i i ARE ORDERED TO ACT 1 INSTRUCTIONS TO AMERICAN PEACE COMMISSIONERS United State Positively Declines to Tolerate Any More Jockeying Span iards 3Iii3t Hurry Out of Cuba and Pay Cuban Debt Debate to Stop Spanish sovereignty in Cuba must end forever with the advent of the new year and all Spanish soldiers must be out of the island by Jan 3 according to an ultima tum that was cabled to Madrid Tuesday All of the Spanish troops that remain in Cuba after the date named will be subject to the regulation of the American army This question and several others of equal importance were finally decided at an informal cabinet meeting which was attended by President McKinley Secre taries Jnng Alger and Hay and Attorney General- Griggs which was followed by the dispatch of warm messages to Madrid and Paris The United States will take possession of Cuba on Dec 3 and will assume con trol of the custom houses and direct the civil government Gen Blanco will cease to be chief of the island and must busy himself with the deportation of his troops Spain asked to he given until Feb 1 to evacuate but the cabinet decided not to extend the lime beyond this year The American peace commissioners at Paris were directed to inform their Span ish colleagues in unmistakable terms that it is uNcless to discuss the Cuban debt which will not be assumed by either this country or Cuba They are to take up questions that are open to discussion of which the disposal of the Philippines is the most important It is reported that Spain has agreed to the cession of the isl and of Guam in the Ladrones MERRITT IS MARRIED Ceremony Is in Private ou Account of the illness of tbe Bride Maj Gen Wesley Merritt Unite States army and Miss Laura Williams off Chicago were married in London Monday Elaborate plans had been made for the wedding which was to have taken place at St Andrews Church in the presence of Gen Merritts staff and a large gathering mrm I K5 W tf i i A X I Tt T VJ 3 M f a J y ha j - yj a L J V- A MEKHITT AXI HIS JllllDE - I- - I of British nobility and army officers both the bride and groom being well known in the London exclusive set But the seri ous illness of Miss Williams disarranged all the plans and the wedding was a quiet and most unostentatious ceremony ac cording to London dispatches performed in the apartments of the brides mother iu the Savoy Hotel TRAFFIC POOL ILLEGAL Siiprcme Court Gives Railroads Com bination a Death Blow The Supreme Court on Monday render ed an opinion on thcso ealled Joint Traffic Association cae which has been pending over a year The court by a vote of five to three Justices Gray Shiras and White reversed the findings of the court below and held against the Joint Traffic Asso ciation Incidentally the court affirmed the constitutionality of the anti trust law The court also decided two other cases brought under the anti trust law These were the Kansas City Live Stock Asso ciation cases which the court below decid ed were in restraint of trade This judg ment was Teversed The Supreme Courts decision holding that the Joint Traffic Association was a combination in restraint of trade and com merce and ihat the association was ille gal means that organization must stop transacting the business for which it was formed or ele must operate on entirely new lines The case is considered one of the most important that has ever come before the Supreme Court The associa tion was formed Nov 19 1895 by thirty one railways representing the greattrunk lines and their network of branches The purpose of the association as stated in the articles of agreement was to establish and maintain reasonable and Just rates fares and Tegulations on State and inter state traffic PULLMAN COMPANY HIT Coiu t Declares Corporation Ha Ex ceeded Its Limitations The Pullman Palace Car Company is hard hit by a decision of the Illinois Su preme Court which has declared that the corporation usurped power not granted in its charter when it bought real estate and built thereon the town of Pullman Char ter violation is also held in the companys owning stock in the Pullman Iron and Steel Company and the land it owns near the JBelt Line Stripped of all legal technicalities the important parts of the decision affecting the company arc as follows The court holds that the charter of the company did not clothe it with power to purchase the real estate upon which the town or city of Pullman is built or to construct the him ings in said town or city or to engage in the business of renting dwellings store rooms market places etc It holds that it may not own stock in the Pullman Iron and Steel Company but that it may sel liquors to the passengers on its cars Winston N C claims the distinction ol selling more pounds of leaf tobacco direct from the hands of the farmer than any other loose market in the world The present tobacco year the market will sell 2000000 more pounds of tobacco than it has ever sold before the sales reaching tQ more than 18000000 pounds Geological specimens lately discovered at