77? 7 f CAUCASIAN. s cr i-1 VOL. XVIII. THE CUBAN CENSUS" Sonic Interesting Facts Brought Out By It. NATlVfc AND FOREIGN POPULATION. How the Rac. s Stand in Point of Num bers. - American Population -Span 'sh and Colored. Washington, 1. C, Special. (Jen. Sanger has m;ur. public the compeu dioiiH results of the 'Cuban census taken under liis direction. The figures are, very in ti active, raid. In the opinion- or the v.i.r depart n-nt off i'. iu'f,. fully Justify the !i-.;.;:.,n :i- th.; ad ministration to allow municipjil ::!:f frage in Cuba jit an curly stnjre. Th ofiieials nro gr:it:f:ed to find tli.it, tho iiiitive Ciih.vii.s constitute :,o hu-.y. a portion of the population; that ti.o whitts so crc-.tly outnumber tho Macks and that ho l:uf:e a .proportion can real and write. In their opinion flu-re seems to be no reason for the objection that the proposed basis of siifTragfj would result in turning tho island over to the control of Spain. The total population of Cuba is , 7!t7, in -I ml i UK SI.").L'i." mahs ar.d 7.77. .'D:! females. 'I here are 4 17,:t7J white males and -U2.'Xi:; white females r native birth. Tho foreign whiter number 1 1 .T'lo males and 2,-13& fe males. There are 11,V.)S males .legroea J" nl lL',710 it initio negroes. Tin; mix ed races number I'j.V.oi) males and I b".:().-, females. The population of llabana city is 2r.5.0St and of the province of llabana 12 1. SO I. The population of the province of JUaUnzas is liiilMlt; of Pinar del Itio 17::.(Mi; of Pu-'ito Principe 1 ; of Santa Clara 0,uo!j; and of Santiago ::j7.'i:.. Of the total population of the islanl 3,1 IS, 7(l'J persons are pet down as single. Hit;, as married; while 111, 7S7 live together by mutual consent. Tljor' are s ." , 1 in widowed persons. Of the total population acremlins; to citizenship, are Spanish; l.jjti- ",t;7are Cuban; 17,Nll are in suspense: 7!,."i;t; are of oilier citizenship, and C1G jtre uif1noVn. The Spanish by birth number l::,i:i:). Of the child-cn of 10 year.; of ge and over, l:,Ul have at tended school. Of the total population li:!,IJf' tan read and write am! 19, 153 have a superior education. The table on citiKensu.it, literacy and education is specially important a 3 forming the basis of suffrage about to bo conferred, Because so many citi zenships are still in suspense, and for other reasons, the returns arfj not quite complete, and for other reasons, the re turns are not quite complete, but the conclusion is drawn that there will be at least 14,000 qualified native Cuban voters under the proposed basis of suf frage, and against mis there will bo .rr,7t7 Spaniards whose citizenship was in suspense when the census was taken, les-t the number who have since declared to preserve their Spanish citizenship, and plus illiterate Span iards, not declared who are the ownerd of property. It is not believed that there will be any great number of lh-3 latter (lass, as the total number of illiterate Spanish males over 21 is only 17,42(1. The comparison shows a much greater preponderance cf Cuban voters than was expected. There are 1S7,S2tJ white adult males who were born In Cuba as against 0G.0S3 born i'i Spain; G.701 born in other countries and 127.300. colored. Males are in excess in the total popu lation, except in Santiago, though the female whites outnumber the male whites, except in Pinar del Rio. Among the negroes and mixed races the females are in excess; while among the foreign whites the males are largely in excess. Tho negroes are in the minority in Cuba, constituting only 22 per cent, of the population, being the most nam- crous in Santiago, where they consti- S'te 43 per cent. The native whites nstituto more than one-half the V1 jopuuiuuii, ui ,)3 per cent, i ne pro X Vlrttrm rt rYi itrlrtiTi nnilor !t vjinra la fituler 21 is nominal; about one-half of (Ac population. Only 15.7 per cent, of a'uits we paths of t wLba. Nil I'ults were married. Nearly nine the inhabitants were born in .lne-tentns or the cnnuren less i:nn 10 years of age do not attend a:ool; tl-te. 43 per cent, above 10 years are X 1 ,A Fcllut e of Agricultural Works. rtd Atlanta, Oa.. Special. The Southern icultural Works, a large farm im- Jem en t manufacturing company of Lilty, has been placed in the hands .u.'aC receiver. Geo. W. Parrott was icu uy juuge iewnan, oi me unit- States District Court, as the receiv- iLZJLle is.jngtriu'teu to lmestigate tno nTnciaTcondition of the company and U kiort to the court if the trustees -S'i-'U the bill are the Atlanta Terra aet(i Company, which is a cfjditor on cte'n nccount for the sum of $10; V. II. treigshaber, for money loaned in tho ()ym cf $1,4 11.05, besides interest and jxs open account for fcrchandise p ior money loaned. Womin Jumps From the Bridge. New York, Special ---Miss Marie ncp of this cfty, Jumped from the jrooklyn bridge Friday afternoou. any men have made this leap into e waters of the East river since the idge has been completed. Most of em "have perished, but Miss Dines is p second woman who has ever at tJtipted to end her life in this way lli i3 now in the Hudson Street Hos- '. No hones were broken, but (& -sicians say ji ia posaiuie sue iia? , A 1 - 1 , 1 1 hVtaincd internal injury. '1 Hi a Aifvanra nn Pretoria . . ' ' TVtl,ondon, By Cable. The report of ( fighting at Karee siding, six miles ?a1f th of Glen, may be the first news of tjfiprev In arJ n if this were only an unimportant rmlsh, there are many other indi- ons that Lord Roberts is either ting, or has aiready started, for tho hern goal. Adispatch from Cape n under Friday's date says the ..