WORK DAY AND NIGHT Belief Forces Under High Pressure Flood Devastated District. in TRYING TO HE PAIR THE RAILROADS 'oar Da j Before Traffla Rrsamea Nor folk and Wnlcra Daoly Uamifnd Tho fatality Lltt I Mot Lars as at First Reported. BLUEFIELD. W. Va.. June 26. The West Virginia flood situation has not many new developments, but it Is au thentically stated that the loss of life has been greatly overestimated, al though the loss of property can hard ly be estimated. The most conserva tive estimate obtainable places the loss of life at about fifty, a great part of whom are colored miners and their families. A great many more are missing and are supposed to have been swept away. There are great piles of debris and It will take many days to find all the bodies. The Norfolk & Western Rail road company will lose at a conserva tive estimate $500,000, not taking Into consideration the delay to traffic, etc. The double track is practically washed away for a distance of six miles and at least 3,500 men are at work day ind night repairing roadbed and re moving drift. The Cumberland Val ley electric light car arrived todar nd will be used to prosecute the work at night. It will be four days before any traffic can be resumed. The loss to the coal operators will reach about $400,000 outside of the de lay at the mines in loading, etc. The property loss by private parties 13 heavy and cannot be estimated at this time. It is thought U will reach the $1,000,000 mark. General Boggs and Colonel Hudson of Governor White's staff arrived to day to hold a conference with the general superintendent of the Norfolk & Western railroad, to ascertain what assistance is needed from the state au thorities. The wires are deluged with press work and hundreds of messages are received hourly from anxious friends in all parts of he United States, inquiring about relatives and friends. Until traffic is resumed and all communications opened it will be impossible to estimate with any de gree of certainty either th-i loss of life or of property. lICKET IS COMPLETE. Ttash and Nippert Lead Ohio Republi can' Standard Rearers. COLUMBUS. O., June 26. The r.eket: For governor, George K. Nash. For lieutenant governor. Carl L. Nippert. For supreme judge, J. L. Price. For attorney general, John M. Sheets. For clerk of the supreme court, Lawson E. Emerson. For state treasurer, Isaac B. Cam eron. For member of Board of Public Works. The republican state convention here today broke the Ohio record by completing its work in Ihree hours. The intense heat was prostrating and Chairman Hanna Hot only cut short his speech, but also those of others and then dispatched business with the utmost speed. In those three hours tha convention nominated a full state ticket, adopted Its declaration of principles, endorsed J. B. Foraker as republican candidate for re-election as United States sen ator, completed the party organization for the campaign and transacted other business. Of the seven nominations only three were new men, and cne of these, Nippert, for lieutenant governor, was nominated without opposition, after Lieutenant Governor Caldwell had de clined renomination. Nash, Sheets. Cameron and Johnston were nomi nated for second terms wi'hout oppo sition. Chief of Police Killed, SEATTLE, Wash., June 26. At 5:15 o'clock thi3 afternoon John W. Con sidine, one of the proprietors of the Standard gambling house and the Peo ple's theater, shot and killed former Chief of Police W. L. Meredith. Plow Company Organize. NEW YORK, June 26. The Na tional Plow company, in which a num ber of western capitalists are Inter ested, was organized in Jersey City today. Hay's Hody at Cleveland. CLEVELAND. June 26. The body of the the late Adelbert S. Hay arrived here at noon today from New Haven, Conn. The casket was conveyed from the Union station direct to Wade Mor tuary chapel in Lake View cemetery, where services were held late this afternoon. Secretary Hay and family were driven to the home of Samuel Mather In Glenville. The floral trib utes were so many that they entirely covered the casket. IMPOSSIBLE TO f IX LOSSES. Means of Communication too Meagre to Collect Facta Regarding- Flood. KEYSTONE, W. Va., June 26. The following story is told by an eyewit ness of .the great flood: "Keystone is the metropolis of the Elkhorn mining country. It has but one narrow street, and, because of limited space, many houses were built on piles or walls over the Elkhorn or close up against the mountains. The town follows the meanderings of the stream for a mile. "On Friday night at 11 o'clock the storm struck the mountain and for six hours rain fell in torrents. By 9 a. m. the valley was a raging, seething. angry torrent. Houses, barns, bridges, fills, live stock and human beings were swept by the mighty current and dashed on the rocks or trees below. "I was'an eyewitness of the disas ter at Keystone, stopping at a hotel. At the first warning many of the in habitants took refuge on the mountain side overlooking the town and river. More than a hundred people, how ever, remained in the town to look after the women and children who did not escape early. The bridge leading to the depot was soon swept away, then the angry waters rushed through the only street in the town and we found hundreds cut off from