E!C ill Cffil COMPLETED GIGANTIC SCHEME. The Conclusive Session Wa Held Saturday. The Name ii the "United Staloi Con eoildaled Steal Company." J. rierpont MorK.m. of New York, has jot completed 1 tie project ty which another and tin- greatest r(tioliil;ili-n of i a; i t :i1 ii added to ttic notable list of those of the hist ten years. The steel trust plan was cotriiiuinated nt a or.ii renec in his oitice late Saturday af Urtv.oit. An official aim luncetncnt says thai the Carnegie Company, the Federal Steel Company, the National Tube ( ompany, the Ameriean Steel it Wire Company, the Ameriean Tmplate Com pany, the National Steel Company, the Ainiriean Steel lloo Company and tlu American Sheet Steel Company are to he cmhincd into one concern, which is to i-'ic stock in return for theirs, the a'uation Intiug been iletermineil upon the assets anil earning power o the rc spi' tivc corporations thus merged. The new trust, it i- understood, will he called the Cnilcil States Consolidat ed Sn el Company. It will have a total capitalization of If i.ioo.ixjo.ooo. Of this $,(0,000,000 will be 5 per cent. general mortgage bonds. $4n,ooo,oix will be 7 per tent, stock ami $400,000,000 will he common .stock. COIRS DEFEATED. DeWet Routed by Col. Plumer'a Column and Loses Hit Artillery. (in. DcWct was routed Saturday by Col. I'lutncr, with whom were Col-. Hi nnikcr, Cradilock, Jeffrey and Cab bo. This success was preceded by a si lica oi desperate attempts on the part of the Boers to escape from the water licit of the Orange and the lin:ke rivers. (.it'll. F'rencli reports from l'iet Rc ticf that the result of the columns sweeping the country ea-t is that the liners are retreating in scattered and dis organized p.irtii-s to the number of some 5.000 in front of him. Am-tcrday and l'iet Keticf have been occupied and there troops are protecting the Swazi frontier. French will push on. but i much hampered by the continuous heavy rains. Summary of total losses indicted up on the enemy up to February 10: Two hundred and ninety-two Hocrs known to have been killed and wounded in ac tion. 56 taken prisoners. 183 surrender ed, one 15-pounder Run. 40J riiles, ics, tioo lounds of snviU ammunition, 3500 1iores, 70 mules, .1.5,10 trek oxen, 18,700 cattle, 155.400 sheep and I.070 wagons :ud carls captured. Our casualties arc: Five officers and 41 men kiilcd, and (our llicrrs and inS nu n wounded. LEI T TO SAVAGEl' MERCY. Ki'chcncr Turned fouth AHsan Homes Cvsr to Forccious Dlacki. London telegrams say: The British war office meets with silence Gen. De Wet's charge that Kitchener has been conducting a war of extermination. The fact was known before DeWet told it. Not onlv have the lioer women and children been left :o the mercy of the kavaVc blacks, but the Basutos have been incited to attack the defenseless homes and destroy or carry off their ;n m:".cs. The English have been content to kill or deport the men, leaving it for the blacks to finish the work on the women and children, and as all weapons arc seized when the English can get hold of them, the women are utterly without means of fighting off the savages when they come. Americans can get an idea of the sit uation by imagining the male settlers nt a frontier territory carried off as pris oners, and the women and children loft in their homes without means of de fence with hordes of bloodthirsty In dians nearby. Chwang Commits Suicide. Pekin advices assert that the empress dowager has already caused the decap itation of Vu-Hsien, and that under im perial orders, Trince Chwang has com mitted suicide. Li Hung Chang has assured the foreign envoys that the sen tence of the imperial court on these two men has been carried out in accordance with the demand of the powers. TO TAKE OKLAHOMA LAND. Chicago G. A. R. Mon Forming a Club to go to tho Torritory. A number of Civil war veterans of Chicago, 111., are discussing the advis ability of organizing a club to go t Oklahoma in search of homesteads next summer when President Mckinley is sues a proclamation declaring 2.500.000 acres of good farming land open for settlement. George S. Cragg. of U. S. Grant post No. is one of the leaders in the movement, and says that a score or more of veterans have expressed a desire to join in the scramble for land next August. The old soldiers will have an advant age ever other citizens. Under the law a man mv.r-t live on the government I reserve for five years before he owm it. With old soldiers the length of time tln-y served in the war is deducted from the five years. Each man who stakes ofT a claim is limited to 1C0 acres under the law. Co!. Robert