pattsmoutli Journ.lL C "W. SIIERMAS. IatlUber. rLAl TsMO VTII. : MKBRASff A. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Kegalar Session. The senate passed a bill on the th dividing the salaries of railway postal c lerks into seven grades varying from SK) to 81.803 per year. Several schedules in the tariff bill were dis posed of In the house the sessioa was brief, and practically no business was transacted. A bill was Introduced to limit the rates of sleep ing cars to one-half of one cent a mile for lower berths and one-third of one cent a mile for up per berths. Os the 11th the senate entered on the elev enth week of the tariff debate and nineteen pages of the measure were disposed of In the house no business was transacted because of the lack of a quorum. A bilx. was Introduced by Senator Squire, of "Washington. In the seuato on the 12th for the free coinage of silver. The wool feature of the tariff bill was discussed In the house a bill was passed Betting aside $100,000 from the fund belonging to the estates of the deceased colored soldiers Of the war for the purpose of erecting In the District of Columbia a national home for aged and Infirm colored people. The Indian appro priation bill was further considered, and a bill was favorably reported to restore to the pen sion rolls the widows of Boldiers who had been dropped because of remarriage, and whose sec ond husbands have died. On the 13th the wool section of the tariff bill was discussed In the senate. Senator Sherman '(O.) making a vigorous speech, against free wool .... In the house a bill to disapprove of the treaty heretofore made with the Vte Indians for their removal to the territory of Utah waa passed. The Indian appropriation bill was further considered. Ik the senate, on the 14th, bills were passed to authorize the appointment of women as public school trustees in the District of Co lumbia, and for the development and encour agement of silk culture In the United States. The tariH bill was further discussed In the bouse the time was occupied la considering the Indian appropriation bill. DOMESTIC Forest fires in Michigan swept a dis trict 1 mile wide and 5 miles long1 and wiped out the town of Sagoda. Ix a battle with striking1 miners and officials at Lemont, Fa., three of the strikers were killed and another fatal ly injured. Nineteen common wealers from the state of Washington were sentenced to ninety days in jail at Helena, Mont., for stealing a railway train. Focr jocke3-s were hurt and two horses killed in the handicap steeple chase, the first of the season at Haw thorne, near Chicago. Ix Chattanooga, Tenn., the grain warehouse of J. T. Thomas, Son & Co., covering nearly an acre of ground, was burned. Xear Talequah, I. T., an Indian des perado killed a man. woman and boy and was later shot by the son of his victims. Three young persons were drowned by the overturning of a boat in the lake at Vermilion, O. IIexrt Hat and Charles Heusman, members of the senior class at Beloit college, were drowned while bathing in Green lake near Elkhorn, Wis. Sevex persons were overcome by heat at Warsaw, Ind., and three of them would probably die. Mrs. August 2s old, of St. Louis, whose husband essayed to beat her, killed him with a baseball bat. Four members of a boating party were drowned by the capsizing of their boat on a lake near Brewster, N. Y. Coxet, Browne and Jones were re leased from jail in Washington and departed for the commonweal camp at Bladensburg. Mrs. Jaxe Shattuck, of San Fran cisco, goes to prison for life for killing her daughter's lover. Strikers at Salineville, O., blew up a railroad bridge. They were charged by troops, who dispersed thera with bayonets. Flames in the lumber-yard district of Dubuque, la., destroyed property worth $500,000. Sixteen horses were burned to death in a fire in the rear of Uostetter & Co.'s coal yard in Chicago. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 11th was: Wheat, 69,211,000 bushels; corn, 7,514,000 bush els; oats, 2,764,000 bushels; rye, 205, 000 bushels; barley, 87,000 bushels. After twenty-one years' close con finement Arthur Winner and A. J. Mc Nutt were released from the peniten tiary at Leavenworth, Kan. Strikers destroyed three more rail road bridges in the Alabama mining district. Officers were elected by the su preme council of the Royal Ar&anum in session at Detroit, C. W. Hazzard, ' of Monongahela, Pa., being chosen regent. Thf. supreme lodge of the Ancient Order of Dnited Workmen began its annual session in San Francisco. A St. Berxard dog suffering from hydrophobia bit five men and two Women in Dallas, Tex., three of them being fatally injured. Five young women got into a fight at Breeden, W. Va., with knives and -pistols and Mrs. Lizzie Maynard was killed and Jennie Morris mortally wounded. The national section of the Cadets of Temperance held their annual conven tion at