at Horgantown May 11. Near Lynchburg, Va. , Wm. II. Snow, Jr., shot and killed Henry W. McVeigh, his brother-in-law. Governor Bob Taylor, of Tennessee, Trill probably deliver the annual ad- dress at Guiiford Battle Ground, July 4th. The eight-year-old son of J. A. Whit man, of Dosier, several miles north of Winston, N. C. , fell into a tub of hot fclop at a blockade still house and was bo badly scalded that he died. The steamship City of Macon, from Boston to Savannah, Ga. , was discov ered to be on fire when nearing tha lat ter port. 'Ihe blaze wa9 extinguished with the aid of tug3 aud the passengers carried off in safety. St Burgees, W. Va., Thomas Belcher, aged sexenty years, fell into the fire and was burned to death. There was a row between colored peo ple xvhile returning from a funeral in Bichmond, Va. . during which Irving Allen was killed anil two others wounded. An unidentified body, found afloat near Norfolk, Va. , is supposed to be that of Cherles Morris, of Philadelphia, xvho xvas lost overboard from a tr. March 11. J . Pi ay ton Nabors. a white man living two miles from Hodges, Oreenwoed county, South Carolina, killed his S-jear-old son. It is thought the killing was accidental, as Nabors was elruuk. A Winchester rifle elid the work. A delegation from the Women's Christian Temperance Union of Kieh mond, Va., called on Superintendent of Public Inst ruction bouthall and urged the teaching of a couree of hygeinein the public schoals. A special to the Constitution from Columbia, S. C, pays: Near Newberry, on the night of the oth, there was a battle between eight or ten whites and a fcoi e of negroes. A deputy fdieriiT. xvith a warrant for Monroe Leitzse.y, charging him with assaulting John i Banks, a member of the Legislature, ewore in a posse and went to the man's house late at night. The negro called for help aud twenty negroes irom ad jacent houses rushed out with shot funs, thinking it a lynching party, iriug on both sides was lively. Pour whites and four negroes xvere wounded. The whites retired. The North. New York's Comptroller says the city i debt is now SCO, 000,000 beyond tho legal i limit. " ; Pnldio School Teacher Jesse Bell, cf ; Binghamr tou, X. Y., was beaten by ' two men for whipping his pupils. i Eight thousand school teachers in New York will receive an average ad vance in pay of SI 02 a year. ; Work li83 been suspended in all the coal mines of the Ohio district, over ', tho 10 per cent, advance demanded, ; but there is hope of a settlement. New York's State tax has been fixed at 2.0$ mills, the lowest rate for several ; years. Twenty-eight ice companies of Chi cago, 111., have formed a truttwith GO'J.i'OO cai ital. At Richmond, Va., a crowd hanged and burned President McKinley and Mark Ilauna in effigy. Ohio coal miners are demanding a balf-boliday on Saturday, and may strike in nine counties. E. K. Woodbury, 89 years old, o! Tort Chester, X. Y., was killed whiio trying to rescue hi bicycle from under a passing train. Miscellaneous. A di'patch from Lima says that c0) native agricultural laborers and ser Tants have leen shidped from Japan to rem. The Mexican government has made public its determination not to i erm t the recruiting or raising of regiments of Spaniards resident in this country, or otherwise, within the borders of Mexico. The Canadian Government Las re jected the Yukon Railway bill, on the ground that the land grant was exce& sive. Steve Brodie. the celebrated bridge jumper, died suddenly cn a railway train near Adrian, Mich. T. M. McBride, suspected of mnr derinc four members of the Lee fam ily, at Paint Bock, Tex., ccmmitied suicide. Ihe President Las approved the bill for the relief of the families of the dead tailors who were killed by the "Maine"' explosion. 