Transcript

WASHINGTON MONDAY JULY PRICE ONE CENT

I

aclJt ut1ttiu Oitnt 0

1865 22 iii Nu1nFR 1901

THE TRUST MILS TO ACT

Postponement of the Effort to Startthe Steel Mills

The Determination Run the1Jants With AonCnion LaborAbandoned However All QuIetnt 31 elCeexport null VelIsJVllle

PITTSBURG Pa July 22 The Ameri-can Steel Hoop Company did not attemptto resume work in tbe Painter mills on theSouthside this morning but its failureto make tile move expected by the strikers-is not significant The start has wenpostponed but the determination to runthe plant with nonunion men has notbeen abandoned

There was more activity around themill this morning than at any time sincethe strike began and there was evidence-at 7 oclock that the management hadpanned a busy day even if it had givenup for the time the plan of putting theplant into operation In one part of themill a force of bricklayers was at workat that early hour rebuilding a furnacewhich had been torn down during thenight and along the curb of tlie northside of Carson Street sat about twentyfive laborers with their dinner paRs

them These men had evidentlybeen summoned by the management andwere waiting for their orders Steamwas up in the boiler room but the millproper was dark and quiet The strikerswere not In evidence

Pittsburg is waiting anxiously for off-

icial reports from Wellsville and McKeesport as definite statements by the constituent companies of the United StalesSteel Corporation that these plants wouldbe put in operation at once with aidof nonunion men make these towns the

ttlegrounds of the big struggleThe only feature that today divides in-

terest with the doings In McKeesportand Wollsville Is the organization of anAmalgamated Association Lodge in theNational Tube Works McKeesport andthe report that a lodge has also beenformed at the big tinplate mill at Monessen It is said that the employes ofboth of these companies will remain atwork as long as possible piling up a

fund for the Amalgamated Asso-

ciation but will hold themselves in read-iness to strike the moment Mr Shatterconsiders It necessary to give them theorder to do so If as claimed the Ama-ljnn ated Association had succeeded in or-ganizing lodges at these mills and Isstrong enough to close when it de-

sires to do so It has gained unexpectedstrength So far it has been impossibleto obtain a statement from the manufacturers and all the talking has been doneby the strike leaders

WELLSVILLE Ohio July 22 The looked for attempt of the American SheetSteel Company to start its plant here to-

day with nonunion men did not materi-alize and the strikers and th 4r friends areBtHI waiting for developments AU night-long and until this morning a partyof Amalgamated men patrolled the townwitching for the approach of the nonunionists who were expected from Vand rsrift Pickets were thrown out nearthe works but no new men entered the

and at 4 5 the last guard went homeThe town was quirt at daybreak At 8oclock there was more life and whilenone of the officials of the company couldbe seen strikers were in evidence and theyclaimed to have gained ground since yes-terday

Some of the man who were working Saturday have been induced to quit and thecompany has not obtained otntrs to taketheir places These the strikersclaim were brought here last week fromVundergrift

Three mills are working this morningthe same number as last week It is ad

by the strikers that from eighteenmen are at

WISE

The Springfield Ia n Prac-tically Ended

SPRINGFIELD Mass July H The bigstrike at the Cheney Bigelow wireIs admitted by labor men to beover the firm having stolen a march onthe wire by making concessions-to the weavers machinists who hadno grievance against the company andwho say they will not strike in sympathy-

It Is believed the wire workerswill accept the offered last weekBeginning August a ninehowr day forthe machinists and a flftyhour week forthe wire workers will go in force Themachinists and the weavers will receive

tvngts which have been paid for atenhour day

ilACHTNISTS HETTTEN TO WORK

miiloycd on the Same Conditionas Before Strike

WILKESBARRE July 21 Thestrike of the machinists at DicksonWorks of the AHisChalmers Companyended this morning by the men returning-to No concessions were granted

they went back under the sameconditions as existed before the strikeWhich started two mouths ago

Tim strike of the Lehigh Valley ma-chinists and shop men te broken and thecompany has alrddy received eight appli-cations for work and more ar coming intoday The company not recognize j

says It has 3M nonunion workmen now inthe shops The applications of the

and Ute company selects wishesIn that way it gets rid of l ad

THE GIVE TIP

Colliery Kniployrn Aiixionw to Re-

Taken heckWILKESBARRE Pa July 22 The

committees of the striking firemen are today asking the operators to reinstate allthe and take back the engineerswho were for refusing to takethe places of the strikers As far as canJM learned the operators are raising noobjections to this and if at the conventiontonight the committees report that all themen will be taken back then the strikeTrtll b omdsjly declared off