Hoboken, X. J., delegates from all parts of the United States being present. Chief Justick Reaslet decided that the legislature of New Jersey could not confer upon women the right to vote for any public officers. D. L. Ii ARK.XES8, dairy and food com missioner of Wisconsin, died at his home in Berlin of blood-poisoning. The big mining strike has been set tled, an agreement as to wages, to last for a year, being unanimously adopted by the conference at Columbus, O. Bill Daltox's brother, Littleton, has identified the remains of the bandit at Ardmore, I. T., as those of the noto rious and much killed Bill. - A tomb lined with cement was un covered in a mound at Egan, S. D., and in the compartment were twenty-two male skeletons averaging eight feet in height. A rude altar nd many bronEe titensils were also exposed. Jakes Perry, a Virginia negro who introduced smallpox into Knoxville, Tenn., was killed by unknown persons. Congressman Breckinridge is no longer on the honorary roll of the Union League club of Chicago. The Isaac D. Smead foundry company at Toledo. O., failed for S'250,000. Isaac Hanks, of Rutland, Vt., was fined 81,000 for causing the death of his wife by starvation. Attorney General Moloney rules that women in Illinois may not vote for trustees of the state university. Eleven persons were injured in a collision between two trains near Still water, R. I., and the property damage- was heavy. Figures submitted to congress by the director of the mint show an in crease in the output of gold and silver, and also show that the United States still hold the first place in the list of the gold-producing countries of the world. Lack of rain was injuring the crop prospects in nearly all of the western states. Mrs. Henry L. Sweet and her 3-year-old son were drowned at Duluth, Minn. Mixers in Ohio were greatly dissatis fied with the strike settlement and re fused to accept it. In Illinois and In diana the miners were preparing tore turn to work. An hour after having read to her mother an account of a suicide by hanging, Laura Corbett, of Baltimore, killed herself by hanging. An alliance between the Knights of Labor and the American Bailway union was formed In Chicago for of fensive and defensive warfare. At the closing session of the Na tional Millers' association in Chicago a resolution indorsing reciprocity was adopted. Almost the entire village of Grants, Ore., was swept away by a flood. Lars Christexsen, of Alma, Neb., fatally shot his wife and blew his own brains out when the woman threat ened to leave him because of his abuse. The union stock yards, located at Bennings, D. C, a short distance from Washington, were burned. Damage, S125.000. Two brothers named Raymond from Albany, N. Y., were murdered by cattle thieves near Arbecka, O. T. A negro that assaulted Miss Her ring, a white woman, near Blackburn, Ua., was captured by a mob and skinned alive. The miners in Indiana and northern Illinois have rejected the compromise 6cale effected at Columbus, O. The boiler of a sawmill near Lin neus. Mo., exploded and two men were instantly killled and two others were fatally injured. A hail and wind storm devastated Sibley and Nicollet counties in Minne sota. Strikers at Staunton, 111., stopped freight trains and broke the seals of all the cars to see if coal was being carried. Misers in the southern part of Law rence county, Pa., were reduced to the verge of starvation by the strike. At Crawfordsville, Ind., a little girl swallowed a screw and died. Hasten ing to her assistance, a man fell from a pump tower and was fatally injured. E. V. Miner, of Indianapolis, broke the world's 10-mile bicycle record, making the distance at Louisville in 20 minutes and 54 seconds. Fifty Coxeyites seized a fast freight train at Fairfield. I1L The National Association of Millers of the United States in annual conven tion in Chicago elected A. C. Lorning, of Minnesota, as president. American flag day was celebrated on the 14th by the Sons of the American Revolution of several states. The day commemorated the 117th anniversary of the adoption of the stars and stripes as the national ensign. Vernon Bros., New York paper dealers, lost stock valued at S200.000 by fire. In the state senate investigation it was shown that New York police gave protection to green goods swindlers, and that millions of dollars were re ceived by them for "protecting" saloonkeepers, thieves and other dis reputables. J. II. Day, suspected of incendiar ism, was hanged by a mob at Monroe, La. United States marshals arrested twenty-two Coxeyites for seizing a train at Fairfield, I1L The United States troops stationed at Hartshorne and Alderson, I. T., be gan the removal of intruders from the Choctaw nation. Ten carloads of Ohio militia were sent to Sherrodsville, where striking miners burned the depot and some cars. Dr. George M. Wagner and Civil Engineer S. R. Lewis, attaches of the government engineering corps, were drowned while bathing in the Missis sippi near FestuB, Mo. Johasn Kacffmann. of Cramp Hill N. J., murdered his wife and three children and then killed himself. Pov erty was the cause. A. C. Tbaatman, the largest whole sale grocer in northern Indiana, failed at Fort Wayne for 8100,000. James B. Carpenter was hanged at Middletown, Pa., for the murder of his father on December 11, 1603. George Brock, aged 45, murdered his wife and little boy and then killed himself near Borden, Ind. The man had become desperate from poverty. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Mas. Lois Tbitton, who was the last slave sold at auction in New Haven, Conn, (in 1825) is dead at the age of 05. The Kansas prohibitionists met in state convention at Emporia and nomi nated E. O. Pickering for governor. Congressional nominations were re ported as follows: Illinois, Ninth dis trict, R. R. Hitt (rep.) renominated. Indiana, First district, J. II. Heming way (rep.); Fifth, George W. Cooper (dem.) renominated. Ohio, Eighth di trict, L- M. Strong (rep.). Kentucky, Ninth district, L. G. Pugh. (rep.). The Rhode Island legislature unan imously elected ex-Gov. George P. Wet more to the United States senate to I serve six years from March 4 next. John T. Andrews died at Dundee, N. Y., aged 93 years. He represented the Steuben district in congress from 1833 to 1S37 and was believed to have been the oldest ex-member of congress in the state. Rev. E. G. Robinson, formerly presi dent of Brown universitj-, now pro fessor of philosophy in the University of Chicago, died in Boston. The populists of Kansas in state con vention at Topeka renominated L. D. Lewelling for governor. Lorenzo Danford was nominated for congress by the republicans of the Sixteenth district of Ohio. Congressional nominations were made as follows: Wisconsin, First dis trict, Rev. A. S. Kay (pr.); Second, John J. Sutton (pro.); Third, J. C. Martin (pro.); Tenth, Rev. John Holt (pro.). Indiana, Second district. J. L. Bretz (dem.); Fifth, E. T. Baker (dem.). Ohio, Seventh district, G. W. Wilson (rep.) renominated; Eighteenth, R. W. Taylor (rep.) renominated. Illinois, Seventeenth district. J. A. Connolly (rep.). Missouri, Second district, U. S. Hall (dem.) renominated. New Hampshire, First district, J. II. Whit tier (pop.); Second, E. M. Blodgett (pop.). The Wisconsin prohibitionists in convention at Milwaukee nominated a full state ticket with J. G. Cleghorn, of Clinton, for governor. The platform favors prohibition, reform in naturali zation laws, money issued direct to the people, just pensions and the with holding of state aid from sectarian schools. The populists of South Dakota in convention at Mitchell nominated Isaac Howe, of Spink, for governor. Republicans and populists combined in Tennessee on candidates for the supreme bench. FOREIGN. Muley Hassan, sultan of Morocco, died suddenly at Tadla and it was be lieved he was poisoned. His son had succeeded him. S. F. Frank, a Pole, who had been a resident of Buffalo, N. Y.t for twenty-five years, was seized when on a visit to his native country and sent to Siberia. Sir Matthew Baillie Debie. chief justice of British Columbia, died at his home in Victoria. An earthquake at Grenada and Al mere, in Spain, destroyed a number of buildings and killed several people. Canada has apologized for drunken soldiers tearing down the stars and stripes at St. Thomas and will punish them. The steamship Faraday left Wool wich with 1.000 miles of the deep sea cable which is to connect the buoyed end of the new commercial cable be tween Ireland and Nova Scotia. A fire at Yamagata, Japan, de stroyed 1.200 houses, and thirteen peo ple lost their lives during the con flagration, t Seoul, the capital of Corea, was cap tured by the rebels and the king was a refugee. Property valued at more than 81, 000,000 was destroyed by fire in Pan ama. The cholera was said to be spread ing in Russia, China and Turkey. By the capsizing of a boat off the coast of Ireland fifty harvesters, on their way to Scotland, were drowned. John Duke Coleridge, lord chief justice of England, died in London, aged 63 years. Patrick Drohan, Rory McDonald and James Sullivan were killed and three men injured by an accidental explosion of dynamite near Coteau da Lac, Quebec. LATER. Ix the United States senate on the 15th an amendment to the tariff bill to leave the duty on wool the same as in the McKinley bill was defeated by a vote of 29 to 37. The bill providing for the deficiency in the appropria tions for the government printing office was passed, and the post office appro priation bill (SS7.23fl,59'J) was reported. In the house the Indian appropriation bill was again considered. At the evening session private pension bills were discussed. Ahdul Aziz has been officially pro claimed sultan of Morocco. European powers may not recognize him. Ebastus Wiman