EIGHTY LIVES LOST IN SHIPWRECK, The Steamer Islander Struck an Iceberg Cff Douglas Island. BOILERS BURST AS STEAMER SANK. Wife ol the Governor of Yukon Territory ad Her Child Amonl I be Victims I the Disaster - Many Other Passengers a ad Soma ol the Crew Oo Down With the 111 fated Steamer. Victoria, B. C. (Special). The steam er Islander, the crack passenger steamer cf the Alaskan route, operated by the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company of this city, struck an iceberg off Doug las Island at 2 o'clock Thursday last and went to the bottom, carrying down 05 to 80 souls, including passengers and members of the crew. Some of the sur vivors arrived here by the steamer Queen. They report that as the vessel went down the Ixiilcrs exploded, causing the death of many who might have es caped. Captain Foote was on the bridge when the vessel struck and stayed there and went down with his steamer. Among the passengers lot on the Isl ander were: Mrs. Ros, wife of the gov ernor of the Yukon Territory, her child and niece: Pr. John Duncan, of this city : W. G. Preston and bride. Seattle; F. 'Mills. Victoria; Mrs. J. C. Hender son, Victoria: V. H. Keating and two sons, Los Angeles. Cal.; J. V. Douglas, Vancouver; Mrs. Philiips and child. Se attle; Mr. Tall. Victoria; Mrs. Nichol son, wife of Captain Nicholson. The members of the crew lost arc: Captain Foote. George Allan, third en gineer. Horace Smith, second steward; S. J. Pitts, cook: two Chinamen: Buck hoodcr and Burke, oilers ; two firemen : Night Saloon Watchman Kendall: Joe Bard, second pantrvman: Iw.i waiters: G. Miller, barber: N. Uw. M. P. Jock, Porter and Moran. coal passers. ROBBED BY EMPLOYE. Secretary ol the New York Branch of Swift & Co. Short In Accounts. New York (Special). It has just be ccme known that the New York office of Swiit & Co. the Ch.cago packers Jiad been robbed of a considerable sum of money by its secretary and treasurer. The local office is incorporated as a New York corporation. Its secretary and treasurer was John Hayden, 35 years old. Following his usual custom. John Chapman, an auditor in the Chicago offices ol the company, came to this city to make an inspection of the ac counts. Hayden met Mr. Chaplin and (turned over the books to him. Tues day Hayden was at the office for a short time, but the next day could not be found. Mr. Chaplin continued in his work and at present the loss is variously estimated at from $10,000 to $50,000. BRITISH SYMPATHY WITH STRIKERS. Congressman Qrosvenor Says Englishmen Want Our Industries to be Crippled. London (By Cable). Prior to his departure for New York on the Ameri can Line steamer St. Paul, Congress man Grosvenor. of Ohio, ref.-rred to the wide-spread interest taken in Great Britain in the American steel ..trike. "The sympathy of the British pub lic." said the Congressman, "is strongly with the strikers, not for any good feeling for the men. but thev hope our industrial systems may be as damaged and crippled as theirs have been. They hope the closing of our mills will force ti9 to buy from theirs and permanently defeat our prosperity." EXPECTS BOTHA'S Sl'RkENDER. Rather Incredulous Story Published in a Lon don Paper Concerning the War London (By Cable). The Sun says it hears that the concentration of General Botha's forces a: Hondweni, on the bor ders of Zululand. announced in a dis patch from Durban, does not foreshadow a fight with Botha, but his surrender, in pursuance with an understanding reach ed between General Botha and Lord Kitchener. The Sun adds that the gov ernment is satisfied that the war is vir tually over, and that Lord Milner. now on his way back to South Africa, has in his pocket the draft of a complete con stitution and plans for the future govern ment of the annexed territories. Fought In Two Wart. Harrisbnrg (Special). Gen. Joseph F. Knipe. who saw service in two wars, died at his home in this city, after a lingering illness. He fought through he Mexican War with General Scott and in the Civil War he took part in ell the battles in which the Twelfth Corps figured, from Chattanooga to Atlanta. He afterward served as chief oi cavalry in the Army of the Tennes see. He was retired "in 1865, at his own request, as a bragadier-gencral, af ter having declined a colonelcy in the regular service. He was postmaster of Harrisburg duptig President Johnson's administration, and at the time of his death was connected with the Pennsyl vania State Department. 5,000 Men on His Trail Sherman. Texas (Special). The search (or Muses Wilier, the half breed negro Indian who is said to have murdered Mrs. Caldwell near South Mayd, continues. Posses arc covering all the territory from South Mayd. in Grayson county, to Wood ville, I. T., a distance of 100 miles. Several arrests have been made, but (he suspects were soon released. Should the negro be run down his fate is not a matter of conjecture. The offi cers, however, are taking steps against mob violence. Sheriff Shrewsbury says there are scuo men on the trail. Ooc Farmer Kil t Aaother. Sparta. Ga. (Special). Chaunoev Boyer, a farmer living about to miles from town, was shot and instantly killed hy C. A. Brookin, a neighbor, near the liome of the latter. Some matters in liti gation led up to the trouble. Brookin is in jail. Boyer leaves a widow and child. Vetarinarlaet Have a Chance. Washington (Special). The War Department will soon hold a competi tive examination to fill 21 vacancies in the veterinarian service of the