2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Everj Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ter ysar J2 o# paid In advance 1 50 ADVERTISING RATES: AdTertlsements are published at the rate of Pne dollar per square for one insertion anil lifiy tuts ver square fur cacti subsequent insertion Rales Dy tlie year, or for six or three months, ar« low and uniform, and will be furnished on application. Legnl arid Official Advertising per square, Ibres times or less, s!.'. each subsequent inser tion fO cents per square. Local notices 10 cents per line for one inser sertlon; 5 cents per line (or each subsequent •on > troopers were panic stricken. The field hospital is crowded with injured and the colonel of the Tenth regiment gave up his quarters to those in immediate need' of medical assistance. When the storm came up Gov. Stu art was entertaining a few friends in his tent. The storm broke with such suddenness and fury that the occu pa its of the tent found themselves en tangled in the canvas and ropes in an instant, but all escaped serious in jury. 1 here were nearly 50 men in the regimental guard tent of the Tenth regiment when the storm broke and not one is believed to have escaped injury. The men of the Second brigade, whose tents were pitched in the low land, were forced to swim to safety. Their cots are floating about the camp and not a tent of this brigade remains intact. When the storm swept down upon the camp there were hundreds of vis itors present. EBERHARD CONFESSES. Man Who Murdered and Robbsd Hie Aunt Tells of the Crime. New York City.— Drawn back to the scene of his crime by a force he could not resist, August Eberhard. self-confessed' murderer of his aunt, Mrs. Ottillie Eberhard, a Viennese widow, whom he lured to a lonely spot in New Jersey a few days ago and shot to death, was captured on Thursday near Paterson, N. J., and is now a prisoner in the Hackensack jail. What interested the authorities most in the confession of Eberhard made to them was the reason he gave for committin gthe crime. Eberhard said that he was in love with a New Tork girl and that he needed money to marry her, so, knowing that his aunt had $2,500, he plotted to kill her and steal the money. Eberhard says he also intended to kill his cousin, Ottillie Eberhard, to whom he was engaged, so that nothing would stand in the way of his marriage to the New York giri. Eberhard was found lying on the lawn of a residence just outside of Paterson. There was an ugly looking wound in his right leg, which the murderer first said had been inflicted by Italians who attacked him, but which he afterwards confessed' was inflicted by himself so as to make the police believe he had been wounded on the night his aunt was killed. When Eberhard was searched not penny was found in his pockets. Eberhard said that he had buried the money lie stole from his aunt. He led the detectives to a tree n?ar Lit tle Falls and there dug up a bundle of bills. There was $2,400 in the bun dle, which is the amount that was stolen, as the murderer left a small amount of money in the bosom of his aunt's waist, so as to give the im pression that she had' not been robbed. HAZERS ARE SUSPENDED. Eight Cadets at VVett Point Military Academy Are Sent Home in Disgrace. West Point, X. Y. —Eight cadets in the United States military acad emy here were on Thursday sent to their homes as a result of hazing members of the fourth class. They were William T. Russell, appointed at large, and Harry G. Wever of Illinois, members of the first class; and Byron Q. Jones, New York; George \V. Chase, New York; William W. Prude, Alabama; Isaac Spaulding, Oklaho' ma; William Nolle, Virginia, and | James A. Gillespie of Pennsylvania, members of the third class. The cadets who have been placed under suspension for what has come to be regarded in official eyes as the major offense in the acad'emy list, will have their cases passed upon by the secretary of war and have been or dered to await the secretary's action at their homes. Precedent in such cases sets the penalty as dismissal from the academy following proof of the hazing charge. Mail Order Houses Are Indicted. Chicago, 111. —The federal grand Jury returned' indictments on Thurs day against 29 mail order houses whose alleged Illegal profits are' said to hftve been between four and' five millions of dollars. The charge is using the mails to defraud. Assistant Treasurer Meline Dies. Washington, D. C.