I A GIANT JiEAT COMBINE Overshadows Even the Billion Dollar Steel Trust WILL CONTROL THE PRICE OF MEAT. An toe Leadloz Meat Packers Are la It Will Be Knows at the Uaited Slates Packing Caaiaaay Amawr lit Swift at the Head The Estimated Aaaual Profit oa dross BjsI ess Tea Per Cent Chicago, III. (Special). A gigantic combination of the parking houses of th country, to be known a? the United States Packing Company, with a rr table capitalization of $500,000,000, on which an antuial business of from 750,000,000 to $ l, ot.0000,000 will be trans acted, at a net profit of from $75,000,000 to $100,000,000. These are some of the details coming 1o the rurface in Eastern financial circles f f the most far-reaching of nil the trusts jet projected. Notwithstanding the repeated and posi tive denials from Armour, Swift and ether interests, the proposed combine is accepted as a certainty. It overshadows the United States Steel Corporation. It is understood that the basis of pay n'ent by the new trust, to he known a the United States racking Company, for the corporations and firms it is to absorb will lie twenty-five times the earnings for the last year. The earnings aggre gated over seventeen millions of dollars. The reported division of capital among the principal interests in the $.',00,000,000 combine is as follows: Armour & Company, $201,000 vc : Swift & Company, $100,000,000; Nelson, Morris & Company, $75 010.000; Oi.lahy. $2.-ooo.ooo : Schwarzvchih & Sul.-.ber-irrr Company, $25,000,000: others ovct the United States. $50.01:0.000 ; miscel laneous expenses, including cost of pro motion, etc.. $-5. 000.000 Total, $500. 000.000. I. Ogdrn Armour is to be chairman cf the finance committee and head the financial drpartmcr,. ami if his Ileal ill will permit, Gnsiavns F. Swift is to i.e president. The full list of of'ccrs i-: Chairman board of directors. J. Ogden Armour; president, G. 1". Swi". treavt "r, Edward Morris; general manrger operating department). Kdwir.1 Ccidahy: chairman finance committee, J. Og'hi. Armour. PIVE M'RSF.S DROWNED. Rvwboai Sunk by Steamer at Battle Creek Michigan. Battle Crerk. Mich. ( Spccinl). Five tnenibcrs of a boating party of six em ployes of the Ilnttlc Creek Sanatorium were drowned in Lake Goguac. Their rowboat was run down by the steamer Welcome. Miss Carry Eyotk. the sixth occupant of the capsized boat, was rescued. Bennett had been rowing the young ladies about the hike and the party was returning to the sanatorium villa about jo p. m.. jnst as the little steamer Wel come was leaving her dock with an ex cursion party. In some way the Wel come ran the rowboat down. The small boat was struck amidships and the hull crushed. AH the occupants were thrown into the water. Miss Kyock managed to catch hold of the overturned boat fend hung to it until she was rescued by a person who bod witnessed the ac cident and coine out in a boat. All of the victims except Miss Rich rd, were members of the new class of nurses ax the sanatorium. FIENDISH ACT OP INSANE WOMAN. Attempt; to Klll.llcr Mother and Sister and Then Commits Suicide. Cincinnati, O. (Special) While suffer ing from temporary insanity, Kmma Bankhardt, a spinster, 40 years of age, attempted to kill her mother and her tistcr Dorothy, and then committed suicide, at the home near Covington, Ky. Mrs. Baukhurdt and Dorothy were asleep in separate rwims at the time, anil each was dealt a terrific blow on the head with some blunt instrument, their skulls being fractured. Both probably will die. Having dialt these blows to her mother and sister, she saturated their beds with oil and applied a lighted match. As soon as the flames began to spread she ran to a cistern in the yard end jumped in, drowning before assis tance could reach her. Hundreds of neighbors were attracted to the liankhardt home by the fire and succeeded in rescuing the two victims of the insane woman before they were harmed by the flames. Maaeuvcrs Planacd for Pacific. San Francisco (Special). The coast of California, with the Golden Gate as the center of operations, will in all pro lability be the scene of the next strategic maneuvers between chosen fleets of the American Navy. Naval men arc dis mssing the prof ..sition entertained at Washington of holding Fall maneuvers on the I'aciiic Coast on lines similar to Jhore which govrrned the late contest off the New Kngland Coast. Sied Company's $18,893,0) Mortfaie. New York (Special. A mortgage fi r f 10.00:1,000, made by the Bethlehem Steel Company of I'l nnsylvania, was tiled with the Comity Register of Hudson County. N. J. It is in favor of the Colonial Trust Company, of New York, and is to secure an issue of $10,000,000 of twenty-year 5 Jcr cent gold bonds. Wijuts tli I'. S. Senate Abolished. Milwaukee. Wis. (Special). The Social Democratic party ir. the Mute con vention, uere adopted a platform reaffirm infl its rJligiance to the principles .if internal iojia! socialism. The platform i Vicnnnds. among other things, a law prantin?; wageworkers over tio years of igr. who have earned less than $io,r03 a year and have been citizens of the United" States not less than 16 vears. a pension of $12 n month for the re mainder of life: nl.vi that the United States Senate lie abolished. S&ot to Dcataj hy Angry Mob Sparta. III. (Spri-ia!). Ardec Wilson, a negro, who was arrested here for an basalt on c young white woman, was riddled with bullet by an angry mob. The mob took ban from the jail, lippd a uftoser over his head and swung him op to a telegraph pole, but in nf . manner he slipord the nooe and fell to the street. In an iistant he was on Ins fret arnd running away. He appar ently eicapiI in the darkness. Imt a posse pursued him and surrounded him several hours later within two blocks A ih jail Uid sju.