The Ashburn advance. (Ashburn, Ga.) 18??-19??, May 06, 1899, Image 7
CJl IS Pi 10 SPAIN AMBASSADOR (AMBON RECEIPTS FOR TWENTY MILLION'S. THE NONEY BUYS THE PHILIPPINES Exchange Will Be Bought In New York and Transferred to Madrid at the Earliest Moment. The last move in the negotiations ’terminating the war with Spain oc¬ curred at Washington Monday, when Secretary Hay paid to the French am¬ bassador, M. Gambon, the $20,000,000 provided by the cession of the Philip¬ pines. The payment was rtiade in four treas¬ ury notes of $5,000,000 each, and was receipted for by M. Catnbon as com¬ pletely liquidating the obligation of the United States in this connection. The ambassador deposited the $‘20,- 000,000 in the Riggs National bank of Washington city and the cashing of the warrants is expected to be made later through the City National bank of New York. The Spanish government was notified by cable of the payment, but nothing will be done as to forwarding the funds to Europe until Spain directs the exact course to be pursued. The form of receipt signed by the ambassador was follows: “Received from the secretary of stats of the United States the sum of $20,000,000 in four drafts upon the assistant treasurer of the United States at New York, of date April 29, 1899, each draft being for $5,000,000, the same being in full payment of the ob¬ ligation of the. government of the United States to the government of Spain as set forth in article 3 of the treaty of peace between the United States and Spain, signed at Paris, France, on the 10th day of December, 1898, the ratifieation of which -was ex¬ changed in the city of Washington on the 11th day of April, 1899, the pay¬ ment being provided by the act of congiess, approved March 2, 1899, en¬ titled an act making an appropriation to carry out the obligation of the treaty between the United States and Spain, concluded December 10, 1898. * “Jules Gambon, “Department of State, Mayl, 1899.” Will Buy Exchange. It is expected that exchange for the entire. $20,000,000 will be purchased by Spain’s representative in the New York market. Dealers were of the opinion that exchange for about three- fourths of the amount of the indemnity had already been gathered and that the remainder would be obtained without a further advance in rates. No Photo* Allowed. The treasury department has taken steps to prevent the photographing of the warrants for the payment of the $20,000,000 to Spain for the Philip¬ pines, because abuse of the privilege •might lead to the counterfeiting of government securities. Miss Francis E, Johnson, a well known Washington photographer, surrender -was called upon Monday to had plates of photographs which she made of the warrants in question, and willingly did so on the representa¬ tions of the civil service officials. SENT MESSAGES TO DEWEY. Sons of Revolution Soldiers Hold Tenth Congress In Detroit. Enthusiasm for the heroes of 1898 and 1899 equaled, if it did not exceed, that expressed for the heroes of ’76 at the opening session of the tenth con¬ gress of the Sons of the American Revolution at Detroit, Mich., Monday. The expressions of patriotic ardor for American fighters of today culmi¬ nated when Colonel E. S. Chittenden, of St. Paul, proposed that May 1st, 4 ‘Dewey Day,” be celebrated by dis¬ patching the following cablegram to Admiral Dewey at Manila: “Congratulations and fraternal greet¬ ings to Compatriot Dewey from the National Congress of the Sons of the American Revolution in session at De¬ i, The suggestion was loudly applaud¬ ed. Ex-Senator Thomas W. Palmer moved to amend to include General Otis knd all the officers and men un¬ der cosaroand of both the admiral and the geWa 1 The cablegram was so . amend A 1 , FOR III LIEF OF PRISONERS. General Mac Arthur Send* Hfeney and Ptothloni Under Vl»* of Truce. A Manila dispatch under dote of May 2, says: General MacArtbur has sent officers to General Antonio Luna, the Filipino commander, under a flag of truce, carrying money and provisions for American prisoners in liis hands and asking an exchange of prisoners and the names of such as he may have. It is reported that the insurgents have two officers and sixteen others and it is supposed among these are Lieutenant B. C. Gilmore and eleven men of tho crew of the United States gunboat Yorktown, who fell iuto the hands of the Filipinos last month when the gunboat visited Baler, on the east coast ol Luzon. Major Bell with a squad of scouts bas captured the town of Maeabebe, about four miles southwest of Calum- pit, the people ringing bells and shout¬ ing “vivas.” The American army is now employ¬ ing Macabebes, instead of Chinese, and they are delighted to get 50 cents a day, declaring their loyalty to the Americans. Major General Lawton is advancing. Ho has organized a hand of forty scouts to go ahead of the col¬ umn. The