lilir WELCOMES MEM WML PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS. Patrlollo People of Plllsburg Welcome Horn Ihe Herolo Tonlh Regiment Fought In the Philippines. The clouds of smoke wlilch have made the greatest Industrial clly In the world famous wor absent from over Pittsburg last Mondny, nnd permitted the pure sunlight from a dear sky to Rhine mon the magnificent and pulrl otlo ntiiPi Incident In the tic nic-eom-Ing of tlio Tenth Pennsylvania volun teers from tin- Philippine Inlands. Thre hnndr il ihinnm d men nnd wo men lined the nlie-ts of Pittsburg mid Allegheny, shouting n warm w h- me to IIib returning li'iioos; Pnadont Mc Klnley In a speech prated the boy lor their patriotism In protecting and de fending the cnuntiy's llB : General Wesley Merrill and the gov. rnors of half a dimeii slate sU'.iillled by their presence that the whole country Joined In welcoming home the famous light ers. , ... The three- special trains carrying the Tenth regiment home- from Snu Fran cisco arrived nt New r.rlghton Inst Monday morning, where br. akfnst find been prcpnred for them by the ladle of that clly. Amid music, shouts nnd rear if cin non the bins left the trains In th" parks of Allegheny. From tlclv the march was made Id Pittsburg, ending at Schenlev park, where the soldiers were furnished with dinner, af.er be ing reviewed by President McKlnley and prominent men In public and mili tary circles. The citizen of Pittsburg nnd vVcst trn Pennsylvania had suhwrlhul $.", part In order to bring the soldiers home free of charge, and they saw to It that the toys got their money's worth. In the evening tho different compa nies departed for their respective home where further receptions awaited them. As the heroes marched up the pro fusely decornted streets to the music of thousands of Instruments and th shouts of hundieds of thousands of ad mirers, their spirits were saddened. On nil sides were pictures of the late colonel, Alexander Hawkins, who died on the Pacific while en toute home. Not a station In that long Journey from Pan Francisco to Pittsburg had been passed without there being some show of admiration on the part of as sembled citizens. A great demonstration nt Ohama was omitted on account of the specials being 12 hours late. Uravery, devotion tr duty nnd re markable physical endurance were the Tenth Regiment' most striking ' , ncterlstlos as a United Mates volunteer organization. The Tenth furnished a number of military records when It turned to the Fast, a year ami thtee months ago. It was the llrst Pennsyl vania regiment to set foot on foreign soil; It was the only one east of tho Mississippi that engaged n two distinct campaigns; It was the only one thai lost, In killed and wounded.' 10 per cent, of Its strength; It was the only one that had over a year's continuous service to Its credit, nnd laft, but not least. It traveled farther than any other volunteer regiment In the I'nlted States. The Tenth Pennsylvania, within ft week after being sworn Into the United State servce, was hurrying ncross the continent to Join an expedition to a strange land, where Amerlcnn soldiers had never set foot. Ten days after Its arrival on those shores It was fighting an unseen enemy at midnight, and was being roused, by the fnll of Us own wounded. In the savage desire to give what had been taken. The regiment hail six months of gnrrlson and provost duty, then another midnight battle, this time with the Filipinos at Malolos, followed by other engagements and a pursuit across rice fields anil throuch Jungles, burning towns nnd potting the enemy wherever found. SHOT THROUGH THE DOOR. Girl it Mistaken tor a Burglar and Is Killed by a Neighbor. Tyne drove, of Oil City, Pa., was dis turbed last Satutday morning while guarding fL'OO which he had received In an nil deal. Edith Dunn, aged 17 years, daughter of K. V. Iunn. of Hully Hill, near Franklin, had been attending a soclil near her home and it was n'urly 2 O'clock when she reached the house. Greatly to her dismay she found thot (he was locked out, and went to the home of Drove, Intending to ask Mrs. Grove to shelter her for the rema'.nd r of the night. Grove heard her knock at the door and called to know who was there. Hearing no reply he went upstairs, got hi gun and again called and received no reply. He then shot through the door. The weapon wn a 33-callbor rifle and the bullet entered the abdomen of the young woman near the groin. She shrieked, and then Orove opened the door and found her lying on tho porch. Surgeons from Franklin were sum moned and found an operation neces sary. This was performed, but the partcnt died from the nervous shock. She was conscious to the last and ex