BOCOLOR WILL NEXT BE IIUD. REBELS ARE CONFIDENT. Have Never Met tha Americana Bui Are Sure They Can "Whip the Wholt Lot" Strongly Entrenched. To rlmr the Filipinos out of Bacolor, about five miles southwest of Hiin Fer nando, will be tin; next tiiBk of the Americans. Tho rebel general. Mas enrdo, him a force or 6,0')') men there, Well urmid nnd possessed of jilcnty of ammunition. HI troop have never met American soldiers, and they think, according to reports rnrrloil to. San Fernando, that tiny run "whip the whole lot." Paoolor In w ll Intrem hod, nnd thou sand of tmtlviH die working like beavers digging trenches nnd i-nrrylmt the el i tt In baskets. The enemy uc llln nib-mcn for lighting only, lint compel the biilomen nnd Chinese, and even the women, to labor Incessantly. Thr sotond conference held Wednes day morning botwi en Major tleneral Otis and the Filipino emissaries, Col onel Manuel Ai-rio-IIc and Lieutenant Jomp Omul, terminated without uny definite result. Major Manuel ArgurHo nnd Lieut enant Jose Bornnl returned to renew and press the reiitient of iletierul Luna for a cessation of hostilities. Tiny have found the Held of labor ft most uncongenial one. Tho two ofHecr were received In conference by Major Oi'iierul K. P. Otis. The proposal which they had to submit differed but sIlRhtly from those which they brought front the Filipino commander In the Aral hildi'f. ' They desired n little time In which to summon n congress, and expressed thems'lve nit being corv fldenl fiat the congress would decree peace, because the people desired It. They represented that Agulnnldo whh without power to surrender the armv, nnd that tho coiiri-iss must decide that question. Incidentally the Filipino envoy asserted that ARiilnnldo had not yet made a fair test of his strenRtli against the American forces, because only one-third of hi army had been assembled together. The envoys presented a letter from Penor Mablnt. preshb tit nnd minister of foreign affair In the cabinet of Ar ulnaldo, and who I the backbone of the Filipino organization. The com munication wn personal and unofficial, and seconded Major Arguolles argu ment. Whether or not Genernl Luna I sin cere In hi overtures, the negotiation nre giving the Insurgent a much needed opportunity to rehabilitate their demoralized forces. The truth Is thnt dissension nre helping on the dlsorgunlr.ntion of the Filipino nrmy almost a much as the American cam palgn. In the course of the conference with the Filipino envoy tleneral Otis agsjed with the statement of Major Arguelle that the people of tho Philip pine Island wanted pence nnd he add ed that requests for protection were pouring In upon him from, all parts of the country. The following cablegram from Cien- eral Otis at Manila wn received by Jle war department Wednesday: 'General Low-ton- column, passing westward from Norzagaray. captured Balinag and .villages In vicinity Tues day, si altering and pursuing 1.800 In surgent troop. HI only casualties two wounded; Insurgents los Bevernl killed: large number wounded nnd enptured. Numbers not tnted. Have opened communication with Law-ton via Malolos by mean of Hale's troops and detachment from city." Oen. MacArthur' division advanced to San Fernando last week, nnd found that the plnoe had been evacuated by the rebels, who left only a small de tachment to cover their retreat by train. Oen. MacArthur occupied the burning town without los. OLYMPIADS SAILORS RETURN. Dewey's Men Bring Home Monkeys. Pig end Ooate. The cruiser Buffalo arrived at New- York Inst Monday from Manila after a run of 44 day, which Includes stops st Singapore. Port Paid and Gibraltar Buffalo brought bdoui uwj omcers nnd men of Admiral Dewey's squad- mtv On the Buffalo are 49 senmen who were on Dewey's llngshlp, the Olym nln. when Montoto's Meet was sunk f6 from the Baltimore, 7 from the Concord, 90 from the Boston, 14 from the Petrol and . 42 marines. Some of these men have served 12 months or more since the terms of their enlist ment exrlred. There are men who have not been In the United States for five or six years. Th.e men brought home a choice col lection of mascots. Including monkeys pigs and goats. The Buffalo ha two six-lneh guns from the Relna Chris tina. Month's flagship, which are In tended ferUhe Smithsonian Institute, a well as me wheel from the- same ship7 the bell of the Isla de Cuba, Sonne torpedoes ana a great, quanuiy of guns ana old brass cannon, all cap- tured from the Spaniards. A OIQANTIC TRUST. Bteel Comranlee My Perfect on Organization With 8550,000,000 ispiuk Dally conferences are belngr held In New Ynrk bv renresentatlves of the largest companies In America, and the formation of the huge $550,000,000 trust eems