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Hundred Non-Union Men Pittsburg District * for Four Dollars a Ton y -The Amalgamated n Back of the Demand, be in Pursuance of an made with the Shen M a honing1 Manufactur Coal Strike Situation. Labor and Industrial .... * r . May 3.—To-morrow rs in tho Keystone .iis will go on strike i Oliver's Tenth street Clinton mill the men crrow or Monda.y puddlers at the Black ks have also agreed to g the week. At Moore -.burg mill, the firm is <1 brand of skelp iron vs its puddlers $4, but y work the non-union to $3.80 is paid. Thef > are idle now and it is . men will not go back n the union rate. The i Sligo mills are already ■ d number of strikers by •,< ! be 2.500. u mated Association is -trike. All of the mills now non-union. Under - of that organization, men non-union mills cannot be ;r as fast as they strike a scale they will be or > \malgamated lodges. . strikers were organized is the understanding that ;is the present stocks are the fiuishers are to join There are 5,000 linish the Amalgamated officials , e is great authority for - • r t that the Amalgamated bout the puddlers' strike of a contract with the I Mahoning furnacemen. the scale for $1 with the rsg that the Amalgamated puddling up to that tig sburg. A gentlemanwwho e conference makes this >r feature of this strike Amalgamated hrs prom . ikers strike benelits. • not yet members of S '. IN »; \ UoN OK WTED. ... i «. V • • 1'ir. t M »r»l it Garden to > •-«. .ii tin ,V. folk .111*1 Wfttern Kail* rn«il. • W v May 3.—judge J. . • In l States Court, auction restrain .s: il miners in the : interfering with • . r •• or the transpor t . I ’ •■■•I States mails. The * . r the injunction was X rolk and Western 1. ir*v*i < . ; r v, through its attor H H <It. They fear vio - the strikers. l*ni ii A. J. (harden has 'he court to dispatch Mes to the Flat Top ilence to tho in \T, NOT STRIKE. 3.—The miners i vnight and it 1 will > i;t a proposi e at the joint •rr>i\. An agreement • eaied probable, ii. iVnna, national pree i .Vine Workers, was thought there •• in Ohio. think there will be a r. Penna. “The min s May 1 pending a suspension will be -vpient is not reach ■ !. It will not last i * «wever, as another bly be called soon ' rude now.” .-TILL AT WORK. 3. All is quiet in Hi’ Southwest Vir al Company and the are the only ones at of the former were rday, and the latter • o the strikers are try 1.0' " uion ewployed at - > out. and the leaders of th.-se men will be ni-ihi. The operators W. ofiicials seem conti ut they will remain at X TO FSE FORCE. . M v 3—The Elkhorn quiet. A committee . >rn to-day waited ; - I'ocahontas working " i,st Company, ami the asked them to ’• fused, saying they ’la* rate they were get i>ian for the Elkhorn ■ Southwest mines 1 har the miners now r> fuse to stop. They rt to means to make >rce. called oft. l- -May 3.—The Rieh u'.iiirary company left tac scene of the coal ut- Pocahontas. It is aor O'Farrall acted sent him by Adjutant " ho is at Pocahon ■X 'WHANGED. -■ V‘L- May 3.—The situa ;innj;eti. All Is order ... i1'" a lQasa meeting at on Sunday, when ; W1‘l he taken to force • rs to join the strike, miners continue to go :ratoh8* offer. us o.. Mav 3.. br. :!'‘."nss- o.. y •u> Redded to offer »h^ Th^ opera only nine cents to be overcome. Some are hopeful of a compromise at 55 cents. FURNACEMEN ADVANCED. Youngstown. O., May 3.—Notices were posted at all the furnaces in the Mahoning and Shenango Valleys to day of an advance in wages from 15 to 20 cents per day. MOLDERS GET THEIR ADVANCE. Cleveland. O., May 3.—The raolders’ strike came to an end to-day. every shop in the city having finally con ceded the advance. OIL SUPPLY CUT OFF. Cleveland. O.. May 3.—The Standard Oil Co. to-day served notice on a num ber of local factories that it could no longer furnish them with oil for fuel. TURNEY IS GOVERNOR. Nashville, Tenn., May 3.—The Leg islature declares Turney, Democrat, elected Governor. Majority, 15 on joint ballot. SENSIBLE SENTIMENTS. Chlrnsn <«. A. K. M»'ii Do Not Acre* With tht* Mitssachuietti Department Com mander. Chicago, May 3.