STEVENS CENSURED BY THE HOUSE, d,mi.»tlon Of Bis Action la Canaan?, loo With Hawaiian Affairs—Mr. Boa* AC*ln Sat l’p°° bf »*• ffpaaker of ", House In HI. Attempt to Malta aa address—Tbs latest Intelligence from Honolulu—The SltaaUoa Remains Cn clioused* vj }- . - - . * - jn**l'UUV/ w , ltoutelle. relative to the Hawaiian licyof the administration, and de to reporta substitute as follows: ' t, .nnansa faAtn araniiHua r hlsoived. That it Is the sense of Ibis bouse uut a,iuli intervention by the ifovernment of I’niied States, Us representatives or .lord lorces was contrary to the policy and rrfitiuns of our republic and the spirit of our ([institution and should be and Is emphatically fjndomnetl. . ' ■ i;t. resentative Storer offered a sub siitule which was rejected and he will. ,.resont it as a minority report. It declares that the president has ex-, ceded his rights and invaded the dig nities of congress, as well as violated the laws of nationa in hia instruc tions to Minister Willis, and further, that the manner of such attempted intervention by the executive and methods used are unworthy of the executive department of the United states, while the confessed intent of such intervention is contrary to the policy ami traditions of the republic antl the spirit of the constitution. As soon as the Journal was read in the honse to-dav Mr. Boutelte of Ha no, who was oil his feet, sent up a resolution which he said was privi leged. The speaker directed the clerk to read it. It questioned the authori ty of Commissioner Blount to order tiie American naval representatives at Honolulu. Mr. Boutelle vainly (ought to discuss the question of his right to discuss the resolution which was referred to the committee on naval affairs but the speaker cut him short and said it could only be con sidered at this time by uuanimous consent. Mr. Houtelle asked for unanimous consent but Mr. Talbott of Maryland, objected and Mr. Boutelle was forced to sit down. &TILL PREPAJUNQ, TO FIGHT. llmrulian Provisional tioTtrnment tap* porters Bell loose—No Chufei. Sax Francisco, Dec. 23.—The steam* er'Mariposa which arrived from Hono lulu this morning brought advices from the Uawaian islands to Decem ber 14. The situation was December 14 in a state of abeyance awaiting the news expected to arrive by the steamer Alameda due there to-day. Since the diplomatic notes exchanged between the provisional government and Minis ter Willis nothing further had trans pired. in the meantime the provi sional government was carrying out the plans of defense already reported and the last 5,00J sandbags were being filled to he placed in position upon the upper verandas of the executive building in case of an attack. After the vote of the council that removals of Royalists in office should be made, whieh was precipitated by the removal of Fred Wundenberg from the deputy clerkship of the supreme court, (leorge Smitbers, registrar of public accounts, was replaced in the bounce department by George Ashley, an American,and Captain Luddemann, first clerk in the same cepartment, by h A. Mclnerny, a Hawaiian born American. The only other removal which had taken place to December 14 was that of a Royolist from the custom house, who was replaced by a three-quarter white annexationist. onversations with leading Royal ists developed the belief, that Presi dent Cleveland would endeavor to out his pblicy of restoration and thathc would receive-^sufficient back-' jhg in the present congress to enable »m to do so. They admitted that the entire dependence *>n their cause , , 0°w upon the firmness dis P'.a1ve t*le Hawaiian affair is 11a , any moment to assume interna i- , Proportions and hint that both u?. ,and and Japan will take a hand. linM i ana JaPan will take a band. It ' i 6 <'re^enue is given this view. dir» 1, arned upon authority coming ik.. . / ir°m the cx-queen's residence that taftorher recent interview with lipii1S!er Willis she at once went to .L,, Minister Wodehouse and him for the advice he had ,1<'us'y given as to how she should r ,, tl, her negotiations with the u . states government through its tn « a."an representatives. All efforts thi. Only Two 1813 Veterina Kow Left Paris, Ky., Dec. 23.—By the death of Presley Simpson here this morning, there are now only two soldieas of the war ot 1812 living. He was aged | 06 years -» > *»- * M'"' t * ** HOT HAWAIIAN TALK. iim;»u jiimuSiiL^.%■•»»•.> , A WARM TtME IN THB LOWER ;.!"yr\7'- house. .-.< k:‘v.. - A UMIf riritoMiUty Skirmish—Mr. ' Bontalln bli Oo • glrn Brand In the •ha#* at n Rnmnrk thnt cinralnnd to n (surpsr—An Uproar thnt Made XtCM enrjr Vigorous Artlnn on thn Pnrt pt thn Sposksr—Thn Mnn from Mains. > Bepublleans In righting Tnmpnr. Washington, Deo. 81.—The house was lu an ugly frame of mind yester day. The Republicans were In a fight ing temper orer the Hawaiian situa tion when the house met and the row opened Immediately. Mr. Cooltran's resolution of Monday .was presented and hurriedly referred to the com mittee on rules. 