army. "Killed by'TYraia. Stroudsburg. Pa. ( Special.) While walking ucross a bridge on the New York. Susquehanna and Western Rail road Edgar Rosenthal and his sister Pau line, of New York, were struck by a freight train and hurled to the ground. The former was so badly injured that he died a few hours after the accident. Miss Rosenthal is said to lx fatally injured. Hotel at Kenava Burned. Kcnova. W. Va. (Special). The Cot t.ipe Hotel was burned to the ground at 3 1 clock a. 111. The inmates wtre all res cuid. Loss, $8000. f I'M MARY OF THE NEWS. Domestic. Win. E. Douglass, formerly assistant teller of the Guarantee Trust and Sav ings Company of Philadelphia, who was arrested in B ston, decided to return to Philadelphia without a requisition. Lack of rods at the American Steel and Wire Mills, at Jolict, 111., will force them to shut down increasing the num ber of workmen out at that place to bono, many oi them involuntarily. President Search, of the National As sociation of Manufacturers, will call a meeting shortly for the discussion oi reciprocity with foreign nations. Kev. Charles W. 1'erkins. of Boston, will become president of Dcnisort Uni versity, Granville, Ohio. Twenty-nine ships chartered to carry grain arc tied up in San Francisco har bor because oi the strike. John Winters, who robbed the Selby Smelting Company, of California, oi $200,000. pleaded guilty. Dr. T. 1). Wood, of Stanford Uni- - 1 1 .1 -. M ... t versuy. 1 ,11., nas acccpicu a can iu Co lumbia L nivcrsity. A plan is on foot to have built a fine bridge across the Missouri river at Kansas City. The removal of tobacco tariff has re vived business in Porto Rico. J. Spear Gilchrist was found dead in bed at Elkins, W. Ya. Reports received in San Francis-o state that the ship Manchester, which sailed nearly a year ago from New York for Yokohama, and which has been reported missing, was wrecked on the desert island of Pikar, in the Pacific Ocean. Mr. Charles II. P. Sharrcits, mem ber of the board of appraisers at New York, will be the American representa tive in China in connection with the adjustment of the tariff of that country. The arrest of railroad ticket brokers in St. Louis has led. it is claimed, to the exposure of a great scheme to coun terfeit tickets and passes. The B. ct O.'s tickets were among those on the list. A romance of the Spanish war result ed in the marriage in Philadelphia of Lieut. Henry Watterson, Jr., and Scn orita Blanca Esther Casanova, a beau tiful Cuban girl. The United Fruit Company's steam er Ethchvold. bound from Port Plata. ! I Jamaica, for Boston, with bananas, j I went ashore on Baker's Island. She I ! freed herscli. ' I A number of the cotton nunufactur- , : ers of New England are opposed to re- 1 ' ducing wages September I. lest it 1 should precipitate a general strike. I The Chicago Board of Health is mak- , ! ing tests to ascertain definitely it bo- ! j vine tuberculosis can be communicated I to human beings. j Col. John D. Elliott, an cx-Conied-; crate officer, died at his home near Denver. Col. Mr. Michael Davitt, M. P.. addressed an Irish-American gathering in Chi cago. At Miami. Fla.. Mr. Henry M. Flag ler, the Standard Oil millionaire, was granted a divorce under a new State statute giving insanity of four yiars' standing a sufficient cause for divorce. Mrs. Flagler has been confined in an asylum for many years. foreign. It is said that the Crown Prince of Germany will marry one of the daugh ters of the Duke of Connaught. and that another daughter. Princess Mar garet, is betrothed to the Czarewitch oi Russia. The first Parliament of King Edward VJI. wound up its business and ad journed. Some oi the London news papers were severe in their comments 0:1 the work of Parliament. A body of Kurds has been raiding a section of Armenia. Twelve villages have been destroyed, the men and boys murdered and the young women car ried off to harems. Owing to poor crops in certain sec tions another famine is expected in one third oi the provinces oi European Russia. Hugh C. Kelly and Ethel, daughter of Sir Arthur Forwood, were married in London and started for America. Mr, Chamberlain, in replying to .1 cYiticism of Sir William ernon Ilar court on Lord Kitchener's proclama tion in the House oi Commons, said in regard to the devastation policy, that it was nothing compared with General Sherman's campaign. The editor and publisher of the Lon 'lon Globe has been ordered to appea before the bar of the House of Com mons for accusing Nationalist mem bers i f corruption in connection with private bill legislation. Over 700 persons, mostly women, im plicated in the fire at the harem oi the Yildiz palace, have been banished t'rom Constantinople to Arabia. Latest advices indicate the steady ad vance of the rebels in Panama. Both sides are committing cruel atrocities. Professor Schenck led an interesting discussion in the Zoological Congress at Berlin on the predetermining oi sex. The House of Lords rushed through its second reading a bill granting spe cial powers for a transatlantic line which is to send ships across in b ur and a half days. Commander Frederick M. Wise, who was in command oi the old Monocacy when she was fired on by the Chinese .'or:s at Taku, died in a hospital at Yokohama. M. Sarafoff. president of the Macedo nian Committee, and other members, who had been on trial in Sofia, Bulga ria, charged with murder, were released. In manifestation of the discontent prevailing- on the island of Malta, the Union Jack