band, which is under W. M. Young, an old Indian fighter, who killed five Filipiuos last week, includes Diaond, Harrington, Somerfield and Murphy, ol the Second Oregon regi¬ ment. The anniversary of the battle of Ma¬ nila bay was observed by the United States fleet, the usual drills being omit¬ ted. SOUTHERN PROGRESS. List of New Industrie* Established the Past Week. Among the more important of the new industries reported during the past week are a box factory in Texas; a brick and tile factory in Kentucky; coal mines in Kentucky, Virginia and West Nirginia; a cotton mill supplies factory iu South Carolina; ft cotton and woolen mill in North Carolina; a $1,000,000 cotton mill in Louisiana; a $75,000 one iu South Carolina, and two of 10,000 and 1,200 spindles re¬ spectively in East Tennessee; and one each in South Carolia and Texas; an plectric light and waterworks plant in West Virginia; an electric light plant in Mississippi; an electric light and power plant in Georgia; a 100-barrel flouring mill in Georgia, two of 25- bar-el and one of 50-barrel capacity in South Carolina, and a 100-barrel mill (new) and a $150,000 mill (rebuilt) in Tennessee; a foundry and machine shop in upper East Tennessee; a $25,000 guano factory in Alabama; an ice factory in Arkansas; lumber mills in Arkansas, Florida and Virginia; a machine shop in Northern Alabama; a $200,000 marble company in Virginia; a mattress factory and a natural gas and oil company in Texas; a 600-bar- rel sugar refinery to be built by Memphis capitalists; a$2,000,000 iron and steel company in Virginia; tele¬ phone companies in Arkansas, Ken¬ tucky and Virginia.—Tradesman (Chattanooga, Tenn.) GILMORE A PRISONER. Admiral Dewey Informs Department ol Fate of Yorkton Crew. The following cablegram was re¬ ceived at Washington Monday from Admiral Dewey: Manila, April 30. —Secretary Navy, Washington: Apparently reliable in¬ formation, ten of the Yorktown boat crew including Gilmore,are prisoners at insurgent headquarters. Am con¬ tinuing investigation. Dewey. Inasmuch as there were fifteen mem¬ bers of the Yorktown party captured by the Filipinos at Baler and as Ad¬ miral Dewey accounts for only ten of them, it is feared that the other five have been killed. They were proba¬ bly killed or fatally wounded in the original assault upon the lauding par¬ ty at Baler. The identity of the members of the party still unaccounted for is not known. A telegram was sent to Ad¬ miral Dewey Monday asking him to give the department, if possible, tho names of the men known to be in the hands of the Filipinos. It is accepted at the department that the reason he has not already furnished these names, with the exception of that of Lieuten¬ ant Gilmore, iu his dispatch of Sun¬ day’s date was because he did not have the information. The insurgent headquarters, where Admiral Dewey says the men are held prisoners, is supposed to be San Fer¬ nando, but there is no assurance on that point. MILES IS CRITICISED. Work of "Beef" Inquiry Board Ended and Report I* Signed. The Wade court of inquiry conclud¬ ed its. work at Washington Saturday in connection with the allegation of General Miles concerning the boel supplied to the army during the wav with Spain. The report was signed at 2:30 o’clock p. m. by every member of tho board, aucl soon afterwards the members of tho court left the Lemon building, where all the meetings in •Washington have beeu held. Colonel Davis, flip recorder of the court, carried the official copy of the findings to the war department, and, in the absence of Secretary Alger, de¬ livered it to Acting Secretary Meikle- john. Mr. Meiklejohn immediately deposited the document in an envelope and forwarded it to the president in New York. The report is of about 30,- 000 words, and goes fully into the questions which have been raised in connection with the army beef. The text has not been made public, and will not be until after tho presi¬ dent shall have read it. It will then rest with Lim to say whether the re¬ port shall be given to the public. The verdict, however, is known to be that the charges which General Miles made before the war investiga¬ tion commission are not sustained in reference to the refrigerated beef, al¬ though his contention that the canned roast beef was not a suitable continu¬ ous ration is admitted. There is di¬ rect criticism of General Miles for failing to promptly bring to the atten¬ tion of the war department the rei>orts made to him concerning bad beef, and “several individuals” are censured for failing to observe the proprieties cf their position as commanding officers in this and other respects. The forecast of the report as made by the Associated Press on the 18th instant was an accurate one. As was then stated, the court takes the posi- tiou that the testimony is conclusive that both the refrigerated