6 THE QUIET HOUR. Thou knowest all our trials, I^ord, Each sin and need and grief, Arid Thou hast promised in Thy Word Sometime to send relief But Thou hast set a task for each. As soldiers in a war. Who storm some point, the height to reach. Through battles' thunderous roar. Help us. for we are faint Indeed! Our little strength increase; With manna true our spirits feed, And bid our fears to cease. From Thy great white throne far abov» Thou dost our conflicts see; O God of power. Thou God of love. Our Friend and Helper be. ■Let purity and truth be ours While here we dwell below, Accept and consecrate our powers, Makp every virtue grow. Lead Thou through each perplexing strife, Be with us all the way, Lift up our hearts from death to life, Crown Thou each passing day. Oh, when our hope is burning low, Its oil is well-nigh spent. As up the rugged path we go— The rocky, steep ascent — Be Thine the voice clear With victory's thrilling ring, To teli Thy people Thou art near The needed aid to brin«! —Anna M. Woodfln. in Union Signal. itlli a >tirrm-• »tory At-My Li j-e In The j "iCopyright, 1899. by F. Tennyson Neely.] CHA PTEK XlV.—Contixued. No time need be wasted in telling the fffect of this "assignment to quarters." Prolific a source of squabble us is the custom ashore it becomes intensified afloat, and, when coupled with it came a shaking up and rearrangement of seats at table, all hope of harmony van- on the instant. The two brave young army girls still retained their 6eats at the captain's table; but two 1 most estimable young women, Red Cross nurses, were dropped therefrom and transferred to that of the second •officer on the port side, much to the comfort of a rather large percentage of their sisterhood who had regarded their previous elevation with feelings of not unmixed gratification. Then officers who had been seated with the general's staff had to vacate in favor of Mrs. Frank and Dr. Prober and Lieut. ■Billy Gray, whose father and the chief were long-time chums, and the lied 'Cross nurses who had been at the first -officer's table fell back to that of the third. It was every bit as good as the other, but it didn't sound so, and they ■couldn't see it; and there were faces sour as the product of the ship's baker when that evening all hands went down to dinner, and the silence maintained, or the ominously subdued tone of the Calk, at the other tables w as in marked contrast with the hilarity that pre vailed where sat the gray-haired, ruddy cheeked old chief and the laughing coterie that listened-to the fun that fell from the lips of Witehie Garrison. Armstrong, silent and somber, at the captain's right, looking forward from time to lime, saw only one face at the general's table that was not lighted up •with merriment; it was the face of the hoy he envied, if envy of this kind ever entered into his heart, and he wondered as fie looked at Billy's curly head what could have come over that glad young life to leave so deep a shadow on his handsome face. One night, just one week later, Arm strong's eyes were opened. More than •once iu the meanwhile he had invited the young oHirer's confidence, and Billy, •who three months earlier had been all gratitude •ankness, protested there was nothing on his mind. lie had been very ill, that was all. As to Canker's charges they were simply rot. He hadn't the faintest inkling what had become of the purloined letters any more than lie had of the whereabouts of his Delta Sig friend, young Morton, now officially proclaimed a deserter. But Armstrong heard more tales of Witcbie's devotions to him in his ill ness, and the slow convalescence that ensued, noted how the boy's eyes fol lowed her about the deck, and how many a time lie would seek her side, even when other men were reading, walking or chatting with her. Arm strong looked with wonderment that was close allied to incredulity and pain. Was it possible t hat this blithe lad, who had won such a warm interest in the heart of such a girl as Amy Lawrence, •could be forgetful of her, faithless to her, and fascinated now by this selfish and shallow butterfly? It was incred ible! But was it? The days had grown hot ter, the nights closer, and the air be tween decks was stifling when the sea rolled high and closed the ports. Offi cers had taken to snoozing up on deck u* steamer chairs. By an unwritten faw the port side of the promenade deck was given up to them after 11 at night; but the women folk had the run of the starboard side at any hour when the crew were not washing down decks. Armstrong had been fur forward about two o'clock one breathless night to see for himself the