was rn to pieces and the statue of (Juccn Victoria disfigured. The Czar has conferred on Count von Wa'dtrsee the Andreas Order, with diamonds and swords, which is the highest Russian decoration. Max Opitz. proprietor of a private bank in Berlin, was arrested, charged with forgery and defalcation. The German papers complain that Count von Waldersee is talking too vaingloriously. financial. The Park Steel Company, of Pitts burg, has declared the regular monthly dividend of 1 J4 per cent, on the pre ferred stock. Stockholders of the Commercial Na tional Bank of Chicago have voted to increase the capital from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000. It is slated that W. K. Vanderbilt has recently invested $8,000,000 in low priced slocks of the Vanderbilt system, including .'O.0000 shares of Nickef Plate common and an equal amount oi Lake Erie and Western. The American Elevated Railway Company, capital of $5,000,000. a rival of the Manhattan "L " is seeking con trol of an old franchise allowing tracks on upper Broadway. The Kansas corn supply is said to be I 50 per cent, greater now than when the government crop report was issued. The corn crop has jumped within th pat four days 30 per cent. The New York Sub-treasury state ment shows that the banks have lost $106,000 this week. The National Lead Company has de clared the regular quarterly dividend of 1I4 per cent, oil the preferred Hock, payable September 16. THE FIRST FIGHT AT ENCONTRADOS. Battle in Which the Colombians Were Compelled (0 Retire. STEAMERS SEIZED AND RECAPTURED. Four Thousand Mea From the Frontier ol Cncoti, Led by Dr. Rangel Oar. blras, in the Invasion-Tea Thousand Mea Massed on the Frontier for the Defense ol Venezuela. Washington (Special). The Depart ment of State has received a dispatch from the consul at Maracaibo, report ing that Dr. Kangel Garbias has in vaded Venezuela with 4000 men from the frontier of Cucuta. Everything was done by the Venezuelan govern ment to meet the invaders. The first fight took place at Encon trados and the .invaders were obliged to retire. The invaders took two steamers to come to Maracaibo, but these boats were recaptured by the Venezuelan troops. The Venezuelan government has is sued the following decrees: "General Diege Bautista Ferrer, Pro visional President of the State of Zulia: Considering that the peace in general has been greatly disturbed by an in vasion to the Venezuelan territory with an armed force of Colombians, com manded by the traitor Carlos Rangel Garbias. as per declaration issued by the provisional president of the repub lic anil in compliance with the dispo sitions on public order therein speci fied, suspending the rights and guaran tee referred to in the national constitu tion." DESTROYERS IN WATER. Three New Fighters Launched at Sparrows Point, Near Baltimore. Baltimore. Md. (Special). In the presence of more than 2000 people, among whom were a number of dis tinguished visitors from New York, Philadelphia, Wilmington and Wash ington, the three torpedo boat destroy ers now being constructed at Sparrows Point by the Maryland Steel Company, were launched with great enthusiasm. The Whipple left the ways at 1.48. the Truxton at 2.0. and the Worden at 2. 13. The Whipple was christened by Miss Elsie Pope, of St. Paul, Minn. The Truxton was named by Miss Isabellc Truxton. of Norfolk. Va., the grand daughter of Commodore Truxton, of Norfolk, Va.. and Mrs. Emilie D. N. Worden, of New York, christening the Worden. Alter the launching the guests were entertained at luncheon by the Maryland Steel Company. AMERICANS MAKE Bid CAPTURE. Colonel Cabrera, an Insurgent Chief, Made Prisoner in the Philippines. Manila (By Cable). Second Lieut. Walter S. Grant, of the Sixth Cavalry, while scouting with a detachment near Taal, Batangas Province, has made what' the military authorities consider the most important capture since Aguinaldo was made prisoner. Grant captured Col. Martin Cabrera, his ad jutant and six other insurgents. Cab rera had been growing in power for some time. He controlled all the in surgents in southern Batangas and also those westward of the city of Batangas. Colonel Panganiban, a captain and twenty men with twenty-six rifles and considerable ammunition have surren dered to Lieutenant Smith, of the Twentieth Infantry. They formed a portion of General Malvar's command. After taking the oath of allegiance they were released. STEAMER SINKS PILOT BOAT. James Gordon Bennett Cut Down and Four Men Are Drowned. New Y'ork (Special). The German steamer Alene. now running in the Atlas branch of tlie Hamburg-American Line, ran down and sank the pilot boat James Gordon Bennett No. 7 and drowned three pilots and the cook of the Bennett. The accident occurred near the Scot land lightship, while the pilot boat was lying hove to on Sandy Hook bar, about ten miles east of Sandy Hook. When the Alene struck the pilot boat the weather was clear. The survivors say the German steam er came bearing down upon their ves sel and they were totally unable to avoid her. ISSUE OF TOBACCO TRUST BONDS. Mortgage for $150,000,0(0 Filed in the Court ol Hudson County. New York (Special). There was filed in the Hudson County Court in Jersey City a mortgage for $150,000,000 made by the Consolidated Tobacco Company of America to the Morton Trust Com pany to secure an issue of 4 per cent, bonds not to exceed $ 1 50.000,000. It is dated June 15 and bore revenue stamps to the amount of $75,000. The papers show