f Hy "3 (r rs- -w --.:, -" fmwmp- v-f f'f gj ssV H J smb h H B B B H ,.3 i . 2 vn - l l FIRST PART. Jm , ' j - i 1 PORTY-FQTJBTH YEAK PAGES i TO ,8. ti-r,? mv - x Uj y y i, v - OYER II HL At the Sound of a Bugle Blast the Boomers Sweep Into the Neutral Strip. THE START FOR OKLAHOMA, Fearful Hoods "Will Impede the Forward Progress of the Pilgrims. A PIEECE BOEDER FIGHT. The First Bed Flow of "What Prom ises Be a Very Carnival of Blood and Crime. HABEI HILL HAS DISAPPEARED. The Authorities at Washington Are Much Alarmed OTer the Prospect of Serious Trouble Ahead. HAEEISON HAT DECLARE MAKTTAT. LAW Owing to the floods it was decided to allow the boomers to start across the neutral strip for Oklahoma earlier than was at first intended. At the sound of a bugle thou sands of wagons started in an eager race for the promised land. Pour persons were killed and others injured in a fight between a squad of boomers and the Indian police on the border. Harry Hill has mysteriously disappeared, and a reward is offered for his discovery. Government officials ere fearful of a general riot The military will be held in readiness. rSFZCtlXi TXXXQBAlt TO IBS DISPATCIX.1 Abkansas City, April 18. Between floods and tornadoes the boomers who are now in full march on Oklahoma are having a hard time. This is a bad season of the year to do anything in this part of the coun try, but perhaps the most difficult feat of all to perform is to attempt to go anywhere by wagon. Every stream in the Indian nation is swollen to such an extent that the fords have been obliterated, and in order to make successful crossings men have to go out on the boiling water in rafts and make sound" ings at the risk of their lives. The storm of Tuesday night was the most disastrous in thehistoryof Southern Kansas. The wind blew a hurricane and Ihe rain fell in torrents. Among the thousands of boomers massed along the Cherokee strip the suffering and terror caused by the furi ous onslaught of the wind was appalling. Horses were stampeded, schooners were overturned and in the darkness man and beast" raced about panic stricken and be wildered. Scenei of Confusion. In some cases whole families were hurled out of their wagons and scattered over the ground. Many were injured, but nobody was killed. The old soldiers' Oklahoma colony was overtaken by the tornado and badly demoralized. Every tent save one was destroyed, and the canvas covers of all the wagons were blown away. The drenched and miserable boomers who comprise this colony returned to "Wichita for fresh covering. At Wellington the storm raged furiously. Several buildings were wrecked. A man named Hacker was almost instantly killed by a flying board. All Southern Kansas and as far south into the Indian country as the borders of Okla homa have sent reports of washouts, of mis ery and sickness in the camps of the boom ers, and of trails almost obliterated by the water which spreads over the low lands. Later reports about the battle between the Chickasaw; police and a party of boomers and cattle men near Oklahoma City show it to have been a stubborn contest for suprem acy. The mounted police were guarding the southern border of Oklahoma with strict orders not to permit anybody to nse the famous Chesholm cattle trail. The First Blood Shed. The cattle men were on their way to Kan sas, and endeavored to bluff the police by driving their stock past them. Several boomers who saw a chance to get into Okla homa under the guise of cattle men on their -way North, joined the Texans and made a bold dash for the trail. The police warned the intruders back, but, being nu merically'stronger, the cattlemen continued to advance. The police then fired a volley, instantly killing two cattle men and one boomer named Henry Geiss, and wounding four others. The invaders replied with a rattling fire, which killed one policeman and wounded another. They then rounded up their cattle and took the old Abilene route through to Cheyenne reservation. The first shooting around Kiowa occurred last night. Two boomers claimed a certain quarter sec tion and one named George Kramer under took to put the other, Charles Heidke, off the land. Both men drew revolvers, and Kramer was shot through the head and instantly killed. Heidke was slrft through the groin and may die. A Very Mysterious Departure. Oklahoma Harry Hill, one of the oldest boomers in Kansas, left for the Territory from Wichita last Friday, and has not been heard from since. He was expected to re turn Sunday, and his disappearance is most mysterious. The last heard of him was from Purcell. He left that village Sunday evening, saying that he would ride over to Oklahoma City Monday noon. His dog was found shot through the head. xuuuuncoi Wichita's most prominent citizens and is worth several hundred thou- Mftd' dollars. A reward of $600 has been offered for his discovery, and this reward will be greatly increased to-morrow. Capt Marum, of the United States Army, estimates thatthere will be at least 20,000 men in the Territory before May 1 seeking home steads. Great trouble is sure to be tne result if the estimate is correct. A thousand wagons and 8,000 men, women and children are to-night toiling slowly across the strip for Oklahoma. Many started at 8 o'clock this morning. Everybody wanted to get in the lead, and if a detachment of soldiers had not been present to preserve order there would have been trouble. Starting- Across the Strip. One of the wagons had the Stars and Stripes floating from a pole. When all was expectancy Captain Hayes, mounted upon a superb gray horse, dashed down upon the colonists. He reminded them of their pledge not to disturb cattlemen's fences or Indian villages