was found guilty of forgery in New York and remanded for sentence. Clemency was recom mended hy the jury. At a, wedding feast at Suffernville, 111., John Macori shot and killed two men, the result of an old feud. There were 232 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 15th, against 216 the week previous and 313 in the corresponding time in 1S03. An incendiary at Monroe, La., taken from jail for execution by a mob, was permitted to hang himself. The populists in state convention at Jamestown, N. D., nominated a full ticket with the name of Edward Wal lace for governor at the head. Walter Muir was nominated for congressman at large. Mrs. Irene McKek died at Geneva, Ind., aged 104 years. She was born in New York in 1790. A detailed report of damage by the recent flood in the northwest places the total loss at over 82,000,000, the loss to the Union Pacific railway alone in Oregon being 81,500,000. In two days the bodies of eleven per sons were found floating in the Mis sissippi river between St. Louis and Cairo, I1L Woman suffragists at Kingman, Kan., arrayed Editor Brown, who opposed thera, in a gown and paraded him through the streets before a brass band. The backbone of the great miners strike was considered broken, many strikers having accepted the compro mise scale. Explosions in the Franziska mines at Korwin, Russia, caused the death of ISO miners. The populists made the following congressional nominations: Illinois, Fifteenth district, J. M. Grier. Ken tucky, Ninth district, John G. Blair Maine, Fourth district, C D. Chapman. C0MPK03IISE. Proposed Settlement of the Trou bles of the Strikers. Gov. Altgeld's New Order Substance of tbe Agreement Beached at Columbus, O. How the Miner Have Re ceived the News. OPERATORS WILL HAVE TO PAY. Springfield, 111., June 13. The gov ernor on Monday about 4 o'clock issued an order withdrawing the First regi ment from Pana. This action was taken on recommendation of the sheriff, who, with Hugh Bayle, as sistant adjutant general, had consult ed both with the strikers and the local miners and concluded there was no danger. The adjutant general has shipped fifty rifles to Peoria on requi sition of the sheriff. Gov. Altgeld has issued general or der No. 9, which somewhat modifies general order No. 7, which has caused considerable criticism. The new or der reads: "It Is not the business of soldiers to act as custodians or guards of private property. The taw authorizes them simply to assist tbe civil authorities In preserving the peace, quelling riots and executing the law. Whenever troops have been or may hereafter be ordered out and an owner of the property feels It necessary to have it guarded, he must do so at his own ex pense, and In such case troops should be sta tioned near enough to promptly quell any dis turbance If one should occur " The last clause is the added one. ' The Columbus Compromise. Columbus, O., June 14. Members of the national executive board met Tues day and prepared a circular letter to be sent to the miners in Ohio, western Pennsylvania, Indiana and Illinois. The letter is quite voluminous, and enters into the history of the compromise and the reasons there for. The board calls attention first to the fact that at the Cleveland con vention the miners decided to hold no more conventions, but to leave the future policy of the strike and the mat ter of the compromise wholly in the hands of the board and the district president. An account of the meeting of the executive board and district presidents in this city last week, at which time it was agreed to effect a settlement on the basis of a compro mise, is given. The board then recites the advan tages which the miners have gained through the agreement adopted by the joint conference. In the first place, they have succeeded in doing away with the ironclad agreements which have previously existed in the Illinois and Pittsburgh districts, and which have been a great detriment to the interests of the miners and the organ ization in those fields. They have also remedied a crying evil in cer tain sections in Ohio growing out of the truck-store system. At these places 6crip has been the only circulating me dium among the miners and they have thus been prevented from paying dues and becoming members of any organi zation. Under the agreement it is pro vided that at such places the balances due to miners at the end of every two Weeks shall be paid in cash instead of scrip. The board also calls attention to the fact that the miners have violated the injunction of the national officers not to destroy or molest property, but on the contrary have resorted to acts of lawlessness which have resulted in calling out the national guard in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. The seriousness of the situation alone, they say, was justification for a settlement on any reasonable basis of advantage to the