onerated Grove from all bin me. Grove claims that he called at least four times and when he wa coming down stairs with the weapon he pur posely dropped several gun cartridges on the uncarpeted stair to give warn ing to the supposed thieve. Grove is almost frant c with r'lef c er the sad occurrence, while the fatbr of the dead girl is Inoonso'ab'e. POLITICAL OUTLOOK. Hon. A. H. Longlno, of Washington county, wa Thursday nominated for Governor of Mississippi, by the Demo cratic 6tate Convention, without op position. Tho platform endorses the declaration of the Chicago Convent on In ISM, ard declare Hon. W. J. Bryan to be "the ablest exponent of thoee principle, the statesman nnd patriot, the great tribune of the people." The committee In charge ct Mayor Jones' Independent canvas (or gov ernor of Ohl.i bu arranged a trip f ir the mayor ever the state with an au tomobile. Accompanying the candi date will be a speaker and singer, and the music used will be furnished by .Mr. Jones, in addition to this feature a horde of canvasser will be s'arted In a few day and troy will tell May. r Jones' book. "The New R'ght," and each mem wl'.l be provld'd with lltera -ture and argument. The procieds of the book will be devoted to the cam paign work, Nebraska Democrat, Populist and Silver Republican mot In Omaha Tuesday and fused on nomination for Judge of the supreme court and two member of the beard of regen'a of the Ute university. Former Gov. 8llu A. Ilolcomb wa nominated for upreme Justice by the Populists and Indorsed bythe other two convention. Four men of the Twenty-third regi ment stationed at Cebu, Philippine Islands, were amtushed by the native In the hill and three of them war killed. TERSE TELEGRAMS. Hot winds have ruined the Texas cotton crop. Wllllnm Jennings PSryan'a Wealth doe not exceed Sl'OO.OW. F-xpert claim thnt the wheat crop of the northwest will be a failure. A colony of leper exist In the northern part of the state of Wash ington. Michael Fltzhenry, n pnlnter, fell from n bridge In Pittsburg and wa Instnntly killed. Forest fires nro raging about Tira mle peak, in the northern part of Lar amie county, tint. There I nn epidemic of typhoid fever In Pittsburg. Physicians tny careleas milkmen ore to blame. Sixty Cleveland meat dealer are sold to have been forced out of business by the ndvnnre In price. Frank Knmber of lies Moines, In., was killed by lightning ns he stood on tho porch of his home. Twenty omnibuses pave been shipped from Washington to Cleveland for use during the Street car strike. tn Maryland plans nre forming for the execution of criminals by the use of gas Instead of by hanging. The callng of prosed rhtrken cmp-ed a violent Illness among IS Ihft slier at llloomlngton, III., Inst week. George Hob'-rtson, colored, I under nrrest nt Newport News. Vn., for de liberately drowning two boys. Admiral Dewey Informed the recep tion comlttee that he would arrive In New York harbor on August 2W. Pleasant Plain, a small village 25 miles cast of Newport. Ark., was de molished by a storm Friday night. The will of the Inte Iilshnp John P. Newman, of the Methodist Episcopal church, disposes of nn estate of S30, 01X1. Twelve thousand striking clonk mnk cr returned to work nt New York hist Wednesday, having gained their de mands. Theodore Patten was killed nn Brooklyn bridge Inst Wednesday, He collided with a trolley car while rid ing a bicycle. Highwaymen held up a stngo conch near Hutte, Mont., the other day. H. T. Itelthncy wns robbed of more than 5.noo In gold dust. Tho main tent of n circus wn blown down upon MOO people nt Winchester. Vn., Inst Tuesday. Many person were trampled upon. The Shnnghnl Mercury publlshe a communication from Pikln to the ef fect that the emperor ha developed sympions (f lnsnnlty. Several hundred people witnessed Charles Ondlln lielng crushed to death betwen a pole nnd an electric car 111 New Y'ork C.ty Inst Friday. Peter Louln ond his 15-year-old son. under arrest at Klectiic, Ala., charged with shooting Hall Jordan, were killed by a mob of masked mm. Sfcrctary Hoot has orderel three more regiment of troops 1 1 lnve their rendezvous for San F.nnilsco. there to embark for Manila. llellevtng thnt he wns too old tn be of nny more use In this world, Peter Pinter, aged hi, committed suicide by hanging at Chicago a few days ago. John Peterson, a night watchman In a female boarding reboot nt Englc wood, N. J., killed a burglar who wns ransacking the Institution Wednis.luy night. A party of pctcntlst under the di rection of Prof. Agasslz sailed from San Francisco for Islands) In the S uth crn Paiillc, where rescarchca are to be made. President McKlnley attended service nt the Christ M. K. Church, Pittsburg, last