PRECIOUS METAL1 IN IMIIH SOME RICH FINDS. Fortunes Made In Day by Hinart in the Oold Plelde of Alaska. The excitement over the Klondyke mines at Seattle Is on the Increase and hundred of people are preparing to all for Alaska. The steamer Portlnnd, which brought down over $l,000.ono In (old Is on her return trip and will be crowded to.V-r turnout capacity. Con servative n s who have been In the country rlalY there I room fur hun dreds more In Alnskn. They almlt that all of the Mold In the vicinity of Klondyke have been taken, hut every river In Alnskn Is, In their Judgment, filled with (told, which can he secured, If the men are willing to link the hard ships. Inapectnr Strickland of the Canadian mounted police, who rattle down on the I'ortland, ay: "When t lift D'.wsnn City a month ngo there were ROW claim staked out, and there were be tween 2.000 anil .1,000 In there. We can safely nay that there was about $l,r.a0, 000 In gold mined InHt winter. The wages In the mine were )! a day, and the eawmlll Inlmrers $10 a day. The claim!! now ataked out will afford em ployment to about fi,f00 men, I believe. If a man In strong, healthy and wants work he can f 1 ml employment Ht Rood wages. Beveral men worked on an In terest, or what Is termed a "lay," and during the winter renlUed from $5,000 to 110,000 each. The mines are .15 to 100 miles from Alaska boundary. A detachment of mounted police of the northwest territory, which passed through Seattle two years ago, struck It rich. Five of the twenty guards re turned on the I'ortland With gold amounting to $00,000. The other l!i re mained In Alaska to engage In mining. Circle City, Alaska, Is deserted, writes a miner who has Just returned from the Klondike mines. Everybody Is up at Klondike or preparing to ho soon. It Is the richest district the world has ever known and will produce millions .this year. Flour at Klondike Is worth 1100 a sack of f.O pounds, and everything else Is In proportion, and none to be bought. Live dogs are worth from t'2 to $." a pound; they are scarce. Gravel Is frozen IS to 20 feet deep to bed rock, but we burn a shaft down and then drift, using fire Instead of powder. The gravel runs from $5 to $ir0 a pan, and the young fellow on a claim above me panned out 140,000 In two days. I was offered $;W0,000 cbhIi for my claim. 1 still hold the ground, and will be either a millionaire or a pauper In the fall. Men cannot be hired fnrwnges. Every newcomer In the rnmp Is offered big wages, as high as $'.0 a day, but seldom will anyone work for another. The on ly phantom that stands In our way to the goal of a millionaire is grub, I have provisions enough to Inst me till next June, and I am as well fixed as any man In the country. If the boats do not get up the river before July we will be In hard lines. John F. James and Henry Blake re turned recently from the derert region near the Mexican border, bringing a story of extreme suffering and of sue eers In the discovery of the California mine, one of the most famous of the lost mines of the southwest. THECCBAN WAR. The Bainy Season no Impediment to the Con tinuation of Hostilities. At this senson of Hie yenr when the rnlr.s In Cuba have usually prevented warfare, there si rms to be no cessation In the conflict between the Cuban Insur gents and the Snnnlnrds. The proximity of Ocneral flumes, to Jiavnni and his constant and unre stralnable activity nre sufficient to ex pose the wretched Incompetency of Weyler (is a general, and to show his Btupldy n a tactician. Tor live months Uomcz has moved about as he pleased within a radius of six leagues, with 2'. C00 men agnlnst him, and yet he escaped onpture, death, wounding or even dis comfort. General Weyler has proven to the world, as well as to his own aov- e-nment, that he Is a perfect dunce, so far as a knowledge of conducting a cam. palpn on tho usually accepted lines is concerned, INDIGNANT WOMEN. With Broomi in Band the Clean they Dirty Streets of Bt. Louie. Half a hundred St. Louis womcfn sal lied forth in a body, broom and shovel In hand, a few days ago, and cleaned that part of the c'.ty the center of which is the alley between Chouteau avenue and Convent street and Third and Fourth streets. They were headed by Miss Louisa Meyer, Two years ago a party ot Bt. Louis women felt them selves compelled to teach the city tamers a lesson in tnis way. The con' dltlons now are aa bad, and the women nave won puuno approval by thus cal line attention to them. The women who cleaned the streets to-day were chiefly wormngmens wives ana daughters. Uteri Employ a Burglar. "Sleepy" Burk, expert cracksman, has been employed by tho Servito , sltycr of Mary, controlling tho Roman uatnouo convent ana seminary at Chi' cgn, to force open a vault In their In siltutlon. The vault contains the re mains of three sisters who have died abme valuable marble fit for altars and legal papers. But all of these have been Inaccessible, for several years, as the combination to the vault was lost, tor the North Pole. The Localanielger of Berlin describ ing the start of Hcrr Andree's ballon from the Island of Tromsoe says tho mdnd was so gusty that Herr Andree was obliged to glvo his orders through a peaking trumpet. Everybody was sur prised that the start should have been made in such weather. The ballon had a narrow escape from being driven against a rock in Smeerenburar sound. Lieutenant Peary set sail Monday for un norm t-oie in tne Mope. . Justifiable Harder. 