mun?nm and Pub!!sh«v iLLT.wom «e5 BE BUCKED THE TIGER AMD MA1MC A MEAL FOR MUM GAY BRUTE. THE OfMBtnC «T tt»e Bm«MM CM1<J»-Dre*el •MMitai Home lor ITnlon Printers at Uprluci-Foa** KM IWh iWCMn Xarderedi &>• , .. OwgT--«tO»«U 1k* Senate, the 13th. ibe river •** •fctber bill wtc reported back TfOm the OMSmittee on Commerce with *mend- HMto. The consideration of the naval %»t was resume.!. Mr. Mcl'herson ».ffered an amendment appropriating $250,000 to ward 'the construction Of a dry dock at Algiers, Louisiana. It was rejected. Mr. McPber°or*., from the Naval Committee. Offered an amendment tJ the Senate amend - Mnt providing for three harbor defense double turret ships of the monitor type -lu- wtead of one ship. Mr. Gorman spoke at length on lines of economy, but not against enlarging the navy. After further <3ebat« and without action on Mr. Mc- Ptieron's amendment the Senate ad- , Journed. In the House, the Sibley tent ,H " claim bill again tfame fe the fore ou a re- ^ port from the committee of the whole f'•'"* '• ivtCrrin'* cijsirn to the rvjopf. of jfy. t for flnalVdjudiCHtion. To this substitute there was pending an amendment providing v *i that the reference should be merely for ln- » ^uiry, »nd report to Congress. The amende JpSMRtwan ____ Homo f->r t5«e T»|»t»s. $ \ Colorado Springs, Colo., 5,000 feet SsjCf fcbovo the turgid bos j in of Lake Michi- ^1^- -gas and jet within the shadow of the frreat mountain ranges, whoso snow- '* tipped crests soem to touch the Western f 1 > eky, a Senator of the United States, a bishop of tlie Episcopal Church, and a v "•*' l~ , Journeyman printer stood Thursday noon upon a platform and amid huzzas from thousands of throats joined hands feJV. in response to one sentiment. "The £>$ * - light of, union for self-protection is t given of God." The Senator was Jacob " / H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire, who, s| , \ at 16 years of age, was a full-fledged ?t?t j-master of the art of preservative; the / Bishop was the venerable W. E. Me- & I>r?a, of Chicago, who also, in his f i early days, served time at the case; $ , '• , and the journeyman, John P. Mc- %<'• H Kenna, of New York, Vice President of the International Typographical Union. The event which gave occasion for their manifestation of fraternity, and which brought together representative printers and publishers from nearly every commonwealth of the land, was the dedication of that institution--which owes its existence to the contribution of every union typo in the United States •ltd the welcomo aid of a couple of philanthropic Philadelphians--a homo • union printers. Has Sued the Gambling SynMeate. THE Minneapolis gambling syndicate, consisting of "Col." Tanner, Flannigan, •ad Shelly, were made defendants in a suit to recover $15,000, along with a number of other well known sports. The suit is brought by Edward R. Har- roun, St. Paul's former City Assessor. • few months ago a sensation "was caused by the statement that Harroun had lost his all, and more too, by buck ing the tiger, and tha' he proposed to feting Bait to recover $15,000. t MEWS NUGGETS'. SILVER whose burner certain. noocratm Wpit* me ^^iielOv. N8. Hobnrth. W. H. Com ing, Julius H, French, L. H. Greener, Nelson Morris, George J, Gibson, and Peter J. Hennessy. THE Mount Vernon Baptist Church In Camden, N. JM has been seised by the Sheriff on an execution held by the pas tor, the Rev, John Ehmstmrg, tor $3,728, advanocd by him to defray ranning ex penses. The church, whieto was for merly one of the strongest in the place, has been ruined by Internal dissen sions. WASHINGTON. BtottOB has It that Senator Stanford of California intends to retire from political and business life within a few SKHAK, in accordance with the advice •of Ms •physicians. WSM>UM STRONG, the retired Assool- •fre Justice of the United States Su- |»Wimo Court, -presided at the sixty- Thb peHo* oT Yonters raided the eighth anniversary of the American Sun- Hand-in-lta,nd Club rooms Friday night! -day School Union in Washington, (and arrested the forty-three men and REPRESENTATIVE COOPER of Indiana boys who 'were witnessing a prize fight, i has Introduced in the House a bill O we of the •principals was caught. His oppotmmt escaped. The Hand-ni-Hand clwb is-composed of young men between 1,8 and 25 years of age. There was a wild shamble to escape irtien the police made their appearance. Those captured were-todfeetlup. , .- . • *' 't * ' ; - WESTERUT amending the section of the Revised Statutes authorizing the Secretary of War to issue artificial limbs to all soldiers who are disabled and dependent upon labor for support so as to include glass eyes, in cases where the eye has .tNBlNli 1 INDUSTRIAL* SEWATOB MILTON W. MATHEWS died at Urbana, 111., at 3:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Senator Mathews for the last yeaf, and especially during the last j flict between 'the six months, has suffered from heart trouble, caused by rheumatism, first induced by the grip. THAT part of the new tax law of In diana which gave the State Tax Com mission power to imprison for contempt has been declared by the Supreme Court of the State unconstitutional. Such power, the court holds, is a strictly •judicial function. » , , v . „ REV. J. W. Eiitiis, who was deppsed 1 THE striking Boston (Mass.) boiler from the pastorate of Central Presby- j makers received word from headquar- r • I at f na inrnvnoriAnol ITntAn in terian Tabernacle in San Francisco up on the charge of deception, falsehood IN New York, 1,500 paving-stone cut ters and in Brooklyn 500 have struck. THERE is a prospect of an armed con- miners of the Cceur