X LONDON HORRIFIED. Women and Children of the Boer Being Starved to Oeath Order Itsued to Tak No Prisoner. Telegrams from London jay: There is a strong expression of discontent with Lord Kitchener'. course nt the Cape. The- disastrous turn which the war lias taken since Lord." Roberts .'withdrew from the field is attributed in a large de gree to llocr resentment antued by the crurl and oppressive methods which Kitchener has adopted for the suppres sion of ibe conllict. If the reports in regard to Kitchener are true, Weylcr, the Spanish tyrant, who drove the Cubans to revolt, was humane in comparison with the English general. The floor women and children .ire bring concentrated in camps, and then deliberately starved to death. Their farms arc burned and their crops de stroyed, and then they arc herded with in certain lines which they arc forbid den to leave under pain of being shut du'i. The women and children are said to be perishing by scores nml hundred, and when it is remembered that the Boers are a free people and not rebels against the power which is seek inn to crush them, the Kitchener policy seems all the more infamous. It is in effect a policy of extermina tion and it i the knowledge of this fact and the feeling that their own ex tinction will follow the crushing out of the Transvaal Dutch that is making nearly every British subject of Dutch descent in Cape Colony and Natal a friend of the Uocr invaders, and a se cret or open foe of the English. Hundreds of Dutch colonists have en listed in the llocr ranks and the latter are at least twice as strong as they v-rc when the crossed the Orange liver. A dispatch from Cape Town says tint the English residents arc in a panic and in the sections of Cape Colony occupied or threatened by the llocr. the En; lish are appealing to their Dutch neigh bor for protection. The feeling against Lord Kitchener and lii s barbarous system of warfare has been much intensified by a report to the effect that he had ordered the troops operating against DcW'et to take ivj prisont rs. NO TIMBER FAMINE. Annual Cul On'y Amounts to Two Per Cent ot Forest Land. The total exports of timber, lumber and manufactured wood for the fiscal year ending June .10, icjo.i, amounted to $50.50X416. Imports of corresponding products amounted to $20,591,008, show ing a balance of almost exactly $.10,000, 000 01 exports of this class over, imports. About half of these imports come from Canada, consisting mainly of planks, boards, logs and shingles. Another prin cipal feature in our timber imports is the tropical timber, including Cuban ma hogany and cedar, and Mexican mahog any and cedar, and mahognay from Central and South America and Africa. The wooded area of the United Stales is 1.004, 496 square miles, or if per cent, of the land area. From this standing supply of timber it is estimated that from i.8,!0.ooo,ooo,ooo to 2..too,poo,ooo, 000 of board measure feet of lumber arc available. The annual lumber cut has been estimated for the year 1800 at 40, 000,000,000 feet; that is, we cut approxi mately 2 per cent, of our National tim ber resources annually. Of this cut 13, 000,000,000 are credited to the lake re gion, 10.000,000.000 to the Southern States, 6.000,000,000 to the Northwest and north Atlantic States, 5.000.000,000 to the Central States, 4.000,000,000 to the f.. Pacific States and 2,000,000,000 to the y mountain States, indicate that our timber f supply is not disappearing at an alarm ing rate, provided the destructive waste of forest fires can be prevented. California Town Snowed In. Wolverville, county teat of Trinity county, in the northern part of Cali fornia, has been snowbound since the latter part of December. Two men have come out on horseback, enduring many hardships. They report provn lons extremely scarce. One man was frozen to death. Efforts will be made to take in mail and supplies by pack trains, NO REWARD FOR MOB. Gov. Stanley, of Kansas, Sayt it Would Bo Useless to Offer it. Gov. Stanley, of Kansas, says he will not offer a reward for the arrest of any one concerned in the burning of Fred erick Alexander, the negro, at the stake in Leavenworth, "It would be of .absolutely no use to issue the offer," . said the governor. "If the guilty per sons were arrested they would neces sarily have to undergo the first trial in Leavenworth county, and on account of the present condition of public senti ment there it would be useless to at tempt to prosecute anybody there for the crime," A joint resolution has been passed by the Legislature 'condemning the Leav enworth lynching. It favors rigid in vestigation and demands that the per- Went Over