3.8. Harris, who deliberately shot and killed Thomas H. Merrltt, a prominent . politician at Lexington, Ky because he found Merrltt kissing Mrs. Harris, was acquitted by the jury recently, after ,. Hearing juage traiconers cnarga that aa unwritten law justifies a husband in Killing a man under such clrcum stances. I- Can ia Demand. i ' Lonjc trains of empty freight cars nave rolled out ot Kerns city for two weeks and dropped off In twos, threes and fives on side tracks along the lines of the rallroa Is In Missouri, Iowa, Kan sas, Nebraska and Oklahoma. These Qtipty freight cars, of which there are (nouaands, will be filled with new '87 wheat Insldo of four or Ave weeks. A tremendous grain ruth Is expected and the best of management bv railroad nr. nclals will be needed to prevent a huge grain r lociiaae or a grain car famine, Conservative estimates of oron atatuti. clans place the yield of wheat for this jruar 10 ansas ai u.tw.wo bushels, TEBS1 TELBOBAMS. The next convention of the Enworth League will be held at Indianapolis. Cln...l .... - .ft t ..nl ..nlli.K VI nrini inuiiB m minii 1111, have been partially covered by a land slide. The Trans-MlsslsslppI Congress met at Salt Lake, Utah, with W. J. Bryan as president. Two daughters of Chas. Zelgler wpre burned to death at Jersey City a few days ago. A $1,000,000 bridge between Ruperlor, Wis., and Duluth. Minn., has been opened for travel. Rev. Hubert II. Fulton, a distinguish ed I'resbyterlan divine, died at Ills heme In Philadelphia, Tuesday. Several buildings were struck by lightning and houses unroofed during a storm at Pittsburg Sunday. Br. Cadawallader, a well-known Phil adelphia physician, aged f.0, mairl 'd his housemaid, Bridget Mary Iiyan, used 21. Thomas Norman, an ex-snllnr of the British navy, Jumped 100 feet from the bridge Into the river below at Cleveland and rescued a drowning boy. Wilson, a savage bulldog owned by Father Hill Paly, the turfman of Brook - lyn, attacked an Infant in Its mother's arms Hnturday night, wounding it fa tally. There has been a satisfactory rain fall throughout the. northwest prov inces of India and the authorities In tend to reduce considerably tho extent of the relief work. Frank Hcott and Frank llyre were drowned at West Ennsburg, Vt., the other dny while trying to save the family or Dennis Iow, who wero en dangered by a freshet. An Ice cave hns been discovered at a point near Cripple Creek, Col. Photo graphs by flssh light reveal a wonder ful display or runcirul and fascinating figures formed In Ice. (lov, Prake of Iowa was Injured re cently by a fall on the steps of the capltol. Mo struck on his hip, which was penetrated by a bullet during the war. The Injury may prove serious. The eolnred troops. Ninth battalion of the Illinois state guard, refused to return from Springfield to Chicago In old coaches, they demanded Pullmans, but were finally shown where they were wrong. Hev. Henry c. Mlnton. P. P.. of Pan Francisco, who has accented the presi dency of Center college, at Lexington, iy., is a Washington and Jefferson college mnn, having graduated at Washington in ism. Tho Hawaiian government has given notice that no foreign-built vessels will be admitted to Hawaii pending action on the treaty. Similar notice was given in January, lw.'l, when annexation was first proposed. Mrs. Clarence Moore, of Washington, received a severe nrrvous shock when she heard the news of her father's death Frank McLuughlin, proprietor of the Philadelphia Times. A n lapse followed and she died Saturday. The National League of Republican Clubs at Its convention In Detroit elect ed L. J. Crawford, of Kentucky, for President. The next meeting will be held at Omaha. Tho platform elands by McKlnley's administration. The St. Louis Credit Men's associa tion hns withdrawn from the National Credit Men's association, because the East favors the Torrey bankruptcy bill. It Is trying to get all other west ern organizations to do the same. Neary one thousand Spaniards em- Ployed In the navy yard and In the ar senal at Havana went on strike Monday. They refuse to return to work until the wages duo them nre paid. Operation In the two departments is practically sus The Avlsador Commercial, a political and commercial dully of Havana, in a leading eililoiinl article, makes a bit ter attack upon United Btates Consul General Lee. on account of his report to the Government ut Washington on the Itulz case. Acting upon the suggestion of Cnpt.