MOTHER TRUCE FLAG NEWS PErOHTa BAY AGUINALDO 'ASKS FOR A CONFERENCE. i To Send Commliflsn to Confer with 'Americana Movement on Bacolor. Manila, May 14. The Filipinos have resumed the attempt to induce the Americans to discuss the situation. Reyes, a roung lieutenant on the staff of General Gregorio De Pilar, came to ; General Lawton under a flag of truce. Be was accompanied by a barefooted 'bugler. The two were escorted to Ma nila by Captain Sewall of General Law. ton's stair. Reyes told Major General Otis that Aguinaldo desired passes for military commission to come to Ma nila to confer with the American-Phil. Ipplne commissioners. General Otis replied that passes would not be necessary, as unarmed commissioners could enter the Ameri can lines. He would leave the matter. he said, In General Lawton's hands. Lieutenant Reyes returned In the even ing to Bacolor. MOVEMENT ON BACOLOR "Washington. D. C, May 16. Official Washington is waiting with consider-. 'able anxiety for the result of the move ment against Bacolor, which has been begun by the troops under the com mand of General MacArthur and Gen. eral Lawton No news of the present location of the troops or when the assault on the insurgents encamped at Bacolor may be expected, has been received br depart ment officials, and !t is presumed that the time which has e'ppsed since the receipt of General Otis' last message lias been occupied in making the dis position of the men necessary to pre vent the escape of the 9.000 Filipinos be lleved to be entrenched at that point It had been hoped by this time Gen eral Lawton would be in the vicinity of Bacolor, but the operations of his scouts at Ildefonso would seem to in dlcate that his headquarters are still not far from Baling. San Ildefonso is Just to the north of Massin, about eigb teen miles to the northeast of Bacolor and fourteen miles to the eastward of Mexico, where General Luna's head quarters are established. No official advices have been received regarding the operations of the scouts under Cap tain Berkheimer, and it is believed in the absence of such information that General Otis is awaiting results of the present movement before making any report Officials familiar with the latest ad. iVices from General Otla are hopeful (that by this time General MacArthur has moved his column so as to occupy (the railroad connecting Bacolor with the northern portion of the island. Four miles separate his headquarters at San 'Fernando and the railroad. With the wagon route connecting San Fernando end .Bacolor in his possession and the railroad occupied by his troops, it will pe an extremely difficult matter for the Insurgents' general at Bacolor to retire twlth his entire army, I General Otis, it Is expected, will send gunboats up the numerous streams traversing the country to the south of i Bacolor, so that they can effectively co-operate with General MacArthur and General Lawton when the attack on that city Is made, With the reinforcements sent to Gen eral MacArthur and to General Law- jton. the authorities are confident that 01"e company and the United States Ithese officers will have a sufficient force Glue company of Milwaukee, the De ite destroy the Insurgent army and cap- lane comMnT of Philadelohla and tha ture a considerable number of Its mem bers, and at the same time to make a (demonstration that will hold General Luna in check. ' It Is appreciated that the Insurgents to the south of Manila, for the purpose of relieving their comrades in the north, xnay make a demonstration against that elty, but the authorities feel certain ''that General Otis has a sufficient force tto repel any attack that may be made. I Secretary Hay received today a re port from the Philippine commission transmitting copies of the proclamation Issued some weeks ago, setting forth the purposes of the United States with respect to the Filipinos. These proc lamations are printed in Spanish.Tagale land English, and according to Presi dent Schurman have been very widely I distributed. At the time the report was written Dr. Schurman took a very en couraging view of the situation. BATTLE FOR A TOWN ; Manila. P. I., May 1. Twenty Amer ican scouts under the command of .Captains Case and Berkheimer. sup ported by two companies of the Min nesota and Oregon volunteer regiments, flanked the insurgents at San Ildefonso land captured the town. The Filipinos l were so terrorised that although they I nred W,M0 rounds of ammunition they .only slightly wounded one scout. The (Americans killed one insurgent officer land wounded six men. Tne insurgents retreated to- San Hsfiguel, stx miles northward of Ban IrJdefonso. 