-, in restrictions have been KJl tly increased owing to iue move ls of the troops. State il to lo 1 Repc i I 'hai 1 sJthe -i 1 THE CROP BULLETIN. Corn Planting Well Advanced and Cotton Planting Begun. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Cli mate and Crop Service of the Wea ther P.ureau, North Carolina Sec tion. For week ending Monday, April 16, 1J00: Daring the week ending Monday, April lC;h, 1500, the weather conditions were very diversified; notwithstanding v.ry unfavorable features during the middle portion, due to cold rains and frost, fair, relatively warmer weather at the beginning and close of the week caused some progress in vegetation, ar.d gave an impetus to farm work which advanced more rapidly. The rainfall averaged 1.50 inches for the Slate, and occurred chiefly on the 11th and 12th as cold, drizzling precipita tion with northeast winds, accom panied Thursday morning by thunder storms, and in tome instances hail. Frosts occurred subsequently, especi ally Saturday morning, but fortunately did very little damage. The rainfall, though beneficial In many counties, put a stop to plowing and planting un til Monday. The amount cf sunshine was small and the temperature wi-.s continuously below the normal, and deficiency averaging 5 degrees daily. The soil at the close ui the week was again in excellent condition for work ing. Preparations for corn and cotton have advanced rapidly. A large por tion of the corn crop has just been planted, and some tif the early sown is coming up nicely. Planting cotton has begun in several Southern counties, while in other sections fertilizers have been placed and the soil is ready to re ceive the seed; planting will become general within the next two weeks. Tobacco plants have not grown rapidly, bat are plentiful; on account of the low prices farmers will diminish the ac reage of tooacco. Seeding spring oats is approaching completion; the seeds are germinating and growing well. The outlook for wheat seems eery promising; a large majority of correspondents report the appearance cf wheat good, and much improvement in growth; winter oats are nearly a failure in some counties, uaving been winter killed. Rye is beginning to head. Gardens and truck crops are still quite late; as yet only lettuce and radishes are ready for shipment; peas and onions look well; beans and Irish potatoes are coming up nicely; many cabbage plants have been transplanted, but fall cabbage is poor; bedding sweet potatoes is underway. Along the coast some rice has been planted. The prospects for fruit have nt.t been better for many years; at present wri ting peaoh, plum, cherry and pear trees are in full bloom from Raleigh west ward, and are setting fruit nicely. Strawberries are late, and no ship ments have been made. Elizabeth College Commencement. Commencement at Elizabeth Col lege, Charlotte, N. C, the well known Lutheran girls' college, will take place duMilfrg 'the we'Ok cf June In' to 5Sh. The chief events will be as follows: Baccalaureate sermon, Rev. W. C. Schaffer, D. D., Savannah. Address before the missionary so ciety, Rev. Wm. A. C. Mueller, Charles ton. Address before the literary societies, Prof. Lawton B. Evans, Augusta, Ga. The college has had a most success ful session. The students and faculty have enjoyed good health. Earnest and thorough work has been accom plished in all departments. The high standard in the college course sustained by this school, its fine college building, and healthful lo cation are attracting the attention of the best families. Elizabeth college is a well equipped, high grade institution for women. State Teachers Assembly. The Teachers' Assembly this year promises to be one of the most suc cessful sessions of that great educa tional gathering yet held. The pro gi amine embraces a variety of attrac tions and the indications are tiat it will be largely attended. It will be held in the Teachers' Assembly build ing at Morehead City, beginning on June 12. Prof. S. Mott Thompson is president and C. H. Mehane secretary. Tar Heel Notes. Greenville is going to have a cotton mill. Subscriptions for that purpose have already reached about $40,000, and a meeting of the subscribers and others interested Is called for the 19th. It is believed the subscriptions for the mill will reach $100,000 before they close. A heartbreaking tragedy occurred near Henry last Thursday evening. The wife of John Falls went out to milk, leaving her children alone in the house. As she returned from the barn she met one of the children, a little 3-year-old girl, with, all Its clothing on fire. The little child was burned to a crisp and died immediately. Lincoln ton Journal. At the federal court in Greensboro last week a Winston young man was fined $50 for expressing himself on a postal card. A friend borrowed hi3 pistol and failed to return it. The final sequel was a postal card asSing for the "stolen" property in plain English; The result was indictment in the fed eral court, submission and a $50 fine, with