L. Pollock Dead. Col. Robert L. Pollock. U. S. A., retired, died Sunday at Cornelius. Ore., in his Sjd year. He was a veteran of the Mexican and Civil wars and of many Indian campaigns in the West. Five Were Cr: mated. At Versailles, Ind., George James and his (our daughters, Georgia, 17; Theresa, is: Nora, 12, and Electa, 7, tverc burned to death in a fire that dc atroyed their home. Edward James, n ton 14 years old, escaped. Fatal Gas 1f out Explosion. By an explosion in one of the build ings nt the city gas works at Rich mond one man was killed, one end of the building was blown out and six men were injured, but none seriously. LATEST NEWS NOTES. It has been decided to open the gates of the Pan-American exposition on Sun day,. The payment of secret premiums is said to be the cause of Russia's tarilT reprisals. Twelve persons arc dead as a reu!t of the railway disaster near llordcn town, N. J. At Woodruff. Wis., fire destroyed nil the business houses with the exception nl one saloon. Americans living in London will as sist in raising funds for Juecn Vic toria's memorial. At Mcna, Ark.. Peter Hcrryman, col ored, was taken from the city jail and hanged by a mob. Fire in the business portion of At lanta, (in., destroyed property vahu d nt nearly $500,000. Japan, provoked by Russian occupa tion of Manchuria, may compel lonccs sioiu or go to war. The Copl.iy Cement Company, of Al lontown. Pa., sold out to a New Yoilc syndicate for over $1. 000,1:00. Negotiations for the purchase of the Danish West India islands by the Unit ed Slates are still in progress. The first snow in Mis,i-.ippi in two ears began Friday, Similar ne,vs comes from Georgia and Texas. A contribution of a quarter of a mil lion dollars by John I). Rockefeller to Drown University has been announceil. The American government is urging a reply from Dritish government on amendments to 1 lay-Pauncefotc treaty. In a quarrel at Ondurman, Egypt, be tween soldiers of two Soudanese regi ments live were killed and 20 woiiudc.!. Consul General Wildman lost his lii'e in the Rio de Janeiro disaster while waiting for treasure he had in the ship's sa ie. It i thought the Dritish government will establish tariff for revenue to rai-e money to pay the expenses of the Doer war. The big leel combine is to be known a. the United St:itcs Consolidated Steel Company, with a capital of $1, 100.000, 000. Tin re has been a tich strike on Le pine creek. 15 miles from Dawson, where quartz assaying $84 a ton was found. The question of an extra session of congress will depend largely upon '.h-' conduct this week of four filibustering senators. General Cailles, of Manila, - has is sued a proclamation offering ten Mex ican dollars apiece for the heads oi Americans. Brooding over a scolding from his father. Janles Tallison, a sensitive boy of 14. tried to kill himself at his home, at Brooklyn. Snpt. Dillingham, of the New Yoik health department, urges the people of the city to be vaccinated, a3 smallpox is spreading. The arrangement whereby farnvng im plements may be imported into Turkey free of duty has been renewed for an other decade. Illinois Legislature adopted a resolu tion to investigate Dowic's Zionist bank, but the latter says he will resist the committee. The Thirtv-scventh infantry, the first of the volunteer reg'ments to return from the Philippines, was mustered oct at San Francisco. The Columbus (O.) Anti-Saloon league proposes to bring suit against saloons on the ground that they are public nuisances. There is scarcely a city of 8,000 pop ulation or over in Indiana that has not sent 10 Andrew Carnegie its petition for a public library gift. The salary of every telegrapher on the Dig Four railroad has been advanc ed liVi per cent., a total increase of about $too,ooo a year. Mrs. Emmons Blaine presented to Chicago university the Chicago insti tute on pedagogy, representing an en dowment of $2,000,000. Gen. MaeArthur's reception at a Philippine city was extremely cordial. Important arrests of insurgent sympa thizers have been made, Senor Clsncros, delegate to Cuba constitutional convention, refuses to sign the document, and predicts war with the United States. It is believed in Germany that Rus sia's real tariff war will be with that country, and that the present one with America is merely temporary. Three persons -were killed and sev eral injured at Goshen, Ind., by the Wabash westbound passenger train run ning into a sleigh filled with people. President Steyn and Gen. DeWet, in behalf of fighting burghers, issue a proclamation in which Dritish soldiers arc charged with all manner of crime. At Rochester, N. Y.. the