miners. Coal Diggers Displeased. Columbus, O., June 15. The mining rate agreed upon by the joint confer ence of operators and miners in this city last Monday will not be indorsed by the strikers in the Hocking valley. The feeling against its acceptance has been intensified by President A. A. Adams, of the Ohio district, who re fused to sign the scale, addressing the malcontents at various points in the valley and urging them to organize against the settlement. President McBride and the other officials expect a radical change in sentiment as soon as the circulars ex plaining why they consented to a re duction in the scale for mining are re ceived and understood by the rank and file of the miners. President McBride reiterates the statement that the miners will accept the situation and return to work within a reasonable time. Spring Valley Men Rebel. 8prin'Q Valley, 111., June 15. The miners of northern Illinois will hold together as Aim as bands of steel. All thoughts of accepting the Columbus compromse are now dispelled. At a delegate meeting here Wednesday aft ernoon, at which at least 10,000 miners were represented, it was unan imously voted not to dig a ton of coal until the operators restore last year's prices. They adopted resolu tions calling on the executive board of the miners union to resign and de manded an election for officers at an early day. McBride Hanged lo Effigy. Pittsburgh, Pa., June 15. President McBride was hanged in effigy at a mass meeting of strikers at Hays Crossing, near McDonald, on the Pan Handle railroad. Three thousand men attended a meeting at McDonald and denounced their officers for compromis ing at 69 cents. Action on the Compromise. Dispatches report action on the pro posed new scales as follows: Accepted at upper Des Moines (la.) district by miners and operators; at Monown. Pa., by operators: Osltaloosa, la., by miners and oper ators: lieattyville, Ky., by miners and oper- tors; Jackson county, O., by miners and op erators. Kejected at Fuirbury. 111., by miners; south ern Iowa by miners and operators: at La Salle, 111., by miners; at Washington. Ind.. by miners; at Terre Haute, Ind., by the miners; at Spring Valley. 111., by the miners. Denver, Col.. June 14. The coal miners' strike in this state does not tp pear to be nearing a settlement. Over 800 men employed in the Crested Butte mines decided to strike until the schedule of three years ago is restored. This will compel the coke ovens at Cardiff to close down. Strikers Manifest Their Disapproval. Pittsburgh, Pa., June 15. A half dozen men began work Wednesday morning clearing out the mines of the Imperial Coal company preparatory to start next M onday. They were attacked by a mob of 500 strikers, who drove them from the minesand fired at the en gineer. They then went to the company store and drove out the clerks and helped themselves to eatables. After leaving notice that they would kill anybody who started to work at the 69-cent rate they marched to Moon Run. The company has appealed to the sheriff for protection. Ohio Bridges Burned. Mabsillon, O., June 15. Two bridges on the Wheeling & Lake Erie railway, not 25 miles away, were destroyed by miners Wednesday afternoon. Tele graph wires were cut, and an impor tant railway system paralyzed. The action was brought on by the move ment of coal by that company. AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION. Its First Annual Convention Assembles in Chicago. Chicago, June 14. The first quad "ennial convention of the American Railway union assembled at Fisher's hall, 82 East Lake street, at 10 a. m. Tuesday, and, a few minutes later, ad journed and repaired to larger quar ters, Ulrich's hall at North Clark and Kinzie street. It was in Fisher's hall that the organization was first formed, and the leaders felt at home when they came within its doors. Less than a year ago the first union was organized with a mere handful of men. To-day there are 422 flourishing, prosperous unions with a total membership of 124,379 in all the states and territories of the country. The object of the convention is to organize all railroad organizations un der one management, which shall govern the entire working force of tbe roads- Switchmen, brakemen, fire men, engineers and conductors are all included. Chicago, June 15. The American Railway union on Wednesday decided to affiliate with the Knights of Labor in the movement to improve the con- i dition of the laboring men ef the coun try, and resolutions favoring an al liance as far as possible between the Knights of Labor and the American Railway union were adopted. NAMED A TICKET. Action Taken by the Wisconsin Prohibi tion Convention. Milwaukee, Wis., June ltt. The state prohibition convention nominated the following 6tate ticket: Governor, J. (3. Cleghorn, Clinton; Lieuten ant governor. Ole B. Olson. Eau Claire; secre tary of state. T. J. Vanmeter, Lafayette; state