condition of things in the hospital under the forecastle. The aiaui deck was crowded with sleeping forms of soldiers who found it impos sible to stand the heat below; so on his return, instead of continuing along the gangway, he decided to climb the iron ladder from the main to the promenade deck. It would land him at the forward end of the starboard side. There he could smoke a cigar in peace and quiet. It was high time everybody was asleep. But as his head and eyes reached the •level of the deck he became suddenly aware of a couple huddled close to gether in the shelter of a canvas jscreen, and under the steps leading nljft to the bridge. He knew Gray's voice at once, and Gray was pleading. He knew her tones of old, and she was imperative, and listening with obvious impatience, for, almost at the instant of his arrival she spoke, low, yet dis tinctly: "Do as 1 say; do as I beg yon when we reach Manila, and then come —*ind see how i can reward." CIIAPTFR XV. Manila at last! Queen city of the archipelago, and Manila again be sieged! The loveliest of the winter months was come. The Luneta and the l'aseo de Santa Lucia, close to the sparkling waters, were gay every even ing with the music of the regimental bands and thronged with the carriages of old-time residents and their new and not too welcome visitors. Spanish dames and damsels, invisible at other hours, drove or strolled along the road way to enjoy the cool breezes that swept in from the beautiful bay and take wistful peeps at the dainty toilets of the American belles now arriving by every boat, from Hong-Kong. All the Castilian disdain they might look and possibly feel toward the soldiery of Uncle Sam gave place to liveliest inter est and curiosity when the wives and daughters of his soldiers appeared upon the scene; and there was one car riage about which, whenever it slopped, a little swarm of officers gathered and toward which at. any time all eyes were directed that of the White Sisters. Within the old walled city and in the crowded districts of Himondo. Quiapo and San Miguel north of the I'asig. and again in I'nco and Krmita to the south, strong regiments were stationed in readiness to suppress the first sign of the outbreak so confidently predicted by the bureau of military intelligence, in a great semicircle of over 20 miles, girdling the city north, east and south, the outposts and sentries of the two divisions kept watchful eyes upon the insurgent forces surrounding them. Aguinaldo and his cabinet at Malolos to the north had all but declared war upon the obstinate possessors of the city and had utterly forbidden their leaving the lines of Manila and seeking to penetrate those broader fields and roads and villages without. Still hug i ging to its breast the delusion that a semi-Malaysian race could be appeased by show of philanthropy, the govern ment at Washington decreed that, de spite their throwing up earthworks against and training guns on the American positions, the enemy should be treated as though they never could or would be hostile, and the privileges denied by them to American troops were by the American troops accorded to them. Coming and going at will through our lines, they- studied our force, our arms, equipment, numbers, supplies, methods; and long before the Christmas bells had clanged their greeting to that universal feast day, and the boom of cannon ushered in the new year, all doubt of the hostile senti ments of the insurgent leaders had van ished. Already there had been ominous clashes at Hie front; and with everyday the demeanor of the Philippine officers and men became more and more in solent and defiant. Ceaseless vigilance and self-control were enjoined upon the soldiers of the United States, nearly all stalwart volunteers from the far west, and while officers of the staff and of (he half-dozen regiments quartered with in the city were privileged each day to stroll or drive upon the Luneta, there were others that never knew an hour away from the line of the outposts and ihcir supports. Such was the case with Stewart's regiment far out toward the waterworks at the east. Such was the case with the Primeval Dudes on the other side of the I'asig, lining the banks of the crooked estuary that formed the Rubicon we were forbidden to cross. Such was the with Canker and the —teentli in the dense bamboo thicket to the south, and so it happened that at first Armstrong and Billy Gray saw nothing of each other, and but little of the White Sisters, probably a for tunate thing for all. Ever since that memorable night on the Queen of the Fleet, Gray had stu diously avoided his whilom t