INSANE ASYLUM FIRE, Seventeen Inmates Perish in the Flames Fed Without Clothes. Yankton, 8. D,, (Special,)—~Ons of th most horrifying fires in the history of Yank ton occurred at the State Insane Asylum, when one of the cottages took fire in thi basement, completely gutting the bullding and causing the loss of the lives of 17 lg. mates confined there, The cottage was of stone and granite walls with wooden Interior and intended for laundry purposes, but owing to the crowded condition of the main bullding 4 of the female patients were placed there and the laundry was operated in the basement The exact cause of the fire is not known, except that it originated in the dryroom ol the laundry. Here there Is a coll of stean pipe, and the theory ls that flae particles similar to lint settled on the pipes which ignited the clothes, dropped on the pipes and were fired. The lack of water greatly hindered the work of the firemen. The burned cottage stands some 800 fest in the rear of the mala building, the water tank for fire protection belong 100 feet in the rear of the collage The steam pipes used for pumping ran from the boller room of the main building through the cottage for heating and then to the wriesian well or tank. The intense heat in the burning building caused the pipes to burst shortly after the fire began, leaving the fire hose withou! power, except direct pressure from the tank, which was in no way sufficient to quench the flames, Two streams of water werd thrown on the building, but with little good. With the thermometor standing at 23 below gero, the inmates who could escape came down the narrow flight of stairs in thelr night clothing and bare feet into the bitter cold, and had it not been for the nearness of shelter the suffering and probable loss of lite trom freezing would have been terrible, The building was thres stories high, with an attic and two entrances, one east and one west, There was one stairway from the second and third floors, which led into the main balls to these entrances, thus giving but one egress for those on the second and third floors and attie, Fifty-two persons were inthe burning building, 40 patients and 12 female attends ants, The attendants escaped, as did the others who were saved, with none of thelr personal effects, many losing all that they possessed, An inquest is pow in progress at the asylam, which may develop the exact cause of the fire, It is not thought blame will be attached to any of the attendants, The four walls still stand and will make the work of removal dangerous, as a ook lapse is Hable to occur. In 1882 the asylum, then a frame building, was destroyed by fire and six lives were lost, The Joss on the building and machinery is estimated to be $18,000; uninsured. BURIED BY AVALANCHE, Lives of Twenty-four Italians Under Snow. Georgetown, Colo, (Special.)—In a snow slide at Silver Plume, twenty-four lives are believed to have been lost. The dead arn Italian miners, with their families, Eiever bodies have been recovered, only two of whieh have been Identified. The identified dead are: Dominielo D, Es tefani and baby. The following are missing and are belisved to be dead: Three Toudel brothers and Daptistio Bretto. The follows ing have been recovered alive, but will prob ably die: Astonio Gerliand, Antonio Ni grettl, and one unknown. The slide was the most disastrous eves known ia Clear Creek county. It occurred al 8 o'clagk, Starting two miles [rom camp the avalanche eame with terrific foree, car. rying with it buge bowiders snd immense trees, A short disisnce from the starting point the avaiacche parted, one section coming from Cherokee Guleh, taking with it two cabins oecupied by Italians aad the shalt house of the Cary City mine, The other slide came down Willlahan Gulch, be. tween the Pelican and the Seven-thirly Miles. This portica of the slide did the most damage. Settlements of miners, mostly Italians, were situated in both guiches, For a week or more the inhabitants have moved from piace to place to escape threat ened disaster, should the thousands of tons of snow start down the mountain sides Somes of the most venturesome lagered In their homes, and when the slide came es- cape was for them Impossible, It is estimated that 13 bodies are buried beneath the piles of snow In the two gulches, Eleven persons have been taken out dead, ouly two of whom bave been iden tiled. There is practically no hope for | those under the debris. Iostantateous death was