The flremen are much theirSefeat and there is

the United Mine Workers for theirtreatment of the matteryortollc Washington Steamboat Co

trip duly 630 p XL from toot J

5 li t to Old Point Xorfolk Vfc Bracb Occam I

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SECRETARY GAGE EXPLAINS

RennonH for the Order to Refuseftnlinn SiiKnr

Secretary Gage sent to the State Dethis morning his reply to the

recent communica-tion on the subject of the alleged bountyon sugai c to exporters by that Gov-

ernmentSome weeks ago the Treasury Depart-

ment ordered collectors of customs at thevarious ports to refuse liquidation of entry in the possible event of importations-of sugar from Italy until it could be de-

termined what rate of countervailing dutyshould be imposed under the tariff to coyer the bounty said to be offered by theItalian Government to exporters

The Italian Foreign Office promptly sent-a communication to the State Depart

which was transmitted to theTreasury Department denying the exist

a sugar bounty provision in Italyslaw and stating moreover that

Italy had not exported any sugar Theproduction of sugar in that country itwas said is not sufficient to meet the de-mands of home consumption and there-fore none could be spared for export

Secretary in his reply today ex-plains that to customs officersrelative to Italian sugar was merely provisional or tentative in character Theorder was made necessary he explained-by a certain intimation that some Italiansugar would be imported at New Yorkand by the contemporaneous informationthat Italy offered a bounty to sugar ex-porters in that

The hint sugar from Italywould be imported at New York was ob-tained from letters addressed to theTreasury Department by merchants inNew York enquiring whether a bounty-on exports of sugar existed in Italy Thedepartment officials read Insome of them published inences w the allegd Italian bounty Whileadmitting that this character of informa-tion could not be accepted as conclusiveby the department Secretary Gage saysthat there was no recourse under the lawin view the possible importation ofItalian sugar but to refuse liquidationentries until the matter could be officiallyinvestigated He is now awaiting the arrival of a fun copy of the Italian law andthe order to collectors of customs relat-ing to Italian sugar will have to stand un-til this copy is received and examined bythe experts of the Treasury DepartmentIt is understood at the department thatalthough Italys sugar production In re-cent years has been too to allowany exportation there is thatthis year a considerable amount will bemarketed outside the

YACHT CLUB

Fully Three II n ml red YesesGlen Cove I

GLEN COVE N Y July 22 Fully 300yachts of ril sires and descriptions rang-ing from the sm r ISUIe 30footthe big steam yachts of morefeet on the water line were gathered atGlen Cove thl morning to take part Inthe annual cruise of the New York YachtClub to the eastward The conditionswere not entirely propitious however forthe sky began to cloud up and byoclock there were hints of a heavy rainor squall or both No have beenspared by the regatta in

for this cruise and as an import-ant yachting event 5t ranks second onlyto the Americas Cup races

It is probable that the host which rondezvoceetl at Glen Cove this morningcomprises the largest number of pleasureyachts ever gathered In American watersThey came from New York Boston Phil-adelphia Baltimore and on some yachtsthere were the names of Westerncities like St Louis and Pittsburg Therewere over 100 steam swinging atanchor in the cove and abouttwice as many windjammers

There were tw big ninetyfooters theConstitution aiia Columbia which aresoon to struggle for the honor of defend-ing the Americas Cup and which willrace week fa the porttoport were the four evenlymatched schoorfes Elmina Quisetta-Amoria and Muriel the big yawl Vig-

ilant with her long record of victoriesover the English importation Allsawhich lay near by the fleet seventyfooters Rainbow and Virgins trttich sailedtheir first race of the season today andthe Athene which gave a surprise to theIndependence in an impromptu brush InMassachusetts Bay some time ago And

the big ninetyfoot schoonersof all ratings many of which

have distinguished themselves in previousregattas The prospects for exciting con-tests in these classes were such as tothrill every true lover of the sport

A string of signal flags was broken outfrom the flagship Corona at II oclockcalling the various fleet onboard to formally adopt theprogramme for the cruise

AIXEGED BOER CRUELTY

LONDON July 22 Tn Perroria cor-respondent of J e Telegraph who a fewdays ago defended the Doers now re-cedes from his exoneration of the burgh-er who were accused of Brit-ish prisoners at tateat despatch he says