-l hint to death SUMMARY OF THE LATEST NEWS. Domestic. President Roosevelt made a trium phant journey from New Hampshire into Vermont on a tallyho drawn by six horses. Enormous crowds greeted him at Cornish and at Windsor. Robert Edwards, while masting on his bicycle at Harpers Ferry. W. Va., collicd with a stubborn steer and was thrown violently, narrowly escaping with his life. Governor Cummins and staff, of Des Moines, will attend the launching of the cruiser Des Moines at (Juincy, Mass., September 17. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., and pa-ty left Chicago en route to the North west on a hunting trip. Alfred D. Jones, the first settler in Nebraska, died a: his home, in Omaha, aged 87 years. Three Italian workingmrn em-ploy cd in a sewer at Schenectady, N. Y., were drowned. President Roo-evelt has been invited to visit Hirmingham, Ala. ()i the six candidates for Senator Mc I.aurin's place v ted for in the Demo cratic primaries in South Carolina none received a majority. The highest two. Congressman A-bury C. Latimer and cx-Gov. John G. Evans, will be vot ed for in the second primaries. I Rev. Leona-d RadclifTc (lied at the 'Westminster Home for Invalid Cler gymen, at Perth Atwboy. He was 00 I years old. and tit one time was promi nent in the American Home Mi-ion-ary Society. i At Monroe. Mich., Walter Lcnirraiid i slmt and killed Joseph l.aborge, whom ; he found in his house upon his return. I Mrs. emerand says that she and l.a borge were planning an elopement. General Manager Lord, of the Amer ican Iron and Steel Manutactu-ing Company, at Lebanon, T'a., rct'used to grant the demands oi the striker- that I colored nonunion men be rent' 1 d. ; Attorney General Anderson. i W ; trinia. 'ays that the law -i the Stat'" : is sufficient to block tile propo-:.! tne ' ecr of the Atlantic C"ast Lino and the , Seabi ard Air 1 .inc. Theodn-e Ro-.-cvclt. Ir.. has -tartei' with 11. R. McCttll r.ijji. a vire-prc-i-dent oi the Chicago and Norihwr -:ern Railway, on a hunting trip in Soir.h Dakota. ' Hitntsvtllc. Ala., has invited P-esi-ilcn: Roo-evtlt Jo vi-it that city next month. A combination -of the hading malle able irmi companies is c.rdcr consider ation. T he crpital stock oi the lilinois t 71- tral Railroad was increased to $05,040. coo. j T here will be no contest over the t ; ta'es oi either Charles L. Fair r his ! wife by Mrs. Fair's relatives. Mrs. ' lia-riii I'.. Nelson, mothi.r oi Mrs. ! Fair, on behalf of herself and children, has rchtiinihed for a sum in cash all claim to the estates oi Fair or his wife. , Five employes oi the I'.attle Creek (Mich.) sanitarium nurses, probation ers ;;nd stenographer were drowned in Lake Gi.guac as the result of a col lision between- tite steamer Welcome and a rowboat containing a party of young people. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., let New i York, accompanied by II. R. McCul : lough, of Chicago, vice-president oi the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, 'lie goes West tor a three week lmiit : ing and fishing trip as the guest oi Mr. McCullough. I The first clash between the striking anthracite miners and the troops oc ' rttrred at Tamaipia. Pa.' Strikers ston I ed the troops. A number of the strik , ers were arrested. Captain Gearhart. of Company F, Twelfth Regiment, was ! injured. Foreign. 1 Fmperor William and King Victor Emmanuel reviewed ,30.500 troops on the Tcmpclhoi Field. The Empero saluted the American generals, who will be hi-: gite-ts during the army lr.a- - neuvers. The .pproaching e:;piration oi the time limit tor the completion oi the ' Atlantic sliippiiig t-tist is arousing much int' t-es; and agitation in England. 1 The lioers are negotiating wi-th the French author-tics f,,r a concession oi .agricultural lands on the Island i f Mad- aya-car. I: is proposed to ir.stidl a combined ligl.tsliip and ocean telegraph station too miles west of ti'.e Lizard. 0:1 the English coast. The prices of meats in Germanv ' con- i 11 11c to advance, and a go. id stiak irw costs 44 cents a pound in Berlin. The French Minister of Finance pro poses to meet the financial deficit by reducing the amount of untaxed a'co h il hi;',ierto allowed producers and by a I. dishing exemptions from the tobarco tax. Captain von Frankenberg and J.ieu tenant Ntimbauer of the First Regiment ' German Field Artillery, have been dis missed from the army on a .-count oi ; demonstrations to a pardoned dueli-t. I The Hamburg customs authorities ; will hereafter reipiire certificates of o-i-gin in the case oi grain shipped from Baltimore. New York and other Amer ican ports. Colombia will formally demand of Nicaragua an explanation in regard to the latter country's alleged participation in the revolution. Actual war is not fc.