THE PLA1NDEALER 4. YAH SLYKE, Editor and Pub. h were killed by the of Health under the McH*K*Y, ILLINOIS. SfV> "4^'^ •IF# «i • CHEER THE COLONEL. #HCCKIN RIDGE'S FRIENDS CEIVE HIM WARMLY. HE- tifli" Initlm* Position OM Strikes We* Upheld--ftlotocw Coke WorkemBoatoJ- Vklrj Tal« of Bartod TNUOM from OW ' •' ' .V V/;:4, w:< K«itmkr"« Qnwr Tutfc ' 6bL. W. <X P. BRECKINlHtWft^ rived at his home at Lexington, Ky., Friday night to begin what promises to he the hottest campaign ever fought oat on that, historic ground. When he 6book out his silver u ane on the oar platform he was greeted by 500 citi zens, who gave nim a hearty cheer sni pressed forward to shake'hit hand. A oroad smile spread over his gleam ing face and he * eemed to be glad he bad come. A committee took him in tow and with "some difticulty steered him through the crowd and into the rear entrance of the Phoenix Hote1, from which he made his waj to the tele- S-aph office and sent a massage to rs. Breckinridge announcing hi-; safe .arrival and enthusiastic welcome. Then he went to hi.s sons apartments across the street and into consultation with bis managers. The excitement was over in ten minuses and the peOjple- ^ went home tQ.suppHsjr. 8^ L ^ . i « - , t e n i * i i » * . J^CHAIRMAN BOATNEH, of ; CO» |6^ , ^reSsional crmmittea appointed to in vestigate the Northern Pacific Rail road injunctions of Judge Jenkins, sub mitted the majority report of the com mittee to the House Friday. After re citing the circumstances' leading up to '?,?<. *$'•!'. ' the granting of the two orders- of in- f"Y- Junction en-December 19 and De::em- .lu%sV*' hot-23, the report says: • "Your com- § mittee has no hesitation in declaring \<' if- ' that the orders rendered were a gross abuse of the power of the court: were supported by neither reason nor au- * yU&* " thority: were beyond the jurisdiction $. „ of the'Judge, and were therefore void." |L>* A. i* * . Unearthed S8.000.000. ft J*?/X U • ^discovery of $5,000,000 Spanish a?.'"** m NN,* treasure on the Jalapa ranch in the State of Mexico is reported. While a clerk of the ranch was on his way on horseback across the property the hoofs of the animal sunk into a cover ing of mortar. On dismounting he dis covered a.-square; stone with the in scription: "Below this stone ar3 de posited JO,OOC-.O.-fc** His master imme diately put- te.-eral men to work to make excava ions, but owing to a dis pute over the ownership the spot is. •OTTjuadar guard by rurales. Given Iveptf l'«trv IN the Central Court, in Lotffli9h. Joseph Farnara. the Italian anarchist who pieced guilty, was sentenced to twenty yeai*s" imprisonment at h^rd labor, francis Poiti, hi? companion, was found guilty and sentenced tb ten years* imprisonment. After his sen tence was pronounced Farnara shouted "Vive l'anarchie." He was at once .seized by the court officers and re moved. He struggled hard to free bin:self, and endeavored to make a •pasch, but was prevented. - » Ballets for striken^ - .',i.. • A RIOT occurred at the Pointer works of the McClure Coke Com pa y, near Scottdale, Pa., in which fifteen peop'e were shot, some of whom are thought to be fatally wounded, among tbem being the wife'of one of the Hun strikers. The company made an effort to start that and other plants of the eompanv T aesday, and Friday the Women living at the plant determined to^drive the me a from work, which precipitated the riot * BREVITIES. v-J v A IXWDON dispatch 6ays it W«f%ndw- 1 f ing hard Friday and the cold is intense throughout Yorkshire. COAL miners and operators will hold a Joint conference at Cleveland to take steps to end the strike. COLONEL A- L- NEWMAN, ex-Pren dent of the Commonwealth Eank, committed suicide at Boat n. • THE first carload of this season's 'California cherries were shipped to the East from Vacnville Friday. OSCAR TOWNSEND, general manager erf the Cleveland, Lorain and Wheel ing Railroad, died at Cleveland. Ohio. A SYNDICATE has been formed to Wfork a large body of ore underlying a portion of the city of Leadville, Colo. THE First Katio al Bank of Sedalia, Mo., one of the oldest financial insti tutions in central Missouri, failed to open its doors FYiday morning. A notice was posted on the door notifying de;K)sitors of the suspension. Trie baak has a capital of $ '50,000, and was haver.'{& reserve lund of UNITED STATES SENATOR FRANCIS R STOCKBRIDOE, of Michigan, died at 7 o'clock Monday evening at the home of his nephew. James S. Houghteling, 27 Banks street, in Chicago, The end came unexpectedly while the Sena tor was in his room with a nurse. Although he had been ill for several weeks his condition was not thought critical and his death came as an unusually severe blow to his wife and his wife and friends. At Kalama zoo, his home, his death caused mani festations of sincere grief from his many friends, by whom the Senator was so generally be loved for his sturdy char- actor and open-handed generosity. His liberal gifts to Kalamazoo College and the Young- Men's Christian Association will remain as monuments to his great- heartedness. His business partner, S. A. Browne, and Banker Dayton, an other intimate friend, were moved to tears as thev learned of his death. THE strike on the Great Northern Railway was callei off Tuesday night at *St. Paul. _ Arbitration did it, and the plan proposed by the commercial