'Ihe Financial committee of the New York Life Insuiance Company have telegra; hed I resident McKiuiex. ex j reusing their confidence in his jelicy, so fur a made public, and offering to lean .? 10, ..., km.? to the government i:a 2:ed;a!ely, iu cnta cf war, at stieh terms &i t-e jorr55if5t say Jt JUBt. . . The Positively Promi53d Message Did Not M ateria' ize. LEE CABLED FOR DFLAY. Tbousauds bo Had W.dtcd to il-M tlie rresiden: 'h Cuban Mc.-a-i Turner Axviy Disgusted .2d Day,-AfU; aqti et icssic-t, m? ' ing which the reso.utioa o lie red the day beicre by euator Lhand er calling lor ; the Cul ance i re-pondeuce, wa3 reft ried I to the committee, and a secret ses;cn on the bill to purchase the Pauish Wet : Xdiau Island heieiofore repoiteu, the S'enate adjouixe i until Monday. ! ?.;D Dav. It was frankly an I openly i charged in the Senate bv i eikius, of ! 1. alifornia, in a set si eecb, that pain was lesi'ousible for the Maine di.-aster, ! as it had been brought about by pan i ish niachinatioufeaud: panish treachery, i Turnerj of Washington, introduced a j resolution to take action without wnit i mg on any department cf the goveru ! ment; Clay, of tieorgia, Fpoke at length on the 1 oraker resolution. Other ; speeches xvei o delivered for free Cuba, j after which the Senate resumed the con : 6ideration of the sundry civil bill, and I finished thirty-three i ages before going into executive sessiou. ( 74rit Day In the enate fierce Cuban speeches were made, "iho United '. States ouirht imiiiediatelv' to declare ! xvar ngatn.st S; a'u and to maintain that I xvar until the people of Cuba are noo'e free from Spanish starvation a:;d c; j ty, and the government of tho inland firmly established as an independent I republic. J his utterance by Senator ! ( handier, of Mew Hampshire, iu n ' carefully prepared statement ci his po ; sitiou on the Cuban crisis was tho I climax of an extended discussion of the : subject, participated in by Pevera! ' members in the Senate. Sp.eeches had i been delivered by Turner, of Wahing i ton: Harris, of ivansas, and Kenney, of . Delaware, all of xvhom took tttong ( ; ground for vigorous afid instant action , l3' the United States.' At the conelu- ' j sion cf tho speeches on the Cuban ; question, the Senate resumed th con- ; : sideration of the sundry civil bill, the! ! only important program being a slight- ; , ly modified form of the committee j i amendment suspending the forestry j 1 reservation proclamation. I ?Sih Day. When the Senate con- j I vened intense exieetane. amounting: j to excitement, prevailed on both the ! j lioor and in the galleries. The Presi- i : dent's messaye Jjf I been positively -j promised, aud its coming was awaited i i with genuine anxiety, 'leu minutes : ! after tho Senate met consideration of j the sundry civil bill was resumed and j I with the exception of eignt minutes ! j ns med by an executive session, in i ! wiucti Senator l'avis auneuneed that j j no message xvou'd be feut into-dav, ai- j I most the entire session xvas consumed ! bv the ai ironriation bill. It was ora?- tieally completed when laid aside fori j the day. THE HOUSE. 