in the Ponca and Pawnee villages, and then announced that the starting signal would be a long bugle blast. Then he rode back to the head of his column and, alter swinging it down the plain a few hundred yards, he seized a bugle from one of his men and blew a sharp blast that set in motion the whole train of boomers. An exciting race np and down hill began. As the strange procession passed the Chil loco Indian school little Indian cirls greet ed it with cheers. The skipper of the neatest schooner of the fleet was pretty Ella BlacE burn, of Quincy, HI., and her crew of three sisters. They were dressed in calico gowns and old-fashioned snnbonnets. These girls are going for homes in Oklahoma, and they say they will not return without them, even if they have to marry boomers. They car ry two Winchester rifles. Pour days from now and this great cara van will reach the borders of Oklahoma, All day to-day long white-topped wagons have been rolling into Arkansas City from the camps north and west of here. Some of them are waiting for to-morrow's sun, others are already down to the Pawnee trail and following in the wake of the schooners start ed by Captain Hayes. One Olan Who Will Not Go. There is one old fellow in the walnut bot toms who will not start. His name is Black, and although he is nearly 60 years old, he is infatuated with the 'buxom wife of a young farmer near Caldwell, and persuaded her to run away with him and her husband's best team of horses. The wronged husband learned to-day for the first time that his spouse and horses were here, and early this morning he came over from Caldwell with a constable and replevined the horses. He declined, however, to reclaim his wife. The boomers over at Hnnnewell and Cald well started only a few minutes after the Arkansas City procession began to move. Every drop of liquor in the camps was de stroyed. The boomers have no definite plans as yet, but it is understood that un less they'came to the old Cherokee and Cheyenne trails at Black Bear Creek they will separate into divisions so as to strike theJ)order at three points widely separated. A man who passed through Purcell to day says the town is overrun with gamblers, monte men and thugs, and several strangers have been held up and robbed at the muzzle of a six-shooter. Last night a big force of special deputy marshals patrolled the streets to prevent a collision between, opposing factions of gamblers. SCENES AT CALDWELL. Hundred of Wagons Continence Their Journey Across too Aoqtrnl Strip . Fresh ArrlTnU" Without Ceas Ins; Fears of the Floods. Caldwell, Kan., April 18. At 10 o'clock this morning the start across the Cherokee strip was made by the boomers en camped here. The intention had been to start to-morrow morning, but owing to the condition of the trail because of the heavy rains of the last few days, Captain Wood son, commanding the company stationed here to repel invaders, determined to give the colonists another day to cross the strip. At 8 o'clock a blue-coated bugler mounted at the camp of the soldiers and rode from camp to camp among the boomers with the tidings that they might cross the line into strip at 10 o'clock. The troops broke camp at 9 o'clock and proceeded to the line. By 10 o'clock SO wagons were drawn up on either side of the little bridge where the old Beno trail crosses the line. At just 10 o'clock they were permitted to start. The troops rode slowly in front, the wagons stringing out in single file, making the start of a long pro cession that will continue to pour over the little bridge into the land of the Cherokees all day long. About 700 wagons left to day. Captain Woodson returned after riding a few miles with the troops, and Lieutenant Jenkins will take them through to Oklahoma. A dispatch from Wellington says: The stream of prairie schooners moving south ward has not diminished. The streets of the city are filled with boomers and they continue to pour in from the north, east and west, and frequently from 6 to 12 wagons and teams are in one outfit. Such an emi gration has never before been witnessed in this section. Old settlers iamiliar with the Cimarron river, which all settlers entering Oklahoma from the northwest cross, say that its waters are very high and that it is as much as a man's life is worth to cross it in Its swollen condition. Its, banks are composed in a large part of shifting quick sand, and where asjfe crossing can be made to-day, to-morrow m nil probability the same place would be a death trap, if any parties who intended to go from nere with teams have abandoned the attempt and will to by rail, being fearful of serious acci ents in fording this river. MABTJALMW.' The Authorities nt Washington Have Their Eyrs an Oklahoma Every Effort Will be Blndo to Prerent Trouble An Anxious Feeling;. Washington, April 18. It is very ap parent here that officers of the army are filled with the liveliest apprehension re garding the opening of Oklahoma. The Secretary of War has authorized the state ment that the Government is fully aware of the situation, and has arranged to take all proper steps to prevent trouble. It is known that the subject has formed the main topic for discussion at recent Cabinet meetings, and that the Attorney General has been called upon to decide the question as to authority of the "War Department to act in case of strife, bloodshed or violence in the newly opened country. The instructions sent to the commandant of the troops in Oklahoma, as a result of the opinion rendered by the Attorney-General, were extremely guarded. They are under stood to direct the army officers to assist in the maintenance of law, but to carefully ob serve the regulations defining their