our Winston friend still minus his shooting iron. Winston Repub- lican. Easter Presents for the Prisoners. Easter Presents for the Prisoners. Pretoria. By Cable. United States Consul Adelbert S. Hay has received six and a half tons of presents for Bri tish military prisoners, mostly from England and the Cape, comprising luxuries, groceries, sugars, clsrarp.ttea and beds for the hospitals. It has been admitted duty free to the Trans vaal, and every facility afforded, whlchr has greatly gratified Mr Hay. General Ludlow, retiring Governor of Havana, has sailed Cor the United states. BRITISH IMPEDED By The Rains of the South African Wet Season. lARGn DEVELOPMENTS EXPECTED. The Removal of Buller and Roberts Demanded For The Safety cf the Army, London, by Cable. Heavy rains im pede the progress of the British col umns. The blockade at Wepener con tinues, although relief is near. Large quantities of stores are being moved southward for Dloemfontein, which is a reversal of the course of freight for the last six weeks. These shipments are made necessary by the operations in the southeast cf the Free State. There are 2,000 sick in the field hospi tals, most of the cases being dysin tery and enteric fever. With the ex ception of these facts, the embargo up on war intelligence is almost complete. The special correspondents send trivi alties, or statements which obscure, rather than explain, the situation, in their efforts to prepare matter that will pass the censor. Here and there a phrase indicates an expectancy that large things are about to happen. What is to be done with 'Sir Redvers Buller and Sir Charles Warren occu pies everybody's . attention. . The pa pers continue to comment earnestly up on Lord Roberts' censure of these commanders. They ask if more errors are not likely to occur, together with fruitless waste of life, in the event that men who have been declared in competent by their superiors continue to command 40,000 men. It is now generally accepted that the government had a purpose in the publication of Lord Roberts' dispatch, and that the recall of General Buller and General Warren probaly ihad been decided up on. According to Boer reports there is a steady flow of volunteers to the Transvaal. Heretofore these adventur ers had been attached to various com mandoes. Now it is said they are to be formed into a special legion, with continental officers, and there is a ru mor that the command will be given to" a distinguished French soldier, late retired, who is now in the Transvaal, or is nearing the end of the journey thither. The morning Post has the following from Bloemfontein, dated Tuesday: "In view of the advisability of a re treat through Swaziland, emissaries o the Boers are now endeavoring to pur chase secret information concerning the caverns in the Greystone country, which are enly known to the natives, with the object of accumulating pro visions and ammunition. Large quan tities of British forage and stores were dispatched to the south Monday. Japan and Russia May Fight. Yokohama, By Cable. If the quick and steady dispatch of telegrams from Korea mean aught of a really serious nature, the inference would be that Ja pan and Russia are on the verge of war. Outwardly, however, there is absolute calm. The present opinion of the community seems to be that, as the conflict is inevitable, the sooner it oc curs the better it will be for Japan. The latter, with her great fleet, far su perior to iaat of her enemy in those waters, would make short work of Russia's naval force, and command the situation for some time at least, with the advantage that added pres tige would confer. Russia demands a concession of territory near Masampo, or as an alternative, the island of Ko toku. Either would be a standing menace to Japan and one of the hard est of diplomatic fights is now on et Seoul." Offered Portagal $5,000,000. Pretoria, By Cable. As soon as the Berne award in the Delagoa Bay arbi ration was published the Transvaal government offered to lend Portugal the amount she was condemned to pay, $5,000,000, which, however, was cour teously declined, the statement being made that the money was already pro vided. Wheeler, Lee and Wilson to Retire, Washington, D. C, Special. Repre sentative Grosvenor, of Ohio, has in troduced a bill authorizing the Presi dent to appoint three volunteer officers as brigadier generals, with a view to their retirement. The bill is an ad ministration measure, having been presented by Mr. Grosvenor after con ference with administration offic'-als and at their request. It is designed to benefit General Joseph Wheeler, Gen Fitzhugh Lee and General James H. Wilson, all of them volunteer officers. who by the terms of the bill would be given rank as brigadier general? - in the regular service, and subsequently retired. To Put Up Sqare Bale Presses. Birmingham, Ala., Special. The Alabama Compress Association has been in session in Birmingham for two days. A company with large capital has been formed for the erection and operation of the gin plants. The o!icy of the company will be to perpetuate through all the cotton States the sys tem of handling cotton in the bales 24 by 54 standard square bales. They expect to do this by assisting and co operating in the erection and main tenance of square