to be a short way on. jn laoi therjiit Sens been practically cioseu, witx iW the great corporations. but so far the Federal Steel Company and the Cambria iron ana meei v-oio pany are outside of the fold. It 1A nnltlY'eiV Known Ullil iiic s ?u rert-fcteel Company Is not avcrso to be- 'ine- a member or me irusi, out n "lolding out for unusually large ln-d-s..m,.ttts. The combination of the Carnegie v-i,. Federal Hteei. national meei. merlcnn Tinpiate, American oicei nu Ire and the uocKeieoer iron crests will pronaoiy u tuiitiuu the basis of 525,OOO,0(K cai italua- n. Plotted Ags.mt Ureylut. rh. Journal, of Paris prints the ,,j,.r of M. De Crlon, who was one t t-ni Henry's agents, before the court e cassation. The witness made tho .n.ationnl statement that he had forg d sevc-ral documents against Dreyfus .h order of Col. Henry and had broken Into Mme. Dreyfus' apartment 0 secure samples oi per nunnuiiu handwriting. The Figaro announce hn discontinuance of Dreyfus ttstl mony for the present. Minleter Favors Lynching. Hev. A. D. Carlile, pastor of the Tab' ernacie Presbyterian Church, of PltlS' burg dropped a bomb Into the meet ta. of the Pittsburg presbytery yester ,iv at Swlssvule by declaring tha 'vnch law Is sometime tustltlable. 11 nself would cheerfully pull the ropi c' sent a ravlsher Into eternity, h 1. A perfect cy lone of protests. ( aroused. Tno aeuaie wus not ra I i TERSE TELEGRAMS. Kx-Froretnry Phermnn will spend the summer at Mnnstlcld, Ohio, The American RiiRnr Iteflnlng Com pany ha ndvnnced tho price of sugar ic per pound. Indian at Mohnin. Bolivia, put to oath with terrible tortures lo:i soldiers of Pando's army. Safe crnokor got IXIO from Ihe dry od store of Mr. M. Joyce nt Pitts- ifrg, Sunday. Iniluth. Minn., street enr strikers sed dynnmlto Inst Friday to prevent the operation of cars. The reorganized Carnegie Pteel Com pany In now the greatest Industrial orperatlon In the world. Joseph Kennen. a coal miner or Pittsburg, was murdered a few days go by two tioRrocs who escaped. llitilyard Kipling ha been offered ml has agreed to accept a degree of ,L. D. from McUIII I'nivcrslty, Mon treal. p-tiikers created dlsoider nbout the mines at Wnrdncr. Idaho, ami soldiers now on the scene by orders of me overnor. Harry FllblnRir of Pittsburg, ran way Horn Sunday School last Sunday o play with boards In the river. Ho wn drowned. Miss Mnrgaret Sullivan, while wnlk- Ing In her sleep at New York the other night, fell a dlstarce of 30 feet and was fatally Injured. The Croat Central Ballwny company f Croat Britain ha ordered 20 freight locomotive from the Hnldwin locomo- ive works, Philadelphia. More tlinn HM) street car windows were broken at Duluth Monday ny tones thrown by strikers, and several pnsseiiRors wore Injured. I.ewiH Cnir nnd Co orge Dent don, of ernardi lMy. wore In :t boat on On- Ida lake, N. Y., snd are suppos-'d to hnve dtownod in a storm. BiiR.-non. Thomn M. Anderson, who returned recently from the Philip pines, has boon usslRiiod to command of the department o'f the okes. William Strather nnd Charles Wlns m wore hanRod at Washington, 1. C., Strather for tho murder of Hose Talbot nnd Winston for killing his wife. Isaac Croswoll. of Philadelphia, lind Just recovered from the grippe. Al- hotiRh HO yenrs of nge ho committed uleldo Inst Sunday by Inhaling gas. Charles Kkllllnir tn.l Kdwnrd True- worthy were killed nnil several other hurt by nn explosion of acid at the nnebec pulp null, Benton tails, Me. Cnpt. CoRhlan. of the BolelRh, has presented the Nordonfclt ennnon ta ken from tho Spanish cruiser iteina 'rlstlana nt Manila to the city of Itu- Iclgh, N. C. Hugh CnvannURh, 22 yenrs old, a ball player, was killed by a swift ln shoot In a game between the Washlng- on Athletic club and the Ksmeralda Athletic club nt Mont Clair, N. J. .Mrs. William C. Whitney, wife of the former secretary of the navy, died at New York from the effects of a fall In a fox hunt over a year ago. She has been completely paralyzed ever since. Last Sundny the fourth victim within three months, died from the use of headache powders at Pittsburg Tho authorities arc endeavoring to prevent the sale of this patent modi cine. The Kngllsh speaking elegy of the Mty of Mexico have been dtnounolrg the coming full light nt Dui-angos but one clergyman cannot see now It Is more sinful than pugilism or horse racing. Charles B. Towns, a New inrk stock broker, was convicted In that Ity of appropriating TO shares of the stock of the St. Louis and Southwest ern rnllrond, belonging to Surgeon Cordlerlo, of the navy. Dr. Broughton, of Atlanta, da., pas. tor of a Baptist church, last Sunday denounced the lynchers of Sam Hose, Next day he received a portion of flesh cut from