-.re,'. William C. Whitney, of New York, has ioi'nded in London the ieresford T rust in memory oi Lord William Her-ii-ford and for the benefit of indigent t"-ii'cn. T he Colombian government is con centrating troops from all quarter- at Panama and Colon to inert expected attacks by the rebels at those ports. 1 Montagu itolbein. the English swim mer, failed in his third attempt to swi-ti the Engl'sh channel after being in the j wa'er hours and 1 1 minutes. Financial. The great puzzle oi the fiv.rui'ial ; world; Who owns Reading? T he Baltimore & Ohio will '.1011 give ia contract ior 100 locomotive. T he Intel-national Paper Comttuny has declared the regular cuarte"ly divi dend of I !' per cent, on the preferred : tock. j New York will not believe anythim j but that Pennsylvania is buying RvaJ j ing stock for control. Philadelphia liankers assert there will I be no money stringency, ulthough rates of interest will go up. Soti'hern Railway is not so bullish since Illinois Central declared positively it would not join u Southern Serurities combine. The coke outlook, says the "Iron Age." is very discouraging. Railroads cannot handle it, so great is the demand in;.de bv furnaces. T he Chesapeake & Ohio has leased from a car trust twenty-five locomo tives. 1000 steel gondolas, 400 wooden gondolas and 810 other coke and freight cars, lor $j,ooo.ooo. Baltimore & Ohio at even 115 is one of the most attractive securities in th? general list. That road has only bespit! its career. TO END THE BIG STRIKE Governor Stone May Call Extra Session of Legislature. CONFERENCE ON THE ARBITRATION. Should the People ol Pennsylvania, who are Indirectly Sulferers from the Strike, Make a Demand, the Governor Will Issue tbi Call He Favors Arbitration and Had a Bill Drafted During the Last Session. Harrisburg, Pa. (Special). Persist ant rumors were in circulation here that A special session of the legislature may be called by Governor Stone in the in terest of legislation looking to the ar bitration of the strike in the anthracite region. It is understood that should I there be a popular demand for the : calling ol the legislature together to 1 grapple with the question, a demand I which should be imperative and unmis takable, representing the gcat mass of the people, who have indirectly sut ured by the coal strike, the Governor would be constrained to call an extra session. While no confirmation of these ru- mors can be secured from an official source, it is stated that a legislative solution to the grave situation in the strike region is possible. Governor Stone's leaning toward arbitration ia pronounced and well known to the op erators and miners. During the last legislature he not only urged upon the assembly the ne cessity fur passing an arbitration law, but he had a draft of a bill covering the need made and sent to the coal operators and officials of rhc L'nited y ineworkers. Neither the operators nor the miners, however, approved of the bill as it was framed, and the Gov ernor knew that it was impossible to secure its passage in the face of the objections of both sids-s interested. Conference on Arbitration. WiikrTarrc. Pa. (Special). At the cio-e of the sistccnth week of the an thracite s;rike the talk of arbitration is ;:e.:i:i renew cd. De-pite the statements i--ucd oy the presidents oi the coal carrying railroads that they will 11 it '.- ree to arbitration, the hope is still strong in the strike region that the in llcencis now being brought to bear up on the operators will have the desired rT-.-t. It was reported here on good author ity that President Mitchell will have a crnlermce with l'nited States Senators Quay and Penrr.se at the St. Charles Hotel, Atlantic City. Some weeks ago. at a meeting of the People's Alliance oi this city, a com mittee was appointed to wait on the Pennsylvania senators and request hem to use their influence to bring the miners and operant cugether. Denounce lien. Gobin's Order.' ' Shenandoah. Pa. (Special). General Gobin's report from Major Gearhart was to the effect that everything was quiet in the Panther Creek region. More men reported for work there, he says, than on any previous morning and none was molested by the strikers. In Shenandoah and vicinity every thing continues quiet. Tainaqua, Pa. (Special). Strike lcad-r-s went from doo to door in the "I'tther Creek Valley svce-njing the news of General Gobin's stern warning and his instruction to the men to shoot and shoot to kill if molested in any maimer. MESSENGER GIRLS POPULAR. . Telegraph Boys to Disappear From Western I L'nion's Chicago Olfice. Chicago (Special). The familiar mes senger boy, so long identified with tel egrams, is about to disappear, so far as the branch of the Western Union Company here is concerned. This has been finally decided by the local officers of the company having the matter in charge. The latest strike of the boys, the third disturbance in a month, forced the American District Telegraph Company, which supplies the nics-rngcrs for the Western Union, to hire .oo girls to take the strikers' places, and alter a trial oi nearly a week it is declared that their services are sat isfactory. T he girls are w orking in the business district and the resilience portions of the city during the day. T he night force is made up oi young men. not boys. j CIRCLS COMBINE THE LATEST. ! Three ARitregations in "Communltyof dntcr. I est" Scheme. I Kansas City. Mo. (Special). Accord- , ing to Peter Sells, one of the proprie tors