- Oen. Weyler, Queen Resent Christina of Spain, has granted pardons to tho Insurgent chiefs, Jtogeiio, enmncne, Gonzalez, Castillo, Oulllcrmo, Fuente, Domingo and Blvcrlo, who were under sentence of death. A meat train on the Chicago and Northwestern railway ran into eight cars which had run oft the track near Boone, la., Tuesday. Eight tramps are supposed to he killed. Several trainmen were injured. The whole train was wrecked. The Central Labor union, after a long wrangle at their meeting Sunday, "resolved that the appointment of T V. Powderly as commissioner of Immi gration Is the greatest official Insult ever offered by the federal government to organized labor." Three men In a buggy were chased by Chicago police. In exchange of idiots two of them are supposed to have been fatally wounded, a bicyclist who ful lowed went over the abutment at the Lake street bridge, the draw being open. As he clung to the abutment the bridge swung into place, crushing him out oi numan snape, Columbus R. Cummlngs, the financier and railroad builder, died Tuesday night at Chicago after an Illness of several months from Inflammation of the liver. He left a fortune estimated at $7,000,000. Mr. Cummlngs waa born in canton, N. 1 ., 65 years ago. . A new board ot pension examining surgeons nas Deon appointed at Man nlngton, W. Va., consisting of Drs. O. P. Mclntyre, W. C. Q. Wilson and M. L. Miller. Henrique Laldley, Portuguese vice consul at Can FranclBco, has arrived at Monterey, Cal., to Investigate the In cldent of the tearing down and burn ing of the flag of Portugal, which Man uel Orting, a Portuguese grocer, had hoisted over his place ot business on the Fourth of July, The seventh International convention of the Baptist Young People's Union of American began in Chattanooga. Tenn.. Thursday morning with about 4,009 delegates In attendance. As In all pre vious conventions the singing will be quite a factor, a trained choir of fOO voices filling the big auditorium with melody. In consequence of the increasing tur- ouience ot uie Mussulmans at Crete, and the almost incessant outbreaks and disorders, the Admirals of the Interna tional fleet have Issue! a proclamation, admonishing the Mussulmans and an nounclng that If a single European sol dier Is harmed they will bombard the town. John Fraser, who, 40 years ago, own ed a profitable business In New Tork. and lived in one of the finest houses on Fifth avenue, was found dead In his bed in a Ralneslaw hotel In Park How a few days ago. His father, who died some time ago In Bcottland, had left him a handsome legacy. Annie Kcrchall, aged 14 years, living at Ph lodelph a. waa the victim of an atempted assault the other day in the woods near her home. Her assailant escaped, but the following morning his body was found hanging to a tree some distance from the scene or tne assault, He had evidently feared arrest and committed suicide. From appearances, the man waa a tramp. . , - I NEW lift Bill WED M. SLIGHT CHANGES MADE. Bepresentatlveo of the Boose and lenate Per fect the Long-Dlsoussed Measure, The new tariff bill, as agreed upon by the members of both houses In con ference will, when maelo public, present an entirely new sugar schedule, at least In the main Item of duty on raw and re fined sugar tho fourth presented slnco the bill emerged from the recesses of the Ways and Means Committee. It Is estl- n-atd that the changes In the sonar schedule will raise about $2,000,000 ad ditional revenue. Following are among the more Important changes made In other schedules: Ildes, IB per cent, nil valorem. In place of the 20 per cent, fixed by tho Senate. Wool (as heretofore sent), first-class, It cents per pound; second class, 12 cents per pound; third class, 4 cents on Hint below 12 cents per pound In value and 8 tents on that above 12 cents In value. These rates on third-class wool Were the result of an agreement be tween tho wool growers and tho carpet manufacturers. Coal, bituminous, 07 cents per ton. Tobacco, $1.76 per pound on Imported wrappers. This is the Senate rate. White Pino lumber waa restored to the House classification and the House rate of $2 per 1,000 feet Insteud of the Senate rnte ot $1. Tho reciprocity clause has been trans formed Into a modification of both tho Senate and House schedules that Is, the number of articles which enn bo used as bases for reciprocity agreements has been Increased, but the President's discretion as to rates dnd the ratifica tion of treaties by the Senate, which was the main feature of tho Senato provision, has been rejected. One of the