bodies of the Twin Cities wa< the one adopted. The tie-up of the road lasted eighteen days. Mr. Hill was pro nounced in favor of arbitration all along and agreed to any system of arbi tration if the men would resume work. The conference went over all details of the trouble thoroughly. and Mr. Hill made great concessions to the men, the result being that the whole difficulty was settled then and there. The 4,500 miles of track was at once opened for business by over 5,(HO employes and the .en tire Northwest released from the freight and passenger blockade that oppressed it for over two weeks. It is reported on the best authority that General Manager Case of the "Great Northern has resigned as the result Jpf a violent quarrel with President Hill. The latter, it is said, accused Case of being responsible for the continuation Of the trouble with the strikers. Case denied that he was responsible for that state of affairs, whereupon Hill billed Case a liar. The President thbn ap plied a still more opprobrious epithet to the General Manager, ;who instantly slapped the face of his chiel Mr. Case's resignaticn is now in the hands of Hill • ' . i "I WAS shocked and disgusted be yond measure by what I saw at the penthouse, or smallpox hospital," said Dr. Leonard St. John, of Chicago, when asked for his opinion a* to the public danger from the loathsome dis ease. "1 am pretty well accustomed to revolting sights and smells in connec tion with disease, but the condition Of' things at the pesthouse was too much for me. That was some time ago, and I am informed that matters are worse there now. I went there professionally to see a couple of patients. I did not investigate the place par ticularly. What I noticed was, forced on my observation.... I see no sufficient excuse for the awful state, of affairs. When more room was needed it should have been secured at once. The powers of the Health Commissioner are veiy exten sive. When I visited the pesthouse there were some 200 patients there, and to care for them were ten Sisters. This ijtier those Sisters worked mrnOurs a day there was one C'v*' > i"' to " " f - . - : i: ' •• 'Ik ' supposed $25,000. WiLLiAk 'WItAlKn. 61 St. Peter's mine fame/has been convicted at St. Louis of obtaining money by false pre tenses In that he floated, by untrue ;representations, stock in absolutely valueless mines; The sentence imposed :is four .years in the titate prison. Whalen secured nearly $300,000 from gullible investors. THE Red River is encroaching rap idly upon Fulton, Ark., and the rising waters now threaten to f!o.d the entire Slace. The water has reached the usiness portion of the town, and is running under the postoffice and many mercantile houses. Several manufac turing estab ishments have been com pelled to stop op ? rations, .EX-SCHOOL COMMISSIONER JAMES JIOFF died in Milwaukee after under- an operation for appandicitis. _KEFRK8ENTATIVE ISAAC B. TOMP- . «INS, of New Bedford, dropped dead ^THE secret service of tH6 ̂ Treasury fe informed o! the existenci! of a new ttid dangerous Counterfeit of the $2 Treasury note. It is of series of 1.891 gieck letter Fount Tillman ^teg ster, D. N. Morg u. Tteasurer McPherson portrait cn the not^' J:: :jEDA8TERKU r^tilfeicT twenty-fou: nurse to every twenty patients, and if they worked only twelve hours a day, one fiurse "to forty patients. This is shamefully ,inadequate. But the Sisters had to do all the work of the place, all of the cleaning, scrub bing, cooking, and waiting on the pa tients. At that time there was no male nurse there, and when the pa tient became delirious there was no one but the women to hold them. When a patient died the Sisters had to carry the loathsome corpse down a harrow winding stairway, and out to the deadhouse. So narrow was the stairway that it was impossible to bring the dead body down. I am told that two male nurses have been added to the staff since then, but the number of oatients has increased enormously." SOUTHERN. . "?• PARIS (Ky.) authorities have received a letter declaring that Congressman Breckinridge will be shot, and the building blpwn up with dynamite, if he attempts to speak there. THE corner-stone of the Pythian University was laid at Gallatin, Tenn., with imposing ceremonies by the Knights of Pythias. The university is I to be international in its scope, as its support will come from the Knightis of ; Pythias of the entiie world. The con- j templated cost of the'Building to be | erected is $100,000. A b'g barbecue J burner was a feature of the celebration. FIRE broke Out at 11 o'clock Satur day night in the St. Charles Hotel, the largest and finest hotel in New Or leans. Many of the guests had retired and were aroused with difficulty, i A number of persons wpre seen at a fourth story window ,1 Surrounded by flames and gesticulating wildly to the people below. The clothing of one of them caught fire and, with a scream, he sprang from the window, falling on his head on the pavement and da-hing out his brains. Three other* who were near him perished. The Commerce street side and rear of the hotel burned first, allowing most of the guests to , . rank as a coke State, Ala- •tands second, while Illinois gave the smallest product. The highest value for the product is reported in Montana at $9 a ton, and the lowest in Georgia at $1.50 a ton. The yield of coal in coke wan 63£ per cent., and the amount used in the manufacture of coke was 1-1,895,$45 short tons. THE agricultural appropriation bill reported to the House by Chairman Hatch, of the Committee of Agricul ture. appropriates $."