Mount Poole in the far west of New South Wales are considered to show that in a distant age the sea divided Australia into two or more portions They consist of fossil shells etc 4aJW wawMwmKwjm IN THE HOLY LAND Historic Spot Which Kinperor Will iam Ih Visiting The visit to Jerusalem of Ivaiser Wil helm II excites intense interest not only because it is one of the most spectacular journeys of recent years but on account of its possibilities of changing the political future of Palestine The German Em peror has a desire to be known in history as William the Colonizer it is believed that some deal between himself and the Sultan for the acquisition of Syria and Palestine is already in progress and his visit may therefore be an epoch in the CHUKCH OF ST MARYS history of the ancienf city which has seen during its 4000 years changes innumera ble in politics and government The Em peror entered Jerusalem Monday and for several weeks will devote his time to vis iting spots of historic interest On Sun day the Emperor assisted in the dedication of the Church of St Marys which is built on an historic site Since he has been visiting the holy places the site of Solo mons temple the Church of the Holy Sepulchre the tomb of David the tomb of Rachel and the Garden of Gethsemane are among the thousand and one historic places upon which the Emperors feet will tread THE SITUATION AT V1RDEN Soldiers Are Returning Home and Conditions Becoming Normal There have been no important develop ments lately in the coal mining situation at Virden 111 and affairs are monotonous ly dragging along The companys works are at a standstill and it is thought that no further attempts will be made to im port negro miners The most exciting incident of the situa tion since the fight of Oct 12 was the de parture to Chicago of Manager Fred W Lukins He was conducted to the train outside the stockade by a large body of soldiers and hastily put aboard It was feared that an attack -would be made upon him but none was attempted and accord ing to a dispatch the community breathed a sigh of relief when the train bearing him to the general offices of the company in Chicago pulled out of the town Earlier in the day Lukins had given a bond of 1000 for his future appearance on the charge of conspiracy to murder The same charges have been made against T G Loueks of Chicago president of the com pany and other officers Meantime the situation has toned down to almost normal conditions and many of the soldiers have been sent home The services of all of them will perhaps be dis pensed with soon The future develop ments in the troubles between the miners and the coal company will likely be in the courts of Macoupin County APPLES WILL BE A LUXURY Crop in the United States the Small est on Record The Orange Judd Farmer says The apple crop of the United States is smaller than it has been since reliable statistics have been collected The total supply from the 1898 crop of the United States is 27700000 barrels compared with some thing over 40000000 last year and 70 000000 in the record breaking crop of 1896 The failure is widespread reaching from the Pacific coast to Maine and in none of the States does the output of fruit approach an average In the great apple States of the West the crop is almost an absolute failure although the situation in Michigan is better than elsewhere that State having about two thirds of the bumper crop of 96 New York has only one fifth of a full crop The army is short of staff officers and io more will be mustered out at present Spains expenses during the late wai are said to have amounted to 800000 000 The cost of guns alone for United States coast defense during the war was 4821 000 Quiet rules in Porto Rico and residents accept American government without pro test The gunboat Yorktown will go into com mission at San Francisco and will be sent to Manila Two men were killed and another seri ously wounded in a fight at Carters Creek Tenn Gen Blanco is concentrating the Span ish troops in Cuba preparatory to em barkation for Spain The War Department has issued a com pilation of notes on the Philippines both historical and geographical Secretary Long will ask Congress to increase the number of sailors allowed for the navy from 12500 to 20000 All the coast lights of Porto Rico ex cept the one at San Juan destroyed by the bombardment have been relighted Uncle Sam is establishing coaling facil ities for the navy along the Atlantic const from Eastport Me to Port Royal S 0 The United States representative on the Island of Guam in the Pacific adminis ters all of the offices from Governor down President McKinley has ordered that Jefferson Barracks St Louis be made as laTge a military post as any in the coun try Radical autonomist deputies at Havana 2 - y - FEANCE IN FERMENT PARIS DISRUPTED OVER DREYFUS CASE Detroit Journal THE Minister of War Resigns in a Fit of Passion Angry Mob Burns Kiosks Days of the Third Republic Believed to Be Numbered The world has been treated to a new illustration