of the Forcpaiigh & Sells Broth- i ers' Circus, that circus has perfected b "community of interest" with the Buffalo Bill Wild West aggregation and the Barnuin & Bailey shows. Mr. Sells said tin y are to be managed by the ; Barmim and Bailey Company ll.imit- I ed 1 of London. I-Jigland. ; "Kach company." said Mr. Sells, "re- ' tains its individuality and will stand on its own legs. The idea is to have one of the big shows in the United States each year, and one in Great Britain and , one on the Cuii incnt. T he Barnuni and Bailey Couq any (Limited) of Lon don intends to control the circus busi- , ncss oi the Continent and Great Bri.ain. J Fifteen Injured. I Yomigstown, O. (Special) Two cars i on the Yuungstnwn and Sharon I'.lec i trie Railway collided at 5 15 o'clock a. m. two miles south of Sharon. Seven t(n persons were injured, two ierioudy. Contested Murder in Court. j Holly Springs, MUs (Special). At I the trial of "Whit" Owens for the mur der of the two Montgomery-), l'nited States officers, Orlando Lester, who is j under sentence of death in the same : case, swore that he himself did the kill ing. On previous occasions he 'hid 1 sworn that William Mathis did it. Ma j ths was hanged rive weeks ago. Les ter's execution was deferred in order j that he might testify at the present trial. Would Combine Church and SUe. I guidon (By Cable). The Rev. Forbes Phillips, vicar of Gorlestoii, near Yar mouth, who aroused widespread com ment by permitting Mrs. Brown Potter to recite from his pulpit, in June, lool, is agitating a freth and more startling scheme for a close union of the church and stage in the cause of religion. He proposes that each parish maintain a theatre under the management of the church, In an outspoken interview the clergyman says: "Clergymen overdo the religions side of life, thereby ruining the spiritual liver, like that of overfed Strusburg geese." NATIONAL CAPITAL AFFAIRS. Growth ol the Nation. A moving picture of conditions in the United States at decennial intervals from 1800 to 1S50 and annually from 1850 to too is presented in .1 monograph just issued by the Treasury Bureau of Statistics. The area has grown from 8J7.844 square miles in 1800 to ,1.05100 square miles in 1002. exclusive of Alaska and the islands belonging to the United States. 'The population per square mile which was 3.6 in 1810. was ih.i in 1002. The total wealth has grown from $7,000,000,000 in 1850 to an estimated $94.o,ooo.ooo in 1000 and the per capita wealth from $.K7 in 1850 to $12.15 1000. In 1800 ihe public debt was $15 per capita; in 1840 it had fallen to 21 "cents per capita: in 1852 it was $2.67 per capita; in i8or. before the beginning of the war. $2.74. and then mounted rapidly until it became $76.08 per capi.a in 1806, gradually falling again after the war. It is $w.o7 in 1002. The money in circulation amounted to 85 per capita in 8io. and in 1002 $28.40 per capita, tlw highest point that it has ever reached. Deposits in savings banks amounted to $1.1,18.576 in 1820 and $2.5(17,004.580 in loot. T he individual deposits in na tional banks have grown from $500,910, 87.1 in 1865 to $.1,111,600,196 in 1902. The number of farms increased from 1.449.07.1 in 1850 to 5.7.10.657 in 1900: the value of farms and farm property from $4,000,000,000 to $20,000,000,000, and the value of their product, which was not measured until 1870. grew from $1,958,000,000 in that year to $.1,764,000. 000 in 1000. The value of farm animals increased from $544.0x0.000 in 1850 to $2,081,000,000 in looo. The value of the product of the man ufacturing industries grew- from $1,000. 000,000 in i(";o to $1.1.000.000.000 in 1900: (V number of people employed therein grew from less than 1,000.000 to 6.750,000. Civil Service Report. The annual report of the Civil Ser vice Commission has been made public. It opens with the statement that 47,075 persons were examined during the year, of whom 21.028 were examined for the department service. The service does no. include merely the departments at Washington, but. all the federal classified services outside of Washington, with the exception of the Postal. Customs. Internal Revenue and Government Printing services. Thus, the railway and Indian services are divisions of the departmental services. Nearly 2t.ooo persons were examined for the Post oftice Service, or a little over a thou sand less than the number examined fur the departmental service. About 60 per cent., or .1.1.7.19. of those taking examinations pas-ed. and 14.959 failed. Compared with the year previous, this represented an increase of 2.1 12 in the number of persons examined, a decrease of 1.208 in the number who passed and an increase of ,1.140 in the number who failed. The total number of persons receiv ing appointment, excluding the Philip pine service and the municipal service of the District of Columbia, neither of which is subject to the provisions of the civil service act, was 9.870. In the entire executive service of the government there arc. in round num bers. 2.15.000 places, of which number about 121.000 arc classified. Of the 114.000 remaining unclassified. 