fiend and counselor, while the latter's equally studious avoidance of Mrs. Garrison had become observed throughout the ship. The dominion and power of that iiutle lady had been of brief duration, as was to IJC expected in the case of a woman who had secured for her undi vided use the best, tlie airiest and by far tlie largest. room on the steac.sr — a cabine de luxe indeed, tliat for a week's voyage on an Atlantic liner would have cost a small fortune, while here for a sea sojourn of more than double the time under tropic skies, and while other and worthier women were sweltering three in a stuffy box below, it had cost but a smile. The captain had repented him of his magnanimity before the lights of Honolulu faded out astern. The general began to real ize that he had been made a cat's-paw of and, his amour propre being wound ed, he had essayed, for u day or two majestic dignity of mie.ii that became comical when complicated with the qualms of seasickness. There was even noticeable aversion 011 part of some of the officers of the Dudes who, having made the journey from"the bay" to Honolulu with the women passengers, army wives and IJed Cross nurses, nat urally became the recipients of the views entertained by these ladies. Quick to see if slow to seem to see, Mrs. Frank has lost no time in begging one of the young soldier wives to share her big stateroom and broad and comfort able bed, and the lady preferred, the heat and discomfort between decks to separation from her friend. Then Mrs. Garrison tendered both the ruiftof her cabin during the day and evening; sug gested, indeed, that on hot nights they come and sleep there, one on the bed and. one on tlie couch; and they thanked Iter, but—never came. She coddled the general with cool champagne cup when he was in the throes of mal de mer, and held him prisoner with her vivacious chatter when he was well enough to care to talk. But, after all, her most CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY. JUNE 21, igcx). serious trouble seemed to consist in keeping Hilly (iray at respectful dis tance. lit* sought her side day after day, to Armstrong's mild amaze, as has been said; and when he could not be with her was moody, even fierce and ugly tempered —he whose disposition had been the sunniest in all that gray, shivery, dripping sojourn at the Sail Francisco camp. But once fairly settled in Manila, the White Sisters seemed to regain all the old ascendency. Col. Frost had taken a big, cool, roomy house, surrounded by spacious grounds, down in Malate and close to the plashing waters of the bay. Duties kept him early and late at his office in the walled city; but every evening, after the drive and din ner, callers came thronging in.and all Witcliie's witcheries were called into play to charm them into blindness and to cover Nita's fitful and nervous moods, now almost painfully apparent. Frost's face was at times a thunder cloud, and army circles within the outer circle of Manila saw plainly that all was not harmony betwixt that veteran Benedict and that fragile, fluttering, baby wife. The bloom of Nita's beauty was gone. She looked wan, white, even haggard. She had refused to leave Hong-Ivongorcome to Manila until Mar garet's arrival, then flew to the shelter of that sisterly wing. Frank Garrison had been occupying a room under the same roof with his general, but both general and aide-de-camp were now much afield, and Frank spent far more days and nights along the line of block houses than he did at home. The com ing of his wife was unannounced and uterly unlooked for. "Did I consult my husband!" she exclaimed in sur prise. when asked the question one day by the wife of a veteran field officer. "Merciful heaven. Mrs. Lenox, there was no time for that except by cable, and at four dollars a word. No! Jf any doubt of what Frank Garrison w ill say or do exists in my mind I go and do the thing at once, then the doubt is settled. If he approve, well and good; if he doesn't—well, then I've had my fun anyway." But it made little difference what Frank Garrison might think, say or do when Nita's need came in question. It was for Nita that Margaret Garrison so suddenly quitted the Presidio and has tened to Hawaii. It was for her sake, to be her counsel and protection, the elder sister had braved refusal, difficul ties, criticism, even Armstrong's open suspicion and dislike, to take that long voyage to a hostile clime. That she braved, too, her husband's displeasure was not a matter of sufficient weight to merit consideration. She was there to help Nita; and until that hapless child were freed from a peril that, ever