j d'Alene region and the mine owners, j owing to the determination of the latter to employ non-union men. THE Iowa Delegates-at-large to the I Democratic National Convention are: | J. H. Shields, L. M. Martin, Edward ! Campbell and John F. Duncombe. S. ] L. Marsh, one of the alternates^ Is a ! colored man. and misappropriating church funds, has brought an action at law aga inst his ac cusers for $100,000 damages.s' -- THE Supreme Court of Ohio has af firmed the right of truancy officers act ing under the provisions of the compul sory education law to require from teachers of parochial or private schools a list of pupils attending their schools* together with their ages and residences. GEORGE WEU&MAX, foreman of the Blair cattle outfit in Johnson County, Wyoming, was 6hot from ambush and killed as he was on his way to Buffalo. The crime is ascribed to rustlers, upon ters of the International Union in Cin cinnati that they would be supported ia their present strike and that $12,000 had been voted to them from the Interna tional treasury. They are much elated over this encouragement and are more confident of success than ever. FOREIGN. JAEGER, the absconding cashier of the Frankfort Rothschilds' boose, has been arrested at Alexandria, Egypt. The greater part of the money he took was recovered. A HOB of miners destroyed the engine house attached to a colliery near Hartle- whom Wellman and some officers were 1 pool. England, stole a large quantity of If : THE old warship Iroquois has gone yi - Mt of commission at the Mare Island f-f; • Vmvy Yard, California. |g^ THE pottery of Thomas A. Maddock ̂ _ it Sons at Trenton, N. J., was destroyed k^' 1tj fire. Loss, $175,000. I ? / " O P E R A T I O N S at the Harney Peak tin W ~ mines in South Dakota, which closed J|. - down in March, have been resumed, u" THE Capitol Building at Santa Fe, 1^-, K. M., burned Thursday night. The i k records were saved. The building cost ! THE Confederate 8oldiers' Home at A. the "Hermitage," Andrew Jackson's J* ,. place at Nashville, has been opened. : It has accommodations for 12S men. WotiiiAX COOKS, a farmer near Pres- k '• eott, Iowa, was called from home by . business on Wednesday, and when he «4. t returned the following day he found |<P|4 his wife and daughter murdered. His §^' hired man, whose name is Dooley, is 'Lk: MTTRAT HASTEAD claims to have in- formation that Robert T. Lincoln has written a letter in which he absolutely refuses to be considered as a candidate for the Presidential nomination, and recommends the renomination of Mr. Banlson. EKQLISH newspapers are dissatisfied with the decision of the Government to take part in the international silver con ference proposed by President Harrison. They consider the Government's action an unwise concession to the free coin age advocates. THE first of the Chicago boodle cases to come to trial has fallen through. Judge Collins declaring, after hearing the evidence of one witness for the State, that M. B. Hereley, member of the Board of Education, ehould never have been indicted. A FIGHT between Mexican troops and about thirty men alleged to be adher ents of Garza is said to have occurred near the American line. Of the latter eleven, including Julian Flores, their leader, were killed. The others escaped, probably crossing into Texas. THE Anti-Anarchist League, of Paris, tfee mission of which recalls the plan of 'lighting the devil with fire," has issued a circular declaring that it is the inten tion of the league to compass the murder of some well-known anarchist for every foture anarchist outrage by means of the knife, poison, or vitriol. SAVANNAH, Ga., suffered by fire Thurs- 4af to the extent of $100,000, twenty- •even buildings in the residence section being burned. . J. C. AND L. P. HALX. and Jack Pow- crs, working in a mine near Orovilie, Cal., were killed by the walls of the tun- «Ml falling in upon them. COUNTESS JOHANNA, of Thun-Hohen- •tain, in Austria, while walking upon the street in Salzburg, fell against a •bop window and broke it. Her neck was out by coming in contact with the she bled to death. to serve injunctions forbidding illegal roundups. MIDLAND, Mich., was shaken by the explosion of a battery of lour boilers that furnished steam for operating the saw mill of the Midland Salt and Lum ber Company. The boiler house was detached from the mill and was com pletely wrecked, and considerable damage was also done to the saw mill. Three employes were killed. August Malcolm, the fireman, was fatally hurt, and Arthur Robinson, E. P. Elton, Charles Blynn, Charles Burt, Albert Mall, and Sanford Walton were all more or less seriously injured. E. P. Elton was blown some distance from the mill, receiving a severe scalp wound. The cause of the accident has not been definitely ascertained, but it is charged to be a defect in one of the boilers. The damage to the property will not ex ceed $7,000. THE farmers in the West and North west have a good right to be blue these days. The heavy rainfalls seriously Belay those who have not finished their •feeding, and the ^unseasonable snow storms in the more northern regions have played havoc with the crops already in. The corn belt is soaked, and the til lers of the soil in Kansas, Nebraska, Mis souri and Iowa are fretting away the time until the sun dries the land so they can do their drilling and seeding. Wheat, too, will have to wait in many States until the land assumes a better condi tion for plowing. The outlook is not at all encouraging to-day. Cloudy weather still prevails in the vicinities visited by coal from the dumps, burned the resi dence of an officer of the company and