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Show THE SILVER BILL. It Comes Again Under Ipe Notice of the Senate and House. FRENCH MONASTERY DAMAGED BY DYNAMITE. Courrmin; the Proposed Filibuster- log Expedition Against Lout r California. Ilj Telegraph tsthe Ntw..j Ilonar. WasiumtIux, June 3. The House, by a vote of 120 to Unadopted Unadopt-ed a resolution to proceed to thu immediate consideration of the silver sil-ver bill. McKiuley from the committee on rules, reported a resolution prold-ing prold-ing that the Houe shall iroceed immediately to the consideration of thu sih er bill and Uiat its couside ration ra-tion cmitinuc until Saturday, when the previous question shall be ordered. or-dered. The previous qui-sUon having hav-ing been ordeiod on the resolution, forty mluutesdebatc were to be a! lowed. Blount Georgia) had no o'ji-c-tion to the time limited for debate, but he was informed that tho chairman chair-man of tho committee on coinage w ill be allowed to ofleramciidment-s which were a Imissablu under the rales of the Houe. WfienUiey were offered, thi re would be left no opportunity oppor-tunity to the minority to offer uny amcudment. There would be given no opportunity on the (art of the minority to ask the House ote on the free coinage of slhir. At the reiiublican caucus list night Uiire had been muih dlscii-Mon aud it was necessao to whip In the friends of free silver by means of this resolution. It had -worked a shameful outrage on the minority. There were many meti on Uie other side w ho w ouid veto for free sih er but for fear of thu President. The President was in record wiUi the Secretary of the Treasury, and both were in aecord with Wall Street, Bland uf Missouri said no doubt a large majority of the 1 louse would favor unlimited coinage. To prevent the fact from arpeariugoii the recoid it wasproiose-d to gag every democrat demo-crat In thu Houh. anu many republicans. repub-licans. Eirygeiitliman whootcd for this resolution voted against free siivir. Cannon of Illinois said tliemmor-lt, tliemmor-lt, whk-li was now clamoring for free coinage, had held the Uouh: m the forty-ninth aud fiftieth Con grebes, but lasted one bill for free coinage. They could nut now fe-ol the- country or even fe-ol ttiiui-s ttiiui-s elves. The motion to rccou-ddcr was tablet). Yeas 121, nays US. ISepresentativo Mills today submitted sub-mitted to the House committee on l'nciflc railroads a retort in favor of the bill, prcviou-iy agreed upon, to refund the government indeblcd-rt-ss of the Union nud Central Pacific Pa-cific raiiroids. The report wa adopted by the committee. .1 Sllter lotle IllseoTernt St. PirrtRauuHc,, June 5. A silver lode jieldlrg Ur cent of pure mttal lias been di-covered iu the bed of the river Fonelz In Southern South-ern Russia. A Monaslerjr tlamasrU. Pakis, June 5. I-agmnd Char-treuu, Char-treuu, the famous monastery fourteen four-teen miles from Grenoble, has licen uiuih damaged by an explosion of dynamite. It Is believed to have been done by persons who failed In an atteni t to extort blackmail from the monks. 1 ilitmtlf riiic. Sa: FiiANrisuo, June 5. A UiTOntcle special from San Diego bays the ln estimation into the proposed pro-posed filibustering expedition against I.ower California continues to reveal startling facts. A new phase is now put upon the affair. From eidence furnished by agents of the Mexican Land arid Colonization Coloniza-tion Company it appears that the I rcldeutofthecompanyhadln view a plan to annex the peninsula to the British empire. 1 1 was designed to colonize Lower California to secure concessions from the Mexican government, gov-ernment, then foment dissension in the English capital, and the inter ests would then I-ejeoiardized. The intervention of the mother country coun-try was to be invoked. Proof of this state of things is substantiated by letters written by Miior fecott, manager of tho corn pan, . An flTfinet nnil Ibe fantr. Nrw I'liuic, June 3. Bar silver 103. The advance Is due to the action ac-tion of tlie republican caucus last night In nccepUng McKinIe 'a pro-iiositlon, pro-iiositlon, that Uie Treasurer shall purchase $1,51)0,000 worth of American Amer-ican silver e-ich mouth, and that silver bullion may be used to meet tho demand for redemption. His proinsition also contained a national na-tional lank redemption fund feature, fea-ture, and a provision that when gold and silver reach jar, there shall be free coinage. Ttirr Aptirose. VASlitM.TO, Juneo. Tue Sec-retary Sec-retary of btatu lias received a dispatch dis-patch from tho United Stales lega-lion lega-lion at Rio Janeiro announcing that the Cabinet ascl a resolution resolu-tion euUiutlasiirally approving Uie action of the International American Amer-ican Conference in recommending arbitration on all questions of dlf-fere dlf-fere ncc betw een the several governments govern-ments of the Americas. SfnMe. WAhiiiM,TO, June 3. The silver sil-ver bill was taken up. Hisrock addressed ad-dressed the Senate on the proposiUou of free coinage. He believed the majority of the (.c-ople oppoed the orenlnsof the mints to free colngae. Tlie national convenUons of boUi political parties would, by decisive majorities-, repudiate such aprorosi-tlon. aprorosi-tlon. Massatcrei! by Indians. Denveb, June 5. J. a . Holt, purchasing agent for the Importing Cattle Company of Wyoming, arrived ar-rived here this morning and gives a brief account of Uie Indian mas sacre which occurred in the upper Green River country several days ago. He says that a party of Indl-ans. Indl-ans. who had become Intoxicated wltli whisky furnished by ranch-mcn,came ranch-mcn,came to the camp of the government govern-ment surveyors and demanded more "fire water." It being refused the Indians attacked the party, killing Chier Engineer Crittenden, in charge of the third division of the government survey, and Chain Bearers E. V. Tlmberlako, George Woods and Henry Ovcnneyer. Jesse Jes-se Lee, assistant engineer, was left upon the field ferdead but recovered sufilclenUy to gel to a nelghtnring ranch, where he now lies in a precarious pre-carious condition. |