Sam Hose's body and a warning to leave the state. Mrs. Schuyler Hamilton, Jr., 30 jears old, wife of the son of den. Schuyler, tiled Thursday afternoon at her home In New York from morphine poHonlng. It Is said that an overdose of the pois oning was taken by mistake. The Gallagher Oil Well Agitator Company has been organized In Pitts burg with a capital of $500,000. With a device on which tt holds the patent It proposes to reopen old oil well, once gusher, now merely holes In the ground. The executive committee of the Pennsylvania Civil Service Heform a soclatton, meeting In Philadelphia, adopted resolutions disapproving the removal by Gov. Stone of State officer for the alleged purpose of making places for partisans. Bessie Kgbert, daughter of Colonel H. U. Egbert, of the Twenty-second Infantry, In a letter said that her father's last words as he lay mortally wounded In the charge on Caloooan were: "We took tho town, anyway, genernl. William Menaonnnii, a student in the medical department of the West ern University of Pittsburg, started to speculate four months ago with $25. His Investments thus far have netted him $18,500. He also keeps up with his studies and expects to pass his ex amination. Bev. Thomas C. Cnrmon, of Borden town. N. J., died Wednesday from the effect of poisoning caused by eating canned meat about a month ago. He was the pastor of the Methodist Epis copal church at that place and was a son of tne late inomns camion or. Bordcntown. He was 69 wears old. Mrs. Augutus Studwell, of Mount Vernon. N. Y., Is In a precarious con dltlon from Injuries Inflicted upon her last Tuesday by a great Dane watch dog kept by her husband. He sank his teeth Into her back and lifting her from the ground shook her like a rat Her cries brought neighbors to the re scue. Tho attempt to enlist Cubans and Forto Hlcans In tho American army has proved a dUmal failure." Only three Puerto Hlcans responded tu the call. The Industrial Commission now In vestigating tho sweat shop system at New York has learned that handsome Fifth avenue tailors send their clothes to sweatshops. They receive $75 for these suits while a man, wife and child will work on it for a week from 14 to 16 hours a day, and set $12 for making the clothes. Admiral In Good Health. On the iteamshln City of Peking, from China and Japan, which arrived at San Francisco last Monday, was Dr. K. Page, passed assistant surgeon l.'nlted States navy, and surgeon on the flagship Olympta for the past year and a half. He makes me louowin statement regarding Admiral Dewey hanith: "Admiral Dewey Is In perfect health, He has not been mora than 20 miles away from Manila slndfl the 1st day of last May, and no nus iiu ten in nec essity of a physician's bid In that tlmo, The renorts concerning tha admlral'i physical condition bate been grossly beef inn ii m end. MILES CENSURED. Court Finds that Refrigerated Beef Was Not Treated With Chemicals Beef Packers Were Not at Fault By direction of tho president, who pproves tho finding". Acting Secre tary of Wur Mciklcjohn ha mndo tibllo the report and findings of tho military court appointed to investigate ho charRos made by MaJ. Uen. Miles, ommandlng the army, that tho hoof upplled to the army during tho war with Spain was unlit for the use of the troops. The most Important feature of the report are: The llmllng that the gen- ral s allegations that the refrigerated oof was treated with chemical were ot established: that hi allegation oncoming llv; canned fresh or canned ronst hoof were sustnlni d as to Its un sultablllty for food a used on tho ransport nnd as a long continue.) llepi ntlon; censure (ion. Miles for "Krror" n falling to promptly notify the sec- rotary of war when hi; Hist formed tho pinion that tho food was unlit; con- ure of t hi; commissary general ttlien leu. F.gnn) for Ihe too extensive pur- iiises of the canned bei f as an un ited ration; censure of Col, Mans of Oon. Miles' staff; the finding that the acker wore not at fault anil that tho uents supplied to the army wore of ho same iiualtly nn those supplied to he trade generally and tho roeoin- londatlon that no further proceeding taken In the promises. Tho conclusion of the court adverse i further procedliiR bluiod upon ho charges I ns follows: 'It has been developed In Ihe course f the Inquiry, as recited In this report hnt In some Instnni-os certain In dividual fulled to perform the full measure of duty or to observe tho ropiiotle which dignify high mili ary rommand, but the court I of the opinion that the mere statement In h otllelnl report of the fact devol- iped nu ots the end of discipline, nnd hat the Interest of the service will ho best subserved If further procecd Iiirs be not taken." There