l w 1 0 t W i sVk 1 Vhi J SM X V i - a 4 Sound Business Sense 013 Hardcash Ive decided to take young Sharpleigb Into - business with me as soon as he and my daughter get back from their honeymoon Bullion Bonds But I thought you saw no good in the fellow Old Hardcash I didnt at first but v Ive changed my mind I told him he couldnt have my daughter till he had at least 1000 in the bank He got me to put it in writing and then went out and borrowed the 1000 on the strength of becoming my son-in-law Such busi ness ability as that mustnt be allowed to go to waste Tid Bits CAST Ah tO a ffl K CSS FAST toostmns fSS ViJZnrZvnirZ KfJtlSsm i6sBFrTCVrHna9P2k3 1 QRm Por Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of t tjSJjJ WTfi - - IT was the Food Success of 1899 nd the first of the kind ever offered the American People Cooked Seasoned and put up in convenient sized key opening cans Success cttracts imitators LIBBYS VEAL LOAF Is the Original All otherbrandscf Veal Loaf in tins are imitations of Libbys When you want a delicious lunch or t supper of daintily seasoned meat get Libbys Veal Loaf Chicken Loaf Cottage Loaf There are 71 Varieties of Libbys Foods in tins New edition How to Make Good Thines to Eat sent free if you write LIBBY McNEILL LIBBY Cfcicago triMaifefeftKaraa Wwm EXCURSION RATES to Western Canada and par ticulars as to how to saeuro 10 acres of the best Wkt Browing land on tk Conti nent can be setjorsd on ap plication to the Supsrta tendent of Istnicrttioa Ottawa Canada eg tfe um dersicned SrmyUHj ducted excursions -will leave St Paul Minn m tk 1st and 3d Tuesdny in each month nnd specially Iw on all lines o railway are being quoted tar axsmasvees leaving St Paul on March iSth and April tt far Jtoil toba Aesiniboio Saskatchewan and Alberta Write to F PedleySupt Immigratloa Ottawa Canada or the undeisipned who will atailyou atlases pamphlets etc free N Bartholomew 80S 45th St Des Moines Iowa W II Koren Water town South Dakota W VBennett 861 Hew York Life Bide Omaha Neb B Davies 154J4 Bart 3d St St Paul Minn Agents for Govt of Cbjl IJiflifiCilHI sSeBcciL SLJC KoFt KWUP f r jv BBTi ifmvm jVamnmmmaaamsmammmam fcJ Keeps both rider and saddle tier fectlydryin the hardest stems Substitutes will disappoint Aybtor 1807 Fish Brand Pommel SHcksr it is entirely nev If not for f your town wnte for catalosae m A J iUWtK Boston Hn mnt lf--- z r W L UCLAS S3 35 SHOES SWorth S4 to S6 compared win oiner mattes Indorsed by over 1000000 wearers Tlie aenuine have W L Douglas name and price stamped on bottom Take no substitute claimed to be as jrocd Your dealer should keep them if not we will send a pair on receiot of trice and 2 so extra tor carnage btate lum MMM BUSES WHLRE ALL ELSE ft vm Ltu W Marfber size and width plain or cao e Cafc free W L DOUGLAS SHOE CO Nekton Uks r crpgssrai OAK Pgmtawa I A I UEUI aBblE Larcest Seed POTATO Growers la As erics AT1CCO ixiu v up xnormouiigocu wrai u Clover and Farm Seeds Send tils atf HO FT 10c for cat aloe ana 11 BARK FARM SEEISAS11LES iEsued 5 VER innit 11 cttica crrn fn in pecr Hie c n mem LS I Ssrfl Bast couch Byrup Tastes uooa use P n tlmi Sold hr riraissrfotn KBWaiagEBMI T1 JUnil W OHHLIV MULU UUi ln Ulllii Ii mm III FREE DYES Maine PHI Agents tVantod both Old and Young Send 2 Stamps for full particulars and sample of Dye mine DyeSjfor household use Sawyer SoyleMfrs Dover Should write for oar ni linn nf PT I TlnUVBV lifiAmnliq Thfi rnmnlft n Sioux City Newspaper Union Sioux City Iowa- V DISCOVERY gtres OOfPV quick lif cures worst cases Book of testimonials and 1 0 AT traatmaat FKEE Jr II II Greens Sons 2x S Atluto Cs If afflicted with gore eyes uo W1 ThompsonsEyeWater miCN WRITING TO ADVHRTI8ERS please sav roa sawiho advertisement In thla paper S C N U No 15 1000 O How Happy I am to BE FREE from Cst by the Sun On every sunny day the profile of Queen Victoria is cast upon one of tke pillars of the Wiite House porch The most eastern column of the front fur is the one selected by old Soi upon which to draw his atrtliag picture Victorias shadow can he seen only from the north windows of the execu tive mansion or from the prch itself for it is thrown upon the ssth side of the post The silhouette appears promptly at a quarter before tke noon hour and faces east toward the capitol As the members and Sentors upn the hill gather for their daily deliberariens the face of Englands grand old woman grows in distinctness and watehes them Outlined as though by a raaster artist against the snowy column bathed in the