*,480,643 for the fiscal year ending June M0. 1895. Com pared with the appropriation for the present fiscal year, this is a decrease of $142.85<i very little change has been made in the salary list, but a reduction of $513,820. in the aggregate has been accomplished by a rearrangement of the service and by consolidation of offices wherever prac ticable. Authority is gi/en to continue investigations with a view to extend ing the demands of foreign markets for the agricultural prod; cts of the United States, and to continue inquiries as to the best system of road making, the same appropriation as last year being provided. A reduction in the appro- Kriation for the weather bureau has een made, amounting to $74,277. The decrease is mainly in salaries, though contingent and general expenses have been considerably reduced, without, it Is hoped, in the lea*t impairing the usefulness and efficiency of this valu able service. - " -- FOREIGN,"" THAT Brazilians appreciate the, Mon roe doctrine of the United States, is shown by the fact that popular sub* scriptions are being taken to erect a statue of President Monroe at Rio Janeiro. President Cleveland will be invited to send a fleet of war vessels to attend the unveiling on July 4. A TERRIBLE accident occurred at Brahilov, Roumania, in which many lives were lost. While the pier was WPS crowded with people, in holiday .attire, bound for Galitz, on the Dan ube, waiting for the steamer which was to convey them to that place, the pier gave way'and threw 120 people in to the water. Many of the excursion ists are believed to have been drowned. A SHARP shock of earthquake was felt in Athens Tuesday. Several light er shocks followed, but na further damage was done. Reports from the stricken districts confirm the most alarming reports as to the loss of life and amount of damage. It is believed that when the total loss of life from earthquake disasters and from subse- S[uent expqsut e of the homeless people s added up it will be found that nearly, if not quite, five hundred peo ple have lost their lives through the recent calamities. DURING the Friday Epitaphion pro cession in the cathedral at Athens, a violent earthquake shock occurred. The cathedral wa? crowded with devo tees, who started for the doors, but were partly calmed by M. Tricoupis, the Prime Minister, who was one of the worshipers, and the people dis-( persed. The shock was felt through out the country, and immense damage ^yas done. Thebes and Atalanta are now completely destroyed. Incalcula ble damage was also done at Lamia, Larissa. \ olo, Chalcis, and Patras. At Lamia the walls of the prison fell, and many of the uninjured prisoners made their escape. Thousands are home less, and there is little doubt that there has been a great loss of life. m GENERAL THE t^ittSdian government fWpOsefe to place a supply of tuberculine in the hands of veterinarians throughout the country to test its efficacy in tubercu losis. THE Diamond Match Company pro poses to form a combination to control the manufacture of matches through out the world. As a part of the plan, it intends to establish an immense factory at Liverpool. R. G. DUN & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: When accounts of great strikes and labor disturbances crowd all newspapers It Is idle to look for much improvement in busi ness. 1 hat every week of ldlene^a for so niany men must appreciably lessen the aggregate power to purchase products of labor Is evident But in spite of all, some Improvement still appears: NEWS has baen received that JJpO of the 500 Mexican troops sent out to quell an uprising of the Yaqui Indians in Lower California have been killed in ambush. The Indians hid them selves along the cliff of a canyon through which the soldiers h^d to pass and poured down upon them a shower of bullets and an avalanche of rocks. A surgeon and his espart sent to attend the wounded soldiers were captured and tortured t'J death. THE clubs of the Rational League stand as follows in the championship race: w, Clerclaads. 8 Bostons 8 Phiiadelp'a 8 Baltimore./ 7 Bt. ijOuia J. 6 Pittatraatfi. « Kansas C'y e Sioux City, a Gr'd Rapid. 4 ladlaaap'Us 3 Per L. cent. W. 2 ' .80 <lOlmeiBBiil. i 1 .T2" Ijoutsvilles t 4 M>" Krooklyns.. 4 4 .#'!6 Now Vorkd. 4 4 .400 Waehinxt'n 8 4 .6or>!OhloagM.... 1 WB8TEBX LfcAOUE OAKBS. Per L. cent. , W. Per L. aent. S .444 1.000 LOO.' .867 .too Detroits... 3 Toledos a Ullwa'kees 0 Mlnne'p'Us C Per L. cent. * .400 4 .33X 8 .000 9 .000 MARKBT REPORTS, escape.. It is thought there were 20:)! CHICAGO. CATTUJ--Common to Prime.... $8 60 HOGS--Shipping Grades 4 00 uests in the hotel at the time of the fire. The hotel was built in 18o6 at a cost of $1,000,000 and vas for years the finest in the South. It was valued at $550,000. v > -t-. WASHINGTON. WHEAT--No. 2 Red... COUN--No. i... OATS--No. 2 KYE--Jio.2 48 BUTTEB--Choloe Creamery..... IT EGGS--Fresh 10 POTATOES--Per bu bO . , . > INDIANAPOLIS. CATTLE--Shipping. '.. 3 00 Hoot- -Choice Mght 4 00 BUT two months remain before the \VHtAi-(Na??