Is more or less rrltlclsm of Con. Mile In vnrlou part of the re port. Probably the most direct In- tance I the one which states that bo und the criticism of olllcers found elsewhere Is the report: The court Anns thnt agnlnst none of the olllcor commanding corps, ll- Islons, brigades and regiments nnd heir staff otHers should a charge of guilt be brought. The court also find thnt the mnjor- gonernl commanding the nrmy had no uniclont Justification for alleging that he refrigerated beef was embalmed or wn unfit for Issue to troop. it also find that ho committed an error n that, having belief or knowledge iih claimed, that the food was unlit. hat It caused sickness nnd distress, thnt Borne of It wn supplied under tho iresenee or experiment, that other )oof wns embalmed, he did not Im mediately report such knowledge or belief to the ecretury of war to the end that a proper remedy might be promptly applied." Considerable attention I given to Dr. Daly' testimony concerning the refrlgerutcd beef on tho trnnsport Panama, and also to hi report con cerning the beef supplied to the Im- munes stationed at Chloknmnuga. Referring to the doctor's analysis of residuum from beef secured on the ransport, the court calls attention to the fact that he approved the finding of the board of survey and that not withstanding there were ather medical officers on board, no reference was made by him to his suspicion that the meat had been chemlcnlly treated. TROOPS ILLEOALLY DETAINED. Colorado'a Oovernor Determined to Have His Volunteers Released. Oovernor Thomns, of Colorado, has announced that within a few days, If President McKlnley and the secretary of war continue to Ignore his com munications on the subject ot recall ing the Colorado regiment from the Philippines, he will take steps with a view to securing the Immediate recall of the troops. He doenn't ay what he will do, but It I believed he will take legal proceeding. He said: I have tried quiet, peaceable means and have failed. Now I will be oblig ed to resort to something more forci ble, and It will be made public. Of course, t do not desire to take any action that will unjustly hamper the administration, for I am an American, but I do not propose to sit Idly by and see the volunteer from Colorado fighting and dying In the Philippines In defense of tho policy which I actu atlng those In charge of the move' mi nts of our armies abroad. 'In the Hrst place, the volunteer troops are being detained Illegally and In defiance of the Constitution. They enlisted for the Spanish war. That war Is over, and still they are detained In those Islands. Under the Constitution the Colorado volunteers will be perfectly Justified In laying down their guns where they are, and returning to the United States. If they should do anything like that probably they could be court-martlul- ed and punlxhed under the strict let ter of military rule, but In that event the same military rule would be placed above tho Constitution of our republic. CUR XEW POSSESSIONS. The total customs receipts of Porto Illco from August, 198, to lhbD, were $-.ki:i.161. The shares or tne $:,ooo,ooo for the Cuban soiaiers win De allotted on a basis of an army of 40,000. The total Internal revenue receipts at Manila from August 14, 1SV8, to February 28, 1SD9, were $172,779. As soon as the lighting ceases In the East Admiral Dewey and his famous cruiser, the Olympla, will start for the United States. H. a. Curtis, of the United States insular commission, said that an election will soon be held In Cuba to decide the Inland's future. Tho country beyond Calumplt Is full of all sorts of Ingenious trenches and pitfalls In the roads, with sharpened bamboo. Fortunately, the Americans escaped the latter. In the swamps near Ban Tomas, where Oen. Wheaton'a troous did their hardest fighting the men sinking tu their waists In mud, are many bodies of Filipinos, smelling horribly. Orders have been sent to Oen. Bios, the Spanish commander In the Philip pines, for the Spanish troops at Zam boanua. Island of Mindanao, arid In the Sulu Islands to evacuate their posi tions and return home without wait ing to be relieved by the Americans, The transport Kllpatrlck, now In the harbor ot Havana, which was to be sent to Porto lllco to bring awsy the Nineteenth Infantry, has beou found unseaworthy and may abandon the trip and return to .New York WOULD CAUSE MUTINY. Pamphlets feeued by the Antl-lmperlallet League of Bnton Barred Prom the Malls to tha Philippine. The government officials hnve for bidden thnt cltlxcn communicate with Americans at Mnnlla on the subject of tho Philippine wnr. Pamphlets, which are claimed to be nothing more than proceeding nnd debntes of tho United States