61st Dat. After an exceedingly inr- j bulent session of six hours, tha He-use i passed ihe naval appropriation bill and j theu adjourned until Monday, 'lhoi war spirit was manifested i;: all ihe j speeches and overiode ihe naval com- ' mittee itself by increasing the number ; of torpedo boats ami torpedo boat de- J etroyers to 21, the bill as reported no : viding for but 12, and th.eai propriatio:. to .?4, (), COD, ic dead of j?2.y.),0 -u. &2r. Dat. Tu the House the Senate j resolution for terni orary foi title ttions was lasted. V bile t here was no at- i tempt t ) force considcra'ioii for a res-.- lution regarding tun Cuban situation iu j the Home, there was a I nef out! real;, ; in the course oi which the warlike te:n- i per of the crowded galleries wa- so manifest tl.it Speaker Lleed threat, ne t to clear them ii it xvas icieated. '1 iie outbreak occurred over a molioti ly Cannon to pn s the Senate reso lution to autb.orir.e ti e l"re.-ide!it to erect tempo! nry lortificntionr, in e-.-e of emergency, upon bn, -i. when the writ ten consent if the- o-.vnr- d,t a I, without awfiiii-ig the long proce-8 oi legal condemnation. This led to a de mand by Badey, theBemr crat:c leroler. for information a; to tho lacts which warranted a I these war maa-nres. 1 be particular statement which arou.-ed lite galleries w as to the elTect that whi e the Democrats were w iliiug to wait any reasonable t:me for the President to transmit a message that would meet the approval if the American r-eop ". they would lu t wait a rairute for h :n to continue nei'cdiations with th "butchers of St am. &-3dL)at. The crowds which thronged the galleries of the House were disap pointed. There were no outbreaks f my kind on tho floor on the Cuban qne-tion. Ihe whole day was sp--; t o:i the private calendar, w;th the re-;! that several i-ibs w-r a-sed, among them one to pay ihe heirs .f John Roach, the ship bui! der, :J.'i, O-'t on u claim which ha b-eeu lending a dozen years, and another to pav C. C. Bo-t.y-shell, supet meu' le'.jt of the Philade -phia mint, lT.'fr', cxt-a-d-d fr'.tii tho gold vaults by a weigh c!-rk At . p. m. t!:e Hoii-e t. . k a lec- ss ur.th p. m . the e'ening .. ion being de- vote t to tne con-;-.ie: legislation. l-ili D.vr. f: v in the galier:- aul Houe for l...n --. ii.a-i o'clo"1'.: n"i!il si.--r: y i m . the th'.U-a: h ' w ..tion ! waiting I T at ;e: cm r:w' r I t:.-- eio" e ( ho Lai ii oi:i k p hear the fir-id- : :'s Ci:! ..ii turned awav v, r and di? r.-' 5 a; t-d the delay. Nevr was the.'-i ". h d:--pppoiatment at t:.e capitol. ihe me:.i lcrs feit :t ev..r. m re keenly than t'.:n spectator?, and f-.-r t . h.-.rr atttr-v-d they stoo l about t;ie lobb-ies di---uss -ing the latest pha--3 cf the tituatton. Ike- news of the pror&td arcii-tici, which came ou the Le.-l4 :' thie announcement that ienerl I.e-e Lad cable 1 for delay received q-pe C' ranch at:e.Ti.i a-i the re-'piest t f ik-r.-eral Le-?. Th- del ae in j ri gre's in the IIor.e ovr the urmy re :ga . .s t.on bill attract 1 little r r no ate:.:i It was com mete! m-'.rc- al sorbtug -op: o-.t.on to th ground that i'.z 1 of the !ta-u! over-hudove by l:.e --'.ion Con-; 1-rab e developed Oil the jvi-.i.n fwr rti extea i : g j i u t i A cl v. a. ;:d Is iaiaicii'i to tL to E-:- nro which the eonn'ryhe 1 heretofore relie 1 in time of ette-s I hre while a strong effort t i rota'B't the bill. a coirAi:iso or tlf.etv In F.wry Partlcuiar Oiirt Are Sn- i Parlor and More Than a Matrlt. Tha Spanish warship Telavo bus of 1st been mention.! as rbout eo,nl in strength to cur own Indiana, and a c iid;ct between the two ha been tpc ulated upon an evenly balanced and iudeterminabie in advance. Such talk i bi-e l upon gross carelessness of ' observation or misinformation, a reference to the facts xn the case wfil show. . j Indiana, hem." o' onsl-"-dk-rdfcC-" ment, Is feet t-hortcr, 1? 