beef and the canned beef were in good condition when delivered to the government, and continued so until issued to the troops, except in especial instances where the deterioration was due to ac¬ cidental conditions in transportation or to the influence of the tropical cli¬ mate. OTIS’ ACTION ENDORSED. Term* Given Filippino Representatives Approved By Washington Officials. A Washington special says: War department officials are very much gratified with tho tone of the reply of General Otis to the Filippino delega¬ tion. It is considered as comporting with the dignity of the United States. It would not be possible for the United States to recognize the existence of the Filippino congress or a Filippino government* General It is believed that whan Otis’ reply is communicated to the Filippino commanders they will ask another conference with the expecta¬ tion of arranging favorable terms of peace. that It is said at the war department it is not likely that any further con¬ cessions than that of general amnesty will be made. Peace and freedom, it is believed, will appeal more strongly to the Filipino army than any argu¬ ment Aguiualdo aud his officers may make. Meanwhile it is the belief of the offi¬ cials of the war department that further’hostilities on a large scale are not probable. MOB WRECKS MILL. Striker* Destroy Valuable Property By U*e of Giant Powder. Wardner, Idaho, was the scene Saturday of the worst riots since the deadly labor war of 1892. One man is dead, another is thought to be mortally wounded and property valued at $250,000 has been destroyed by giant powder and fire. The damage was done by union men and sympa¬ thizers on Canyon creek, two miles from Wardner. The strikers took possession of the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mill, which they found deserted, the manager hav¬ ing directed his employes not to risk their lives by battling with the mob. Powder was called for aud placed under the mill. Fuses leading to the charges were lighted nnd the mill blown to fragments. The loss to the company is estimated at from $250,000 to $300,- 000 . CONVENTION ADJOURNS. Sunday School Worker* Flnlali Tlielr La¬ bor*—Mot Neat in Denver. The last sessions of the ninth Inter¬ national Sunday School Association at Atlanta, which were held Saturday, were perhaps more largely attended than those of any former day, and the enthusiasm displayed by the conven¬ tion at the close of the president’s ad¬ dress in the evening will be long re¬ membered by all who heard it. More was accomplished during the last threo sessious of importance to Sunday school work in the United states and Canada than was concluded ilnriug the two days previous, and the delegates departed for their homes with the conviction that tho ninth in¬ ternational convention had not only been the largest in point of attend¬ ance, but the most productive of good to the cause in which they are labor¬ ing than any former convention. The nomination of Hon. Johu Wan- amaker, of Pennsylvania, as chairman of the executive committee, was re¬ ceived with deep approval by the dele¬ gations from every state, the members of which being familiar with tho est and enthusiasm displayed in Sun¬ day school work by the ex-postmaster general of the United States. The nomination of the day that struck a responsive chord in the heart of every delegate was that of Mr. lb F. Jacobs, of Chicago, the nestor of the convention, as the chairman of the commission to make a tour of every country on the globe where the Bible has been introduced. Denver, Col., was selected as the place of meeting of the tenth interna¬ tional and fourth world's convention. It had been announced that these two conventions would be held in the same city, and at the same time, and the large audience was on the qui vive of expectation when the chairman stated that invitations were in order. Although Toronto and Indianapolis made strong pleas for the conventions, the speech of E. W. Halford, which was one of the most eloquent and most brilliant heard in the hall, carried the different delegations by storm, and when he concluded, it was readily seen that the conventions would go to Denver. The nominating committee returned during the day a list of vice presidents and members of the international ex¬ ecutive committee that is an honor to the association. An able address was delivered by President Smith on the occasion of the close of the convention and the fervent and eloquent prayer of Rev. Dr. George, of Mississippi, brought to end the most successful as well as the largest convention in the history of the International Sunday School Asso¬ ciation. WARRANTS ARE DRAWN For Discharge of Treaty Obligation* of United State* To Spain. At the request of the secretary of state the treasury department Saturday drew four diplomatic settlement war¬ rants