that the Consolidated Tobacco Company has absorbed the American Tobacco and the Continental Tobacco and subsidiary concerns. CRAZED BY A BLUNDER. Station Agent Causes a Collision and Then Lotet Hit Reason. Omaha. Neb. (Special ). Jas. Greene, station agent at Otha. Iowa, sent out orders which brought two freight trains together on the same track, lie is now lying in the baggage room a raving maniac as a result of his blunder, re strained by his friends from self-destruction. He is kept under the influ ence of chloroform. In a frenzy of self-reproach, Greene sought to cut his throat, but was restrained. The trains came together on a heavy grade, but the crews jumped and escaped injury. Castillo's Widow It Dead. Madrid (By Cable). The widow of Senor Canovas del Castillo, former Pre mier of Spain, is dead. Senor Canovas del Castillo was shot and killed by an Anarchist at the baths of Santa Agucdi, at Guesalibar, August 8, 1897. Cable Service Established. Washington (Special). Cable com munication has been established be tween Calapan, on the northern coast of idindora, and Boac near the west coast of the island of Mannduque, in the Philippines. Often Lift to Aid Science. Denver, Col. (Special). T. L. Mon son, State Dairy Commissioner of Col orado, an ardent believer in the theory advanced by Prof. Koch that animal tu berculosis is not communicable to hu mans, either directly or by product, has just made a remarkable offer io the world. He professes himself ready and willing to be inoculated with the germs of animal tuberculosis and submit to any test that may be imposed by a com mittee of, surgeons and specialists, pro vided agitable provision is made for his family in case the experiment thjnld have a latal termination. BY FIRE AND WATER. Twelve Llvet Lost at the Waterworks Crib on Er e, at Cleveland, Ohio. Cleveland, Ohio ( Social). Five men were burned to death, four were drown ed, three and possibly four were suffo cated and several were injured as a result of a fire which destroyed a temporary waterworks crib two miles off the Cleve land harbor. Twenty-six men obeyed the order ol Manager G. C. Van I)euen, when the flames broke out. and took refuge in the water on floating pieces of wreckage. Four of them lost their holds upon their frail floats and sank just as help reached their comrades. The crew of the tug J. R. Spranklc heard the fire whistle blown from the crib and raced to the scene from the harbor. They picked up 18 of the survivors who had drifted to the west of the crib on their floats of boards and wreckage. Van Dcusen and three of his men were hanging in the water from a two-inch line suspended from the crib. Just as the line was burning away above the men's hands a yawl boat from the barge Willulm, manned by two men, dashed into the veil of heat and smoke that en veloped the crib, and rescued the four men on the rope at the risk of the boat men's lives. The men picked up in the water were brought to the city on the tug Sprankle. They were naked, exhausted and badly burned. Many of them were cut by falling timbers. The crib is a total loss. It was a frame building 200 feet by 50 feet, the sides sheathed with iron. It contained valu able machinery. It is now a charred, shapeless mass of wreckage. The crib and machinery were the property of Shailer & Schninglau. contractors. Their loss will exceed $200,000. Fire and harbor tugs, with rescuing parties on board, reached the crib soon after the flames broke out, but when they arrived the structure was a mass of flames and all hope of saving it was abandoned. GREAT GULF STORM. The American Steamer Avelyn Goet Ashore at Pensacola-Many Schooners Sunk. Pens; tola. Fla. (Special). The French steamship Cyrano, which arrived here reports that the American steamship Ev elyn, to days from New Y'ork for this port, went aground at 8 o'clock about eight miles from Pensacola Bar. -She is listed and is fast going to pieces. 1h? Cyrona is 12 days from Savannah, and experiened very rough weather. She beat up and down the beach for three days awaiting a chance to come in. The Cyrano sighted the British steamship Spennymoor, but she put back to sea and was not sighted again. During the storm the Portuguese bi'tk Propheta, laden with a cargo of timber valued at $5,000 for St. Thomi. Africa, was badly damaged. Her rigging was carried away, masts snapped off and she was stove in on the starboard side and stern. The bark B. A. Brayton was also slightly injured. The storm was one of the wildest ever known here. The wind reached a velocity of 70 miles an hour, with spurts of 00 miles. There was great damage to shipping in the bay and the water front property. Twelve or fifteen schooners of it. E. Saunders & Co.'s fishing fleet were badly damaged. Four of them sank, causing a loss aggregating $70,000. The schooner Tortugas, from Mobile for Apalachicola with a cargo of cypress lumber, which put in for anchorage, col lided with another vessel and sank. 200 MILES AN HOUR. Remarkable Speed It Claimed for Cigar Shaped Elevated Cart. New Y'ork (Special). Within a few days the American Elevated Railroad Company will emerge from rather mys terious obscurity with the announcement of an iiilportant transportation project. At least this was the statement of Os born Congleton, president of the com pany. At the last meeting the capital stock of the company was raised from $100,000 to $5,000,000. The base of the project is a new form of electrical transportation. It is a cigar-shaped