REVENUE MUST BE INCREASED. A SeadjutmeBt of the Tariff ti Urgently Seeemmenioi. Tht president Monday sent the following Dwngt to congress: "To ths Congress of the United States: "Regretting the necessity which has re quired me to call yon together, I fait that your assembling Id extraordinary session Is tndlspensuble because ot the condition In which we fin J the revenues of the govern ment It Is conceded that Its current ex peadltures are greater than 1U receipts, and that such a eondl'.ton has existed for now more tban three years. With unlimited means nt our command, we are presenting the remarkable spectacle of increasing our public debt by borrowing money to meet the ordinary outlays incident upon even an economical and prudent administration of the government. An culmination of the subject discloses this fact in every detail and leads Inevitably to the conclusion that the condition ot the revenue which allows it is unjust IS able and should be corrected. "We find by the reports of the secretary of the treasury tbnt the revenues for the year ending June 80, 1S92, from all sources, were t4P.8u8.2'V0 22, and the expenditures for all purpose were J415,9J3,Wfi 56. leaving an exce.. i.f receipts over expenditures of 9.914, 4c3 06. During that fiscal year HO,. 670.4'.7 OS were paid upon the public debt, which has b'en reduced since March 1, 18S9, t269,O70.H90, the nnnunl Interest charge de creased 11, 64,576 BO. The receipts of the government from all source during the fiscal year ending June 1)0, 1H!'3, amounted to 44ol,710,5fil PI, unci its expenditures to .469.S74.6S7 (showing an excess of receipts over expenditures of 42,341, t74 29. A FINANCIAL I.XII1DIT. "Since that time the receipts of the fiscal year and, with but few exceptions, of no month ol any fiscal yenr, have exceeded tho expenditures. Tiie receipts of tlio govern ment, trom all sources during the llscul year ending June .SO, H!4, were :)72,S02,492.fi9, . and Its expenditures 4 142,(105,758. SM, leaving a deficit, the first since the reMimption of specie payments, of 4fi9,s03,200.fN. Not withstanding there was a decrease of 4 lti. 769,128.78 In the ordinary expens 's of the government, ns compared with the previous fiscal year, its income was still not sufficient to provide fc.r Its dully necessities, and the gold reserve in the treasury for tho redemp tion ol greenbacks was drawn upon to meet them, But t it is did not sufllce, and the gov ernment then resorted to loans tn repleuibh the reserve. "In February. 1894, 450,000,000 In bonds were Issued, and In November following a second Issue of 450,000,000 was deemed necessary. The sum of 4117,171.796 was realized by the sain of these bonds, but the reserve whs steadily decreased until, on Februury 8, 1805. a third sale of 402,815.400 In bonds for 405,110,244 was announced to congress. "Tho receipts of the government for the fiscal year endlug June 80, 1S95, were ?390, 873,203.30. and the expenditures 4433,178, 28.48, showing a deficit of 442,805,223.18. A further loan ol 4100,000,000 was negotiated by the government In February, 189G, the sale netting 4111,100,246, and swelling the aggregate of bonds Issued within three years to 42I'.2,S45.4(0. For tho fiscal year ending June 39, 1896, the revenues of the govern ment, from ull sources, amounted to 440!), 475.408.17, while Its expenditures were 4434, 678,054.48, or an excess of expenditures over receipts of 425,203.245.70. In other words, the total receipts for the three fiscal years ending June 30. 1896, wqro Insufficient by 137.H11.729.46 to meet the total expendi tures. CONDITIONS NOW F.XIK,T1.U. "Nor has this condition ' since improved. For the llrst half of the present fiscal year the receipts'of the government, exclusive of fiostal revenues, were 4157,507,603.76, and ts expenditures, exclusive Of V6al service, 1 195. 4 10, 000. 22, or an excess of expenditures over receipts of 430,902.390.46. lu January of this year the receipts, exclusive of postal revenues, were 4 24,316,994.05, and the ex penditures, exclusive of postal ser vice, 430,269,389.29, a deficit "of 45,952. 895.24 for the month. In February of this- year the receipts, exclusive of postal revenues were 424,400,997 38, and ex penditures, exclusive of postal service, 28,796,066 66, a deficit of 44,395.069 28, or u total deficiency of 186,001,580 44 for three years and tight mouths, ending March 1, 1897. Not only are we without a surplus in the treasury, but with an Increase in the public debt there has been a corresponding increase In the annual Interest charge from 22.893 883 20 in 1892, the lowest of any year since 1862, to 434.387,297 60 in 1896, or an In crease of 411,493.410 40. "It may be urged that oven if the revenues of the government bad been sufficient to meet all Its ordinary expenses during the an tnree years, tuc gold reserve would still ave boon insufficient to meet the demands upon it, uud that bonds would necessarily have been issued for its repletion. He this as It mny. it is clearly manifest, without de nying or affirming the correctness of