<etito Prlm#""" * ̂ new fiscal year "begins: yet not one bf j ^oaw--»©*. a White..40 the fourteen annual appropriation bills 16 has passed both houses of Congress ! CATTLE.. and been sent to the President for his approval. The cau«e of delay is found partly in the fact that during the long session legislation in keep ing with party promises or pajt ty pol icy is brought to the f[0nt, while in the short session little : sore than the passage of the appropriation bills is attempted. Chairman SayerS, of 0 4 75 6 60 8 00 «• « 75 87 & IS 87 «• 88 34)4 47 IS 10>6 so 8W Hoos too WHKAT-NTH.VRI*. VA'.WIVH.). *83 Cop.!f--No. 2 ST OATS--No. 2.;r..'.;'v.f....v.vU.^ 84 Ksb •! t'lNCiS'NifK' ' RHEEP...&. 300 |B 4 60 ($6 10 & 4 00 & » & il 0 87 WH g*T--N O. ^R«D J l y. i COBI^-NO. 2 . . . . . . OATS--Mixed..... •Jfc.. "Aii:- ATTORNEY •FRANCIS; of New York, confirms thei ijeport that he is to marry Emma Juch,; |pe prima donna. A CRANK named Camilla Reinhart called at John D. iRockefeller's resi dence in New York, and said he had feoft^e to get his share of the $65,000,- Spft held by Mr. Rockefeller. V Ex-VICE PRESIDENT LEVI P. Mos- #ON has filed with the Court of Claims Ht Albany a demand for $5,200 for nine- #~ of the 0nest Guernsey cattle in the House Committee on Appropria- j RVE--No. 2. tions, says that the work on the appro- CATTLE priation'bills is further advanced this year than it was at the same time two years ago. The House, he says, has parsed seven of the fourteen bills mak ing appropriations for the fiscal year 1^94-181^5, wh reas, on May 1 two years ago but six appropriation bills haul Wen acted upon by that body. A REPORT concerning the production of coke in the Appalachian region for 1893 .has been made DETROIT. HO SB^y, «•• COKN--No. 2 Yellow,... OATS--No. 2 White ' TOLEDO^ WKEAT-KO. 2 Red No. 2 Yellow..... ' ELECTION OF OVER TWENTY ^^ENilTOItS INVCH^I^p^ OlBcw to B« Filled la the Tartona States This Year--A New HOBM of A«PN««I- tettws to Be ChoMB-'Het VUrhtS la 8om« Sections. The politicians of the country are in the saddle. This is no unmeaning phrase this year, for 1894 promises to eclipse in interest even a presidential eleotion. In fact, it promises to fore shadow accurately tjie campaign Of 1890. For this reason all the talent of the various parties is already being brought to the front, primed with a mass of campaign material growing out of the silver, the tariff, and the Hawaiian controversies of the vast year. Local issues will be merged in those created by the leaders of the na tion, and as over twenty Senators are to*be chcsen by the Legislatures which are to be alocted this year, and an en tirely new.House of Representatives is to be voted for, a change in the com plexion of the legislative branch of the country lies in the balance. In the • 1 lis Biiiiim umini. mil a iMMttmiL whloi will ehooee a in Ben*. ; polltleal, MatinMlit la the 8t*t» aot yet crr»«allM)d into move- meat RXeept to develop the certainty of aa entire Populist State ticket Alabama elect*.a Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor, Treasurer, Attorney Gen eral, Superintendent of Education, Com missioner of Agriculture and a Legislature will choose rh« successor to Senator John T. Morxao. The election takes place Aug. 6. Although the Lefflslatur.e which will be elected Ic Missouri this fall will not choose e Beaator, the campalga is, nevertheless, of general interest. A Judge of the Su preme Court, State Superintendent of Schools, and a Railroad Commissioner will be elected. Kentucky elects Judges of its Court of Appeals and county officers. Its Legislat ure has already named Senator William Lindsay, whose term expires in 1805, to succeed himself. Florida has its Stats election October 4 In addition to State officers, it *111 choose a Juratioe of the Supreme Court and a Legislature. No senatorial vacancy in its delegation will occur nntli 1897. Texas *lects all It* State, county, and precinct efflcers this year and a Legisla ture which will choose a successor to Sen ator Coke. Tennessee Democrats expect to have things their own way. There is a strong Populist organization in the State and it may make a bitter flght for tbe assembly. • North Carolina electB Judges, solicitors, and a Legislature which will name a sue-, cessor to Senator Ransom. Agent JOseph D. Weeks of the United State.-s Geodetical Survey. The total was 9,460,HI0 short tons, against 12,- 010,829 in 1892. The large reduction is due to the depression in the blast fur- na£e industry. The only section of the Lmted States in which thOre Was any material increase in coke production was the Flat Top district in West Virginia. The total amount produced there during the year was 451.503 tons, against 365,696 in 1-892. Pennsylvania ATS--No. 2 Mixed... KYE- No. 2 BVPfr'ALCfe'" ( BEEF CATTLE--PrlmS Steers... • 00 «* 4 so WHEAT--No. 2 Bed , > U . , COBS--No. 2 Yellow .i.'. Si 0 *»J4 by-Special t OATS--No.2Mixed. .......:.2. *91 M U co & MILWAUKEE. WHIIE--No.« Spring........^,.' Cobn--No. 3 #• & OATH-NO. 2 Whia. RYE--No. 1 <9 BABLEY--No. A 66 PosE-Mess.....^.-......