threatening, seemed sapping her very life, Margaret Garrison meant to stay. For the letter that came by way of He knew Grau's voice at once. Honolulu had told' the elder sister of increasing jealousy and suspicion 011 the colonel's part, of his dreadful rage at Yokohama on learning that even there —the very hour of their arrival — when the consul came aboard with a batch of letters in hia hand, he had one for Mrs. Frost. She had barely glanced 1 tit its contents before she was stricken with a lit of trembling, tore it in half, and tossed the fragments on the swift ebbing tide, then rushed to her state room. There she added a postscript to the long letter penned to Margaret 011 the voyage; and the purser, not her husband, saw it safely started on the Gaelic, leaving for San Francisco via Honolulu that very day. That letter beat the ordinary mail, for the Queen was heading seaward, even as the Gae lic came steaming in the coral-guarded harbor, and a little packet was tossed aboard the new troop ship as she sped away, one missive in it telling \\ itcliie Garrison that, the man whose life had been wrecked by her sister's enforced desertion was already in Manila await ing her coming, and telling her, more over, that the packet placed in Gen. Drayton's hands < ntained only her earlier letters. In hi.- reckless wrath I.atrobe had told her that those which bound her to him by the most solemn pledges, those that vowed undying love and devotion, were still in his hands, and that she should see him and them when at last she reached Manila. Three mortal weeks had the sisters been there together, and never once in that time did Nita venture forth except when under the escort of her black browed husband or the protection of her smiling, witching, yet vigilant Mar garet. Never once had their house been approached by anyone who bore resem blance to tin readed lover. All along the Calle Ileal, where were the quarters of many officers, little guards of regu lars were stationed; for black rumors of Filipino uprising came with every few days, and some men's hearts were I failing them for fear when they i thought of the paucity of their num bers as compared with the thousands of fanatical natives to whom the taking of human life was of less account than I the loss of a game chicken, and in whose sight assassination was a ' virtue when it rid one of a foe. Already many officers who had weaUy yie to the importunity of a de.oted wife was cursing the folly that led him to let her join him. The outbreak was im minent. Anyone eould'see the war was sure to come—even those who strove to banish alarm and reassure an anxious nation. And when the call to arms should sound, duty, honor and law would demand each soldier's instant answer on the battle line; then who was to care for the women? The very serv ants in each household, it was known, were in most crises regularly enrolled in the insurgent army. The crowded districts in the city, the nipa huts sur rounding the wealthy homes in the suburbs swarmed with Filipino soldiery in the garb of peace. Arms and ammu nition, both, were stored in the great stone churches. Knives, bolos and pis tols were hidden in every house. Through the clergy, in some instances, and foreign residents in others, the statement was set afloat that every American officer's residence was mapped and marked, that the Tagals w re told oil by name—so many for each house in proportion to the number of American inmates—and day after day, awaiting the signal for their bloody work, were native devotees greeted with servile bows and studied the habits of the of ficers they were designated to fall upon in their sleep and slay without mercy. Even women and children were not to be spared; and many a woman, hearing this grewsome story, trembled in her terror. For a time, in dread of this new peril, Nita Frost almost forgot the other; but not so Margaret. She scoffed and scouted the rumor of Fil ipino outbreak. She laughed at Frost, who all too evidently believed in it and was in hourly trepidation. lie begged that the guard at his quarters might be doubled, and was totally unnerved when told it might even have to be re duced. Not so Mrs. Frank. She made friends with the stalwart sergeant commanding; always had hot coffee and sandwiches ready for the midnight relief; made it a point to learn the name of each successive non-commis sioned officer in charge, and had a win some smile and word for the sentries as she passed. It wasn't Filipino aggres sion that she feared. The men won dered why she should so urgently bid them see that 110 strangers—Americans —were allowed within the massive