sunlight the Queens brow nose lips and chin appear with unerring fidelity At about the time the Senate and House are called to order by their respective officers Victoria fades away or rather is lost in the shadow and the whole pillar becomes dark Hia Dreadful 3Tatc Is Parker Podds a good whist player No he used to be but golf ruined him A Succspsfnl Farmer Within three miles of the town go ing eastward is the farm of Mr W Creamer one of the municipalitys largest and most prosperous mixed farmers Mr Creamer came to this country in 1880 and settled on a por tion of the land which comprises his present enormous farm of 1280 acres In common with many others of a similar period he experienced all the hardships and difficulties common to the absence of railway and market facili ties In nowise daunted by energy industry and indomitable will he has been able to surmount all obstacles and has achieved an unparalleled suc cess and is known throughout the dis trict as one of its pre eminent farmers His operations extend over 1280 acres two sections the thought alone of so much land makes the Ensceni farmer dizzy 800 acres of this is broken and the remainder is excellent pasture land and wood This harvest he took off a crop of 500 acres of wheat and 200 of other grains Four hundred acres are plowed and ready for wheat next spring Mr Creamer is as has been stated a mixed farmer of no mean pro portions having at the present time 40 horses 60 head of cattle and 50 pigs The most modern farm buildings are found on his premises the main build ing being a barn 55 feet square on a stone foundation containing stabling for 16 horses and a large number of cattle The loft is stored with 29 loads of sheaf oats for feed and tons of hay there is also a cutting box Another building of large dimensions is the granary in which after teaming large quantities to market he still has stored 3000 bushels of wheat A crashing ma chine is in the building There are a number of lesser buildings containing chicken house pig pens and cattle sheds The farm residence is a hand some frame structure of ample pro portions in connection with it is a wood shed The water supply is unex celled besides house supply there is a well in the stables and a never falling spring situated in a bluff which never freezes Surrounded by a thick bluff of poplars extending in a semi circle to the west north and east the win ter storms are broken and accumula tion of snow unknown Added to his farming operations Mr Creamer con ducts a threshing outfit for the season His success is an instance of what can be accomplished in Western Canada Baldur Man Gazette Nov 16 1899 Thousands of settlers are going from the United States to take advantage of the free homestead lands that are being offered by the Canadian Gov ernment His Discovery Gro wells angrily You know that a fool can ask questions that a wise man cant answer dont you Howells Ive heard so but I never knew it until now Chicago News Cleanse Your Blood The thing most desired of a Spring Medicine is thorough purification of the blood With this work of cleansing going on there is com plete renovation of every part of your syatem Not only is the cor rupt blood made fresh bright and lively but the stomach also re sponds in better digestion its readiness for food at proper times gives sharp appetite the kidneys and liver properly perform their allotted functions and there is in short new brain nerve mental and digestive strength HOOD 9 Sarsapamla Possesses the peculiar qualities Pe culiar to Itself which accomplish these good things for all who take it An unlimited list of wonderful cures prove its merit IVliVlIirlBailAin Is what Mrs Archie Young of 1817 Oaks Are West Superior Wis writes us on Tan 25th WOO lam so thankful to be able tosay that your SWANSONS 5 DS9F3 is the best medicine I have ever used in my life I sent for some lastNovember and commenced using it right away and it helped me from the first dose Oh I cannotxplain to yeu how I was suffering from neuralgia It seemed that death was near at hand I thought no one could be worse I was so very weak that I hardly expected to live to see my husband come back from his daily labor But now I ta free from pain my cheeks are red andl sleep well the whole sight through Many f myJWej f3 are eo surprised to see me looking so well that they will send for some of your DStP nilVIIU ATICliM I have been afflicted with rheumatism for 2 years Iwasinbed KHpIIMAIIiII TCtk it whes I saw your advertisement in a paper