treasurer, William Johnston, New Richmond; attorney general, E. W. Chafln, Waukesha; state superintendent, F. L. Eaton. Milwaukee; Insurance commissioner, Thomas Edwards, Ashland: railway commissioner, John W. Evans. Waupaca. The platform favors prohibition, re form in naturalization laws, money is sued direct to the people, just pensions and the withholding state aid from sectarian schools. Nominations for congressmen were made in several districts as follows: First district, Rev. A. S. Kay, Brod head; Second district, J. J. Sutton, Co lumbus; Third district, J. C. Martin, Mineral Point; Tenth district, Rev. John Holt. The balance of the con gressional nominations will be made by district conventions. The platform calls for woman suffrage, postal sav ings banks, that all money shall be is sued by the government, and that im migration be restricted. A STAGE HELD UP. The Deadly Work of One Lone Highway, man in the West. Wagoner, I. T., June 12. Saturday afternoon a lone highwayman, Levi Sanders, a desperate Cherokee char acter, held up a stage on the road be tween Fort Gibson and Talequah, where the big Cherokee payment was in progress. He made the passengers get out and secured 70 and some jew elry. One man was shot throtigh the lungs and was left in a precarious con dition. The robber then left, going toward Talequah. On the way he shot and killed an Indian boy who was herding cattle, and took his horse and again took to the road, where the robber came upon two wagons. He shot into one of the wagons and killed a woman. The men began shooting at Sanders, who was finally shot literally to pieces. A MONARCH DEAD. Morocco Rnler. Saltan Muley Hassan Foully Murdered. Taxgier, June 13. It is now known that Sultan Muley Hassan died sud denly June 7 at Tadla, between Mo rocco and Casa Blanca, Advices re garding the death of the sultan 6ay that he suffered from fever for four days previous to his death and that he died while giving orders. Some time before his death the sultan began vomiting and continued to suffer in this manner until he expired. It is added that symptoms of his case point to poisoning. Corner Stone Laid. New York, June 16. The New York Society of the Sons of the American Revolution laid the base stone of a monument at Dobbs' ferry, designed to mark the spot where Washington had his headquarters in 1783. The monu ment will stand in front of the old Liv ingstone house in which the Yorktown campaign was planned, and in which the American and British commanders arranged for the final evacuation of American soil by the British and op posite which the British sloop .of war fired the first salute ever given by Britain to America. Vice President Stev.ro son made the principal address. Panama's Big Fire. i Colon, June 10. Panama was on Wednesday visited with a large con flagration, 150 dwellings having been reduced to ashes. First stories circu lated were greatly exaggerated. WILL HELP BUSINESS. J The Ending of the C oal Strike Will Uav That Effect. New York. June 16. R. G. Dun J Co.'s weekly review of trade, says: j The strike of bituminous coal miners will end Monday wherever the authority and ad-' vice of their general organization can end It,! and there is little room to doubt that the coal' famine will then begin to abate. Some time, must elapse before supplies of fuel will ena- ble all works to resume that have no other rea son for suspending production. 1 "At New York boot and shoe shops have stopped, but shipments from the east are 10 per cent, larger for June thus far than last year.' The demand is mainly confined to low-priced goods, and has recently been more narrow Tor women's shoes. "The woolen mills are closing rapidly. It Is asserted that scarcely any have orders to occupy them beyond July 1 In men's wear, but in the demand for dress goods a somewhat better tone Is perceived.1 The New York and Philadelphia markets are dull, and at Boston a slight decline is seen in prices, with a large sale of ter-: ritory wool at 30 cents, scoured. West ern holders appear to be expecting higher prices than can at present be realized In east- era markets. Wheat is only a fraction higher, the exports and ordinary consumption for the year having already exceeded the government estimate of last year's crop by 124,000,000 bushels. "While business is narrow it is comparative ly free from losses by failure, for the liabilities reported in failures for the first week of June were only $2,507 .228, or which $476,118 were ot manufacturing and $1.H72.261 of trading con cerns. The aggregate liabilities thus far re ported In failures in May were but $13,514,760, of which $5,146,025 were of manufacturing and $6,912,302 of trading concerns. The number of failures this week has been 232 in the United States, against 813 last year, and 40 In Canada, against 34 last year." Bradstreet's says: ' "Of more Important eastern cities