Sunday morning. In the at't rn on he took a ride through the beautiful parks of the city. At Whiting, near Chicago. Mondny n leak at the bottom of one of the Standard Oil Company's stills; caused a lire and explosion. The loss I esti mated at $100,000. Jack Van Pchaajk of Chicago hns thrown aside a legacy of $!),0oo which was to be his onconilltlon thnt he re mained separated from hi wife. Ho preferred his wife. Forest fires are raging at the en trance to the Platte cam in, twenty miles south of Denver. The fire burn d up the aides of the canon and la de vaotatlng the foothills. John Wring, a 4 year old boy of Philadelphia wo found In the woods near his home hut Thursday dying from strangulation. The deed wa evi dently that of a maniac, W. J. Spnulllng. a wealthy rnncher of Fagle, N. M shot and killed Nellie McKitiHtry, an actress, who was keep ing house for him. A posse of cowboy thereupon killed Stradllng. Col. Hell' twenty-seventh volunteer regiment started from Camp Meade for Manila Wednesday morning, and will go Into camp at the Presidio pre paratory to taking transport. Willie and Wilbur Eblln. twins, 4 yeor old were drowned at Mt. Ster ling, O., a few day ago. The mother did not know of the boy absence until she saw one of tho bodies Moating down the creek. Robert Anderson wa stricken In New York stock exchange Just a he cried, "Thirty-aeven." Th.se word he repeat over and over again in the asylum where he wa taken. Editor W. W. Crum of the Florida Republican, of Tampa, wa brutally beaten by whltecap Wednesday night. Some week ago he appointed JJan Morrison, a colored man, his assistant. Wfillnin Ivory, a New York mea senger boy, attempted tn clean out a store while drunk last Tuesday. Tho proprietor threw him out, fracturing hi skull. The boy died ond the store keeper Is locked up. Monday morning burglar entered the court house at Ebenaburg, Pa., and cracked the safe in the county treasurer oillce, oecuiing $4,000. Eight hundred dollars In an In-lde vault was not touched. There is no clue. Arrangement are hearing eomp'e tlon with various steamship line ar riving In this country for th transpor tation of foreign delegate to the In ternational commercial congress ut Philadelphia at reduced rate. A colored man believed to be Tom L. Johnson of Toronto, a delegate to the colored Masonic grand lrdge, which is In session In Windsor, Ont., com mitted aulclde by drowning himself In the river near Windsor Thursday. Miss Mattle Kelly and Mis Nichols, of Batavla, N. Y., and a young man named Cornell, of Youngstown, N. Y., were killed at a crossing three mile west of Hatavia Saturduy, and Had ley Harris, of that place, wuh fatally Injurrd. John L. Flavin, president of the State Teachers' association of Wiscon sin, and for 25 year county uMilrt tetiimt of education, iHi. d iul- tide by hanging himself to a tree on hi farm at Watertown, Wis. Des pondency and overwork are believed to have been the causes. Report on Petroleum. Agent T. H. Ollphant of the geoloploal urvey ha completed hi annual rep rt on petroleum production for the year 189". The production In IK9S wa 66,364,231 barrel, valued at S44,1U3,36, an avarava of "U.I cent per barrel. HI III IHE PHILIPPINES. MAYORS ARRESTED. Officers Installed By th Americans Caught Recruiting Men tor the Rebel Army. Natives Favor Revolutionists. Recent event In the Philippine have proved somewhat discouraging to oflkials who are trying to accompany war with a policy of conciliation. Two new municipal government have col lapsed through the treachiry of the mayors. Monday the mayor of Pan Polro Mneatl, who wns elected by the P'opli'i under the direction of prof. Dean Wor cester of the United States advisory commission for the Philippines, wa brougiit to Manila nnd lixlgul In Jail. The I'nlted State , Ulcer at San Pedro Miicatl found thnt he was using Ills of Poi" as a recruiting station for the Philippine army. Four disguised In surgent ofllcers were helping him. The mnyor of llallttng was nlo nr rested nnd confined In the same pilon. Tho Americans caught him a-slng be tween the lines of the two nrmli with Incriminating document, which tho authorities second. Another prominent native mayor Is under sin velllance. When the result of the election at Imus which Hen. I.awton nnd Prof. Worcester engineered, wns announced, the American Inquired n to the where, nhiiiit of the people's choice nnd were Informed thnt he wns In prison at Itlll bld, where the authorltli had placed him on suspicion of being a revolu tionist. He was released and Installed as mnyor. Such events nnd conditions t'nd to give color to the assertions of foreign residents acquainted with the native character who Insist thnt