1 Captured records show that 20 per leant of the opposing Insurgent force has been killed and wounded since Lawton's advance began on May' 1. General Rios, Spain's military repre sentative here, says the Inhabitants iof Zasnboeaga, on the island of Mln .stanao, demanded arms from General ' &4 . Ia. if -f -tiaa ...Inal tit Ifef of the American forces, but their jreqaest was refused. I r !r.,ht nr. o. the li." .ct. STu.r7wtt2 I machine guns ana men stolen irom '? ElrseiiL I ' k aaJtrai were repulsed with great I ftoaa- rrsaarsl Mooters, a mater of en- I r nt ESS JELZewns 1 ' rffiTST mrZmmaUUn GRAIN STRIKE STILL ON. The "Bcoopere" on the Bis Lakes are Having Trouble. Buffalo. N. Y.. Mav 17. From th present indications it li not likely tha the question of the appointment of bos scoopers will be readily settled Contractor Connor says be will not agree to bosses being chosen by any one but himself. Messrs. Gowder an Corrigan were in consultation with Mr Connor and agreed that the carriers would not concede anything on thl point to the strikers. The receipts of grain have been much lighter for the last few days because shippers are withholding their grai until the scoopers' trouble is settled Consequently the condition of the har bor is being relieved, but there are still over forty boats to be unloaded. Every coal and ore dock in Buffalo is now said to be tied up. Saturday morning seventy men employed at the Lackawanna coal dock joined the strik ers and a little later the men at the 3cott ore dock also quit. They num bered about fifty men. Several men were sent to Dunkirk. Erie and other lake ports to Induce un ion men at those places to refrain from fueling vessels bound up or down. The men out number about TOO. The grain contractor brought In two carloads of men from the vicinity of Bradford. Pa., and twenty-six from Tonawanda were Dut to work, minus a few who degerted when they learned that they were to take the places of strikers. IOWANS RETURN FROM ALASKA Tales of Suffering and No Profits In bight. Skagway. Alaska, May 17.-F. A. H Fysh and Al Williams reached Dawson April 16 from Kotzebue sound. Fysh and Williams formed two of a party of eighteen who left Iowa last summer and Joined the big rush which landed 2,000 men on the various rivers of Kot zebue sound. The party ertabllshed winter quar ters 300 miles up the Kowak river. After untold hardships and labor they decided that there was no gold In the country. On February 19 Fysh and Williams struck out over the divide to the Koyukuk, thence to Dawson, a dls tance of 1,600 miles. Mr. Fysh reports that Kotzebue sound is thickly peopled with an in telligent race of Indians, closely re sembllng the Japanese in habits and physique. The principal diet hereto fore has been dried salmon, but the abundance of white man's food last summer was the cause of laying away less than half a crop of salmon. Tbe result this winter was that the Illy nourished natives have been dying oft like sheep. He says the opening of the Bering sea will see the exoaus or me last white man, and only a scattering of cabins will mark the scene of one of the most disastrous gold hunting ex peditions since Corteas landed -on the coast of Florida, PLANS FOR A GLUE TRUST. This Industrial Combination Is the Stlckest of Ail. New York, May 17. Preliminary plans for the organization of the Amer ican Glue company were effected in this city. The new company will have a capital of J35, 000,000. The corporation will acquire the plants of the Armour ! company in Chicago, the American Glue company of Boston, the Diamond United States Tanners' Glue company, which controls the output of eastern tanneries. Plans have already been ar ranged for the erection of a glue fac tory at Newark, N. J. The new concern will also own the glue factory in Mil waukee, erected recently as a joint en terprise by Milwaukee tanneries. The glue stock of the Packing house of Ar mour Co. has been contracted for for fifteen years. WHISKY TRUST CAPITALIZATION Stock Watered 660 per Cent In vestigation at Washington. Washington, D.C., May 17. The whis ky trust was under investigation by the Industrial commission. Chas. C. Clarke, a distiller of Peoria, III., was the wit ness. He outlined the history of all combinations of distilleries In the Unit ed States from 1872 to the organisation of the present so-called trust. The present organisation Is a combi nation of the American Spirits Manu facturing company and the Standard Distilling and Distributing company. The two companies co-operate, being controlled practically by the same own- Prior to the organisation of the Standard company the combination had not been sufficiently strong to hold up prices, but for the last year, and until the first of the present month, the ad ditions made by the Standard company had had the effect of bringing up prices to a profitable margin. Within the last week or two, however, there had been a reduction below the cost of produc tion. Two New York Bankrupts. New Tork, May 17. Tobias, Israel and Simon Losser, comprising the firm of Losser Brothers, manufacturers of ck,thln - !"" " .nk- ruptcy. with liabilities of m.m. of wnicn (, is securea. David Henderson, theatrical mana- gcr, who lives at the Hotel Lincoln, this citr. baa filed a netltlon In bank. npter The ItaMUtk are $130,. . which tM.tl are unsecured and NUM partially secured. A large part of Um dewta wet Incurred la Chicago a theater there. WANTS 110 BIG DISPLA ADMIRAL DEWEY WANTS TO BE LET ALONE. How Dewey will Return Home H Health Not the Best and Needs Rest and Quiet. Manila, May 17. Admiral Dewey wll" sail for New Tork by way of the Suei canal on board the United States cruli er Olympia in about five days. It expected