of the fickle volatile charac ter of the French nation in the sudden dis solution of the Bris son ministry after an existence of only a few months The result was precipi tated by the spectac ular performance of Gen Chanoine in resigning the port folio of minister of war which was placed in his hands as the successor of Gen Zurlinden only premier snissox a few weeks ago The situation is all the more surprising tn view of the pressing nature of the con troversy with England over the Fashoda iffair This seems to have been complete ly lost sight of in the excitement over the Dreyfus case for which the army is chief ly if not wholly responsible The sudden act of Chanoine is attributed to the hound ing to which he has been subjected by army officials who are apparently more Bager to carry on an anti Semitic war in he streets of Paris than to meet a for eign enemy in central Africa As the downfall of the Brisson ministry is apparently traceable directly to the hos tility of the army to the steps which have been taken looking ro a revision of the Dreyfus case the natural effect will bo to undo what has been done in that direc Mon as it is not in the nature of a French court to do anything distasteful to both ihe Government and the army For the present army influence is superior to jus tice and the people and if the forms of re- etsion should be gone through -with the result is likely to be merely a repetition of the perversions of justice which have been witnessed in the nasi It is safe to say that this will be the inevitable outcome should the new cabinet be of the charac ter foreshadowed by the tumultuous pro ceedings in the Chamber of Deputies on Tuesday when the rallying cry was Vive Iarmee and Down with the Jews Gen Chanoine in announcing his res ignation repeated the declaration of his wj n yrs y M DELCASSE OEX CHANOIXE predecessor Gen Zurlinden that Drey fus was guilty Premier Brisson then took the tribune and in a forcible speech I appealed to the chamber for support in maintaining the supremacy of the civil power M Brisson protested against the I manner of Gen Chanoines resignation declaring it to be contrary to all precedent He then demanded an adjournment of the chamber in order to enable him to consult j with his colleagues and the sitting was suspended amid great excitement j Later in the day vast crowds gathered I hi the Place de la Concorde and began a violent demonstration The mob burned several kiosks on the Place do la Con- corde A fight occurred on the Boule vard Montmartre between the police and the anti Jewish rioters and several of the mob had their heads broken Another serious conflict resulted from a demonstra tion made by a number of royalists who assembled in front of the military club The royalist flag was snatched from the hands of the man carrying it and a violent tussle followed The excitement in the streets continued throughout the evening the mob deliriously downing traitors Jews and M Brisson The disgraceful scenes and excitement temporarily put aside the Fashoda inci dent and the fear of war arising there from Throughout the disturbing events Tuesday not a word or thought was devot ed to the war crisis This distracted coun try is completely absorbed in her appalling domestic troubles and the people at large scarcely recognize the existence of the Fashoda dispute In some quarters it is believed the days of the third French re public are numbered have signed a document declaring their I n niA ha coin Gen- Blanco has ordered the sale oiiorJU allegiance to the new political status in Cuba i ojjuilisu army ciiuipiucius in uuuu I STORM ON THE LAKES Wild Wind and Waves Work Terrible Havoc From all over the great lakes Wednes day came tales of wrecks dangers and narrow escapes in the terrific gale of Tues day night The storm was defined by the weather authorities as a cyclone with its center between Chicago and Grand Ha ven Mich Tales of numerous wrecks and dangers came from all points in the southern portion of Lake Michigan It j will be several days before all the story of tne storm can be learned So far as Chicago is concerned the storm was the most disastrous of recent years not excepting the great gale of May 1894 Old tugmen say that the waves were higher than at any time since 1889 when the lake shore road and a part of Lincoln Park were washed away Lin coln Park Commissioners estimate the damage done by the storm at 30000 Fisk Hall the large new building of the Northwestern University was for a time in great danger of serious injury from the high waves The wall that was built out into the lake to protect the building from just such storms was washed away at a loss of 5000 The steamer H A Tuttle laden with grain from Chicago went down off Michigan City the crew being taken off by life savers COMING ELECTIONS Officers Who Are to Be Chosen in the Various States The elections will be held Tuesday Xov 8 The elections for Representatives in Congress will be held in all States but three namely Maine Vermont and Ore gon