car running on a central rail on an elevated structure. The electricity is carried in two outer rails. It is said to be capable of a speed of 200 miles an hour at a cost of but one-fourth of the present method. MOB RETREATS BEFORE SHERIFF. Henry Pratt Saved From Lynchert by Plucky Alabama Official. Tuscaloosa, Ala. (Special). A mob of about fitly men entered the jail be fore daylight determined to lynch the negro Henry Pratt, charged with at tempted assault of Sallie Rice, a little white girl. The mob lorced their way up the steps into the first part of the jail used as a dwelling by the deputies and where the sheriff was sleeping. The mob demanded the keys to the part of the jail containing the prisoner, but the sheriff informed them that the keys were locked up in the safe in the sher iff's office. After some parleying the sheriff secured a loaded shotgun. This apparently cowed the mob, and they left the jail and dispersed. BIG STEEL WORKS SOLD. Bethlehem Steel Company Likely Pastct Into Control ol the Trust Behleheni, Pa. (Special). The stock holders of the Bethlehem Iron Com pany voted almost unanimously to ac cept the price of $7,500,000 offered by the Bethlehem Steel Company lor the big steel and ordnance works here, and an hour later the directors consummat ed the deal. The steel company, it is said, has a purchaser for the plant, and it it generally believed that this pur chaser is Charles M. Schwab, president of the United States Steel Corporation, and it is also believed that he will buy the property for the Vickcrs-Maxim Company and the Cramp Shipbuilding Company. The works employ 4000 skilled mechanics. Phillips Will Pay In FulL Chicago (Special). George II. Phil lips, the deposed corn king, will pay in full. The expert accountants who have been working overtime in an 'effort to reduce the tangle of accounts in the broker's books made a detailed statement which shows that the company is solvent and the total liabilities of the concern are less than $2O0,oco, well within the as sets of the young operator and his asso ciates. "I said the first day that every penny would be paid as soon as our books were straightened out," Mr, Phil lips declared with a smile. Serious Fire in Pennsylvania. Chanibersburg, Pa. ( Special). The village of Dry Kun, Pa., was almost de stroyed by fire. The fire originated in the Hammond Hotel stable and spread to ths hotel, destroying it, together wuh four stores and six residences. There is no fire apparatus in the town. The loss is estimated at $40,000 partially insured. Womaa Chose Unique Suicide Method. Clarksburg, W. Va. (Special).-Miss Mary Corner, oi Bridgeport, aged 30 years sat down on the railroad track in ircnt of an approaching train and was instantly killed. She was despondent. THE BIG STRIKE GAINING FAST. Workers Much Cheered by the Develop, ments In the West. RECRUITS NUMBER ABOUT 3,000 A DAY Eipect to Win Over ths Chicago Men-Such Oalns, They Declare, Would Make Them Masters ol the Sltuatlon--The Operators, on the Other Hand, Say the Striken Have Reached Their Highett Po nt. rittsbttrg (Special). The decision of the Joilet men to strike has been a se vere blow to the Steel Trust in its fight with the Amalgamated Association. Milwaukee is expected to follow. Even the steel malingers .look for a reconsid eration by the Chicago workmen in a few days. They would not be surprised to hear at any time that these had yielded to the arguments of the Amalgamated Association, voted to reconsider their de cision not to strike and thrown up their employment. The rumors of the trust fortifying it self by buying other properties are not in any degree affecting the situation The only report of this kind that could have any effect is that about the pur chase by the trust of the Republic Iron and Steel Company. This is an indepen dent company owning blast furnaces and rolling mills which have an annual out put of 2,000,000 tons. It has signed the union scale, is working full nnd has giv en employment to many of the strikers. President Shaffer was asked whether it would help the Steel Corporation to pur chase the Republic company. "All I care to say." he replied, "is that if it does it will simply be buying a lot of idle mills." This is a direct threat that if the Re public passes under the control of the trust the union men will be called on to quit work. No one doubts that the Am algamated Association has the power, and it is no exaggeration to say that the union men in the Republic mills would cease to work just as soon as the sus picion that they had been transferred to the trust became well founded. Thus the strike leaders have accepted in good faith the challenge of Mr. Schwab that it is to be a war of cxtermi ation. They have succeeded so well in their first week following the general strike order that even the steel manufac turers have respect for their leadership. GOMEZ WILL NOT BE PRESIDENT. He Refuses to Take the Nomination. Saying Palma Is Beit Man. Havana (Special). General Maximo Gomez has addressed a letter to the local committee of the National party in Havana, who had chosen him as a candidate for the Presidency of Cuba, and Senor Estrada Palma as a candidate for the Vice-Presidency. The communi cation runs in part as follows: "On hearing what the committee have done I hasten to say that I must refuse to undertake such high office un der the republic. So far as candidates are concerned, I look upon Senor Es trada Palma and Senor Maso as the best selections