Gcncssee National Savings and Loan Association went into the hands of a receiver. Lia bilities of $joo,ooo are double the as se'.s. While riding on a Washington, D. C. street car. a negro swallowed a piece oi tobacco, lie became very ill, and died upon being removed to the hos ptlul. The 5 I'.aiv.okin (Pa.l silk mi'!, employ ing 250 operatives, has been closed down by the owners for an indefinite period because the employes formed a 'nio 11. A thief entered the St. John Evan gelical Roman Catholic Slovak church at Ni-w Haven, Pa., and stripped it of eventhini; valuable, robbing the poor boxct. Trouble has becu caused in Ripley county, Indiana, by a club formed by young women who agreed not to asso ciate with young men who drink 3r smoke. The William II. Crocker expedition from the Lick observatory to observe in Sumatra the total eclipse of the sun May 17, sailed from San Francisco Tuesday. The German 'government will soon send to this country an expert to ex amine American agricultural machines with a view to their introduction into Germany. The work of recovering the bodies of the victims of the mine disaster at Cumberland. D. C proceeds slowl '. So far eight bodies have been found, fov.r bcinu white. B. NATION MIS HER UNIT. THREATENS THE; JUDGE. Write tho Court lo "Quit Fooling" and Re loase Her Latter Ignored Other Mes sage Reach Judge) Hazen. Mrs. Carrie Nation, tiring of jail life, has written Judge llazcn a letter de manding release. "I want you to quit your fooling," she writes, "and let me out of here. If you cause me to miss my engagements I won't ferl like a ministering angel un to yon. It is lime for you to recover yourself before the devil, your master, makes a clean sweep with you into h . You know you are persecuting one of God's children, who loves you for Jesus' sake. Let me out that I may go about my Business of saving sin h poor deviis as vou. Write or come to see me rinhl off:" Judge Harm has ignored the letter, placing it in the waste basket with doz ens of others received on the subieit front different parts of the country. Some of these letters threaten the judge. One from Hunker Hill. Kas., says ,a committee of 50 will administer a coat of tar and feathers to him if Mrs. Na tion is not released nt once, and anoth er from n woman in Douglass, Mich., ays: "We now propose if Mrs. Nation is held longer to raise the greatest army of women the world has ever known and wipe men out of existence. It is our intention to begin with you." TEN WERE KILLED. Bad Railroad Collision In New Jortoy Fire Added lo tho Horror. One of the worst collisions in the history of the Aniboy division of the Pennsylvania railroad occurred Thurs day evening at Ruslings siding, near Uordentown, and about eight miles sou:h of Trenton. N. J. The "Nellie Dly" express front New York for Atlan tic City collided with passenger train No, 3.to, running from Camden to Tren ton. The number of dead so far as known is ten and the number of injur ed upward of 25. Most of the injured arc Italians who were riding in the smoking car of the express train. They were being taken to Atlantic City to do construction work for the railroad company. The scene at the wreck is described by those who were present as horrify ing. The two trains collided at full speed nnd both engines were complete ly demolished. The forward car of each train, in both instances a combina tion baggage and smoker, was entirely demolished also, and to add to the hor ror the wreckage took fire. The second car of the "Nellie Dly" turned over on its side and the passengers had to climb out through the windows. COMPROMISE AT PEKIN. Foreign Mlmstors and Chincso Official Fin ally Reach an Agreement A compromise has been agreed upon between the foreign envoys and the Chinese plenipotentiaries, Prince Citing and Li Hung Chang. The envoys pro pose to permit the court to commute the sentences of decapitation in the cases of Prince Tuan, Duke Lan and Cjcn. Tung Fit llsiang to life imprison ment, and will agree to the following punishments: Prince Chwang to be strangled, Yu llsicn to be decapitated, Cliao Shu C'hiao and Ying Nien to be permitted to strangle themselves and Chi Hsin and Hsu Cheng Wu to be be headed in Pekin. If the court advances no new obstacle, the negotiations on the first point of the demands of the low ers may be considered closed. This agreement removes the excuse for Count von Waldcrscc's projected military expedition into the interior. The foreign ministers think the gravity of the situaton over, but it is expected that difficulties will arise when some of the governments send their indemnity claims. AN