probably their fate, Crushed To Prosecute Cervera. Madrid, (By Cable. )—The Supreme Mille tary Court, which nas had under considera tion the loss of the Spanish squadron st Santiago de Cuba on July 3 last, ins decid. ed to prosecute in connection with the dis aster Admiral Cervera and Commandant Emilio Diaz de Moreu, former eaptain of the destroyed erulser Cristobal Colon, Earthquakes in Indiana. Indianapolis, Ind, (Special. )— Dispatches from Porter County, Ind., say that earth quake shocks were felt throughout that county. Several buildings were damaged in Chesterton, a village near Valparaiso, Fissures la the earth two or three laches wide ran in all directions through the streets, The vibrations were from east to west, ABOUT NOTED PEUFLE, ! HBeeretary Long, of the Navy, is a partial believer in female suffrage, on which he bas recently written an article, Senator Ross, of Vermont, since his ap. pointment to the Senate, has been making a careful study of parilamentary rules of pro- oodure, Andrew Bpenoe is sald to be the caly mis slonary-'oyeclist in the world. He travels in Californie, where he has met with remarks ble sucoess in his work, Rudyard Kipling works 10 hours every day, or, to be quite correct, every night, for the novelist usually sits at his desk until Abe small hours of the morning. Paderowski dally goes through a regular get of gymnasties for the purpose of | his arms and bands for the they are called apon to perform. He employs an apparatus which he designed, Wood," says an old Cape Cod mate of Santiago's Governor, “dida’y moh as a boy, and kept to himself, seemed to bo doing a plies of thiaking, was always ready to take a band with other chaps General Oils, the commander of our s fu the Philippines, is said to ba a man lsconie speech, who rarely utters more xi one short sentence at a time, but who ges to make that sentence epigrame : ot THE NEWS, President McKinley, in an address to the Home Market Ojub in Boston discussed the problem of the Philippines and sald: "No, imperial designs lurk in the American mind,” Secretary Alger, while passing through the streets, before the banquet, was hissed, The Pipe Machine and Manufacturing Company is the latest combination Among iron, steel nnd tinplate concerns. Residents of several Colorado towns are leaving them on snowshoes and gathering at Leadville on secount of the shortage of food suppiles, The Boston Fruit Company's new steel steamor Admiral Dowey, is ashore on Cutty- bunk, near the entrance to Bazzard's Bay. Commodore Jobn W, Phillip, who com- manded the battleship Texas during the war with Spain, was presented a sword and Bible Ly the school children of Texas, Two men were killed and eight were io- jured in a wreck on the South Carolina and Georgia Railroad near Charleston, B, C. Cinclonati clothing firms were burned out with a loss of half a million dollars, The War Department has honorably dis charged Major-Gienerals Butler and Bumner and Brigadier-Generals Kiine, McKee, Wiley, Lincoln apd Combs, all of the volunteer army. Jeremiah Dingley, of Auburn, Me, died, aged 77 years. He was an uncle of the late Congressman, The explosion of a gasoline stove in M. Moskowiiz's tailor shop, caused a fire in the business portion of Springfisid, Tenn, which destroyed buildings and contents valued at $60,000, Dispatohes from Porter county, Ind. state that severe earthquake shocks were [felt throughout that county, Several bulldings wore damaged in Chesterton, a village near Valparaiso, The Baltimore and Ohio Raliroad has in- troduced a new feature in its sleeping car gervies, arranging to attach an ordinary sleeper in addition to the regular fl:st-class sleeper now in service on through trains. The innovation will be that in these or- dinary sleepers Pullman rates are reduced one-half, 80 that passengers have the choles of paying the highest price Puliman rate or take advantage of the cheaper rate offered in ordinary cars. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad is the first line to introduce this service and its popularity has been predicted, It is sald that W. M. Greene, vice-presi- dent of the Baltimore and Ohio Bouthwest- ern and formerly general manager of the Baltimore and Ohio Raliroad, has been of fered and will probably accept the vice presidency of the Rock Island Road, to sue ceed Mr. Truesdale The State Insane Asylum, at Yankton, 8 D., was destroyed by fire and 17 of the in- mates are reported to have perished. An avalanche of snow and earth at Piume, Col., buried Italian miners, a woman and two ebiidren in Cherokee Guleh, several of them being killed, 25 tueky Regiment, was shot in the hip In an altercation at Anniston, Ala, with Lieut Edward Seott, of the same regiment, Former Confederates now living in Bos. ton are organizing & veterans’ association for «social purposes, ings against Judge W. L. Norwood, of the Thirteenth Cireult, by fire and as a result nearly $50,000 worth of property has gone up In flames. fires broke out In different sections town, Home, loss #10000; barns snd outbuildings School, loss $3,0)0, large general store of mfles from Washington, aad Oblo Railroad, loss $15,000, troduced In the House a jolat resolution pro- posing the thanks of Congress and the American people to Mal Gen. Elwell Otis and the officers and men of his com. mand for the gallant and successlul action at Manila on February 4 and 5. J. D, Ciark was lodioted at Nashville, Tenn, for the marder of Minnie Clark, alias Blanche Cox, bis supposed wife, The body was found on a bridge across the Comber jand river, near the clty, under elreum- stances indicating preparations for throw. ing the body into the river, Clark was from & prominent family of Montgomery, Ala, and is a brother of Thos, H. Clark. law librarian of Congress, MILES REPLY TO DR. CONNOR. Says He has Consclentionsly Done His Duty to His Country. Cincinnati, O., (Speecial.)—A local paper telegraphed General Miles for a reply to the address of Dr. P. 8 Connor st the testi. monial banquet in this city, The command. ing general replied, without mentioniog the name of Dr, Connor or any other member of the War Investigating Commission, or even referring to the speech of Dr. Connor, or been made of him. His tefogram follows: Washiogton, February 16. In thirty-six years’ continuous serviee, I am upconsious of having neglected or ex- my country, I shall contious to do what | belteve to be for the best interests of our country, and I hope, protect the henith, life and honor of those who risk ail for their country and its people, [Signed.} . Spain Buys American Wheat, Washington, D. CO. (Special, )-The lack of a commercial treaty with Spain, the for. mer treaty having been terminated by the war, is not preventing trade between the two eountries, although Ameriean products are bandicapped by an additional 20 per cent. daty in Bpanish ports, United States Con. sular Agent Mertens, at Valenels, reports to the State Department that there Is great de. mand for American wheat. A eargo of 4,000 tons of red winter wheat, which had just ar- rived there, proved entirely satisfactory, and importers were willing 10 receive more, STABBED THROUGH THE HEART, A Woman's Knit Faseclnator Found Near the Murdered Man's Body, Cleveland, 0O., (Special, jeJacob Gur brandi, night fireman at the Hunt Stamping Works, on Hickox street, near Eaciid avenue, was found dead in the bollervroom of the plant, haviog best stabbed through Nernox A, Mites, M, FAURE DEAD. mh The Chief Executive of France a Victim of Apoplexy. ILL ONLY THREE HOURS. He Bids His Wife and Daughter an Affect tlonate Farewell, and Thanks All for Their Kind Attention—-Not a Great Statesman, but a Conservative Ruler, Who Generally Found a Safe Course. Paris, (By Cable.) —M. Felix Faure, Presi- dent of the Republic of Franse, dled at ton o'clogk Thursday night after an fllgess of three hours, Up to the vary moment that his brief but fata! fllpess Interrupted him in the perfor- mance of his usual dally duties, there was no indication that the angel of death was beckoning to him, Up to the very last M, Faure indulged in his customary habits of work, and even in his equestrian rides, He ate well and slept regularly, Nevertheless, several times re- cently he bas been heard to exclaim: “How wonk my legs are,” and “I can scageely stand.” or to make some such remark, He left his study about the usual hour, at seven o'clock, telling Montjarret, chief of his stables, that he would ride on horseback from seven to haif-past seven on the follow- ing morning. He then retired to his private apartments, dined with bis family, went to bed at ten o'clock, got up at six and almost Immediately Informed bis valet that he would not ride, An Unnoticed Warning. M. LeGall, his secretary, on jearning of this, hurried to the President, whom he found In his dressing-room about 8.45 A. M. M. Fauresald: "I do pot feel {ii but] prefer to abetain from fatiguing