—Maj. James F. Meline, for 16 years past the assist ant treasurer of the United States, died at his home here Thursday after a long illness. He was 67 years old. A HIGHER COURT REVERSES LANDIS HUGE FINE IMPOSED ON STAND ARD OIL CO. IS DECLARED ILLEGAL. NEW TRIAL OF REBATE CASE Is Ordered by United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Three Judges Concurring in the Opinion Handed Down. Chicago, 111. —Following the unan imous decision on Wednesday of Judges Grosscup, Seaman and Baker, composing the United States circuit court of appeals, reversing and re-t manding the case of the government against the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, in which case Judge Landis in the district court had imposed a fine of $29,240,000, the federal attor neys announced that the government had 30 days within which to file a pe tition for a rehearing, and that it would be filed within that period. In the case that was reversed Wednesday, the Standard Oil Com pany of Indiana was found guilty of accepting rebates on shipments of oil from its refinery at Whiting, Ind'., to East St. Louis, 111. Judge Landis fined the company $20,000 on each of 1,462 counts, each count represent ing a car load shipment. The opinion of three judges of the higher court leaves little of the con tention that each car load constituted a separate offense. Even the various shipments, of which there were about 500, could not be considered as sep arate offenses under the ruling of the court of appeals. The fine should have been based on settlements be tween the railroad and the oil com pany, the opinion holds. Of these there were just 36. The maximum fine on this basis would amount to $720,000 and the minimum $36,000. It is said that $223,000 is the total amount which the Standard Oil Co. is alleged to have received as rebates on the shipments in question. In the event that a rehearing is de nied, the government may goto trial on the original indictment, containing 1,462 counts. Such an action, Dis trict Attorney Sims could be ready to take within two weeks. There are also seven other indictments, con taining 4,422 counts. As a vast amount of work has been done on the case already decided and reversed, it is unlikely that an entirely new case will be instituted. The record of the present case contains over a million and a half words, and is estimated to have cost the government $200,000. Another move which may be made by the federal attorneys is to trans fer the prosecution from this jurisdic tion either to the western New York district, or to the eastern Tennessee court. In these two districts, the government investigation led to in dictments containing about 2,000 counts against the Standard Oil Co. i DESPERADOES RAN AMUCK, Two Bandits Shot 11 Persons in th< Streets of Jamaica Plain, Mass. Boston, Mass. —Eleven persons wer< shot on Wednesday night, three ol them probably fatally, by two des peradoes who, on being pursued bj policemen and a crowd of citizens fled for two miles through a thieklj settled district of Jamaica Plain, fir ing right and left and disappeared ii the woods near Franklin park. The men are believed to be two of th£ gang of three who robbed a saloon in Jamaica Plain Tuesday night aftei shooting and killing one man and wounding two others. Mrs. Delia Fallon is one of th« most seriously injured of last night's victims. She was standing in front of her home with her baby in hei arms when the two men, pursued b> a crowd, came down the street. As they passed her one of them fired and the bullet entered her head. Sh« was removed' to a hospital in a criti cal condition. It is believed that the desperadoes lay concealed in Calvary cemeterj while the police were hunting fot them on account of Tuesday night's hold up and robbery. The robbers fled' with hundreds ol men pursuing, and soon disappeared in Franklin park, shooting down Offi cer Cox near the park gate. As soon as possible a cordon of po lice, armed with rifles and revolvers, was thrown about the park. Patrolmen McMahon and Thomp son sighted the supposed Italians in the neighborhood of the park late in I the evening and went down before their flre. Herbert E. Knox, the night watch man of the Forest Hills cemetery, who was shot in the abdomen by one of the desperadoes, died at the Emer son hospital late last night. Plasterers Fell 50 Feet. St. Louis.—During mass Wednes day at St. Francis de Sales church two plasterers fell 50 feet to the floor, near Rev. Holweck, who was celebrating the mass. One man was killed'. Battleships Resume Their Voyage. Honolulu, Hawaii.—The Altantic battleship fleet bade adieu to Hawaii on Wednesday and sailed for Auck land, N. Z., the next point on its world itinerary, where it is due to arrive on August 8. AN AMERICAN IS THE VICTOR JOHN J. HAYES WINS THE MARA THON RACE IN ENGLAND. Yankee Sprinters Completely Out classed the Englishmen, Who Were Expected to Win. London, England.