recommending lllllaVinffi 1 IV ITS AWAflTMSHft Jf TlfMMM verv hicrhlv I thought I would try it IthaaeoMpIetelycuredmehut I like it so well that I vraat two more bottles for fear I will get into the same I was before I sent for 5 BM0PS writes Mr Alexander Futrellof Vanndale Ark Feb Gtk 19M CCuj Harmless i v Fever Ne1 MmSWss jiracB IWhacae Heart VTeaStHeM Tlaot Valai la CpMnluf fttmtlBCZS etc etC OAftl Vsl tDl sufferers to elve 6 DROPS at least a trial wj SD B Mk Y W WllfWtsa aXSc sample bottle prepaid by mill for lOc A Ji kStrtllnTlBM von AIM Ianre bottle9KdoseB fcx06 bottles fori fJSAJJX XJLKKJ soldbyusaaaagtate AeKJtTSWAKTZDIaHtirTerritiirj write a ro aay 4WAJTSOX XKEUEATTC CUKE CO 99 tv 14 Xake St CHICA IX y sf vPVVw vsvSssSssi jSn CHAPTER XIII Continued Is he one of the distresses you have Buffered from and would rather now be free from one asks in a general kind of way 4 Certainlv not I liked him very well I I liked him very well- indeed But if he comes back now it will be with a differ ence Things have got altered somehow dont you feel that This hardly seems the same boat that used to lose itself in the middle of the Thames with every body trying different kinds of poles Doesnt it feel a long time since then I believe it was the tunnels did tt Did what Why since we came through those tunnels we seem to have come into an other world altogether Everything is different the landscape is different- Are the people different - JC dont know she says reflectively Vbut I seem to feel a different kind of atmosphere around us somehow Dont you think it will sounel odd to hear Mr Duncombe if he comes back talking about theaters and comedies and maga zine articles But dont you want to hear what has been going on in town what new books are being talked about and new plays Miss Peggy lifts her eyes for a mo ment Dont you think she says with a little hesitation that he is interested in rather small things To write a comic piece for a theater that isnt a great am bition is it It is a harmless one surely Oh yes You laugh at the moment and forget But these are not the things that remain in the mind Sometimes I almost wish that Col Cameron had not repeated that ballad of Gordon of Brack la if I happen to lie awake at night it comes into my head I seem to hear the very tones he used and it makes me shiver it is so terrible a story I wish I dared ask Col Cameron to write out that ballad for me Dare That is an odd kind of word Why hell be delighted Will you ask him for me Certainly not Ask him for yourself Do you think he will bite And why is he called colonel she demands with unreasoning petulance Why isnt he a major or captain or general I wouldnt mind what it was but colonel You are a little too familiar with the title on your side of the water And you know how that is she says instantly No you dont I can see you dont Well I will tell you Youre al ways calling me a school girl but there are lots of things I can teach you No doubt The reason we have so many colonels in America she remarks with an oracu lar air is simply this that at the end of our war all the survivors were raised to that rank That was what a grateful country did That is what I call true gratitude What they did with people above that rank I dont know but all the rest were made colonels What do you do at the end of c - of your wars We havent time to do anything be fore another has begun Then your soldiers get plenty of chances Say do you think I could get a copy of Men of the Times over there in Tewkesbury asks this persistent questioner You would be more likely to get it in Gloucester Is it an expensive book I dont know perhaps eight or ten shillings But if you mean buying it it is a bulky thing to carry about I could cut out the pages I want I should like to see all that Col Cameron has done a list of the engagements- he has been in because because naturally it is interesting when you are meeting anyone from day to day well you want to know all about him And who told you that Sir Ewen Cam eron was in Men of the Time Your wife I was asking her what battles he had been in and she said I ought to look there Why n3t ask himself Oh I couldnt I couldnt do that she exclaimed and then she suddenly ceased for at this moment the door was opened and there was the tall sandy haired col onel himself looking very smart and fresh and with a cheerful on his lips Nor was Miss Peggy much confused no she frankly gave him her hand and there was a smile on her face as she returned his greeting and in quired if he