exercises, Otherwise the President worked as usual, and read the official documents and de. spatches, with the newspapers, as was his custom, in order to prepare himaell to pre- side at the Council, which assembled at 2 A.M. M. Faure presided with his usual ablilty, and thelr taking leave, the ministers could pot have imagined that they were pressing his bagd for the last time, He took his luncheon as usual at noon, returned to his study at two, and spent the afternoon seated in a favorite armehair Uy the fire, convers. ing with M. LeGall, who, about five o'clock, asked permission to depart, At six M, IoGall returned, Immediately reporting himself to the President, who was then sign. ing decrees presented by General Ballloud, sccording to his dally custom, of signing was then about over apd soon faw minutes, when the President oalied M, LeGall, saylog: “Come quiekiy, I feel HL” When M, LeGall reached bim, the Presi dent was rubbing bis forehead and saying weil,” M. L#Gall ssked plied, "I feel a general weakness, [I am falating.” Dr. Hambert, on arriving, gave ether inhalation, He did not consider the ease serious, but on findisg that his patient did not revive, he decided to Inject ealeine, Bade All Farewell The President was apparently aware of the seriousness of the attack, for be mur Jo suls perdo, bien perdu” (“I fesl my senses falling me. desire to see his wife and chlidren, When Madame Faure and Mlle, Lucile Faure en tered the room the President exclaimed *'Jeo sullering greatly. I am lost”), At eight o'clock, when the doctor bad ar. quainted M. LeGall with bis worst fears, the latter informed M. Dupuy, who ane but, on M. Le Gail observing that his pres. who was pot to be aware of the gravity of the situation, the Premier said he would re- main st the Ministry of the Interior, in readiness 10 come at the members Meanwhile M. to the lssue of the seizure, His wife cams farewell, It was & touching soene. He thanked her for the affection and devotion the bad sonstastly shown him, asd then be bade farewell to his davghters, the doctors aud his personal sUendante, thanking ail for their care and devotion, and asking them to pardon any hasty words be might ever nave uttered, SMALL FIGHTS AT MANILA, Volleys Exchanged Batwoen the Ontposts and & Few More Shells Fired. Manila, (By Cable, }—A large body of Fili- pinos, presumably reconnoitering, was dis. covered on the right of General King's posi. tion near San Pedro Macatl, The eutire brigade of General King turned out, and after an exchange of volleys the Filipinos retreated into the jungle, Since the American line reached the nat. ural outward defenses of Manila no farther advance has been made, The American troops are now in eamp slong the line, and in many places they are temporarily in- trenched, Ocensional brushes fake place between seouting parties, Troops K und I of the Fourth Cavalry encountered Fillpino scouts near Paranaque and exchanged volleys with them, Trooper Wilther was wousided fa the right arm. The United States abmed transport Bol faio fired four small shells at the natives, having discovered by the use of ber search. Hght that they were mounting a battery near Paranaque. The natives did not reply, but withdrew their guns to Paranaque, The transports Bratus and Bomulus have srrived from liollo, They bring news that the American authorities are clearing vees sels from lloilo, showing that they have assumed control of the port. The patives burned all the records before evacuating the oity. There are rumors that the Filipioos are in sore straits in the interior and are quarrel. ing among themselve A“HAIK CLIPPER" CAUGHT, Confesses to Having Robbed 300 Giris of Their Tresses. Ohloago, 111, (8pecini.)-J. W. Jorgenson or “Jack the Halr-Clipper,” 0s te has been knows for the last four years, was arrested while in the act of cutting » Fransky, A GREAT BLAZE IN A NAVY YARD, Large Machine Shop in the Brooklyn Yard Burned Out. New York, N. Y., (Special. )—Over a mile Hon dollars worth of government property was destroyed by fire, which started iu the large machine shop of the Brooklyn navy yard, known as machine shop No. 28, and the workings of the navy yard have received a serious setback, Many flue models snd patterns of battleships, thelr parts and plans have been destroyed, and some of them can- not be obtained again except by golog over the work mapped out in the beginning. A great number of the modsls were simply coples of plans, drawings and specifications