that the voyage will occupv about four months. San Francisco, Cal., May 17. In re sponse to a message from Mayoi Phelan asking htm to become the guest of the coast on his return from Manila. Admiral Dewey has cabled as follows: "With sincere thanks, I must declln the hospitality of the Pacific coast Condition of my health makes absolute rest and quiet Imperative." Admiral Dewey will leave for th United States as soon as he can ar range his business there and give full instructions for the management of th fleet to his successor. The United Statej cruiser Olympia, upon which Admlra Dewey will make the voyage home, will sail a leisurely trip, stopping at Medl terranean ports fur some time to glv the admiral and the officers of the ship and the crew an opportunity for rest Like al! the Olympla's company, Admira Dewey is much run down by his Ion stay in a tropical port without change and under the rigid conditions iniiden to a war footing. All are delighted at the prospect of returning home. The officers have had little shore leave and have been obliged always to be on shipboard by sundown The crew have had still less leave an show the effect of a year on the h ships. The Olympia will go from Ma nlla to Hong Kong, where a fortnight will be spent in transforming the mud color with which It was painted white, having up to thlB time been un able to comply with the department order to take on white paint. At Hong Kong the cruiser will be provisioned for the further journey. Dewey ex pects to retain his position on thf United States commission. Washington, D. C, May 17. Secretary Long said of the proposition to present Admiral Dewey with a home: "The proposed gift of a home to Ad mlral Dewey is not only a great and deserved tribute to him, but an expres sion of the generous gratitude of the people. It is something in which they will all wish to share and in which the widow's mite will be as big as th( Millionaire's check. Handsome as it the gift, the spirit that prompts it U still finer." IOWA SOLDIERS MUSTERED OUT Savannah, Ga., May 1. The Forty ninth Iowa, Colonel Dows, was muster ed out here Saturday. The regiment was routed by the Georgia & Alabama and Seaboard Air Line, passing Atlanta Sunday morning and proceeding via Cincinnati and Chicago to the west After being paid off the men raided soda water stands, bread and sausage wagons In camp, took all the stuff and urned over the wagons. The police were called out and many arrests wer made. The men were hauled to police barracks in patrol wagons and trolley cars. The station was packed with them, and the recorder had to hold a special court to hear the cases. The boys were in a joyful mood and took regular schoolboy fashion to show It. THOUSANDS OF DEAD SHEEP. They Were Sheared Too Soon and Cold Weather Kills Them. Denver, Colo., May 17. A special from Price, Utah, says: There are thousands of head of dead sheep strewn along the hills and in the gulches leading into the canons of the Price river, some twenty-five miles to the west of here. Flock owners have been out since the cold snap of tec days ago getting their herds together and find the worst condition of affairs that has existed for many years. The 70,000 head or more sheared at Price, and 35,000 at Colton were sent Into the hills, where there was snow at the time and where the grazing was good. Out of 40,000 head owned in Price there is a loss already accounted for of over 2. BOO. Herds further back in the hills will have heavier losses. BIO COAL STRIKE, Kansas and Missouri Miners' are Trying to Force Recognition. Pittsburg, Kas., May 17. The strike of coal miners in Western Missouri and Southwestern Kansas ordered by Na tional President Michael of the United Mine Workers' association, to take place at noon Saturday, was respect, ed at all camps except Tale, at which latter, however, the men may yet go out At a meeting of the Tale miners. It was shown by a vote of 18 to ISO that the camp was opposed to the strike that only called out part of the miners of JCansaa and Missouri. Spanish Students on tha War Path Valladolld, Spain, May 17. A dispute between a student and a cadet led to a desperate fight between students oi the university and cadets on the prom enade Acere. The students used stlcki and chairs and the cadets fought wltb their swords. Tradesmen were obliged to close their shops during the affray. The fight was renewed In the evening, when workmen took the pert of th students, sweating "Long live the peo fla.N . VOLUNTEERS DO THE FIGHTING Regulars Used as Camp Followers to Hold Captured Ground. Battle Creek, Neb., May 17. A late letter from the Philippines is one writ ten by John Clark Hoover of company F, First Nebraska, to bis father, Private J. D. Hoover of this place. It is bright and newsy, but the most impressive feature is the evi dent feeling of weariness that man! tests Itself between the lines, notwlih standing the young soldier's determina tion not to complain. Although mailed a month ago. It contains Information regarding the greatly reduced strength 3f the First Nebraska that has been but recently given out through official channels. The letter Is as follows: Malolos, P. I., April S Father: wrote you a short note the day we cap tured Malolos, and we are still here. Out of the 1,028 men we left Manila with but 3s5 remain for duty. One hun dred and fifty-seven were killed or wounded. The others were taken sick 3T had cold feet. "Pete (Frank Peterson) was wounded Curas Is with the transportation quar termaster. Olsen is with the pack train. Miller shot off his flng-r some two months ago. Taylor is In the regi mental hospital, played dead ut. So you see I am the only Battle Creek boy it the front. 