such a conclusion, that the debt would have been Increased in the least the amount of the de ficiency, and buslueas cunlldeiice Immeasur ably strengthened throughout the country. BSTEMT. THE OCrAT SCKI. Congress should promptly correct the ex isting condition. Ample revenues must bo soppiled, not only for the ordinary expenses of the government, but for the prompt pay ment of liberal pensions and the liquidation of the principal and luteresl of tho public debt In raising revenue, duties should be so levied upon foreign products as to pre serve the home market, so far as possible, to to our own producers; to revive and in crease manufactories; to relieve and en tourage agriculture; to increase our omestlc and foreign commerce: to aid and develop mining and building, and to render to labor lu every Cold of useful occupation tho liberal wages and adequate rewards to which skill and indus try are justly entitled. The necessity of the passage ol a t art II law which shall provide ample revenue, teed not be further urged. The Imperative demand of the hour is the prompt enactment of suoh a measure, and to this object I earnestly recommend that congress shal! make every endeavor. Be fore other business is transacted, let us first provide sufficient revenue to faithfully ad minister the government without the con tracting of further debt, or the continued disturbance of our finances. "William Mi Kini.it. "Executive Monslun, March 15. 1897." Er. Hunter ths Nominee. The Republican legislativecaucus at Frank fort, Ky., nominated Congressman W. God frey Hunter for I'nited Slates Henator by 38 vote to IB for Holt. 5 for Lewis, ft for liovle and 2 for Yerkes. All the candidates joined to supporting lr. Hunter for eleollon. Lieut, Gov. Worthingtou ruled that no ballot fur senator can be taken until March 23, the second Tuesday after the assembling of the legislature. Colliiion la Kentucky, The northbound Illinois Ceutral St Louis ipress collided with a freight train ot Kust Calru, Ky., killing Fireman Walter Kodgers, colored, 'telegraph Operator Uodwln lions was Injured. He was lu the station, which was knocked over into the backwater by tho passenger engine. The train left the truck. TEESE TELEGRAMS. At Danville, Ky., Taylor Stevens and John Bayley were crushed tu death by a full ot slue. A rolling mill at theUupont powder works, Wilmington, Del., exploded. Due mail was Wiled. PLAN FOR A NEW PARTY. A Permaaeat TJniea ef ths Forces that spportsd Bryan. An effort Is to be made to effect a perma nent amalgamation of the factions which were allied tn the support ot W. J. Bryan. Severs1 conferences have recently been held In Chicago, at which the situation was discuss ed and a decision reached that some steps should be taken to prevent the threatened disruption ot what may be termed the "re form forces." ' The April number of "New Occasions," a magazine published in Chicago, voices the sentiment of those who have been In confer ence in an address which calls for the aban donment of the old party lines and a re organization under the name of the American I'arty. , The editorial proposes a novel method of forming a party platform and organization. It suggest that at noon, July 4. the Ameri can people organize by voting precincts all over the I'nited States, each precinct to elect ono representlve to a Congressional conven tion to be held a few days later. At the Congressional conventions one representa tive should be chosen as a meralif r ot the l'eople's Congress, selected "not for his oratorical ability, but for bis capacity to think." This congress of 357 mon.wlth dele gates from the territories, should meet at some central point and map out a plan of. work. Copies of this plan have been mailed to national i committeemen and lenders of the different organizations, and it the responses are favorable a conference will be held In Chicago nt an early date, and a definite plan of action agreed upon. TERMS OF SILVER REPUBLICANS. Will Permit the Tariff Bill to Pu if No At tempt is Made to Reorganizs the Senate. Henator rettigrew, of South Dakota, In an Interview said: "The five (Silver Republi cans, (Senators Mantle. Jones of Nevada: Cannon, Teller and myself, will not do any thing to delay or hinder the adoption ot a protective tariff law. There are a number of Democrats who will be just ns considerate. If there is an attempt to reorganize the Ken nte, we may be in session all summer, and if there is a serious attempt to seat the three new senators that have boeu appointed, a great broach will bo opened and the tariff and everything else may bo lost sight of. "There Is also some talk of passing other legislation than tariff and appropriations. It is not my opinion that it is tactitly under stood that the Senate will not be reorganized : that the new senators by appointment will not be seated, and that there will be no gen eral legislation. In that event the way Is clear to an early passage of the tarilT law," FORTS ORDERED BLOCKADED. Ruisia Issues Instructions to Clots Both Cretan and Greek Cities. The following