IMPORTANT ARREST. For Aiding the Filipino Rcbola Fronch Sub. oct Come to Griot. At Fagsanjan. province of Laguna, Lieutenant Vaughan, of the Thirty seventh infantry, arrested Fernanda Rustan, general ngent of the Tabaca laria Company, on the charge of having aided the insurgents, Rustan is a French suhicct and a'close friend of the insurgent General Cailles, and was to a certain extent associated with W. D. Carman, the American con tractor, who was recently taken into custody charged with having furnished supplies to the insurgents. It has also been learned that Rustan furnished the insurgents with supplies, information concerning the American troops and their movement as well as with money. He dealt directly with the rebel General Cailles, who has been op crating continually in the district cast of Manila. Mr. Webb, the bookkeeper of the Philippine Trading Company, has made a partial confession to the effect that certain Belgians residing in Manila and the Day Lake district were impli cated in the plot to kill Captain Jones, commanding the American troops stv tioneil 111 the town of Jiay. Drcwncd Her Six Children. Mrs. Rose Wurzcr, a widow, in a fit of insanity, drowned her six children, agod from 4 to IJ years, at Uniontown, Wash. Two were boys and four girls. She threw them into a well 30 feet deep containing two feet of water, then jump ed in herself and held the heads of the children beneath the surface until all were drowned. Mrs. Wurzcr was found alive in the well. Miner Drowned by Flood. As a result of the giving away of a wall the Asylum mines at Tuscalossa. Ala., were flooded and 30 negro miner are now entombed in ten feet of water, it is thought, with little prospect of be ing rescued. Two Costly Flit. The nuckeyo hosiery mills at Dres den, Muskingum county, O., were en tirely destroyed bv fire Wednesday. The mills were' owned by Messrs. McGov era and Prettvman. Loss. 6,000. CONGRESSIONAL NOTES. Exposition Measure Paned. The bill to authorize the holding of the international exposition in cehbri lion of the centennial anniversary of the Louisiana purchnsc nt St. Louis In loo.i, and appropriating fj.onoooo therefor, passed the House Monday under sus pension of the rules by a vote of 191 lo 41. The sundry civil appropriation bill was taken up and it was figured that the appropriations would total $094,118,59?, exclusive of the sinking fund require ment of $5.1,000,000, against $057,150,86 lor the current yenr. Mr. Cnnnon showed that the incrense in the army bill was $j.f7.f5.l; in the naval bill, $1,1.51)8,057: in the postoffic? bill, fj2.i4J.joi. a total of $49.49.871. The sundry civil bill is reduced $5,6l V f5l and permanent, appropriations nre cut ?sj..i54.ooo. I lie government lias saved $0,400,000 in interest on the pti.t lie debt by the refunding bill of last ses sion, and deficiency appropriations will I. e reduced $J..5o,ooo. In the Senate the postoffiee appropria tion bill, carrying $w.i..o8.o88, was tak en tip, but no action taken. Reject Conference Report. Dy the emphatic vote of 18 to 43, tlu Senate Tuesday rejected the conference report on the military academy appro priation bill." This action came at til'. conclusion of a spirited debate on the provisions against hazing inserted in the report by the conference committee of the two branches of Congress. The House spent the day on the sun dry civil appropriation bill. The fea ture of the day was the debate on thi question of national irrigation of arid lands in the west, which came up inci dentally. Mr. Cannon reported the last of the general appropriation bills, the deficiency. Civil Appropriation Gill. The House finally passed the sundry civil appropriation bill Wednesday ami entered upon consideration of the gen eral deficiency, the last of the general appropriation bills. The Senate spent the day on the post office appropriation bill. The amend ment of Mr. Duller, of North Carolini, proposing a reduction of about 9 per cent, in the pay for railway postal ser vices, war, defeated, 18 tp 51. A sharp controversy on the pneumatic time question was precipitated by an amend ment offered by Mr. Mason extending that service to Chicago, and one by Mr, Vest extending it to St. Louis. Claim and Pension Bill Pa;. Two of the great supply bills of the government, the postoffiee and the dip lomatic and consular appropriation bills, were passed by the Senate Fri day. Early ill the day Vv'ashington's farewell address, in accordance with a custom of the Senate on Washington's birthday, was read, the reader behtf Senator Dacon. of Georgia. The House devoted the day to odds and ends of