biggest victories won by the House was In the restoration to the dutiable list of burlaps, Jute and Jute bagging, cotton bagging, gunny sacks, floor-matting and cotton ties, which the Senate placed on the free list. While restored to the dutiable list, however. the rates are lower than they havo ever been on this clsss of articles. Another victory of the House was the elimina tion of the Senate stamp tax on bonds and stocks. It was decided that the machinery of collection was too cumber some. Haw cotton was restored to th free list as originally fixed by the House. The Senate, with the aid of some of tho Democratic Sonntnrs, mudo cotton du tiable at 20 per cent. SENATE AGREES. United Btates Objeota to Faying the Exorbit ant Demands of Iron Hanufaeturers. The price to bo paid for armor plate for the three new battleships now In course of construction wns the theme of extended, and at times, lively de bate, In the senate. Late In tho day an amendment to the deficiency appropri ation bill was agreed to, restricting the price or armor plate to $.100 per ton, or $12G less than tho amendment reported by the committee and recommended by tho navy department as the minimum rate ncceptablo to the armor contrac tors. Another amendment inserted In the bill directs the secretary ot the navy to Investigate as to the establish ment of a government armor factory and to report to tho next session of congress. During tho debate Mr. Hale urged that the failure to equip the battleships with armor would humiliate the I'nlted States In tho eyes of the world, and would lessen our navnl power at a time of possiblo foreign complication. After inserting tho armor amendments, tne deficiency appropriation bill, the last of the great supply measures, was passed. The bill provided a total appropria tion of $,'!,410,72fi for armor for tho three battleships authorized In 1W6 and lim ited tho cost per ton to $42d. Mr. But ler (N. C.) offered an amendment re ducing the total to $2, 4(17. DUO, limiting the cost to $:100 per ton, and providing for the establishment of a government armor factory If private concerns do not bid within $300 per ton. The measure will now have to be act ed upon In conference. Representa tives or the house and senato have as yet come to no conclusion on the Tariff bill. Foster Meeting with Bnooeaa. Ex-Secretary Foster Is bellovcd to he meeting with a large measure "of "suc cess In his efforts to secure from tho British government additional meas ures of protection for the seals In Be ti ring sea. While ho has not yet report ed that the British have formally con sented to participate In a conference with this object In view, unofficial ad vices Indicate that this is about to be accomplished, TO COLONIZE THE P00B. Booth Tnokor of the Salvation Army Confers with mslaeat HoKinley. Commander Booth-Tucker, head of Salvation Army In the United States, called at the White House the other day with a note of Introduction from Vice President Hobart, with whom he naa a pleasant Interview. President McKlnley received Commander Booth- Tucker cordially, expressing pleasure at meeting a man of whom he had heard so much, and praising the work of the Salvation Army, in which he has long taken a friendly Interest. Com mander Booth-Tucker presented the respectful greetings of the many thou sands of Salvationists In the United States, and told the Presldeht that he was on his way West to make inquiry aa to land upon which tg begin on a large scale the Army's project for col onising the destitute poor of the cities, in which tho President showed much Interest. CAPITA! NOTES. Myron H. McCord's nomination to be governor of Arizona was Anally con firmed by the senate after a contest lasting several weeks. The vote stood 29 to 18. The new tariff duty on imported cat tle will have a prohibitory effect as far aa Mexico Is concerned. During the laat 24 months 600,000 cattle have been Imported from Mexico, paying to this Qovernment about $760,000. The duty on Mexican cattle under the rfew tariff will range from $4 to $4 per head,' while the old duty averaged ti.oo per head President McKlnley Issued the order suspending the operation of ex-Presi dent Cleveland's order consolidating the pension agencies of the country ana reducing tnetr number to from 18, Secretary ot the Treasury Oage has Issued an order reducing the salary of the commissioner of Immigration at New York from $8,000 to $4,600 a year, and the salary of the assistant commis sioner from $4,000 to $3,000. Mr. Powder- iyj aalarwlUJe .ow THE MINERS' STRIKE. Agreement Between Operators which will Probably Settle the Dispnte. The basis upon which the great min ers' strike will probably be settled Is embodied In the following provisions ol agreement between the mine opera tors; "That wo will pay tho miners em ployed by us In cash for all