that could be made for the Presidency and Vice-Presidency. Let all Cubans agree upon this import ant matter and Cuba will have a strong and stable government, entirely fitted to deal with the external relations in which Cuba will have to exist as a re public." CALIFORNIA STAGE HELD UP. one Robber Gett Money and Valuables From Twenty Passengers. San Francisco (Special). One man armed with a repeating rifle held up a stage loaded with twenty passengers on the Calistoga and Clear Lake road, some eighty miles north oi here. Af ter taking the express box, the mail bag and watches and purses of passen gers the bandit ordered the stage driv er to go on. He got a few hundred dollars, but the exact amount is not known. The passengers were all tour ists. The highwayman wore a hand kerchief over his face and had cut holes ,in it for his eyes. This is the third robbery in this section in the last three weeks. Two Killed by Lightning. Greenville, S. C. (Special). A ter rific electrical storm visited this section doing considerable damage in the mill village of the American Spinning Com pany. A six-room house was struck and Miss Victoria Levi and Miss Busbee were almost instantly killed. Klingham Ward was also struck but is til! living, although his condition is serious. Four children of the Russell family, who were occupants of the house, were also shock ed, remaining unconscious for several hours. Fought With an Eagle. Binghamton Special). William Ballenstadt, an I i-year -old boy, whose 1i,.im in ltmnru III Imrl n ifn .,n.l I death struggle with an eagle which at 1 tacked him near Wavcrly, N. Y., where j he was visiting. The lad fought with a I stick until nearly overcome from wounds I from the bird's talons. Then a farmer , appeared with a gun and shot the eagle, j which was found to measure seven feet Hat Manufacturers' Trust. New York (Special). Efforts arc be ing made here to form a Hat Manufac turers' Trust, and it is said articles of incorporation will be riled by those in terested in the project within a few days. About twenty of the leading manufac turers of the United States are expected to enter the combine. Private tinyard Killed. Washington (Special). The War Department has been advised of the death of Private Fred Hayward. Troop H. Ninth Cavalry, which occurred at Matanzas, Cuba, August 2. His death was due to gunshot wounds. Father and Son Drowned. Frederick. Md. (Special). James Birch and his little 5-year-old son were drowned at Grove's limekilns, near here. The boy went to water a horse in the quarry. When his father arrived he saw his son's hat floating on the water, directly over a portion of the pool fully twenty feet deep. He at once jumped into the water to rescue the boy, but was drowned himself. It is supposed that the boy rode the horse into the pool to the edge of the deep water and was thrown off. HERE AND THERE Commandant Pretorius, who was re cently shot through the eyes, died from his injury. Minister Francis B. Loomin present ed his credentials to King Charles of Portugal. A lire broke out in C. L. Renninger't house in Delmar, Del., and but for the providential rainstorm the town would piobably have been burned. Bishop Anton Kozlowski. hepd of the Polish Catholics in Chicago, had lour prominent members of his church ar rested who accused him of murdering and robbing tick parishioners. Live NATIONAL AFFAIRS. Pcntion Roll Longer. Commissioner II. Clay Evans has pre pared a statement showing the operations in principal features of the Pension Bu reau during the last fiscal year as com pared with former years. Most of the data will be embodied in his annual re port, and tint statement is prepared for the use of the National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, which will be held before the report is ready. The statement shows that on January 30, yo, there were 997.735 pensioners on the rolls, a gain of 4206 during the year. The roll lor the last fiscal year is the largest in the history of the bureau. During the year 44.225 claims were al lowed, and 3507 restored; while 4.1.586 names were dropped on account (if death, remarriage and other causes. Two War of the Revolution pensioners died during the year. In the last four years the net gain to the pension rolls was 4021. The number of pensions granted to widows in the past year under the act of June 27, i8ox, was 16,610. or nearly 4?m in excess of those granted the previous year, the result of the act of May 9, iqoj extending the provisions of the act of June 27. 1890. The pensioners on account of the wir with Spain numbered 3555 invalids and 204) widows. The appropriation for the payment of pensions during the fiscal year 1901 was $144,000,000. of which amount the bureau expended for pen sions $138,531,483.84: leaving a balance 011 June 30, loot, of $5,4(18.51(1.16. The total amount paid to pensioners as first payments upon the allowance of their claims during 1901 was $9.9.14 "6.1.54, or $10.238.47 more than the first payments during the year 1000. Agriculture In Alaska. A report on the agricultural statistics for Alaska just issued by the Census Bureau shows that Alaska's farm wealth June 1, igoo, was $15,686. of which $2196 was invested in live stock. $600 iu implements and machinery and $12,800 represented the value of build ings and other improvements. Buildings have been erected on 9 of the 12 farms in the territory. Prepar ing the soil for cultivation has been the chief item of expense in opening farms, being