CUBANS SHOW ANGER. DON'T WANT TO SURRENDER THEIR ARVIS. ( Trouble Over Their Disartuine Has CuuHcd ome Anxiety in War Depart ment I'"ic itins Against Brooke's Troop" Deemed Not Impossible. Special dispatches from Washington in dicate that there are differences between the Cubans and Americans of a nature so tense that only the greatest tact and abil ity , coupled with a compromising dispo sition on both sides , will be able to solve them without results of a grave nature. This teems to be the opinion at the War Department , although officials refuse to discuss the situation publicly. There is less criticism of Gen. Gomez than there was. It is believed that the old general Is still pro-American , but that the opposi tion of the other Cuban generals has dis couraged him. Although the course of Gen. Brooke is not approved in all its details by his su periors , there is no disposition to criticise him for demanding that the Cubans give up their arms. This measure is approved as a necessary one. and if all differences of opinion are to be traceable to this order It is quite likely that Brooke will be sus tained by the home Government. But the throat to disarm the former Cuban soldiers by force , if necessary , is not ap- GbXISRAX. BKOOKE. proved , the policy being to placate rather than irritate , and Gen. Brooke , more than likefcr , will be advised to keep this policy firmly in mind. A conflict with the Cubans is not desir ed , and will be avoided , if possible. It is saiij that President McKinley has boon Inlorr.u-d of the situation by Gon. Algor , and that the President himself will take a hand in unraveling the knotted skeins. The Cubans must be treated with great paliruce. They lack stability of purpose and other sterling characteristics. Recog nition of this fact is deemed requisite in handling- the questions that have arisen. Washington advices say that the Goveru- m-ni i prepared to establish its author ity in Cuba at all hazards although anx- lot tu avoid conflict. Such conflict , it is generally conceded , would postpone indefi nitely the independence of the island. Secretary Algor cabled Gen. Brooke asking him for a statement as to the re ported troubles in Cuba. Of the charges ngniim Gen. Brooke made by the Cu bans , the Secretary said not one of these had yet been made , and added : "People who are put under a necessary restraint are apt to complain of undue restraint. " The Cubans say they are willing to give up their -truis to Cuban officials , but under no circumstances will they yield them to the Americans. They point to the fact that every move by the Americans tends to Americanize the island. Americans are favored for government positions ; Ameri can signs go over the new offices , and the American grip is tightening on everything. Cubans fool that they are being brow beaten and forced into the background. They are ready to fight again for indepen dent o if it is necessary. AVar , they say , is not desired , but unless an honorable proposition is made promptly.it cannot be avertf-d. AGLMNALDO IN HIDING. "Filipino Leader Has Not Been Heard From for Two Weeks. Asuinililo ; is said to have fled into the province of Nouvu Ecija. Nothing has been homl of him for over two weeks. It is believed by Gregorio Pilar , the insur gent general , that the Filipino leader has been de.Norted by the government. The Spnmsh prisoners , about 5,000 in number , have been carried into a northern prov ince , and are thought to be beyond Ameri can assistance at present. Five American prisoners wore carried through San Miguel , but their names are unknown. The natives have forced their genera i to countermand the orders that all $ villages should be burned as they retreat ed. ( Jens. Mat-Arthur and Lawton are preparing for an extensive forward move ment. All forces are being strengthened in every possible manner. CHINA CLASHESTWITH BRITAIN. Jii sia Is Also ArouHinjj the Ire of the Celestials. Great Britain's warships and soldiers $ are in fdH possession of Kow Loon , occu pying a position just opposite the city. $ The present trouble is the result of a sud den renewal of the native opposition to British control of the coded territory. In addition to the large military and naval expedition now in the field , the volunteers have been notified to bo in readiness for uny emergency. Troops are patrolling the European quarter of Kow Loon. It is re ported tluit Chinese rebels from Tung- Kuug invaded British territory , and that two armed gangs robbed the city of Kow Loon. Hong Kong itself is quiet. The territory back of the hinterland is also disturbed , and Chinese troops have been tent there. The Russian demand for a new railway concession connecting Pekin with Russia's lires-ont railroad system in Manchuria is still exciting the gravest anxiety. The Germans and Japanese are particularly uneasy on