seml-oSlelul statement was published In Vienna: Iiussin instructed the commander of the Russian squadron in Cretan waters to take steps, in conjunctlou with his colleagues, to blockade the Cretan and Greek ports, tier many and Austria had previously sent simi lar instructions to their squadrons, and Great ilrltain ami Italy are ready to partici pate. A similar decision upon the part of France is awaited with certainty. The Russian government hasdispatched a circular note to the six powers proposing that each of them send immediately 2.000 troops to Crete to effectually occupy the island and compel the Greek troops to with draw. The powers are considering the pro posal. SUPPLIES LANDED AT V0L0. Ths Greek Soldiers Destroy Bridges on ths Railway. The reply of the Greek government to the ultimatum of the powers having been delivered to the foreign representutlves at Athens, preparations fer hostilities be tween Greece and Turkey, which are appar ently inevitable, are being hurried forward with all possible speed. Crown l'rince Constantino is about to start for the Greek frontier to assume command of the Greek troops there, and several Greek transports have landed grent quantities of war material and large numbers of horses and mules at Yolo, Thessaly. It is reported that Greek bands huve de stroyed a number ol bridges ou the railway between Monastir, ths present headquarters of the Turkish army, and Kalonlca. TRAINS DYNAMITED. Blown Up by Insurgents and Mai; Span ish Killed. A dispatch from Havana says: The Insur gents have nttacked the important town of (i nines, in tho province of Havana, burning 25 houses, ransacking all the stores, and taking 410,000 from the municipal safe. The hpauish garrison resisted for two hours, but after losing all hopes of reinforcements for tified itself In the church nnd loft tbo town defencelots. The Hpauish losses are reported to be very heavy. Bejiient, another import ant town of the province, has also been nt tacked by the Cubans, nnd with equal suc cess. Two trains have been blown up with dynamite by the insurgents nt Faootaco, and ou the Han Clara line. In both coses many Hpanish soldiers worn killed. Killed Them Both. Stephen Horton, n wealthy farmer, who resides in the little village of Rutland, six miles from Manslleid, I'm, is lying dead In his home, while In another part of the hoiiso lie the remains of his wile. The death of both bos been attributed to poison, and the coroner's jury has found that Mrs. Horton administered it to her husband, and then ended her own distance with the remainder of the deadly powder. Tho Mortons lived quietly, and ns far ns cr.n bo ascertained, were happy mid contented in thoir domestic; relations. The only known trouble existing in he family has been tho frequent periods; of dementia exhibited by Mrs. Horton, ami it is thought she accomplished the terrible deed while temporarily derauged. A Business Myth. Secretary NortlL of the National Associa tion of Wood Manufacturers, contributes an article to the "Forum," in which he shows that England's industrial supremacy Is a myth, uud that sho will eventually be out stripped by Germany, as she is now out stripped by the United States. In this con nection It is best to quote the exact language of the writer. Hays Mr. North: "Machinery Is the slugle item of manufactures In which English exports show an Increase daring these 20 year. Even in machinery the Gor man have latterly discovered that they can make a better nrticle than the English, whllo In the Iron nnd steel industries generally tho Kugllsh no longer dispute German supre macy." A Terrible Voyage. The Heaver line steamer Lake Widnulpeg Captain Taylor, 25 days out from St Johns, N. IS. , arrived safely at Liverpool. Captain Taylor reports having had a terrible voyage, during which his vessel had such a largo quantity of wut-r In ber engine room thut the passengers had to be called upou to as- sist in clearing ber and In righting her cargo, which bad shitted during the heavy weather. The fires of tne Lake Winnipeg were out for over a fortuigbt nnd 307 head ot cattle, 22 horses and 7 sheep had to be thrown over board owing to the scarcity of drinking water on board and the Inability of the engineers to work the condensing apparatus. FIFTY-FIFTH C0X6RESS HEl EXTRA SESSION. Ths Poblio Cilleries Were Faeksd and 61 Senators Were la Attendance. There) was an abundance of flowers on ths desks of senators when at 11 o'clock Monday Mr. ' Hobart called the Senate to order. There was an exceptionally full attendanoe ot senators. The public galleries were pack ed and the reserved galleries were filled. The chaplain's opening prayer Invoked divine grace and blessing on the senators and mem bers now about to take up the work of the extiaordlnary session and on the president and Vice President. The roll call disclosed the presence of 68 senators. The new senator trom Kansas, W. A. Harris, took the oath of office, Mr. Mtf Bride, of Oregon, 1 presented the creden tials of Henry W. Corbett, appointed by the Governor of Oregon to All the vacancy caused by the failure to elect a successor to Mr. Mitchell.