The message was written under circumstances which prevented my makingan enquiry He intimates that his praiseof the conduct of the Doers referred

past and adds that It is a fact thatBotha himself expressed to Gen-

eral Kitchener and others his regret atthe demoralization and degeneracy thatwere spreading among the combatantsand the impossibility of representingthese

The correspondent denies that theDoers shot officers to teach

the use of captured guns but sayspainfully accurate that they behav-

ed disgracefully in shooting woundedmen who were lying helpless on theground Sworn evidence to this effectwas and copies were sent to Gen-

eral

THE nATVTES-

A Woman nail Three Children Hum-e I to Death nt Pfttsl ur-

PITTSBURG Pa July 22 All but oneof the Ratxa family occupying the thirdfloor of a tenement house at 2718 PennAvenue perished in a lire at 730 oclockthis morning The father Francisis alive but will not recoverare Mrs Sophia Ratza and her threechildren

The lire was caused by the explosion ofan oil can The building was destroyedThe other escaped

Rlackhurn to Sell Ills HuntLISBON July 2 Capt Howard Black-

burn who arrived here Saturday in the27foot sloop Great Republic from Glou-cester Mass is tryftig to sell his boat

SflO Special PanAiicriaan Kri s5Hun Excursions to liiiffulo via I-

A O H Rtrain leaving Washington 705 a m arming

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ACCUSED BY THE FILIPINOS

The Governor of Bengnet Beforethe Philippine Commission

Charged With Using Office toKnrtlier His Personal Interests inSecuring Jiitiii c iiml Other Irlvil-egex An Biiynlry to He Made

MANILA July 22 The Philippine Com-

mission is now dealing with the case ofWhitmarsh who was brought

here to testify as to his conduct while incharge of that province Governor Whitmarsh was accused by some of the na

of using his office to further hispersonal interests in securing mining andother privileges

The Commission has already adopted aresolution in regard to the matter but its

has not yet been published It Ishowever from sources that

are reliable that the Governor has prac-tically been exonerated on the ground thathe was simply suffering from home criti-cism which was not based on

It Is said that the Commission wilt notmake its action in the untilit has sent some unbiased Ben

to make a thorough and official Investigation of the charges against Whitmarsh The accusations have createdconsiderable interest here and the out-come is being awaited with interest

The Philippine Commission has receivedfrom the Chinese Consul General a protest against the provision in the proposedManila charter which prohibits the useand the sale of opium in the city

The Consul General has presented asprecedents the charters of large Americancities against this action and lIethat an attempt to stamp out thethe drug would be followed by serious

the habit has become an expensivethe city and throughout the archi-

pelagot

THE ATTACK ON PTJRA

Sentence of AITJIIIOII Comiunted toTen Years Imprisonment

Teenys mail from Manila brought tothe War Department copies of several interesting military orders one of them be-

ing the record in the trial of Juan Agenon a native on the unusual charge ofbeing a war rebel Aganon wasby a military commission atthe of Tarlac Capt Robert K

Infantry was presidentof the commission and Lieut George HShields jr judge advocate

The charge against Aganon was thatwithout being part or portion of any

organized hostile army and without shar-ing continuously in the insurrection butliving habitually at his home following-a peaceful avocation without the charac-ter or appearance of a soldier Aganon j

dW order the inhabitants of the barriosof Furs to enter the pueblo for the pur j

attacking the American troops stationedthere and in compliance with these

pueblo of Pura was entered theof police badly wounded and the

telephone wire between Furs and VictoriacutThe wm ojr fowl Agj n gsi tyand sentenced the prisoner to be

MacArthur however comto ten years impris-

onment sayingIt is shown that the accused while

living within the lines of the Americanin the guise of habitual peaceful

and without being a portionof any organized hostile army or havingthe appearance or character of adW actively exert his energies tosistance of the enemy and the injury ofthe American Government the benefitsof whose protection he was accepting Itis shown that in obedience to orders hecut the telephone wires caused to be

an attempt at the assassination ofthe Chief of Police of Puss resulting inthe serious wounding of that official andthat he prearranged an attack on thetroops there stationed

Of such war rebels the laws of nationsand of war have definitely fixed the status and the Is that ofdeath t