the subject of this unexpected B. Jnove upon the part of the Russians , and it is said that there is a feeling among a the prominent Chinese that the moment has come to make every effort in the di rection of securing British sympathy and aid. Sam Mattingly , Brush Grove , Ky. , kill ed his wife while she was attempting to elope. SAN ISIDRO IS TAKEN. Gea. .Lawton's Advance Led by Col. Summers Captures the Town. Gen. Lawton's advance guard , under Col. Summers of the Oregon troops , took San Isidro , an insurgent capital , Wed nesday morning. Summers' command , consisting of the Twenty-second infantry on the left , the Minnesota regiment in the center and the Oregon and North Dakota regiments on the right , preceded by scouts and accompanied by Scott's battery of ar tillery , advanced from Baluarte. The troops first encountered the enemy two miles from San Isidro , the rebels retiring when our artillery opened fire. Just out side the town a rebel force , estimated to number 2,000 men , was intrenched. It made a slight resistance , but left its po- OUXBOAT LACUNA DE BAY. sition when our troops turned its right flank. The enemy's loss was fifteen men killed and trventy wounded. On the American side one soldier of the Oregon regiment and one of the Minnesota regi ment were slightly wounded. After cap turing the town Col. Summers' troops continued their advance , pursuing the re treating rebels several miles. The expedition under Maj. Kebbe of the Third artllery : , consisting of the Seven teenth infantry , a battalion of the Ninth and one battery of the First artillery , left Calumpit , marching up the Rio Grande to Gen. Lawton's division at Arayal. A flotilla of cascoes loaded with supplies also proceeded up the river. Both forces were convoyed by the "tinclad' ' army gunboats under Captain Grant. KRUGER FINDS A PLOT. Seven Men Declared to Be Working : Up a Revolution. Seven men , nearly all of whom are for mer British officers , were arrested at Jo hannesburg on the charge of high treason against the Transvaal republic. Further warrants have been issued , many prominent - nent men being involved in the alleged conspiracy. According to the authorities , incriminating documents were found on the prisoners , showing that they are en rolling men to cause a rebellion. Two thousand men are said to have been enlist ed. It is asserted that the officers arrest ed were also preparing to organize a corps in Natal , the British colony between the Orange Free State and the Indian ocean , to assist the projected movement at Jo hannesburg. An estimate of what the news costs a big newspaper and how it travels may be derived from the telegraphic tolls charged for transmission. The expense of tele graphing war news from Manila is at the rate of $2.35 a word. From Manila to New York the cable route is : Manila to Hong Kong , thence to Saigon in Anam , Singapore , the Straits of Settlements and Penang , on the Malay peninsula , to Mad ras. India ; thence by Eastern Telegraph cable to Aden in Arabia , to Port Said and Alexandria in Egypt ; Malta , Gibraltar , Lisbon and Plymouth , England ; from Plymouth by Commercial cable to Wat- erville. Ireland , and Canso , Nova Scotia , to New York. News comes that during the last winter the submergence of Sable Island by the ocean has proceeded rapidly. Sable Isl and , which lies eighty-five miles east of Nova Scotia and in the track of ocean steamers , is the most notorious spot in the world for shipwrecks. In the last ninety years more than 150 ships have been wrecked on its treacherous shoals , and two lighthouses placed on the island by the Canadian Government have been washed away by the ocean. During all these years it has been gradually sinking tinder the water , until now the island is not much more than one-third as large as it was at the beginning of the century. During the month of April there was a remarkable falling off in the exports of agricultural products , provisions , includ ing cattle and hogs , showing a reduction of $1,507,933 and.breadstuffs $12,297,517 as compared with the same month last year. Cotton exports dropped $6,327,454 , thus making a total shrinkage for the month in products from field and farm of $24,952,425. The exports of breadstuffs for April were smaller than for any month since July , 1897. The payment of a dividend of one-fifth of 1 per cent to the creditors of the Iron Hall winds up a failure which involved 03,000 members scattered through more than twenty States. When a receiver was appointed it was found that the liabilities of the order were $5,100,000. Altogether $2,000,000 has been collected and paid to creditors , leaving a permanent deficit of $3,100,000. For the maintenance of the life-saving service the people of this country pay about $1,500,000 a year. Of 3,987 lives imperiled in coast shipwrecks last year , only 