the coal mined or loaded by them on the pit car or wagon on the bnsls af coal screened over the standard screen her-lnnfter provided for. That no owner or opera tor, and no person connected with the management of a mine shall be Inter ested directly or Indirectly, In the pro fits arising from the snles of merchan dise to ftiiy employees of nny such own er or operator. The payment shall bo made In cash semi-monthly for all la bor performed at the mines during the pay period next preceding the pay days, without deduction or set off for any merchandise, supplies or goods that may have been obtained by tho miner from any store, or for or on ac count of any order for such merchan dise, supplies or goods. And we anil each of us do hereby further agree Hint in case of the violation by nny one fir more of us, parties to this ngreetnent, to pay the sum of 10 cents per ton upon each ton of the total output of coal mined by any one or morn of us vio lating nny one or morn of said pro visions and terms. It Is ngreed Hint when this contract hns been signed by 7 per cent of all the mine owners In the Pittsburg dis trict, Including the river operators, It will go Into effect. It Is bard to say how long It will take to get the neces sary signatures, but If everybody works towards thlH end tho compact should be In force at the end of a week. The matter of wages Is to be left to a commission of arbitration ngrecablo to both tiperator and miner. The de cisions of this bonrd nre to bo final. Shrewd operators nt New York who were expecting the strike and got a corner in coal stand In a fair way to rnnke a fortune. Advices from cities of the middle west confirm the Impres sion in speculative circles here that the coal market Is being played for all It is worth. In the Pittsburg district the price at the mines hits already Jumped from 7rc to tl.r.O a ton. A. M. llluittiinn, of tho Washington Coal A Coke company, said that some of tho Pittsburg operat ors were doing an extensive brokerage business In West Virginia coal. There Is more coal on band than Is generally reported. Many long railway sittings are lllleil with loaded cars. These will not be released ntilil the de sired advance Is secured. New York Is not afraid of a coal famine, as bard coal Is burned there almost exclusively. TO SEIZE HAWAII. The American Flag to be Baised on the Island, Should Japan Interfere. A special dispatch from Washington to the Chicago "Times-Herald" says; 'Tho administration has taken steps to keep Its grip on Hawaii. Any ag gressive Interference on the part of Japan will result In the landing of ma rines and the hoisting of the American flag, with or without tho ratification of tho pending annexation treaty. Tho administration, realizing that some crisis might arise while the treaty still hangs fire In tho Senate, have taken steps to be prepnred fur any emer gency. Rear Admiral Bnrdsley will have, when the next steamer arrives In Honolulu, Instructions giving him power to net at the first sign of aggres sion on tho part of Japan or trouble of any kind with which local authorities are not nble to cope. Rear Admiral Bi ardnley will be given sufficient force to carry out the programme that events may force upon him. "It Is definitely settled that the bat tleship Oregon, now en route to San Francisco from Seattle, will bo dis patched to Hawaii as soon as she can be prepared for the voyage. This will give Admiral lieardsley three vessels the Oregon, Philadelphia and Marlon. Julian has at present but one vessel In the harbor of Honolulu the cruiser Nanlwn. She haa another cruiser at Ban Francisco, awaiting orders which may take her to the Hawaiian Islands." Two young women, Georgia Coulter, of Chicago, and Bertha Yarnell, of Fort Wayne, lost their lives by tho capsizing of a sailboat at Eagle Lake, Ind. A Selfish Preaoher. Rev. Early It. Itedmon, aged Sii, a graduate of the Blblo College of Ken tucky, and a Christian minister of re putation, left Lexington, Ky., tho other day for Cincinnati to be married to Mrs. Jennie Hunter, a young widow from Cripple Creek, who is said to be worth $100,000, Tho groom procured a divorce from his former wife, who was a Miss Lanbrlck, last Monday. He and Mrs. Hunter met and became ac quainted through a "personal" In a dally newspaper. They made every preparation to get married as soon as the young preacher could get a divorce. He charged his wife with unfaithful ness and began proceedings several months ago. To Prevent Biota. Booth-Tucker, commander of tho Sal vation Army, is the guest of the Santa Fe Itallroad Company on a tour of Col orado, New Mexico and Arizona, where he goes to locate lands in the arid dis tricts for homes for the worthy poor In the large cities. Mr. Tucker declares that the poor classes must be colonized or revolution will overtake the