—Col. James A. Sex ton aud Col. Henry L. Turner, prom inent G. A. R. men, think the protest of Commander Joseph A. Thayer, of the Massachusetts Grand Army of the Republic against the proposed decora tion on Decoration Day of the monu ment to the Confederate soldiers buried in Oak wood Cemetery, was uncalled for and an impertinence. “The mem bers of the G. A. R. in Chicago." said Col. Sexton, “do not care what the ex Confederates do at their cemetery. It is entirely natural that they should wish to show respect to the memory of their old comrades. As for using Dec oration Day for the dedication, it is a national holiday and a time set aside as a remembrance to the dead, and 1 do not believe the Grand Army men of Chicago will object to the Confederates using that holiday for their memorial service. There is a very friendly feel ing between the Union and Confederate soldiers now living in Chicago, aud ; they fraternize on many occasions.” T am a member of the G. A. R.,” 1 Col. Turner said, “but I utterly repu diate the spirit manifested lu the letter 1 of the Massachusetts Department Com mander. General Thayer speaks of this monument as a memorial to per I petuation of the love of treason. I look 1 upon it as a memorial to the heroic 1 valor of a reunited nation.” PEACE TREAY RATIFIED. Thp Emperor of China (Jives Ills Assent, and 1.1 Hung Chan*; lias Gone to Che Foo to Exchange Katilii atlons London. May 3.—The Times has a despatch from Shanghai stating that the Emperor of China ratified the treaty of peace with Japan yesterday and that Li Hung Chang will at once proceed to Che-Koo to exchange ratifi cations with the Japanese representa tives. ACCUSED OF MURDER. The lln«l>»uil of a Woman Who Died Un der t erjr Suspicious Circumstances, in JuiL • Special to the Register. Charles Town. W. Va., May 3.—An drew Scott, colored, 30 years old, was arrested hero this morning charged with poisoning his wife. He was coui nin'.t-il to jail, and Coroner David How ell took charge of the case. Vn in quest was begun, hut the testimony could not be completed, as there tire many witnesses, and the jury adjourn ed until to-morrow. The testimony developed that Scott and his wife were married about four years ago. She is young and rather pretty, and on ac count of his jealousy they have not lived happily together and had fre quent quarrels. Yesterday morning Scott attempted suicide by cutting his throat with a razor, but only made a slight incision. Later he went to the drug store of J. P. Bishop, and under the name of Simpson purchased an ounce of arsenic. He prepared dinner anti made a cup of tea, into which it is. alleged he put arsenic for his wife, and she drank it. Shortly afterward she be came sick and a physician was called, who discovered that her symptoms in dicated arsenic poisoning. She was in spasms during last night and died ear ly this niorniug. Soon after her death a quantity of arsenic and partly char red paper with Br. Bishop's label on it was found in the cooking stove. Dr. Van Perr> stated she had died of poison, and Scott was arrested. An autopsy will be held and the coroner’s jury will report to-morrow. There is talk among th,* colored people of lynchng Scott to night* __ *■ THE RISE IV SHOES. Manufacturers Dwlure Ir Is l)ne Solely to the t ost of Leather ami the Scarcity of llhles. Boston. Mass.. May 3.—The contem plated advance in the price of shoes for the fall season, which was a re sult of a meeting of the manufactur ers in this city a few days ago, is cre ating considerable dissatisfaction in shoe circles all over the country, es pecially is this the case where jobbers and retailers have taken contracts re lying upon the present prices as a ba sis. A . . . \ representative of the Associated in-ess visited some of the leading leath er firms in this city and a representa tive of the firm of Chase, Merritt Co., gave the following statement of the cause of the advance in the prices of shoes: , , , "The continued rise in the price of leather which is caused by the lack of hides, is responsible solely for the contemplated advance in the prices. The shoe manufacturers to-day don’t want to take orders; they simply de sire to keep enough orders on hand to have their machinery running. They have made concessions so long that now they must stop it. and no jobber or retailer can place orders with a manufacturer to-day unless he pays an. advance of 13 per cent, pec pair. \yi l.L RETAIN ITS INDEPENDENCE Chicago. May 3.