authority and leave arrests for violations oflaw to the Marshals. The President might, in case of serious disturbance, declare martial law over the Territory, but this could not be done in advance of breach of the peace, and the machinery of Government would, it is feared, be too slow in moving to meet the great emergency which may arise. The only army regulation on the subject provides lor interference by tbe troops in an emergency only in case of interruption to the carriage of the mail or assaults upon United States property, but under a sozne- ( Continued on tevtnth page.) PEOTESTS TOO MUCH. Eren Facts Known to all Included in the Standard's Sweeping Denial. IT IS BEF1HING THE OHIO OIL, And Marketing It to Compete With the Pennsylvania Produet. THE OPERATION RATHER EXPEN8IYE, Bat a Llma"Eeflner Says the Results Are Far From Unsatisfactory. The flat denial of the Standard Oil Com pany that any importance is attaohed to the fact that it has gobbled np most of the Ohio oil field has drawn out an interesting cate chism for its officials to furnish the answers to, if they were so inclined. Of course they aren't, though Lima oil is being refined, and although it costs more than a similar process for Pennsylvania's superior product, the Standard is selling it on its merits. (SPECIAL TXLXOBAX TO TIOl DISPATCH.! Lima, April 18. No statement could be further from the truth than the sweeping denial sent broadcast from Oil City, Wednesday night, in which it was said the Standard Oil Company officials authorize the statement that there is absolutely no truth in the report that they are abandoning the Pennsyvania oil fields for Ohio, or that they are able to successfully refine Ohio oil for illuminating purposes. The entire story, they say, is based on the fact that they are now building a pipe line from Ohio to the Pennsylvania fields. The authority of this denial is too uncer tain, perhaps, for it to do much damage, but it was put out for a purpose, and de serves a little attention. The story, which was made up wholly of facts, was not based, as alleged, on the building of a pipe line connecting the Ohio and Pennsylvania fields, which was A LATE DEVELOPMENT, but chiefly on the fact of the Standard's ex tensive purchases and improvements here and at other points in the Ohio field, to gether with the report that the Standard was refining Lima oil and secretly sending it out in tank cars to distributing centers, whence it distributes it broadcast over the country. It was not asserted in these dispatches that the Pennsylvania field was being aban doned, but that the effect on that field was unoertain and remained to be developed. The idea of its abandonment was probably only a natural conclusion growing out of the enormous purchase here, whieh, it must be remembered, is a radical change in the pol icy of the Standard, which has never before attempted to acquire production. There are many who suppose that the Standard owns the Pennsylvania field, but as a matter of fact it owns no wells there at all. This fact makes the purchase of 25,000 acres of Ohio territory all the more significant and sug gestive. One thing is certain Pennsylvania pro ducers must hereafter treat with the Stand ard as A. PPODUCEE OP CBUDE OIL as well as a consumer of it, and, as said be fore, the effectyOf this change on the. Penn sylvania fields remains to be seen, and time alone will tell. The Standard will not. Its propensity for denying everything, divulg ing nothing and squeezing pretty much everybody that it can get a grip upon, is too well established to admit of turning to that source of information as to future plans and effects. The greatgame of freezeont, wherein Ohio oil was beared from 60 to 15 cents, together with the Standard's anxiety to take it all in at that price, even when necessary to build tankage to accommodate it, at an ex pense of millions, and also good and suf ficient foundation for suspicion. Since the building of a pipe line to con nect the Ohio fields not merely with the Pennsylvania tanks, but with the Standard refineries everywhere, from Brooklyn to Chicago, is admitted, the whole question really is as to whether they can refine Ohio oil. As they deny that it can be refined successfully, it is necessary to depend largely on circumstantial evidence. SOME PEBTINENT QUESTIONS. It is one thing to know that a man is a criminal, and another to send him to the penitentiary. Of course the defendant can not be compelled to criminate himself by answeringbut he can easily shed a flood of light on tbe subject by answering any or all of the following questions: What is the product of its 20-stiU refinery of 5,000-barrel capacity? If not refining petroleum, it is running night and day. If Ohio oil cannot be Jrefined successfully, why is this refinery to be increased to an 80-still, with 20,000-barrel capacity? If it can't be refined, why are they build ing a 22-acre reservoir? It will hold an enormous amount of water enough, in fact, to supply quite a city. Water won't mix with oil, hut is necessary to a refinery, and not to the fuel oil business. If Ohio oil is worthless except for fnel, why have they bought up as much as possi ble of both oil and oil territory, and why do they seek more? SIN OTJLABLY SIGNIFICANT. If fuel oil is the real product, why have they Quit making contracts for furnishing fuel oil for even a year? They at one time made contracts for two years. As a matter of fact, they have refused to contract for more than two months, although they have 15,000,000 barrels of it here above ground, and a daily production fully ten times as great as the demand for fuel purposes. In dications are that people who have gone to the