^... »» NKWVOBK. OATTLB ' • 00 HOOS..... « 18 ttMwr too WHEAT--NO^S-KED. 01 OOBK--No. 2 u OATS--Mixed Westerti.. il fcVTTsa--creuoenr IS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .» » v '/y. to* «o MM •1 #7 112 9> m tv & • » 3 00 «a ti INENT CANDIDATES IN COMING STATE ELECTIONS. following summary ho detailed mea- tion is made of the congressional elec tions, but these take place in all the States on November 6. The Senators whose terms expire March 4, '1895, are: John T. Morgan, of Alabama; James II. Berry, ot Arkansas; Edward O. Woleott, of Colorado; Anthony Hlggins, of Delaware; George 1J. Shonp, of Idaho; Shelby M. Cullom, of .Illinois; James F. Wilson, of Iowa; John Martin, of Kansas; Wm. Lindsay, of Kentucky; Donelnon Caffery, of Louisiana; Wm. P. Frye, of Maine; George F. 11 oar, of Massachusetts; James McMlll&a, of miohlgan; James Mc- Laurln, of MlssiHeippi; Thomas C. Power, of Montana; Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska; William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire; John K. McPherson, of New Jersey: M. \V. Ilangom, of North Carolina; Joseph N. Dolph, of Oregon; Nathan F. Dixon, of Rhode Island, Matt tie w C. Butler, of South Carolina; Richard F. Pet- tlsrrew, of South Dakota; Jsham O. Harris, of Tennessee; Hlohard Coke, ©f Texas; Eppa Uunton, of Vlrarinla; J. N. Camden, of West Virginia; Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. In addition to these, vacancies for the terms ending in 1896 are to be filled by the Legislatures of Wyoming, Mon tana, and Washington. Iowa has al ready elected Congressman Gear, to succeed Senator Wilson. Virginia has elected CoL Martin to fill the place of EppaHunton. Kentucky has chosen Senator Lindsay to succeed himself. The Legislature of Louisiana will also have the naming of the successor to Judge White. Senator Walthall will resume the Senatorship in 18!,* i. So, on the whole, the Stats legislative con tents will perhaps be of most impor tance. Summary of the Situation. New Hampshire Is one of the Eastern States in which the light for both Senato rial and Gubernatorial honors has already begun, and it will attract national attea- tion. Ex-Senator Blair has entered the field for the seat now occupied by Senator William E. Chandler, and Charles H. Burns is a close third for the same honor. New Hampshire votes on Nov. 0, as do all the rest of the States that have electiona In New York both parties are preparing for an aggressive contest. It Is more than likely that Gov. Flower will secure a re- nomlhiitlon. The Republicans are already looking about for Gubernatorial timber, and among those talked of are Elihu ltoot, Cornelius Bliss, Mayor £chieren of Brook lyn, Judge Oaynor, and possibly ex-rYAte president Levi P. Morton. Vermont votes Sept. 4, and elects its State and county officers and a Legislature. As yet the sentiment of the State as to nominees has taken no definite shape, al though Gov. Fuller will probably secure a renouilnation. Connecticut always votes twice In the fall. Its town elections take place in October and its State elections In Novem ber. A.11 tbe State officers are to be chosen. Senator Hlggins will have to contend for re-election ip Delaware. His State votes for Governor, two-thirds of the State Senate, the entire Assembly, and for all the principal county official*. Maine has its State election on Sept. 10. It will elect an entire State ticket and a Legislature, which will cUuose a successor to Senator Frye. PciiKsylvss's elects one-half lit State Senate, its entire lower house, a Governor. Lieutenant Governor. Secretary of Inter nal Affairs, and an Auditor General Massachusetts elects its State officers and a Legislature to choose a successor to Senator Hoar. • Ohio votes only for Secretary ot State, minor State officer* and for Congressmen. The Sooth. In the South the battle royal is being fought out in Georgia, which does not vote until Oct. a, but as a Senator is to Ms chosen the contest«' already rather warm. The aspirants for tho Senate are Governor WJJJ'um J. Northen, A. O. Bacon of Macon, and Fleming G. Du Bignon of favanuatw t'ecrettry 'of tbe interior Hoke Smith, Speaker Crisp and Congressman Henry G. Turner are among tho possibilities, though neither of them is a candidate. To draw the line through the group of active can didates for the place would put Northen and Bacon together on the anti-adminis tration side, and leave Da Bignon alone on the other. . The' term of Senator Butler, of South Carolina, expires within a year, and the Populists, under tbe leadership of Gov. Tilimnn. are already planning to capture . the Legislature which is to choose trie State's next representative In the upper hoase of Congresa With fc'eaator Irby. a Populfst-Democrat, as one representative, it u the belief of Gov. Tillman that he himself can succeed la capturing the longer terra. South Carol lea elects State ottosM as weJ* West Virginia votes for a* Legislature which will choose Senator Camden's suc cessor. The West. Kansas promises the nation a fdur-cor- nered fight. Tbe stalwart Democrats have decided to put a State ticket in the field, and the Republicans will name some such man as Ady, Humphreys, Funston or Case Broderick. The fusionlstS may unite on Congressman Harris, a Democrat, or oa Gov. Llewelling, Thomas J. Hudson, Jerry Simpson or William Baker. A> the suc» cessor to Senator Martin, who now fills out the term of tbe late Senator Plumb, is to be chosen by the Legislature, ex-Senator Ingalls will undoubtedly take an active part in the campaign looking to as elec tion as Senator next winter. Kansas electa an entire State ticket, the entire lower house, a portion of the State Senate and county officers everywhere. In Oregon, all State, county, and pre cinct officers are to be voted for. 