WILCOX ARRAIGNED. Tie Grutf JaryFisdsa Tree Bill ud le Studs Nr TriaL NiTK AUIMK MFIISS CtOPSEY to tho Charlotte both City, N. C, pad ... “The grand Jury has found a true bin agitaet Jiao Wilcox. Tho report was ■ado at 13: U o'clock Taooday after soon. Tho Jurors came Into the court loom escort** tar so officer end with all tho dignity and aolematty do# the I turned over the MU 0< Indict to lodge Jones. In banding the ■ to tho Jndga, the foreman This la what wa And.'" The court ordered the prisoner brought Into court after doaner at 3 o'clock, no that be might be arraigned. The order wee obeyed and at the hoar net James WUeox, accompanied by hie tether And Deputy Sheris Reed marched Into the her. The court house waa well fined with people and every •ye turned to gaze upon the prison ft. WUeox Is a very ordinary-looking, compactly-built man of about 38 years. 9s shoulders are broad for a man of his stso, and his head Is lira* and Is tho most striking part of his person, it Is bulky, sonars and heavy. His. balr was neatly trimmed and bis face clean tfkavea. His general appearance about the face is that of a courageous, deter mined, buU dog. He did not as much as allow the muscles of his fees to relax while la the eonrt house. Ia fact he ap peared to bo troubled and the least bit reatlsas. Be was carefully, but plainly •milt Hie hair was parted In the middle and a flat, smooth curl lay on bis forehead Just beneath the “part.* The solicitor, George W. Ward, ask ed Wilcox to stand and lift his right hand. He obeyed promptly and the plea of “not guilty” was entered by his lead ing attorney. B. P. Adylett. The MU ol Indictment reads aa follows: “The State of North Carolina, «>es OUOtsak County Superior Court, March nra, IMS. The Jaroru for the Btau ippB tMr proMBt that ItpH WUeox, Into of the said county and State, on tho 88th day of November, 1881. with three sad aims la tho coun ty at Pasquotank, la said Statu, felon Musty, wilfully, and with msllre efere dld MU and murder Pdla M. the statute la curb and provided, end ageiast ead dtgalty of the But*. . “OBO. W. WA&D. After the plea of aot guilty waa Mill Mr. Adylett said that hla elleet would ha triad hr hla God aad hla country. Tho State ashed that a special resVre of St he draws. Tho defease insisted oa M, which ware draws thm the boxes hr a boy, William Youngs, under tea years old. This case promisee a Ilraty cjutcsL Tho proeeratios aad tho defense arc alert aad win Sght every laeh of SNBad. Aydett ashed tho judge to ■aha a note to tho effect (hat the de foam objected to the box from which No Jurors worn draws. cUlmlag (hat It had aot baas revised with la the last two roars aa tho law provides. The Sleds returnable Thursday St t o'clock, when the trial •W hegta. Whoa the realm was draws WOeox waa maimed to jalL Mavra la Paragraphs A Philadelphia dispatch says: "Hear Admiral W. B. Schley, aeeomnaaled by Ms wtth arrived hare Monday aftvr Washlngton aad he waa > reception by the Pennwyl of Klag Mdward's visit to Ireland Is believed to am that amay arrests for political offsaaea are ■ bemads. • A Loadoa dispatch says: “One han dled aad Afty halm of cotton aad IN halm af cotton seed mdal tn the cargo of tho BrMloh etearner Mora, Copt which arrtvod from as van nab. Nr Bamharg, were badly KILLED IT A BLOW. CMWW TmOHm In the Crepeey KHuahoth City, Special to Charlotte Observer.—'The Wilcox trial la well under way. The Jurors have been se lected and the witnesses are bains heard. The detunes haa done well la choosing the Jurymen. Niue of the twelve ere Intelligent-looking young men. Several of them seem to be of the same social position as the prisoner. The negroes, two of them, are of the ante-bellum type, each being between 10 and <0 yean oM. They are honest, gnod-looklag, full-blooded Africans Pendleton Bright, the twelfth Juror, does not appear to he a man of much Intelligence. He la young aad lnnooent tooktag. The Jury is In charge of Dep uty Sheriff U J. Pritchard. The court house was well filled at an early hour Thursday. Many women were within the bar. The crowd was good humored. Dr. I. Peering, coroner of the county, waa the first witness called. He said: “1 am a graduate of the Colloge of Physicians and Burgeons of Baltimore. Hava been coroner three years and have held two post-mortem examinations One waa held on the body of Idas Nellie Cropeey Just after Christman day, on the 17th ol Decem ber. “I found the body In Pasquotank river M yards from the Cropeey resi dence, about IS yards to the right of the house, looking