1 have been In some twenty-odd battles and skirmishes ince we started, and 1 am getting tired of It. They have the regulars ?ome up and hold the ground the vol jnteers have won. They won't give us the proper guns to scrap with, glv- ng them to the regulars. "Look at the list of killed and wound ed. and It tells the story about who lid the fighting. The South Dakota. Pennsylvania. Montana, Kan!tis and Nebraska are the boys. Th Third ar till'-ry was the only regulars to take an active part. We will have t") go against some hard breastworks when we make an advance. "Peterson is walking around, ho his folks need not feel anxious about him, Taylor will be all right In a few days. "We are living high, on cMcHen. pork snd meat nothing too good f"r a fil 3ler. We found a' big wine celllar. ond before they got a guard over it I had a canteen full of claret and twelve hot- ties of champagne. "Some of the boys have unearthed a. poo! deal rf mony. One of the hoys found an 1S04 American dolliir, and there are only three known to be in existence. 'First Sergeant Vlckers of our com pany died yesterday from wounds re ceived in battle. 1 can't soe why the volunteers have all the fighting to do. The engineers dug up a modern six Inch Krupp gun in the streeia of Ma lolos the other day. 'Muft close, as this pen Is giving out. Tell all the boys' folks mat .ney are all right. 'Love to all. J. C. HOOVE R. NEBRASKA NEWS A speclalelertlon was held at Mlnden Saturday to vote upon the proposition to Issue bonds to aid In the erection of new school building to take the place of the one recently destroyed by fire, and the result was that the bonds car. Tied by a vote of nearly five to one. It is proposed to make a high school building of It, and work will commence jdst as soon as possible. At a meeting held at Beatrice, the relatives' association of company C, First Nebraska volunteers, decided to send Rev. C. S. Dudley at once to Washington to personally intercede with the president for the withdrawal of the First Nebraska from the firing line. He will go on behalf of the en tire regiment. All company associa tions of the state are requested to Im mediately wire certified approval of this act to C. S. Dudley, Beatrice. Mayor Lestor of David City Is inau gurating many unlocked for reforms in that city since taking the chair. The first move was to close the back doors of the saloons on Sunday. It has been an open secret for some time that any one who knew how could quench their thirst on Sunday and the surprise and disappointed look said to have been on some faces as they learned the new order of things was noticeable. The next along the line of reform was a hint to the owners of slot machines that the law would be enforced, and the rapidity with which slot machines disappeared was marvelous. T. C. Baker, a wealthy farmer living one and one-half miles from Sterling, has been having things stolen from his barn every few nights for the past two months. The last thing taken was a $45 saddle. Without saying a word to any one Mr. Baker telephoned for the Lincoln bloodhounds, which came and were at once taken to the farm. The dogs got the scent and followed K to the main traveled road, but were un able to follow any further. It Is sup. posed It was loaded Into a wagon and driven off. The dogs were taken back nd Mr. Baker is still short his prop- erty. BOILED DOWN The six-round fight between Matty Matthews and Owen Zetgler was de clared a draw at Chicago. Despite the rainy weather 10,000 people Inspected the gunboat Nashville at St. Lous Saturday. John E. Sebley, investment broiler, has filed a petition In bankruptcy. The total liabilities are 717.6M. Mr. Herbery Lloyd of Elward Lloyd, limited, of London, the proprietors of the Daily Chronicle, Is dead. On account of the long continued drouth prayers for rain were said in every town and village In Koumanla. The United Presbyterian missionary convention adopted resolutions at New. castle. Pa., against the seating of Congressman-elect Roberts of Utah. After three defeats Harvard won In the debate with Tale, held In Cam bridge, Mass., Saturday. The question was: "Resolved, the present method of electing United States senators Is pref erable to a method of election by pop alar vote." CARE FOR ITS OWN DEAD SOUTH RESPECTFULLY DECLINE TO YIELD ITS LABOR OP LOVE. Tha Action Taken by tha United Confederate Veterans as to Care of Cravee of Their Dead. I Charleston, S. C, May 17. With a tplrlted and at times stormy session. the ninth annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans was brought to a close Saturday. General J. B. Gor don, commander-in-chief, and all