'ihe Populists, under the command of Messra Waldrop, Marksberry, and Fitch, will have a full ticket in the field. At present Its Governor, hylvester Pennoyer, Its Attor ney General, and Its Adjutant General are Democrats, while tbe remaining officers are Republican. The Legislature to be chosen will have the successor to Senator Joseph N. Dolph to elect. The Populist nomination for Governor will probably go to Nathan Pierce, and it is not unlikely,' that the party will support Gov. Pennoyer for Senator Dolph's place. Senator Wolcott, ot Colorado, will succeed himself in March. 1893. His State, bow- ever, has a bitter contest on band for 1804. Gov. Walte, who WHS chosen by the fusion of the silver Democrats and the Populists, expects to run again, and the Republicans will make a warm effort to defeat him. Colorado electa all its State officers la NO VUM ber. Illinois elects 6tate Treasurer, Superin tendent of Public Instruction, three Trus-. tees of the University of Illinois, half the State Senate, and 153 members of tbe lower bouse. , In addition county officers will be chosen everywhere, and the Legis lature will choose a successor to Senator Oil llom. Nebraska elects a Legislature which will have Senator Mafjderson's successor to choose. In addition the State votes fyr, Gdvernor, Lieutenant Governor. Treasurer,' Auditor. Secretary of State, Attorney Gen eral. Commissioner of Public Lands and Buildings, and Superintendent of Public instruction. Wisconsin votes for Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, State Superin tendent. Commissioner of Insurance and Railroad Commissioners, half of tbe State Senate and the entire lower hotisa No senatorial election is on the tapis to etog legislation this year. In Indiana the offices to be filled are those of Secretary of State, Auditor, Treasurer. Attorney General, Judge of the Supreme Court, Superintendent of Public Instruction, State Geologist, and State Statistician. No Senatorial vacancy will exist, and so the legislative fight is not of national interest. Iowa's Legislature does not meet next year, and the successor to Senator Wilson has already been chosen In the person of Congressman Gear. The State votes for Secretary. Auditor, Treasurer, Railroad Commissioner, Judge and Clerk of the Su preme Court • , Wyoming elects Its State officers and State Senators for four years. Its As semblymen and county officers hold Office two years. This year ail these offices will be filled and the Legislature will elect a successor to Senator Joseph M. Carey. South Dakota elects all Its State and county officers and a Legislature to choose a successor to Senator Rlcbard F. Petti- grew. North Dakota elects all State officers, a' Judge of the Supreme Court und all county officer*. There will be no Senatorial vacan cy next year. California elects all of its State officers this year, but no Senatorial election occurs in 1895. hence the legislative fight will be of a purely local natara" Michigan has a successor to Senator Mc Millan to elect and a State ticket to. take office January 1, 1895. Washington elects two Supreme Court Judges, its county and precinct officers, and its Legislature chooses a Senator. Idaho has its Slate, district and county officers to elect and a Legislature whiclyslll Choose the successor of Senator fboojr Virginia has only its Congressional elec tions. Nevada has only its State, county and Congressional elections aext November. EVIDENCE has "been found showing that Lawyer A. T. Beck, of Indianap olis, was struck w,th a sandbag before he was shot No arrests have been MOB OF UNEMPLOYED RAIDS ' THE FACTOR IMF* F •' Employes brhrcn from the fthops avd the Machinery Destroyed--Over 7<0OO Blot- ers--Pierce Conflict "wit* *oltee~- Many Are Injured. Mlllt.t 1 Under ^Arm*. The disorders which began in Cleve- lanl. Ohio, with the May day demon stration of the unemployed, culminated in open riots. There were three sepa rate and bloody conflicts between the police and the rioters, and troops were put under arms ready to respond to call in ca?e of an emergency. The trouble began when a mob of ~,0W) started to raid the factories on the Hats and drive from work the men em ployed therein. The first attack was male at the Variety iron works. The windows of the factory were smashed with stones and bricks and the work men Cei in a panic. A I jrce of seven ty-live policemen wai then called out. The rioters procaeded, however, to the Upion bolt works, where 1,50J men were induce 1 to quit work before the 0 ricers arrived. When the police came upoil the scene the men madj a stand aud htuded bricks and stones at the officer,?. Clnrged on tine Rioters. Orders were given to charge them with club?. The rioters ran like sheep at the fir.