liad heard any tidings of ibreakfast We passed most of that morning in Tewkesbury having got ashore and clam bered up the steep ruddy siippery bank and thence made our way into the town We crossed the Avon not running red with blood as the chroniclers say it did after the memorable battle of some four hundreds years ago but running yellow in spate with the recent heavy rains We found the Severn a busy river and we had quite sufficient occupation in get ting our awkward vessel past the suc cessive strings of barges that were being brought up by steam power against the flood we having to keep outside of them and get our tow rope over their smoke stacks somehow or anyhow But with Murdoch at the bow and Captain Colum bus k on the bank we succeeded in get ting by without any serious mishap In this fashion we swung along by Chasely Bye and Deerhurst and Turley and tnen we halted for luncheon at Haw Bridge there eing a certain White Lion in the neighborhood where Captain Co lumbus proposed to bait our gallant steed Well said Mrs Threepenny bit pull ing in her camp stool to the fable with much complacency we have got so far In safety thank goodness But Im glad Im not responsible When the worst comes to worst T mean to simply sit still and be drowned We ought to hear at Gloucester to night whether Mr Dun- 1 ii - JBY WUm igLACKl combe is coming I am sure we owe a great deal to him for all the trouble he took about this boat He was most in defatigable you would have thought he was planning the whole expedition for himself Yes madame one said to her you ought to be most grateful to him Its all very well for you now here you are in fine summer weather windows open beautiful scenery all around you and so on I can tell you it was a very different thing last January up at Staines or Kingston inspecting one melancholy house boat after another the ice crack ing on the slippery gang boards ones teeth chattering with the cold That was what Jack Duncombe did for you Yes but we are not ungrateful are we Peggy she observed making a bold appeal I hope not the younger person an swered And I am only sorry he has not seen this beautiful Severn along with us Per haps the Kennet may make it up to him She seemed very certain that J ack Dun combe would come back to the boat and there was this to be said for her convic tion that if he could get away at all he would assuredly try to join our party now for he had always been curious to see how the craft he had helped to con struct would behave in the open waters of the Severn But we had no idea that we were to see him so soon On this still golden evening we were quietly gliding on toward Gloucester when Captain Co lumbus was seen to stop and speak to a stranger CHAPTER XIV Fancy Columbus meeting an acquaint ance in this out-of-the-way neighbor hood Queen Tita exclaimed And then she looked and looked again Why 1 declare it is Mr Duncombe Isnt it Peggy It must be The waving of a pocket handkerchief put the matter beyond doubt And then in the course of a few minutes the Horse Marine recognizing the situation and observing a part of the bank where we could easily get alongside stopped his horse the bow pi the Nameless Barge was quietly run in among the reeds and bushesrthe gang board shoved out and Jack Duncombe in boating flan nels and with a small blue cap on his head and yet nevertheless having a curi ous town look about him stepped on board and was cheerfully welcomed by the women folk and introduced to Col Cameron And you didnt get my telegram at Tewkesbury said he We never thought of asking for tele grams Queen Tita made answer we were too much engaged in watching the people pumping the water out of their houses Oh said he I thought you must have been washed away somewhere 1 hardly ever expected to hear of you again Did you see the newspapers No I suppose not Why there was nothing but gales and storms and floods many a time I wondered how you liked the For est of Aarden in that kind of weather I can assure you said she we had nothing to complain of in the way of weather Ah you are used to the West High lands he remarked in his off hand way Well now if he had not been a new comer and therefore to be welcomed he might have been made to suffer for that imprudent speech but she only said There is Peggy who has never been in the West Highlands what do you say Peggy I think it has been just beautiful and delightful all through that young- lady said promptly We had some rain of -1 11tl course now ana again out we uiunc seem to