1-4 feet r.ar- ; rower and c! ;'-feet les draught, she t has les powerful engine-, developing ; only horse power to the in- j d:ana's .,7.j'. Her new boilers may j give her greater owtr, but that is ve; j to be demons. rted She is tu year ; older tnan the Indiana. She ii jut ! about as heavily armored a the ;n- j diaua, in some paits more, in bOiae I less. She carries only uu tons of ecal 1 to tho Indiana s 1, -P. i:e lias tn tame r.uud-r of torpedo tubes. IT naliy, in the ordiuanco she is far in ferior to the A mt r:iun hhip. She has four big gun, two of pj inch and two of 11 inch calibre; but tho In. nana has four cf lu-iuch calibre. 'Ihe Pe ayu has one :.2-inoh and twelve -1. 7-iucb gun's, against the Indiana's eight inch and four i;-inch guru; and the Peinyo has six quick fiiitig and twelve machine guns, against the Ind. ana's twenty quick-firing tf -ponuders, mx quick-firing l-pi unders and four ma chine guns. It i not extravagant to fay that th Indiana iu pom! f otlensive arm&mo'it, fully 'AO per c-ut UHre elective th in tho I'clayo. Much hi4.s been said also about the Em; eia lor ( 'erto.-. V. .-he i l ot a bat tle t-hip, but an !tri:Ki ed cru"-er. l et us see Low she compare with, for ex ample, the I r.'oklyn. Tho Spaniard is b; tons light-, i, v 'leel thorter, li feet broader, 1 fot stiallower, has 'Jti'.t less horse power, atid is nearly two knots slower. She i less heavily armored than the Brooklyn, excepting over her guns whore her armor is thicker. She carries :Ji'(J tons less coal. She has the fame number of torpedo tubes. She ha? two 11 -inch irunt, which are mu h heavier than any on the Brook lyn, but whether they wi!', on the whole, prove more ellectne than tho Biooklyii'H eight s-mch guns is an open question. Certainly the Spaniard's eight jj-inch quick firing guns are not eqiiikl to the Brooklyn's twelve o-iuch, nor nor ten smaller ones to the Brook lyn's sixteen; nor xvill her six machine puns agaiut tho Brooklyn's four give her a winning preponderance. Spain Las Mjven other smaller ar mored embers, heavily ai med, of which the Vizcav a may be taken as a tyi e, of about 7,0 -) tons, end io to 12 iiuhes of armor, and each xvith a coiiole lb or 11 i n c h v. u n s a n d 1 e n - i n c h g n n s . Against th'-'-e the United States has three more battle-hips, each equal iu fighting strength t two of the -par.iTi cruisers and the tw o armored cruisers each about tonal to one of them, lu c( a-t-defence reEse. a, monitors, etc , the i uite.i taes is far bui ei lor to Spain, the latter hav ing practically none to be compared with our Monterey, Puritan, Terror, Ainphitrito, Mitntonomoh and Monad nocx. In gunboats andcmirers,too,the advantage i detide-lly on the side of the United States. Ii to the-e technical conditions we add the differences iu geographical position, and in ski. I and resource-, between the nations behind these fleets, the odds are seen to be so h pelessly agatnst Spain as to make it j- a l'-e of wonder that any rational h statesman f-houhl for a moment cons! er the possibility of war save a a .. t -..eiqerate resort for national de fenca New York Tribune. fsUl'POHT-' .MoKINLKY. The Commercial Itodlrsof f iiarleston Adopt i:.c nt ion. The commercial bodies of Charleston, B. C, the cotton exchange, the chamber of commerce, the merchant!' exchange and the Young Men's BusiuesB League a'i met en the lluthof .March, and unan-imotls'13- al:ted resolutions calling on the Senators and Representatives of South Carolina to stai.u by 1 resident Mcivinley in Li efforts to maintain peace, i he resolutions adopted, which were signed by the pri ients of tho bedie i.atl.t d were addres.