wrecked that of a non-union man whose employment by the company was the cause of the riot. EMIX PASHA, who is said to have be come blind while endeavoring to recon quer Wadelai, In Central Africa, has long been a sufferer from defective vision. At Zanzibar, after his return with the expedition sent out under Stan ley to "rescue" him, he walked out at an upper window in consequence of his partial blindness and sustained such in juries that for a time his life was de spaired of. REPORTS received by the Russian Gov ernment regarding the condition of win ter wheat show that the crop is In a favorable condition in the Polish, Bal tic, northwestern and southwestern provinces, Central Russia, the Crimea and the Caucasus. In Kherson the wheat crop is in an unsatisfactory con dition, while in the northern and east ern provinces the grain has not yet sprouted. IN GENERAL REPRESENTATIVES of the Political Prisoners' Amnesty Association called upon Secretary Blaine to ask the friend ly interposition of this government in behalf of Irish-American citizdhs now held as prisoners in Great Britain. The Secretary reserved his decision. FLOODS are ragftig all over the West and South, and thousands of acres of rain, and in those still visited by snow farming lands in Illinois, Missouri, and sleet the temperature evinces a most discouraging tendency to hover about the freezing point. |pi- EASTERNS THE feuprome Court of Massachusetts has affirmed the validity" of the oleo margarine law passed by the State , Jjegislatujje in ItiOl, holding that the statute is but an exercise of the police power of the State. Ax overweighted cellar floor in the BOW Havemeyer Building, Cortland and Church streets, New York, fell Thursday afternoon. Two men, Charles t Desola and Albert Zimmer, were killed, and two others were badly hurt. THE United States' Grand Jury at \ " Boston returned a fresh batch of indict- *1" ^ ^ " SOUTHERN. AN attempt was made to rob the Graders' Deposit Bank at Sterling, Ky. Robinson's circus was passing and while the officers were watching it a man stepped in and seized a package con taining $4,600. He had almost escaped unnoticed when a clerk caught sight of the money. The thief was seized and the money recovered. At the jail the eneak gave the name Of Frank Owings, Houston, Tex. THE caterpillars, which a year ago appeared in such numbers along the southern border of North Carolina as to delay trains on the North Carolina Central Railway, have again appeared. Reports made by correspondents of the State Agricultural Department say the caterpillars have stripped the forests of all their leaves and are moving 6lowly westward. They are much more nu merous than they were last year. So far as reported they have not attacked the crops. NEW OBLEAXS dispatch: The great Morganza levee in Pointe Coupee parish --the biggest levee in Louisiana--broke Monday in consequence of the great pressure of the swollen river against it. At midnight the crevasse was 400 feet wide, and the water, six feet in depth, was rushing through with appalling force. The levee is 25 feet high, from 60 to 150 feet wide and a mile long. It is one of the most im portant levees along the lower Missis sippi, and parted at a point where a break will cause the greatest possible amount of damage, since it will let the water down on Pointe Coupee, Iberville, West Baton Rouge, Assumption. Ascension, La Fourche, Iberia, St. Mary, and St. Martin parishes, and may flood all the country between it and the Gulf. This levee broke in 1884 and caused $10,000.- 000 of damage, cutting down the sugar crop of the State materially. It was partially broken in 1890, but enough of it was held then to reduce the amount of damage. The United States govern ment assisted in rebuilding it both times. POLITICAL. CHARX.ES EMORY SMITH has formally resigned the Russian mission. THE Montana delegation to the Re publican National Convention goes un- Instructed. GROVER CLEVELAND was indorsed for the Presidency by the State Democratic Conventions of New Hampshire and Missouri. THE People's party of the Second In diana Congressional District has put M. W. Ackerly, of Knox County, in nomination for Representative. GEN. C. H. GBOSVENOR has been nominated for Congressman by the Re publicans of the Eleventh Ohio District. Pattison, Democrat, was elected in this district in 1890 by a plurality of 2,953. IOWA has announced itself for Boies. The Democratic Convention at Counoii Bluffs decided this, and selected the twenty-six delegates who will go to Chi cago and present Boies' name and insist Iowa, Nebraska, and elsewhere are sub' meraed. The Sny levee, which pro tects the rich bottom lands of Pike County, Illinois, is in danger of break ing. AT its morning session, Tuesday, the Methodist Episcopal Conference took a decided stand in favor of closing the World's Fair Sundays. The sentiment of the delegates was that there might better be no Fair at all than one whose gates would be opened Sundays. In case of Sunday closing, the conference is favorable to a Government appropri ation of $5,000,000. UNCLE SAM ha3 put his foot down, has taken his whip in hand, and Is pre paring to flog two giant monopolies-- the young and cruel Reading combine and the mature and sturdy stone trust. If the men who command what kind of stone shall be used in build ing houses and what prices shall be paid are philanthropists, Uncle Sam wants to know it. If the men who dictate the price of hard coal, and who by their own admissions made a net profit of $40,( 00,000 in 1891 are ben efactors of the human race. Uncle Sam wants to know the modus operandi. A large number of dealers In coal and stone have been summoned to appear before the Grand Jury at Chicago and tell what they know about the regula tions of the trusts. D A N Q B R T H R E A T E N E D MANY POINTS. 