gates. There were tramps, even in Ma nila, she said. When the sisters drove, their natty little Filipino team flashed through the lanes and streets at top speed, the springy victoria bounding at their heels to the imminent peril of the cockaded hats of the dusky coach and footman, if not even to thq seats of those trim, white-coated, big-buttoned, top-booted, impassive little Spanish bred servitors. The carriage stopped only at certain designated points, and only then when a group of officers stood ready to greet them. Not once had they been menaced by anyone nor ap proached by any man even faintly re sembling poor Latrobe; and Witchie Garrison was beginning to take heart and look upon that threatening letter as a mad piece of "bluff," when one day the unexpected happened. [To Be Continued.] HUNTING IN CUBA. .Many Domestic Animal* Have linn Wild nml Wow AlTortl Excel lent Sport. In eastern Cuba Weyler's campaigns of extermination have led to an un expected result —a decided and prob ably permanent improvement of the local hunting grounds. Thousands of stampeded pigs, goats and chickens have taken refuge in the Sierras and become self-supporting enough to de fy recapture. Practice has also im proved their speed. Barnyard fowl have turned into wood birds and pass the night in almost inaccessible roosts—the top branches of tall for est trees, shrouded by a mantle of tangled vines. The Spanish settlers who imported pigs from Andalusia and Aragon would not recognize their descendants in the jungles of the Si erra dc Cobre. Ordinary hunting dogs can hardly venture to encounter the fierce boars that rush at every in truder of their lairs and stand at bay until their female relatives have scut tled into pathless thickets. As natural game preserves both Cu ba and San Domingo have, in fact more than doubled their attractive ness since the time when the compan ions of Columbus explored the up lands of Santiago and marveled at the almost total absence of wild quadiu peds. Birds abounded, but there were no deer in the forests, no foxes, bears or badgers in the mountain cliffs. There were neither rabbits nor squir rels, the only indigenous animals be ing the liuita, a burrowing rodent that seems to form a connecting link be tween the marmots and woodrats.— Indianapolis Press. He Wanted to lie Acenrnte. During th.e bombardment of Alexan dria, in ISS2, I.ord Charles Beresforo asked a gunner if he could hit a man that was on the fort. The gunner re plied : "Ay, ay, sir!" "Then hit him in the eye," said Lord Charles. And he was considerably astonished when the gunner replied: "Which eye, sir?"'—Chicago Journal. I'nnppr eclated Vocalist. Clara (an amateur vocalist) —If you bad my voice, what would you do with it? Maude —I don't know, dear; but T be lieve 1 would give it a holiday till the man came round, then I would have it tuned. —Pearson's. \\!l:it Did MM* Monnf Slowboy —1 am going to kiss yon to-night when I go. Miss Willing— Don't you think t time you were going?— Chicago Daily News. ASKS FOIIEIGN AIT). China's Emperor Appeals to tho Christian Powers. He WiftlicM Them to ■lrpunr llie Kill prom llowitjicr aurt limaiiiluli lllm 111 Iteal Authority, I utter Their Protection lla»»u --tren ol' t'lirlfttiaiiK < oiitlnue. Tien Tsin, June 11. —The special train that went to examine the line and reeonnoiter returned Saturday night. The railway was found clear two miles beyond Yang Tsuh. The (irst repair train, with Admiral Seymour and tiis staff, 650 British, ('apt. McCalla's 100 Americans, 4U Italians and 25 Austrians, left Sun day morning. A riotchkiss and other guns were mounted on a car in front of the engine. The rest of the guns were mounted in the center of the train. A second train left with GOO iiritish, Japanese, Russian and French troops. London, June 12.—The last message out of l'ekin to reach London left there yesterday at it a. m., going by way of Russian telegraph through Manchuria, the Tien * sin line being cut. It is as follows: Shanghai, under yesterday's date, cables that there has been street fighting in Pekiti since early Sunday a fternoon. I'he Shanghai correspondent of the Daily Express, telegraphing yester day.says: "Weng Tung Ho, Emperor Kwang Hsu's tutor and confidant, who was dismissed by the dowager empress after the coup d'etat in 180s, sends with the special sanction of the em peror and his party, including the three viceroys, a message to the peo ple of the west. In part it is as fol lows: '•* His majesty is convinced that the loval support of many scores of mil lions ol the Chinese will be accorded to his proposals for putting an end to the state of