nation. Colonization, he says, will solve the social problem and take from the large cities tho idle men and women and make them creators of wealth, rather than charges on the Government. She may be a Widow. After waiting a week; for the return of Fred Burrows, his wife has coma to the conclusion that he Is dead, and that his death is due to the avarice ot some one who knew that he went around with $1,100 In his vest pocket. Mr. and Mrs. Burrows were seeing the country. They left their home in Chicago and came to Denver after a long stay at Manltou and were to have left for the coast this week. On July S Burrows Went to visit a dentist and never re turned. " Illled In Cube. Col. Charles Gordon, a well-known .American, who served in the Cuban army ana was in nign tavor witn iten. Gomel on account of his intelligence and bravery, has been assassinated by the Spaniards In the same manner that Charles Govln was murdered last year In the pronce of Havana. Covin and Gordon landed together In Cuba In the same expedition early In 1896. Govln was attacked with machetes and cut to death. He was ia Love. Clarence Davis, aged 17, became in fatuated with Miss Artie Phillip at Columbia City, Ind. The girl consented to their marriage In September. Re cently, however, she became smitten witn another man ana jutea Davis, who wept upon the street as he saw her pass with his rival. He threatened vengeance, and last night he threw himself In front ot a Wabash express ana wee greuoo to pieces. ALLEGED MURDERER'S ID IMP. LEAP FOR LIBERTY. Esoape Prom a Trala While It la Traveling 80 Miles aa Boar. Accused of having murdered and be headed his father some time ago at Pittsburg Archie Kelso for a long time eluded tho vtgltnnen of tho police. A few days ago he wns apprehended In Oklahoma, and detectives were sent to bring him back to Pittsburg. Kelso ad mitted Hint ho had been present when his fnlher was murdered, but that the deed bad been done by two tramps. Ily ma willingness to return without the necessary requisition papers ho gained the confidence of the detectives. When the trnin had passed F.mlngton, ten miles west of (nlell, 111., Kelso com plained of not feeling well, lie leaned out of the car window, his hands both on the sill. For a moment he remained in Hint position. Suddenly, as though shot from a catapult, the prisoner went through the window. Detective Mr Kelvey was too late to catch him, and looking from the window, saw him go rolling and bounding like a rubber ball. The train was rushing along lit tho rate of firty miles an hour, and It seem ed ImpoHKlble that the boy could havo lived. The train was Immediately stop ped and backed to tho spot. No man gled remains were found, nml no traco of tho ulleged murderer discovered. MANY DEAD. Flood Similar to That of Johnstown Engnlfs Two New York Towns, Tho two Inrgo reservoirs In tho Finn kill mountains, which supplied water to tho towns of Malteawan and Fish kill, N. Y burst their walls at 2 o'clock Wednesday morning and the water that Was released swept through the Dutchess valley, causing ruin and death. Five bodies have been taken from tho wreckage left In tho wake of the flood, and there are known to bo two and probably three more lying some where beneath the piled up debris, which Is all that remains of three houses tint were swept away by tho torrent. The nnmis of those whoso bodies have been recovered, as official ly given out by Coroner II. B. Holier of Matteawan nre Mrs. John (,'onroy, Mrs. Mary Ferry, William Ferry, John Hi ilka, I'bllaniena Iielukn, The miss ing are; John Conroy, aged 2 years; Julia Conroy, nged 0 years; an un known Hungarian. The body of Mrs. Mnry Ferry wns taken from mud and debris t';n fet deep. Thirty-five men worked all day (n tlie ruliii. Mrs. Conroy. one of the lost, before her marriage lived at Johnstown, Pa., where the grent flood occurred severnl years ngo. She was rescued there by John Conroy, who afterward married her. Most of the ruins have been searched over, nml It Is possiblo that some bodies have been swept Into the river. Knglneer John Conroy, who lost his wife and two children, states that they were not In tho building when the flood enme. They were on a knoll on the edge of tho floods. He told his wife to stay there with tho children until he went back to tho building, but she attempted to find a place of . greater apparent safety, and In crossing to an other house the flood swept her and the children to her death. About a tlioiiHiind yards above Mur phy's boarding house, directly In the ( enter of the ravine, was n small settle ment of Arabs, :ti or 40 In number, oc cupying half u dozen huts. There Is not a vestige of the settlement now, but so far as known no Arabs lost their liven. On each side of the rail road track are great plies of rubbish, tree trunks, ris ks, pieces of houses