legislation. Under an ar rangement entered into, a large num ber of these smaller bills, in which ineinhcri arc individually interested, were passed. Twenty-nine claim bills and 1,19 pension bills were passed. Among the latter was the Senate bill to pension the widow of the late Gen. Henrv W. Lawton. who was kiilcd in the Philippines. As the bill passed the Senate it carried $100 a month. The House cut the amount down to $50 nn the representation that Mrs. Lawton en joyed a comfortable income. AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL Senator Dcpcw reported favorably from the committee on expositions the House bill for the Louisiana purchase exposition at St. Louis. Capt. Nehcmiah M. Dyer, who com manded the cruiser Baltimore during the battle of Manila bay, has been re tired on account of age. More than 1.000 sailors and marinri, the biggest contingent the navy has had in Washington since the civil war, will march in the inaugural parade. George D. Gear, who was appointed judge in the circuit court of Hawaii, is the man who preferred charges in the House against Delegate Wilcox of that territory. The Senate committee on mi'itary if fairs Wednesday completed its consid eration of the army appropriation bill. The committee endorsed the action ct its sub-committee in adding the Spoon er Philippine amendment to the hill. As a result of several conferences be tween the secretary of war and the Cu ban Economic commission, correspond ence has been opened with Gen. Wood at Havana with a view to the creation of a joint committee for the revision of the tariff of Cuba. Gen. Thomas M. Anderson,' senior vice commander of the Sons of the American Revolution, and other officials of that organization, were before th? House committee on judiciary Tuesday advocating legislation against the dese cration of the flag. EDICT RECEIVED AT PEKIN. Tur-g Will be Degraded, Tuan and Lan Exi id and Older Die. Trincc China; and Li Hung Cha.i. have received telegraphic instructions from the court to notify the ministers of the powers that an "edict has been issued regarding the punishment oi Chinese officials, confirmatory of the de mands made by the ministors, as fol lows: "General Tung Full Sian, to be de graded and deprived of his rank; Prince Tuan and Duke Lan, to be disgraced and exiled: Prince Chuang, Ying Nien and Chao Shu Chiao to commit suicide; Hsu Chan Yu, Yu Nsieu and Ki Haiti to be beheaded." This is not exactly what the ministers demanded, but it is considered advi sa ble to agree to it, as the demand for lives has been agreed to except in the case of General Tung Full Sian, wdioin the court is powerless to molest. There is a private understanding that his lite will be claimed when it is possible. " Farmer Boy Hold Up a Bank. The private banking institution of V. D. Vennuni at Fosher, a small haml.'t situated in the northwest part of Cham paign county, 111., was robbed by ,n lone highwayman who secured $i.6jj. MANY PERSONS DROWNED. Pacirto Mall Ship Rio do lanorlo Went to the Bottom Near San Francisco, and 122 Live Were Lot. The Pacific Mail steamer Rio dc Ja neiro rim on a hidden rock while en tering the Golden Gate, San Francisco, Cal., early Friday morning in a denc fog. She sank a few minutes after striking. It is thought that about t-12 persons were drowned, most of whom were Chinese and Japanese, but it is im possible to ascertain die exact number, as Purser John Roomy, who had the passenger fist and rosier of the crc-.v, is among the missing. At five o'clock in the afternoon 10 bodies had been recovered, two white Women, one white man and seven Chi nese. The most prominent passenger on the steamer was Koun-evillc Wild 111:111, United States consul at Hou Kong, who was accompanied by his wife and two children. It is thought all were drowned. The ship was in command of Pilot Frederick Jordan when she struck. He was rescued. Capt. William Ward went down with his vessel. A3 nearly as can be learned, there were 201 people on board the Rio dc Janeiro, as follows: Cabin passengers, second cabin, 7; steerage, Chinese and Japanese, 58; white officers, 30; Asiatic crew. 77; total. 201. The following have been account-'d for: Rescued. 79; bodies at the morgue, 10: total, 89; missing, Hi. The saved number 79, elas-ified ns follows: Cabin passengers, u; wdiite officers. 11: steerage (Asiatic), I?; crew (Clunese), 41. The lost number 12J. classed as fol lows: Passengers, officers. 19; crew (Chinese), 3O; steerage (Asiatic). 