anarchy brought about by the action of the Empress ILsi Tsi. " 'The government of China being virtually non-existent, the emperor proposes that the foreign powers whose troops dominate the capital shall remove his imperial person from the palace in which his majesty is confined a prisoner, shall declare Em press Hsi Tsi and her ministers to be usurpers and shall bring Emperor Kwang Hsu to Nanking, Wuchang or Shanghai, whichever tin; foreign powers deem to be the most suitable situation for the new capital of the Chinese empire, under the new condi tion. "*lt is proposed by his majesty and bis aavisors that the foreign powers should declare a joint protectorate and undertake the task of governing the country through his majesty.' " London, June 13. —Sixteen British marines, reconnoitering in advance of the international column marching to Pekin, fought and chased 2,000 Box ers on Monday, killing 20 or 30. The Times in an extra edition pub lishes the following dispatch Uom l'ekin. dated June 12: "The chancellor of the Japanese legation. Sugivama Akira, while pro ceeding alone ami unprotected on offi cial duty, was brutally murdered by soldiers ol' (lie favorite bodyguard of the empress, al Manigatc railroad station yesterday." London. June 15. —A dispatch from Shanghai says: "A report has reached here that tin- liritish, American and Japanese n>ini>'ers in IVkin favor the restora tion i.l' Kinpci'or Kwang Sn, but that the French and Russian ministers in sist upon the powers taking charge of (Irina. It is further reported that the respective divisions of the coun try have already been assigned. The belief is thai the withdrawal of the British ships from the Ynrgtse-Kiang is an indication of Great Britain's dis claimer of the 'sphere theory.' " Later reports from Tien Tsin con firm the news of the burning of the Japanese legation, but the rumor that i minisler has been murdered is not confirmed. Fifteen hundred Russians, with four guns, have arrived outside of l'ekin. This makes 4,000 Russians who have landed. Brussels, June 15. —Confirmation has Ixen received of the report of the massacre of one Swiss and two Italian engineers employed on the Belgian railroad in North ( liinn. The sister of the Swiss engineer was also killed ail two other persons are miss ing. The whole Chinese empire seems to be in a ferment. The intentions of the empress dowager are still equivo cal, with a balance of testimony on the side of a determination to expel the appropriators of a part of her country or to lose her throne in the attempt. It is related of her that on Monday, following the murder of the chancellor of the Japanese legation, she was roused ton sense of danger and wenl to the lung-Ting gate of l'ekin. where she advised the rioters to disperse. But she took no steps to apply force and the appearance of things is more threatening than be fore. The Times publishes the following dispatch from Tien Tsin, via Shang hai. June 14: "A serious engagement has occur red between the international column and the Mohammedan troops of Cien. Tung Full Siang, near l'ekin." |<'rclicliitiaii Won the Stace. Paris. June 15.—The international automobile race for the James Gor don Bennett cup. from Paris to Ly nns. was won by M. F. Charron, of I'rnncc. Alexander Winton, of Cleve land. participated in the contest, but his machine was smashed on the road. llriaii'K Nomination AsMiiretl. Chicago. June 15. By the action of he democratic state conventions in California. Missouri, Kentucky. Geor gia and Vermont yesterday, lion. VV. I. Bryan i assured of the nomina ion for president on the democratic ticket. SITS AS A COURT. Republican Kattonal Committee Moota at Philadelphia. ( oiilrMtaiil* lor Srala 111 tin- I vnven* (lull l'ri'«Piil Tlu-lr < latin* Tlio Alabama Feo|»lc arc Turned HOH II HleriU 111 ibe < nite ol' (>■■<; Dialrlrl. Philadelphia, June 14.—The repub lican national committee met at the i lot el Walton yesterday and began the investigation of contest cases pre paratory to the formation of the tem porary roll for the national conven tin. Chairman lianna was not pres ent, when the committee convened and Henry Payne, member from Wis consin, presided in his place. Sena tor iianna came in later, but lie did not assume the duties of the chair. The entire session was devoted to hearing testimony and arguments iu the contest from Alabama. There were seven contests from this state, including those over the representa tion from the state at large and those from the Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh and Ninth districts. The hearing in the main consisted of recitals of petty acts of