The sentence is confirmed but In viewof the dominant political of thecase is commuted to imprisuBJeent at

labor for the term of rs

A VIOLENT PILIPIIJgHe Slay His Sweetheart nod Her

Mother ami J nt her ffOfficial advices from MaeAr-

thnr received at the to-day bring the story of the crime trialand punishment of one Bliss ASpaio anative of the Philippines Elias had a j

affair Narciza Amicable agedeighteen to prevent her marriage to another man Ellas put to thesword which In Filipino is halo not onlyhis sweetheart but her father and motheras while a neighbor whoin curiosity at the closeslaughter was hacked about the sbxmldersand arms For all of this BAles got fifteenyears in the Presidio

la the words of the reviewing author j

ity Under the circumstances to make j

comment or remark is deemed needlessand nugatory further than to concur in i

the view expressed by the departmentcommander tljat the sentence isinadequate

TAXES IN THE PHILIPPINEsAn Important Act Adopted y the

Comiu 3oiiAn important act recently adopted by

the Philippine Commission a copy ofwhich lisa just been received at the WarDepartment provides the urbana taxthe Industrial tax taxes andthe sums collected under the regulations-for cutting of timber publiclands and all other taxes known 33 inlandrevenue taxes shall cease to be leviedand collected as revenue for centralGovernment of the archipelago but shallbe applied as provincial and municipal

the Spanish control of theall revenues from such taxes were

sent to the central government and theprovinces and municipalities never

any benefit from the moneyCommission has abolished

that system and proposes to give to theprovinces anti municipalities the inland

collectedthat onehalf of such

revenues shall g to the municipalities-In which they are collected and onehalfshall be paid into the provincial treas-ury for those provinces inare collected

Collections derived trout the cutting ofUmber are to be the provincesbut will be the central gov-ernment and deposited in the insulartreasury and Appropriated to the prov

to which it belongsannual taxes authorized in ach

province are the cedula or registration

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tax of one dollar Mexican from everypersons of eighteen years of age

more than fiftyfive yearsa native of the Philippine Islands a

citizen of the United States era foreign-er except a soldier sailor or officer ofthe United States or Navy mem-ber of a nonChristian trib or a foreignconsul officer exempted by treaty of in-

ternational law The person paying thecedula tax will receive a certificate ofidentification which can be used in courtor in the transaction of business Onehalf of the revenues from this source areto go to the municipallties and onehalf-to the provincial treasury also providrd that no person other tax-es an amount equal cedula shallbe required to pay the eeduia Thewhich was passed the part ofprovided that the 1 revenue re-ceipts after the 30lh shall betreated as provincial funds and ap

to the central

TO LEAVE SECBETABY ROOT

3Ir Squires Accepts n Place With an-A phalt Company

F C Squires confidential clerk to theSecretary of War tendered his rcaignati v to take effect at once MrSquires will accept a position with theNational Asphalt Company in New YorkcityMr

Squires has been In the Governmentservice for fifteen years having been inthe War Department the entire time withthe exception of one session of Congresswhen he was clerk to one of the Housecommittees

When Mr Alger became Secretary ofWar in April 1SS7 he selected Mr Squires-as his confidential clerk He is a nativeof Ionia Mich

THE INDIAN LAUD ALLOTMENT

Conduct the DrawingThe Secretary of the Interior today an

nounced the names of the appointees whotvlll have charge of the drawing for theallotment of homesteads in the WichitaComanche and Kiowa Indian lands InOklahoma Territory The men selectedare exGov W A Richards AssistantLand Commissioner exChief JusticeDale of Oklahoma Territory and ex

States District Attorney G PSt Louis All have had con-

siderable experience in Indian affairsMr Richards is at present in charge of

the work of registering applicantsfor homesteads Judge Dale was thePresident of the Dale Commission whicharranged a number of treaties with theseveral tribes of Indians for the Tellnquishment of their lands for

The appointed have beenport at El Hew Okla TOT on the 26thinstant to arrange the details of the

will commence announcedin the Presidents proclamhtfiwi en July29 There probably be a total of about150WO applicants for tao 139 farms to bedistributed

Mr Richarls wires under daze of July21 from El iteno that the total registra

up to the night of the preceding dayapplicants The number of the

applicants registering is assuming unexpected proportions The fleet estimateswhich were then considered somewhatlarge for the total registration were notas large as the MgifltmUon to date

ASSIGmIENT OF LIEUTENANTS

The following assignment ef officers re-cently appointed has been announced bythe War Department

First lieutenants Hu B Myers FifthCavalry George J Wen T ttth CaxelryHenry R Richmond First jCvalry Julien E Gaujot Tenth George TBoTTman Fifteenth James MBurroughs Twelfth Cavalry Alvin KBaskette Third Infantry Robert TCrawford First Infantry Rufus BClark Third L SmithSixteenth Clau4e s FriesTwentyseventh infantry Joseph ILGriffiths Twentyseventh Ern-est Van D Murphy Infantry Edward Y MillerInfantry