- The governor's certificate was read, and McBrlde requested that the new senator be sworn In it there be no objection, but Mr. Oray said some unusal circumstances attended the appointment and the credentials should be scrutinized. He moved the credentials be referred to the Committee on Privileges sod Elections, and It prevailed by unanimous vote. Mr. Hoar and Mr. Coekrcll were earned a committee to wait on the- President and In form him that Congress was in session and ready to receive any communication from him. The Henato then at 12:20 took a recess un til 2 o'clock At twelve o'clock Monday Maj. McDowell, the clerk of the House, rapped for order, llcv. Mr. Couden, of Michigan, the blind chaplain of the House, then delivered nn in vocation, appealing to the throne for God s blessing on tiie work of the new congress and tho new administration. The clerk of House then read the proclamation conven ing congress, after which the roll ot mem bers was called. Speaker Thomas It. Iieed was re-elected, the vote standing: Heed, 199; llalley, (Demo crnt, Texas,) 114: Hell. (Populist, Colorado), 21, und Nuwlands, (Sllverite, Nevada), 1. At 3 o'clock the session was resumed. ,Mr. Hoar and Mr. Crockrell r-ported that they had called on the president. Secretary I'ruden of tho White House staff thereupon stepped forward, message In hand. It was sent to thetiesk and the reading Immedi ately began amid the close attention of sena tors. It took but ten miuutes to read the message, and Immediately thereafter, on motion of Mr. Allison, the senate adjourned. TARIFF BILL READY. Committeemen Hope to Raise $50,000,000 to 160,000,000 Additional. The new tariff bill made public Monday by the ways nnd means committee, embodies the results of hard work by the members ever since tho meeting of tho last eesslou of Congress In December. It Is intended to raise from 460.000.000 to 00,000,000 more revenue under the bill than is provided by existing law under similar business condi tions. Duties have been advanced for the double purpose ot protection and levenue. Another importaut rule which has govern ed the committee is the substitlon of specific duties wherever possible for those based upon value. Such duties have been restored upon nearly nil of the chemical schedules, muny articles of iron and steel, upon sugar, upon agricultural products, and upon many sundries, It Is in textiles, however, thut the greatest care has been taken in transforming ad valorem Into specific duties. The cotton schedule was made spocllle in form, with tho exception of some general provisions when the present law was framed. The duty per yard was based upon the number of threads tu a yard, thereby permitting au increase of rates upon tbo liner goods. A similar sys tem of classification is applied in the new tariff to manufacturers of flax and silk. The duties upon silk are to be based upon the amount of pure silk contained in a given weight of fabric, the rates being higher ac cording to the proportion of silk without adulturntlon or admixture is larger. The duties on woolen goods are nt present compound tu character, and some of them will have to be left so. The committee has done much figuring, however, with a view to substituting specific, rates, and has been able to do ho iu a number of cases. Tho textile schedules of the bill are nut likely to bo subjected to great changes in the senate, except perhaps In the case of woolens, where a bitter contest Is riiging between wool grow ers and woolen manufacturers. Tho committee, endeavored, where It was In accord with their views of protection, to keep below the McKluley rates, and in every ease avoid going nbovo them. They have been ohligod to disregard this rule iu a few cases, but many of the schedules, like Iron and steel, where McKluley rates nro no longer needed, can be cited as evidence that they have adoptod a moderate scheme ol du ties. They huve put back the full McKlnley rates on Agricultural products, because they have fi.lt that the farmer was entitled to all that it was possible to do for him by protec tive duties. The McKlnley rates have been preserved also upon tobacco, wines and silks, because they are considered essentially luxuries. There has been an Increase upon tiller to bunco, In order to make the difference less wide between tiller nud wrapper and the temptation to fraud less serious. The bill, as a whole, represents what tbo committee regard as a scientific scheme for the protec tion and development of American Indus tries and the maintenance of a supporting treasury. 