to the river. The body had been tied down by Mr. Still man, the fisherman who found It. It waa carried to a little outhouse near the river. Drs. J. B. Wood, O. McMullen aad myself held the autopsy. It waa be gun after the body had been out of the water an hour. The two doctors, myself and six Jurora srere present. We first examined the clothing to see If there were any marks of violence. The skirt was of dark goods and the waist red. She wore U slipper on one foot, the right, and nothing bnt a stocking on the other. I found the clothing In fair condition. There srere no torn place*. The fingers were partially drawn and the llmbe were limp. I did not examine the finger nails. While In the water the legs hung loosely. They were not stiff at all. We removed all the clothing from the body except the stocking*. We first cut the body from the pit of the stomach to below the naval. We exaaalned the vaglaal organs and found them to be those of a virgin. The womb waa normal. The condition of the hy men and the womb Indicated that she waa a pare sromaa. We found the In ! tantlnee aad stomach normal. The heart vn« empty on both sides. We cut off a place of the right lung aad found that on being aqueesed It emitted a small amount of frothy mucous Nothing waa found la the pleura. mark or deprwloa caused by tke col lar. We examined the head end noticed that It was a little more swollen on the left than on tke right aide We quit there, but after going tip town and see ing the solicitor we went beck aad held aa aatopay of tke head. Then we made aa Incision around the head, beginning on the right aide, and removed the •ealp. Tke skull waa left bare. Aa wa ent through tke left temple we saw a •waning or contusion. Wo found la tke •woUea place, which waa about SxS Inches la alas, a tablespoonful of clot tad bhjod. The membrane over the bone was colored dark bine. The condition there waa brought about by a Mow." The defense objected to the question that brought out the last assertion and the court ruled that It waa competent; that tke witness was a medical expert. Tke defease entered an exception but tke court stood Arm aad the examine Uon continued. The witness eon tinned: “The blow vaa given by eome round, padded la etrument. lech a blow would produce uaooeactouenees which would likely last half aa hour. “Tke absence of water la tke stom ach. Inace aad the pleural cavities would Indicate that death waa not eased by drowning. If Wee Crops*? had got la the water alive aad cou •doue aad drowned, tke water would have been la these. Along with the water would have been digested or an food to the stomach end Mood and froth to tke lunge. If l bad found these conditions I would have said that •he went to the water conscious." Death of Ommt«I Dcvld Stanley Waahlagtoa. Special.—Major Oen •ral Darid & SUnley. U. 8. A., retired, a notable Scare la ani ounpilpt aad a corps eoamadar. died at bis **•* 7* mn. of ebroa ^**aea Re was president of tbs Soriaty of tta A nay of tke Cam barlaad for fosr yooro waa eoaaaader of tbo Watloaal Self ten- Home. In thl. city. c—w* Report so Tobacco. WodhSM, SpaeUI.—Tke Oeaasa Bsraas boo coaptetod tbo preliminary tshlao ahowtag tbo arraga, production aa* raise of toboooo grows la IW la tbs Worth Atlastle aad Weaten States, la tha ptea Worth AOaatte States there srara 17J7I farm rapertlag tobacco Tbor aid rated la 1SW U.Ttt aaraa of I raateod a total of 17M7S. of a rate# of fUUJtt. la Woatora Statoa than wart aaly 1U farm grswlag tabaaao. with a tafal arraaga of O. ptwdsetag tlAia iwsh af a rates af W-Tld. I I I I w.; •; 20 PEOPLE DROWNED Terrible Disaster on a liter Boat. Oily Niae Persoas Escaped WIILE TIE LITTLE STEAMEt WAS Entering Lake Palmyra n S«Mn Squall S track Mar, Almost Lifted Iter Ont of the Water and Turaed Her Bottom Upward. Vicksburg, Mias.. Special.—The stem.' ar Providence, plying between this port and Lake Palmyra, was orartarned at t o’clock Wadnmday morning by a sud den squall at Iona landtag and SO ot bar passengers end crew were drowned; The dead: Cape Caeeedy. ot Vlcka borg; Chan. Roup, of Vicksburg; Clyde Scott, of Vicksburg, cotton seed buyer; Dr. N. A. Lancaster, a prominent phy sician sad planter of the Palmyra neighborhood; 17 colored roustabouts and deck passengers whose names bare not been reported. the Ul-fated boat left here at noon Tuesday on her regular trip, carrying a large miscellaneous cargo ot freight and a number of paaecegera. At Z •'clock, as the steamer wee entering Take Palmyra, a sudden storm of cy clonic proportion came