-ed ta Sena tor I 1 mrta and are as follows: "Asastiong -eiitiment and desire exists among the busmen men f L tar leston mat i res. dent McAinley le given fiili time to eomple'e his plan d ma:ntniu j ta"e witn :iit.-, con-i-tertt-ly with the Louor of cur rountry, e ie?pectlu.ly urge our - t-nat'.r and 1 lep retteiitHtiveit to suppoi t and uj bol-1 tne 1 re-inent in such tlTort. Jdeae com muQieite thi-. telegram to the entire South Carol.na de.egation." TKANP-MISSiSSIl'IM EXPOSITION. The Duildlngt WIS: be Fliiihed by the Opening Day, Jun 1 The announcement La been made npcii author. ty of th c:il aicnitect of the Irans-Missi-sippi Exposition, that a. I construction wore will be finished up in ample time for the instnlla'ioa of exhibits and the perfrrtion of conces sions Ly the oj eninr day, Jnne 1. ILe iarg building are nearly reaiy for tLe artistic decoitioa i-ave the fine arts building aid the immense rtructare mhicn ti.e L'ni'e i States government in buiid.ng. On the itter ti.e ttatT work is eariy done -n 1 tne dome is reced ing tLe finisLing touches. Theconces si jrjr:e- are pu-aiag construct.on work rapidly, as are the varices States, rlf teen of whica are rect:ng bu..d:ngi. Hank Wreckers Convictr!. Ertck B. Leefe and Joseph N. Wolf on, cha-gel with rrticirtion in the wrecking of the Cnion National Bas.k, at New Orleans, were both convicted cn the 2d in the United States Circuit Court. TLe jury had been out all night. Leefe hal been one of the book-keej ers ia tie bank, and WTof oa a lawyer of seme rrominence, with high connections Leefe falsified the book , and Wolfsoa rotted the Lank of OTii' oi'.-O.L'-U YT rersr kxt- a man rto ecu1. 3 kcp Ttwst9 lwc'i-ii Csscnt la wla II IKJHJI IMS. T,:nuinary Outers of an Election in Br:w,i3vi!Jo. AN ED TOR KILLS TV0 KEN Ui"n He i Wo.mdnl, Ltcr Shot to De.itli in .l.ili and liol rrrpr.rvd for Huriidi. Tct;..-, 0:1 ;hv f. i tlr-dm muola I'lood.-hed ai a ieu t ul the con'.ust be tween tne two tactions aao u a. th BedN ami the idut. in t-e libl ot the lua.n mctfUl Uo t--..n. twiu.ea xveio kh.e 1 a.i-i t a o w -.i.i e i. c hoitiV uf.er this a ii.lv:. bi .-e iu C'." ;a:l where whs con .u.-.t n - 1.. '.. oui doi.c tlie wur-i w .ru oi u-i --ay n-i killed uim. i iiey on, g-.'. .. out lUiO tut! bti't'Ot Hiiil Ae.e ;U'Jii: tv -.'.ia it wnea w.sc Co ;a-ci pica e 1 a. id it wa iuAe!i to an U'. t...e.' s Tne ..cd mclitt. wi'u - iei 00b at its iicad J.-i' inayoi lU'.ifi hi. j'-iui LuiU'i., v. no ii.ts ;ne t 1 m. e - u .-i tiCKet sii, ..'iiivi In me , oils, Vic torious. i n-Jii tiia iea i.1 iu uiO UUowu tao i.e-'l- ut o..ii- .-el up a ... oi tiliUd. eolUUtl'l l:!'.!' tU' l..l"i- oy the.r oppouciiin a. oi Uie ni.u.i um eli minate, i in . lit t.ui v .lig k. i i.n ..l i..." laiL-r - - i : 1 1 1 c 1 1 . :i . Lie, tile ci.l V of IV :i ,!! at .1 o . lioMl.e, m cel e-l 11 1.1 t Volllld. iitl lii-i oil i.i He s ivf. ii - j.;.upe I on a P im- aa-l - ti n s pi-ud. . ui.ot" oi ... wi.o w.i iu iiu'.'.'.l ai tuci !.u.c s;. .v ti.e 1 11: ea. ;. ..- cl o! tlliiig. .il e. pod to ai.t . ...... .-a, 1 ut ti.e i.iiur v. a. ..;. k w ; 0 1 .