bribery and intimidation tfrom both sides of the controversy and in some cases affidavits were read in which t lie wit ness had testified on both sides of the case, giving absolutely contradictory testimony. The principal develop ment of the day, however, consisted iu bringing out the fact that the fed eral officeholders in Alabama and some of those from the state who are employed in Washington had been ex tremely active in shaping the result of contests for delegates. So palpable did it become that fed eral patronage was the principal ob ject in view that the committee de cided to practically exclude all the contesting delegates from the tem porary organization of the convention except those from the Ninth district. In fact the contestants had hardly left the room when Committeeman Manley, of Maine, offered the follow ing resolution as the sense of the committee: "Resolved. That the committee de clines to place on the temporary roll any contesting delegates or alter nates from Alabama except in the case of the Ninth district, and in that district that A. 1). Wimbs and.l. \V. Hughes and their alternates be plac ed upon the temporary roll." This resolution was adopted and then Committeeman I'ayne introduc ed the following resolution: "Resolved, That this committee re quests the president of the I niteil Stales to direct the proper officers to cause an investigation into the acts of certain federal office-holders in Alabama in connection with the elec tion of delegates to the primary con ventions and to the state and district conventions held in said state to elect delegates to the national convention to be held in Philadelphia on the 19t.h inst., and if the facts as stated in tin hearing held before said committee regarding the contest in said districts and state be true, this committee asks, not in the interest of the repub lican party, but of the country, that such action shall lie taken as the pub lic interest requires." In presenting the resolution Mr. Payne said that he introduced it be cause of the evident pernicious activ ity of the office-holders in the cam paign and that he believed it would be a serious mistake for the commit tee to fail to ask that official recog nition be taken of this infraction of the laws of the country. The com mittee had. however, agreed to take a recess after the disposal of the Ala bama cases, and the committee dis solved for the lime. Mr. i'ayne re questing that action be postponed. The evening session of the commit tee was devoted lo the Delaware con test, Waller 11. Hayes appearing for the Addicks, or "Union" republican contestants, and Levi ('. Bird for the Dupont or "Regular" republican dele gation. The committee continued its session until 12:13, when a decision was reached to refer the Delaware controversy to a committee, with in structions to harmonize the differ ences of the two parties if possible. Philadelphia. June 15. —With :;ll tile work prelimiiKiry to the entertain ment of the republican national con vention and its attendant throngs practically accomplished, Philadel phia is now contentedly awaiting he: visitors. Prom the big conventioi hall down to the detail thorn charged with the responsibility fee that they have the situation well ii hand and the completeness of tin preparations seems to justify the be lief. As yet however, the hospitalit; >f the city is by no means taxed. Ihe most interesting event in th national committee yesterday was th scaling of the Warmouth delegate from Louisiana after a very spirite contest occupying nearly all dav Ill's is an overthrow for the feden office-holders of Louisiana, ten < whom were on the delegation heade |by Wimberly. the collector of th port of .New Orleans. Although Win berly is a member of the nation, committee and made the stronger possible presentation of the case, tl committee by a vote of 25 to is d eliired in favor of his opponer Among the men thus denied seats i the convention is William Pitt Ke logg, ex-governor and at one tin United States senator from Louis ana, who has been a delegate to cvei republican convention since ISo tl<'(li<>ili»i .Missionary murdered. New York. June 14.—-News has bet received in this city of the murder Dr. Edna. (!. Terry, in charge of tl station of the Methodist Missiona society at Tsilng-lliin, China. Tl tidings came in the shape of the f< lowing message to Dr. Terry's brot er-in-lnw: "Dr. Terry murderr Rrcak news gently." Later the Met odist board received this messaf. dated Tien-Tsin. June 12: "llopki and Mayner safe." The persons na ;?d are missionaries at Tsung-iii There is one other Methodist m jionary at the same place.