out of the west, catching the Providence broadside on. The little vessel wee lifted almost en tirely out of the water, her upper works blown away end her hull turned bottom side up In 40 feet of water. The victims were drowned like rets In a trap. Only alas of the satire boat’s company were saved. The property loea will amount to several thousand dollars. Messrs. Cassidy. Scott, Roup end Lancaster ware ell married men and leave large families A steamer csrylng caskets and divers left here for the ecene im mediately and will attempt to recover all tfcie bodice. Those rescued were J. B. Johnson, pilot; Walter Kaln. clerk; J. M. Wil kinson, mete: eight negroes. The sur vivors reached here late this afternoon coming overland, a distance of about 40 miles. The Providence was built at Lyons Is. In ISM, and bad been In the trade here for some years She was about ISO tons burden and waa consid ered one of the fastest stern-wheelers on the lower river. The Belle of the Benda la overdue from Greenville, bat other hosts moved on tlms Ex •Governor Altgsld Dssd. Jollst, 111, Special.—Former Govern or JvAa'VT Altgsld iT/tefrfijfoom' So, Hotel M unroe, Wednesday oin^a at 7:09 o’clock. He bad been ui^oaecloui since midnight $90,000,000 ta Bonds. Philadelphia. Special.—The board o1 directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad at a masting authorised the Issue of *50,000,000 or convertible 10-year 91-1 per cant debentures. The resolution adopted was In part as follows: "Re solved, That for the purpose, first, for the purchase of 1*,000 additional 50 ton steel ears and *60 locomotives re quired, as stated in tha annual report, tha Increase! traffic of the company, at an estimated coat of $*4,000,000. and, second, for the construction of the tan net extension of tha company’s system Into the city of New Tork and tha pur chase at Urn real estate required for ths paaeeager motion, the expenditure* for which purpose tfr the years 1*01 and 1*03 are estimated at 9*0^00400." The bonds referred to are an leans of 990,900,009 gold bonds of the company of tha denomination of 91,000 and 9(00 respectively, bearing date November l. 1*0*. running for tan years therefrom with Interest at tha rale of 9 1-* per east, per annum, payable aeml-annoal. >7, tree of taxes. Cnl, Lowery President. . New Tork, Special.—At the quarter. *T meeting of the Western Union Tele graph Company, Gen. .Thomas T. Kek ert was elected chairman of the board of directors and Col. R. 0. dowry, now ▼lea president and general superintend ent of the Western division at Chicago, was elected president and general man ager at the eompany. BMSBnpBK BelMie Tha Amalgamated AesocUUon la tha Wheeling district wOl not auks tay now demand on tha bar Iron wage seals. Attorney General Sheets, of Ohio, basaa the proeecndoa of tha Bnstern Ooaaolldated Oil Company, pt Maine, aader tha Foreign Corporattoa act It waa tea reed Tharaday that C. W. White, a prominent attorney aad **h#rof C. W. White, afSt Louts, wn« erdmatsd la the debate of the laat VMh.r*TOftorwMaaarmMMbm! •a his wap tram MohOa to Waahlng toa State sad hla name did aot appear m the eaanalty list Martial law |p thraateaad la Mam hdk, Ta, bees see at tha treat ear BHha Aad the aaloeae kere been SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL New Enterprises That Are Enriching Our Pavo'ed Section. The South’s Iron Interest. Manufactrer’s Record. The consumption of Iron, which Is bow running at about the rata of 18. 000.000 tons a year, la so staggering that It is difficult to folly grssp the fact that this growth 1s permanent It 1s altogether probable that we shall again see much lower prlcee In Iron than at present, as It would not be natural to aspect an unbroken record of tho phenomenal activity which bow pervades the Iron and steel in dustry; but vra have probably reached a period where the consumption oi Iron and steel will expand as rapidly as the productive capacity of the country. We may have temporary dullness, as In the past, but the In creasing usss of Iron In fireproof con struction. which must come about In the better class of dwellings, as In office buildings; the vast extension —now a necessity—In the terminal facilities of the railroads of the coun try, and In the Improvement of road bed and rolling stock to meet the heavier traffic, are all factors in aug menting the consumption of Iron even beyond the 18,000,000 tons which we have reached. In the light of the growing power of Iron and steel. It Is of more than sectional Interest that the South