-stf assault, but their leaders succee ed in 1 a lying them on the Al>- 1 ey stf3fct viaduct, ab idge about 1.000 feet long. Squads of police coming up at both eads of the bt-i lge pennei in tiie crow4, and they wove forced to light their way out. They made a rush for the off'cers, but at least a score Of them were clubbed unmercifully te- fore they finally succeeded in getting Hway. jJur.ng this conflict two an archisms were arrested after a terrific ttruggle. One of them, Thomas Moore, an old man, wa9 clubbed inti submis sion and taiien to the station in a pa trol wagon, cursing the polico and de clared that it was t'3e happiest day in hi i life. Clubbed Them Till They Ban. > In the south end of the city at the ame time a mob of 500 men drefve away the workmen from the Unitad States ealt works, and were about to make a raid on the Cleveland rolling mills. They were met by Police Di- lector Herbert and a squad of ten policemen, who clubbed them until i hey ran. At least thirty men were injured in this me.ee, but the mob was dispersed. In the afternoon Mayor Bee an nounced that no more rioting would be permitted. He issued a proclamation c mmanding people notj t < assemble on th i st' eets. and at the same time called upon the Cleveland Grays, the Gatling gun battery and the 1 evident compa res of the Ohio National Guard to as semble in their armories and await his call. Thera was a ready , eaponse to the call, and at night at least 5 >o men were under ai m-s awaiting aoyMpoie|,to gency that might arise. <^; A*«ft of 't roops. : ••- Te'cgrams were received "at t^nluth by Sheriff Sharvey from every mining tenter of the Me-abt range, stati. g tha> strikers had t-top ed wor<c a; every mine, ana that the situatkn was critiea'. Ona teleiran was lram D. H. Bacon, of the Minnesota Iron i oa- pany, who was at the Auburn mine, and urged immediate act on. The Suerilf at once telegraphed Governo - Kelson, ask.ng permission to call on the militia. * * BUFTLED UNDER MILLIONS. SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRE- ) f;C^ aENTATtVES. •* • v a: ana What They Are Doing for the Good of the Coontiy- ^ ill Our National Law-Makers Acted Upon. m- H 'm A\' ' < Treasury Clerks Hive a Narrow Escape from Being Crushed bjr Coin. A prx-tlon of the $50,00 O X) that is stored a.vay in vault O at the Phila delphia mint cama \ery near bei&g a cause of disaster to teveial cie:-ks who were counting the c<in, Wednesday afternoon. Tne cjin was piled up in bags to a he ght of twelve leet and a wiutn of eight fee . The vault is da a}-, and tho ba js hp^l become moldy a.idtiai. As Wellington Morris, an employe. w.ts standing < n top of the j.ile raking in sorno loose silver dollais, 1 e s,eppeu int • a bag, a ,d the sliver dol ars at. once hegaa to slide ouf. L'ke a snowball On a iui> <r.tai i s de the ma-=s cf •ilver do lars grew in size. There was an ominous 1 umble, and the clerk-i At the oot of the pile 1; oke I Up in !>urpi*i««. Seeing the imj endihg dan.era wild brt-ak was mide tor the door. !)••. Caleb Whiteaead, who rep resents ihe Mint- Bu ea 1. jumped over tho 'scales at tho moment when .he dollai-K poured down with a roar. t<\ Sirtori and W. A. Bosbv.-hell, who are assistants in tho counting, sci-am- blod out>in the niok o time. Serious injury to Morris was feaied, but ho hue eeded in e>oapiiig unhurt. flie impact of t,r.e dollars .«-h^ok the mint building as ir by an t arthqt ak^ and inton?e excitement pr mailed among the emploves. it is estima ed th t th i amount which fell was valued n't full (.0, CO J and weighed ll.,uoO poirn's. Tjr« I'er^ons Hurt to Death. , Two persons were barned t > death and three others ba il." injured in an explosion and lire at th? dyeing house of tjf. .lollj' &, Sons, in East Twelfth fcjti"e<?t. New York, in the basement of tho building was a tank of benzine, wh ch is Stii-posed to have explodei. In live minutes the establishment ip in Kanies. •• -J * ---- • , ' Sparks from the Wires. CONGRESSMAN HENDERSON, of €owa. is critically ill in Washington. THE Council at Oskaloo.sa, Iowa hie fixed the saloon tax at $1 00.'. JOHN MUNDORF cut his throai in a bar be :• shop in New York City. THB State of Tennessee iiai com- pleted the tale of bonds for $1,^X10,00J. KMI'LOVES of ii; : Kentuc.iy ©oal mitres have struck. Over i,00o ir.ea are out. , .loil^ STUDENMEYER, a cigarmaker, was rebbed by footpads at Dubuque, Iowa, of J«400. , EMMA JCJCH, the opera singer, is to marry Francis Wellman, a New York attorn jy. Ai- Woo^ter, Ohio. JameS Wiggins was convi ted of attempting to murder W. A. Mackey. KKANK HARVEY, a Jeffersonvilje (Ind.) convict, oicapel in his under- cloihes, but was recaptured. THE Diamond Match Company will build an immense factory in England, 1 c iting it in London. THE> Wesfeyan Methodist Church and two other buildings burned at Middle ton. thio. Loh«. .>.0,0 0. W. BUCKLEY, of Montgomery, Ala., was eiectel commander of the State department cf the G. A. R. JOHN CIANT/, a laundry agent and studerjtof Do I'auw t niversify. Indi ana. is mis3ing, ar.d is short in "his he- counts about *„0 . W. A. Osmak, dealer in general merchandise, assignea ^t Rus ellviile, Ala, to W. C. liurs*. Liabilities. ^*,0.0; assets not gi\en. " . •, i" *. 