the old officers were re-elected. Louisville, Ky., was chosen as the next place of meeting, and the question of federal ;are of confederate graves was disposed of by the adoption of a substitute reso lutlon which declines the president's suggestion, except as to those graves located In the north, and reserving to the women of the south the 'duty of raring for the dead of the seceding states and Maryland. The adoption of this resolution and the report that ac companied It brought out considerable jlscusslon, and at times much confusion and disorder prevailed. General Stephen I). Lee presented the report of the committee on history, which was unanimously adopted. This was one of the most important matters before the convention and the reading of the report was listened to with rapt attention. The report alluded to the war with Spain as a factor in oblHerat. ing the feeling of sectionalism between the states and reffrs to the prompt re sponse of the southern slates for troops as showing the depth and fervor of southern patriotism. APPLAUD M'KINLEY'S SENTIMENT Alluding to the question of confed erate graves, the report says: "The recent generous words of President Mc- Klnley, commending the confederate dead to the nation's care, are the ex pressions of a sentiment growing every where, that the dead of the confederate iolditrs are the glory of the whole coun. try and that their memory Is worthy of commemoration wherever brave action strikes a responsive chord In noble hearts." The committee on resolutions then re. ported the substitute for the resolution on the federal care of confederate graves, recommending the "United Con federate Veterans record their sincere appreciation of the utterance of the president of the United States In At lanta In December last in recommend ng the assumption of the care of th graves of our confederate dead bv the lational government; that we shall we) come any legislation which shall resul n the care of the graves of our confed erate dead, it recommends the care of their final resting places Is a sacred trust, dear to the hearts of southern women, and we believe we can safely let it remain there." W. J. Colquitt of Atlanta was elect ed commander-in-chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. His only oppo nent wag Robert E. Lee of Virginia. The next reunion will be held at Louisville, Ky. GENERAL NEWS M. Henri Beeque, the dramatic au thor, is dead at Paris, aged 62 yeais. The donation of 1250,000 by Andrew Carnegie to Birmingham university, England, has been accepted. W. L. Breed of Cincinnati has been elected president of the Western Soci ety for the Prevention of Vice. The death of General Viscount Ka- akaml, chief of the headquarters staff of the Japanese imperial army, is announced. James P. Crawford, president of the Terre Haute Iron and Steel company nd secretary of the Wabash Iron com pany, died of paralysis. At the request of the president Gen. eral Americus V. Rice of Lima, O., will be appointed purchasing agent of the census bureau. Morltx Albert Jacobl, for twenty-five years president of the Cincinnati Frel Presse, died of apoplexy Saturday at his residence In Fort Thomas, O. At the sixty-seventh annual conven tion of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity t New Tork, President James C. Car ter and Secretary Colonel Charles E. Sprague were re-elected. The American Steel Hoop company of Pittsburg has just purchased over 100,. D00 tons of steel for use during the sec. ond half of the year. It is said the price will be 125 at the mill. The National League of Musicians at Milwaukee elected these officers: Pres ident, George Nachmann, Baltimore; secretary, H S. Blessenhert, Indlanap. oils; treasurer, Charles Melber, Clncln. natl. Claude Branton was hanged at Eu gene, Ore., for the murder of John Linn, a stockman, who lived in Gilliam county. Branton's accomplice, Court land Green, confessed and Is now serv ing a life sentence In prison. A strike Is threatened by the Brick, layers' union of New Tork, which de mands U cents per hour Instead of M cents, Its present pay. The union hat 7,000 members. Efforts are being mad to settle the matter without a strike. A movement la on foot to have south ern and northern veterans of the civil war hold a general reunion In St, Lnult some time In the near future. It li also suggested that the Sons of Veter ans of the north and south also meet there at the same time. Suit has been brought In the United Btates court at Philadelphia against th National Pneumatic Tool company by Joseph Boyer of St. Louis and the Chi cago Pneumatic Tool company for In fringement of patents. The National Pneumatic Tool company is a new con. wun nsaoquartera at Phlladel- A MILLIONAIRE'S VIEWS Carnegie Elscussas tha Philippine) Question From Europe) London, May l.Andrew Carnegie gave out the following signed state ment on Imperialism and the political outlook for the United Btates: "It gives me pleasure to oblige you y a statement of the situation in which I find the imperialistic question here. I have seen many of the most promi nent public men now In London whom I know to have been friends of the American republic when it. needed