-u.! ;.n t at u.e l;rt .1.0. i 1 V m,.i..i.cd tli-jitoir. v ilis-....le too, w !; 1 .i.-uetl to lu- ori tl.el ii.it, .;. 1 1 - a ''..I let i: ot.i 0UI..1I1 s 1 . v .... 1 - 1 .'. I L.S ll.". ! Cil.'.o .ilii.v-!, tl e c-ititor, lu-ai itig lie M:- oil Of 1 u.-u - ed otil 1 1 ihe 1 lln-o (I U.e ii.t .. ws puj er, and tp..:uia y :- ! i.ii wii;g wliat ne lli il .in;, lie I'.ew li.o li.a..i out ol tlie oea.1 01 me 1 I c :i -i.i'.'.e n-s lie lay on ibe bKlew.i.K. PiUll.un. it wa-i l. &.ae t, v .o : by a nun named e h o ic -. iirieste.l iind to-eti.er v. .th t J.o:en.o iiui.len, was i.ii.c: (.iiuileu then gave L:u: -eii nj. iiftoen liiiii'ites li-i t pa-Mt 1 l -'t . -not l . : o c boy. V 111 i 1 ilui-liy n mot of men lor med and m.t.c.ed to ;m jail. lhe-loorof tne Hal t-LU--.i.r was soon l.i.tie;e-l down an' in tu-.t, two minutes ciili.lt-n was dead - UU bodv ocrloratcd bv b.iiietn. ot b.ili .- fifd"w;!i t-i-i- v !;; tho .mi -u.-.d eiti-7-'.-iis diaggeil t o? body oat n.i ttio street and wete ab..;it to bii.-n it when vvi'-er coiiiisel pievuib;-! and U:e iiuner-take-i was urmitte I ti t.ih" chargn of it. i'uring tho ex'it' l-.eiit ti.e boy e.s cai c-i. 1 he tow. 1 id one- u.-'.-l .ocvu Mild no fuitocr t'Ollui-i 1- w -eet.-d I . obbs weie biotheis oi th-j Ltd candi date for mass mil. The haughty youns typr-wrlter lro herself to h r queenly heighr. "(b-orge Vermillion." ike Kiid, in by tone-, "io once could .nista!:- your attentions t me. My lawyer says I bive a Ic-auM-ful cn-f. PiilK-r I will 'if- you f'r breai !i f j-roinNf or be you must fgiv- in- the b uril ri.!.t to xvrtte '.Mr. ;.-org" Verniiolon' : my :illin ar-h Write !t" f.TJl"'d the un- r: -r. gh-S. '. v.. u sp.d it."' O'. ' km'! Bl.i'n ' Southern Railway. Fui'mn Czr Srvx9. In effect March 1. gallnbury, A!ioI!le, Hot S-rln2't KnoxvllI 'd b:' tati'Hig, West 1'nllman Drawing-Room EBi,t botnd Sb 1 p'-r.g Cmtx. Loniii. N B (EnMern li'j.e ) N' lr ToOim Lv..Slii'y ..Ar 93')nr:i fC ntral Time.) 8 30 pm Ar. . Si..t sviilo . . Lt ft 13 ! 2o 1 m 44 . H 1 kory. . . 4 7 Tl am um am urn n'n B.!J : -1 a'.i pin 0 58 tn 44 fl0 23 pin " fll OS pm 44 121'i-rn " 1 2rJ urn 44 3 OftHtii '4 4 13 am 44 ! 7 40 am 44 . MorgHnlon, . " 7 2b M if ion ... 44 ft i't . Ib..::i i K-iob. 10 12 . . As! t v ide . 44 o 1G . Ho' S ftr,:-. 44 4 f . M-.rri-.,ut. . " 2 3" . . 11 t.f xv lib-. . 44 11" . ti"ttat 00 k a. 4 10 bO (Central 'Iim-.) 0. lb & G. R. R. co5;r.fCTi.T sriTa tnt South Carolina fnd Giaria R. H. 8?h iule in cT-ct O.rt. 1. !'!. S rth'ou:.!. H. V. 4 O. i-itb!oat.d. Lavtf 7 10 a ra . 0- tr . -t.-i Arr:rS0l r rr S a rs . V.rwt, .i.-.-. " I y v. ' 12 2'j a rr. K r..-v ! t . " t It ; re :. ll. A C. 12 fJpni. v- l-n -. " SO'Jr.m J tip ra K-r-. -ix. .. - 2 00 p m 1 4'. : ro L'.' ; : r . 1 " 0 j. m ' 'J. ft Ti . f t:i imJ't " 1 15 r.t ' 2 L: :l. I., k H i.... " 11 i f. " 2 J) ra V rv;i- . " II H i in 41 -n. w-t-',ir. 10 10 m 44 L 20 m .-ti-.r r " 9 Z3 ro ' It t' i as. . H-fcrietra.. . " il.am " fjl; ti Kor-: C ty. " B i') a m K 'ii ra liu'.f -rfor It - H Cj a m Arriv-7 Z-l p m . . yrU,u I.-av 7 00 a in ;.ortLrcu-1. QtZwy l'v. atboucJ. I.eav C y :n Iila tk.arg..Arrlv 7 ii a fa Arriv--7 00 p -a. . . OaJT.-iey-.. . . L-a .. Ctari " Trams Lcrta of CaxOci rur,s -taliy ex -pi IraiL-s ltw-nt Larleston ar.i HlE?svi;i4 ruii. -iabv. I'or mtorn at.,ii b to ri?-, Hr-l-i Lar. SailiLg. etc.. ca.l oo 1 .eai -.:ra- uu,s ai traveliaif ag-r-tii of t oib r.'Pj, r t. t. Vil'.Al, TrarTt.- M'ijir . I A. EM EIi'OS. T. M., a. C. 4 o. 6. B. I TMP.-'iy. U. L, ra'r,r- ttUvailL. . A, Ct