now in the storerooms of the department at Washington, nud these can be replaced at soy time, Tho steam engineering depart- ment of the Brookly yard is practically wiped out, and the work done in that bulid- ing will have to be thrown temporarily upon the department of yards and dooks snd thst of construction and repair, There 1s con- siderable obstruction to the work there, and an extra force will hava te be put on ia or der to keep up with the work. The fire was first discovered by the man on the watch of the battleship Massachus- otte. He immediately notified Lieutenant R. T, Mulligan, in charge of the watch, and a call to fire quarters was called, The men of the Massachusetts scurried down to machine shop, about three hundred yards on the fire. and twenty-five feet long. It was four stories in height and bulit of stone and brick. gained headway. It was soen that the Mae. About this time a four-alsrm was turned in in the oity, and sll the sngines in the neigh. borhood of the navy yard respouded., The paid to the foundry and other bulldings the vicinity, ia A small corrugated loss on this Is Insignificant, Machinsshop No. 28 was occupied by the the In the machineshop very litle work was on band, A number of small orders torpedo boats MoKes, fit. The records and models of the battleshi; bor on Febronry 15, 1898, were also destroy- of an inquiry within the next few days, and if possible the responsibility wil be fixed, Commodore Philip, the commandart of Pt. Go comma dant of th» Cubans Sell Hellef Supplies. Washington, D. C., (Special. )—~Acting Reo rotary of War Melkiejohn has cabled Gen cargo and that hersafler ail supplies of this character will be distributed uoder Gsnera Brooke'sdirection, ‘as complaints have bee made that charitable supplies are sold by duties have Leen paid.” Blaming the Ground Hog. Bladensburg, Md. (Special. j—-The people of this section of Maryiand are swearing that the inconvenience and hardships of the snowstorm have practically passed, fears of a freabet are entertained, and it Is stated siready removed thelr goods and chaitels tu the upper rooms in their houses, streams are all covered with several inches of ice snd banks of snow, and are risin FIELD OF LABOG Korea has one raliroad, Toiedo bas 7,000 unionists, Hawall has three railroads, Machinists bave 100 unions, London bas 15,452 policemen. St. Paul hast’t an idle union. Spain contains 1,027 iron mines, Toledo is to have a labor temple, St, Paul has & borseshoers’ school, Toere are medical schools {n Japan. Miogneapolis broommakers organized Alabama has a woman cotton planter, Dmver palaters want $3 aod the «ight hour day on March 1, tending a non-union theatre, Plumbers, gas and steamfiiters, struok were employed on the edifice, Following closely on the heels of the su cess of the compositors’ movement for tue nine-hour workday and the adoption of sim: tional Union eome ths announcement tha! the Machinists’ foternstionsl Union, witl over 50,000 memb ra, Is carrying on a strong fight la the United Scates Ssunte sad Houw of Representatives lor an eight-hour work. day. A scheme is under way to connect Liver. pool with all the manufacteriog towns with- in a radius of seventeen miles by electric stroot raliroads, which will carry passsngers in the daytime and freight at night, $t. Paul Typographioal Union demand. fron text-books for tue publlie schools, Not content with municipal owaershi of street raliways, el-cirio nad gas Hgh ing planta, water supply, and talephon =, in sev. oral Eoglish eftles ths maunieipal oor wr - tions have bulit dwalilags for workiawr a, ran hotels, and have erouted nud ov ated magoificent baths, In Liverpool the coun ell charges part of what shoud be tne rest from mualeipal houses oecupled by work. fngmen as homes against the taxes of the community, = A representing the Collegs of of New York are now in Aibany to figns the passags of the ten-bour drug I. In Berlin shoot musie ls sold by weight, yman O Connell, of New York, MAINES FLAG FLIES. es Stars and Stripes Float Over the Shattered Hulk, om ——— CROWNED WITH LAUREL It is Festooned From the Fighting Tops High Mass Celsbrated Keel of the New Maine Laid st Orsmp's Shipysrd—Hhe Will be a Powerful Engine of Destruc tion, and 1s to Cost Nearly $3,000,000. Havana, (By Cable.)