in some instances $120 per acre. The 12 farms have a total acreage oi 159 acres, and vegetables arc the prin cipal product. Five of the (arms are only small market gardc.is of less than three acres. The value of domestic animals and poultry was $2196. Potatoes and tur nips furnished the principal income from vegetables. Next to vegetables grass cut for hay and ensilage is the most important agricultural product. From the standpoint of income upon capital invested poultry raising in 1899 was relatively the most profitable branch oi Alaskan agriculture. When Chinese Arc Merchants. Attorney-General Knox, in an opinion rendered at the request of the Secretary of the Treasury, holds that a Chinaman may engage in the manufacture of goods for sale and still be considered a mer chant in the sense in which that word is used in the treaty and laws relating to the exclusion of Chinese where the mercantile part of the business, cither wholly or in part, is the selling of goods so manufactured. New Offices In Presidential Class. The following fourth-class postoffices will be advanced to the Presidential grade on October it: Sykcsville. Md.: Marionvillc. Mo.; Penngrove, N. J.; Cresson, Pa.: Charleston. Troy and Walpolc. N. H.j Welch and .William son, W. Va. To Investigate Plant Disease. Dr. B. M. Duggar, physiologist in vegetable pathological investigations oi the Department of .Agriculture, liar, been ordered to proceed to points in North and South Carolina, Texas. Mis sissippi and other States to investigate diseases of cotton and other plants. Capital Newt In General. The Treasury Department lias decidid that a customs duty of five cents a pound shall not be imposed on all coffee im ported into Porto Rico from the United States. The Navy Department has announced that it will furnish the counsel of Ad miral Schley with the list of the govern ment's witnesses, "as a courtesy. Captain Perry, of the battleship Iowa, now at San Francisco, has reported to the Navy Department that his vessel could not sail immediately to Panama on account of needed repairs to boilers and machinery. Commissioner Evans, of the Pension Bureau, gave out some figures showing the operations of the bureau during thj last fiscal year, as compared with former years. Secretary Hay will go to Canton to confer with the President about the canal across the isthmus and other matters relating to that region. Our New Possessions. . Civil Governor Taft and the Philip pine Commission were enthusiastically received at Vigan, Province of South 1 locos. A governor for the province and ether officials were appointed. The com missioners are agreeably surprised at the advancement shown in the places visited. In Camarines Province, in the Phil ippines, United States troops killed .e bastean Angclcr, a brother of General Angeles, and six privates; captured a major, two captains and nine i,ien. Judge Halsey, in Wilkcsbarrc, Pa., made final the preliminary injunction restraining the striking machinists from interfering with the non-unionist. The contract providing for harbor im- I provenients has been signed, and work will begin immediately, I lie cost ol the improvements will amount to $1,500,000. Courts-martial are to be held in ! Manila on Lieut. Preston Brown and Capt. Wancis P. Freemont, Second Infantry. The lieutenant is accused of killing a native who refused to recover the body of a soldier from the river. The charges against Captain Fremont are not knownyct. Thirty Pairs ol Teachera Married. Carbondale, 111. (Special). Of the 400 American teachers who ' sailed on the transport Thomas from San Francisco to Manila 60 of them on reaching Hono lulu were married. The teachers had been chosen from the many normal uni versities of the country, and" were strang ers to each other. The acquaintance and courtship extended over a period of less than ten days. The captain of the Thomas refused to permit their wedding while at sea, and the 30 couples upon ihe arrival of the transport at Honolulu sought out a clergyman and were mar ried. Robbers Made Mistake. Laporte. Ind. ( Special)'. Five armed men, at 3 o'clock in the morning, at tempted to hold up a United Slates Ex press wagon between the Lake Shore nnd Erie depots in this city. In the darkness they made a mistake, however, und held up a baggage wagon. The express wa gon was heavily loaded with valuable packages. As a result of the mistake, the robbers secured nothing. Commandant Pretorlut Dead. Jagersfontein, Orange River Colony (By Cable).- Commandant Pretorius, who was recently shot through the eyes, it deud. PENNSYLVANIA NEWS. The Latest Happenings Gleaned From All Over the State, BURGLARS CUT A MAN'S THROAT. Two Men Attacked Alexandria Kcrmichaet and Hit Wife la Their Bedroom at Springfield Robber Band Alarms Lebanon-Churches, Stores and Railroad Stations flroken Into and Looted-Place ol Worship Burned Down. These pens:on were granted to Pcnn sylvanians; Jacob Shoemaker, Greens burg. $8: John There. Erie, $42.50; Crancr Clcndennan. Tarcntum, $12; Julia A. Lowe, New Castle. $8; Cather ine Copley, Warriors Mark. $12; Susan A. Winter. Somers Lane. $8: Mary E. Dunlap. Pittsburg. $8; Sarah A. Car ron. California. $8; Helen Condon, Johnstown, $8; Geo. M. Vcnscl. Alle gheny. $6: Isaac Vincent. New Era, $10; Joseph W. Russell. Grove City. $10; Samuel Franklin. Lloyd. $6; Mar garet J. Tomer, New Kensington, $8, Sarah A. Hixenbangh. Roscoe. $8 Denison B. Moses. Springboro. $6; Ab salom W. Boyd. Bradford. $6: Law