Niagara Falls. John Wiser and John Marsh, of Ni agara Falls, attempted to cross Niagara . river above the falls. They lost control Yof their boat and were carried into the y rapids. Wiser, who was unable to swim, was swept over the falls and drowned. Marsh, after a desperate struggle in the , icy water, was rescued by persons along ' the shore. Oklahoma Mission Destroyed. The Catholic Mission of the Sacred Heart was burned in Potawamac coun ty, Oklahoma, rendering homeless four hundred persons. No lives were losr. he building was entirely destroyed, en- ailing a heavy loss. The Sacred Heart Mission was established in 1876 by the Vsuit fathers, for the Indians. The 'lurch was the finest in the West, cot .ining a library of 20.000 volumes, in iding many ancient books from Italy, nce and Spain. LATEST NEWS NOTES. . A mob of 2no masked men burned the pesthousc at South Omaha, Neb. The business portion of Roanne, Ind., was wiped out by fire. Loss, $75,000. It is reported that Andrew Carnegie will give Conncaiit. O., a free library. At Lebanon, Tenn., fire destroyed five, business houses. Loss, $75,000, partly insured. , As a result of a riot nt Corbiu, Ky., three persons are dead and three or four others wounded. Wholesale dealers in tea are com plaining that their business' is suffering from the war tax. ' .' ' . The Italian steamer Lono ha been, lost. Many bodies from th Week have been washed ashore. sty Gov. Allen signed the first bill passed by the Puerto Kican Legislature, pro viding for jury trials. 1 The U. S. S. Scorpion has been dis patched to Guianoco, Venezuela, to pro tect American interests. Four firemen were injured and $35,000 worth of property was destroyed in a Chicago fire Saturday night. A death in New York revealed that the deceased, who always passed as a man, was really an old woman. DeWet is said to have crossed the Vaal river and to be concentrating hi) commandoes for a united attack. ft is rxpected' that the public Ses sions of the Cuban constitutional con vention will begin next Monday. Five Chinese girl were sold at auc tion in San Francisco, Cab, Saturday, bringing from $1,750 to $2,500 each. The naval appropriation bill carries $77,016,635, and provides for two new battleships and two armored cruisers. Four children of Benjamin Miller, of Elkhart. Ind., were burned to death by a lamp exploding while Miller was ab sent. An Ashtabula (O.) colored youth, who tried to extort $500 from a banker by a threatening letter, was trapped and captured. Uncle Sain will hold the present gov ernment of Venezuela responsible for any damage done to American asphalt interests. Lord Kosebery says immense for tunes and business sagacity of Ameri cans threaten England's commercial prosperity. The lynchers of a Florida Iranswreek er cut otf his lingers as mementos. One of them fainted at the negro's efforts to save himself. Congressional committeemen investi gating the Ilooz cases nt West Point characterize hazing as villainous and contemptible. Frank Crowell, superintendent of Swiit & Co.'s glue factory, was killed by smoke at a tire in a Chicago apart ment house. The National Rolled Steel Car Com pany is preparing to build a $1,500,000 plant near Pittsburg, Fa., to build cars of rolled steel. F'x-Gov. James A. Mount, of Indiana, expired suddenly at his hotel nt In dianapolis Wednesday. Heart trouble was the cause. A valet, an ex-United States soldier, looted the jewel box of Mrs. Joseph (iarsidc, in a London hotel, securing $75,000 in valuables. W. II. Haskins has been re-clectcj president of the Ohio Mine Workers, b. H. Sullivan, of Coshocton, was elected vice president. Physicians announce that Queen Vic toria's death is fast approaching. Mem bers of the royal family arc at the bed side, awaiting the end. At New rtaltimare, Mich.. WillianrF. Sandell & Co.'s bank was broken into by cracksmen, wlio forced open the safe and secured about $3,500. In a battle with horse thieves Cashier Volt, of a fifayelte, Ind., bank, was shot and one of the thieves was serious ly wounded before capture. An anonymous gift of $400,000 has been made to Syracuse (N. Y.) univer sity, conditioned upon a similar sum be ing raised by the institution. Attorney David C. Fitzgerald, of Buf falo, has been indicted in eight cases by the grand jury', charging subordina tion of perjury in divorce trials. Martin Wright, late Socialist candidate for governor of Utah, was instantly kill ed bv the discharge of'a revolver, which accidentally fell from his pocket. Venezuela is defying the United States in the dispute over the asphalt lake claimed by the Bermudcz Aspha't Company, and bloodshed is