—The sun sbhons brightly Wednesday morning for the first time in several days, when the wreck of the United States buttie-ship Malone, destroyed in Havana harbor on the evening of Febru ary 15, 1608, was decorated with a large American flag, At 9 o'clock the Stars apd Stripes Was boisted at half-mast by Captain Eaton, of who, with Mrs, Estes Rathbone snd Mrs, Dudley, and 10 saliors of the Resolute, rowed to the sunken battie-ship, The only others taking part were & battalion, with officers, of the First Maine Heavy Artillery. Feetoons of Green. An immense rope of greens was festooned about the fighting top, each loop bung with four feet in diameter aod The stafl, At 10 o'clock high mass was celebrated in memory of the Maine victims in the Merced The cersmony, which was very Impressive, Was representing Major-General Brooke; Com- and other naval officers, the City Counell, the executive commites of the Cuban Mill- assembly, the secretaries of the civil depart~ ments and many officials, together with representatives of the Havana Fire Brigade and other local organizations, Mauy women of the beiter class were in the congregation, which crowded the edi- flee. Ia the afternoon the graves at Colon American officials, military and naval de- talis participating. FOR THE NEW MAINE, Crampe. Philadelphia, Pa. (Bpecisl )-The anni- versary of the blowing up of the battleship Malus in Havana with the begining of work on the powerful man-of-war which will bear the name of the § i $ i The pew Maine will be bulit by Cramps’ Shipbuliding Company, and at the company's yards at the first plece of the keel of the vessel inid, Theres was no formality in the pro- the crowd as the group of workmen set in of the keel Other keel were immediately by the side of the first, and thus was started what will be one of the most powerful fighters of the new navy. The New Battle Ship pieces of the steel i i i ! { i Ohio and Missourl, the contract price each of which le #28850 0. Ste is to have a speed of 18 knots, water line of 388 feet and a beam of 72 fest i i 1 8 inches. about 600, “Hook of the Royal Blae,” The February issue of the “Book of the loyal Biue," During the i service did not ~3eeed of which 62.674 were regulars; in the war were 116,821, of which untesrs, (10,189 being eolored), and 55,082 regulars, a total of 274 717. Major Heistand also gives the number killed, wounded and Jost, and the deaths ding ware, and other important facts, EDITOR ATTACKED BY MINER, Murderous Assault on Account of Utter anres in His Paper. Pans, lil, (Special )-—Edltor Wililam 8, Childress, of the Beacon Light, and corres- pondsut of Bt. Louis and Chicago papers, was assaulted by Wesiey Pope, a union miner, Childress, through bis paper, bad repeated’y bitterly assalied union miners i | MAD EXPECTED HEAVY LOSS, Washington Officials Fenved Iiello Would be Biosdier than that st Washington, D, O., (Special )~ Department received the following gram from Admiral Dewey at Manis: “Potrel just arrived from licllo, That piace taken by our force Batarday aod now ceeupled. No prisoners, No casualties on our siéa, Iusurgents’ loss not known, but % believed to be slight, They attempted to burs town, but foreign property generally wis saved by our fores,"” While no apprehension had been felt bers 88 to General Miller's ability to eapture the capital of the Vissyans Federation, or any- thing sise that was wanted io the Puilippiee archipelago, the reports of strong intrenoche ments which the natives had been construct. ing around the city led officials bers 10 fear that the landing would be a biloodier affair than any of the battles at Maunlls, it was with great satisfaction, therefore, that Ade miral Dewey's dispatch was received. The fact that foreign interests in liollo are being satisfactorily guarded is another sources of gratification to the administration, This forestulls eriticlsms or the danger of interference from avy foreign power whieh bas ail along been 8 complication that bad to be considered ns a possibility. The War Department bas received the fol lowing from General Otis: : “One bundred apd eighty officers and, 1,800 mes, Spanish prisoners of War, eft port on 12th and 18th by steamers Bela Christina and Uruguay en route to Spain” CROPS RUINED IN FLORIDA. The Zero Mark Was Hesched st Penss- cela Damage to Vegetation. . Atlanta, Ga, (Special, )—'Telegraphie com- munication to Fiorida bss been kept up spasmodically during the past two days, ail wires being down south of Jacksonville, Li+ports from Pensacola indicate that the coldest westher ever known bas just passed over the northern part of Fiorida, The zero mark was reached