72.498 arc those of fourth-class postmasters. The annual expenditure for salaries for the entire executive service is stated to he about $1.10.000,000. and of this. $85,000,000, or nearly two-thirds, goes to salaries for positions subject to the civil service rules. Ruling I'pon Civil Service Law. President Roosevelt has made a rul ing upon the civil service law which apparently disposes of the case of Miss Rebecca J. Taylor, who is testing in court the right of the Secretary of Wa.r 1o discharge her. The President's ruling, which has been pomulgatcd by the Civil Service Commission as one oi its own rules, is: For the purpose of preventing all misunderstandings and improper con struction of said section, it is hereby declared that the term "iust cause," as used in Section 8. Civil Service Rule 2. is intended to mean any cause, other than one merely political or religious, which will promote the efficiency of the service, and nothing contained in said rule shall be construed to require the examination of witnesses or any trial or hearing except in the discre tion of the officer making the removal. Since the President U the fountain head of the civil service rules this dec laration has the force of a new law, and is of equal force and effect with all other rules. Disappearance of a Disease. The disappearance oi one of the most fatal diseases to the American soldiers in the Philippines dysentery is caus ing great satisfaction to the medical branch of the Army. Surgeon General Forwood has received recent advices that this disease, which heretofore has caused more sickness and deaths than any other disease among the troops in the Philippines, has practically disap peared. Against Bullet-proof Cloth. The United S:ates Army ordnance officers, after an exhaustive lest, have reported against the adoption of bullet-proof cloth shields. T he test show ed that, weight ior weight, the shields were not as resistant as steel plate, while lluy were of double weight when wet. Newsy Hems of Interest. If Secretary Wilson would accept the place he would be ilected president of the Iowa Agricultural College. Acting President iroulkc. of flic Civil Service Commission, has addressed a communication to all the executive de partments in regard to the part office holders may take in politics. In conformity with a wish express' ed by Secretary Shaw the national banks arc increasing their circulation ol banknotes. The object is to give greater elasticity to the currency. 1,100 Lives In Peril. New York (Special) In broad day light and bright sunshine, a collision which might have resulted in a dread ful calamity occurred in New York har bor between an incoming passenger liner and an outbound freight steamer. The steamship I.iguria, of the Italian Royal Mail Steamship Crtmpany, with over 1,100 persons on board, was run down in the Narrows by the British steamer Peconic. of the Mediterranean and New York Steamship Company, bound out for f.crtn in the Mediterranean, BUST COVERS ISLANDS The People of Guadeloupe Are Panic Stricken. ASHES ARE HURLED OUT TO SEA. Detonations Heard from the Direction ol Martinique Heavier Showers ol Dust Fall Upon Dominica Than at Any Time Since the First Eruption of Pelee. A Dark Cone Shaped Cloud Emitting Flashes. Pointc a Titre (By Cable). This en tire port is covered with n cloud of fine dust, and the populace is panic-stricken. Fine ashes arc hilling continually in a slight drizzle. Scmidarkncss is over the sea and the ships in the harbor seem to be enveloped in a cloud of smoke. Advices from Basse Terrc. Island oi Gaudeloup?. assert that since daybreak the entire island has been covered with a cloud of dust coming from the south east, the direction of tic Island of Mar tinique. The population of Basse Tcrrc is greatly alarmed. St. John, Antigua. Many loud de tonations were heard here from 9 o'clock to midnight. Basse Terrc. St, Kitts, B. W. I. A series of loud reports were heard litre from 7 until 9 o'clock. Roseau, Dominica, B. W. I. A thick mist which enveloped Roseau Saturday was taken, as it approached, for a rain storm. The dust is still falling, al though lightly, but during the night the quantity of dust which fell here was greater than upon any previous occa sion since the first eruption of Mont i Pelee. j A sevce eruption of Mont Pelee, I Martinique, was reported to have oc curred at noon August 21. T his repo-t 1 was brought to Castries. Island oi St. I Lucia, by officers oi the French steam i ship Dahome. T his eruption was lol 1 lowed by total darkness five miles away , from t he volcano. ! A dispatch received from St. Thomas, 1 D. W. I., said that be. ween in o'clock in the morning and ,1 in the afternoon i of August 25 clouds oi dust w ere seen ' in the direction of Mont Pelee from 1 the Island of Dominica. Detonations were heard, and there were light show ers oi volcanic dust on the island. ' A dispatch from Paris dated August 28 said the latest dispatches received at the ministry of the colonics from 'Fort do France. Island of Martinique. ; were dated Monday. August 25. They j made no mention of the reported crnp I tions of Mont Pelee. The Patis dis- patch said also that the cables to Mar i unique, both north and south, cotititi j mil to be interrupted. I F.lTorts made to communicate by ca- hie direct w ith the Island of Martinique j have proved unsuccessful. Telegraphic : communication v.iih that island from : New York is still interrupted. REVOLUTIONISTS REPULSED. J Aladc Stuhhom Attack Upon The Town Oi i Caripnuo, Venezuela. Kingston, Jamaica (By Cable). The German steamer Polaria, which arrived : here from Venezuela:; ports, reports thai j while at Carupano, Venezuela. 