trouble and expense of putting them selves in the hands of the Standard by adapting fuel oil will be squeezed iu the near fnture. But it is not necessary to depend on the answer of the Standard to settle the matter, I have learned to-day, beyond all possi bility of a doubt, that the Standard is suc cessfully refining Ohio oil and sending it out of Lima in tans: cars in tact, in tram loads. The Standard has no cooperage here, and most of this refined oil is sent to Cleveland, where it is barreled, and whence it is marketed. This is a fact, and anyone on the ground can see it, although it is of course impossible to get into the refinery. A LIMA BEFINEE TALKS. Furthermore, the Eagle Consolidated Re fining Company is refining Lima oil ex clusively, and has a market for all it can produce. Nor is that all they are selling it on its merits, as Lima oil. I interviewed S. S. Drake, the President of this company, in his office this evening, and found it brilliantly illuminated with four large lamps, burning Lima oil. The blaze gf these lamps was not'only brilliant, but ex ceptionally so, and if there was any odor I failed to detect it '"Do you use Lima crude exclusively?" was asked. "Yes, sir. We use nothing else, and have been refining Lima oil for over two years." "Do you find a ready market?" "We have no trouble in selling every barrel we can refine, in direct competition with Pennsylvania oil.' "Does it differ in any respect with the mej Pennsylvania product?" THE KINO OP LIGHT XX GIVES. "It eives a better Ueht,?' he said, taki off tie shade, 'jfefou will observe that is s ' .frriifcijA PITTSBURG, ERIDAT 'AHEffL very white and very $) flame. I wish I had a lamp of Pennsylvania oil to set along side of it. If the twoaet side by side, and you did not choose L$sauoi, you would, be an exception to the rule. Nobody eyer saw a better flame than that,' "How1 about the odor?" "Well, if there is any exceptionally bad odor I have become so accustomed to it that I do not notice it. If yon turn the lamp low, however, you will smell a sulphurous odor peculiar toXima'oil. The difference would only be recognized by an expert, for you know oil gives ofl an odor when the flame is turned down." "Is it easily refined?" "No; that has been the trouble. Pennsyl vania oil is refined in 24 hours, and it takes 48 to refine Lima oil, and it takes more chemicals." EELATIVE VALUES Op THE TWO 0H-8- "What is the relative value of Pennsyl vania and Lima crude oil for illuminating purposes?" "I believe I do not care to give any fig ures," said he, hesitatingly, "but there is not as much illuminant in Lima as Penn sylvania crude." "What is the percentage?" "As we pet it, about 40 per cent" "What is the percentage of Pennsylvania oil?" "I am not sure as to that," said he, re peating the question to an employe of the refinery, who served an apprenticeship on Pennsylvania oil, and from whom it was learned that it is about 72 per cent "Have yau been able to cheapen the cost of refining Lima oil?" "No, but we are making better' oil, and are experimenting constantly, with tbe hope and expectation of lessening the cost" "Are you the only refiners of Lima oil?" "No. The Peerless Oil Company, at Findlay, refines it, and is now adding two new stills. That is the only refinery in this field, except ours and the Standard's." "Is the Standard refining Lima oil?" SOMETHING EVERYBODY KNOWS. "Well, I'm not in the habit of saying anything abont other people's affairs, but they have a large refinery here, and it's running day and night Everybody knows that." The Standard is still acquiring territory as rapidly as possible, with five buyers in the field. Besides small deals, they closed to-day with the Union Oil Company for 1,553 acres of leases. The Associated Press dispatch sent out last night, announcing that, with the close of the deal for the Ohio Oil Company's ter ritory of 15,000 acres, the Standard had ac quired all the available territory here, is erroneous, and caused considerable indigna tion. The Lima Timet, in a long article on the subject, says: The Standard has acquired by purchase a large acreage of oil-producing territory and tho largest portion of the production, bat to say that it has all is absolutely false. Not more than one-tenth of tbe territory is under their control. Thousand8npon thousands of acres of good producing territory, some developed and some undeveloped, are still open. to the pro ducer. MUBDER ATllEA, Frightful Story Told by the CreVr of a Bier chant Vessel One Ulan Knocked From the Yard and Killed Warrant Ont tor tho Officers. tSFXCUr. TKLIOEJLM TO THE BISPATCIM Philadelphia, April 18. United States Marshals here have warrants for Cap tain E. E. Sewell, of the wooden ship Solitaire, of Bath; the first mate, F. Byan, and second mate, J. W. Bobbins, The two mates left the vessel before she was docked here on Monday and the-captain has disap peared. Some of ,tbe crew toll, an awful story of cruelr.it'rpra the start they were overworked, and instead of having the usual watch plan of four hours off, after eight hours of duty, they were compelled to work fully 20 hours of the 21. They were constantly at work, when they should have been below, scraping down the masts, painting the Solitaire outside and inside, and painting the boats." Men were daily knocked down with brass knuckles and be laying pins. No order was given without being accompanied by an oath, a kick or a blow, and the men say they were black and blue from this treatment during the entire voyage. On March 11 Coombs, an American sea man, William K. Holm, a Dane, and two Germans were ordered aloft to take in sail. Roaring with oaths at the top of .his voice, Bobbins, the