23 were lost : of the $7,168,390 worth of property imperiled , the life-saving ser vice rescued $0,420,530 worth. Roar Admiral Watson , who succeeds Dewey in the Philippines , was a lieuten ant on Farragut's flagship at the battle of Mobile bay , and assisted in lashing the admiral to the rigging of the Hartford be fore In- went to do or die. M. F. Hastings writes from Weather- ford , Ok. , that he has plowed up on the bottoms of the Gimmaron river an old armv musket , with the inscription , "L. . Howard , Co. A , 64th 111. U. V. I. " He would like to hear from some one who has claim to the old weapon. It is believed that the largest audience ever gathered to witness a sporting event was present at the windup of the football season in London , England. An accu rate count showed that 80,000 people were ' present Viola Horlocker , the handsome young stenographer of Hastings , Neb. , who is accused of attempting to poison the wire of her employer , has been bound over to the District Court in the sum of $5- 000. The prosecu tion claims it has a clear case. It is un derstood that it will be argued that the girl was infatuated Kalb County , 111. His father , C. II. Hopkins , was a well-to-do farmer , having come from Ireland in the early ' 20s. The son began life as a farm hand. When 17 he went to col- % lege. He became / } a lawyer , then got t/ elected to Congress - ' gross , and the with her employer Misg nOKLOCKER. and sought to re move his wife. Miss Horlocker's friends repel with indignation the allegation that she is guilty , or contend that if she be guilty she was insane. This interesting young woman , until her arrest , was one of the social leaders of Hastings. Her at torneys sought to have the preliminary hearing at her home , alleging that she was too t ill to appear. Judge Bowen said that if ! she was not produced within the hour he would send the sheriff after the young woman and put her in jail. A carriage was at once sent and the defendant was brought in. _ * The arrest at Johannesburg of seven English otlicers indicates that the Boers have decided not to give the Uitlandors a cnance to organize an other Jameson raid. The plans for that ill- fated expedition were laid in the early au tumn of 1895. Rifles , Maxim guns and field pieces were gathered and a military camp established. Dr. Jame son fully believed that nil. .TAMESOX. . . . . . with his men thou sands would rally to his aid. He set out on Doc. 29. 1S95 , with 500 men. On Jan. 2 the invading party were met by the Boers , who , after thirty-six hours of fight ing , forced them to surrender. Jameson and his band were arrested. They were received as heroes in London , and. after a trial , wore sentenced to a few months' imprisonment without hard labor. Congressman A. J. Hopkins of Illinois , who is a candidate for Speaker of the next Congress , was born near Cortland , De \ \ lanky , red-headed young lawyer from HOPKINS. Aurora has become one of the most polish' od and attractive figures in the House. When Chairman Dingley of the Ways and Means Committee dkul the Illinois delega tion presented Hopkins' name for the place , but by right of seniority it went to Payne. Captain Wilde and Gon. Miller , the navy and army men who have disputed as to which belongs the honor of capturing Iloilo. Admiral Kautx is the commander of the American naval forces in Samoa. His loiters to his near relatives in this coun try severely criticis ing the German con sul general embar rassed the Navy De partment. Kautz is one of the oldest offi cers in the service. His record during the war with the South is exceptionally b r i 1 - liant. He negotiated the first exchange of prisoners authorized by President Lincoln nml Iii i nhinpt. find ADMIRAL KAUTZ. it was he who hauled lown the Confederate flag from the city iall of New Orleans. He was made a. ommodore in 1897 and an admiral since he outbreak of the war with Spain. Frederick W. Schneider , late of the [ ' 'irst South Dakota infantry , has return- Mi to Milwaukee. He says : "It is well known to every sol- tlier in the Philip pines that the insur gents , when they i-atch an American , inoculate him with the virus of leprosy , { [ t is known definitely ; that a member of the First California regi ment and another one \ who was attached to MI : . SCHNEIDER. mother regiment wore taken prisoners mtside the walls of Manila , and while hey were in captivity leprosy seeds were lumped auto them. The inoculated men vero turned loose and allowed to rejoin inr forces. " Particulars of the fighting in Samoa how that in the recent battle between the riendly natives and the rebels , the latter est 100 killed and wounded ; also , that Srtsign Monaghan of the Philadelphia was leheaded before he was dead. [ Frances L. Adair , 20 , Boston , Mass. , onfessed to forged checks to the amount if $200. He earned $3.50 a week and laid $6 board. Ike Armantrout , Hillsboro , Ohio , charg- 'd with murdering his brother by pushing : lira into the creek , has.been released. ECENT events of national interest - est have awakened great public attention to the Mormons of Utah and the polygamous faith. The fight made against Congressman Rob erts , the known possessor of three wives , has led to investigations that are likely to develop some sensational disclosures in the very near future , and authenticated details already made public indicate that the practice of plural marriage is still in vogue. Since the decree of-1890 this is consid ered bigamy , pure and simple. The wholesale promiscuous taking of wives , therefore , has been broken up , but many secret ways have been de vised for evading the Federal prohib itory statute. The cupidity of lead ers has operated to make easy the ac complishment of plural wife-getting , and Mormoiiism is dying a hard death. The essence of the Mormon dogmas is contained in ' ' an avowed 'spiritual revelation" given to Joseph Smith , ' leader of the Latter Da- Saints , in 1843. The official Mormon ritual on the patriarchal order of marriage de clares that a man may espouse a wom an , and if she consents espouse an other , and so on indefinitely. Since 1890 this doctrine has been advocated under difficulties. The Government jas prosecuted all illegal marriage par ticipants. However , a common way of having the civil rite performed is to elope to Mexico or Canada , or to sail out into the neutral waters of the high LEADERS AMONG .MORMO.VS. = ? eas , where the marriage is performed. Then the couple will return to their Mormon homes , and in their temple of worship will be "sealed" in wedlock according to ritualistic customs of the church. It is in evidence that within he past year a number of the most H'ominent Mormons in Utah have vio- ated the Federal statute , and have taken unto themselves additional vives. This seems to show that ap- oarent submission to the law when first ? nacted was only a temporary public 2essation in the traffic of wives , and the Government is making an active nove to compel Utah to maintain her Statehood on constitutional lines. In Chicago and other large cities , and u many rural communities , unusual activity of the Mormon missionaries las been noticed during the past year. \s a result of this work there has ecently been a decided influx of cou- -erts into the sequestered valleys of Jtah , Wyoming and New Mexico , the icadquarters of orthodox Mormonism. t is a heterogeneous mixture of huinan- ty that the missionaries send back to he "fold , " and a noticeable fact about he whole thing is that women predom- nate among the converts. Many re- ) orts from sections where Mormon nissionaries have been at work show hat the Latter Day Saints' emissaries mve been driven out of the communi- tj- , but in other instances they have gathered in converts , innocent and ig norant , beguiled by fatuous promises and deluded by specious representa tions regarding the religious aspect of the matter. One hotbed of primitive Mormonism is still in existence. Ine the southern part of Utah the polygamous practices of the Latter Day Saints-are still car ried out. Here Mormons can take a new wife every month , if so minded , TEMRLE ST < jeorGc-UTV\HfcJ LOGAH. CACH&CO. UTAM-JM * "w AT " " = PROGRESS OF MORMON CHURCH IN TEMPLE BUILDING. and nobody molests them. The settle ments are very seldom visited , except by Mormons. The nearest railroad point is 200 miles distant , and no stage line traverses the 100 miles of territory over which the orthodox settlements are scattered. The only regular con nection this community has with the outer world is an old Indian who brings the few letters that are written and takes them out. It is without exception the most heaven-forsaken country the eye of man ever rested upon. In some sections the alkali element prevails to such an extent as to clean the ground of the scantiest vegetation. Wide , smooth plains stretch out before the eye , white in the distance like snow banks. In other places the alkali is so strong that the earth when wet rises like bread under yeast. St. George is the mecca of this dis trict , where the seal of the Mormon church is kept. Here , too , is a temple. Elders preside , who keep strangers at a distance and compel hard-working wives to uncomplainingly accept their wretched fate. These elders usurp the functions of law and order , and their word is final. Church matters govern everything. Stock raising and alfalfa farming are the industries pursued. It is in the temple of this law-defy ing community that real Mormonism is still rampant. When a woman convert is accepted she is taken to the temple , washed in a tub repeatedly , arrayed in white linen and a veil of muslin , and given a new name , which she must