bale ginneries. Gen. Boynton Accepts. Washington, D. C, Special. General H. V. Boynton has accepted an invita tion to attend the annual Fourth of July celebration at the Guilford Battle Field, Guilford Court House, N. C. and to deliver the address of the oc casion. General Joseph Wheeler has also been invited and is expected to at tend. The invitations were extend eel through Colonel James E. Boyd, As sistant Attorney General. Colonel Boyd is one of the officials of the corpora tion which keeps the famous battle, field, of. the Revolution in condition. RALEIGH, ISORTII CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 2G, 1900. II IE On The North Carolina Constitutional Amend- rnent. SECTION FIVE UNCONSTITUTIONAL. fie Declares That the "Grandfather Clause" of the Proposed Amend ment Is Clearly In Violation or ti;t Constitution of the United .States and Smijs Further Tiiat "There c.-t: be no Doubt" That the Court In De claring This Clause Unconstitution al Would Hold That the Iiemaindcr of the Amendment, Including the Kducational Qualification, Would Stand and be Operative. A Decided Opinion From a Great Constitu tional Lawyer. April 11, 1900. Hon. Marion Butler, United States Senate. Dear Sir: I am in receipt of your letter, enclosing copy of the proposed amendment to the North Carolina con stitution and asking my opinion as a lawyer to the following questions, to-wit: First. Is section 5 of the proposed amendment constitutional? Second. If the Supreme Court should declare section 5 of the proposed amendment unconstitutional, would the court hold that the whole amend ment would fall with it, or that sec tion 5 would fail and leave the remain ing sections to stand as a part of the organic law of your State? The amendment proposes an educa tional qualification for all voters. It is admitted that such educational qualification applying to all the citi zens oc North Carolina of voting age is constitutional. Section 5 provides as follows: "Section 5. No male person who was on January 1, 1867, or at any time prior thereto, entitled to vote under th laws of any State in the United States wherein he then resided, and no lineal descendant of any such person shall be denied the right to register and vote at any election in this State by reason of his failure to possess the education al qualifications prescribed in section 1 of this article: Provided, he shall have registered in accordance with the terms of this section prior to Decem ber 1, 1908." This is an attempt to except a cer tain class of voters from the operation of the amendment providing an educa tional qualification for all citizens who were volerc January 1, 1S67, and their lineal descendents. On January 1, 1867 no colored person was a voter in North Carolina; so it is apparent that no colored person or his descendents could have any benefit of this provision of section 5. CHINESE POSTAL FACILITIES. tetters Carried by Private Compan'es Slight Use of Postage Stamps. The recent establishment in Mott street of a postal sub-station with Chinese interpreters for the particular accommodation of the inhabitants of Chinatown may induce some inquiry about the way the Chinamen who do so many things backwards, according to Occidental ideas handle their mails In their own country. Sure enough, they stick stomps on the backs of let ters, though not invariably; and the stamps look like the labels on fire cracker packages, showing dragons, pagodas, and other emblems less eas ily identified, but meaning ''sincerity," "longevity," and so on. But private postal companies, analo gous to our express and telegraph cor porations, do most of the business in China. They use no stamp, and it is necessary to prepay only about a third of the postage, as the rest is collected from the recipient. The less one pre pays in excess of the minimum the surer and swifter the delivery- When a New Yorker mails a letter to interior China the stamp carries it only to some Chinese port, where it is trans ferred to a private post at the recipient's expense. Similarly a missionary sta tioned away from the coast has to pay two postal charges to communicate with friends here. Shanghai has a mu nicipal post for its own merchants and citizens, with branches in fifteen treaty ports. It used to charge each customer $oO a year for all his business, light or heavy, but stamps are used now. Chinese stamps are reckoned in can dariues, approximately equivalent to cents. Their value used to be based on the silver ounc-e, or tael, but its vari ability caused confusion, so now the Mexican dollar is the basis. The first imperial set was made in Japan, and proved unsatisfactory; the current set came from England in 1898. Some stamps, notably those of Tientsin, were Issued without authority merely to sell to collectors. There was no other de mand for them, they never carried a letter, and they have been officially re pudiated. Elsewhere the regular de mand is so slight that no stock is car ried; the stamps are run off on a hand press while the buyer vaits. New York Post. The revolt against German authoritv in the Cameroons, West Africa, is be ing quelled. - S HB AN 0 D 'iue Constitution of the United States provides as follows: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or alil lged by the -United States