4.1. That the steamer sank almost inini" dialely after striking Is fie report of a majority of tho.c rescued. Some 'f the passengers say that she instatit'y lifted forward, and that in five minutes she went down, while others declare that she remained a 11 oat fur half an hour after she struck. The wreck lies about three-fourths of a mile south of Fort Point and about 1.000 yards oil the rocky shore. The smokestack and a portion of the upper works are visible. TiME IS AT HAND. Establishment of Civil Covornmont In tho Ph llpplnes Will Occur Soon. According to the latc-t advices from the Philippine commission the time for the establishment of civil government in the Philippines is near at hand. It was stated at the war department that the evil government will be established as soon as Judge Taft reports that the conditions in the islands justify such ac tion. It is generally understood that Judge Taft will be the first civil govern or of the islands and that Gen. Chaffee will succeed Gen. MacArthur in com mand of the military forces to be re tained there to assi-t in the maintenance of order and the eiu'orccmir.t of the laws. It is not likely, .however, that there will be any immediate change in the military command or that there will be any material reduction in the mili tary strength for many months to come. The Philippine commission has recom mended the adoption of a tarilT system and its report probably will be made public in a few weeks in order that :dl interests effected by be fully informed and heard or. the subject before the pro posed tariff is adopted and put into ef fect. CONCEDED TO AV.EH1CA. Powor Agroo Not to Sirza any Territory In China Without Consent of All. At the instance of the United States government, the powers have accepted the principle that no further individual concessions of territory in China shell be sought or obtained by any one power without international absent. Hereafter if any nation seeks to se cure room for its individual settlements or like privileges th" application must be approved by the other powers before the Chinese government will be permit ted to assent, even if it desired it o. Another important point oi the agree ment is that the present is not the most opportune time for asking new concessions. It cannot be determined whether the conclusion is retractive in effect. FINDLAND i MOURNING. Protest Againit Russlanliation of the Comtr Reverse Scnato'j Order. The people of Hclsingforg. Finland, have shown that they arc not reconcil ed to the new order of things by hostile demonstrations on the anniversary of the publication of the czar's manifesto to the Finnish senate, concerning the Russianizing of Finland. Black -.sheets, disnlr.vcd in the streets, were inscrib ed with the names of the senators who otcd in favor of the proclamation man ifesto, while at ni'it the windows of the resiliences of the Finns u-re hung with black cf.it: ins and the 'i'.-hts were extinguished. A ilei"t:'tii;n of wvmcn placed a monrnir.;; band 011 the monu ment of Alexander II. Grorvs of nun marched through the town, forced the Russian storekeepers and others to ex tinguish thoir liuhts. and made a demon stration in front of certain senators' houses. , An address, signed bv F50 women, was presented to the vice president ri the senate, protesting against the trans fer of the records of the Finnish state department to St. Petersburg. Thf transfer has been countermanded. Girl Shocti Hor Ftiher. Isaac Slater, of Fort Wayne. Ind.. was shot and seriously wounded by his 15-year-old daughter. The girl shot to save her mother from being killed at the hands of the husband and father. Tlu girl was arrested, but immediately re leased. New Smelling Proce . A chemical process is alleged to have been discovered by Dr. Millfr, of Mt, Pleasant. Pa., which will reduce high grade ores more quickly and at less cot than ha been practical heretofore. , 1 . . TWO LIVES LOST In an Effort lo Rid Btringlown of law-Break Ing Drug Slores and Speaktasl.t. Further Troublt Feared. Stringtown, an Isolated oil town in Wetzel county, W. Va., was the scene Wednesday of n calamity in which five buildings were burned and two livel lost. Stringtown Is a characteristic oil Vil Inge with rough wooden house and a few irood buildings. It is in the non- license neighborhood and "blind tigers" run wide open under the guise of drtiu stores and restaurants. There are mary gambling joint, and dives, all of whicfl are very distasteful to the native popula tion, thought encouraged by the itiner ant oil people. Since Mrs. Nation lienan her crusade in Kansas there have been murmuring in Stringtown and threats to use fire and dynamite to eradicate the saloons and dance halls. Nitru-glycerin lias been Used before to break up