second mate, mounted the rig ging after them almost before they had started at their task. Coombs stood next to the mast as the mate came np, and Holm was next to him. Aiming a blow at Coombs with: "What are you doing ?" he hit him in the neck. Losing his balance the American fell 80 feet, when he caught him self on the bnntlines and saved himself. w liH !, cqnm mmflrlr iit ma, a 1.5. TTnl... who, according to Coombs, gave a frightful yell and fell like a stick from that awful height to the deck. He was ..killed in stantly and was buried next day: "I made up my mind," said Coombs, "that if enough of the crew would stand by me we would, mutiny. I was ready for any thing to get out of that floating hell. I stole the carpenter's hatchet and wanted the Irishman to stand in and get the rest of the crew over, but he had not any 'sand and the Dutchmen were thoroughly cowed and ready to stand anything. I was wild enough with the poundings day and night I, had to taKe to sail we captain and the two mates, set fire to the ship and take to the boats.1' ' TRIED TO P0I80N HIS PA. A Young Man in Maine Under Arrest Ac cused of Attempted Patricide. rSPICIAX, TELIQBAM TO TOT DISPATCH. 1 Poetland, Me., April 18. A young man in the neighboring town of Gray is under arrest for attempted patricide. The facts in the case are these: Mr. Abel Black, an old and well-knon citizen of West Gray, came near being fatally poisoned, Monday, by paris green, whjch had been put into a jug of cider from (which he was in the habit of drinking. He! had been at work in his field, and went into the house about 10 A. M., drank a glass ojf cider, and soon became sick. i Later in the day J. L. Crockett also took a drink from the same jug. He notice'd that it looked and tasted peculiar, and on a more particular investigation saw that it was col ored with pari green. He was very sick for a time, but it also acted as an emetic in his case, andpe is now all right George Black has been arrested on a charge made by bis fatherof mixing the paris green with the cider. KILLED BY A COUPLING LINK, Strange and Fatal Accident to a Wrecking Crew at Renovn. rSFECIAL TZLEOBXX TO TUB BXSPATCII.I BenoA, April 18. On the Philadel phia and Erie Bailroad, near Cook's Bun there had been a smash-up of an oil train, and a wreckine crew went up ,to clear the track To gefone of the derailed oil tanks on tue track, a rope 100 feet long was at tached to the coupling link, the other end being fastened to tbe wrecking engine. John "Wilson, one of the crew, was standing 100 fnt distant from tbe tank, and some dis t&nce from, him stood Bndolph Schwab, an other workman. I When the strain came on the rope tho coupling link on the tank broke. One of ' fill TMPPPJt flflW tnVSnl Wlleftn nml eirtiAlr him in the forehead. Glancing from his forehead it struck Schwab in the neck, kill ing him instantly. Wilson was knocked down, but beyond a, bad cut was not in jured. - flf&t - 'ff'Hfcn nHifrd k.StA ml.tV! i3m r.- I --.-r. . i".. ...... -K. .. .ifX. r.!.i. .. " ' -.4. . t .ti-iju. J- . J . J i iUkSSSBBSSBBE& 19, 1889, UNEARNED FORTUNES Expected to be Coined by Many Hew York Boarding House Keepers DUBING THE BIG CEHTEHNIAL Only Three of Washington's Descendants Honored at the Banquet. THERE AEE TOO MANY 10 ASK ALL. The Ball Boand to lis a Big Success, Despite the Early Hour It Starts. The arrangements for the Centennial in augural celebration in New York City are fast nearing completion. The .story having gone abroad that extortion would be prac ticed by hotels and boarding houses, similar to that practiced in Washington during the inauguration, New Yorkers are in a hurry to deny the story. They have to admit that some boarding house keepers will get every cent they can. The ball will be un fashionably early. Only three of Wash ington's many descendants will have places of honor at the banquet rspEcuu. TELxa&m to tux dispatch. New Xoek, April 18. Any keen ob server or good listener who will go abroad thrdugh this city this week will find that tKS biggest part of the population of New York is agape over the coming centennial jubilee. One thing is emphatically sug gested by the far-seeing men about town, that is that there should be built along Fifth avenue, back from the sidewalks, block after block of platforms for spectators. Something should be done to boom this idea as a matter of public comfort Tbe far-sighted one who wants to make sure he will haye bed and board for himself and family has already swooped down upon the hotel keeper, and you can hear from your friends who have spare room at their homes that the country cousin is on the way hither. ( Some boarding house keepers are meanly trying to coin an unearned fortune by put tine up cots in their parlors and dining rooms, on the flan of the ladies of the same profession whb took advantage of the inaug-J uration jam in Washington last March. But most of them are going to be fair and won't crowd their regularpatrons to the walL ALL OUT FOB THE STUFF. It is interesting to note how small busi ness men and theater people are taking the chance to furnish novelties for the jubilee. Almost every one is planning and scheming to attract the money that the visitors will bring to town. All of them count on swelling their purses to stocking size. They are among the most excited in all the city.g' The column of Washington's descendants came down upon the Centennial Committee to-day. The committeemen were awed by theattack, and only fired one gunjipon the advancing hosts. The single gun the com mittee fired was the announcement that only three Washingtons were invited to sit Ct the banquet Thsyrwrre, Edmund Law Bogers, of Baltimore, 'Uhe oldest living