or any State on account of race, color or previous condition of servitude." It is a well established principle 01 law that you cannot do by indirection what you are forbidden to do by direc tion, and it Is so apparent that the purpose of this exception is to exempt from flie operation of the educational clause the whites who could vote in !S67, and their descendants and ex clude the colored citizens that it clearly is obnoxious to the 13th amend ment to the Constitution quoted above. It is not necessary that the person to be excluded must be described as a class, for instance, as colored people to bring the class within the inhibi tion of fhe Constitution. Only one class can be intended by section 5. and that is the former slave and his de scendants, and these are as certainly excluded as if specifically mentioned. The educational clause then does not apply to all the white citizens, but does apply to all the colored citizens who were slaves and their descendants who couia not nave oeen voters m 18G7. This is clearly an attempt to exclude the colored voter unless he can read and write, and such exclusion i3 because he is black and was a slave. I believe the court will declare the "grandfather clause," as it is called, unconstitutional. If the grandfather clause shall be held to be unconstitutional, the ques tion is will the educational clause re main in force and will all voters black and white alike be excluded by the provisions of section 4 who are not qualified by the provisions of that see tion, that is, who cannot read and write any section of the Constitution in the English language. A failure by unconstitutional meth ods to exclude a class of white voters from the provisions of section 4, can not destroy the provisions of that sec tion concerning the qualification of voters. I think on that question there can be no ground for doubt. The re jection of the grandfather clause cau not in any manner effect the operation of the provision of-the 4th section, and that will remain in full force and ef fect as completely as if section 5 had never been proposed as a part of the Constitution. Yours truly, . H. M. TELLER. Malay Punt'nf. In Tivt8 that are shallovr enough punting ia said to be very good fun. out in Pahz.ng, in the Malay peninsula, it Is the sole form of boating on many of the strears. These are not only lhallow, but '.eir currents are also so strong that rowing up stream ia luite impossible. All goods are taken inland by way of the rivers, so boats are big and often heavily laden On each side of the boat there runs a plat- fotra for about half the length or the vessel, and upon this platform stand s;3C Malays armed with long, light .ole& TLey start at the bow and walk toward the stern, planting their poles in the sandy bed of the river und push ing as they go. They then draw up iheir poles, walk back again and repeat ie process, keeping excellent tibn Lroughout. When the rivers are in food and the bottom cannot be reached tfith the poles, the men must fasten "he boats to the shore and wait until 'he water falls. A Malay waterman who has had plenty of experience ai -poling' boats should be a cltTer hauJ it managing a punt. Copenhagen will send a scientift? ex elition to Siam in the avtunin, Choosing a Wife?. Fuddy One cannot help falling in iove vith a handsome woman who know 4 how to dress herself. Duddy Yes; but when a man chooses a wife he is wiser to choose one who can dress a turkey or a lobster than !oDe who knows only how to dress her ;lf. Boston Transcript The official enumeration shows that the city of New York has 47,190 salar ied employes, a number equal to the entire population of Bridgeport, Conn., Oakland, Cal., or Portland, Ore.- It is three thousand more than the popula tion of Utica, N. Y., 4,000 more than Savannah, Ga., and 11,000 more than Harrisburg, Pa. Only cne-third of the counties of New York State have population that equals the grand army of office holders in that city. "Ifmu nicipal affairs could be managed as J business manages its affairs," says the New York Press, "the duties of thes 47,190 officials could be performed by one-third the numbor." . The Paris Exposition was formally opened by President Loubet on Satur day. THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. The South. In a fight with revolver at Idling ton. Ky.. Dr. Joseph X. Parker kho and killed Veto A. Antonelll. Tf fight took place in front cf a grorfty store on Chetnut street, in wjUh th men became involved ia a o,mrrv ehordy before. Mrs. Mary J. Furmaa has bi'ia'ih ed her etate. at Xaahvllle. Teun.. val ued at from $200 .uw to $:50.