a great ma jority of the native sympathize with the Insurrection and elect utile a a whom they know to be revolutionists. For two weeks Manila has b'en policed nt night with unusual vigi lance. Apparently tho authorities ore expecting trouble. The trend of affair tends to make the policy of leniency unpopular among the Americans. When they abandoned Morong they burned the whole town. Col. Smith of the Twelfth Infantry, who is In rommnnd nt Ang. les, Is ski p thai regarding Filipino friendliness. Instead of allowing the natives to re turn to the town nn heretofore he has ordered his troop to shoot ai men try ing to pass the lines nnd to tura back the women and children. He recently gave the nmlgo In the town nn opportunity to prove their pro fessed friendship, putting them to work nt digging trenches nnd c'eanlng streets, but this only displeased them. The foremost citizen of Angele, a lawyer, who had welei m' d the Ameri cans, wns found communicating with the Insurgents. The American promptly marchrd him off to San Fer nando to stand trial. UNFAVORABLE REPLY. Transvaal Refuses to Accept Propositions Made by Great Britain. Tho report that th Transvaal gov ernment had handed It reply to tho I'.rltlsli agent at Pretoria, to be for warded to Sir Alfied Mllner, Brltlph high commissioner for South Afrlia and governor of Cupo Colony, Is con firmed. It Is believed, however, thnt the pro position of Great Itrltaln for a Joint cotnmlfislon to Investigate the effect which the franchise reform legislation would hnve on the (luthinder has not been accepted, but that fresh proposal have been ndvnncrd. Sunday wa observed throughout the Ornnge Free State and Cape Colony with humiliation, prayer nnd sermon advocating a peaceful solution of tho crisis. Mr. Snytier, a lending Dutch Reform preocher here, referred to the close tbs uniting the Cape dutch to those of the Transvaal, which, he added, were member of the great Afrikander family. If war was de clared, he asserted. Great Itrltaln would commit a "heinous crime before God and man, resulting In clvij war In Capo Colony." There I evidence of growing lin easlnes at Johannesburg. Great crowd gather at the railroad station, expressing disapproval at the depart ures for Cupo Colony and Durban, Natal. According to Afrikander report tho Transvaal' reply Is a counter proposal of a live year' retrospective franchise in the election of the president and an Increased representation. It la said that the suggestion is made to submit all other difference to arbitration. Fitly Saloons Raided. Sheriff Sell of Camden county, N. J., with 40 policemen sworn In as deputies Sunday raided 50 saloon tn Gloucester and captured 400 gambling device of the slot machine order. The raids were planned and directed by D. C. Gib bony, secretary of the Law and Order society of Philadelphia. In nearly every case tho ofllcers met wi:li rtslstance, and na a result more than a dozen men are In the hoapital some injured so badly that their recov ery la doubtful. Knives, pistol and block jack were freelj used. PRAISES AMERICAN GRIT. Lord Kitchner Tells Why England Lost a Bridge ContracL In the course of his speech Monday at the opening of the Atbara bridge, In Africa, which was constructed by a Philadelphia firm after competition with Hiitish firms for the contract, tho sirdar, Lord Kitchener, of Khar toum, said: "The construction of this magnifi cent bridge, I think, may fairly be considered a record achievement. ' So far us the failure of the efforts to p ace the construction order In England Is concerned, I think It demonstrate that the relation between labor and capital there are not auftlclently advanced to give confidence to the capitalist end to Induce him to take the risk of es tablishing up-to-da'e workshepa that would enable Great Iliitaln to maintain her position a the hint constructing nation In the world." "Hut, as Englishmen failed, I am de lighted that our cousins across the At lantic stepped in. Thli bridge Is due to their energy, ability and power to turn out works of magnitude in les time than anybody else, I congratulate the Americans on their aucotsa in the erec tion of a bridge in the heart of Africa. They have shown real grit far from home. In the hottest month of the yeir and depending upon the labor of for eigner." CABLE FLASHES. The czar will shortly undergo an operation on hi brain. The situation between England and the Transvaal has become ao grave that a war seems inevitable, It Is reported that the Ruwlan czar wa determined to do all In hi power to prevent an Anglo-Aunei loan . al l-ance. HINDERED BY A SICK MAN. Cot. du Paly da Clam Very Much Wanted by Dreyfus' Attorney. "Dead men tell no talc." Thl