4.00 6 .% i .80 & .7t @ .09 & 14fc<e 8.25 BM 8.0C MARKET REPORTS. CHICAGO. C1TTZ.K-Common to Prime.... $3.50 Hpos--Shipping Grades >Jw BHKKP--l air to Choice WHKVJ-- No. 2 Spring... COKN--No. 2, NEW OATH--No. 2 1. RYE--No. 2 BCTTEB--Choice Creamery .' CIIEE-SK-- Full Cream, flats...... KGG8-Fresh PQTATOJW--New, per brl........ INDIANAPOLIS. CATTI-E--Shipping HOGS-Choice Light KHI-KP--Common to Prime"....II WHEAT--No. 2 Ked CORN--NO. 1 White OATS--No. 2 White BT. LOUIS. CATTLF IM H og - •j; W HKA R--No. 2 Red. M COBN--No.St...-. 4] OATS-NO. 2 " "•« RYE-NO. 8, 70 CINCINNATI. ** CATTM. AM HOGS.. •« &HKKP IN WEAT-NO. 2 Red. S CiKN--No. 2 44 OATS--No. 9 llixed ..." DTFTROU'. CATTLE. ««O Hoos m M Buticr...... im WHEAT--No. 2Red.....i. ON COHK--No. 2 Yellow ' ' 11 OATS-No. 2 White 3B TOLEDO.'" WHEAT--No. 2 „ jq CORK--No. 2 Yellow M OATS-NO. 2 White. " M »*E.. „ _ „ BUFFALO. BEET CAITLE LIVE Hoot WHEAT--No. 1 Hard COBK--No. 2 MILWAUKEE! WHEAT--No. 2 Spring... CORN--No. S OATS-NO. 2 White R*E--No. 1 BABLKT--No. 2 POKE--Mens Cattle.,. Ho«s. SHEEP I WHKAT--No. 2 Red.'..".*."."".'.'.".'.' COHK--No 2 OATS--No. 2 BnTTEH--Crsamery.'. *" * * * FOB*-New Mess.. A 6.00 0 6.00 6 6.00 83 .47 .HI .79 .'A .10 15* 8.50 & 9.00 0 4.50 4.75 • M W*t»l H»D«I for Msay T«sw-iMa«w In Nra Oiwiswwl DUtrtst* la lawiMit Psrii-Loii ofllw 8 took and Cieft Will B* VwyOmt. VHh Waste of Wstw. reached been HE Ole Missip Is a boomln' " is the correct river expres sion for the condi tion -of the father of waters at St. Louis. The danger line has the mighty stream has already spread Itself over territory not rightfully its own, doing great dam age to its banks and to the movable property of citizens along the shore be tween Bremen on the north and River des Peres on the south. The rise came within thirty-six hours, und the water Is still creeping up. Near the Merchants' bridge, in North St. Louis, scores 01 men in the employ of the lumber companies are at work securing lumber piles from the water. Last Saturday these piles were from twenty to thirty feet from the wa ter. Where the river seems to have created the greatest havoc is a squat ter" settlement about half a mile below the Msrcu&Dto' bridge, called Okla homa." The greater number of the squatters' homes are small flatboats or floating houses, some of them In the water, others on land supported on stilts. The danger line is 28 feet for a num ber of houses along the river front. At last reports the water was 27 feet 7 Inches. \ Damage Beyond Estimation. Near Brunswick, Mo., the Missouri and Grand Rivers have been rising rap idly for several days. Monday was spent in rescuing the inhabitants of the bar south o£ that place, which was formed about twenty years ago by the Missouri River changing its channel, and has lately become valuable farming land. Much stock was Also taken off the bar. ~ Hundreds of acres are cov ered by the floods and dozens of homes destroyed. Monday evening the ferry boat, loaded with people and horses, was broken from its , cai le by drift and floated down the stream. One woman fell into the river, but was rescued. The drifting ferry-boat was carried down the stream for almost four miles, where it landed on a bar in the Missouri River and the people were rescued by some fishermen. Mnoli Suffering In N^bnijw. Never has Nebraska experienced -su<Jh a long-continued down-pour d'f rain. The Missouri River is nine feet above low water mark. There is no flood at Omaha, but reports from points below indicate that the river is rising rapidly and already out of its banks and flood ing the Iowa and Missouri bottom lands. Reports from all along the lines of the Omaha roads tell of rain and snow in the Black Hills and in Western Ne braska and cloudiness all the way to Salt Lake. All trains were late and there are a number of washouts reported, though none of ihem have caused accidents. There is a washout between Beatrice and Lincoln on the Union Pacitic branch, and the Rock Island main line trains are using the Burlington tracks instead. The rain has so filled the approaches of the Mis souri Pacific Plattsmouth bridge that the opening of the bridge has been delayed until June. Snow has fallen in Western Nebraska, ranging in depth from six teen inches in the northwestern portion to two inches in the southwestern por tion of the State. IOWSD* May Seek the Hill*. At Ottumwa. Iowa, a heavy rain has set the Des Moines River booming again. The water has risen rapidly and continues to rise. The rain, it is feared, will swell the river to the highest point since 1856, when all the city except that part on the hills was submerged. Deait Farm Animals Floating: By. The Maumee near Toledo, Ohio, is on the rampage, being higher than was ever known before, except at the floods caused by ice gorge in 1883 and 1881. Parts of buildings, trees, fence rails, dead cattle, hogs, sheep and general debris came down- Reports tell of ex tensive devastation at Defiance, Ant werp, Napoleon, Fort Wayne, Maumee and Perrysburg. Marengo Island, off Perrysburg, where are many summer cottages, was nearly covered, and six or seven houses have been washed away. H ad Snow in South Dakota. , At Redfield, S. D., quite a heavy snowstorm occurred Tuesday morning, but melted almost as fast as it fell. Rain has been falling all the time since. During the past forty days eight inches of water has fallen there, the heaviest downpour known since the settlement of the country. There has been no