which have elected their Representa tives In some of the States the elections will have more significance because of their bearing upon the selection of United States Senators Reference to some of the most important elections follows New York will elect Governor and Leg islature A successor to Senator Murphy is to be elected by the Legislature Pennsylvania will elect Governor Leg islature and the latter a successor to Sen ator Quay West Virginia will elect a Legislature to find a successor to Senator Faulkner IP SIR HERBERT KITCHENER Sir Horatio Herbert Kitchener the sir dar of the Egyptian army and the new hero of the Soudan is a young man being but 47 for the high place he has won by merit in the military service of his coun try He was born in Ireland and at 20 was a lieutenant By 18SS he had been advanced to the rank of colonel Ho spent eight years surveying in the Holy Land during which he picked up a very fair knowledge of colloquial Arabic This to gether with his knowledge of the native character went far toward his success in the Soudan An adequate story of the sirdars life would read like one of Scotts romances of the East nis wanderings in Pales tine the Soudan Erzeroum Africa and LOOKS AS THOUGH SOMETHING WOULD HAVE TO GIVE lb JfiE5k 1 ill S5cSSL -75 m mz z x tt m fiMU7jf of New Jersey will elect a Governor and Legislature to find a successor to Sen ator Smith Nebraska will elect a Gov ernor and Legislature with the seat of Senator Allen at stake Missouri will elect a Legislature and Supreme judge the Legislature to name Senator Coek rells successor California will elect a Governor and Legislature and the latter will choose a successor to Senator White Indiana will elect a Legislature to choose a successor to Senator Turpie and will also select a Secretary of State Illinois will choose one half the State Senate and a State Treasurer The State Senators will vote upon the successor of Senator Cullom whose term expires in 1901 Massachusetts will elect a Governor and Legislature the latter to name a successor to Senator Lodge Michigan will elect a Governor and Leg islature and the Legislature will select a successor to Senator Burrows Minnesota will elect a Governor and Legislature in which will be involved the naming of Senator Davis successor Wisconsin will elect a Governor Legis lature and the seat of Senator Mitchell is in the issue In Washington Tennes see Utah Wyoming Delaware Connecti cut Texas North Dakota and Nevada a United States Senalorship is concerned in the legislative elections STORMS HAVOC ON THE LAKE SICKNESS ON THE WANE Physical Condition Reported of Cuban Better Troops The sickness among the troops at Sagua de Tanamo and Baracoa Cuba has de creased Soldiers of the Cuban army are still in their camps living off the country Gen Wood has decided to send Captain Shelly into the interior of the province to learn the real condition of the poor peo ple Lieut Brooks says the need for dis tributing free rations will not be great after the first of the year elsewhere have been filled with thrilling episodes He has been shot at by Bedou ins almost murdered in Palestine nearly hanged for being a spy but his delight has been to penetrate dens of villainy to find out at all hazards the mysteries of the Orient for himself He has disguised him self a score of times and has thrown dice with death to further some military plan of his own Such is the sirdar BEGS FOR MERCY Spain Abandons Claims to Concessions on Cuban Debt The cable announces that Spain has at last abandoned her attitude of claiming any concessions in Cuba and Porto Rico as a matter of right and has now simply thrown herself on the mercy of her con queror The Spanish representatives did this at Wednesdays session of the joint peace commission in Paris acting under instructions from Madrid They pointed out that only by some re lief from the Cuban debt could the com plete ruin of Spain be averted and sub mitted facts and figures in proof of their declaration The cable containing this information was received in Washington while the President was in Philadelphia attending th peace jubilee and Secretary Hay immediately sent the cablegram by his executive clerk on a special train SHORE AT CHICAGO Great Capital of Trusts The New York World prints a list of all the trusts in existence which includ ing the five now forming make a total of 156 It estimates their united capital at 2238G9S000 The trusts now forming will alone be capitalized at 240000000 All of these may be affected by the decis ion4of the Supreme Court against the Joint Traffic Association J T Johnston lost his life in a cottage fire at Sherman Texas while trying to save his personal effects USE AND ABUSE OF CHLORAUy Clersymen Seem to Be Particularly Addicted to Thia Habit Chloral is the most popular hypnotic and Is the one which most frequently gives rise to habit Clergymen seem to be particularly addicted to the form ation of this habit When I opened the discussion on hypnotics at the Brit ish Medical