has psssed the apecu latlve period In this Industry, and Is now In position, by virtue of the Im provements which have been made and the new capital which has been secured during the last few years, to reap the benefit of a very active and sound extension of Its Iron interests The experimental, and to a large ex tent speculative, condition which sc long prevailed In tbe Southern Iron trade, to the great detriment of lu legitimate advancement, has passed away. One by one the leading lroo companies of the South have been putting their plants In a high state ol efficiency, enlarging their furnaces Improving their facilities for mining ore and coal and making coke, and thus getting on a basis for lower coal of production, which, when lower prices come, will enable them to con tinue In profitable operation without the troubles which hampered so man) of them In times past. With all of Its advantages for Iron-making, the South made comparatively little progress In that Industry between 1890 and 1900 This was due In part to lack of ado quite capital and experience, and tr part to many cases of thoroughly bad even If not knowingly corrupt, mis management, the evil Influence ol which directly and Indirectly Injured the Iron trade of the whole South. It la since about 1900 that the South’! iron Interests have been getting InU better shape, and henceforth the de velopment of this Industry promises to be more nearly commensurate will the advantages of this section than has been the cane In the past. Th« outlook is altogether cheering. A >300,000 Additional Mllt A dispatch from Spartanburg. S. O. annonncas an extenstva addition to lx made by the D. E. Convert* Co. 01 Clmdale, 8. C. It its tea that tha direc tors definitely decided at a meeting li Spartanburg on March 1 to erect a No 1 mill, which will bare an equipment of 18.888 spindles and 484 looms. Thi production will be high-grade clotha Structure to accommodate the mi chlnery will be 100x180 feet In else The capitalisation of tha No. 8 plant will be >800.000. A. H. Twichell la pres dant and treasurer. Erecting Weaving Addition. Mention was made recently of an In crease of capital stock from >80,000 U >800,000 by ths Anchor Mills of Hun tersville, N. C. It has been ascertained now that extensive Improvements hen been commenced by tbs company pro paratory to adding weaving to Its op erations. An addition two stories high 780800 feet la being erected, and la M will ba Installed the looms nscesstn (probably 140) to oonsume the product of the company's 4100 spindles. Possi bly otl er Betterments will also lx mads Textile Notea Joncevllle (8. C.) Cotton Mills be* In creased capital stock from $16,000 u $$0,000. Tucapaa (8. C.) Mills Co. has added seventy-four looms. Increasing Its tote to $$•; plant has 28.000 sptndien 3. r. Williams of Shelby. N. C.. hat admitted B. A. Welmsn to a half-lntsr •et In bis hosiery mill, sad the plant will be enlarged. Ooaaales (Texas) Cotton Mills wl| Increase capital from $128,000 to $180. 000. The company's 800-sp1ndla an< 100-loom mill was completed recently W. M. Hagood of Easier, & C.. Is or gaols! eg a oompany, with capita' stock of $$00,000. to balid cotton fac tory. About $$0,000 has been subscrlb •d. 1 It is reported that Sumpter Cogswell of Pell City, Ala., has com plated nr rsagsmeeU for the srectioa of a $1.. ooo.ooo cotton mill by Now Bngland and local capltallsta W, B. Lloyd, T. J. Hogan John Lloyd and W. B. Lindsay of Chnpsl Hill, N. C., have Incorporated Blanche Hosiery Mile Co., with cepl tai ntoek of $8100. and privilege of In crease to $18,000. Tenallle (On) Cotton Mills' stochhel will moot March 10 to aoasidoi plane tor putting the plant la opera floa. It to n new mitt ef 400 spindles ooea$«ted recently, hat capital lor om •ration to lacking. Possibly the bond holders win tabs charge. It to reported at Uadele, On, that the Maeenehoeetta Mills la Oeorgto wW double Its plant of $1,204 sptadiss aad 1728 looms. An enlargement ef thli MlOPt woetd pro Whir require the ra pes dttera of sheet MOOMO; however, ao aethorltatlv* etotoment has been ausds concerning the Improvement. A MARCH BLIZZARD Sweeps Down On (be Western States Brinjinj Deep Saow RAILROAD BUSINESS PARALYZED. Telegraph Wires Down lad Train* Unable to Plough Through Drift* of Snow. 8t_ Paul. Special—North Dakota and the Canadian Northwest have ex perienced the worst snow storm tn many year* and railroad traffic 1* practically paralysed. The Northern Pacific and Qreat Northern have not moved a wheel for nearly 16 hours In the