dam age to crops. Five Children Killed Outright. William Wilkins and wife bnd five children, colored, thinking a storm was brewing, retired Into a cyclone cave at their home in the southwest part of Anthony, Kan, The heavy rain so un dermined the house that the roof fell on the sleeping people. Wilkins succeed ed in getting out and arousing the neighbors, who assisted him in rescuing the wife alive. The five children, from 6 months to 14 years of age., were taken out dead. .82* Aocoidlng to a Washington the sliver question threatens to eom««p again as a subject of present fegtateftrt interest. The silver men are not dis* poaed to accept their defeat, said there are again in oirctilatlon petitions vrglng the rules committee to briAg out an or der to fix a time for a vote on a free- coinage bill. Some fifteen or mor̂ sig natures have been obtained to one peti tion within the last two days, and Representative Pierce, of Tennessee, who has been the principal mover in the piatter, says that with the signature* obtained several weeks ago ninety- nine names altogether have been seoured. Exclusive of the mem bers of the Rules Committee 118 constitute a majority of the Demoorats In the House, so that fourteen names yet remain to be obtained. Mr. Pierce says that he does not know what will be the result of his efforts--that he may fail to secure the requisite number of signatures--but tha£ he intends to keep at work until he becomes convinced that he can not succeed. The aatl-silver men are not giving themselves much concern over the matter,and say that they do not believe the silver bill will again be taken up at this session of Congress. They say they do not believe the requi site number of names can be secured; that the House looks upon the sliver question as settled for this session, and Is not in a mood for a renewal of the uglib over Liie Bmiiu bail. SUNDAY-SCHOOL UNION. Btxty-el«rhtti Annaal Meeting of the As sociation B<sld in Washington. The%ixty- eighth anniversary of the American Sunday-school Union was held in Washingtoa, C. The Hon. William Strong, the retired Justice of the United States Supreme Court, pre sided. The Rev. Dr. James1 M. Crowell of Philadelphia -presented the annual report. Sixteen hundred and sixty- four new Sunday schools have been established, with 7,018 teachers and 59,551 scholars. Addresses were made by the Rev. J. IS. McCullagh of Ken tucky, WwK. de Groff of Kansas, and the Rev. B. W, Chidkaw, D. D., of Ohio. The latter is 85 yeafs old, and his col lege diploma at Miami University was signed fifty-nine years ago by the Rev. Dr. Scott, father oi Mrs. President Har rison, who, though 94 years of age, was upon the platform and pronounced the benediotion. TERRIBLE RESULTS PROM MINE EXPLOSION. BEHIUNG SEA TREATY SIGNED. Queen Victoria and Lord Salisbury AlBx Their Signatures. The other afternoon Minister Lincoln drove in a carriage to the Foreign Of fice in London, carrying a little leather case under his arm containing a copy of the Behring Sea treaty signed by Presi dent Harrison A quarter of an hour later he drove back to the legation with the little case, which then contained a copy of the treaty signed by Queen Vic toria and Lord Salisbury. The actual exchange of ratifications occupied only two or three minutes. It took place in the Secretary of State's room overlook ing St. James' Park, and Lord Salis bury and Mr. Lincoln each signed his copy of the treaty with a new quill pen. The pens, together with the blotting- pad used, were placed in a special bu reau for preservation through the ages. EXCITEMENT IN WAUKESHA. 4maU-slEed Riot Between Cltlseas an4 Imported Laborer*. Up to the present it has never been suspected that so innocent a beverage as waters capable of inciting a riot. The town of Waukesha, Wis., however,, where water in clear springs is abund ant, has found the beverage productive of a certain quality of disorderly con duct. A party of 300 laborers, who went thither the other night by instruc tion of a company of spring owners to begin laying pipes whereby to conduct water to Chicago, received a discourag ing reception. The whole town arose from its beds to discourage them. Fire- bells were rung, the residents dashed to the scene of action, the fire-hose was mercilessly trained on the incoming la borers, and the latter finally gave up the battle for the night. Selling Bogus Convention Tickets. People oiltside of Minneapolis are be ginning to realize that the pressure for seats in the convention hall will be great and all sorts of schemes to gain admission will be sprung upon the door keepers. An enterprising Chicago swindler, the local executive committee has learned, has printed thousands of fraudulent tickets in that city which he Is disposing of at such prices as he can obtain to the unwary. A Minneapolitan recently came across one of these tickets in the windy city and informed the local committee of the fraud. The Impostor has obtained a fair idea of the Interior of the hall and the numbers of the seats, and has thus been able to per petrate his fraud with considerable will. Fatal Duel In Kansas. At Marion, Kansas, J. E. McCarty shot and killed E. A. Gross. A bad feeling had existed between the parties for some time, and they met and quar reled. Gross told McCarty to arm him self and meet him at an appointed place. McCarty procured a shotgun and met Gross with the above fatal result. Mc Carty is a respected citizen and an auc tioneer of more than local reputation, while Gross was a butcher. 4.00 i 8.75 4 •»1*« .MM » 5.03 0 580 *< 5.50 World's Valr Notes. THE fine art exhibit will be much more extensive than was at first ex pected. THE Rensselaer Polytechnlo Insti tute, Troy, N. Y., is preparing.to make a notable exhibit. 