()0. io Vanderbllt University. The entire town of Wharton. Texa. and the country for eight mile arouna is flooded. The strike at the Coal Cref k CosT. Company's mines, at Coal CM-k. Tenn., continues and tie conininy nro- poses to have its property vicatd by all strikers. The trial cf ex-Can cressnian Davi 1 G. Colson. the surviving principal in the Colson-Scott duel of January Id. began Tuesday at Frankfort.' Kv. On the result of hi almost unani mous endorsement by the Alabjnia Democracy in Saturday' primaries. Senator Morgan wlies: "The very re mirkable vote of so many counties give a safe assurance of the future strength and harmony of the Deno-. racy cf Alabama. The ionfidoa c th'H expresse-d towards me as one of tin Senators from Alabama excite i.iy gratitude to the people and wl'.l in crease my devotion to their interests and prosperity." The Transmississippi Commercial Congress met Tuesday at Houston, Texas, and every State and Territory west of the Mississippi river was offi cially represented. The grand jury at Frankfort. Ky., which ihas spent the last two weeks in investigating the assassination of Gov. Goebel, will resume its wrk Wednes day, and a report is expected son. Hamilton W. Babie has aeen chosea to deliver the fourteenth antroal course of the Thomas endowment lectures at the Richmond, Va., Colleg?. His subjecCwill be "Literary Criticism." Clarence Knowles, of Atlanta, died at Pensacola, Fla., last Saturday. He was a highly successful business man, and was well and favorably known all over the South. Rev. O. B. Wilson, superintendent of the Stillman institute of Tuscaloo sa, Ala., was killed by lightning wail using a telephone. He was a Virginian and at the time of his death was em ployed in the work of educating ne groes under the direction cf the South em Presbyterian church. At Marion Junction, 11 miles south of Selma, Ala., on the Birmingham di vision, a hotel has been secured by iha strikers on t'he Southern railway and headquarteis established. From this point it is understood the organizers will operate. Seventeen men register ed there. The North. An irreligious and somewhat cynical correspondent sent tae fallowing query to the New York Tribune: "Don't you think the Tribune ought to rebuke the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church pecple for recording the fact 04 ja memorial tablet that they think themselves well rid of gaod old Dr. Hall's preaching?" Afier referring .1 pis faithful service of thirty-cne eats the passage is quoted: " There re niaineth therefore a rest to the people of God." Ex-President Cleveland began hii second Princeton lecture In a (harac teristic way. "I am in something ol jthe predicament." he said, "of thi preacher who said to his congregation: 'I propose to speak to you of some things which only I know about, i-t some things which both you and I know something about, and. finally, ol other things which neither joj por I know anything about.' OI things under the last head I shall en deavor to steer clear." ' Three thousand, two hundred and fifty dollars were given at the sale in New York last Friday, of the Oriental objects belonging to William Churchiil Oastler, for a medium sized blue anJ white vase of the K'Ang-Hsi period, The price is a record one for a spci- Jnen of Chinese blue and white porcc Jain ether than of the Hawthorn pu. tern. The vase is onl 24 inches hiRii Mr. Pendleton was the purchaser. Tai total sum realized was $16,313. While the ministers cf the New York Methodist conference were discussin ;the question whether to approve Mr. Sheldon's experiment in journalism 01 not, one frank member of the confer ence interrupted by saying: "The dry est paper I ever read is Sheldon's pa per. I think the editors of the great newspapers can get up pretty good pa pers. I think the children of the world are wiser in making newspapers thai; our good brother, Sheldon." Foreign. Numerous fusion projects in tie iron and coal industries are cn foot in Ger. many. Dr. ChevaiSe, the new bishop cf Liv erpool, is the hero of a story of a ser mon with an appropriate text. At Ox ford, where he was known by the un dergraduates as the "little shaver" a title which distinguished him from his brother, "the big shaver" he wa the incumbent cf the church of t Pe: ter-le-Bailey, and on a certan Saturday night he became the father of twins. On the Sunday morning" the curate, whose turn it was to preach, gave out the text. And the text was: ' Are net two better than one?" The Boers continue to pres their at tack on Wepener, in the Orange Fret State. Queen Victoria drove through eever al villages adjacent to Dublin yester day afternoon. Belgian eoke consumers have formed an organization to build evens on the Scheldt, consuming foreign coal. Miscellaneous. A XTT T 1 said, will control the Republican State convention at Nashville, Tenn., Thurs day. The trouble between the Montreal cigar manufacturers and their emoloy es is spreading and now threatens the closing of almost all the factories in Canada. ueorge i nomas, a negro, who as saulted Mr3. Rosa Douberly, a white woman at Hardeevilie, S. C, wa threatened with lynching. The President has sent a message to the Senate asking that $25,000 be plac at the disposal of Secretary cf State for the payment of the expenses of a .conference cf the republics constitut ing the Union of American Republics, which he recommended in his last nn nual message. MR. BUTUR SPEAKS On Proportion to Clcit V. S. Sen. ator by Vote of the People. SEXATR. Xinty--!rhih Day t th nlng of th day !- Ion of tL S-njtt a bill & a4-d tcrantlrK hUit cf th Mexbms ar a'.i-tn cf $12 a month in ctitaln a. Aftr th transaction of the routine buins Mr. Iluar a.!Jr m J the Sn ate on t!. I'hilippiti. q :t!on In tcns later t-1 max n-.aniftl In th uddrtm ty Senator. Mr. !Lar' na tion upon the subj-t was -ll undr M00J. and h. j'-h a n.aMcrlr I prttientation of th aiiTl --pns!fii :! c f th auction. j XSn".y-air-tu Day.