I the barricade behind which den. Mer cler and the general Rtaff who are op posed to Dreyfus have Intrenched themselves. Hut there Is one weak point in their defense Col. Iu Paty dn Clam and the military clique know It nnd are striving to the utmost to keep him out of M. Kaborl' clutches. If they enn prevent Hit Paty de Clnm, who In now called the "sick mnn of the Drey fus nfYalr," from appearing at the wit ness bar, they can effectually put the silence of the tomb between truth and Justice. M. I,alMiri I fighting tooth and unit to drag him Into couit, but Col. Jouaust persists In refusing him the necessary assistance. M. I.atmrl hit the nnlt nn the head Snturday when, replying to Gen. Mcr cler' Inst remarks, he exclaimed: "Al ways the dead. Snndherr dead, Henry dead; Iu Pnty de Clem Is not coming." Col. Jounust Immediately cut him short, declaring ho must not make ob servations, ns M. I.A.horl staggered and fell back Into his Beat with a despair ing gesture. The confrfintntlon of Col. Manuel Mniirel, Cnpt. Freystaetter and Gen. Mercler was an Instructive exposure of the fraud nnd dlshot.esty of the general staff, which the absence of Du Pnty de Clnm alono prevented frcm being complete. Cnpt. Freystnctter' opnnlng state ment was a discharge nf grnpeshot for the Mercler gang. He enumerated four document that were secretly com municated to the 1K!H tribunal. The llrst Cnpt. Dreyfus energetically denied nnd no reliable evidence has been ad duced In Its supi-ort. The second was the "canaille do d " document, which ha been shown not to refer to Drevfu at all. The third waa the d'Avlgnon letter supporting tho second, which therefore fall to the Rround with It. while the fourth was tho Panlzzardl dispatch, which tin been proved In correctly translated nnd ruled out of the priM-eedlngs by Col. Jounust In the present trial as utterly unreliable. The announcement that the Panlx fardi dispatch was one of the secret documents win another hard blow to Mercler' reputation, because he had declared In his deixisltlon thnt this dispatch wa not communicated to the tribunal In 1894. M. I.nborl asked Col. Mauret to ex plain his declaration thnt only one do cument was read. Mnurel gave the Jesuitical reply: "I ,ni not say only one was read. I sold I only read one." Capt. Freystaetter did not hesitate a second when M. Dahori asked him If he maintained his open statement. He re plied: "Not only did I read the docu ments, but Capt. Maurel read them and made a commentary of each." This wnr Ihe He direct to Col. Maurel, who did not protest, but merely objected to the term "commentary." Maurel thus stands before the world as a self-confessed liar. In tho court-martial of Captain Al fred Dreyfus, last Snturdov, charged with treason, two of the Judues sitting at the former trlnl confronted each other and passed the lie, the same be ing the case with one of the Judges and General Mercler, former minister of wnr. M. Ilertlllon made the Dreyfus pro ceedings relillctilous last Friday by at tempting to prove Dreyfus guilty by mathematics. Ity means of chnrts, dlngrams nnd Instruments he gave a demonstration which put most of the audience to sleep and provtd nothing against the accused. Laborl cornered Gen. Mercler on the Schneider letter, which the Intter hnd used in evidence nnd which Col. Schneider hnd repudiated ns a forg- ry. The gent-nil was surprised when La borl suddenly demanded thnt Mercler be recalled. Evidently he hoped tho tribunal would support him In' refusing to explain how he got a copy of a let ter which wus of later date than his incumbency at tho ministry of war. Hut I.nboii wa not to be denl d. lie Insisted that Mercler should give some explanation. Then, after hesitating, Mercler declared that he would na fcume all the responsibility attaching to hi possesion of the document. This as La Vorl intended It should be, wa a demonstration of communication by tho general tnff of part nt lenat of the secret dossier to any ordinary soldier, such os Mercler became Immediately on leaving the ministry of war. When Labor! had attained his object find forced a confession of grave violation of law on the port of Gen. Mercler, he gave a smile of grim satisfaction and then added nignltlcantly "I shall have other question to put to Gen. Mercler." The scene wa highly dramatic and made a profound impression upon all the spectator. Gen. Mercler made a pitiable exhibi tion. M. Iabori, in a passion, fairly thundered his questions. "What can be the value of docu ments," said he, "which we can not eu and can not discuss, document for which It Is Impossible to know who take the responsibility I appeal to you, Mr. President, to be good enough to ask Gen. Mercler