never breathe except to her husband , in the endowment house. She goes through ceremonies like degrees in a lodge. A pantomime of fire and the devil is enacted , and a startling and impressive oath never to reveal the se crets of the order is administered. At Salt Lake City , the old center of Mormonism , the wives have not been abandoned , but they have been scat tered. Formerly a. number of low dwelling houses , grouped together , .ROBERTS AND HIS WIVKS. would hold the different wives of some Mormon bishop , each in separate apart ments. At every addition in matri mony a new house was built. When the Government began earnest war on polygamy these structures were aban doned. But the wives were not. They were distributed here and there about the city. Each husband has bis favor ite wife , but secretly provides for the maintenance of all tlie others as well. It is authoritatively proven that the big Mormon colonies in Mexico and Canada are being used to foster polyg amy. At Salt Lake City the Mecca of Mormonism , one can learn of dozens of instances where leading Mormons during the past year have gone on journeys to these points , accompanied by young women , and have returned to live apparently in the relation of hus band and wife. New cases of this kind are being constantly solemnized under the secret forms of the Mormon church in one of the four temples in Utah where "sealing" is done. The recent death of President Abraham Cannon revealed the fact that he had taken a fourth wife even after Statehood Avas accomplished. Persons less notable have also been accused of violation of the law. In most instances , however , no complaints have been made , no de mands for explanation , and no ecclesi astical trials. The men continue to hold their high positions in the churcK. and to preach. Every effort is made to shield the bigamists from the searching eyes of Gentiles outside of the fold. The Mormon officials unite in strenu ously denying that there are any polygamous - amous new marriages , but they pay no attention to the secret ways of contin uing the practice. The most ardent supporters of polyg amy seem to be the Mormon women wives of leaders , whose voices in coun cil receive considerable weight. No- woman of the days of Brigham Young could have preached a more emphatic sermon in favor of polygamy than that of Congressman Roberts' third wife during a recent address before a meet ing of the Young Women's Improve ment Association. She told her audi ence that she was grieved to see so many young women of marriageable nge living single lives , and declared that the laws of the land would not prevent her from taking the man she loved , and they should feel likewise. She said that for each of them there MAP SHOWING SPREAD OP MORMONISM. was an affinity , and if the affinity had sixteen wives she said it should make no difference when he was found. Except in the isolated Southern Utah settlements , cases generally of new polygamy involve women of the highest character. They enter IP to such relations under the belief that they are obeying their religion. Young women in the Mormon church know that only a marriage in one of the tem ples is recognized as being divinely binding , as promised by their leaders. Marriage is comparatively easy , too , in Utah in a general way , although it is now compulsory to obtain a license from the county clerk. Ten years ago no license was required , and church officials alone performed marriage cere monies and granted divorces. The au thority to perform marriages is not confined to the high priesthood now. At least one-half of the male adult members of the Mormon church have authority- perform the ceremony. With two sharp , clear aspects of the Mormon question the law and the pub lic have to deal to-day the strict ob servance of the law in Utah , the pre vention of missionary work among the other States. This latter affair is one that is attracting general comment. All through the West Mormons are es tablishing missions , recruiting con verts. They make religion the prom inent feature of their doctrine , and , being "something new , " many are at tracted , and join. "No matter how- earnest and sincere many of these mis sionaries may appear plural marriages will always be condemned by true ad vocates of law and order. Silkworm in Europe. The silk worm was first introduced into Europe by two monks engaged as missionaries in China , who obtained a quantity of silkworms' eggs , which they concealed in a hollow cane , and. conveyed in safety to Constantinople in 452. Power ol" Cold Water. Cold water is the greatest stimulant known to the medical profession , pos sessing more lasting power than the strongest brandy. It has been known ti ; bring the ulse up to 100 from 76 in i few minutes' time. Costly Ram. -V ram has just changed hands in. A..otralia at 1,000 guineas.