'J ho Republican members for several days have been considering how best they could chango the duty on woolens uud pottery from nil valorem to specific, so as to make the bill consistent throughout. At tho final meeting specific rates were fixed on some of 'he principal manufacturers ot wool. In some cases this change of basis was found not to bo practicable, but It was made in every Instance wherever possible. Four Wom:n Drowned. A Mexican woman named Luz Santos Rod rnguez, and ber three daughters were drowned at a ranch 20 miles from lirowns villi-, Tel. One ol the girls, while bathing in a luoou went beyond her depth The two sisters rushed Into the lagoon to save her, and also began to sink. The mother then threw herself into the water to save her children, und was drowned with them. LABI TICKS. The senate agreed on the Alutklan bound ary treaty without change. lly the falling of a wall iu Fez, Morocco, 180 workmen were killed. William Drury, the millionaire land owner of Ktltbsburg, 111. , died on Saturday, aged 87. . It ts now reported that Xansen may try to explore the polar regions in his ncw-fnugled flying maebluo. On a little Georgia coal road an engine ran into a washout, kllllug tho engineer and fatally wouudlng the fireman. The upper house of tho Arizona legislature has passed a bill making legislative sessions hureafter to be at ten-year intervals. Governor Bradley wrote "refused" across the back of the petition and record In the ease of Scott Jackson, the murderer of Pearl Bryan. Two children of William Btureman, La- Sort county, Indiana, were poisoned to eath by eating patent pills, and three others an critically 111, . THROUGH ABRIDGE A.Traia hi Indiana Dropped lata a Swollen Stream. A special from Princeton, Ind., says a a frightful wreck occurred early Wednesday morning 10 miles north ot that place, on the Evansvllle A Terre Haute railroad. For the past week several small bridges and large sections of track have been washed away, but every precaution has been taken to avoid accident In spile of all this, passenger train No. S had the track washed out trom under her, and the smoking car now lies in the botton of the river, with every passenger in it lost. The balance of the train is lodged in tree tops, SO or 75 yords from the track. Conductor Sears and the fireman , are known to he among the lost. A dispatch from Terre Haute, says: The train which left here at 6:30 this morning went down through a trestle at the approach to the White river bridge, four miles below Yincennea. The reports received here are that of more tban 70 passengers, less than 10 were taken out alive. Nothing can be seen except the smoke stack of the locomotive and the top of the rear Pullman. Several bodies had been recovered at 10 o'clock including those of the engineer and IT reman. A later report says that five men were killed snd two seriounly injured, as follows: Killed Herbert Allen, Kvansville, head janitor In the State House, caught in the smoking car and drowned: Joseph Bole man. of Evansvllle, locomotive fireman: John Sears, of Terre Haute, conductor; two un known men. injured Urakeman Jacob Haursen, of Evansvllle; J. l;. llen!orson, brother of ex State Auditor Henderson, iloth will recover FIGURES ON IMMIGRATION. For Seven Months Past the Decrease Was Nearly 0,000. A statement prepared at the Immigration bureau shows that during ths six months ended December 31. lH96,tho number of immi grants who arrived in this country was 149. NJH, a decrease, as compared with the same period In 1H95 of 42.200. Iu January last the decrease, as compared witK January, 1M90, was 3,820, making the total decrease for the seven months 45,526. This decrease Is said to be largely dun to tho difficulties and uncertainties attending a lauding In this country. The many de portations and the strict' examinations en forced iu this country Is stated to huve caus ed a large increase of immigration from Europe to Ilrazll. Argentine republlo and other South Am or I can countries, where in ducements nre offered. Au important factor In tho largo decrease of arrivals in this country is believed to be the proclamation ot the Italian minister of the interior warning undeslruble classes from embarking for this country and refusing them passport. FOREIGN NOTES. Inland Psrti of Crete ars Beiet by Bands of Robbers. The Mussulman refugees who have been brought to Canea are destitute and on tho verge of starvation, and the Island is full of bands ot robbers who are pillaglnlng the towns iu the vicinity, Tbe Cretan Insurgents nre bombarding the fortress of Kpliialonga, The garrison ts still resisting. Several conflicts between Mussul mans and Christians have occurred in the village ot Arcbanes. A scourge of black vomit Is devastating the City of Oaxaea, whim makes- thrre epi demics that are now iu progress in Mexico. Smallpox is increasing dully, nnd the grip In tbo western part of the republic shows no signs ot abating. No Instance is known of anyone recovering after boing attacked. As the plague spot is, far from railroads, no dnnger is apprehended of the disease spread ing over the country. Hundreds have died. A dispatch from Constantinople says that large quantities of Gras rifles and cartridges are being smuggled from Greece Into the Turkish Island of Chios, off the west coast of Asia Minor, by way of Smyrna. and that they are being sold to the Inhabitants ot Chios nt low prices. A dispatch received frein Yalta, in the Crimea, reports that a sanguinary encoun ter