feared. The four classes at West Point held meetings and decided to abolish all forms of hazing, and the congressional investigating committee was so notified. Both branches of the Colorado Legis lature have adopted resolutions provid ing for a joint committee to investigate the grievances of the striking coal min ers. At Berlin, Ontario, a 5-year-old child of Mrs. Katherinc Ebcl was abducted by a man wdio secured the child under the excuse that he wanted its photo taken. It is practically assured that neither West Virginia nor Iowa will be admit ted to the competitive coal field nt the coming convention of miners at Indian apolis. Two persons were seriously injured and .15 others slightly hurt in a fire which destroyed the Stewart hotel, St. Louis. Mo. Forty guests lost their clothing. It is reported that a lot of Creek In dians, known as the Snake Band, are up in arms near Eufalula, I. T., and that a peaceable Creek, resisting arrest, has been shot. The plant of the Pennsylvania Chair Company, at Towanda, was destroyed by fire Friday, causing a loss of $30,000 on the buildinf and machinery and $65, 000 on the stock. The India government has accepted the Indian currency committee's pro posal of 1898. providing that the profit on the coinage of rupees be kept in gold as a special reserve. The coroner's verdict in the Fredonin (N. Y.) normal school fire finds that do officers of the school were criminally to blame lor tne ueatns ot tlie 11 stu dents and the janitor. The Pacific Charter Company which has been organized in San bUncisco, proposes to bring 1.000,000 Jfhinese to Mexico and establish fisheVes, canner ies and warehouses along Jhe coast. PLOT REVEALED BI RNARGKIST. WANTS PROTECTION. A Greek Tellt New York Judge of a Band Formed lo Rill Americans Several .', . Conspirator Arrested. Elia Masuras, a Greek, the com plainant in an assault case which came before .City Judge. Kellogg, of Yonkers, N. Y., Sunday, told a startling tale of a plot of Greek anarchists to kill prom inent Americans, and would have told more had the court not stonned him and turned him over to the police that they might quietly investigate the case. Sev eral arrests have already been made and a number more are planned. itn tlie stand Masuras said that In Greece he had been a member of nn an archist society. Some time ago it feil to hi lot to kill a public man in the United States and he was ordered to conic to this country and place himself under the orders of the American branch of the society. After reaching America he affiliated himself with a branch of the anarchist organization at Yonkers, but finally be came frightened, withdrew and refused to carry out the mission entrusted to him. whereupon an attempt was made to kill him which led to the exposure. The police assert that they believe the story told by Alasuras. and they say that the affair has led to the discovery of an anarchist band of a dangerous charac ter. TROUBLE WITH VENEZUELA. President Castro la Provoking a Quarrel WWi the United States. The navy department has sent its in structions to Commander Sargent, of the gunboat Scorpion, to sail from La guyra, Venezuela, for Guanoco to pro tect American interests at the latter place. hile our efforts to straighten ogt the complications with Venezuela are much embarrassed by the growth of the revolutionary movements, fur there are two, the issue is made directly with the Venezuelan government, as represented by the de facto president, Castro. . It is his agents who are threatening to seize the arms of the New York and Iter nuuiez Company's employes, which movement the Scorpion is to prcve.it if she. can reach the point of trouble in time. Stale department officials re gret that the Castro element is not meet ing the ndyances of the United States in n conciliatory spirit, but is showing n disposition to resent the department's request that no arbitrary action be tak en respecting the asphalt concessions until the incumbents have had an op portunity to assert their legal right. The aspect is regarded as unpromising for n speedy settlement, and the case will require to be handled with great delicacy to avoid an open rupture. DIED TO ESCAPE LYNCHING. Defaulting Bank Cashier Suicides Rather Thin Risk Mob Violence. The town of Wathcna, Kan., is in a panic over the wrecking of the State bank, whose cashier, Frank Harpster, blew out his brains and thus escaped lynching at the hands of the townspeople, more than 250 of whom are rendered penniless by the wildcat speculations of the cashier with the bank's funds. . It is definitely known that Harpster squan dered $1.10,000 of the people's money and how much more it is impossible to tell at present. 