—By a decisive vote the Board of Directors of the McCor mick Seminary have rejected the pro position of the Presbyterian General Assembly for a surrender of the prop erty and control of the seminary. Near ly all of the forty directors were in at tendance when the vote was taken. r A Letter to Governor Stone, of Mis sissippi, on Finance. He Cannot Conceive Why the Peo ple of the South, Whose Interests Are All Against Any Sort of Un sound or Fluctuating Currency, Should Favor the Free and Inde pendent Coinage of Silver—The Life and Hope of the Democratic Party Rests Upon the Maintain ing of Sound Money. Jackson, Miss., May 3.—Governor Stone this evening gave to the Associ ated Press a letter addressed to him by President Cleveland under the date oi April ildth. The President says: "I have never ceased to wonder why the people of the South, furnishing so largely, as they do, products which are exported for gold, should be willing to submit to the disadvantages ami loss of silver mono-metallism and to con tent themselves with a depreciated and fluctuating currency while permitting others to reap a profit from the traus mution of the prices of their produc tions from silver to gold. 1 hope our Southern fellow citizens will be per mitted to see the pitfall which is di rectly before them who madly rush towards the phantom light of free, un limited and independent silver coin age. If we, who profess fealty to THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY, are sincere in our devotion to its prin ciples, and if we are right in believing ! that the ascendancy of those princi ; pies is a guarantee of personal liberty, universal care for the rights of all, non-sectional American brotherhood, and manly trust in American citizen ship in all parts of our land, we should^ study the effects upon our party and consequently upon our country of a committal of the National Democracy to this silver apparition. it mere are uemoenus wno suppose that our party cau stand on the plat form embodying such doctrine, either through its affirmative strength or through the perplexity of our opponents on the same proposition, or if there ary Democrats who are willing to turn their backs upon their party associa tions to the hope that free and un limited and independent coinago of silver can win a victory without the aid of either party organization, they should deceive themselves no longer, j nor longer refuse to look in the lace the results that will folow the defeat, if not the disintegration of the Demo cratic party, upon the issue which tempts them from their allegiance. If we should be forced away from our tra ditional doctrine of SOUND AND SAFE MONEY, our old antagonist will take the field on the platform which we abandon; and neither the votes of reckless Demo crats nor reckless Republicans will avail to stay their easy march to power. This is as plain as anything can possibly be. “It, therefore, becomes the duty of every Democrat wherever he may be, to consider what such a victory would mean, and in the light of a proper con ception of its results he should delib erately shape his course.” SOUTH CAROLINA’S REGISTRA TION LAW. Columbia, S. C., May 3.—In the United States Court to-day, l>efore Judge Goff, C. A. Douglass, of Wash ington, commenced his argument in the case to restrain the holding of a con stitutional convention in this State, on the ground that the registration laws of South Carolina are unconstitutional. He aimed to prove that the effect of the registration law was to deprive citizens of the right to vote, and said that this unjust feature invalidated it. Judge Goff is not expected to render his decision under a week or two. THE INCOME TAX HEARING. Washington, D. C., May 3—There is no doubt that the argument of the in come tax cases in the Supreme Court will begin next Monday. The matter from the iirst has been contingent upon the arrival of Justice Jackson from Tennessee. To-day Chief Justice Ful ler announced from the bench that Jus tice Jacksou was expected to be present Monday. KILLED BY LIGHTNING. Special to the Register. Huntingdon, W. Va., May 3.—Last night near Rock Camp, Ohio, fifteen miles north. Ham Bazzill. T. J. Bold man and Chilton Woods, were fishing in Symm's Creek. A storm arose and they took shelter under a tree. Light ning struck the tree and all were in stantly killed. All leave families. JAPAN WILL COMPLY. Paris. May 3.