bUiaard-atrtcken district, and have abandoned all efforts to do ao until the fury of the storm shall abate. The high wtnds has piled the snow In the mountains, and packod It In solid masses, many deep cuts being entirely filled. The temperature has been gradually falling and is now at or below the aero mark. Not a trans continental train has arrived at St. Paul since Friday, and nona la ex pected for several days. The North ern Pacific reports Its westbound coaat trains which left 8t Paul Saturday morning, tied up at Fargo, the road beyond there being blocked. Every effort la being made by the road to keep Its passengers who are •now-bound warm and well fed, and for this reason trains are being held at stations where the accommodation* are good, rather than attempt to get them through with a possibility of be ing tied up between autlona. The valley division of the Northern Pa cific between Frankfort and Wlnnl pog la entirely abandoned. No trains have attempted to run since Friday night and exact condition* on this di vision ar# not known by the genera] officers here, as the telegraph wires hare been carried down by the bur den of sleet that proceded the heavy snowfall. * a« uiutaon on me ureal North ern li equally aa bad. The line la tied up entirely between Grand F-orka and Wllllston, N. -D, a distance of about 35 miles, and all wires bare been loet beyond Fargo. All communication with western Dakota and Montana points has been lost So fierce has been the storm that It has been tnad rleable to attempt to re-open the road nnttl It abates. Reports received at the general offices Indicate that the gale has somewhat sobsided, bnt that the snow still continues to fall. The branch of the Oreat Northern runn ing to Winnipeg Is also tied up. No trains hare been started northward since Friday night, and those that were caught out on the road by the storm hare been held at the stations near the border. Winnipeg is reported to be entirely cat off from railroad communication with the outside world. The Canadian Pacific trans-continental trains are anow-bonnd somewhere west of there, and no prospect of relief la yet In sight The storm started on Friday, being preceded by a light rainfall and ac companied by high winds. The rain soon turned to sleet and then to snow and this has fallen without cessation for more than II boors. The terrific gale drifted the snow badly and It Is nsxt to Impossible to wade through the streets. Business of all kinds bus been at a standstill since Friday night So far as known there has been no loss of life, but owing to the demoralised condition of the wires late news baa not been received from the remote districts. The farmers ball the advent of the snow with delight, as the ground has been very dry, and this abundssce of moisture will put It In excellent shape for the spring seed. 'Flood Warnings. Knoxville, Tenn., Bpeclal.—Flood warnings Issued barn predict a ris< In the Tennessee river of from 12 to IS feet Monday. The warnings wars of tha Tennessee river, which la con trolled by the United States Weather Bnrean. The system has been eaatah Ilshed only recently and It la thought will save thousands of dollars to property-owners. A Georgia Cyclone. Macon, O*., Special—A cyclone swept across tho corner of Monroe. Upson and Crawford counties Sunday and a messenger who came from there reports that Cicero Tharps'* handsome residence was blown down and scattered about the plantation aad one of the aegro tenant* was killed outright aad a number of negro families rendered homeless. The track of the storm was by Moraa’s Mill to Moutpellsr Springs, and the same re port la to the effect that Montpelier Springe, an old college settlement, was destroyed, two big brick bonnes and a frame dwelling being demolish ed aad the families occupying them rendered homeless. A Sunday Halt Fight. ■t Paso, Ten., Special.