—lt would be no exaggeration in the minds of any of the 100,000 spectators who witnessed the finishing struggle of the Marathon race (2(5 milefe) at the Olympian are na h riday to say that it was the most thrilling athletic event that has oc curred since that .Marathon race in ancient Greece, where the victor fell dead at the goal and, with a wave of triumph, died. Since the beginning of the Olympic games the great rivalry has been be tween England and America and while the minor competitions on the track and field, in which the two na tions specialized, were fought out, Englishmen consoled themselves for all the American successes by the thought that in the domain of long distance running they always had been supreme, and whatever prizes they failed to grasp in this the co lonials would pick up. The sequel may be told briefly. Six Americans started in the Marathon race and nine English runners. Of the first ten men to reach the coveted goal, four were Americans and they are officially placed as follows: •John Hayes, first; Joseph Forshaw,. Missouri Athletic club, third; A. R. Welton, Lawrence Y. M. C. A., fourth* and Lewis Tewinipa, the Carlisle In dian, ninth. The second man was Hefferon of South Africa. He was the oldest among the runners, having 34 years to his credit, and he made a remark able pace almost to the end of the struggle. The firct Englishman who crossed the line came in twelfth. He was W. T. Clarke and was not one of those counted upon to win. Duncan, the former English champion, who won the preliminary English trial, fell out at the twelfth mile. The race is not only a triumph for the United States but. in a larger sense, for America, because seven of the leaders at the end were from North America. The three Canadians, Wood, the Indian Simpson and Law s n finished fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively. It will not snatch any laurels from the brow of Hayes, who won a good race, to say that the hero of the .lay was the Italian Dorando. The sympa thy of every person in the stadium went out to the gallant Italian, who, although he did' not win, deserved to win. Durando crosse.l the line first, but as he fell several times after he en tered the stadium and each time was helped' to his feet by over-zealous of ficials, he was disqualified. The judges' decision was unanimous that Hayes won the race properly. SULTAN SURPRISES TURKS. He Grants a Constitution to His Peo ple and Orders a Parliament to Assemble. Constantinople, Turkey.—After 32 years of autocratic rule under Sultan Abdul Hamid 11., Turkey again has been granted a constitution. An im perial irade was issued Friday order ing that a chamber of deputies be as sembled. This present constitution is practically a restoration of the one proclaimed December 23, 1876, by the present sultan immediately following his elevation to the sultanate. This action on the part of the sultan, which came as a complete surprise to all observers of the prog ress of events in Turkey, was wrest ed from him by the Young Turks, a political party that has been working for many years for the establishment of a constitutional government. FINANCE AND TRADE. Retail Business Is More Active and the Percentage of Idle Machinery Gradually Decreases. New York City.—R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: Industrial plants gradually enlarge the percentage of active machinery, furnishing more work for wage earn ers, which stimulates retail trade, while favorable crop progress strengthens confidence in a continu ance of recovery in business. New ccntracts for steel produces are being placed with more freedom, and col lieries resume that were closed by the drouth. Outside representatives of jobbing houses are numerous in the primary market for cotton goods, but opera tions are restricted, as is customary at this season. A Battle With Indians. Tucson, Ariz. —ln a fierce battle between Mexican troops and Papago Indians last Tuesday near Getro, a mining camp in Sonora, Mexico, 19 In dians and two soldiers were killed. Hughes Wants Another Term. Saranac Inn, N. Y. Gov. Hughes will accept a renomination if the Republican party of this state de sires him to again be its candidate. In a statement made public Friday the governor so declares himself. A Daring Crime. Philadelphia, Pa. — After choking Joseph, A. Vaughn, a bank runner, and robbing him of $1,900 on a trol ley car Friday, a man whose identity is unknown dashed through the car and escaped.