1 * After a lively parliamentary skir mish Mr. Boutelle demanded recogni tion for a privileged resolution and the speaker was obliged to recognise him. When read It proved to be the resolution Mr. Boutelle sought to In troduce Monday, declaring that the prerogatives of congress had been in vaded by the policy of the administra tion, and declaring that policy incon sistent with the constitution and tra ditions of the country. The row was now fully under way. Mr. McCreary, chairman of the foreign affairs com mittee, made the point that the reso lution was not privileged, and after some sharp words from eaoh side, Mr. Boutelle got the floor to discuss the question as to whether the resolution was privileged. “The message of the president In dicates this country may be Involved In war with a friendly power. l’’or all we know," said he, In a loud voice, “the arms of thn United States may be even now pinioning with their bayonets a friendly nation with whom the mass of the people of this country sympathize." He held, he said, that It was the im perative duty of Congress, reluctantly recognized by the president, to dis avow, discredit and reprobate a policy designed to bring the country Into discredit in the eyes of the civilized world. [Oreat applause on the Re publican side. ] “I care not whence this policy em anates," continued Mr. Boutelle, “whether from a Republican presi dent ora Democratic usurper." The confusion that followed the word “usurper" drowned ‘tho rest of the sentence. He continued to talk amid loud cries for order and the speaker at last, with the aid of hts gavel, brought, the house to a stand still. Before the gentleih&fl from Maine had fairly launohed his neat pniiippic opeaxer vnsp suaaeqiy swept the ground from under htm by deciding the point of order In accord* ance with the contention of Mr. Mc Creary and referred the resolution to the committee on foreign affairs. The consideration of the urgency deficiency .bill was then resumed and some very exciting scenes were then enacted before it was finally passed. The item appropriating 1303,030 for special examiners was amended so as to prevent the suspension of any pen sioners without giving the pensioner notice with opportunity to furnish testimony in rebuttal. Amendments were also adopted ap propriating 9180,003 for extra mileage for members and senators, 940,000 for stationary and about 945,000 to pay employes of the house and senate an oxtra month's pay. The most bitter opposition existed to each of these propositions, tho first of which was de nominated on the floor a proceeding whose scandalous character had not been approached since the days of the famous salary gran Mr. llland and Mr. Holman ied the fight against these propositions with a view to plac ing the members on record with an aye and nay vote, but they wero not numerically strong enough, and the committee on rules ultimately brought in a special order, by the terms of whicli the filibustering was stopped without a record-making vote. Huar oa Hawaii. Wasiuxotox, Dec. 21.—When the senate met this morning the vice president laid before it the report of the secretary of the .treasury and it was inferred to (m committee finances. V Senator Hoar pf Massachusetts pre sented a petition on the subject of good roads, signed by about 150,000 citizens This was so heavy that it required the efforts of several em ployes to wheel it into the senate chamber. Mr. Oallinger of New Hampshire offered a resolution (upon which he said he would address the senate after the holidays) “that in view of the widespread industrial depression, it is the sense of the senate that it is un wise to attempt a change in the tariff laws during the present administra tion.” Mr. Hoar of Massachusetts addressed the senate upon the Hawaiian ques tion. The president in undertaking to decide the Hawaiian question and to withhold from the people what he was doing until it was settled one way or the other, seemed to have sup posed that he was the Untied States of America and that whatever that phrase meant it was but a synonym for him. The question now was whether the people of the United States were living under a constitu tion or a dictator. This question he discussed at great length. At the conclusion of Mr. Hoar’s re marks, Mr. Morgan, chairman of the committee on foreign relations, offered a resolution that the committee on foreign relations should inquire whether irregularities had occurred in the diplomatic or other intercourse between the United States and Ha waii. Ho explained the resolution and it was agreed to. Ex-Congressman Beaten and Robbed. Forest, Miss., Dec. 31.—J. H. ltoe man, ex-congressman from this dis trict, was called to thedoor of his rek--J idence near Ely lost night, by \ two masked men and after heing brutally beaten was robbed of 9350. He is se riously injured. The eye of the master will do more work than both of his handa Mot to oversee workmen is to leave your I purse open. FIRST HAWAIIAN SKIRMISH* Lively niM la tk* Imm Or*r the frM< Meat's Hmmi« ■ yi\ Washikotok, Deo. 20.