at Pensacola, At De Funlak Springs it was 8 above, All com~ munieations east and south of this polutis interrupted, and it Is impossible to lesrn the exact damage dose to fruit and vegetables, Damage to orasges is believed to have been widespread. The loss to .pinespples Throughout Georgia the early vegetables Lave Been killed and the peach crop and other fruits almost entirely destroyed. Savannab, Ga. (Special, )—Letters were received from Florida telilng of the direful effect of the freezs io that Biate, The orange growers’ letters are recitals of lce- bound trees and fruit that Is ruined by the ovid, The prices of Florida oranges sd- vanced in one hour from the receipt of the Florida mall from €3 to §5 per box, Crops about Savannah sre s total loss, by the freezing weather, The meiting saow is adding to the freezing water that these plants have already received, SEVERE IN TEXAS, Blizzard is Sald to be the Worst in the History of the State. Dallas, Tex., (Special, )—Beports from all over North Texas are that the blizzard of Saturday and Sunday was the most severs in the history of the State, Loss of eaitie in the Indian Territory and on the Pan handle ranges will likely be very large, The temperature has risen to about 15 degrees, and though it is stil far below the freesing point, traffie of all kinds is moviag reguisr ty, Zero weather has been recorded all over North Texas. Snow bas besa on the ground hers for seven days. This Is the longest cold spell for fourteen years, Houston, Tex., (Special. }o=The thermomes a ter bas made 8 pew record in South Texas, reaching 4 degrees above zero. The loss to live stock will be very heavy, Early vege etables are damaged to the amount of at jonst §1 000.100, Waco, Tex., (Bpecial. }—For the first time in fs history Waco and vicinity bas experi enced zero weather. Sunday morning ihe mercury registered 7 below. Oats are roined and wheat seriously injured, The Brazos river is frozen from bank to bank, Great dawage bas been dose to live stoek. . IMMIGRATION TO HAWAIL Bill Extending All the Laws of the United States to the Islands, Washington, D. C., (Special )—-Ssasto. Falrbanks, from the Benate Committes on Immigration, reported back to the Senate the Lill extending the auti-contraet labor jaws of the United States to Hawail, with amendments making the Lill cover all fm migration questions. The amendments specifically iuclude the Chinese exclusion acts, The bill was accompanied by a writien report, in which the committee say: “Sines the passage of the joint resolution of annexation, there bas been a decided impetus given to the Importation of con tract Jaborers into the islands by the sugar plantation owners, The committees is In. formed that each vessel from Asiatic coune tries is increasing the Isl of contract labor ers, and unless some restrictive measure fs adopted, the number must shortly be still further sugmented, Toe joint resolution annexing the islauds to the United States provided for the exclusion of Chinese, “This provision the commitive regards as inadequate, innsmuch as it does not provide for apprebiendiog asd deporting Chinese immigrants sbotid they land in contraven- tion of the terms of the joint rescintion above mentioned,” ER a cs LOCOMOTIVE IN A DITOR, the murderoys assault, The editor's injuries are very serious, and even if he does survive, he will bs disfigured tor Mte. Childress, bavisg sdvooated the side of the pegroes and operators, it Is feared that more trouble may follow. Capt. Couch hins placed ali the military in Pana on pro- vost duty, Invalid Burned to Dexth. Wheeling, W, Va., (Special )-Mrs, Betsy Conway, aged seventy-three years, ying at Moundsvilie, who was an invalid, sud able to walk only with the aid of a cane, got 100 near au open fire-place, setiing her ciotbes on fire. She was burned to a erlep, and died in an hour. ———— COURT MARTIAL FOR CAPTAINS, Communders al ia Spanish Must Ave To Be Catled to Account. Madrid, (By Oable)—Ail the survivieg eaptains of the Spanish warships destroyed in Mantle Bay by the American feet will be South Carelina and Georgina Hosd, Charleston, 8, U,, (Special) «A eonstrae- tion engine was wrecked by the spreading of tracks on the Boulh Carcilna and Geos gia Ralirond, eleven miles from this oity. Two men were killed and eight were in- ured. : : The engine bad gone out of the eity with a crew of five men and earried five others, who were in the employ of the & " tance Telephone Company, wow ra