700 rebels j attacked that place stubbornly and got I inside the tow n, where they were met j by ioto Government troops under Gen eral Velutini. Severe fighting, lasting the whole day, followed and cnd.d in the disorderly retreat of the rebels, several of the latter being killed or wounded. Bullets repeatedly struck the steamer, and the lives of her crew being in danger, Captain lloff, her commander, communicated w ith General chain; ami , asked for protection. T he Genera! re- plied that the Polaria must clear out. las she had no right to be there. Her captain refused to leave the port and I telegraphed to the German cruiser I Gazelle, Canti-iu Gra 010 la, at J.a 'Guaira, asking for ininieoiiie pi.nect on. The Gazelle arrived at Carupano Sun day morning and protected the Polaria while the hitter proceeded to take in cargo. T his work was completed Mon day night, and the Polaria sailed under the protection of the German cruiser, which also left Carupano. When the Polaria left Carupano the Venezuelan Government officials were in fear of another and more serious attack on the place. J rade was completely crippled and many atrocities were re- ! ported. A dispatch from Willemsi.id. Island of Curacao, announces that details had been received there of the reoccupatioii of the port of Carupano. Venezuela, hy lb; Venezuelan Government forces, it would therefore appear that the fight ing referred to by the Polaria followed ! an attempt on the part of the insurgents to recapture (.aitipano. Due to Action ot Ancrkan Trust. London (By Cable). "Dear meat is due more to the action of certain Ameri can trusts than to the closing of the ports against cattle " is what the presi dent of the Board of Agricul'nre. R. W. Il.'lllbllrv told :i mi-pli'tiir .,( ! which he addressed at Shi w sburv. when defending the action of the Board of Agriculture in pn hibiting the impor tation of stock. The Cabinet Minister also expressed his approval of the recent widening bases of taxation, and sa'd he would not have, been sorry if a further duty had been placed on dour, explain ing that, while it would raise the price of the food of the people half a cent, it would revive the milling industry of the country. ODDS AND ENDS OF THE LATEST NEWS. t ' - President Roosevelt spent a busy and eventful day in New Hampshire, clos ing with a visit to the siimmir home oi Secretary Hay, on the shores of Lake Sunnapee. H e made si vera! important addresses during the day. The Southern Railway has increased the wages 01 us machinists, black smiths and boilermakers. Mrs. Kate Wagner killed her two children and herself in her home, in i-iine KiicK, Ark. A Chicago and Pastern Illinois pas senger train was wrecked near Cayuga, Ind. The engineer and fireman were probably fatally injured. The passen gers escaped with slight injuries. Becam-e she feared that she. would become insane, Mrs. John McCurdy, of Chicago, a bride ol three months, killed herself by inhaling gas. Former Secretary ol the Treasury Hon. John G. Cat lisle made the an nual address before the American Bar Association at Saratoga. Sir Thomtis Lipton hai promised the Chic3i;o representatives his influence with (he Briii'h in the interest ol the Olympian games. MINDANO IS SHAKEN UP. Twenty Morot Killed hy Earthquake In the Philippines. Washington, D. C. (Special). The War Department received a cablegram from General Chaffee, at Manila, re porting the occurrence of a reries ol cathqnakes on the Island of Mindanao. Twenty persons were killed by falling walls, the victims all beitur Moros. T he Americans in the vicinity escaped, and the dispatch says there were no re ports thtst any of the soldiers occupy ing that portion of the island affected sustained any injuries. T he upheaval occurred in the coun try adjacent to the Lake of I.anao. in the1 Moro section of the island, neat Camp Vickers, which is now the head quarters of the American forces sta tioned in Mindanao. General Chaf fee's cablegram says the mountains anr' rivers and other streams were consid erably disturbed, and much damage was done. T he extent of the damage however, was not reported. It is presumed here that the seismic shocks occurred about five dys ago. though the date is not mentioned in the dispatch. This is the first scriou? earthquake reported from that country during American occupation of the Philippines. The most important pre viics seismic disturbance in Mindanac was the one thai' partly destroyed Pa laic. Kota-Batu and the village on the banks of the River Mindanao in tK"2 T his phenomenon closely followed the eruption of the volcano o' Makatnnn. General Chaffee also cabled that th? military situation in that section re mains quiet and unchanged. No at tacks have been made on the American forces at Camp Vickers since the last report, which was cabled eight days ago. TEXAS WHEAT YIELDS FOR 1W2. Crop Estimated at .0?0,OM Bush:!s Satnc Quantity of Outs. Austin. Texas (Special). The follow ing estimate of the grain yield of Texas this year has been is-ucd by 11. B. Hor sey, secretary of the Texas Grain Deal ers' Association. There are about S.coc.noo bmhels of wheat in Texas this year and about '.he .