1 A coMiECTiox of finely mounted birds and animals will be shown in the Penn sylvania building. 0 A NEW JERSEY pottery firm Is making a large number of specimens of fine work for exhibition at the Fair. THE gold and silver and other mineral exhibits at the Exposition will probably aggregate in value several million dol A TELEPHONE exchange having, it to now thought, about 600 instruments, will be established, in the Exposition grounds. IT is the intention, If possible, to ar range for a grand international regatta for both salt and fresh water yachts during the exposition. IT IS announced that the Pope has di rected that specimens of the beautiful Inosalc pictures, made at the mosalo works In the Vatican, shall be exhibited at the Exposition. A COMPANY has been granted the privilege of carrying visitors by lakc^ to and from the Exposition grounds. It is planning to run at least fourteen steam ers. Between the "lake front" In Chi cago and the grounds, four large boats, two of them whalebacks, and all havii a capacity of 5,000. each, will make trj every half hour. The charge will" mts one way and 25 cents for ' ' IJeep Snow In Nebraska. Snow has fallen at Rushville, Neb., to a depth of sixteen inches. It will be severe on cattle In the sand hills, and will retard farm work. About three- fourths of the small grain is in and the first sown is up and looks fine. Odds and Ends. 4 ANT one going to bed without moving the chair sat in last will be subjeot to the nightmare. THE difficulty with the young is they don't do as the old folks advise, but as they have done. \ IT is said that 127,000,000 boots and shoes are yearly manufactured in the United Kingdom. THE king clam of Penobscot Bay was taken at Islesboro recently. It weighed eighteen ounces. ON an average there are 106 boys born to 100 girls, but more boys die in Infancy than girls. WHILE endeavoring to swallow a mouse an owl choked to death at Nocka- mixon a few days ago. DON'T talk about yourself in company --it can be done much more satisfactor ily after you have left. To STEP over a child will stop It from growing unless the same person steps back the same way. WHEN a cat washes itself and^uts Its hind leg straight up behind Its ears there will be rain. POT your right foot, out of bed first and into your shoe and you will have good luck that day. To BE perfectly proportioned a man should weigh twenty-eight pounds for every foot of his height. CHT*SETTS HAS cities with titan any etraetion. t the sun 1? ftwa Vtorty.flve to-Fltty Men Lom Thel< Uves In a Slop a at Roqfia, Wash--The Bxplosloa Caught Two Shifts, and None oi Them AMTJFTIVE to ToB KM MOIY. An Awful Ulsastetv $h« most horrible explosion ever known in the Pacific Northwest occurred at the coal mines of the Northern Pa cific Railroad Company at Roslyn, a small town about four miles from the main line of the Northern Pacific, 107 miles from Tacoma. At least 42 men are believed to have been killed. Ex citement in the town borders on a state of frenzy and has extended throughout the State. Nothing like it has ever been known anywhere in that portion of the country, and from all parts of the State news of intense interest in the matter Is being received. Many dead- bodies,' aceordlng to a dispatch, have already been taken out, and hundreds of people have gathered around the scene of the accident; wives and children of buried men are at the mouth of the mine and acting like maniacs in their terrible distress. Every body that has been taken out UD to this time is terribly disfigured, and many of those buried have been crushed beyond recognition. Some are horrible masses of flesh without a trace OJ. I«6U moiititj left, wliiiw tutiuy OI 1116 unfortunate men are believed to have been blown to atoms. Nearly all of the men were, married and a large number of them had large families. It is thought that the explosion took place when the men were changing shifts. The concussion shook the ground perceptibly and the noise was heard a long distance. Smoke belched from the shaft almost immediately, showing that the mine had taken flre. All the inhabitants of Roslyn were on ther grounds in an incredibly short space of time, and the friends and relatives of the men known to have been in the slope crowded about the mouth of the mine, the women and children crying and the men wringing their hands in helplessness. Ropes were stretched to keep the people back, and a rescu'ng party was hastily formed. In their grief many of the men acted like mani acs, and as one body after another, each horribly mutilated, was brought out the wild exclamations of horror and sorrow were terrifying. At midnight seven bodies had been recovered, some of them crushed beyond recognition, and it was known that none of the entombed men were alive. Thirty-three of the dead were married men and had fami lies who swarmed about the opening of the tunnel, hoping against knowledge of their loss. While the wives and chil dren of the victims waited for the rescue of the bodies a car load of coi&ns, sent from Tacoma by special train, was un loaded, and the cofliiis were laid side by side near the tunnel awaiting occupants. If anything could add to the horror of the situation it is the fact that most of the families of the dead are in destitute circumstances. For several weeks the camp has been dull on account of the light demand for coal, and as few of the men were provident, it is feared that much suffering will be experienced un less aid from elsewhere is sent. When the work of rescue began