rence' Watson. Nelson, $7; Win. A. Scranton, Lander, $17; Mary Ann Up ton, Sheffield. $8; Sarah J. James. Kit tanning. $8; Emma L. Leffard, Matta wana, $8. The following postoffices will be raised to the Presidential class on Oc tober I : Cresson, salary $1 too. The name of the postofhec at Cooksvillc, Westmoreland county, has been chang ed to Pricedale, with Laura A. Wilson as postmaster. Postoltices discontin ued: Ferdinand, Eric county, mail to Union City; Itlcy. Juva. Sibley ville and West Greene. Eric county, mail to Waterford. The following Pennsyl vania postmasters were appointed: Brownfield. Fayette county, W. H. Walker; Clarksville, Greene county. J. W. Virgin; Delphcn, Greene county, C. R. Hughes; Rockton, Clearfield county, S. H. Beer. It is believed that an organized band of robbers and incendiaries is operating in Lebanoii county. Eight crimes in four days have caused widespread alarm. Zion Church, in East Hanover Township, was robbed and burned down. The same night $500 worth of trousers were stolen irom a factory at Jonestown. At the same place John C. Hetrick's farm was robbed of a wagon load of provisions and Priscilla Wertz's shoe store was ransacked, but no'hing stolen. The robbers raided the Phila delphia and Reading station at Rich land. Trunks, satchels and boxes were pried open and the contents scattered over the floor. The safe was drilled, but not wrecked. The station slot ma chines were also shattered and rifled. Two burglars entered the bedroom of Alexander Kermichael at Springfield, and in their endeavor to rob his home, cut his throat so badly that Tie is not ex pected to recover. Mrs. Kermichael managed to get out of the bedroom to call for assistance, and in her absence the burglars beat her husband into uncon sciousness and then fled without secur ing any valuables. Joseph Gieske and Albert Kochinsky were imprisoned on suspicion of being the would-lic assas sins. They were captured in the Corbin coal mine by Constables Swift and Dau bert, who had a lively struggle with the men. When pretty Anna Tcnerelli, one of the Italian girls of Pittston, refused to name an early date for her marriage to Vincent Satelli. her sweetheart, he drew a revolver, it is alleged, and attempted to put an end to their courtship by shooting her. They had been engaged for some time, and Satelli wanted an early marriage, while his sweetheart did not care to give up her liberty for a time. Satelli called on her and asked her once again to name an early day. Angered at her refusal, she says, he drew a revolver and attempted to force her consent at the muzzle of the gun. She still refused, and he fired, but missed her. There is trouble brewing in the ranks of the Coattsville Eire Department. The Fire Committee 01 Council, all of whom are members of the Washington Fire Company, have refused the Brandywine Fire Company permission to take its chemical engine to the parade of the State Firemen's Associaton, in Philadel phia, on October 3. Samuel Tueston, president of the latter company, says that unless permission is granted to take the chemical ciiRine the company will not march in the line of parade with the Coatesville department. Four trainmen were injured by the collision of two Reading Railway en gines at the south mouth of the Maha ,ioy tunnel. The injured are: Baggage master Harry Kleinhart. Brakeman Howard Etlinger. Engineer Harry E. Smith and Brakeman Fred Shugart. The men live at Tamaqua. Both en gines were derailed, but only slightly damaged. Mrs. David C. link, of Harrisburg, wife of the State organizer of the Or der of Woodmen, tried to kill herself. She secured his revolver and shot her self in the right temple. She was un conscious when found. Should Mrs. Zink survive she will be totally blind. Nervous trouble is the cause assigned for her deed. William II. Good had his arm man gled and narrowly escaped death at the American Iron and Steel Works, Le banon. His coat caught in the cog wheels of a machine and in order to Kivr his life Good kept his body from the cog? with his arm. The flesh was ripped off the arm to the shoulder. Williant Carney died at Norristown of a fractured skull sustained by being struck by a train and hurled from a high bridge over Stony Creek. A dividend of about 16 per cent., it is announced, will be paid to depositors of the defunct Chester County Guaran tee Trust & Safe Deposit Company. The regular quarterly meeting of Pennsylvania Grange, Patrons of Hus bandry, of Chester and Delaware coun ties, was held at Lincoln University The corrupt politics of the State was condemned and farm crops discussed. John Kitihruw, of Avoca, was run down and killed by a passenger trair on ti e Delaware and Hudson Railroad. He had just drawn his pay at the But ler mines and it ius through the cash envelope that he was identified. The a-ycnr-old child of Lewis Perry, living near Bredensburg, fell into a pail of boilinc water and was scalded to death. George Lynn, a brakeman on the Phil adelphia. & Reading Railroad, was seri ously injured by being knocked from the top rf a box car in the CoatesvilL' Rolling Mill. Thieves took $500 worth of hardware from the store of Van Buskirk & Bro ther at Pottstown. The planing mill of A. J. Maxwell, at Cogan House, va6 destroyed by fire. Losi $2000. ( By falling from the second story of his barn at Willianuport, ex-Representa tive A. J. Kahlor,vas severely injured. Rurtdara rol.hcdt the store of Levi il. Gochenaur .lit Petersburg of $200 worth ti coous.