mind it What I remember is just beautiful And you got through the tunnels all right Oh dont speak of that that was too dreadful said Mrs Threepenny bit with a shudder Thank goodness we are to have no more of them I see you have suffered a little in the wars he continued glancing along the roof and the sides of the boat Youll have to lie up somewhat for repairs Of course you must look very smartr before you make your appearance in a gay and fashionable place like Bath But wait a bit my young friend the steersman put in whats this youre saying about Bath Is the Thames and Severn Canal blocked I have been making inquiries- an swered this diligent youth since I came to Gloucester and I rather fancy it is However I will get to know more to night or to morrow morning But any how why should you not go down to Bristol It will be ever so much better fun I should like to see her go plowing after a steam launch Thank you said Queen Tita with much dignity I for one have had enough of steam launches Oh that was going through the tun nels said he with perfect good humor whereas this will be in the open There wont be any danger not much at all events If she should begin to do any thing we can howl to the people on board the steam launch and theyll stop her back her and pick us up Its quite sim ple Its quite simple complained Miss Beggy to have all our things sunk in the middle of the Severn And your luggage Mr Duncombe Queen Tita asked for she knew that peo ple dont drop down from the clouds in a suit of boating flannels Of course I took my things to a hotel said he When I got your invitation I knew I should be a fifth wheel to the coach only it was too tempting and then I said to myself that I could easily stop at a hotel whenever there was a chance You shall do nothing of the kind said she for she is a hospitable kind of creature in her way that is if you will put up with the discomfort of a bed in the saloon And if you would take my berth and give me the bed in the saloon Col Cam eron interposed then I know youd hate me less Not at all said the younger man with a good natured laugh I am the I r one who ought tor apologize for comlni here to disturb a happy family JjjH to night to show you bear me no ill will ytnrre all coming to dine with me at my hotel Mr Duncombe his hostess protested This boat ia provisioned for any leagth of time But the dinner is ordered said he tnnA V j 1 T i aux Lut iuuiur auu x nave got wnut uu havent got some fresh flowers So I suggest you should leave the boat at some convenient place just outside the town and we can walk up to the hotel And how late do you expect us to re main your guests Mr Duncombe Mra Threepenny bit inquired mildly In Gloucester said he no one ever goes to bed before twelve but two is- the fashionable hour Then I am afraid we shall have to be very unfashionable But comesalong Beggy and we will get some thinga ready for no one knows how the time passes when men begin to smoke They dont seem to know anyway that is their good fortune remarked Miss Peggy and forthwith these two dis appeared And very gay this little dinner party proved to be when we were all assembled in the small sitting room that Jack Dun combe had engaged the table was bright and cheerful with flowers and wax can dles and the banquet a good deal more sumptuous than the modest repasts to which we were accustomed on board our boat Perhaps too Queen Tita if she were still cherishing certain dark designs was pleased to observe that the young mans position as host gave him a certain importance and enabled him to display all his best points of manners One could not help imagining that Miss Peg gy was eying him a little critically though surely that brief absence could not have transformed him into a stran ger But what puzzled us most was thisc How was it that he who had left us in a most perturbed and anxious frame ot mind should now on his return be in th blithest of moods He declared that tho invitation we had sent him had reached him at the most opportune moment but that if it had not reached him at all he would have come uninvited and begged to be taken on board as a day passen ger shifting for himself at nights there was here no making up of any quar rel or the removal of any misunderstand ing On the contrary he conducted him self just as if he had come once more among friends and he was most anxious to please It was rather a festive evening al though Miss Peggy was without her ban jo for a little later on when cigars had been lighted Jack