-ante quantity of oats. , . As to corn, there is no way by w.nch a reasonably accurate estimate can he made. However, the crop this year is lighter than it was last year. No oats were cxpor.cd except for seed purposes, shipments being made to the South east. Something like 2.000.000 lut-heN of Texas oa's were shipped last year at-.il the same amount this year. Will f.iakj Muncy for Chines:. Washington. D. C. ( Special) The state department recently received ti com munication from the Chinese Govern ment stating in effect that it -vas pro posed to start up tne uo criuiicm emu- age mint at 1 icntsin. and al.uig al.uig tnat art assayer and a maclimist trom one 01 the mints of the L'nited States he re commended for employment therein The matter was referred to Mr. Roberts, the director of the mint, with the result that Leonard McGruder. assistant as saver, and Mr. I.. C. F.mory, superin tendent of machinery, both from New Orleans' mint have been engaged fot this service and arc expected to sail fot China within a short time. .... ... 1 , Twa Killed ia Auto Accident. ! Long Branch, N. J. (Special) To ' were killed and three injured in an automobile accident .tt'the Park Avenue i Bridge, over the New York and Long ; Branch R. R. tracks. In trying to avoid running down a man Frank J. Matthews, president of Realty Trust Company, of Je.-sy City, lost control oi his machine. ;in:l it plunged agaitv t 'he railing, broke I through and dropped to the rails .15 feel below. Mr. Matthews wa- instantly ; killed, the heavy machine falling upon ! him. Mrs. J. H Cobb, of Richmond. ! Va., one of his guests, died later at the Monmouth memorial Hospital, and : Mr. Louis Pizini. her sister-in-law, it is lelio ed. will die. ! Killed Wle and then lllinseli. Ca-roTton. III. (Special). Dr. A. O. Miller shot and killed his wife and ;-.t-tempted to kill his little daughter, but succeeded in indicting only a slight wound. lie then swallowed a dose of laudanum, which caused his death in jail after he had been arrested. He I had been drinking heavily of late and this, combined with jealousv, caused the : trouble. j Assaulted anil Murdered. i Corinth, Miss. (Special). Mrs, (t.:ry Whitfield, a young woman ,livin .- near . iii-rc, was assaulted and murdered by ! some unknow n person. T he body was I discovered by her husband upon hiss ' return from work. The sheriff, with a j posse and bloodhounds, are in pursuit ! of the criminals. ! Blown Over Like Feathers. I Owantonna. Minn. (Special). The wreck on the Northwestern Road, five miles west of here, was probably the worst that ever happened in this sec tion of the state. Three persons are jd'. ad. four are fatally injured aTnl 14 j others injured, some oi them seriously. I Murder and Pillage. j Gainesville. Fla. I Special). T he bodies of Mr. and Mrs P.iilMn Lewis, residing live miles south oi Bronson. ' were found on the floor of their home j by neighbors. The bouse had been pillaged and l ewis and hir. wife mur dced. There it no clue to 1 lie mur derers. M. Cambon (iocs lo Spain. Paris (By Cable A decree making a nuniiie,- of diplonatic appointments w as signed by President l.-.mhct. hut it will not be officially pub'ished for a day or two. T h- new appointment.! include those of M. Jcsserand. the retiring French MinisP. r at Copcnha,;'!!. as FiliicI: Ambus ador to Washington: M. Cainb. - i whom M. Jesserand will replace in the United States, as French Ambassa dor lo Spain, and M. Hompard n Frcn h Anihassador to Russii in suecess-oi, to the Marquis De Mon.chcllo. Across Continent In a Balloon. Denver (Special). "Big Glory" e ol the largest balloons ever constructed, was successfully started from this ci y on a trip, the purpose of which is to break the world's Ions; distance record, as well as all previous records for fa-t balloon sailing. It is expected ulti mately to reach New York. The bal loon contains 140,000 ci bic feet of hy drogen gas and was built especially for this trip. The occupants oi the bal loon are Capls T. S. Baldwin and Percy Hudson, aeronauts, and C. S.' Sherman, membei of tlie Half of the Denver Post. 1H KEYSTONE STATE. Newt Happenings ol Interest Gathered Front All Source. Patents granted, Pennsylvanians. I'homas Alhcc. Halstcad, "check-hook keeper; August Buerkle, Allegheny, valve mechanism for water heaters; Gustavc Dahlhrrg, McDonald, gas and strain convertible engine; Henry L, Dixon. Pittsburg, plate glass annealing apparatus; Hugh B. Duff. Chewick, hide-securing apparatus; Davis Fergu son, rit.sburg, coke drawer: William Coldic, Wilkiiisburg, car heating sys tem; Frank S. Jones, F.xport. stilch op erating device: William R. McPhcrson, 'and If. Kurieh, Tarcntiini, wtishboard; George VV. Paul. Pittsburg, parcr and sheer; Howard Hope. Hollidaysburg, esics trough hanger; Henry N. Potter, Pi:tsbtirg. mercury vapor lamp; Charles r. Smith. Pittsburg, furnace; Samuel B. Woodford, Imperial, attachment for wash Ir lih-s. Pennsylvania pensions. William P. McCleery. Troy. $8; Fdward Acklev, Bradiord, $12: Bvron N. Crandall. Ha zelhurst. $24: Robert L. Harrison. Glasspori. S12: Allen Hall. Trough Creek, $12: Waller Baker. Donnan town, $12: John Ford. Bradford. $10: Peter Mundanial. Harbour Creek, ?17; George II. Galhraith. Natrona. $8; George W. Kcpplc. Kavlor, $8; Augus tus ShcHei'liainmcr. IIogeHtown. $8; Jcrusha . Kckert. Woolwich, $8; I.ucv A. Crayton, Athens. $S; Kliza G. Vance. Allegheny. $8: Marv Sullivan. Curry. $12: Sheldon M. Moore. Krie. $ti: Ames Snyder, Henderson. $8: Oli ver 11. Scott. Kent, $10: Isaiah Roos, Allegheny. s': Samuel C. Dougherty. I .Natrona. tsS; Martha A. T'runck. F.lliott, : .Margaret Sinetlzer. Kdinon, $8; I'.liza Ann Davis. Gl n Hope. $8. Charles T. Schoen left Pittsburg for his home in Philadelphia, after having pivchased a site at Butler for iiis pro tected steel car wheel manufacturing plant. He proposes to make car wheels by a new process and said 1 lite the in itial cost of the ulant would br ?50o. rno. As ( ie Kir.ix affair a- Allan' ie City, when the .