1 he feeling against the board of direc tors of the bank is bitter, and it only requires a leader to attempt to inflict capital punishment upon those wdio are morally guiltv of some of the acts of the cashier, because they paid no at tention to the affairs of the institutions, but permitted Harpster to loot it at his will. The losses from the failure of the bank have wide ramifications. All classes are affected. It will fall most heavily upon the poorer tradesmen, workiugmcn ajid farmers. Pension Claims Lost. More than 80.000 pension claims in the office of Milo B. Stevens & Co., at Washington, D. C, were dcsiioycd in the fire Saturday night. Many of the pa pers were to be used as evidence in at tempting to secure favorable action bv the Pension Office on claims, and can not be replaced. In addition to the nension claim. there were destroyed thousands of claims pending before the Treasury De partment and J'atent UlJice. In these the loss will fall upon the claimants. HAZING CONDEMNED. Senator Allen Makes Pointed Remark on West Point Practice. In discussing the army bill Senator Allen, Populist, Nebraska, made a vio lent attack upon hazing at the West Point military academy and declared that the prize fighter is a gentleman compared with some of those young ruf fians nt West Point. "Place one,'" he said, "of the old volunteer officers at the head of that place, and in six weeks he will stop hazing or there will be some dead cadets. I have information which leads me to believe that hazing at West Point is r.csorted to for the purpose of forcing out of the institu tion cadets appointed from civil life, in order to make room for the sons of army officers. And if thev cannot force out the cadet by humiliation and in timidation, they prescribe a course of examination which they could not pass themselves, and thus force the proscrib ed cadet from the school." Gen. A. J. MacKay Dead. Gen. Andrew Jackson Mackay died after few days' illness in New York, Friday. He was quartermaster general on the staff of Gen. George H. Thomas, who commanded the army of the Cum berland. He was born at Caledonia, N. Y., and possessed a ranch in Texas un til the war began. He enlisted in Wash ington when the first call for volunteers came and rose to the rank of general af ter servipg throughout the five year of strife. KANSAS LYNCHERS. Supposed Murderer ol Pearl Forbes Dragged From Jail and Cremated Dead Girl' Father Applied the Match. Fred Alexander, the negro who on Saturday evening attempted to assault Mis Eva Roth and who was supposed to have assaulted' and killed Peart Forbes, in Leavenworth, Kan., in No vember last,' was taken from the sheriff's guard by a mob Tuesday and burned 'at the stake at the scene of his crimes, half a dozen blocks from the center of the city. Probably 8,000 people witnessed the .lynching. The negro wa taken from hi. cell in the State penitentiary Tuesday after noon 'and taken to the Leavenworth jail, where he was. locked in a cell. Hardly had the task been completed when the mob reached the jail and de manded the prisoner. The crowd first attempted to gain admission to the jail by peaceful menns, but Sheriff Ever hardy refused to grant their demands. In a trice heavy sledge hammers and cold chisels were brought into action and nfter a few minute work the doors were forced open, and with an exultant cry the infuriated mob espied the negro crouching in his cell. In a short time the doomed man wa in the jail yard, surrounded by an im mense throng, which clamored for re venge. Still protesting his innocence, Alexander was taken to the scene of the murder of Pearl Forbes. The first thing done was to plant a railroad iron up right in the mud. This was made fast to cross irons firmly bound to the up right iron with wire.' Around the im provised stake wood and boards were piled. To this the man was dragged and chained in a standing position to the upright railroad iron. Chains and irons were wrapped about him, and, with his hands still shackled, he was made fast to the post. Coal oil was then poured over him. Coal oil was then applied for tUe sec ond time, and while it was being done Alexander called to acquaintance in the crowd, and said goodby to them. John Forbes, the father of the mur dered girl, lighted the match. Again Alexander was asked to make a con fession, but he replied that he had noth ing to say. In live minutes the negro was hanging limp and lifeless by the chains that hound him. As soon as the crowd saw that life was extinct, it be-, gan to slowly disperse. Hundreds, however, stayed to the last. ALVORD