the mountain retreat and the hotel was made fast to the telephone poles by means of a line. Hundreds of lives were saved. But in attempting to cross the muddy, surging waters which swept like an avalanche down the street, many lost thoir hold and in plain sight of friends were carried on into the river and drowned. RECALLS C LSTER MASSACRE. Twenty-Five Tears Ago the Brave Gen eral Met His Death. OMAHA. Neb.. June 26. Yesterday was the twenty-fifth anniversary of the massacre of General George A. Custer in the Little Big Horn country of Montana. The slaughter of General Custer and 447 of his troopers took place on Sunday, and it was several days before the news of the tragedy leached telegraph lines. Many of the officers who were killed had been In the Deoartment of the Platte and were well known in this city. General Cus ter had many warm personal friends in Omaha and gloom was cast over the city by the announcement of the ter rible massacre. General Custer was campaigning against the Sioux at the time of his death. With less than 500 troopers be descended upon an Indian village which wa3 supposed to contain but a limited number of warriors. Custer and his men were surrounled and an nihilated and their bodies were discov ered a short time afterward by Gen eral Reno. TOTAL LOSS ABOUT SIXTY. This Is the Conservative Estimate by President Fink. NEW YORK. June 26. Word was received by Henry Fink, president of the Norfolk & Western railroad, from General Manager L. E. Johnson of the system to the effect that the total loss of life by the West Virginia floods would amount to about sixty. Con siderable damage had been done to a number of mines, but some of the more important were only slightly damaged and will begin loading coal today. The dispatch added that the flood of water was enormous in some places. At the town of Ennis the rise had amounted to six feet in thirty min utes. The rapidity of the approach of the flood, the dispatch says. wa3 responsible for the fact that so many lives were lost. Mr. Johnson reported that the Nor folk branch of the Norfolk & Western was nearly washed away and that it would take a considerable time to re pair it. SECRETARY HAY RALLIES. Arrangements For Son's Funeral Awaits Mrs. nay's Advice NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 26. After passing a fairly restful night Secretary Hay, who. arriving late yes terday afternoon at the residence of Seth H. Mosely. where the body of his son lay, was stricken with physical collapse, was very much improve'd this morning. It was stated at the house this morning that no definite plans for the funeral will be fixed upon until the arriva' of Mrs. Hay and her daughter. who are expected this afternoon from Newbury, N. H., their summer home. Meanwhile, however, arrangements are being made for departure with the body later In the day. Consolidation of Railroad Offices. CHICAGO. June 26. The Chronicle today will say: It is reported here that the offices of railroads in the different combinations located in all principal cities throughout the country will be consolidated. The report la revived in connection with the Mor gan-Hill syndicate operations. It is said that wherever separate offices are now maintained by the Great Northern, Northern Pacific and Bur lington joint offices will be instituted. HOLDING THE PASSES United States Deputies Driven From the Matewan Coal Fields. ENTRENCHED IN THE MOUNTAINS Her Minora Are Armed, With Nirrow Rocky Pathways That Form Impregna ble Natural Fortlcatlons The Men Urged on by Women. HUNTINGTON, W. Va.. June 25. Today a posse of deputy United States marshals, led by A. C. Hufford of Bluefleld, were fired on by the strikers and forced to flee from the coal fields at Matewan. On their jour ney from Bluefields the officers were forced to travel twenty-five miles on foot, owing to the destruction of the railroad by flood. They leached Mate wan Sunday evening and immediately began serving notices of th? injunction which had been Issued by Judge Jack son of the federal court. A mob cf strikers followed, armed to the teeth with firearms. On all sides could be heard the cry: "Down with government by injunc tion." Women called down the vengeance of heaven upon the marshals and chil dren hurled Etone3 at them. When nightfall had came notice had been served on the strikers of all the coal companies but one, and they were to be served at Thacker. Fearing an ambush they waited until morning and early today set out for Thacker, Some time before noon they attempt ed to serve the injunction papers. A mob followed, enraged to desperation at the sweeping character of the in junction. One reckless fellow fired the first shot, and almost Instantly the mountain sides echoed the reports that followed the cracks of twenty or thirty rifles. The deputies fled, barely escaping with their lives. The strike situation is assuming a most serious stage. Sheriff Hatfield Mas withdrawn all his deputies be cause, it i3 said, he does not believe in the policy being used to put down the strike. The United States mar shals have been left alone and aftCT being chased from the field it is be lieved that they will be strongly re Inforced and return to flgnt when they again appear to enforce the in junction. Tug river divides West