de scendant of Martha Curtis;" Eichard B. Washington, of Charleston, W. Va., "the oldest living male descendant of Augustine Washington and Mary Ball, the parents of George Washington," and DangSrfield Lewis, of Audley, Clark county, Va., "the oldest male having they blood of both the Washington and Curtis families." QUITE TOO MANY OF THEM. After stating that the Washington family was really too prolific to be provided with tickets, Mr. Bushrod C. Washington writes in behalf of this particular regiment of Washingtons that they were modest, and "hold, I am sure, as I do, that George Washington was pre-eminently the father of his country, and that tbe Washington family, being confined to no name, is com posed of 60,000,000 of American freemen." There were vast hordes of other Wash ingtons, too. But late in the afternoon the Washington Star made its appearance with two solid columns of Washingtons. The Washingtons were in close rank and file, without a single break, for the Star's list was a single two-column paragraph. The committee has "been for some weeks engaged very quietlr in another war, the details of which only "came out to-day. Every foreign minister at Washington was in the beginning duly invited to attend various features of the celebration. They were invited to the ball, and the entire diplomatic corps accepted the invitations by return mail; but it was something of a shock to the committee when every Minis ter in the lot asked to have a box in the Metropolitan Opera House for the occasion. Hence there is trouble, ALL WANT TO GO TO THE BALL. The ball will be an unfashionably early' affair, It will begin at 8 o'clock. There is a tremendous rush for boxes. One commit teeman received an offer of 51,000 for a box, and another was offered ?2,00Q. There is, however, a set price for boxes. The Art Committee has spent a great deal of time and money on devismgouvenirs of the ball. There were souvenirs at the in augural ball a century ago. They were daintily painted fans, which were given to each lady. The souvenir for Monday night is a pamphlet of 12 pages, printed on tinted Japanese paper. The pages are tied loosely with ribbons. The cover bears the full title of the celebra tion. Below the title is the reproduction of the obverse side of the commemorative medal designed for the centennial by St. Gaudens. The reverse side of the medal is on the back cover. The center pages of the pamphlet bear a design by Will H. Low of two figures supporting large tablets, on one of which are tbe names of the thirteen orig inal States, with pictures of Washington and Adams. The other pages give a great deal of data concerning the centennial. THE MUSIC EOS THE BALL. At the meeting of tbe Entertainment Committee to-day, Edmund C. Stanton was elected director of the ball. His duties will be practically the same as those as signed to Ward SlcAUister. Mr. Stanton will also be Chairman of the Floor Com mittee. The music of the ball will bo made up of 100 pjeces staing band divided into relief orchestras of 50 each. It is intended to limit the attendance to 6.000. There rill be 17,000 square feet of dancing room and .12,000 square leet oi supper room. After the opening quadrille almost all the dancing will be waltz music A POLITICAL TRIAL. Clayton's DIarder and tbe Theft of the PiaramervUle Ballot Boxes. Xittle BOOK, April 18. The trial of William Palmer, Thomas Hervey and William Hobbs, Judges of Election, who are charged with interfering with the Con gressional election at Flummerville last November, began in the United States Cir cuit Court to-day. The theft of the ballot box by masked men before the votes were counted and the assassination of John M. Clayton, are feat ures in the case and the courtroom was crowded with spectators. . "" . JB1WIKG THE MZ A Conspiracy to Capture LowerCallfornla Sworn to by a United States Officer Arrests of Implicated Persona Highly Probable. ISrXCXAI. TELXQKAX TO TBI DISPATCH. 1 Los Angeles, Cal., April 18. The filibustering expedition to Lower California, as betrayed by Colonel J. K. Mulkey, of this city, turns out to be true in every de tail. To-night Lieutenant Thomas P. Dapray made a statement under oath. Mr. Dapray is an attache of the Department of Arizona, United States Army. He says: Colonel Mulkey approached me with bis scheme. I threatened to make the matter pub lic in the newspapers, wnen he turned livid with fear and becged me not to expose the scheme lor the present I have, therefore, kept the matter to myself, until reading the ex posure. Thomas B. Dapbat. A reporter to-day secured a ticket to a lecture on "Lower California" at Union League Hall, April 3,1889. This ticket was signed by the. initials K, G. P., meaning Knights of the Golden Meld. ' The net is drawing closely about Mnlkey and his companions, and his immediate ar rest by United States authorities is highly probable. In an interview to-day with a reporter, Governor Lewis Torres, of Lower California, said: , Where one person thought seriously of such a move. Sd would laugh at It and treat it with ridicule. The idea originated probably from some fertile brain, the possessor of which thought there was Something to be gained by it We feel very secure here in Ensenada, and are sure that all our rights will ba respected. We also know there Is nothing In the report, for tbe simple reason that the Americans as a rule are a fair and lust people, and 99 of tbe 1QD would assist us In bofaing our own against any unjust attack. We have Tights which are rec ognized by everybody, and consequently feel secure In the knowledge of those rights. Wades Hayes, of Flower street, is an old Californian. He was here when Walker's, filibustering