and all sorts of household goods and cloth ing. 1 he wave was about l.i feet high, as shown by traces along Its passage. When It reached a point about 700 feet above the buildings It had spread out until It wns about 200 feet wide and 10 feet deep, moving with resistless force, It tore out by the rooots trees that were ono to two feet In diameter. POOR ARMENIA. The Turks Quietly Massaoreing the Unfortu nate Race Have Oiven up Hope. According to a printed report, the Turks In Armenia, fearing European Intervention, have abandoned the old practices of wholesale massacre, but during tho last year there have been clandestine butcheries and most tern ble persecutions, especially In the more remote provinces. The Turks openly boast that they have sworn to wipe out the whole Armenian race. The document recites In detail varl nus forms of persecution. It appears that the tax collectors seize the In habitants If they do not pay everything nemanoeu. "women are taken tnrougn the streets with chains around their necks and kept for days without food. in somo coses they are fastened to oil lars, head downwards. Freezing water Is thrown over them, or they are beaten until the blood runs. In other cases their hands are tied behind their backs and then cats, first mode furious, are thrown upon their bosoms. Often they are burned in various parts of their bodies with redhot Irons. "All the highways are guarded so as to prevent emigration. Not a single day passes without one hearing of or witnessing somewhere witnin our un fortunate provinces some act or nend Ish cruelty. The Turks and Kurds en ter the bouses of Armenians In gangs and commit fiendish outrages." The document concludes with the de spairing cry, "Our hope Is dying out, God help us. May Europe have pity upon us." Embraced a Hero. James E. Gavin, with a 2-year-old child clasped In his arms, leaped from the window of a burning building to the ground at unicago, Sunday nlgnu When the spectators saw that the In fant was saved and the man had only received a silgnt cruise in tne ten teg, they cheered Gavin and a number of women embraced him. The damage by fire amounted to $10,000. Cuban Oeneral Killed. Reports from Sanctl Splrltus confirm the rumor tnat uenerai muinun can dera, who commanded the insurgents In the engagement on July B at Papaya Heights, was allied during tne ngnt. CaDtaln General Weyler. who left 8s.nc.tl Splrltus In the latter part ot laat week with the Astuiiaa Battalion, surprised a camp ot the Insurgents near Jaruco and a sharp engagement took place. Among the killed was the well-known Dr. Hernandez. They Peared the Haa Eaters. It Is reported at Hermolselle, Mex., that the exploring expedition of Jesse Grant and associates, which landed on Ttburon island In the gulf of California have been driven off the island by the Bert Indiana The expedition will go to Uuaymas, where the vessel will be loaded with more men and another ef fort made to explore the island. The Indiana. ar$ said to be cannibals. CROP PROSPECTS. As Advanet la Wheat-Coal Strike not Cos slderod Serious. II. O. Dun ft (Va weekly review trade reports; Excepting the grent coal min ers' strike, which may terminate at any rime, there Is scarcely a feature or the business outlook which Is not encour aging, tho season considered. Crop ifospeota have been Improved br need ed rain In some regions nnd foreign ad vices continue to promise a large de rrinnd. In many home Industries, par tic tilarly In building, there Is more ac tivity than In any year since 18M. and the week has brought a better demand in noots nnd shoes and In woolens, while the movement of freight, mainly Iron ore, through the Snult Sto Marie anal Is the largest In Its history. With money markets unclouded there Is nothing In sight to hinder rapid Im provement when uncertainty about legislation hns been removed, for the miners' strlkn could not lost ions? If business and industries should become active. There Is much less apprehen sion of a failure of fuel supply than there was during the first few days when prices rapidly advanced and large quantities of eoal from West Virginia nave reached northern markets, but some of the miners In that state have . struck. The advance In wheat to Rl 1-Rn waa not duo to the government estimate, which wns followed by a decline, hut to foreign advices and considerable buy ing for export. Demand Is already felt from Australia, South Africa, Brazil mm even Argentina, while the prom ise for F.uropcnn crops Is not consider ed bright. The disposition of farmers to keep back wheat for higher prices nay afreet the outward movement, but Atlnntlo exports during July, flour In cluded, have been 3,1 If., 443 laishels. against ,9;3,KI7 bushels Inst year, al though in the same weeks 4,6r9,31G bushels corn went out. against 1.&74.