—The Journal Des De hats learns from authentic sources that Japan has decided to abandon her de mand for territory on the Lio Tung peninsula except Port Arthur, in re turn for compensation elsewhere. RIVERNEWS. Dally Chronicle of the Movements of the Boats and Boatmen. Work was resumed yesterday on the government dam at Merrill s Station, near Beaver, Pa. A large force of men are at work. The Ben Hur arrived yesterday at 2 p m.. being about seven hours late. She was aground at Hamilton's bar, and was pulled off by the Scotia. The Ironsides is laid up at Steuben ville on account of low water. To-day’s packets are the H. K. Bed ford for Newport at 5 a. m.. the Sco tia for Cincinnati at $ a. m., the Lex ington for Matamoras at 11 a. m., the Courier for Parkersburg at 10:30 a, m„ and the Liberty for Clarington at 4 r jlle Kirk, cook of the H. K. Bedford, will stop off this trip and go to his home at Marietta. Fred Stevens will hold the stove down while he is off. Orville Noll, of Hannibal, has ac cepted the position of cook at the Ho tel Windsor, and will go to work Mon River 5:00, falling. Parkersburg. W. Va.. May 3.—River feet 10 inches and falling; weather lr and warm. Indefinite Reports Tell of Frightful Ruin Wrought by the Wind. Over a Hunt'red Persons Supposed tc be Killed in a Small Strip of Territory in Iowa, Near Sioux City—Two Towns Laid in Ruin3 l and Many People Killed—Only Mea.jsrre Reports Can be Had on Account of the Wires Being Down j and Travel Interrupted. Sioux City, Iowa, M*y 3.—Dispatches wore received here by the Sioux City and Northern railroad from their agent at Sioux Centre, forty-five miles north, telling of a terrible cyclone near there, in which many people were killed and injured and much property destroyed. The wires are down and reports are meagre. The cyclone passed three miles northeast of there at 3:50 p. m. A school house near the town was de stroyed and the teacher and a number of children killed and injured. The Sioux City and Northern tracks were washed out for several miles. Sioux Centre, Iowa, May 3.—8:30 p. m.—Three school houses and at least twenty residences and barns were swept away. At the school houses, two teachers and three pupils were killed and many injured- Two women were found dead about 6 o’clock. One man reported his hot^e was blown away and his family killed. He reports at least two or three hundred people kill ed. Parties have been sent out from Hull, Sioux Centre and Orange City, but their work is being carried on in total darkness in the midst of a tre mendous wind and rain storm. A number of bodies have been recovered. It is said Perkins was directly in the path of the storm and was almost en tirely wiped out. The wires are down. Sioux City, May 3.—(Later.)—Definito reports are beginning to come in as to the path of the cyclone. The storm originated a mile and a half from Sioux Center, moved northeasterly, and pass ed directly through Perkins. This evening, however, news from Sibley is to the effect that a storm struck there about 6 p. m., destroying the house of John Watterson, killing Mrs. Waiter son, and injuring Watterson and his son.. me dioux uity ana iNorxncrn train, which arrived at 10 p. m., brought sev eral passengers who witnessed the storm. They reported thirteen dead bodies at Sioux Center at 6 o’clock. They estimated fifty people must have }>een killed. The deaf ) loll ao for as now know is: Mrs. John Kostor, Mrs. Post. Miss Anna Marsdeu, Charles Marsden, George Marsden, a child of A. Verhoff, two children of L. Tl. Coombs, Miss Mamie S. Haggie and live brothers, - Jamison and two Ivoster children. Their deaths were all in the vicinity of Sioux Center. The names of a few injured near Sibley, where consider able damage was done by the storm, are not known, except John Watterson, who was killed by flying timbers. Herman Belknap, a farmer near Sihlev, was killed by lightning, and Mrs. Frey and the Rossburg brothers were badly hurt. Held Last Night by the Citizens oi the Island, at Thomson Church, To Protest Against the Sale of Beer at the Baso Ball Park—There Wore Speeches Made by Several Ministers—A Fair-Sized Audience Composed Mostly of Ladies Pres ent. As was announced yesterday, there was an indignation meeting held last night at the Thomson M. E. Church, on the Island, by some of the citizens of the Seventh ward, to protest against the selling of beer and liquors at the base ball grounds. There were about two hundred people present, mostly ladies. The meeting was opened by the pastor of the church, Rev. Dr. Bick ley, who briefly stated the object of th<* meeting by saying it had been called to look after the interests of the citi zens of the Island; that