friends. From the highest to the lowest without exception ihey have met me with expressions of deep regret that the republic founded by Washington and his colleagues upon plans so much higher than those of sny other state should have fallen to the level of the military states of Europe. Some of these men stood with Bright In the campaign against the Imperial party here who longed to strike us down.' 1 repeat that without exception these men are lamenting the lapse from true Americanism to this miserable Imper lallsm. "I have met men of the other class who struck us when the republic wae down. Let me give them credit for i change of their feelings toward Amer ica. I know them now to De amongst the foremost advocates of race alliance. Hut I also know If I were a British statesman there would be no price I would not pay for an alliance with America, no price would be too high for securing her entrance Into the troubled waters of the far east, because it Is the d. sire of all English speaking men that we should stand together as against tien not of our race. Nature made blood thicker than water and an alliance with aur republic Is now the keynote of Brit ish policy, and wisely so. But not an alliance with our present Industrial re public. Our present war lord makes himself ridiculous In the eyes of thes tatesmen with three battleships at his back and only 40,000 soldiers strutting like peacocks.as vain and Just as harm less. No. It is not the present indus trial republic England wishes to have as her ally. It Is the republic England ees America must become if It does not soon reverse its policy In regard to the Philippines. We must have a tre mendous navy and a huge standing rmy; for Britain judges truly that Into whatever enterprise the United States goes it will not be content very long to play second fiddle. It Is now inly the cats-paw of England. It could not maintain Its position for a day In Manila if England withdrew her august protection. It is a humiliating position. It makes my blood boil as 1 speak the words. A recreant president is the sole :ause of It. He it was who changed his mind and demanded the Philippines against the advice and wishes of moat of his colleagues. Will the president be permitted to sacrifice the lives of our soldiers much longer In futile fffort to conquer 1.200 Islands that would not stay conquered if they were beaten T Such is the position as viewed from, London. PR08PECTS OF REPUBLICANS. "You ask my personal views as to the future. I answer. President McKlnley will not be allowed by the managers of the republican party to continue his 'oily. I believe he has been already in formed by those whose voice he can aot disregard that he must stop and return to American traditions. The :ountry has no stomach .for victories ver people fighting for righteous gov ernment. Reading between the lines it m seen that he is now veering around. Had he authorized Otis or directed him :o grant Aguinaldo the conference the jitter asked before the war broke out ill that has happened since would have seen unnecessary. Today we see his commission taking every means In Its Dower to get a conference with Aguln- ildo and they are not standing on form. General Otis, as reported by the cables, itill wants to push on military opera. Ions, to which President Schurman oo- lects. The contrast between Otis and Dewey Is significant. Dewey always re ports only what has been done. Otis nas misled the country several times tboul what he Is going to do. His plan f campaign was given out with a great nourishing of trumpets. He was going to corral the enemy, but so far he haa been a complete failure. He won skir mishes, as every One expected, but lost his campaign. The suppression of the news from Manila which our repub lican president enforces would not be tolerated by monarchical Britons. One oppressed cable at Manila which came , via Hong Kong tells us the Nebraska regiment Is reduced to 300 men with IW on the sick list. "The season approaches when mili tary operations must cease and the president no doubt stands aghast at the grave situation. He Is now report. ed as about to call an extra session of congress In a vain effort to relieve him self of the responsibility. My forecast Is that the president will get out of the Philippines and return to American principles by obtaining a shadowy pro tectorate In some form and that he will be able to appear before the republican convention with the Philippine question settled, having given them the same promise of Independence he gave Cuba, and that our party will then carry tha presidential election. If he approach ed the country with the war In the Philippines unsettled It Is Improbable he will get even the nomination. The weight would be too great to carry. This, however, he probably thinks al ready secured, but hi election would then be another story If the democraUe party were to drop silver and come out for Americanism. If the Issue Is pre sented to the people as bet warn the principles of Washington ar MeXialey there Is no doubt of the result Oar party would be beaten, aaa I mm la be. ... "There, you have tempted sa late prophecy a linaiim fesssskss.'