Duncombe who had been educated in Germany proposed to compound for us a bowl of Maitrank as appropriate to the season of the year but Col Cameron offering instead to brew some Scotch toddy as a much wholesom er mixture Queen Tita unhesitatingly declared for the latter and whisky hot water sugar lemons and the like were forthwith sent for We did not sit up till two no nor yet till half past twelve but it was a merry evening And at the end of it in her own room Mrs Threepenny bit made these remarks Well I am exceedingly glad Mr Dun combe has come back and I thought he showed to very great advantage to night didnt you And Peggy has eyes she must see Of course he was much too profuse with his entertainment ridicu lously so for a young man but I am hard ly sorry It would remind her of his cir cumstances And you think she was impressed by borrowed silver candlesticks and fruits and flowers It seemed to me she was a good deal more interested in hearing how we managed to live on blue hares and brown trout at that week the horse fell lame As I said before she continued I wouldnt for a moment compare Mr Dan combe with Col Cameron Certainly not But in Mr Duncombes case if her fancy was turned his way everything would be most propitious and satisfac tory and we should have nothing to Diame ourselves witn ne must see that too she has as much common sense as anyone And I really do think that Mr Duncombe showed to great advan tage to night To be continued CHINESE HABITS OF INDUSTRY Mongolians Excel All Other Peoples in Their Strict Economies No race of men can surpass the Chi nese in habits of industry and thrift says D Z Sheffield in the Atlantic With the introduction of Western civ ilization the vast resources of the coun try will be developed the products of the soil and manufacture will indefr initely increase and domestic and in ternational trade will be multiplied in its proportions Now in all this ma terial regeneneration of China the Chinaman will be in evidence Not a dollar will be gathered from the soil from trade front mines from manu factori 3 without his securing a due proporf m as a reward for his part in the enterprise He will patiently and faithfully work for a master for half a generation and in the second half he will appear as his own master at the head of a thriving business Thus in the industries of the future wherever there is work to be done there willbe found Chinese ready to sell strength9 as working for hire is called in China and they will sell more strength for the money than will men of any other nation Again a dollar in the hands of a Chinaman represents far greater pur chasing power than it does in the hands of a European In China a dollar wilJ purchase 1500 pieces of cash com posed of copper and zinc These cash with a hole in the center and strung on a cord weigh seven pounds A ser vant or common laborerer in Pekin is glad to give ten days of labor and a carpenter or mason six days to secure this amount of cash This money would give a comfortable supper to an average family Three dollars a month or thirty six dollars a year would cover the living income of a Chinese family of the working class The meaning of this is that the China man will snrvive and prosper under conditions of life which would discour age and finally overwhelm the Euro pean Nature has made occupation a neces sity to us society makes it a duty habit may make it a pleasure CapeHs On Saturday the Senate completed con sideration of the Porto Rican bill with the exception of two amendments ben ator Fairbanks made a lengthy speech de fending the 15 per cent tariff Bills were passed granting lands to the btate qi Alabama for the education of colored students and to establish a light ana fog signal at Browns Point Puget Sound The House passed the fortifica tions appropriation bill as it came -from the committee It iro0 hnnr nolitical debate was precipi v j I the House c onty of IS in j The system of registering carriers is in - oS letter Mexican scientists w V oncMtin r l v ou cities More than ss nnn nnn - notes have been kominAl nw ank TjMvr ruytae anks ants 300000 for CveSfS made by convior inw eiQents to be A French commopnioi ica will be able to supply to JS H er possessions SlOonn nnn A sular year -- products every erfTlS15forJ Pilsat Langston Okla has 1COlored P ed favorably ben report- the maguey nlnnt a I QeJded thaj 2 American TSlrpla nuuuun 1 department is invoS Ag vJiilinS - 1 - j X y k -4 I si 1 tated by a general political speech made 1 j by Mr Shattuc