it was found that the entire interior of the mine was clogged with debris, and nothing could be done until a new air shaft could be put in. Deadly fumes issuing from the mine ' stifled all who entered. When the thiid level of the slope had been reached and several bodies had been found, badly mangled and blackened; the presence of a small fire which was roasting some of the corpses was noticed. This gave rise to the belief that the explosion was caused by fire in the mine. Manager John Kangley, formerly of Illinois, says the gas accumulated in the slope where new levels were being driven and before connections were made with the air shaft the exposure of damp to a blast or match could have caused the explosion. Inspectors were continually on guard in the mine and reported no accumulation of gas on the levels and Kangley says it will probably never be known exactly what caused the explosion. ASSASSINATED BY RUSTLESS. SENATE AND HOUSE OP SENT AT IV ES. Foreman of a Ca.tlo Ranch Shot Down from Ambush. The rustlers are evidently determined to beat the big cattle men in this sec tion, says a Buffalo, Wyoming, dispatch, declaring they must either abandon their property or employ as foreman only those who bear their indorsement. George Wellman, foreman of the H. A. Blair cattle company, better known as the Hoe outfit, was shot by a concealed as sassin and instantly killed on the main road and about thirty miles south of here. The only known reason for the crime is that he has been notified to leave the country and has refused to obey the order. The first news of the tragedy was brought in by Tom Hathaway, an em ploye of the same company. He says he and Wellman started for Buffalo on horseback. When about twelve miles out and passing through a rough, broken country a shot was fired and his horse sprang ahead and ran away with him. While trying to subdue the frightened animal he heard several ether shots, and, glancing bacx, 6aw his companion fall from his saddle. He started back along the road and met Woilman's horse, which he mounted. He saw Wellman lying in the road motionless, but was afraid he would share the same fate if he approached nearer, sdi he came in and gave tho alarm. 0 There are probably one hundred peo ple in this county, business men and others, who have br en warned to leave, and doubtless others will be killed un less they at once seek a more congenial climarte. Current Happenings. THE residence of a Jeffersonvtlle, tnd., man has been burglarized seven times within fifteen months. THEY have just opened the doors of Johns Hopkins College to females. Singularly, the first girl to get in was a Ladd. A WESTERN schoolmaster Is being prosecuted by an irate father whose son was compelled to eat soap as a punish ment. A KIND-HEARTED man In North Ber wick, Me., name not given, is about to found an asylum for aged and and infirm horses. THE whole world now operates 900,- 000 miles of telegraph lines, and the charges for messages amount to nearly $450,000,000 anirually. A PIO with one head, but two per fectly formed bodies and eight legs, was born alive in Wilkinson County, Georgia, a few weeks ago. NUMEROUS grandchildren of both the contracting parties attended the wed ding of a groom of 75 and a bride of 71 at Crawfordsville, Ind., a few days ago. ~ A FLORIDA fish story tells of a shad some twenty inches long which leaped from one stream to another, over a con siderable space of ground, in search of food. IT Is announced that the Virginia Ex position Board Intends to reproduce at the Fair, Mount Vernon, the famous home and last resting place of George Wffhlajct.iiv Omr ITatteaal lawmakers and WfcatTtuqp Are Dbtag fbir the Good of the Counity-- Taitow MMWWM Proposed, WWIIM^ and Aetod Upon. > Doings of Congress. OatbeTth the House, after thn frsnssfl i tlon of routine business, went into cooimit- of tho whole (Mr. Hatch, of Missouri, in the chair) on the river and harbor bill The appropriation for the Improvement of the Missouri River between the foot of the great falls in Montana and Sioux City, Iowa, was increased from $70,000 to $100,000. An amendment was' adopted appropriating 810.000 for Im proving the Colorado River by the construction of a levee on tho Gila River near its Junction with the Colorado. The committee then rose and reported the bill to the House. Mr. Richardson, of Tennes see, moved to lay the bill on the table. This motion was rejected--the opponents of the bill not being able to muster sufficient force to order the yeas and nays. The amendments were agreed to 1b groes and the House adjourned In the Scnato, the 8th, the House bill con ferring an American registry upon the Inr man steamships City of New York and City of Paris was passed by a vote of four toonet and a bill reported by the foreign relations committee conferring jurisdiction upon United States courts in cases of crime against State laws committed on aliens started a lively debate, vhich was in pro- srrp.Rs |it, nrljniirnment. In the House, after two hours spent in considering aiueng- iiieuts to the river and harbor bill to re- commit it and curtail its powers, the meas ure was finally passed by a vote of 196 to 65. On the 10th, after passing (several resolu tions for printing various government re* ports, including the thirteenth annual re port or the geological survey, the last re ports of the ffeh commission and of the bureau of animal industry, the House pro ceeded with the sundry civil appropriation, Mr. Cogswell, of Massachseutts, op posing the policy of the committee In neglecting to make proper provision for certain public works, notably public build ings and