scheme started from Los Angeles. He knew Walker well, and for many years has been well posted on Califor nian affairs. He said he did not know Mulkey, and had never been in Lower Cali fornia, but believed there would be some startling developments in Mexico before long. "In 1881, during Garfield's term," said he, "I was engaged in mining in Sono ra, Mexico. At the time I met a large party of men from California, Arizona and New York, who had been inspecting Lower California and Sonora, and were talking of a filibustering expedition to capture the peninsula. One of the men was E. A. Hedd, of Arizona, another was Mr. Ben nett, of New York, who is now the editor and proprietor ot the newspaper, the Lower Californian, published at Ensenada." TOO 0LP TO CLIMB. Frederick 'Werner Snflocnted Because He Could Not Slide Down a Rope. rSPECLU. TII.EQBJjf TO TBI DISPATCH. New Yobk, April 18. The six-story brick building, 81 to 85 Center street, was found to be on fire at 7 o'clock this evening. As hook and ladder No. 1 was on its way up Center street Captain Shaw saw three men at the sixth-story window on the south side. They were Herman Schneider and his two ns, whosa gunsmith shop occupies a part the top floor. Thv tore off a piece of rubber belting and let themselves down to the roof of the three-story building, No. 79. When they got down Schneider said that a workman was left behind. The firemen reached the shop by a 35-foot ladder. They found the place filled with smoke and Frederick-Werner suffocated to I death in the middle of the room. He was HV.i.Aa ,U ivti3 taA ofnmmA 4a fro. A scend the by-rope of belting. Warner was a Grand Armyjnan and bad a wife and four children. The main part of the building was occu pied by Simon Zinn, manufacturer of fancy metal goods. The police estimate his damage at $15,000 and the damage to the building at $5,000. Ihe building is owned by Henry A. Mott In 1872, on Christmas night, six girls and three mea lost their lives in a fire on the site of these buildings. HOW A 301 LOST A HMD. He Fooled With a Daalia Cap and It Blew OirnistFinaers. rSFXCIAT. TZLIORAM TO TUX DISPATCH1 Shenandoah, April 18. John Conroy, aged 12, was standing at the blackboard copying figures from it on his slate at school in this place to-day, when suddenly a loud report was heard, and four of the boy's fingers fell In different parts of the room, while fragments ot his slate flew about the room, striking a number of scholars. Young Conroy was thrown to the floor, and tbe blood spurted in streams from his shattered hand. He was carried home, and the re mainder of his hand had to be amputated. It was a long time before the mysterious explosion could be explained, and' then it was found that the boy had a dualin cap, a powerful fulminate used in the mines, fitted on the end of his slate pencil. While at tbe blackboard he began picking at the ex plosive cap with his knife, with the result stated. , ONE MORE TRUST FORMED. The Western Knit Goods Manufacturers Organize a Combine. Chicago, April 18. The manufacturers" of knit goods in the West now have an or ganization for the promotion of trade Interests. It was formed this after noon at the Grand Pacific iHotel, where 26 representatives of manufacturers in nearly all the Western States met The organization is to be known as the "Western Enit Goods Manu facturing Association"," and it is said to especially include in its membership all the western producers of knit goods, hosiery, etc. A constitution and bylaws were formu lated, and at another meeting on the last Thursday in June they will be submitted for formal adoption. The association elected as President, John W. Hart, of S. B. Wilkins Company, Bockford, 111.; and for Secretary, C. E. Ovenshiere, of the St Paul Knitting Works, St Paul, Minn. WAST A PIECE OF HEW I0RK. The Heirs of a Dntch Pioneer After a Valp. able Property. rsrlCIAL TJXIQBAJt TO THS DISPATCH:! Bochestee, N. Y April 18. About 100 families living in this county are after some property in lower New York, and pro pose to have it if there is any way of getting it or its money equivalent. They are named Mandeville, and everyone of these claims to be a descendant, to some extent, of Vellis Mandeville or Manderville, one of the old Dutch pioneers who came to New York two centuries ago. Tbe old man settled down near the spot where Washington Market is located, and a part of the land he acquired by the right of possession was a seetion through which j uanesvoprt street runs, xz is claimed mat the-present owners have no title from the old pioneer, and that his heirs own the property. Canada Is Making: MoneT. Ottawa, April 18. In the House of Commons to-day, Hon. McKenzie Bowell, Minister of Customs, said that.the amount of exports of produce from Canada for the nine months ended April 1, 1889, was $59,790,891. For the sameperiod in 1888 the figures were 158,308,785. This is exclusive of British Columbia, THREE4 GENTS. SEALS,31TH MOOD. APatheUd'l History Qaufsai' West ftC'S.u "steliip for a Hia Grandslre-Cast the , jfor.Lia-. coin In a TOott$Sunty fS" WITH A COOKED RIT0LTEB IS HIS HAHB Both lather and Grandfather the Victims of Political Assassins. 