- 07a bushels last year. Wheat closed 4o higher for the week and corn Ma high er. Cotton Is a sixteenth hlgner, the closing or partial stoppage of Impor tant New Fnglnnd mills hardly neu tralizing In market estimation the ap- irenensions or Injury from drought. Speculation In the wool market con tinues with price at Boston advancing, with signs or a boom among dealers. in which manufacturers are taking little part at current prices, and at the West whero holders are looking for a great advance. Imports at Hoston wero bnles In two weeks, and dealers are said to have bought 100,000 bales more In London. Sales were ln, 4r,2,30fl bales at the three markets for the week and 24,(172,800 In two weeks, of wnicn I,u7,zw were oomestic. The output of Iron furnaces July 1 waa 104.0(14 tons weekly, against 168,80 tons June 1, but several furnaces have gone Into blast since July 1, and the output Is large for the senson. Pre- ?umably an unprecedented share of It s to supply the great steel companies, which are even now putting more fur naces Into blast, and have heavy ord ers taken, when prices were dropped, while the demand for structural shapes iliiii pmien ih ULrK', firm ior imin im proving, though steel bars are now at the lowest quotation ever known In rittsburg, Bi'fc to Hue, witn bessemer pig quoted slightly lower. Tin plates nre also lower at $3 10 for full weight nnd less than $3 is paid for 100-pound boxen. Failures for the week have been 2GJ In tho I'nlted fates, egnlnst 2G last year, and 21 In Canada, against 39 last year. UNCLE SAM LOSING MONEY, Speculative Importers Making Unusually Large rurcnaeee or Wool. Never In the hlstcry of the Boston Custom House has tho Importation of raw wool been so large ns during the lust few months. Wool sufficient to supply all demands of trade for years ahead Is being Imported and stored away In anticipation of the operation of the new tariff bill. The Government Is losing millions of dollars of revenue Hnd the wool speculators are accumu lating such vast quantities that tne more conservative of them are begin ning to lose heart, and fear that In the eagerness to make a big "strike" when tho price of wool Jumps, the market la being overstocked bo heavily that the upward tendency In prices will be par tially checked and much of the wool on hand become a dead loss. The wool soeculators have got ahead of the Gov ernment by about 124,000,000 pounds, the duty upon which, under the Dlngley bill, would amount to almost $12,000,000. The revenue that would have been yielded, had the whole Import been taxed according to the new schedule, would have reached almost $16,000,000. The greater part of this Immense quan tity of wool has been brought into port during the last few months. A LAKE OT OIL. Important Diaoovery Made la Alaska by Oold rroepeenrs. What is said to be the greatest dis covery ever made Is reported from Alaska. Some gold prospectors several months ago ran across what seemed to be a lake of oil. It was fed by In numerable springs and tne surrounding mountains were full of eoal. They brought supplies to Seattle and tests proved It to be of as high grade as any ever taken out of Pennsylvania wells. A local company was formed and ex perts sent up. They have returned on the steamer Topeka, and their report has more than borne out first reports. It Is stated there la enough oil and coal In the discovery to supply the world. It Is close to the ocean; in fact the experts say that the oil oozes out Into the salt water. It Is stated that the Standard Oil Company has already made an ofrer for the property. The owners have 8. 000 acres and are naturally much excit ed over their prospects fur fortune. The British Havy. In the London house of commons re cently Mr. Joseph Austen Chamberlain member of East Worcestershire, moved the second reading of the naval works bill. The revised estimate, he said, proposed the establishment of naval ' works at Dover at a cost ot 3.500,000 Instead of 2,000,000. These would be an enclosed spate of 810 acres, he said, with berthing accommodation for 20 battleships, besides smaller vessels. The Gibraltar harbor, he said, would be rendered absolutely secure and there would be an Increased space of $0 acres. A new dock would be construct ed at Comombo and a naval barracks at Sheerneas. Sad and Disheartened. Carbolic, acid ended the life fit a cul tivated, traveled woman, an accom plished Ugulst, who spent a fortune in acquiring all that makes life worth the living. Weary, 111 and dishearten ed at lnappreclatlon, Mrs. (Pauline Rlchter took the cheap dose ofiacid In Central Park at New York, JKjiriday, and died In the Presbyterian tYJSpttal without regaining consciousness! Pa pers found on her tell a sad aory of disappointed ambition. At ork time she waa a teacher In this clty.Xbut of late years spent most ot her tJne la janan. X