—Ten thou sand people, most of them Americans, witnessed a bloody bull Sght at Jaaree, Mem. last across tha rlrer from this city, Sunday, In which two of Sonia’s moat noted matadors— Fnsates aad Mssriatlal—took a lead ing part Sts bans wore dispatched by the gwoad aad tvs harem were death. Fneateo aad Maesarv i have boom touring Mexico, bare to Sputa, for a series uf LIVE ITEMS OF NEWS. Masy Matter* ol Qeneral Interest la Abort Paragraphs, The Sunoy South. Great tracts of valuable timber are burning near Marble Falls. Tex. For murder done last April, Luke Bandera was hanged at Marlon, Ala. A long stretch of river bank at Au gusta. Qa., caved In, carrying with it *00 f*et of Charleston A Western Car olina railroad track. While trying to force sleep with chloroform. Dr. Richard Ferguson, Jr., fell forward into a saturated handker chief at Columbia, a C., and was «uf located. Roberts boat Rdmond Houp and bla wife, of Harrodaburg, Ky.. Into Insen sibility. Trolley car* in Norfolk. Va., are be ing guns riled from strikers by pollen and militia. The resignation of Dr. William 8 Lyman, president ol the University of Alabama, baa been tendered because of old age. A *1.000,000 sale of his oil lands In West Virginia was made by J. B. ltub Inaon, a pioneer driller. At The National Capital. Representative O. H. P. Belmont. Ill with pneumonia at Washington D. C.. Is Improving. The United States cruloer Cincinnati. Commander T. C. McLean, Is In New port harbor for a supply of torpedoes, with which to destroy derelicts. Tbo ship will sail on a crulee along the cost and over the regular routes followed by ocean llnor* and destroy such Hosting wrecks as may be found. No hearings on the Isthmian Cauat will be held after this week by the Sen ate Committee. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson has returned to the capital from a Western speechmaking tour. At The North. The deserted village of Halberton. N J.. la to be pot up for axle at auction. During an election riot at Hamilton. O.. on Saturday. George Lafayette via fatally shot by Officer Henry Laurence. After killing Mre. Sarah A. Thill man, for whom he had a fondness, An thony Perry at Detroit, Mich., commit ted suicide on Saturday. Gold shipments of *2.500,000 from New York to Europe are arranged for next week. A Referendum League has been form ed In Chicago, 111., to further that feature of municipal rule all over the United State*. A *6,000,000 Candy Trust Is endeav oring to secure an option on the lead ing factories In 8t. Louis. Five men were drowned by the up setting of a small boat In the Sacra mento River, California, on Bunday. Bafehlowers secured *1,200 In stamps a*d *xeo in money from the Weetvllle, Ohio, postoffice. The centennial of the Incorporation of Cincinnati was celebrated by the municipal authorities. Congressman Chester I. Long ha* been renomlnatod by the Republican convention of the Seventh Kansas dis trict. A number of persons are reported drowned In the flood* In West Virginia, Pennsylvania and New York and the property damage In Maryland amount* to many thousands of dollars. At the annual dinner of th# Ohio Society of New York Senator M. A. Hanna made a plea In behalf of labor. Brneet Seton-Thompeon bids fare well 40 the lecture platform on Satur day and will enter upon newspaper work In Philadelphia. On* body haa bent found In th* ruins ot the collapsed baking powder building, at Cleveland, O. A Philadelphia dispatch say*: “Tbo schooner Maggie a Hart from Apala chicola. reports that 00 February 6. SO mile# north by northwest of Perry'* Island, passed an upright spar extend ing about 10 feet out of th* water with other am*H wreckage fast but floating about, probably attached to a sub merged vesaei," Opposition to the Wax Paper Trust Is th* purpose ot a new *5,000,000 :om peny formed at Chicago, 111. From Across The Sea. Whs New York Herald quotes rr Preeldeat Cleveland as Instating on generous tariff concessions to Cuba. A minion franca gold was received at New York from Faria en route to Cuba. German police are pushing a crusade against quacks of all claims. Fears of an outbreak among lha Vamlab Indiana, of Idaho, are reported. MleceTtaesom Mattera. The victor Hugo centennial in Paris ended la a series of elaborate fetaa end and his residence was presented to the city ae a museum. Application has bean made la Otta wa for a charter from the Canadian Government for the Northern Securi ties Company Mr. Whttelaw Reid, the Americas envoy, la said to have paid It*,*00 for a hones In London for ala weeks during the coronatloo. Sir Albert F. Jonas, president of ths Liverpool Chamber of Commerce, and a distinguished party of British bull osas mss are Invest!gatlag conditions In Jamaica. Reports prepared wader Government cwperlvlsloa show there are shoot 1M^ in square miles of eoal lands In ths United States.' am Service Com ad eel oner Fowlke any* the whole of political contribu tions Ilea la eoerdoa both to secure and to forbid subscriptions. A namber of trot asd second army lieutenants are agitating to revive ths relative rash question. Ths transport Hancock sails from Saa Frsadeeo March 1* for Manila with ths First Battalion of ths Tenth Iran try.