't One of, the saddest stories connected with the political dissensionaof 1861-65 has come to light by the application for a West Point cadetship. The facta have been verified by documents stained with the blood of politi cal martyrs. President Harrison and Sec retary Proctor were deeply impressed by the pathetic relation, and exerted themselves successfully to secure an appointment for . the applicant, who undoubtedly comes from a brave race. Washington", April 18. The appoint ment yesterday of Henry M. Dixon, of Mississippi, as a cadet at large tWest Point, brought to light a sad family history i probably without a parallel in the tragic features which mark it Several days ago a feeble old lady was ushered into thr office of Private Secretary Halford and asked him to present to Presi dent Harrison an application from her for the appointment of her grandson, a youth of 18, as a cadet at West Point Her story deeply interested Mr. Halfdrd, and he took , her directly to President Harrison. To him she repeated the tale, which he said after ward greatly moved him. At his sugges tion Mrs. Dixon, for that was her name, pre-, pared a statement in detail of the eiperi- x ences of herself and family, which accompa nied her formal application for her .grand-, son's appointment A. political maetye. From this statement it appears that Mrs. Annie F. Dixon, the widow of Major Henry T. Dixon, was the only man in Fauqier county, Virginia, who voted for Lincoln for President in 1860. Ha had to send to Washington for the ballot, which he deposited in the box with his left hand, a cocked revolver being in his right. He had been warned that 10 men had sworn to kill him if he voted for Lincoln. Some time afterward he went to Alexan- dria, Va.. on business, to be gone two days. After he had gone a friend informed Mrs. Dixon that her husband would be shot on the depot platform as he alighted from the cars if he returned. She telegraphed her husband not to return home, and he did not see his home again for four years. Ha served through the war, was one of the de fenders of the capital, and was afterward commissioned as paymaster. During the war Mrs. Dixon suffered much persecution, and was several times taken prisoner. Their property was all destroyed, and six weeks atter'the war closed Major Dixon was assas sinated by an ex-Confederate officer, being shot In -the back. a cowaedlt assassination. His family was left in destitute circum stances, and at the requestof General Grant, who was acquainted with the circumstances, Postmaster General Bandall gave the widow employment in his deDartment After about ten years of service she left it and is now old and feeble, penniless and without a home. Her son, Henry M. Dixon, went South after the war, a mere boy, and married in Mississippi at the age ot 18, his wife being a native of that State. He opposed the Democratic ticket at his home in Yazoo City, and in 1879 he was .warned by a mob to leave the town. This he refused to do, and in August, 1879, he was shot down from behind, as was his father before him. His wife did not long survive him, and six small children were thus bereft ot their parents' care and love. It was for the eldest of these, named for his father, that Mrs. Dixon asked the appointment eloquent becojimendations. ''Accompanying the application was a package of papers that were mutely elo quent One of these was a letter taken irom the hip pocket of Henry M. Dixon, through which the fatal bullet had cut its deadly way. Another was a letter from his widow to his widowed mother, full of ten derness and pathos. These, with the rest, were referred to Secretary Proctor, who was as deeply touched as the President, who de termined to appoint the boy if there was a place for him. So deep was the Secretary's interest that he personally looked up the record of Mrs. Dixon, and was satisfied, of the correctness of her statements. There was a vacancy in the list of cadets at large, caused by the1 failure of an ap pointee to fulfill the requirements, and greatly to the gratification of President Harrison he to-day received notice from Secretary Proctor that Mrs- Dixon had been notified of the appointment of her grandson. It mav be added that the bov. who has been ttenaing school.is most highly recommend ed Dy his teacher and rector as well deserv ingHhe appointment because of hls accom plishments and worth. FEEL THE NEED OF A TRUST. New York Warehousemen Preparing ten Form an Airtight Combination. r SFICIAI. TH.ZQKAM TO TOTS DISPATCB.1 New Yobk, April 18. There were re ports on the Produce Exchange to-day to the effect that the big warehousemen were or ganizing a storage trust like that which now rules the Brooklyn water front The state ment was made that the New York storage men have suffered materially by competi tion among themselves, and that the rates of storage for vegetable oils, teas, coffees, hemp, chemicals and sugars and general merchandise are far below Brooklyn trust rates. Tbe organization of the New York trust was to stop this chopping of rates, and efforts were to be made to bring about uni form and profitable rates. Inquiry among the storage men, notably ElliottT. Driggs & Co., Lawrence, Son & Gerrish, and David Seals & Co., resulted only in denials that any storage trust was contemplated, but the people who know what is going on down town were convinced that some sort of a combination to advance and maintain storage rates is under way. SOMEWHAT PEREMPTORY. " An TJnqnnlifled Demand for tho Sesiajsatloa of St. Louis Federal Officials. St. Louis, April 18. Quite a stir was created in political circles here to-day by a peculiar request for the resignations of Col lector Barnum and Appraiser Harrigan. Congressman Niedringhaus called on the of ficials named and presented the following telegram: WASHrNQTON, April IS. Hon. F. Nledring haus, St Louis: Call on Harrigan and Barnum and ask for their resignations, to take effect on May 1. President wants it If they don't resign tbey will be removed on Saturday. Bring their rea ignatioas with you. Nathax CBAjrr. Congressman Niedringhaus left to-night for WasMBgtoa without the resigaaUwa. m r? 11 HssSBBSBSBBCSSSBBSEflSuSBEBBBSSBeBSsK&SBSBSBSSSBBsH