of Ohiof many members- on both sides being drawn- into it 1 In the Senate on Monday seven hjburs were devoted to debate on Porto I3ican tariff bill The House adopted a feso lution by Mr Payne Republican floor leader calling upon the Secretary of the Treasury for information as to the prob able surplus existing revenue laws wpuld nrpito durinff this and the coming fiscal year Under suspension of the rules t tvorp rmssod to onen to settlement 4laV T 000 acres in the Fort Hall Indian reser vation and 2500000 acres in Oklahoma by ratifying the agreements with the Bannock and Shoshone Indians and the Kiowas Comauches and Apaches to di vide the northern judicial district of New York into two districts and to appropri ate 100080 for a military post at Sheri dan Wyo The Senate passed the Porto Rican tar iff bill on Tuesday by a vote of 40 to 31 The House entered upon consideration of the substitute for the Senate Hawaiian territorial bill under a special order The debate was in committee of the whole and only throe of the six speeches were pertinent to the bill Mr Knox Mass chairman of the committee on territories delivered a carefully prepared speech in advocacy of its passage Mr Robinson Ind criticised a section in the bill which he said continued in force labor contracts existing in Hawaii denouncing it as legalizing a system of wage slavery MrMondell Wyo spoke generally in support of the bill Mr Lane Iowa one ot the Republicans who opposed the Porto Rico tariff bill made a vigorous speech reaffirming his position and warning his Republican associates that the country nrould not support an unfair policy toward the Porto Ricans Mr Thomas N C Mr Williams Miss and Mr Boutell 111 discussed imperialism Peace was restored before the Senate convened on Wednesday and during the proceedings of the session there was only a reminder of the harsh Ianguageused just before adjournment Tuesday The session opened with a lively and interest ing discussion of the status of the Quay case in the course of which Mr Wol cott apologized for the language he had used Tuesday disclaiming any intenticST of being offensive to anybody least of all to his friend Mr Lodge The Colo 1 rado Senator made a vehement and elo quent appeal for early action upon the Quay case He was supported by other friends of Mr Quay and it was decided finally to take up the case Thursday un der the unanimous consent agreement made on March 1G In accordance also with that agreement the Spooner bill was made the unfinished business there by bringing the Philippine question to a direct issue in the Senate In the House there was an exciting scene as the cli max of a discussion of the Kentucky sit uation when Mr Wheeler a Kentucky Democrat and Mr Pugh a Kentucky Republican faced each other from oppo site sides of the main aisle and indulged in a wordy duel Mr Pugh charged Mr Wheeler with misrepresenting certain facts He was laboring under great ex citement Mr Wheeler showed admira ble temper and though quick to resent the fancied insult awaited the explana tion of Mr Pughin which he disclaimed any intention of imputing to him person ally a desire to distort the facts Through out the debate which was precipitated by Mr Boering the other Republican member from Kentucky there was an air of suppressed excitement It was the first time the subject had been broached in the House and intense interest was manifested Mr Lacey of Iowa conclud ed the debate with a general denunciation of the Goebel election law This incident overshadowed the other speeches on the Hawaiian bill many of which were ir relevant Mr Gallinger presented an argument m the Senate on Thursday against the seating of M S Quay as a Senator TW Pennsylvania He devoted himself al most entirely to the constitutional phases of the question Most of the dav was spent in executive session on the Hav Pauncefote treaty In the House when 4 i5ie hUr Xed for takinS a vote on the bill to provide territorial govern- snMrs - aif amendments remained that it was agreed to continue the consideration of the bill under the five minute rule until if was fimshed Several important were agreed to among them the follow ing To nullify all labor contracts in the islands to prohibit the sale of intoxicat ing hquor in saloons to limit the and holdings Of pnmnrntnn - to sbstitnte f0 HouS proTsi lating to the appointment of judges and other officers of the island the Senate provision The HonSP the appointing power in t G07enor Senate placed it in the PrPauwr the i I x IL