bus taken place there between Russians ami Turks. Many shops were demolished. A number of the wounded men have been arrested. CRUSHED BY FALLING WALLS. Wind Storm Causes ths Death of Two Men and Injures a Third. A whirlwind visited the town of Mingo Junction, Ohio, Saturday night, doing con siderable damuge, ami was attended with fatal results. The wind was so fierce that It was with difficulty men could keep on their feet at the plant of the Junction Iron and Steel company. A lull occurred shortly be fore 2 o'clock in the morulug.tben in another second the wind lifted tip the Iron roof of the cost house,which collapsed, the tail brick walls, which were held by hog chalns.fHlling li. Few men were nt work at the time, but Frank Hobson and Larry Fahey were caught under the fulling walls. A force of men were put to work to rescue them, and Fahey was taken out dead. A wife and seven children survive him. He was 50 years old. Frank Hobson, agod 29, and single, was so seriously crushed that lie died three hours afterward. John W oik as, a Hungarian, was struck by- falling timbers and brioks and badly crushed. He managed to crawl away and it was some time before he was found. He may die. IN SCIENTIFIC INTEREST. Ai Expedition to Searoh for Light on Man's Development Morris K. Jessup, president of the Ameri can Musem qf Natural History in New York is fitting out an expedition that will be put in charge of 1'rof. Frank W. Putnam and Dr. Enill Iloaz to seoure anthropological specimens aud Information. The 'North western coast will Im) visited first to the north of British Columbia, after which the expedi tion will proceed along the Alaska seaboard, orosslng Bering sea to Asia, work down the Silieriau and Chluse coast to the Indian ocean and proceed to Egypt. The expedi tion will he absent six years and its cost of 400,000 will be defrayed by Mr. Jessup. The Battleship Wtsoomin. . The koel has been laid at the Union Iron works at Han Francisco for the battleship WiBOonsIn, the coutraot for which was hit by tbe govormeut six months ago. The Wis consin is to be one of tbe same class as tbe Oregon, which was built in tbe same city, though larger and more heavily armored. She will be one of three war ships ot the same pattern, the other two being the Ala bama and the Virginia, which will be con structed In eastern shipyards. The con tract price of the Wisconsin ts about 43,000, 000. Steel Ralls for Japan, The first cargo of .steel rails from this coun try for Japan is now being loaded on the British steamer Fortuna, Philadelphia and Heading railway coal warves, at Philadel phia, together with a large consignment ot looomotives built In that city and intended for Japan. Three other steamers have been chartered to carry engines, and raUs from that pojt to Japan, " EEZ1 STiLl FIOTIS F03 IBiRIY. CUBANS WIN AGAIN. X Mors Brilliant Vifitoriea Gaiaei Over ths Spaniards. A dispatch to ha NCw York Sun trom Havana, says: Reports are received from Mansanlllo about another serious engage ment near Cauto river, In which General Garcia captured from the Spaniards a large supply of arms and ammunition, and made 100 Sjiaaish soldiers prisoners. Tbe situation In the province of Santiago de Cuba continues to be favorable for tbe in surgents, and the Spanish eolumns bave practically abandoned active operations on tbe field. They escort only the convoys with provisions from one fortified town to another, carefully avoiding any tight with the Cubans. Col. Vara Del Rey has reported to General Weyler that It is impossible for the Spanish to move In the province In columns less than 4.000 men strong. The Spanish guerrilla of Guauabana, Matanzas provinoe, has been defeated there by the Insurgent forces com manded by lien. Betancourt, Tbe engage ment was very hot and lasted for four hours. The Spanish bad 60 killed, and the Cubans 37. Tbe estate Carmen at Sabaullla hu been attacked again by the Cubans, who ransack ed the stores und dispersed the garrison. Gov. l'rocet, f Matanzas, has soul 80 more prisoners tn Havana. They are ac cused of being Manigos. Two hundred prisoners have been previously reported as forwarded to Havana. They will be sent to the Island of Fernando Po. Senor La Harrera.chief of police at Havana, will embark for Spurn soon. Seuor Porra. civil governor of the province of Havana, will also go tq Spain. Itoth functionaries are said to bo iu serious disagreement with Gen. Weyler. Fonsdeviella is committing new atrocities at Uiiunabacoa. Seven prisoners were taken out ot the jail and murdered half a mile out side of town. Fonsdevtella boasts of bis crimes, and says that tne more he is attacked by the Cubans the more of them he will kill in order to prove that he has the confidence ot his government WHEAT, CORN AND OATS. Statement of tbe Amount Now on Hand ia the Country. The crop report of the department of agri culture, based on returns from three inde pendent sets of regular correspondents add ed to several thousand from mills and eleva tors, and carefully combined nnd weighed, relates principally to the