they were there to protest against the license that had been granted certain parties to sell beer at the ball park; that the license was granted illegally, and over the protests of several members of Council; t.hat the usual notice of the application had not been given, and that the li cense had been railroaded through without anyone being allowed to enter a protest against it. “I ant here,” said he, ‘‘to protest against, this outrage. Not only to maintain the dignity of the ‘Garden Spot,’ but also that of the city. Should Wheeling allow beer to be sold at the ball park it would with Cincinnati and St. Louis be among the only cities in the country to allow such a thing. We do not wish to go on record as such a city.” He spoke of incidents where many have gone to ball games, in cities where intoxicants were sold, and got drunk before the game commenced and made it uncomfortable for others who attended. That such places were not patronized by the respectable people but bv the lower classes. Said he: “I was talking to Mr. Burrows about the matter and he said if the sale of beer was stopped at the Fair Grounds there would be no trouble about the matter at the ball park. Dr Bickley also gave it as his opin ion that it should be stopped at both places. He claimed that it was an imposition and an injustice the wa\ the ball park license was granted, and that he had no doubt there were 2,500 or 3.000 people on the Island who would sign a protest against it. He said: . . .. "I have canvassed one of the most thicklv populated streets on the ‘Gar den Spot’ and only found four families who were not. willing to commit them selves on the subject as being for or against the selling of intoxicants Ninety-seven per cent of the residents of this part of the city are against this thing and ready to sign a protest. In speaking to Mr. Burrows on this subject I asked him whether it was necessary for them to sell beer to help meet the expenses of the club. He said it was, and now I am willing, as poor as I am, to head a subscription list to help the club if they will not sell beer on the grounds. Don't misunder stand me as saying that I am in any way opposed to base ball, because I am! not, but I want to see the game con ducted without such demoralizing in fluences being present. “We should do all we can to have this thing stopped through the proper recourse to law, and if it is impossible to stop the sale of liquor that way we should stay away from the game our selves, keep our friends away, and do all in our power to make the ball games a failure.” The next speaker was Rev. Dr. Brlt tingham, of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, also of the Island. He said ho did not care to make a speech, as he considered it would be superfluous after what the preceding speaker had said, but that he wished to enter his humble protest against the thing. He spoke of a paper calling the residents over there “kickers,” and he wished to be classed as one of those kickers. “I am opposed.” said he, “to either the fair grounds or the ball park being licensed, and I am ready to assist in any fair way to stop this thing.” Rev. A. J. Irey, pastor of the First Baptist Church, next spoke of the matter in a pronounced temper ance sense, generalizing on that sub ject at considerable length. He said tho city now had the best set of officials it had had for many years, and he thought that were a protest made they would do all in their power to asist t :«t people. In closing he said: "It is for you people, the residents of the Island, to say whether this thing shall con tinue or not. For myself. I will say that I am bitterly opposed to it” Rev. Wilbur F. Crafts, superintend ent of the Bureau for the Sabbath Ob servance, of Washington, D. C., was the principal speaker of the evening, but seemed to be rather disappointing to the audience, as his address savored jjii/i u ul wic icuj];ci(Uiuo leutui t? tuau a protest against the license at the hall park. Among other things, he said: “What are you going to do about this thing? I have been suggested as the one ta offer a remedy for the evil, but I think the pastor of this church men tioned a good scheme to you. The easiest and best way to do, if a re course to law will not help matters, is to boycott the hall games and do all you can to make them a failure. Do not understand me to mean that I am opposed to ball games. On the contrary, I am in favor