-Th dj in th i St nat v.as ppxit in isnin, u'lii.U ' t x k a wid ran; aud win -n;ard in with spirtt on U th !.. TL m-?i n as ho.t and llttl --utii 1 a!r.-a ' was transacted. j fhie hundred:! Day. Th Sr.a,j Iii! tinder it co':hidorailca during tha ' !a; fft-rlca th c nfenuc rjeit n ' ine ituwairtn civil government rtnas t:ro. Mr. Hill mad m extendi rxjda- --1 t i n .. . .. t tilt rp tt rs ih ..ibjfct rf tbarp cti't- cijui. rinil union urrn It hi pt-p-ntd. Th.- Alaska Ult rod bill i cohsiden-d for a bri. f tii.i. Mr. Hut. of T( nnc. jv d 'live-ring a r h in op- poSii;.n to the lending IUiik!t.hu-".i an;c!i m nt, idatin t tb. rlghu of alien n.iut-r Mr. r-l.cr. of Ohio. pronounce-. I a eulogy oa th late lt--t-nzo Danford. a re prev-r.ta!i from Ohio, ard th Snat adapted n-olu-tijns expre sive of its wtrrow. Mr. ll.u con, of Georgia, offered two ro-oltnicnn oa inquiring of th S- rtary of War j whether any army offlttrs l:id moir-1 d or were rorriving s-alaries for the j p i foriiunce f civil duties In addition ' to their regular pay. and th oth r in- j iuiring about the m-ii lltur-s nuiJ I for u-nt of officers quarter. oqu'ppuK and all similars. HOUSE Ninety-seventh Day. The Hour en tered upon the consideration of th naval appropriation ..l. with t,c pro, pert cf a severe Etiugle ahead ovvr the question of armor plate, building ships In government ards and th provision in tho bill for ihc coat and geodetic survey. The bill arris $12. tOO.000 more- than any previous naval bill. No arrangement could It reach ed to limit general debate. Mr. Fobs, the acting chairman of th (ommitte. made a iicral defense of the bill, which alto was defended Ly Mr. Cummings. the ranking minorUy member cf the commltt'.. The latter declared that the committee had In formation that we couid obtain Krupp armor at a price lower than any other country in the world. Ninety-eighth Day. The second day's debate upon the naval appropria tion bill in the House, was confined closely to the subject matter of the bill, and was as a rule devoid of in teresting features. The questions ct armor plate :tiid th building of war ships in government yards, as cn yes terday, attracted most attention. The speakers to-day were Messrs. Dayton, of West Virginia; Ixjudenslagr-r. ef New Jersey; Adams, of Pennsylvania; Vandiver, t,f Missouri; Elliott, of South Carolina: Riyey. of Virginia: Fitzgerald, of Ne w York; and Wheeler, of Kentucky. General debate was closed to-day. ar.d to-morrow the bi'l will be read for amendment under the five-minute rule. Ninety-ninelh Day. This was a dull day in the I Ions. Th amendments t the Porto Kican bill ai.d a few minor matters were up for di-cussion. After a short sessioa the llouti ad journed. One hundredth Day. As a result of a protracted struggle In the Hous. th provision of the naval apropriation bill to enable the Secretary of tb Navy to contract for armor for the battle chips Maine, Ohio and Missouri, now awaiting their armor evju'pnvnt. at $515 per ton. the price a-ked for IW'Upp armor, is cut of the bill, as U the pro vision to repeal the $300 limitation placed upon the price cf armor by the current law. The fight tame at Cbe end of the consideration of the bill. Although the provision was obnoxious to the rule, all the minority members of the committee bad agreed to it. but today," when the majority declined lo allow the dlscuFMon of a proposition -for the; establishment of an armor plate factory, they retaliated by rais ing a point cf order against the two provisions above referred to and they were ruled out. The exact effect cf the action cf the House is disputed. Aa Ensfga'a Narrow Escape. When Commodore Decatur, In 1S15, dictated to the dey of Algiers the term of n treaty with the United States, Lieut. John Subrick was dispatched to Washington with a copy for the aj- proval of our Government The brig Epervier was eletailed for his transpor tation, and be was accompanied by Captain I'wis and Lieutenant Neill of the navy, who had married staters a few days Itefore sailing with Com modore Ieentur for the? Mediterranean, and by Lieutenant Dniry and Lieuten ant Yarmdl. who had Xonght with Perry in the battle of Lake Erie. Jut Itefore the brig sailed Ensign Josiah Tattnell. who was a watch officer on the Epervier, succeeded in Inducing an officer on one of the othe?r ships to ex change place with biro, as he pre ferred to remain with the fleet. A few days later, as the Ejtervier passed out of the Straits of tJibraltar. she sig naled "All well on board" Since then she has not been beard from. It In an interesting fact that Ensign TattnelL who eseaied the fate of hi comrades, lived to command the ram Merrimac of the confederate navy. Since the Eir-vie-r went down w have lout a num ber of retools, but each of them can be accounted for. Chicago Record. Two years ago a so-called universal accident Insurance or compensation act was passed in England which provided, that workmen in certain industries (a considerable cumber, in fact) should be compensated for any accident, no matter bow caused, or through whose negligence, so long as it grew out of the employment. No amount of care on the part of the employer, no degree of negligence and stupidity on the part of the workman, was to relieve the former from paying compensation for disability, sle knexs. or death due to ac cident. It w now rKiseil to extend the princip'e lo industries and trades not covered by the original statute. NO. 21. ONE SOLDIER KILLED Strike TrosX a! Crttoa Icstlis is SUGT.rOluLASS WAS THE ICTI Was M)t;rioutiy ar.Uaalel Whil Rcttciiitg the (luaJ at th Cornc'l Dam. Cr,t u l:...inf V Y . S;, !'