GETS THIRTEEN YEARS. New York Bank Teller Who Got Away With $690,000, Sentenced Cornelius L. Alvord, Jr., the default ing note teller of the First National bank of New York, ha been sentenced to i,i years' imprisonment. The amount of his defalcation was $000,000. Judge Thomas in imposing sentence said that he must take into considera tion that the banks were trusted by the public and that the prisoner nt the bar liad betrayed this trust. He then sen tenced him to eight years in Sing Sing under count 39 of the indictment, which charged him with making false entries in the books of the bank, and five years under count 50, which charged him with falsifying the clearing house sheet. The live years' sentence is to begin at the expiration of the eight years. The maximum nenalty for the offense to which Alvord had pleaded guilty is 10 years' imprisonment on each count, or 20 years in all. CABLE FLASHES. The ship Noel Tryvan foundered in the English channel and It of her crew were drowned. Y'oung Baron Rothschild was serious ly wounded by Count dc Lubersac in a French duel. Attention is being called in England to the commercial depression in Ger many and Russia. An explosion in the Koenig Ludwig mine at Recklinghausen, Westphalia, Germany, caused 10 deaths. Verdi, the composer, refused to write a. National hymn for Italy, saying it could not be done in time of peace. The steamer Kaiserin was wrecked on the island of Rcnneon, in the Indian ocean, and 25 persons were drowned. The Prussian government has con tracted for 255 locomotives, 505 passen ger cars and 3,060 freight cars, costing 35,715,000 marks. The city of Amsterdam, Holland, has appropriated $2,412,000, for an electric power plant, and there is a chance for American" bidders. The Bolivian forces have been de feated by the army of the republic of Acre, South America, and are besieged at Puerto Alonzo. The Bank of Norway has lowered its rate of discount from 6'A to 6 per cent., indicating that normal business condi tions again prevail. Ten persons were killed and many were injured as the result of an explo sion in a hat factory at Denton, near Manchester, England. The Crown Prince Oscar, of Sweden, for the first time Thursday opened rigsdag in his capacity as regent. He made a good impression. Mr, Johnstone, a collector of customs, fought five lions in Northern Rhodesia, South Africa, killing two, but afterward died of bites he received. A celebrated occulist. Prof. Hernnn Pagenstrecber, of Wiesbaden, is touring England and the continent attending to the eyes of royalty and nobility. Vera Gclo, a Russian girl student at the college of France, tried to shoot the aged professor. Another student inter cepted the bullet" and was badly wound ed. Fridav Ambassador White presented the President's congratulations on the occasion of the celebration of the bi centenary of the coronation of the first kiiif of Prussia. Carupano, the last town occupied bv the Colombian revolutionist, has sur rendered. The departments of Bolivia and Magdalena are said to have been completely pacified, A fire in the Institute of Pathology in Berlin has destroyed a large part of Professor Virchow's unique collection of skulls, including specimen from Peru and; the Philippine. IS ENVOY'S PLIGHT. Delegate fo Fighting Boer Mad prisoner by Burgher British "Stop the War" . Commllteo Attack Kllchener. - Telegram from Pretoria- say : Boer women, brought in by the 'military, rc poft that William Sleyn, who was-appointed a delegate of the Boers to nsk the fighting Boers to surrender under Lord Kitchener' proclamation, wa made a prisoner and sent to Pietrewief, accused of high treason. . , . Boer families and their stock are be inu brought into convenient centers from all over the country. They nrc kept in camps and fed. Those who sur render voluntarily are supplied with full ration and the Women whose husbands nrc still in the field are provided for on a reduced scale, which is raised wh?n the husbands surrender to a full allow ance. Colville's column, marching from New Denmark to Vlaklaagte, wa attacked by 1.000 Boers, divided into two forces. The cavalry were compelled to retire until protected by four companies of rifle, .hidden behind a ridge, who were waiting with bayonet. The Boers then made a speedy retreat, leaving several dead and wounded from the heavy Brit ish fire. Eventually both attacks were repulsed, the Boer losing heavily. The British lost one killed and 15 wounded. The London "stop the war" commit tee has issued this declaration: "Orders which a British officer report he per sonally received reveal the adoption by Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchener of a policy having for it aim the extcrmina ton of a heroic nationality by starving it women and children and the delib erate massacre of unarmed prisoners." The latter clause alludes to Gen, Kit chener's alleged secret orders to Gc;i. ESCAPED THE GALLOWS. A Quick Votdict Reached in the Patterson, - New Jersey, Tragedy. "We find them guilty of murder in the second degree." So said Charles Brett, foreman of the Paterson jury, as he stood up with his II colleagues, and looked into the straining eyes of Wal ter McAlister, Andrew Campbell and Walter Death. It was 8:05, the hour nml minute when three months to the day that Jennie Bosschieter had left her home in Paterson.' N. J., and started to ward Kent's drug store, there to encoun ter two of these men, and to be lured to the midnight revel that ended in her death. The forfeit of life was not demanded. The youngest of the prisoners will be 11 man of middle age or "more when he leaves a felon's cell, for the Jersey law fixes a maximum penalty of 30 years for murder in the second degree, and tho-e best informed sax. that Judge Dixon will impose nothing less than the maximum, especially as the jury made no discrim ination and recommended lionc of the prisoners to mercy. It was a compro mise verdict that was reached after three hours' deliberation. As for the prisoners, they were almost happy in escaping death. Counsel for the prisoners announced that the case would be appealed. NEW YORK MURDER MYSTERY. Mangled Eody Discovered in a Trunk on tho East River Pier. Within a rusty green trunk, which lay unnoticed on a pile of skids at the en trance to pier II, East river. New York, was hidden a startling murder mystery, which in many features resembles tbe Guldensuppe case. A curious policeman, whn opened the trunk, found in it the body of a man whose throat had been cut. Two hours later the murdered man was identified by a woman as Mayer Weissbard, a jewelry peddler, who recently disappear ed. The man had been murdered and rob bed and his body stuffed into the cheap little trunk to hide the crime. The trunk had been left at the pier some time early Wednesday morning. The intention of the murderers wa evidently to throw the trunk into the East river. The cut in the man's throat was about six inehes long and had been done with unerring aim. The wound was a clean one and had evidently done its work almost instantaneously. The murdered man is 35 years old and leaves a wife and several children. When he left home he had a stock of jewelry valued at $200 and some money. Philippine Legislation. The Philippine commission has pass ed acts giving in domestic products, the Jolo ' archipelago free trade with all Philippine ports and providing for the issuance of licenses to masters and mates of seagoing vessels. The United States cable ship Burnsid: has finished the -vork of laying the ca ble connecting the island of Negro with Vorthern Mindanano. Zamboanga and Jolo will soon be connected. Mr. H. Phelps Whitemarsh, recently appointed governor of the province of Bengnet, reports that several towns in the province have held elections and organized local governments. Fourth Robbery ot One Bank. Thieves broke into the bank of John Conway & Co., Rochester, Pa., dyna mited the safe and got away with about $.100 in silver and small bills. Since the bank was robbed last October, the bulk of the cash has been placed in the vault of the First National bank for safe keeping over night and this accounts for the small amount secured by the thieves. There is no clue. This is the fourth time the bank has been robbed. Tortured With Hot Iron. Martin Reich, aged 62 years, who liv ed alone at his home at Shamokin, Pa., was the victim of a brutal assault by masked burglars. The burglars, five in number, overpowered the old man and applied red-hot pokers to his body ami feet until he finally told them where his money could be found. This amount ed to $1.13.50. After dividiag the money among them the burglar pounced upon Reich and kicked him until he wa al most dead. They then) made their escape. QUAY RE-ELECTED. Th Pennsylvania Legislator Makt Rial United State 8ena1or Received 1 30 Vote In Hous and Senate. Colonel Matthew. Stanley Quay won the battle of his life Tuesday .and will again be the senior senator from Penn sylvania. He received the vote of 26 senators and 104 representative .on the, first and only ballot, three, more than a majority of both bodies, 'of tlie men who gave him their votes 128 are Re publicans, O. R. Washburn is a former Populist and W. J. Garvin of the first Schuylkill district was elected as a Dem