congress have been barred from the mall leaving for tho Philippines. The postmaster general ha directed the postmaster nt San Francisco to take out of the mull for Manila three pamphlet Issued by Kdwnrd Atkinson of Huston, vice-president of the Anll linporiallst league. This order does not iipply to the circulation of the pamphlet by mall In thl country, but bars their dispatch to the Philip pine. Tho throe pamphlets, copies of which have boon prohibited In the nulla for thi Philippines, lire thoe which have the following titles: "Criminal Aggression by Whom?" "Tho t'ost of a Nntlonnl Crime." nnd "The Hell of Wnr nnd Its Penalties." These, unless something should de velop to necessitate further notion, nay be ririulutod through tho mall within this country. The matter was brought to the attention of the postal oMIelals by the war department. It Is thought that there Is little possibility of any of those publication getting past the San Francisco otllee, but If a few should tho military authorities In the Philippines will promptly suppress thorn. Postmaster Oeneral Smith made thl statement: "Theso pamphlets actually Incite to mutiny nnd It would be utterly unju tlllablo to permit their circulation among the soldier In the Philippines. Their circulation Is a movement to In duce tho soldiers to disobey orders and In efTcct to embnrruss nnd resist the government In whose services they uro eiiRiiged. Not only nre they designed to Incited to mutiny tho American soldiers In those Islands, but also to foment nnd encourage Insur rection on the pnrt of the Filipinos themselves. The law covering the ense I:, ample. What action might be taken and the offense Is of the gravest character I not to bo discussed. I do not believe there I any Intention to prosecute Mr. Atkinson as the mat er now stands. Edward Atklnnn. Vice-president or the Antl-Imperlullst League of Bos ton, was shown the Washington dis patch stating thnt the postmaster rub ral had directed that certain v -ihlets nreoared bv Mr. Atkinson be nkon from the malls to Manila. He explain, d that the documents were compilations of fact and figure taken from the debate In the national nouse und senate and calling attention to KilnlS overlooked In debnte. Mr. Atkinson stated that any notion excluding those pamphlet would Indi cate that the congressional recoru and ofllclnl documents were unsuitable to be sent to olllcers of tho volunteer oRlments now at Manila whose terms of service have expired and whoso re turn Is demanded even by certain state ofMcluls. He said: "There are two namnhlcts only. I ne first edition of the first printed In No vember was dedicated to President McKlnley, In support of his statement thnt 'forcible annexation would be criminal aggression.' The fnots nnd figures given In that pampniei were made the frequent subject of debate In the house of representatives und the senate during the session, and Ihe first pamphlet ns a whole was Anally irlnted by order ot tne senate as sen ate document No. 62. 'lne seconu mmnhlet was Issued late In rebruary. when It appeared that acts of criminal aggression were being committed In the Philippine islands. In that pamphlet certain facts and statements were sub mitted to the attention of the senate and were the subject of dehnte, and that pamphlet again, by order of the senate, was printed as a senate docu ment. I have a copy or wo. , anu have sent for a copy of the latter. "If It Is unlawful for a cltiren or ine United States to communicate wltn other cltlsens In Manila by sending them documents In a private edition which have been printed by order ot the United States senate as public documents, I am content to leave the matter at that exact point, which re oiilrea no comment from me. If this attempt to ioroia ire speech and free malls to the people of this country has been made, which cannot believe, I think tne people will decide themselves what to do about It." SWEPT BY FIRE. Farmers In South Dakota Loe Heavily Orain and Stock Eurned. Definite reports show hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage by in-airie fires In various parts of South Dakota. in rsanoorn anu .lorauui counties several dosan farmers lost everything. South of Armour a large number of farmers were uuinea out. In Northern Brule and Southern Buf falo counties nearly three townships were burned over. Nearly 8,000 head of live stock was lost. Damage In these two counties will amount to thousand nnd It is re ported two men lost their lives. Near Castlewood Mrs. Erlckson was burnej to death while trying to nave horses Mrs. Joanna Daven, to years mu burned to death at Cortland, N. Y, whllo trying to save valuublu papers from her burning house. A Heartbroken