Virginia from Kentucky. On either side the mountains are almost perpendicular and the entire distance from bank to bank is not more than 500 yards. On the mountain side of West Virginia the colleries are located. On the Kentucky side are nothing but moun tain paths. A band of strikers almost a thousand strong have crossed over into Kentucky and are occupying the mountain passes. Here they are out of reach of the deputy marshals and command the entrances to the coller ies. The strikers have nothing but hatred and contempt for the marshals and it is said that at the mass meet ing at Thacker on Saturday night they decided to ignore the injunction. WHEAT PROSPECTS ABROAD. Good In Southern and Central Europe and Poor In Northern Portlno. LONDON, June 23. The Mark Lane Express, In its weekly ciop review, noting the necessity for rain in the United Kingdom, says: The wheat has come into ear on remarkably short stems and the ears will not fill without more moisture. Wheat cutting has begun in southern Spain. The provinces of Andalusia and Murcia expect fine yields and the promise in central and northern Spain is excellent. The wheat crop in cen tral Europe is very promising on the confines of the Adriatic and very bad indeed on the confines of the Baltic, Indicating that Crotia and Hungary will have a good crop, while Prussia and Prussian Poland will have a serious deficiency. Mediocre results may be expected in Bavaria and Aus tria. Bill Company Loses. BOSTON, Mass., June 25. Judge Brown of the United States circuit court today handed down a decision adverse to the American Bell Tele phone company in the suit for infringe ment of patents brought against thi National Telephone Manufacturing company and .the Century Telephone company. Bills in equity entered by the Bell company are dismissed on the ground that the patent involved in the first case was void and that affecting the second either was void or so limit ed as not to be infringed by the de fendants. Senator Kyle's Condition. ABERDEEN, S. D., June 25. Sen ator Kyle's condition has not changed materially. He Is somewhat better this morning than he was yesterday, but is a very sick man. Mew Station on Illinois Central. CEDAR FALLS, la,, June 25. In order to provide better track facilities the Illinois Central railroad has de cided to establish a new station by the name of Wllke midway between Alden and Williams. CAILLES TIRNS IN ARMS. Insurgent General and Six Hundred 6 Hla Followers Surrender. SANTA CRUZ, Province of Laguna, P. L .June 25. When General Cailles surrendered here with 650 men and 500 rifles he entered Santa Cruz to the music of native bands which were drawn up In six lines in the church yard. Cailles and bis staff entered the church, where mass was celebrat ed by Chaplain Hart of the Eighth United States infantry. The column passed in review before the United States army headquarters with arms at port, returned to the enclosure, surrendered their rifles and received receipts entitling them to thirty pesos each. All the receipts were deposited in the hats cf Cailles and his officers, Cailles insisting that the arms were not being sold, but be longed to the revolutionary govern ment and that the proceeds must go to the widows and orphans. During the surrender of arms, Cailles and his staff, who were outside of the en closure, wept. The officers afterwards walked to headquarters, where Cailles tendered his sword to General Sumner, who gal lantly handed it back. General Sum ner also handed back the revolution ists' flag, which Cailles will personally present to General MacArthur. Gen eral Sumner congratulated Cailles on his surrender and the latter responded that it was a happy day for Laguna province. The president of the federalists in Laguna made a patriotic address to the former Filipino officers and then the latter and the rank and file of the Filipinos took the oath of allegi ance publicly on the piazza. Frank Mekin, the deserter of the Thirty-seventh infantry, who had been acting as a lieutenant with the insurgents under Cailles and who sur rendered, was placed in irons. FIRST STORIES WILD. Deaths from West Virginia Floods Not So Many as Reported. ROANOKE. Va., June 23. The pas senger train from the west over the Norfolk & Western railroad, which Is due here at 1:55 p. m., did not reach Roanoke until 5:30 o'clock this morn ing. When the train came in there were many people at the station who had waited anxiously all night for the belated news carrier from the devas tated coal field3 of West Virginia. Among those who came in on this train and who had been in the storm was a prominent business man of Roanoke, several railroad men and a woman and two children. They came direct to Roanoke from Vivian and were compelled to walk a distance of eleven miles from that place to the small town of Ennis, where they were enabled to get a train for this city. These passengers declare that the number of deaths has been exag gerated, in their opinions, and feel confident that not more than 100 peo ple have lost their lives, though they cannot say with any certainty as to the number. The mountain districts lying back from the railroads prob ably have suffered heavily and the exact loss of life will not be known for several days. Off for the North Pole. NEW YORK, June 25. A dispatch to the Journal and Advertiser from Dundee says: All is ready on the American. The Baldwin-Zeigler expedition is about to start for the north pole. The leaders and the forty men who accompany them, many well known se'entists, de clare that they will not be content to go "further north" than the Duke of Abbruzzi, who holds the honor of hav ing been "furthest north." They vow they will reach the pole and plant the American flag there. The expedition i3 fortunately in fine shape. She was formerly the Esqui maux, the crack whaler cf the fleet here. It Is Gen. Crowder Mow. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 25. Commissions as brigadier generals have been issued to Enoch H. Crow der, judge advocate's department; James Allen, signal corps, and Robert L. House, cavalry. They will hold these places until June 30. The ap pointments are in recognition of the services of these men in the Spanish war and the Philippine campaign. Gilbert Is Suspended. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 25. President Johnson of the American league has wired Umpire Haskell that Second Baseman Gilbert of the Mil waukee base ball team has been sus pended for five days. The cause of suspension Is not known here. Man Is Taken for a Deer. SPEARFISH, S. D., June 25. There have been rumors in town for several days to the effect that a man had been shot and killed in the Bear Gulch min ing district, he being taken for a deer. As near a3 can be learned two men went into the gulch on a hunt. It Is believed their names were Cook and Dougal, the latter being the one killed. It is stated they were residents of Seim, S. D. The accident is said to have taken place near Crow Peak. WEST VIRGINIA STORM .11 Hundreds Dead and a Tremesdoas Loss of Property. KEYSTONE THE WORST SUFFERER A Cloudburst Deluges the Coal Regions Town of 2,000 Inhabitants Is Swept from Its Foontatlons Property Loss Rivals Johnstown. ROANOKE, Va., June 24. Passen gers on a train from the west report that about 300 people were drowned yesterday evening along the Elkhorn division of the Norfolk & Western railroad and that miles of track and bridges were washed out. ine passengers on the train were transferred by ropes from the train to the mountainside near Vivian, W. Va . All wires are down over the de vastated section and no other partic ulars are obtainable. Those drowned are said to include the most prominent folks of the section. The general manager of the Norfolk A Western left for the scene. It will probably be several days before the road is open. TAZEWELL, Va., June 24. The trainmaster of the Norfolk & Western railroad walked the track between Vivian and North Fork, a distance of twelve miles. He discovered thirty bodies floating In the river. WASHINGTON, June 24. The fol lowing dispatches have been received by the Washingtotn Post regarding the reported loss of life by the flood in West Virginia: "BLUEFIELD. W. Va., June 24. Flood in Pocahontas coal field equal ing that of Johnstown. Two hundred drowned. Impossible to estimate the loss of property." "ROANOKE. W. Va., June 24. Cloudburst over Pocahontas division of the Norfolk & Western this morn ing. Keystone, Elkhorn, Vivian and other towns wiped out. Railroad dis patches say 500 lives are lost. One house left In Keystone. Twenty-five to thirty miles of railroad track are destroyed." BLUEFIELD. W. Va., June 24. This entire section has just been visited by a flood, the extent of which in all probability will exceed that of Johns town in 1SS9, so far as the loss of property Is concerned. Yesterday morn ing, shortly after midnight, a heavy downpour of rain began, accompanied by a severe electric storm, which vio 'ently increased in volume and contin ued throughout the entire day and night. At 10 a. m., while the storm has abated, the lowering clouds would indicate another terrific downpour at any moment. Many miles of the Norfolk & West ern railroad tracks, bridges and tele graph lines are entirely destroyed and communication is entirely cut off west of Elkhorn, so that it is Impossible to learn the full etxent of the loss of life and property, but officials of the coal operations located in the stricken districts have sent out messengers to Elkhorn, the terminus of both tele graphic and railroad communication, and have received a report that a con servative estimate of the loss of life will easily reach 200. A number of the drowned are among the most prominent people in the coal fields. FIRE IN THE STATE PRISON. Attempt to Destroy the Remaining Wing- Is Thwarted by Prompt Discovery. LINCOLN. Neb., June 24. The re maining wing of the Nebraska peni tentiary building, one of which was burned last March, narrowly escaped destruction last evening from a fire started maliciously. Governor Savage and Warden Davis say by convicts employed in the broom factory. Prompt discovery allowed the flames to be quenched in their .incipiency and the damage is nominal. An investiga tion in the broom building showed that a candle had been lighted and so placed that atter burning itself about half way would communicate to a mass of broom corn. The nozzle of the hose had been plugged, but the pressure was so strong that the water removed the obstruction and the fire was quenched. Doer's