-nhiect was broached. Mr. Schoen sa d: "Please don't mention that. The incidi nt is closed. Il really amounted to r rhinj mnr" than that." and he indicated by nlacing his hand 011 a bystander's shoulder aiH shoving him slightly. "I was so annoyed ih.-.t I immediately went 'to Sa-anac Pake and didn't look at a iicivmti,- for six days. There is nothing between Mr. Knox and myself. I have not heard from him since the incident. When Mr. and Mrs. Fred ll.-eler rr-li-rned home after witnessing the cen tennial fireworks displav at Blooms burg, they found Miss I'.dith Bancroft, a nurse in their employ, lyimr bound and gauged upon the lloor. IVon br ing reha-.v hc ated that she was met in the hallway by a man and wom an w ho overpow ered hi r before she could make an ou'ery. She knew noth ing 'more until shortly befo't-e she ws released. The intruders ransacked the ho'-.sj and secured S20 fro-u a bureau drawer. They also had a lot of silver ware and ornaments bundled up ready to carry away, but were evidently dis turbed, leaving th-? bootv. This is the econd time Mr. Ikeler's house has been robbed within the past six months. Over a mile a minute was the record made hy the Readinir "flyer" helwee" Lebanon and Harrisburg. beating all records on the Lebanon Valley Divi sion. The "liver's" actual lime was iwenty-six miles in twenty-one niituttei between Harrisburg and Lebanon and faster time could have been made had not the engineer been forced to slow to eight miles an hour wh le passing through the local yants. a distance of eight miles. Between Palmyra and I fitmmctstown the rate was cightv miles in hour, the greatest ever made by any passenger engine on that strc ch. The removal of Richard Barret with his family from Wilkiiisburg lo Swiss rale 'reduced the population of the for iiier borough by twenty-four. Barret is 45 years old. He married at t'he age f sixteen, his wife tlua b-'ing fourteen. I'hey have twenty-two children, most of ivhotu arrived a triplets. Ba'-rct is a 'ainter and paperhangcr. His oldest on is .'8 years old. and married. T he repo-t of the l.ehig'.i Valley Rail road Company for July shows a de crease oi $727.1(0.144 in earnings and in-.-o're and a decrease in expenses of f 10.20.1. and a decrease in net earnings f $717.71x1. While there was a decrease iti earnings of the Lehigh Valley Coal fYinpanv the expenses were also cut down. The deficit, however, showed m increase of $58,270. The last day's session of the .17'h Minual convention of the .PatriotK Irder Sons of America at Wi!liamport, .vas occupied by the addresses of the -ewly clr.Med officers, the na ional of ficers and the installation ol the new slate officers. In the afternoon the vis aing c-anrs marched in a parade com voscd of 2000 members and twenty-four 'jaii'ls. The following prizes were an lounccd: Comniatiderics, for the larg est number of. men in line. Lebanon v'iillcv, No. 5. Prize. $75. For hrst "archhn, Reading: No. 2. Prize $50. For the longest distance traveled. Allen town. No. 6. Prize $50. Camps, lor the larirest nilnibr of men in line. I eb inon. No. 245j Prize, $75. For the best uniformed, Lebanon, No. j8i. Prize, .sn. For coming tic longrit distance with over 'thirty men, S rituhsburg. Priz" S50. For best marching. Leban on, No. 254. Trizc, $25. The private engine f General Su perintendent W. A. Garrett, of the Philadelphia anil Reading Railway, juinned the track iw tin; cut just south of Morlonville Station ' and plunging into the rocks she was completely wrecked. Mr. Garrelt received a se vere bruise on the head and had one of his ears badly cut. John Rolen, an Austrian, 'if Harris burg. who was recently forced to quit work because ol illness, attended a pic nic on the hank of the Swatara Creek. During ihe dancing, Rolen waded out into the stream" and held up a glass ol beer and shouted: "Here goes my last drink." T hen he plunged into the water of the creek. He was dragged to shore, but liie was extinct. A petition lo President Roosevelt asking him to call a special session ol Congress for (he purpose of taking action looking to the settlement of the coal strike, has been started in Williams- . port. The School Board of Mahanoy Town diip removed six ol the oldest teachers in the township. The reason given was that members of the families ol these teachers were non-union mine em ployees. The Chester Grand, Jury found a true hill in the criminal . libel case of T. Larry F'yre against Thomas O' Connell, but the rase was continued to the next term because ol the illness of the de fendant's counsel. It is alleged that (('Conned published a statement that Eyre had used the words "d n the people" in an argument relative to trolle.v interests in Chester County,.