. Th Cr.t l!tu.. 1 f..r t . .f tb tilk at the Vrt, '1 jam wax ,fc hfr V; cf .t;-iu 1: u rt !h'icl. .f tr !-vt U j.d .v u fL 4 h.!- t. jtlir.inf t.r.u.ui fj, ai;t w n n ti f th -.!-n.ii 11 ;-rJ to ti 0:S-rr trn. rti-1 it .-.AStt. a:. tininc oxtr th i.n; Th i-it :. th r(t-nt f!l l Ltii.au a p.t 10. tlh was in hrs- f Crj. .rl !D.!1 It It fitutr-! ct t-.p t.i th f.'.ll c-ar UuU lt5 where aml :tlk-: ? a dr ll;i j; or man '.1:-.r .i;t n: if in il n: "I inf. br:.iii M.c t.r.-j a:.l !it rns. T!i ; t : huh .r tl l.t I'i of tli.troty !:.! f rtll it . aa tammand i !w of :L inntrr tr rai; or. tah tdu up and down th Croton valley. I.!:rlo u ta'kis.g to ('-ip-.ral M.Iv,-:i and th othrr t-en.t.. rn .f ih - kui! Ln h tij. tidily l.i.-id h. Land to liU t wntuh ard fail: L ad. b .yr; I'm ho," anJ fell t th fl'-iUf It was dt.h dsok at th tlm. but M !., 11 ar.d tb other n;d a r !! Into a clump t.i huih- liuaahy without l.ittinj: any eti. Nj on law the flu or heard th Hwund of th hot whUb kill ! D.ur'an, aud it ia a rjitmt tny ttl. tn ;flHir. Marwhl1. Ih tnn .:ckl :t !i fallen sergeant and rar rid Lisa drn the hill on a tretehr, but aa to rn its they re-ihI Ikxiglaii tent the iwt fell w :ied without ay Ing a word. IJeu'rnant :i(or. with a t-'juid of mn. then Mn'jed th 1111 ti p with. ait rtire.-M. Then th iruarda wrc called ia and c!icrntratJ in the vally with th xt-pUou of tiso placed at th rbl rtatiui. whr thj tbeotlcg took place. Tjoops aril; el later at the Cornell (lain, wher U .-Jrlk la on. Thm Fourth and Eleventh jaral cm fianies are in emp in th Cn.ton valley ar.d a cavalry troop frm New York la at Ardslcy. Utily 1:1 th mmltig th Mr:k-rnhMa m-tl:.R and finding t;iit r. i ffort w a going t le mad to work on the dam. SUjwrM-d. While th tnopH tore waiting at the station fjf th wttd to m. t'l armed Italians cirrylni? an American flag and tw. Itj-l;an flue. rroel th Uttle- lUly Lill to ti e Uorjy. They were tbeer f by the njen In th IJjwcry. aad vatdud with In tt rest l-y tlie deputy sheriff. While the trop were on tho ran tea to the dam. Uiree tiervoun roll Itlamen artldentally diftcharg4 their riflen. but no r.e m hurl. Ih ii.lHtijmen pitched their tamp lni:' the ground. wbr caUu(tku' werk on the dam ia t nip'irarlly u peuded and patrol a were thrown out. Everything Ih quiet. Total Cotton Supply. New Orleans. Special. Secretary llctder'a statement of the world'a U IM supply of cotton for th week end ing Friday. April 13, l.oa a drea for the wt-tk Ju-t tlo ed of ir.1. aealnst a (ieerea A WS laat year and a de-r-aa of Dt.r.Mj year lefor lav;t. The total vlnibJe la 2.1C3.M against 3.31 3.1 Ist week and 6,s4. hV. Cf this the toUl of American tot ton is 2.50e.C2 axaiuitt 2.i2i.li0 laat week, ai.d 2.9277i; lat year, and of all other kinds. Including Egypt, Uraiil. India, etc.. CCS .000 aKalnet CS.000 laat wtek and 1.157,000 lat year. Of the world's vUible supply there U now afloat and held In Great Britain and continental Europe l.Ss0.K?7 la aga.nst 300 t'0 lat year; in lrypt. lfcO.000 against 214.000 last year, and In the United Sutea. 35t.e0 against 1.2 .000. New Koad for the Southern. New Vork. Special. J. P. Morgan and Co. authorize the announcement that the Southern Railway Co. ! nego tiating for the acquirement of ti. Louisville. Evansvhte and i Louts Air Line and a plan for tb re-organization of that company will be issued, based cn an agree ment by the South ern Railway to take orer the property after the re-organization. A Costly Commission. Washington. D. .. Special Comply ing with a resolution of Inquiry lb President sent to the Senate Monday an itemized statement of the expense of the Philippine commls&icn. Tba statement includes the following Item: Compensation $10,000 each to Com missioner Schurman, Worcester and j Denby. $30,000; ier diem allowance to commissioner after their return to United SUtes $5,2S5; secretary to com mission (compensation $8,500; pf diem $3 $12,120; tranportal.n $13,827; bousthold expenses in Manila $9,232; clerical services $21,701: mis cellaneous Mk.VJi. Total $117,185. To Be Governor of Porto Rko. Washington, D. C, Special The President has nominated Charles 1L Allen, of Massachusetts, to be governor cf Porto Rico. He Is arranging to leave Washington for San Juan toward the end of the present week. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Allen and their daughter. The trip will be made on the United States ship Dolphin. (Japtain Southerland, which is now ly ing at the Washington navy yard. ErviJej. C Arthur Pearson. Alfred Harms wc th's former newspaper partner, will this month establish the one-cent London Dally Express, a Liberal Im perial': t competitor of the Daily MalL Germanie Norval, the famous Ameri can circus rider in Paris, will desert the sawdust ring and take the black: veil Greeted with an audience of only 120 persons at the Imperial Opera House. St Petersburg. Maacagnl. the Italian composer, has left that city la a rage. A i i 1 j. T -v.. U '