Inflict Losses. CRADOCK, Cape Coloney, June 24. In an engagement at Waterkloof June 20 the British losj eight men and had four men seriously wounded. In addi tion sixty-six men of the cape (colon ial) mounted rifles were captured. Captain Shandow is reported to have been wounded and one Boer killed. Refuse Perishable Freight. COLUMBUS, O., June 24. The Nor folk & Western railroad officials here have co information regarding the disaster in West Virginia beyond the fact that great damage has been done to the road in the Pocahontas district, a number of bridges having been wash ed away. Orders were issued to ac cept no perishable freight for ship ment to points on the eastern end of the line. No attempt is being made to run trains east of Ken&va. t EX-CONSUL HAY KILLED. The Son of Secretary Hay Meet With - Violent Death. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 24. Adelbert Stone Hay, former consul of the United States at Pretoria, South Africa, and eldest son of Secretary of State John Hay, fell from a window ir the third story of the New Ha ven house in this city shortly before 2:30 o'clock this morning and was In stantly killed. The dead man was a graduate of Yale of the class of '98 and his death occurred on the eve of the university commencement, which brought him here yesterday, and in which, by vir tue of his class office, the young man would have been one of the leaders. The terrible tragedy has cast a gloom over the whole city and will undoubtedly be felt throughout the whole day, which heretofore has been so brilliant and full of happincsss for Yale and her sons. The full details of the terrible ac cident will never be known. Mr. Hay had rooms at the New Haven house for commencement week. It is gen erally supposed, however, that after going to his room he went to the win dow for a!r and sitting on the sill he dozed off and overbalancing fell to the 1-avement below, a fall of fully sixty feet. The fall resulted in Instant death and within fifteen minutes the i body had been identified rs that of.' young Hay. How it all hapepned be came a matter of speculal'on on the part of the throng of curious specta tors who gathered and a subject of mournful inquiry for the classmates and friends of the young man. JESSIE MORRISON SANfiLINE. Has No Fear of t'nfavorable Verdict When Case Comes to Jury. ELDORADO, Kan.. June 24. Argu ments in the second trial of Jessie Morrison for the murder of Mrs. OHn Castle will begin tomorrow morning. It is believed the case will go to the jury Tuesday evening. Miss Morrison is absolutely confident that she will be acquitted this time. Today to a reporter she said: "I am just as sure of acquittal as I am that I am living this minute." "The trial this time has rot been so wearing on me," she continued. "It was a terrible strain the first time. This time, however, both sides rush ed things and it did not become so tiresome." The defense has failed to locate J. W. Morgan, the peddlar who was at the Castle house the morning of the murder. With him on the stand Miss Morrison's attorneys had promised to furnish a surprise. GERMANY TO SOUND TRUSTS. Intends to Lea in o" T. e!r Effect Upon the Trade of the Country. BERLIN, June 24. The World cor respondent hears that Count ron Bue- low proposes to send a commission of experts to the United States to collect all the available information on the working of trusts and their effect on the general trade of the country. The German government and emperor are deeply concerned at the trust develop ments and the report of this commis sion will determine whether special legislation shall be Introduced in the Reichstag dealing with them. Chaffee Military Governor. WASHINGTON, D. C. June 24. Following the order issued yesterday making Judge Taft civil governor of the Philippines, an order has been issued naming General Chaffee as mili tary governor of the archipelago. The military has been ordered to vacate the Ayuntamiento, the large public building which was erected out of the municipal funds of Manila for gov ernment purposes. This will be occu pied by the civil officers In the Philip pines. The palace of Malacayan, heretofore occupied as headquarters for Generals Otis and MacArthur, also has been or dered vacated by the military authori ties, and will be occupied by Governor Taft. Will Make Wheat Rise. WASHINGTON, D. C, June 24. It is now recognized as Inevitable that the cereal harvests of 1901 in Prussia will show the largest and most disas trous deficit that has been recorded in jf recent years, and the requirements of the German empire In respect to for eign grown foodstuffs will far exceed those in any recent year. These statements are included In a long report upon the deficit in Ger man breadstuffs received at the state department from Consul General FraiTS Mason at Berlin. Modern Wonders In Paris. PARIS, June 24. Ladles going this year to Trouville, Deanville and other resorts are much interested in a new Italian invention, a life-saving corset, Invented by Signor Montagnoll. It la made of waterproof linen and can be inflated in a few seconds. In one trial of it a sailor was thrown Into the ses with his hands and feet tied and a 125-pound weight attached to his legs. He remained floating and four men could not push him down. y