Suicide. Louise Fischer, 45 year of age, tho widow of Henry Fischer, w ho commit ted suicide Inst December, because of financial troubles, was found dead in her flat In New York the other day, having asphyxiated herself after fret ting for months over her husband's death. She left a letter addressed to "the public of New lorK city," in which she snid she was heartbroken nnd cou id not live witnoui ner nus band. She asked to be Durieu pesiue him. Thoueande Support McKinley. Three big mns meetings were held in 'Chicago Sunday to voice approval of tho policy of the administration with reference to the Philippine Isl hihIh nnd to protest against the sent! ment expressed last Sunday at the "anti-expansion" meeting In Central Mimln hall. Sunday's meetings were held In the Auditorium, Central Music hall and the First Methodist cnurcn, and In spite of the Inclement weather the aggregate or attendance was proo ably lo.ooo. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL The war department Insular coinmls slon Is engaged on a preliminary repot upon the economla conditions In Porto ltlco. The bodies of 350 soldiers brought from Cuba and Porto Rico were In terred at Arlington Cemetery las Tuesday, - Congressman John Dalsrll's candt dacy for the speakership ot the House Is favored by Washington society Be cause of bis wife's popularity. STEEL MO COKE COMBINE. CARNEGIE RETIRES. Hla Name Will Be Retained by the Management of the Oreat Works Will Aggreselvely Enter Foreign Territory. Andrew Cnrneglo, whose name has for yenrs been Identified with the grentest Iron works In thu world has retired from business. It. C. Frlek, who for years hail been Mr. Carnegie' right hand man has mado tho follow ing alatomont: "The cuiient rumor that tho Cnr neglo Steel Company, limited, nnd the 11. C. Frlek Coke company contem plated combination with other steel Interests were wholly unfounded. What wa In contemplation, and what I now practically consummated, Is the amal gamation tinder one corporate organi sation of nil of the properties and In terest of the Carnegie steel company, ltd., und the- II. C. Frlek Coke com pany, ami their subsidiary und ulllod organisation. Practli ally tho only chaiiKe In tho situation will be the re tirement of Mr. Andrew Cnrneglo from the organization, ho having sold to Ills partners his entire Interest; Mr. Carnegie's intention being to give bin entire tlmo In tho future to the prose cution of his great philanthropic Works. "With reference to the charters which have been obtained In Pennsyl vania and Now Jersey, there I nothing to ay Ht present, but It should be well understood that there will be no hiingo In the management of the arlou companies." It Is stated that Andrew i.arnegio will receive $Pmi,000,0iO In S per cent, bond. - Tho public will be given un opportunity to subscribe to a modor- to percentage of tho capital. It wrts also announced that the nor mal stoc k of the Cnrneglo Stool com pany would bo Increased In a few days n u sum HUlllclent to acotilre the n. -.. Frlek Coke company, which controls 40.000 acres of the Connollsvllle, Pa., coke lands, nnd three smaller com panies, which control smaller tract. Tho deal Include tne stool pinnis ot the CarnoRlo Stool company, limited, besides numerous piers on lake ami Ivor, several hundred siuare miles of atliral gas lands, seven miles of river ront In tho vicinity of Homestead, and all tho stook, ores, buildings and nc- ounts of the companies to be ab sorbed. The plan of tho compnny provides for tho purchase of all the f'nrnegle nnd Frlek properties and other allied Interest, numerous smnll companies dependent upon tho man- Roment, which has boon centered in ittsburg. It was confidently asserted hnt the earning capacity of the new oneorn would be between iio.oou.uoii rid jr.o.ooo.ooo unnunlly. Tho business Is constantly growing, and It I proposed i use tho additional capita! put into ho company for tho purpose of dovel- oi dng the" export trade. This giant omblnatlon expects to enter Into live ly competition with KnRland. Coke Is worth In this country from $1 65 to 2 n ton, ns iiRalnst 1 1 in KnRland. With tho control of n Rrent coke field and a railroad, the projectors of the new company expect to make themselves elt In the markets of the world. They Intend to sell stool Ingots, rail, beams nnd slab. They will make a specialty of atru'-tural Iron work, for they be- llevo that the use of Iron work In building Ih still In it Infancy. Messrs. Philip and Schwab will be associated with Mr. Frlek In the management of he new company. The combination will retain the nnme of The Cnrncgle Work. PRISONERS HEARD FROM. The Yorktown's Men Safe in the Hande of the Filipinos. The first authentic