how this document camo Into hi possession. " Mercler. driven Into a corner, feebly evaded the question, "Mr. President," continued Laborl, "I Insist that a reply be given. Gen. Mercler ha sworn to epeak the whole truth. I must Insist that questions respectfully tendered by the defense bo answered by him. I Insist that Gen. Mercler answer me, for It li my right." After Mercler' ahuflHng collapse M. Laborl ank back Into his arm chair, great bead of perspiration standing on hi forehead, but hi countenance wa radiant at the Impression he had made. Guitcau's Attorney a Recluse. A party of Kokomo, Ind., fishermen who have returned from a trip among the remote and unfrequented lakes of northern Indiana, ran across the little cabin occupied by Attorney Bcovlll, who defended Charles J. Gulteau In his trial for the assassination of President Garfield. Tho cottage in which Seo vill was found la near the banks of Mud lake, where he live tho Ufa of u recluse. How he put tn hi time nobody knows, a his unkempt and uncouth figure I seldom seen. Scovlll f.e' that he 1 still shunned and despised by everybody for his part In trying to save tho neck of Gulteau. Cuban Workmen Strike. Of late the masons In Havana have been asking for an Increase of wages. Monday about 4.000 workers held a conference, at which a strike was agreed upon. They ask $3.50 a day for ordinary work and $4.60 for special work. The American mason working In the city have gone on a sympathetic strike and 9.000 men are now Idle. A Dlshealened Soldier. Newton Holman, until recently an enlisted man In the United State army, aervlng In Montana and Wy oming, tried to shoot and asphyxiate himself In Cobba hotel at Washington, D. C, a few days ago. He had hurt his leg and amputation followed. On August 16 Holman came to Washing ton to try to secure a pension. A few day ago he learned that, as hi In jury was received out of the line of duty, he could not be pensioned. OTHERS SHOULD SHARE OUR fEIG. THE PHILIPPINE POLICY. President Declares That th Slars and Slrlpes Should Do tor All What It Has Dona lor Us. Iteforo an audience of 10,000 person, filling the vast Methodist Auditorium at Ocean Grove, N. J., to the doors, William McKlnley, In a sperch of five minute Inst Friday afternoon, made his Phllipplno policy as clear as day. Dr. I.annhnn, the President' form' r pastor, in an opening prayer, thanked GimI for the girt of Cuba and the Phil ippines, and Jishop Fitagernld, in In troducing the I'res-ldmt, declared thnt there wa no ronflli-t between the Stars nnd Stripes nnd he flag of the Cms nnd thnt they flew side by side. President .McKlnley then dellvind the sp.-ech as follows: Ixive of flag nnd love of country are not Inconsistent with religious fnlth. I believe there Is more love for our coun try and that more people love the flag than ever before. Wherever Ihnt flag Is raised It stands not for despotism nnd oppression, but for liberty, opportunity and humanity, nnd what that II rig has done for us we want it to do for nil people nnd all lands, which, by the for tunes of war, have come w.thln Its Jur isdiction. That flag dor not mean one thing In the United States nnd another In Pueitu Kloo and the Philippine. There has been doubt In some quarter respecting the policy of thl Government In the Philippines. I see no harm In stating It In this presence. Pea'e first, then, with charity for all. to establish a gov ernment of law and order, pri.tecilng life and property, for the well be'ng of the people who will participate In It un der the Star and Stripe. Tho scene which followed this utter ance surpasses description. The vast audience, breaking through the hounds which ordinarily repress such man f js tntlon of enthusiasm, shouted until the roof rang and 10,1X10 flags fluttered approval of the President's words. When the cheering Anally subsided the President snld: "I have said mire than I Intended to in response to your warm welcome." There were shouts of "Go on! Go on!" but the President, after again txpr? Ing his thanks, sat down. The cltw-r aenln broke out and continued for sev eral minutes. PAYMASTER THREATENED. Cubans Riot, Finding II Difficult to 0b!aln ' Their Pay Are Fired Upon end Five Dio. Five men nro dead nnd ten wounded a a result of n light Wednesday bet ween gendarmes nnd disappointed Cuban soldier nt Cuevltas, three mile from Snntlngo, where tho pay ment of the Cuban troop I progres sing. Five thousand Cubans had gathered there to receive pay, and af ter three days only uM) had been paid. Thousands who hud been disappointed ut other point bad rome to Cuevltas us the last pluco of payment in the province. The Imperfect list caused great dis satisfaction, nnd a rumor