of them, in fact, in favotf of all kinds of out-door athletics, but I think they should be free from such demoralizing influences. I believe in keeping America’s great game respect able. Inever knew of a saloon or beery garden that was conducted without having violated the laws, and in such a caso all I think will be necessary for you to do will ho to go before the proper officials and make complaint, when the disgraceful practice will be stopped by the license being revoked. “There is no doubt but this granting of a license to the ball park is a fore runner of Sunday ball games, but ihould such be the case I have no doubt the law would bo enforced to tho full letter, and the Sunday games nip ped in the bud. From what I have been told, you now have the best set <1J city officials for many years and they will do all they can to assist you in maintaining the dignity of your beau tiful Island. If they should not do so, all that will be necessary will be to call on the State or county officials. 1 hopo you will wage this battle of right against wrong to the bitter end, if it takes you a year, and I also hope you will make the fight so strong that there will be no intoxicants sold at either tho ball park or the fair grounds.’* Rev. Dr. Riker, of the Fourth Street M. E. Church, was the last speaker, and he said that ho heartily endorsed every thing that had been said; that ho wished to express his profound indig nation at the way the license had been granted by tho City Council Hoped the people would follow the inctruc tions of those speakers who preceded him and make the fight so strong that to sell beer on the Island would be an impossibility. At the close of Dr. Riker’s talk, Dr. Crafts again got up and spoke a few words, after which he askejJ that a collection be taken up to assist the bureau which he represented to wage their war against the destruction of the Sabbath. U1L NEWS. Another well will lx* drilled on tho Lewis Atbey farm, near Williamstown, by Wilsoa Brothers, of Zanesville. The well will be drilled dose to the big Kate well which created great ex citement when it came in some time ago, and the owners expect good re sults. Tho ’04 well on the Henderson farm, near Williamstown, is quite a freak, and Its actions of late cannot l>e accounted for by oil men. Every day at exactly seventeen minutes past twelve o'clock, the well “flows.” CITY HEALTH MATTERS. The Council Committee on Health met yesterday afternoon and recom mended for payment bills aggregating $234.69. The Health Officer reported at length upon the small-pox situation, saying all the cases were progressing satisfactorily save the last patient taken to the pest house.Mr. Davis. Tlii* patient died last night. It is likely, in the opinion of the Health Officer, that there will be a total of seven or eight cases at the Snyder house, on Eighteenth street, all of the residents there showing preliminary symptoms of the disease, with perhaps one ex ception. The enlargement of the ac commodations at the pest house was discussed, but nothing definite was done. There are no new cases outside the Snyder house. \ —Yesterday afternoon the'funeral of Mrs. Radcliff, of South Jacob street, who died on Wednesday, took place from the family residence. TUE WE ATHER. Washington, D. C., May 3.—For West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania: Fair; southerly winds. Her Sister Republic Tenders Hei Substantial Support. Salvador Has Offered to Guarantee the Payment of the British Claim. England’s Attitude May Hasten the Projected Central American Confederation. London, May 3.—Senor Chrisanto Me dina, the Salvadorean minister hero and at Paris, has made a statement to the Associated Press regarding the ne gotiations which have been conducted through him us the representative of Nicaragua, looking to a settlement of the dispute between Great Britain and Nicaragua. He said: "On the departure of General Bar rios, the Nicaraguan envoy, from this city for Nicaragua, the Nicaraguan le gation was left in my charge, pending his return or the appointment of his successor. In that capacity I trans mitted to the foreign office the various proposals of the Nicaraguan govern ment. The earl of Kimberley, secre tary of state for foreign affairs, has, throughout, been perfectly firm in his attitude, and in my interviews with him and with other officials of the foreign office, my representations have always been