Second lieutenants John Pi HassonSixth Cavalry Anton H Sciroeter SixthCavalry Frederick G Sixth Cav-alry John E Hemphill Third Cavalry

H Jennings SeVenth CavalryKilbocrne Ba-

sil N Ritteahouse Eleventh CavalryRichard Walker Eighth Cavairy Edwin S nartshoni Fourteenth

Walter E Gunste Seventh InG Ruttencu ter First In

fantry Eugene K Crown FourthFrancis H Lomax Fifth infantry

1 McAHater Thirteenth Infantry Ode C Nichols Fourth Infantry

Promoted from the ranks to be secondlieutenants Arthur M GrahamCavalry Edward R Thirdairy Robert W Lesher CavalryEdmund A Buchanan Ninth CayalryThomas B Eatey Ninth Cavalry IKfbertR Love Ninth Cavalry Albert J MolinFourth Cavalry Horace N4 Munro FirstCavalry William F Wheatley FifthCavalry David L Rosette First CavalryRaymond S B mlxrg T Seventh CavalryHomer E Lewis ThirtiethFloyd C Millie First InfantryJIudgett Fifta George C

Daniel Alan Fifth Infantry George TV SagerNineteenth Infantry KneelaiMl S SnowNinth Infantry William C Stoll Elev-enth Infantry Charles W TiHotSonNineteenth Infantry Kennel P WilliamsFirst Infantry Nolan V Ellis Eleventh j

William A Alfoute EighteenthJohn A Broekman Seventh In

fantry Chancing E Delaplane Twentysixth Infantry Benjamin D Foulois Sev-enteenth Infantry Dwight B LawtenThirtieth Infantry Frank WTwentyninth InfantryFarnham Twentyninth Infantry

SECRETARY RETURN

Resumed His Desk at the War De-

partment To IuySecretary Root has returned from his

Western trip of inspection and was athis office i the War Department today

The Secretary visited Jefferson Bar-racks Fort Leavenworth RileyKans Fort Crook and the of thenew armSr post at De Moines On hisway home he stopped for aflay at Fort

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A WRESTLER BREAKSIIIS BACK

StraiiKe AecI l Mit to a Sljin in FallRiver Muss

FALL RIVER Mass July 22 JamesWish is In a critical cohaition at theUnion Hospital He met a peculiaraccident last evening Following a so-

cial entertainment at his house Whiteengaged In a wrestling match with Wil-

liam Maxwell He a hold onhis opponent and wiiil irxtTting hisstrength a iced snap wa bean and befell to the floor

A plHfsician foon that the mans Meltwas broken near the neck sand that hewas wholly paralyzed franttfie neck downHe may not recover

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TilE TRIAL Of OSBDM

Jury May Wave the Case l y theEnd of the Week

imlliiC Tracksicnr the Resilience

Where the Crime C mThe FamilyN Vinit to the Vault

PITTSFIELD Mass July 22 More ofthe evidence of John Nicholson chief ofpolice against Robert S Fosburgh on

trial under an indictment which chargeshim with killing his sister nearly a yearago was presented today The trial wasresumed at 919 oclock this morning before Judge William B Stevens of theSuperior Court anti it was the opinion ofthose who had followed the case withmore or less attentin that the adjourn-ment from Friday should have nabledthe prosecution to prepare for more rapidprogress so that the hearing should beended this week

Whether or not alt that Pittsfields po-

lice chief knows is to be set forth on thedirect examination of the Commo-nwealths witnesses Is a matter for conjec-ture It has been guessed that the Com-

monwealth had expected to develop manymaterial facts by crossexamination tooso that no one here was willing to say to-

day that the trial was certain to end bySaturday especially since the de-

fendants not been outlined andno Indications had been afforded of thelength of time it would take to present itThe defence is also long on crossexamination Tt nobody ifthe trial should be prolonged into thethird

Of overnight for gossip arid conversation regttrdfog the case therewas little thatA5vaE news todayThe visit o tha family yester-day to the vaulnMwhere the casketIn which May Foebwghs body was placedUrs until the trialVte finished and thefamily can move wnjr as it expects todo was one of the things talked aboutThere was nothing unusual in the pil-

grimage it was made in accordance withwhat has become a weekly custom Freshfrom the performance of this sad dutythe family came into court today