for $5,000,000 each in discharge of the treaty obligations of the United States to Spain. The warrant directed the United States treasurer to pay the several sums to his excellency, Jules Cambon, ambassador extraordinary and pleni¬ potentiary of France, representative of the government of Spain. The warrants were signed by F. A. Vauderlip, assistant secretary of the treasury; F. J. Tracewell, comptroller, by C. M. Foree, chief clerk, and Ellis H. Roberts, who directed the assistant treasurer of the United States at New York to pay them. KILLED WHILE EXPERIMENTING. Five Sion Sent Into Eternity By the Bur*t- iiig: of a Torpedo. The powder press at Dupont powder mill at Carney’s Point, N.J., exploded Saturday afternoon, killing five men and injuring three others. The explosion occurred during an experiment with a government giant torpedo. Among the killed was Capt. Stewart, a government inspector, . SOUTHERN MAKES DEAL. South (Carolina and Georgia Has Been Placed In New Hand*. The deal between the Southern rail¬ way for the purchase of the latter rail¬ road has been consummated. The terms of the purchase were not given out, but it is understood the Southern will enter into control at once and probably put on a steamship line to the West Indies. CONFERENCE WITH FILIPINOS SO FAR FRUITLESS. AMNESTY ONLY WILL BE GIVEN. tieneral Oils Informs tl»o-Envoy* Th»l Filipino Government Will Not lie Recognized. A second conferencenvas held Satur¬ day at Manila between General ,Oti» and Colonel Manuel Arguelesses and Lieutenant Jose Bernal, who cama from General Lana under a flag of truce Friday to ask for a cessation of hostilities. The meeting was fruitless. It is understood tLnt the Filipino com¬ missioners were given terms upon which the Americans will consent to negotiate. The Filipinos admit that they have been defeated, and it is expectod that they will return with fresh proposals from General Luna. The envoys from General Luna were hospitably treated l>y General Otis, who provided them with a house and with a guard and permitted them to visit their friends. Returning to the palace Saturday morning the envoys saw an illustration of American re¬ sources. A long train of wagons and pack mules was just starting with pro¬ visions for General Lawton, who has reached Maruuco. The conference at the palace lasted three hours, Jacob G. Schurman, of the United States Philippine commis¬ sion, attending and Admiral Dewey dropping in for an hour. The discussion was mostly between General Otis and Colonel Argueleses, who had been selected for the mission by General Luna because he had known General Otis. Colonel Argueleses had served on the Filipino commission which met the American authorities before the war in an oudeavor to smooth over the impending troubles. Mr. Scbur- man emerged from the palace between the two shock-haired, savage-looking natives and drove unattended to tha office of the United States Philippina commission, where they talked infor¬ mally for about an hour. Manila is divided between two opin¬ ions—the majority believing that tha FilipinoB desire peace, while others think they are sparring for time in which to rehabilitate their demoralized army. gained color The latter opinion from the fact that re-enforcements have been sent to the south, opposite the American lines. Colonel Argueleses, who is a lawyer, splendidly illustrated the Malay sub¬ tlety at words. While he declared with apparent frankness that the Fili¬ pino leader wanted a chance to give up the straggle gracefully, through the coagress, instead of surrendering ignominiously, he asked for a fort¬ night’s armistice so that tho congress might bo summoned on May 1st, and endeavored to commit the Americans to greater concessions and wanted terms guaranteed by treaty. He was told that recognition of the Filipino government was impossible, and he was given to understand that a written guarantee of amnesty for'Mil* insurgents was the utmost that conld be given. Otl* Will B« Caution*. A Manila dispatch of Sunday state* while it is generally expected among Americans that the Filipino emissaries will return with revised proposals from General Antonio Luna, General Otis is not letting this prospect inter¬ fere with his preparations for pushing the war. He h»B ordered Major Gon- erol Lawton to return to Angat, a few miles northwest of Norzogaray, aud not to advance aggressively while tha negotiations are pending. General MacArtbur is apparently acting on the same policy, but he ia repairing the bridges and strengthen¬ ing the lines of his force, which is stretched out with a four-mile front, and within a quarter of a mile of ths enemy. The possibilities of peace are* grati¬ fying to a great majority of the army who have regarded the w-ar as an un¬ pleasant duty that must be performed according to American traditions.