the only one noting an improvement Is Pittsburgh, where sales have been stimulated by warmer weather. At Philadelphia the textile indus tries report a sluggish demand. In the south there are live cities at which merchants are said to have en Joyed some improvement in busi ness. Jacksonville declares collections are better, and at New Orleans and Memphis the demand for staple goods is increased In grocer ies and dry goods. Nashville regards the out look for the fall improved, but admits rain is needed. At the manufacturing centers, At lanta and Augusta, mills are reported fairly active. Needed rains in southern Texas are said to have stimulated demand from jobbers at many points. "West and northwest few, if any, evidences of improvement in business are to be perceived, except those telegraphed from Omaha, Chi cago and Detroit. Activity at the Nebraska metropolis is showing itself in increased de mand for money. Recent advices are that wheat and oats crops in that state will be small, but that of corn heavy. "There is no improvement from the depres sion and dullness characterizing general trade at Cleveland, Cincinnati, Milwaukee and St. Paul. At Portland. Ore., floods are subsiding and goods are being moved. In the valleys small fruit crops will be lost, owing to lack of transportation. Trade at San Francisco is fair only, the wheat export business being at a standstill. "Gross earnings of 127 railroads for May reflect heavy losses to the transporta tion interests because of the coal strike and the general business depression. Earnings of t9,332 miles of railroad In May aggregated $36,154,548, a decrease of 17.7 per cent, from the May total last year, the heaviest decrease from last year shown in any month so far this year. For five months 126 roads earned $179,KU1.07. a decrease of 14.2 per cent, from the corresponding total a year ago. The heaviest decreases are among east ern and central western companies, due to heavy losses of coal traffic The combined earn ings of ten prominent coal-carrying companies show a decrease from May last of 41 per cent. WIMAN CONVICTED. The Jury Finds Him Oollty of Forgery Sentence Is Deferred. New York, June 16. Erastus Wiman has been found guilty of forgery in the second degree. The maximum penalty for the offense is ten years in state prison. Under the recent laws passed by the legislature the minimum pen alty has been abolished and Mr. Wiman ma be sentenced to a term of impris onment from one day to ten years. What the verdict would be was al most a foregone conclusion from the character of the evidence and the charge of Judge Ingraham. and es pecially that part of his remarks bear ing upon the lengths to which the greed of money carried men, bringing them through disastrous speculation to the point where they are tempted to use the names of others to obtain money. It was evident the moment the fore man, George Murray, of - the Hotel Sherwood, stood up that Erastus Wi man's doom was sealed. The face of the prisoner's old-time friend was blanched, and as he attempted to speak the words that should announce the finding of himself and associates his voice grew husky, his lips quivered, tears welled into his eyes and he was forced to defer what he had to say for some time, until he could thorough ly command himself. Then Mr. Murray announced that the jury had found a verdict of guilty, but recommended the prisoner to the mercy of the court. The customary formalities were then gone through with, such as polling the jury and the request to suspend sen tence. The latter was granted, Mr. Wiman's lawj-ers having until June 20 to argue motions. Meanwhile Mr. Wiman had been sit sing as one suddenly overwhelmed and utterly broken by the knowledge of a great calamity. When the force of the blow had somewhatspent Mr. Wiman's sons and friends gathered close about him and gave him their sympathy, counsel and suggestions. Deputy Sheriff Brown, who had lingered near from the moment the jury retired for deliberation, received a nod from Wiman. and the two left the courthouse for the tombs together, and there Erastus Wiman, reputed a millionaire a year ago, slept in a fel on's cell Friday night. It is said seven ballots were taken by the jury and on the first ballot the re sult was: For conviction, 7; not guilty, 8; doubtful.2. " Floaters" in the Mississippi- St. Louis, June 15. A great num ber of floaters are being found along the river south of St. Louis. In the last two days eleven have been report ed found at different points between this city and Cairo. One body was picked up at Windsor, two at Sulphur Springs, one at Bushburg, four at TwinHollows, one at llorine and two at Rush Tower. Some of these are supposed to be the Coxeyites drowned by the upsetting of a big raft ten miles below here during the night succeeding Gen. Kelley's departure from St. Louis. : I u;5 XV. f MM ; A 'X -r.':-l l tUTt. ? 1