lighthouses, while Mr. Wilson of Washington, Mr. Sweet of Idaho, Mr. Clark ot Wyoming, and Mr. Hermann of Oregon all spoke in favor of larger appropriations for surveying the public lands. Mr. Enloe, Tennessee, criticised the coast and geodetic survey, and Mr. Ding- ley, of Maine, closed the debate in a general criticism of the Oom- m it tee on Appropriations for the duplicity displayed in tii« puudiuH bill. The House then adjourned. In the Senate, a bill was passed changing the boundaries of the Yel lowstone National Park. Four bills for this purpose have been pending in the 8enate, and the measure passed is a sort of com promise. In the House, the 11th, the appropriation of 8620,000 for the purchase of a site and commencement of a new building for a new mint at Philadelphia was struck from the sundry civil bill. This was done upon mo tion of Mr. Holman. The Vice President, having gone to New York to act as pall bearer at the funeral of the late Mr. Astor, his chair was occupied by Mr. Man- derson. President pro tem., who laid before the Senate the -resolution of the general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church assembled at Ouiaha, Neb. (repre senting 2,500,000 members and 10,000,000 adherents), heartily approving the World's Fair appropriation bill, "providing express ly that It be conditioned on closing the Ex position on Sunday." The following'bills were passed: House bill to provide for a term of the United States Circuit and District Court at Evanston, Ma House bill authorising the construction of a wagen and motor bridge over the Missouri River at St. Charles, Mo. Appropriating $100,000 for a public building at Pierre, S. IX The presiding officer laid before the Senate a message from the President of the United States transmitting the seventh annual re port of the Commissioner of Labor. After an executive session the Senate adjourned. Jn the House, the 12t.h. a resolution for the Investigation of the Plnkerton agency was adopted'after a sharp debate, the confer ence report on the bill frr the sale of the Klamath River Indian Reservation was also adopted. The House then went into committee of, the whole (Mr. Lester of Georgia in the chair) on the sundry civil appropriation bill. Among the bills introduced in the Senate and referred were the following: Author izing the President to proclaim a general holiday, commemorating the four hun dredth annlversa^r of the discovery of America, Oct 12, 1892: to encour age American shipbuilding, extend ing to the steamship China the same privileges as have been extended to the City of Paris and City of New York. The China is a steamship of 5.000 tons, built In Glasgow in 1889. She plies between San Francisco and China, on the Pacific Mail line, but flies the British flag. The message of the President on the subject of an inter national conference on bimotallsra and the naval appropriation bill consumed the rest of the time. On the Diamond. Following is a showing of the standing of each of the teaojia of the different associa tions! NATIONAL Z/KAaUE. W. L. *»o. W. S .va Chicago 10 Boston 17 Brooklyn- • • Louisville... 19 Pittsburg.... 18 Cleveland. ..11 Cincinnati...11 ,<i?4!PniladelD'a. 10 .Sril New York... 9 .SGJ Av&shlngt'a. 9 .5 0ft. Louis.... 7 ,500 Baltimore.. 4 .465 .450 .429 .SIS Mi Milwaukee.» 9 Columbus. ..12 Kan«as City. 10 Toledo 6 WXSTERN LEAGUE. W. u fto. w. K .<50 Omaha 6 6 .70J St. Paul...„ 4 6 ,0'2"> MinneapHs. 3 6 .434;lndlan'pTs..%l IBS XUANOÎ -IOWA LEAGUE. W. L. $0. W. Jolleti II 1 .'.U7 Qulncy. 4 Pooria.... ... 7 4 .688|'l'erre Haute..4 Evansvllle... 7 5 J 83 Jacksonville ..4 Uockfotd.... 4 5 .441 R. I.-Moline...8 L. VO. 7 .417 7 .864 8 .273 8 aia L. 9* 6 .444 4 .4110 8 ..'83 10 .231 Miscellaneous Notes. IF you can not give a good reason fear * what you are doing, that is a good rea son why you should not do it. A MOTHER, father and their eighteen children joined in one day a Mennonite colony in Lane County, Oregon. BEWARE of the man who is always suspicious of everybody else's motives. The chances are that he has some mo tives himself. . MOST women have a good deal of ro mance in their dispositions. If they hadn't, very few men would ever succeed in getting married. s THE boiling water fad at meals is dy ing out. Thousands of people are glad, and now some doctors who recommended' it say it's all nonsense. RECENTLY invented wire - drawing mechanism has made it feasible to pro duce silver and platinum wire so fine as to be thinner than a human hair. A REPRESENTATIVE of tho Krupp gun manufactory at Essen, Germany, Hi about to start for Chicago to make ar rangements for an exhibit at the fair. GEORGE KENNAN, the American leo- turer ar d traveler, declares that he will . never cease agitating until the political prisons of Siberia are things of the past. EX-SECRETART BAYARD will address the Phi Beta Kappa alumini of New York, on Tuesday evening, March 22. Rev. Dr. Deems is President of the association. A CHICAGO newspaper says that B. P. Hutchinson, the great speculator, who is now in New York, is broken in spirit, and that the fortune of $10,000,000 he possessed a few years ago has dwindled to an insignificant sum. MOST of the men In the islands of Southwestern Japan lead lives of idle ness, and are cheerfully supported by the women. The males are fond of mu sic, some of them being excellent musi cians on various instruments. IN South America there is a race of cats to which "meaowing" is an un learned accomplishment. We are in fa vor of reciprocity with that country, so that we may exchange some of our noe- - 'turoal feline musicians for South Amer ica's aQiaeiflsa users. , , .