Association last month I was taken to task for saying that chlor al was a dangerous drug yet it was ad mitted that it was the custom to give digitalis with the chloral says the Post Graduate Digitalis is not an antidote to the paralyzing effect of chloral when administered with it for the action of disritalis is altogether toe slow jases were quoted in which patients had tak en large doses of chloral and had sur vived but these exceptions prove noth ing and are no more an argument for the safety of chloral than the fact that persons have fallen from great heights and have escaped injury is an argument for jumping off high buildings Chloral is not a safe drug Sooner or later it will be used in a case of fatty degen eration of the heart and the patient may be killed with perhaps a dose of only ten grains It is not a safe drug certainly in the hands of such practi tioners as would administer digitalis at the same time Of the substitutes for chloral butyl chloral has been aban doned Prof Richet claims that chloralose is a sedative so far as the brain is con cerned and a stimulant so far as the spinal cord is concerned This is true of dogs but in a fatal case seen in prac tice the paralysis came from the heart and there were no symptoms that could be attributed to overexcitability of the spinal cord There is a safe derivative of chloral however chloralamide The introduction of the amide radical neu tralizes to a considerable extent the de pressing action on the heart It is fair ly insoluble and is therefore more pro longed in its action It is far safer than chloral It is difficult to form a habit with chloralamide yet I know of one instance in which the patient developed the habit after taking it without my knowledge for a year The habit was cured without great difficulty Heaviest Metal ol All An English scientist writes interest ingly of osmium the bluish white metal with a violet luster which Smithson Hennant discovered in the residue of platinum ores This metal has a sue- cific gravity of 22447 that of gold W A ing 192Go lead 11309 iron 770 nnu lithium the lightest only 0594 The French chemist Toly determined that osmium is likewise the most infnsible of metals It could never be made to yield to the oxyhydrogen flames which makes platinum and iridium rnii like water But loly has been subject ing osmium to the excessively high tem perature of the electric arc which Hois san has of late employed successively in the manufacture of diamonds Un der this tierce heat the rare meiaL ru thenium which used to be deemed all but infusible readily melts But os mium remains refractory there heiii apparent only the faintest traces of fi sion On this account osmium cannot be prepared in sufficient quantify tc make it very useful in the arts But its alloy with iridium which defies the acids is of some value nothing better having been found wherewith to tip gold pens Being nonmagnetic Its em ployment for the bearings of tbs mariners compass has been advocated Lou AVillin x to Oblige getting too stout for com fort but am unable to find a remedy Short It is said that nothing duces surplus flesh like worrv k Long But I have nc thinj me to wtny y Short Well just to help you out Im willing to let you lend me l0 The women In a certain neighborhood are fiercely abusing a father because he refuses to kiss his new baby as long as the pink is on it Is there a t anywuere who blames him JEs i y Sighting a Trunk Old Governor H has many laughable stories told of him I remember see ing him once in a state of mind usually called wrath The circumstances were as follows The governor returning home from a tour to the northern part of the State put up for the night at a hotel in the flourishing and beautiful village of Princeton situated on the Fox River The next morning after arriving at home he discovered that he had left his trunk at the hotel twenty miles away He just then saw one of the neighbors going to Princeton and in his most pompous style requested himv to call at the hotel and see if then was not a little trunk there belonging to him Yes with pleasure replied the kind and obliging neighbor When ready to return he found his wagon heavily loaded the trunk pro -ed to be a large and well filled traveling trunk quite heavy and it was quite certain on the principle of antecedent probabilities that he would never get a cent for his trouble so seeing that it was safe at the hotel he drove home As he approached the residence of the governor the latter went out and open ed the gate expecting the trunk would be taken in and left at the door The farmer told him he was not coming in - But says the governor did- you not get my trunk No you didnt ask me to get it - Did not What would yon call it 1 asked you thundered the exasperated governor Why you asked me to look and see if it was there I did so and yon will find it safe there any day by just driv ing over to Princeton Good day gov ernor good day Suffice it to the governor didnt ask that neighbor to do any more er rands for him ti 4