lnformntlon re- gnrdlng Lieutenant J. C. Oilmore and hi party of 14 men from tne unueu States s-unbnat Yorktown. who were captured by tho Filipinos on April 12, was received Wednesdny at the hands of Major Arguolles. at the staff of Oeneral Antonio Luna. It is In tne form of a list of the missing men nnd I signed by Lieutenant Oilmore. The lieutenant reports that he and bis party have been brought across the mountains from Buler, where they were captured. This Information was brougnt in re sponse to a note which Major Oeneral MacArthur sent to oeneral iuna oy Major Shiels and Lieutenant Hayne, and which these officer, bearing a flag of truce, carried across Oeneral Luna's lines. The note, after asking for Information regarding American prisoners In Oeneral Lunn's hands, concluded with the message that he (General MacArthur) would be pleased to meet Luna. Malor Shiels and Lieutenant Hayne found a span of the railroad bridge, a mile from St. Thomas, broken, 'iney left 10 day' provisions for the prison er on a hand car at the end ot the bridge, placing the car In the keeping of Filipino, whose conduct tnrougn out the various negotiations has been all that could be expected of a civilized nation. Crime Againet Chrlit. Cardinal Olbbons, In the course of his sermon at the cathedral In Balti more last Sunday on the unity of the church, characterized the recent di vorce and marriage or a society laoy In New York as a crime against Christ. He said: 'Consider the pontiff In relation to King Henry VIII., who asked for the popes sanction to a divorce so mat he mlaht marrv again. The pope re, fused to give It, saying, 'Whom Oon hath Joined together let no man put asunder.' 'Only a few days ago the country was shocked at a woman In hiRh life who was divorced at 3 o clock and married again almost before the Ink was dry on the divorce papers. This I a crime against the law of Jesus Chsjst!" CABLE FLASHES, A Cuban bandit, Junn Caballero, has been executed at Santiago. The pope proclaimed a sacred year of Jubilee beginning December ia next English scientists are energetic in detracting from tb4 value of Marconi's recent Invention of wireless telegraphy, The weekly Kngllsh press was full of reports of big cuntructs for machinery ot all kinds secured by American manufacturers In market hitherto considered England's preserves. The val.'t, of the Earl of Strathmore, while bathing near Monto Carlo a few days ago was devoured by a fchark In the presence of a number ot people V ho were unable to render assistance, A sensation nan ceen caused in Ja pan by the withdrawal from Chris tlanlty of three leading orthodox Chris tians. Their action has given the cause of Christianity a great setback In Japan. Word has been received at Cap Town that a caravan unuer tne com. mand of two Europeans was recently attacked near the headwaters of tRe Iiovuma rlevr, east of Lake Nyaasa, tha tribesmen killing 60 porters and capturing all tht goods. SHOT A BANKER. Murderer Left a Statement In Which He De clare! That He Was aa Instrument Carry Ing Out the Almighty's Wrath. Alexnnder Mnsterton, o director of the Farmers Loan and Trust Company and 72 yenrs of age was shot and kill ed Wednesday nfternoon by James Nenle Plumb In the Burlington hotel, Now York. Mnsterton wus shot five time and died within an hour. Tho murder wns premeditated ns evi denced by a voluminous statement written In advance by Plumb and giv en out nftcr his arrest. At present tho real motive for tho crime I unknown. Ilumb In his state ment Issued "To the Public," nnd en titled, "Why I, J. Ncnle Plumb, Shot Alexander Mnsterton," declared thnt he had boon actuated to do the shoot ing because of a systematic hounding of him by Mnsterton. Plumb declared further that Mnsterton had not only ruined him llnnni-lnlly, but had at tempted to nllennte the affection of hi wife and children to cause his soclnl downfall. Plumb's statements, one of which was addressed to the Associated Pres, deal with a period of his cnr.jor em bracing the past .'11 years, are rambling In many places and conclude with the following: "No man has a higher regard for human life than I hnve. Hut the Just nnd righteous punishment of Alex. Mnsterton Is decreed by nn outraged Ood, and I am simply tho humble In strument In III hand, a He hns sel ected mo n HI chosen Instrument of wrathful vengeance. I have rid the world of n man who was not fit to live nnd whoso death a thousand times over could never atone for the mon Btrou wrong done mo." Mnsterton and plumb met by agree, ment In the Hotel Burlington nt I:H0 T. m In tho npnrtment occupied by Manager Colo. They had been there but a short time when five hot were llred In rapid succession. Plumb then came