Not a little was added by way ofand curiosity today when it became

generally known that a third of the defences witnesses had been summoned bythe prosecution He is James W Lundbookkeeper for the Fosburghs He livedacross the street from them at the timeof the shooting and was the first

the house afterward He has beenliving Boston where the Fosburghsare executing a big building contract andwas routed out of bed at 4 oclock yester-day morning by a State detective who

a subpoena on him The defencesay that he was coming anyway to tes-

tify for the accused Otherwilnfesttes are Hittily te fe sworn by

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ExJustie Roger A Pryor who has asummer home near here went on thebench with Judge Stevens when courtconvened this morning

Mr Forbes the civil engineer who hasa witness at the trial daily was re-

called to stand for continuation ofthe crossexamination OB his mapscharts and diagrams ot the Fosburghpremises

Nelson James Hall of Pittsfflekl thenext witness is little more than a boyHe said he was at the Fostourgh houseabout 4 oclock on the morning of August3 three or four hours after the shootingThere were other men there too HesaidI went up Dalton Avenue andfifty yards from the house I found a iwirof socks They were black with a whiteline In them and were lying on the road-side in the grass James Hayes who waswith me found a blue sock a few feetfurther up the avenue There were bare-footed tracks In road We traced the

to Benedict Road The socks weto Policeman ChapsEan

The socks were identified by Hail whowas turned over Joyner for crossexamination

How runny bjftefjj ot tracks did youwas

Only the tf jps of one person wasthe reply

Hall said that be had not measured thefoot prints but guessed that they wereabout ten inches long and broad ratherthan narrow He admitted that he had

only that the timeabout 4 oclock and he

guessed that It was dear weather al-

though it had been fogy all night andthat the sun had not yet risen He saidthat he had been up all night and until hewent to the Fosburgh place had beenaround the police station from the timethe firealarm ben rang at about 130oclock

Hall gave way to James Hayes Wscompanion in the visit to the scene of theshooting Hayes Is a bricklayer He saidthat he had turned out when the fire

was sounded and gone to the po-

lice station where le met HalL

NOT KNOWN MERE

Bostonlie u AViisliiiistoiiian

The police of this city have received noword from the Boston authorities con-cerning Benjamin H Brown a mulatto

home is said to be in Washilgtonyesterday shot and killed Mrs Alice

Russell Crewel at the Hotel Rexford incity

Mrs was twentyfour years oldand tile wife of Hiram Crowell of the

Fire Department After a quarrelmet her in the hallway of the hotelw his pistol and firing Jailed her in

One of the employee of the hotel heldBrown until the arrival of the policewhen he was placed an arrest

Nothing Is known by the local police re-garding the affair nor of the man himselfThere are several Benjamin Browns Inthe directory but the name of Benjamin-H Brown does not appear

SltortTeriu Rends Inreha etlSecretary Gage this morning purchased

2500 4 per cent shortterm bonds at

Only Five Hours anti Twenty Minnies to Bedford Springs via TJ tO R ttare Washington 1050 a m arrive BeJHoni

Springs 430 p m Observation parlor ear Onlyone change of cats at lijrndnan Ru

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CONSULAR OFFICERS NAMED

The President Appoint Sir Spragueto Succeed Father

The President has signed the followingcommissions

Richard L Sprague of MassachusettsConsul at Gibraltar Spain

Edward A Creevey of ConrnectteutConsul at Glauchau Saxony

Samuel Smith of New Jersey Consulat Moscow R sift

R S HItt of Illinois ThirdSecretary of the Embassy of the UnitedStates at Paris

Mr Sprague succeed his father thelate Horatio J Sprague who has formany years Consul at Gibraltar and wasthe oldest person in the consular serviceof the United States at the tmc of hisdeath a few days ago The r sent

has been Vice Consul at Gibraltarfor some time and is the third generationof Spragues to represent the United Statesat that place

BY THE PRESIDENT

Additional Appointment for theProvisional Regiments

The following commissions have beensigned by the President

V Wild second lieuten-ant in the United States Revenue CutterService

War Ebon Swift jr first lieutenant inthe Porto Rico Provisional Regiment ofInfantry George P Marrow second lieu-tenant In the Porto Rico Provisional Regiment of Infantry Henry H Scott secondlieutenant in the Artillery Corps

C Moore of DanvilleIII agent for the Indians of the ColoradoRivery Agency in Arizona