distribution of prin cipal grains, the stocks aud the proportion cf merchantable and unmerchantable. All grain in tbe hands of farmers, including amounts remaining over trom previous years, are Included In the estimates given. Tbe corn on band, as estimated, aggre gates 1,104,000,000 bushels, or 60 per cent of the last crop, against 1,072,000,000 in March, 1496. Hotli the proportion aud the quantity iu original hands at the date are unprece dented, although closeiy approached Inst year and in March, 1H90. Correspondents report large stocks In cribs, particularly in the prairie states, awaiting better prices. The aggregate sold from farms to go be yond county lines is 623,030.000 bushels, or 27.3 per cent of the crop. The proportion merchantable is 1,936.000,000, or H4.8 per cent. The wheat reserves In farmer's hands amount to 20.0 per cent of the crop or 88, 006,000 bushels, against 123,000,000 bushels lost March. Of this amount 8 per cent is re ported as coming over from previous crops. The proportion of wheat sold inside tbe oounty is 61.7 per cent Of oats there are 813,000,000 bushels, or 44.2 per cent of the 1897 crop, yet in farmers' hands. Proportion shipped beyond county lines, 27 per cent. WRECKED BT THE WIND. . Ths Tewboat Hawk Overturned and Her Pilot Drowned. Thetowboat Hawk, owned by the McKln ley Coal company, was overturned by the high wind on the Ohio river shortly before noon Sunday. William E. Devers, the pilot on watch, was drow:nd, but the rest of the crew escaped by climbing upon tbe boat as it turned over. Devers was 60 years old, nnd resided at Freedom, Pa. He leaves a wife and two children. Tbe Hawk was returning from liellalre, (., where she bad taken three model barges ot iron, aud was on her way baok to Pitts burg to get tho balance of her tow. Tbe boat encountered heavy winds coming up the Ohio, and just as she steamed past lielle vue tho wind caught her and turned the boat over as though it were a twig, THREE LIVES CRUBHED OUT. Wreok on ths Misiourl Paciflo Csussd by Horses. Five horses on tbo track ditched tbe north bound Missouri Paciflo passenger train at Wolf Creek, Kan The engine, baggage car and two coaches were wrecked. Tbe killed are: Engineer Edward Nye, Fireman Law rence O'Connor. J. Meadow, traveling sales man for Slninis Grocery company, was badly scalded and had bis leg crushed. He died. Tbe injured are F. F. liaoon, traveling passenger agent for the Santa Fe, cut about the heud; H. A. Kemp, express messenger; John Appleton, baggsgemaeter, severely burned: N. M. Auiterlaud, Oklahoma; V. P. Piper, Kansas City. The engineer and firemen were pinned un der tbe baggage ear. The fireman was in stantly killed, Nye died ten minutes after ward. Deatbs From Plague. l'he total number of cases of bubonic plavue In liomoay up to date Is 9,032. ot which 7,640 proved fatal. In the whole presidency to date there have been 14,856 cases of the plague and 12,204 deaths record ed. 8FASXS FROM THE WIRES. Tbe University of Cambridge conferred the degree ot LL. D., upon Ambassader Bayard. Among the passengers on the Teutonic from Liverpool from New York, Is Mrs. Annie liesant. Tbe keel for tbe battleship Wisconsin was laid at tbe Union Iron Works, San Franolsoo Thursday. The relations between Great Britain and tbe Transvaal are becoming seriously strained. , Tbe blockade on tbe Northern Paciflo, oc casioned by suow storms iu Dakota,bas been broken. The Monon road was bought In at Indian apolis by the reorganization committee for 43,000,000. Prof. Henry Drummoud, the scientist and author of "Natural Law in tne sptrltua World," is dead. Itlohard C. Hooker, an ex-naval offlcer(re sidiog at Berkley, Gal., has volunteered his services to ureece. The French have exiled to island of Re union Queen Ranavaloan, the nominal sov eroign ol Madagascar. The safe In the court house at La Orange, Ind.. was blown open and robbed ot 44,000, wuicn inoiuaou z,uuu pennies. . Ber. Simon J. MacPherson, pastor ot the Second Presbyterian church, of Chicago, has been elected a truitea ot Princeton tint wenitjr. ? INCREASE OF TRade. Ths Gala ressesses the EiutllfL I a.as. "K il O. Pna k Co., says ia thi, view of jtrade: It ia a carious luUJtl Dumas nature, this continued dwT1 ment, even while the increase o( Industrie and of legitimate biui0 grows. No genuine or lasting ZI,,H could coma otherwise than lo:, step, after such a depression as to, J? 1 years have witnessed, and tbe . feature of the situation Is that tt,. nearly devoid of elements which b' soundness and probable reaction, The money markets continn. . ) favorable to Industrial recovery is no such speculative epidemic ieiHwi? an excessive share of available caolu' ' annual statements nf whht T h on March 1 bave not stimulate4io!I!,S Those commonly considered w.)rtkH tentron indicate that farmers' IL 4 menial supplies, together, mW 206.000.000 bushels, exeewl th. mate ot home demand lSO.OOO.ooa biXi!' Julv 1. bv much mora than .i.. like'ly to to be wanted for export, the past two weeks to 6,h!4 aguinet 1,691,476 bushels last yeT Corn is also a traction lowef. TMt-J latlon in wool continues and nw i1 two weeks bave been 17'ms I1, u . v. . i . . i ' 'V BUMS, wurrcu iun largest previous r&ln i same period wer 12,017,676 pomj. V nile there is much lr,l lu, ri manufacturers show by purrkiB bevond their present vnn n,. , . 