ocrat. . ' The remainder of the- vote were rast a follows: Guffcy, Senate 12, House 44; Dalzell, Senate 10, House 24; Smith,. Senate t. House 11; Huff, Sen ate 1, House 6; Stewart, House 3: Olm sted, t; Tubbs. ij Harris, 1; McCor miek, 1; McConway, Ij Swallow, li The scenes in the Senate and House prior to and during the balloting were intensely exciting. The combined ef- , fort 0 the Capitol police, reinforced by a large squad of Harrisburg bluecoat3, were powerless In attempting to pre serve anything like order. Members had to fight their way into the House and finally the doors were broken down and the rrowd rushed in without re straint. Every foot of space in the House was occupied. Members werffv, crowded out of their seats and the desks were occupied by one or more of the dear people. When Senator M. S. Quay is sworn into the United State Senate he will receive a check from the United States Government for nearly $10,000. His sal ary will date from March 4, 1899, when he was retired and the vacancy created. TEXAS OIL EOOM. Th City ol Beaumont Enjoying tho Usual Re Mi'. of an Oil Strike. The excitement at Beaumont, Tex., over the big oil well increases each hour. There is no indication that the flow of oil from the geyser is diminish ing nor is there any change in the char acter of the fluid. ' The town continues to fill up and the streets suggest a great holiday event. Physicians are becoming real estate men. The lumber indusirv i (nrcmMrn , in the wild rush for oil lands. The bus- J ..I 1.- ,i:-.:a . . ,, 1 : iomtici conn 111 ine middle of the session has been continued and the court is idle. Throngs of people frequent the streets until late at night and everything is oil. The Standard Oil Company has scores of representa tives there. City property without oil prospects has increased five-fold in value. A lot near the business center which could have been bought last week for $5,000 now is unpurchasable at $20, 000. The city council has granted a fran chise over the streets for a gas and oil pipe line company for the purpose of transferring oil and gas. CAPE COLONY BRITISH DEFEATED. Six are Killed and Seventeen Wounded in Sever Engagement. The casualty list shows that there has been a severe engagement, with a loss of 6 killed, 17 wounded and 5 missing, at Murraysburg, wdiere the Dutch are said to have been joining the invaders. Murraysburg is 16 miles west of Graaff Reinet. s The government has decided to send large reinforcements to Lord Kitchener, but the war office in carrying out this decision, has determined to enlist 5,000 Yeomanry volunteers. Lord Roberts Tuesday further empha sizes Jhe unsatisfactory condition of South Africa in. a letter to the mayor of Portsmouth, postponing the presenta tion of a sword of honor from that city. He said: "It is most distasteful to me to be honored and feted and called upon to rejoice while so many are in bitter grief and before we can properly re turn thank that the cloud is being roll ed away which has for more than a year darkened the homes and crushed the hearts of so many in our country." Clark Elected Senator. ...-' W. A. Clark has been elected United States senator from Montana, to suc ceed Thomas M. Carter. Mr. Clark re ceived 57 votes out of 93 cast on the first ballot, and was declared elected. No one was elected for the short term. FARMERS FIGHT A DUEL West Virginians End a Family Quarrel With Revolver On Dead. NearDunlow, Wayne county, W. . Va., William Porter was fatally shot Wednesday afternoon by Moses Smith. Both were wealthy farmers. Two weeks ago there was a quarrel between the families of Porter and Smith, and since that time the men have been en emies. Wednesday afternoon Porter went to the home of Smith and called him into his yard. Porter pulled a revolver, at the same time demanding an apology fro'n Smith for certain remarks alleged to have been made. Smith had a gun also, and after Porter had fired Smith, who nroved the better marksman, shot Porter dead. 0n Thousand Men Out. The Williamstown (Pa.) colliery, con trolled by the Pennsylvania railroad, has suspended operations. The trouble is the result of a demand made by the enu ployes that the laborers and timbern should have a 10-hour day instead eight, the colliery employs i, and was the last to quit work dy anthracite strike last tall. Mad $20,000,000 by Samuel Lewis, the de usurer, left 4.000,000, alii under his will to his wii exception of 200,000. wf among relations. In hi -1 presses a desire that his give in her own name 4 vide dwellings for the poof x. 250,000 to tne rnnce i Cital fund; 100,000 to oard of guardian ol 1 aoo,ouo to various hoiol,