speak casjes in the oil country nnd quite sui ccs fiilly. Recently the drug stores and "blind tigers" have kept watchmen about when closed. According to a report the building in which Henry Dames' drug store was kept, was soaked with oil and set 0.1 fire. Dames and John Clendenning, a friend of his, were asleep in the second story. So quick was the fire that both were burned to death. The fire spread and burned four more buildings. It is said four men have been arresi ed. charged with murder and arson, and that several others are to be arrested if they make a move. Th; oil people are threatening to lynch them, and more serious trouble is feared. A SATISFACTORY RE. ORT. Tho D. A. R. Society Ho Gained 3.873 Member.) During the Voir. In the congress of the Daughters '.'f the American Revolution, held at Washington. D. C, the report of the vice president general showed that there arc now 5(17 organized chapters and 77 unorganized chapters, nn increase of During the year 2.1.204 application blanks -and 2.704 membership circulars have been issued. The secretary recom mended that the chapters take care ol the "real Daughters." of whom there arc ceo, and assist in their support. Th? register general stated that during the year 3.87.1 members had been admitted and during the last three years 12,739 women had become Daughters. The report of the treasurer showed that dur ing 1900 the net receipt! of the current fund were $50,101. and expenditures $.l...l6i. The ' Continental Hall fun I" is $!);. !j8. The reports showed Nc York State to have the largest member ship, there being 44 chapters with 3.52.1 members. The most rapid growth was shown in some of the Western States. Mrs. Samuel Verplanck. State regent from New York, was re-tlccted to thtt position by an ' verwhclming majority, Mrs. Donald McLean getting a few votes. f.'EW 0FFICER8 ELECTED. Indiana Woman Has Been Solccted President General ol Revolution' Daughter. The wife of Senator Charles W. Fair banks, of Indiana, was elected president general of the Daughters of the Amer ican Revolution. The vote announced is as follows: Mrs. Fairbanks, 33.1; Mrs. Donald McLean, New York, 20S; Mrs. Washington Rocbling, New Jer sey, 42. Other officers were elected as fol lows: Vice president general in charge of the organization of chapters, Mrs. Miranda D. Tulloch, District of Co lumbia; chaplain general, . Mrs. W. A. Smoot, Virginia; registrar general. Miss Minnie Micklcy, Pennsylvania; treasurer general, Mrs. G. B. Darwin. District oi Columbia; librarian generil, Mirs Julia T. McDIair; editor Ameri can Monthly Magazine, Mrs. EIroy Mv Avery. Ohio; business manager of magazine. Miss Lvjiian I.ockwcod. Dis trict of Columbia; Mrs. E. W. HowaL Yircinia. recording secretary general The following vice presidents general were elected: Mrs. William Lindsey, Kentucky: Mrs. George M. Sternberg, Distrrt of Columbia; Mrs. C. Waring, South Carolina: Mrs. M. T. Scott, Illi nois; Mrs, A. A. Kendall, Maine: Mrs. I R. Mellon. Pennsylvania; Mrs. N. If. Granger. Ohio; Mrs. Major General Whc.-.ton. District of Columbia; A. G. Fo.-ter, Washington. CABLE FLASHES. M. Paul Armand Silvestre. ths French poet and critic, is dead. He was born April 18, 1837. At Madrid. Spain, there has been a heavy fall of snow, the first in eight years, and traffic is difficult. There were three heavy earthquake shocks at Artca. Chili. Wednesday. Tin inhabitants were panic stricken. Dr. T. D. Anderson, at Edinburgh. Scotland, discovered a new star of great brilliancy in the constellation Perseus. Iierr George Speycr. the Frankfort banker, has given 1,000.000 marks to the I city to promote scientific instruction, j The Dutch National prisent for Quen j Wil'ulmina will lake the form of a new ; crow n, and x.oco has been sub.-cribed. f Cold nnd stormy weather prevai's I throughout Germany. At Lcipsic the temperature was IJ degrees below, zero. Heavy snowstorms around KharkorF, capital of the government of that name in European Russia, have blockaded tnree railway lines. The Turkish minister at Madrid. Izzet Pacha, has again tendered his resigna tion to the porte, owing to the non payment of his salary. Affmadu, in British East Africa. th:i headquarters of the Ugaden Somahs.j has been occupied by a British pumtivi expedition, anil the (Jgadon sultan 1 pr:soner. The session of the Austrian parliameil was suspended 111 consequence of a r between the uerniant and Czechs, hitter bombarding the president. wars ot paper. The official report of the firei gan February 5 111 the petroleu at Baku, Russia, say tint 127 perished and a number 01 othi pected to die from their bur' I