—The fight over the Hawaiian matter la the house followed fast and furious on the heels of the message, which was de* laved on aceount of the pension debate until 8:30 yesterday afternoon* The first skirmish occurred over the 4«es tldn of reading the instructions to Minister Willis, which was insisted upoc by Mr. Boutelle of Maine The' house finally agreed to this and imme diate y after the conclusion of this reading Mr. Uoutelle renewed the as* aault by bringing forward a resolu tion declaring the administration pol icy Inconsistent with the spirit of the constitution and the traditions of the government. Great excitement reigned but Mr. Boutelle failed to follow up his parliamentary advantage and was : ruled out of order. The resolution of Mr. Cockran for the appointment of a committee 0f >: seven to Investigate the alleged Inva sion of the territorial Integrity, of the United Htates by the last administra tion also went down under a retalia- ; tory objection of Mr. Boutelle. The confusion was so great the sergeant at-arms was called in to preserve' ' order. An adjournment was caused by the lack of a quorum on a motion to go into committee. Party feeling ran very high at the close of the ses sion. S, In transmitting the Hawaiian cor respondence to the house of represent- > atlves. President Cleveland said: ‘‘In compliance with a resolution of the ^ house, I hereby transmit a report with copies of the Instructions given ^ to Mr. Alberts. Willis, the represent ative of the United States now in the Hawaiian islands, and also the cor respondence since Maroh 4, 1880, con cerniDg the relations of this govsrn* nient to those islands. In making this communication, I have withheld only a dispatch to the former minis ter to Hawaii, No. 70, under date of, October h, 1893, and a dispatch from' ' the present minister, No. 3, under , date of November 10, 1803, because, in' my opinion, the publication of these two papers would be incompatible with the public Interests." The dispatch of November 10, 1893, is without doubt the detailed informa tion of (he developments which prompted Minister Willis’ telegraphlo dispatch of the same date to Secretary , Greaham, on which is baaed the order . Jo suspend instructions. * NBW8 IN BRIEF. f Phllip Schelg, the Minneapolis bank, robber, was sentenced to six years la prison at hard lahoj-. • I A number of Inuietment* h-v- h**n found ifilnit Pension Attorney Van Leuven at Dubuque, Iowa. j General Dalus E. Coon, formerly a prominent citizen of Iowa, wan ado!*;, dentljr shot and killed In Southern^ California. The circuit court at Wsrrensburg, Mo., has awarded the widow of Sena* tor Sparks !a judgment of 12,1(0,87 against the Masonio Indemnity com* pany. The Charity society at Indishapolta. has under its care 735 families, all! wholly dependent on charity. jt is expect yd the number will be so tn*j creased that 0,000 persons will bare to be fed. President Peixotoof Brasil has posU poned the olections for members of' congress until Ma^r. Pour hundred unemployed "men of PlMsburg, Pa., have been set to work! In tne parks at 81 per day. f More }kty gtrlj from 14 to 18! years or age litre disappeared from I . Lynn, Mass, within the {ast three or four weeks and the police have begun a thorough investigation. * TThe Benwood Iron works, the lop mill and Wheeling plants at the. Wheeling Iron and Steel company,}; at Bellaire, Ohio, are closed. The cause is a gpr cent redaction istil wages g Edna Milvilte, a young woman lie*' inpat a boarding honse in Chicago^] was brutally assaulted by an unknown! colored man who went there to beg! for something to tat and was given food. | The Prince Edward island schooner, Oracle Parker was driven on the rocks and went to pi sentCaptain'Farrell' and his crew of Mven men were lost. During the season just closed 10,- . 000,000 barrets of flour were received at Buffalo, N. Y., making it the larg est flour depot in the world. Tbevalne of the product in round d umbers la between 830,000,000 and 840,000,OOlit ! Officers of tbe Chinatown police squad of Denver, Col., found a Cbln-I ese leper In a deep cellar on Wazeejr street The man is 65 years old and! for two years had been confined *«*K this foul pit, which had neither win- * dows nor ventilation. , ' Attorney Baumdnn of Johanesburg,' South Africa, is endeavoring to get. the permission of tbe government to1 try to recover the treasure in the vessel Brykenyhold, sunk off the. African coast over forty years ago*) He believes that tbe treasure eou-iI slated of 300,000 sovereigns near Qatek Jostles for Tnta Robbers. Austin, T«m, Dee. 30.—Dick W»V> lace, Lum Dalton. Lewis Shelton and: Bill Bronson, alias Bronco Bill, ths( four men who held np and robbed the, International and Great Northern train near Duval, this state, on the 11th insL, were arraigned and tried' before Judge Morris, in the district court of Travis county, yesterday and. each found guilty and' sentenced to, thirty-five years in the penltentiarysj ' Tbraatsoad by Joint Advocates. Wichita, Kan., Dec. 30.—The Ben, Dr. Winters, pastor of the First Pres*, byterian church and a noted lecturer, received an anonymous letter to-day] threatening that if he did not cease: his contributions to the Law and Order] league in aid of the crusade against, the saloons he would meet with the . same treatment accorded the ,Bev. J. D. Woods, who was recently assaulted, j ; --- "• The Trank Trust Goes to Weses, Oshkosh, Win, Deo. 30.—The trunkr trust, more properly termed the Nn*l tlonal trunk company, has ended, the Schemit Bros. Trunk company of r of thta city, the largest concern fa the truhtJ having withdrawn. ~ -