4 larger business Is cominir. ' The demand for finished nroduet .;, uruilIU tlio BUIPiriv ot l'IJ ITOll HliwM i great steel works whoso stocks r, C. porteo, but their orders without d.jubiT lull production for severul inouibj. kZ mer pig is a shade lower, i,ut change in quotations appears, un.l tfcT gradual Increase In the demand u-ttil sheets and all the wire family 0f MiS. With the ad veal of spring weather door work much more buslue-s i, eitl The starting of the Maryland mil der contract with the Carnegie fornix, order to make shipments by cheaply, Is suggestive. The reportiofj road earnings in February cotit li miles, 45 per cent of the total milfseii country, and the United States rmidi b, show earnings In that month of t'Xnl only a tenth of one per cent, lew t'C; year, but 10.8 per cent, le?s this a U March earnings thus far reni.rte.1 a,.. Increase of 3.0 per cent over last year the tonnage west bound, as well u ,(,,, class of east bound tonnage, is jnlu, gaining. Failures for the pint t been 25C in the United States, m(Kta ( mm jenr, aim ui iu t.auauu, ugaiUst year. BOATLOAD DROWNED Over 100 Passenger Perish in tht HutJ Straits. According to advices brought by tiJ press of India, which arrived st 'am:J U. G. from the orient, a terrible imJ happened on Saturday, January ts. loiiJ crossing tne uuuaing strnits from Uilud She bad 10 passengers ou buHrd.uiliiJ not far from the Haltalng shure tut M Doing overioaaea. One Hundred and four Misssnmn m drowned, among them were llirw mind son and two daughters, of tlm chief pd oi inn American aieuiouiM cnurci Haltalng. According to advices by the sameita smallpox Is not so prevalent In Hodi as it was a iew mourns ago, nut tut Is still raging In Japan, ami the Horn board of Health has recommended u ernor to declare Hiogo aud Kobe W ports. There was no authentic infrtasut hand when the steamer left regarding belllon in the Philippines, with the eiea of a telegram dated February 14. Mituit the governor general bad Icftluki personally conduct operations agutti rebels at Cavite. The Manilla pawns tlnue to publish reports of the illrpl cess of the Spanish troops, but it the do) of killed and wounded on the rM4i recorded in tbe Spanish press, xrereani ed from the beginning of the outbreill original strength of tbe rebels ivouldss up higher tban tbe Spanish uuthorttmsj willing to admit. rne sugar groswej trlcts were not so seriously ulT'Ctsll; rebellion as many supposed, hileuM growing district is not atiecieu situ REED RENOMINATED. Ths Maine Man Will Again Willi Gavel in the Houit. A caucus of the Republican memberH of the Fifty-fifth congress, held bin night, voted by acclamation to reussj ex-Speaker Heed and all the oOlcer oil last house to serve during the t iiiv-bmi ivrwllU I llu BIMTA niaHti TllllllWS: I U nomas li. Heed, speaker: in'i. J l ouden. ( baplaln; Alexander wj clerk; Renjuinin F. nussell.serneatit-ilfl W. J. Glenn, doorkeeper; Joseph C.Mtt4 Mr. Reed's name was rreseiited VI Pnvnn nf Kmw Vnrlr whn inaile a Ml? 4 speech, which was replied to t y Mt.H alinrt txlllni lilruui III which heOM the wants of the Incoming ailmlnl't) Chairman Dingley of the wayi aw J committee made nn adilrem ontHl measure, now being prepared. Tho ro.tMt nf -ha flemncratlC CHI'S considerable significance, as sliowlJ tent of W. J. ltryan's Induem JJ Democratic representatives iu l"2 Benton McMlllln. of Tennessee, wiJ candidate, and j received 30 re'1? 22 for Bland and 66 lor Bailey. W and McMlllln bad served lu codkk- tban Ballev, but tbe majority i twr nreferred 'the leadersllili of tM young Texan. FEBRUARY OIL RECOW Higher Production Hoted This ' K ary. February was a favorable Boaii" i i.. Th. dailf ft" n vuuviivui uw . "r - - j Hi QAA friarrula li fl iu'TfW 1 J UUD 1 tOO VlfSIVW -- J barrels compared with January. I OA OOK V. I B . I li V ISSI lis aday.tJ y. lntbeWj! . 924 barren nent laths"; vvrnguu d,mu uiiivid -ji - . compared to January. daily runs averaged i, ments 64,138 barrels. l nere is no aoaiemom ut over tbe strike on Elk Fork. tlve and territory has been sKUW-j bonus. v The Fonnsr farm well io Ore . Pa.. Is holding up at 460 barrel twy Phil Fonner farm, couslstiu ot and to tbe south of tbe gurt . leased for a bonus of 46,U0O soi "J royalty. It is reported that tb J( Fonner farm gusher have P"6""! price for the well and leases P L The new well northeast of ' "J nnnl nn tha Hehambaiicb farm, county, establishes the cerUintJ east extension. It was drllleJ I Increased to 30 barrels an hour. xire vmu i"'" j The Chicago hotel, corner Exchange streets, Buffalo, aged by lire. Three persons and two were Injured, lbe ! ward O'Donnell, Paddy HM1 list; William Hauahau. ! H t liam Wilson and wife. O'UoM" aban were suffocated in then nan Jumped from a window juries from which ho died.