treated with con siderate attention and courtesy. The Earl of Kimberley has shown anxiety to avoid a conflict with the Central American republics, hut it being con sidered necessary by the British|jnin isters in council to make a firm stand, all efforts to move them have failed. ‘‘However, I am happy to express the beli^ that this unfortunate dis pute is on the eve of settlement and that in a few days a definite reply will be wired from the Nicaraguan govern ment in answer to a dispatch sent at 7 o'clock yesterday evening to Mana gna, after my last interview with the Earl of Kimberley. iiit: v.cuuoi nuici iuiu i ^ tut) all anxious to help Nicaragua in tho present difficulty, ard they have used every means in their power to do so. As the representative of Salvador, I have offered the guarantee of my gov ernment to pay the indemnity iu Ixm don within 15 days after the evacua tion of Corinto. Tho Earl of Kimber ley having accepted this arrangement I so informed my government last night, and I have no doubt that tho terms will meet the views of tho Nic araguan government.” A gentleman who took part in tho negotiations has said that it is felt by all concerned that Senor Guzman, tho Nicaraguan Minister at Washington, is largely responsible for the continued opposition of Nicaragua, as, being of a sanguine temperament, he led his gov ernment astray as to what they might expect from the United States. Con tinuing, the gentleman said: “It would have been more satisfactory to any of \ the Central American republics to liave themselves paid tho indemnity rather than l>e subjected to the calumny, mis representation and distrust which has appeared in the American and Euro pean press during the past few days. Thero is no question about the Monroe doctrine being involved. In fact, tho doctrine is obsolete. If England or ! any other power is unable to protect the rights of its subjects in Central America they are unable to protect their interests anywhere. If England had tried to annex Corinto it would he a different matter, but she was only demanding reparation for insults of fered to her subjects.” Tho government of Great Britain, it is generally believed, would not view with disfavor a United States protec torate over the whole of Central Amer ica. Indeed, during the present Inves tigations, the Earl of Kimberly said that under certain circumstances j» would perhaps he better for the United States to proclaim a prot<e < it«* o\. • Central America, and make herself re sponsible for the acts of the people. The Exchange Telegraph Company this afternoon claims to be officially in formed that Nicaragua has agreed to pay to the Britisli government £15,000 within a fortnight provided Corinto is evacuated by the British forces and that Great Britain has accepted th# offer under the guarantee of the United States that tho bond will bo executed. The other claims of Great Britain against Nicaragua will lx* settled by a joint committee and Rear Admiral Stephenson will raise the blockudo of Corinto. STREET RAILWAY INDICTED. Brooklyn, May 3—.The grand jury of Kings county brought in an indict ment to-day against the Brooklyn City Railroad Co., alleging manslaughter in the first degree in causing the death of Mrs. Mary Gallager, aged 63 years, who was killed on March 26. last, by a street car while she was on imr way to church. The offense with which the railroad is charged is punishable by a hue oi $.1,000. A HORRIBLE DEATH. Cincinnati, ()., May 3.—Aaron. Ly man, a lineman, lost his footing and fell on a live wire, the wire striking his neck, severing the head and set ting fire to his clothing and body. The wires were immediately cut and the burning body rescued. The remains presented a horrid appearance. PRICE WILLBE HANGED. Denton, Md., May 3.—Marshal E. Price, the condemned murderer of Miss Dean, was sentenced this morning to be hanged. Gov. Brown will name tha date of execution. BAIL FOR OSCAR WILDE. London, May 3.—Upon application of council for Oscar Wilde, the judge to day decided to admit the prisoner to bail. The amount will be fixed to morrow. WILL MEET IN BALTIMORE. Nashville, Ten., May 3-—Baltimore has been selected as the next place of meeting of the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. THE SECRETARY VERY ILL* Washington, May 3.—Secretary Gresham passed a restless night and to-day is much prostrated as the re sult of the severe pain he has exper ienced.