MACDOWELL REFUSESSot OJHccr Must Secure Ren

xitton PapersLewis C MacDowell who attacked De-

tective Sergeants Muller and Wecdoowhen they attempted to place him underarrest Saturday afternoon sifter his efforts to secure diamonds at several of thelocal jewelry stores by having themcharged to Senator Hanna whom heclaimed was his father today agreed toreturn to St Louis with officers who hadcome from that city for him but at thelast moment changed his mind and

to go until requisition aresecured

MacDowell Is still locked op here pend-ing the securing of the necessary papersand it is likely that he will be tried ona charge of assault with intent to killDetective Sergeant Muller In order to holdhim until the papers arrive

Joseph F Dickmann Sheriff of the cityof St Louis where MacDovrell is wanted and John W Cordell a detective fromthe same place arrived in Washingtonearly this morning and in a short con-ference with Captain Boardman the Chiefof the local Detective Force arranged tostart West with the prisoner at 3this afternoon MacDowell declared hiswillingness to accompany the Missouriofficials but later declined to do so

A telephone message was received byMajor Sylvester this morning from thePhiladelphia police asking that MacDowell be surrendered to them but this wasthought at the time to be impossible asarrangements had already been complet-ed to return him to Louis As soonas the photographs which were taken ofMacDowell yesterday are completed cop-ies will be sent to the various cities andhis complete record will probably be se-

cured Tfothing has yet been heard fromYork qeganlicg MacD trwells alle d

operations in that city

HOT WTATHEB PREVAILS

TIle Temperature Expected to Remain Hitch for Days

Daily maximum temperatures of over 99

degrees are predicted for days to come bythe Weather Bureau There is nothing

to indicate moderation in any di-

rection upon the weather map and for atleast two days the prophets at the Bureaufire certain of high thermometer readingsBeyond that the Bureau will hazard noconjecture-

At S oclock this morning the temperature stood at 82 degrees went up 5 pointsin three hours at noon registering S7 At

oclock the mercury had reached 88 de-grees and was still upward bound Theprospect of cooling showers is not evenhintod at in todays forecast

INSOLVENT BANK DIVIDENDS

Partial Payment for Creditors ofThree Institutions

The Comptroller of the Currency todaydividends in favor of the credi-

tors of insolvent banks as follows vizAJirst dividend of 56 per cent in favor

of the creditors of the First Nationalof Vancouver Wash on claims

amounting to S2I355S5SA sixth dividend 5 per cent in favor of

the Creditors of the First National Bankof Neligh Neb making In all Co per centon claims proved amounting to 13751LSS

A final dividend of 2665 per cent in fa-

vor of the creditors of the First NationalBank of White Pigeon Mich making inall ltd per cent of principal and interestin full to July 3 1KH on claims proved

to 452 35

SUSTAINEDS Trundle

Iiy n JuryJustice Bradley today discharged the

rule issued against Ivory G Kimball aof thg Police Court requiring him

to show cause why Albert S Trundleshould not be granted a trial by jury

stated in his petition for a writprocedendo ad judicium that he was

on a charge of cruelty to anion June last and demanded a trial

jury but has not been accorded oneJudge Kimball through A B Duvall

for the protestagaiist the issuance of the writ onground that the Equity branch of the

Court of the District is withoutin the matter

This contention was sustained by JusBradley Levi H David who ap

as counsel for Trundle stated aft-er tile decision of the court was an

that he wilt now endeavor toaccomplish the same purpose throughmandamus proceedings

The Treasury StatementThe receipts of the Government today

according to the Treasury statementreadied the sum of J223549703 and consisted of customs 572492456 Internal rev-enue 1429SS243 miscellaneous se 9W

The expenditures amounted to 52770ftXleaving a deficit of 5315029-

7Snlciiie Vlth Paris GreenW Va July 22

Weinberger of Meldahls a Geraged seventy years died Saturdayfrom the effects of a pint of parisdrunk with suicidal Intent He Is

thought to have been crazed by the heat

IO To Buffalo and Retnrn jjnoVia Ieiuiijlvanin IluilroailP-

anAmerican Exposition excursion will Icav-oWainfcton ift a hi Tuesday Tajy 23 arriv-ing Baffata p m Tickets good on all trainreturning within wren including date ofcak Similar cxcursiofls July 31 August 6 15 21-

f7 September S 11 17 and 36

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A Letter From the Naval Academys Superintendent