clrcu'ated thnt the paymasters would leave alarmed the men who hnl not been puld. They began to collect In groups nnd to show their nnnoynnce. Finally their threats became serious. Capt. linlint with twenty gendarmes wa present to preserve order among the applicants nnd the United States troops protected Col. Moales, the of ficer having charge of the payments. Suddenly Cnpt. llnllnt, who was mounted, was surrounded by a mob, struck by stones and bottles nnd shot In the arm. Ill men promptly fired a volley into the mob, three persons being Instantly killed and 13 wounded, two of whom died. Col. Monies' gunrd promptly sur rounded the money office, but took no part In the fighting. For a few minutes there wa a lively conflict, carbines and machete being used freely. Capt. Haliat wa the on ly gendarme wounded. All the dead were colored Cuban soldier. Thursday morning payment was re sumed under a heavy guard. There are rumors that a force Is being organ ized to attack the pny office, but these are probably unfounded. Gen. Castillo, rlvll governor of San tiago de Cuba, was at Cuevltas at the tlmo and soon restored order. COLORED CHILDREN EXCLUDED. Judge Decides That This May Be Don In New York Schools. That colored pupils may be excluded from schools where white children at tend In New York state was establish ed by a desiclon rendered by Justice Smith of the supreme court In the case of Mr. Cisco, a wealthy colored wom an, who ha been attempting for sev eral month to compel the board of education of Queensborough to admit hir children Into a school at Jamaica. Suits wese begun In Chicago Wednesday by Mrs. Virginia A. Jack son and Mrs. Edith 13. Miller of Cin cinnati, delegates to the recent con vention of the National council of Colored Women's clubs, against tho owners and managers of a theater In Chicago for an alleged refusal to allow complainants to occupy seats they bad purchased. Funston in the Hospital. A letter dated Manila, July 16, says: "Gen. Frederick Funston has been temporarily relieved from duty at San Fernando, and will go to the Second reserve hospital to receive treatment necessary by the reopening of a wound Incurred while In the Cuban army. It is thought Gen. Funston will not again return to active duty, as his term of service will expire September 2, and he has requested and been granted permission to return to the United States with the Kansas regiment." F. Sullivan, of Jersey City, struck a match to light his cigar on the sidu of the public drinking fountain. In the center of Freehold, N. J. Immediately there was a terrific explosion. Sul livan was knocked 13 feet into the road. Manning Phillips was sitting on the edge of the fountain and was struck by pieces of the large stone base, which went flying Into the air. His leg was broken. The explosion was caused by a leak tn the gas pipes. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Thomas B. Reed has notified the governor of Maine thut he ha resigned from Congress. The contributions to the Dewey home fund Wednesday were $101 20, making a total of $1,2:9 51. Gen. Miles and Corbln have agreed to take part tn the O. A. It. encamp ment at Philadelphia. President McKlnley has been elected to represent Columbus, O., encamp ment No. 78, Union Veteran union, at the national encampment In Balti more. The president la, a member of the local organisation. BIG CUT IN SUGAR. Arbuckles Slash Ihe Figures of th Trust Which Is Saib to Hav Lost 11,700,000 On Contracts Already Mad. The war In sugar, the great fight which Is being waged betwern the mighty Sugnr Trust on the one hand, and the Arbuckle and tho Independent refiner on the other, hns assumed an unprecedented virulence In Chicago, where price hnve been cut to the very bone, causing the loss of thousands of dollars per minute. It Is a battle of the giants, for the Sugar Trust hn lost, since Wednesday, It I said, $1,700,000 on contract that were made nt the price prevailing a few day ago. It wn wired In from New York that the trust' contract amounted to 2S0,. 000 barrels, but it wn learned thnt the trust had made the statement thnt It business already contracted for wa $. 