out of tho apartments and walk ed Into the reception room awaiting ar rest. The murderer wns tnkofi before Pol Ice Captain Price of the tenderloin dis trict of whom he Is an Intimate friend. Ho was later taken before a magistrate in tho Jefferson market police court and hold. Nothing wus brought out at the hearing thnt could bo necipted ns a reason for the killing boond the statement made by Plumb that Mnster ton had hounded him for many years. Friend sny that the killing wn the result of an enmity that had existed between the two men for nearly 41 years. Mr. Mastorton was a man or large ncome. Mr. Plumb had nn independ ent fortune nnd has never engaged In nny business. He hns always lived a Ife of leisure In this country, In t.reac Britain and on the Continent, spend ing nbout $.'i0,0'i0 annually. For the nst 20 yenrs ho has lived abroad most of the time. Prior to that he was a conspicuous figure In fashionable and cluh life In this city, being the chum or ex-I'resldont Chester A. Arthur. Clin ton Wheeler, Stephen B. French and men of that type. WEDDED IN JAIL. On ol Roosevelt's Rough Rider Marries a Havana O rl. Emll Cassl, the former chief burtier of Itoosovclt's Hough Hlders, has been married In Jail at Havana to his sweet- heart, Hendrloa Lolnns Castillo. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Father O'Sulllvon. a Catholic priest on duty with the American troops. Cassl, who Is an Italian by blrtn, ac companied Oovernor Hoosevelt In hi tampulRn last autumn and did some speeehmaklng nt the smaller towns on the eat side of New York City. After the election he went to Havana and became a Lieutenant in the police force organized In that city after the American occupation. While In citizens clothes he at tempted to arrest a Cuban, who was firing a pistol in me street, ana was forced to shoot the man. The wound finally proved fatal and Caiud was n aced In in II. Ho sent to .-New xora nnd Governor Boosevelt for assistance. but wns not bnlled out. He will De tried by Spanish law. COST OF THE WAR. The Sum Will Exceed taoo.ooo.ooo Expenses ot the Navy Again Normal The attempt to fix the real cost of the wnr with Spain to date appears to be futile; but with the delivery of the $20,000,000 Monday to Ambassador Cambon for Spain the total certainly exceeds $MO,000,000. This amount paid (,.. tha Vhiilnolnes Is charged at the Treasury under the head of "civil and m seel aneous." but mat cannot ex clude It from Its proper location. For the ten months of the nscai year. since June 30, 18S8, the Government ex penditures have been $533,35,30J, an Increase over the corresponding months of the preceding year of 1220, E!3,421. Practically all of this Increase has been due to the war, as ordinary expenses have remained about the same. In fact. In pensions a reduc tion hns taken place, and this amount of 17.000.000 is swallowed up in me war budget. Adding to the ten months the army and navy expenditures oi April. May and June. 1898. of $54,984, 176. the total Increase is 1275.S77.C97. When outstanding obligations are met, the aggregate cost will transcend the $300,000,000 mark. Tne navy ex penditures have regained the normal, but the cost of the army Is still at floodhelght. The average from 1893 to 1S!7 was $50,000,000; but In the ten months of the present fiscal year It ha been $210,000,000. The aggregate strength of troops employed during the war with Spain was approximately 175.000, covering a period from May, 18V8, to April, 1899. Inclusive. During this time the death from all causes were 6.190, or 2 per cent. The mean strength of the first year of the Civil War was 276,371. with an aggregate loss by deaths of 19,159. being a percentage of 6.8. Nothing to Good fee Can. Funetoa. Kansans are happy over tho promo tion of Col. Fred Funston to a brigadier generalship and declare there Is noth ing In Kansas he may want and can not have. At the same time an In dication of what he may get Is on the tongues ot his fellow cltlsens ot lola, Kan. It Is nothing less than a seat In the I'nlted States senate. This, they say, is as easily within his reach as the position of town marshal ot lola. Col. Fred Funston Is now In the Philippines. "Lent week the rebels de stroyed a bridge blocking further pro gress ot the Americana. In a rain of bullets, Funston with a number of men, swam across the river, routed the enemy and opened the way for tha American soldiers. Treasury receipts for April fell $13. 4O0.0O0 below those for March, whlla expenditures were $22,100,000 more. The great difference, however, does not Indicate either a large falling oft In the ordinary receipts or a large la crease In the ordinary expenses. . Car. ,s li a Bouthetuer. exagaeraivu. i ft