Commander IValmvriclit State F

Secretary Lung lieKnow of a Copy of the Third Vol-

ume at the Annapolis InstitutionThe Navy Department this morning

made public portions of a letter receivedfrom Commander Walnwright Superin-tendent of the Naval Academy in whichhe says that there has been no propositionwhatever to adopt the third volume efMaclays history as a textbook at theAcademy Commander ainwrfghts

is dated July 3 The part made pub-lic

so much in the papers Inregard to the third volume of MaclaysNaval History and having

also an official letter from you tfn thesubject I think it right to put you in pos-

session of a full knowledge of the easeas existing at the Naval Academy

There has been no proposition to adoptthis third volume as a textbook or ref-erence book either front the head of theDepartment of English the AcademicBoard or any person within my knowl-edge

There is no intention here of requiringthe cadets to study the history of suchrecent events as in the SpanishAmericanwar and their time is too limited to

them to study a full volume on anyone war

Maclays Naval History was adoptedwith the consent of the department in1S95 when the English course here wasextended beyond its former limits

This Intention not to adopt the thirdvolume of SIacay3 history Is entirelyapart any consideration of Its value

of theof the theta an I criticisms contained

therein r do know of a copy of thethird volume at the Naval Academy

Secretary Long stated this morning thathe had not as yet received a reply fromMr JJaclay the historian concerning hisstatement that he had sent the proofs ofthe third volume of his book t the Sec-retary of the Navy for his perusal beforeits publication He has however beenadvised by the Applctons who broughtout the book that they are willing tomake the changes and corrections neces-sary to eliminate the attack made uponAdmiral Schley

Naval officers are talking today aboutthe statement made by Rear AdmiralEvans in which he explains the cause eftear Admiral Sehleys remaining forthree days at CJenfuegos Rear AdmiralEvans asserts that the signals arrangedby Capt B H McCalla with thenatives to communicate information to5the American tieet were not made knjwnto Rear Admiral Schley until he had

Cienfuegos for three daysIt will be remembered that Rear

Schley was sent to Cienfuegos toblockade the Spanish fleet which wassupposed to be there xTajrtain ilcCalla-infarmed Rear Admiral Sampson of

which was by himto all the several commandersthe exception Admiral Schley andCaptain Cook aboard the Brooklyn TheCubans followed instructions placingthree horses in a row along the shore intile daytime and three white lights bynight Schley gave them no bees thereason that he had not been advised byRear Admiral Sampson of their meaning

As soon as Rear Admiral Schley 1on May 24 that the Spanish fleef

was not at Cienfuegos he left within afew hours for Santiago

This statement made by Rear AdmiralEvans is all the more astounding coming-as it does following the statement madeseveral days ago by Secretary Long tothe effect that Schley hart in hisopinion given the order for the famousBrooklyn loop

Gradually the exoneration of Roar Ad-miral Sehley appears to be brought about

THE BURIAL OF MALONE

Health Department Statement Conccriilii r the Hurried IntermentThe Health Department said this morn-

ing that everything connected with theburial of George Malone the colored manwho died yesterday x In the rear of JillFourteenth Street northwest of consumption and who was interred In pot-ters field yesterday afternoon was ab-solutely regular The certificate of burlal is signed by Dr A B Cole who at-tended the man The physician statedthat the man was without relatives and

there was nobody to bry him orthe funeral expenses

The Health Department accordingly hadthem the situation of a

friends or relatives lying alonea small room The department fur

a coffin provided an undertakerpaid all expenses According to the

it would not have been possible 1would it have been in accordance withhealth regulations to have allowed

body to remain in the room until posrelatives appeared especially as the

Officer was informed thrt the raaafriendless

This ntorning the dead mans motherat the Health Department Sheto the rapidity with which the

of her son had been of5however claim to have acted

in the matter The certificatedeath is endorsed on the back by Dr

to the effect that Malone had noor relatives in the city If there

any responsibility In the case theOffice officials say that it rests

the physician

PARDON FOR A MOONSHTCTEB

III Child and a Destitute Familythe Grounds

The critical illness of a convicts childthe destitution of his family has beencause of executive clemency extendedthe President in the case of William

OrrOrr was convicted in the ncrthern dlsj

of Georgia on the charge of illicitHe was sentenced March 20 to

term of five months in the county Jailto pay a fine of 5MW A pardon was

to him this morning

An Active CentenarianPIEDMONT V Va July 22 Xrs

Pettit of Piedmont sister ofHalderman of Cumberland Md hascelebrated her one hundredthbirth

anniversary having been born in Virin July 3S01 She Is stll quite ac

and cheerful She lived many years

War Mrs H nnau her sisis eightyseven years f cr-

Flynnx Business JolleKC Silt and K-

Busin 9 Shorthand Typewriting S25 a year

one xviuth at 6th and N Y ave

MACLAYS nOOK NOT USED

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