000,000 barrels. If this Is true the trust may lose ns much nn $1,70(1,000 on the cut In prices of Wednesdny. The os tensible loss would be several hundred thousand dollar under these figure, but it Is said thnt the entire loss, all expenses conslderd, will be as first stnted. The slnsh In price made Tuesdny by the trust In New York and met a little Inter by the Independent refining companies, chiefly the Arbuckles, had the Influence of cutting sugar In Chi cago to such a low figure that for every barrel sold to the local trade the whole saler confessed to a loss of from 80 to 85 rents. Until Tuesdnv sugar o!d In Chicago nt $5 25 tier 100 round, or 25 cent be- trusi siasneii the riroriuct three-six promptly mnile a cut of 24 cent an cash at $."i.ni per 100 pound. Thl mean a big loss to the wholesal IUL I I It" V nr in T M r 1 T T1I1W HI1II II II 1 1 H 10 see it tnrougn. Arbuckles said: "The trust Is trying to hog everything In the country, but we are going tn bent them out. We have done that already. They mads the first reduction and then we went them one better. We can do It and not get so badly hurt ns they will. They have big contract ahead which will be af fected by this cut. and how much money will they lose on them, do you think?" , ALONE ON A RAFT. One Man Out of a Crew ol Filtoen Saved Frtm Death. Cnpt. node of the strnmshtp Catania which arrived at Uulllmore Wednes day from Daiqulra, Cuba, report: "August 9.0 rescued from a raft Ar thur Necalnsa of Gothenburg, one of the crew of the Norwegian bark Drot, from Pascagouln, August 3, for Buenos Ayres. He say that on August 11, when off the Florida straits, tho Drot got Into the center of a hurricane. The vessel wns wrecked. "The crew consisted of fifteen mej eight of whom got on a raft, formed of part of the derk of the disabled bark. After being tossed about for a short time by the high winds, the raft part ed, six men remaining on fire portion, while Necnlasas and the first mate clung to the other. Necnlasna lost sight of the other portion of the raft almost immediately. After drifting about five days without food or water tho first mate Jumped overboard and was drowned. "Neenlnsns nys that three steamers passed within a mile c.f tho raft, but did not answer the signals of the un fortunate man. The Catnnla picked up Nocalnsas more dead than alive on the 2'lth Ipst. Nothing Is known of what became of the other member of the crew." COMPELLED THEIR RETURN. Engineer Covers a Dessrting Crew With a Mauser Rifle. The gasoline schooner Maglo wo wrecked off Hancho VleJo bay, Santa Rosa island, Thursday. The captain and crew hud been fighting and much bad blood existed between them. The captain was In strange water and had a man sounding with the lead, but he failed to report and a reef was struck. All the men Jumped Into a skiff except the engineer and another man, who were In the hold. When they reached the deck they saw the skiff, going off. The engineer called for them to re turn, but they yelled back: "She Is going to turn turtle. Every man for himself." A Mauser covered them and they returned. All afterward landed safe on shore and walked 20 miles to a ranch house. Nominations Ey Pennsylvania Republicans. The Republican of Pennsylvania last Thursday made the following nominations at Harrlsburg: For State Treasurer Lleut.-Col. James E. Harnett of the Tenth Penn sylvania volunteer regiment, Washing ton, Pa. For Supreme Court Judga J. Hay Brown of Lancaster. For Superior Court Judge Joslah R. Adams of Philadelphia. The platform applauds President Mc Kinley's administration, both In war and In peace: Indorse the St. Louis plntform; glorifies the record of Penn sylvania soldiers on the battlefield: favnn ihn ,nrniirfiarinifnt nf th m.r. cnuni nitinnej ijiuinea wie wurn u , " , . Willi,, .v. M.nn b v.uana Tr, Boise Penrose. Dewey Saluted by lha French. The United States cruiser Olympla arrived at Vllle Franehe, France, Wed nesday morning. The usual salutes were exchanged. The French cruisers Admiral Chor ncr, Davout and Frlant, under com mand of Vice Admiral filename, fired a salute tn honor of Admiral Dewey. Admiral Dewey Is apparently In ex cellent health. He will stay at Nice for a week and will take ..art In as few functions us possible. Admiral Dewey received vlBlts from Vice Admiral lilename. Henri Vlg naud, the United States charge d'af faires at Paris, and the United State vice consul at Nice. Marlted th Treatment William Antholti, a section foreman, wa taken from the house of Mrs. Frank Hlnseman at Cary, III., by an Indignant crowd of citizens recently, who gave him a ducking unier the town pump and a ride out of town on a rail and warned him never to return under penalty of being tarred and feathered. Antholtz. It Is charged, neglected his family for the wife of one of the section hands. Th Largest Telescope. Professor Edward Charle Pickering, of the Harvard Observatory, I at Kingston. Jamaica, seeking a aultabla location for th largest telescope In the world, which I being constructed at Cambridge especially for observing the new planet, which Is due to past very close to the earth 18 months hence. He Is favorably Impressed with Jamaica's advantages. Professor Pickering established the Mis.l Ob servatory of Peru. X