4 9 m Dolnga of ConfeSlai. Some routine business was transacted at the opening of the session of the Bouts Saturday. Mr. Lock wood (N. Y.) reported back from the Pacific Railroad Commit- tee ,^the resolution calling upon the ^ Attorney General to inform the A Hotine whether the stockholders o* ^i r; the Central and Western Pacific r»i'roads ,vS were reliable la any manner to the I'uiied States for rehnbar^ement for bonds issued under the various act* of Congress au- &sg tborlzlng the issaing of.bonds in aid of ' said roada The House then went into J ^ committee of tbe whole, w ith Mr. O'Xeil. ! of Massachusetts, in the chriir. and took up the aV:ny approrriatlon hli). The 5 3 bill carries £23.568,284, 1657.355 less tbaik tbe appropriation for the current fiscal " year. During the debate on tho blU the roll was called under the rule and no it ^ quorum being developed, the absentee* were reported to the House, and then, at * 3:55 p. m., the House adjourned. The Senate proceedings were a repetition of -tfp those ot the dav before. Personalities entered larrely Into the debate on tbe tarltf bill in the be a ate Mon- / ^ day. Senator 'l'urpie wade a bitter attack on Senator Aldrich. whom he accused ot uttering falsehoods. When the Hons© ;:J met at noon Mr; # Meiklejohn. calied up the Senate bill for the con- struciion of a bridge across the Nio- brara River, near the town of Nebraska f•:$! City, Neb., and it passed. At 12:27 the House went into committee ot the whole | 41 to consider the army appropriation b<!?; Mr. Outhwaite offered a committee amendment that no appointment of As sistant Adjutant General with rank of Major should be amde until the number of officers in that grade nad boen reduced below four, and that hereafter there should be only four officers in said grade, and that future ptomotions in tbe ad jutant general's. payniHStor'B. and smaller branches should be filled from the next lowest grades. The amendment was agreed to by a vote of 49 to 38. Mr. Pickler offered an amendment that no officer of the army should be detailed to act as Indian agent unless the Presi dent stuuld consider it best to do sa The chairman rued the amendment out on a point of order. The ap propriation for tbe purchase of ma- chine guns, improved mu-ket caliber, was raised from 810,000 to Sx'o.oooi An f ^ amendment offered by Mr. Frye. striking- out the provision that heroafter no uo- pointments should be made to *he grade of I assist an t'«mrtreon until the numbar is re- duced to ninety, and that the number hereafter should not exceed ninety, was &||j disagreed to by the vote of 02 to 05. At 5- o'clock the committee of the whole arose, and the bill, with amendments, was re- ported to the House and at. 5:11 p. ru. it- - passed. The House iben adjourned. In respect to the late Senator Stock bridge,. 3 tbe Senate adjourned Tuesday afternoon,. appointing a committee of seven with a. "'*>•$ committee from the House of Representa tives to attend the funeral at Kalamazoo, Mich. Tbe session of the House was brief*, also, on account of the de:ith of Senator Stock bridge, relative to uhich appropriate resolutions were moved by Mr. Burrows and adopted, and Messrs Burrows, Rynum, McCreary, Boutelle. Payne (New York). Aitken, 1 bomaa and Iilchardson were ap pointed a committee to attend the funeral. The Senate proceedings were rather dull Wednesday, most of the afternoon being consumed by Benat6r Squire, of Washing ton, who made a carefully prepared speech In .general opposition to tbe tariff. Before the tariff bill was taken up Mr. Hoar tried to pass |his anti-lottery bill, but it ultimately went over witbout action, $ Tbe Hou*e at 12:35 took up the bill to Improve the methods of accounting: v| In tbe Treasury Department, aad it was agreed that general debate on the bill should be limited to two hour*. The House went into committee of tue whole, with "j Mr. Hatch, of Missouri. In the chair. At ; J| present tbe offices affected by the bill *1 employ 759 clerks at. a cost of Si.065,760. Under the pending bill there^ will be 02# clerks at an anuual cost of $88(5,000. Mr. Wanger, of Pennsylvania, moved to amend "J the last paragraph by changing the date r; | for the bill to go into effect from July 1. 1894, to July 1. 1895; The amendment was disagreed to The committee rose and the bill w*s passed without • amendment The House again went into committee of the whole to consider apnro- prlation bills, and Mr. Catching calied up> the river and harbor appropriation bill. Mr. Grosvenor. of Ohio, opposed the pas sage of a bill currying nearly S9.000.0001 Without some further exnlanatlon. At 5 o'<?lo£ltlthc cim.mittee rise and the House adjourned without taking any action oa tbe bilL Tbe Senate listened Thursday to two in stallments of two unfinished speeches oa the tariff, tried to go Into executive ses sion, failed because of lack of a quorum, and adjourned. No business w-is trims- acted in.the morning hour in tbe House, the regular order being demanded when it was sought to obtain consideration of a bilL The time of the House from 12:24 un til 4 o'clock was takeri up in the considera tion of the river and harbor bill Speeches were made by Messrs Cannon, \Ve;idock. Ellis. Hepburn tind Riy. At 4 o'clock Mr. Catching* Sought, to have pert- . eral debate close at 5 o'clock, tome opposition was developed when Mr. Catcb- ings mored to close debate In twenty min utes, and on this demanded the previous question, which was ordered, and his mo tion was agreed to Discussion was re* sumed, and Mr. Boutnor opposed the meih- od of imnroving the Red River in I oulsl- ana according to tbe present plan. At 5:30 the House adjourned. Tbe House Friday went into committee of the whole, ou motion of Mr. Catcbings. for tbe purpose of considering the river and harbor bill, with Mr. Hatch in the chair. The appropriation for the outer harbor at Michigan City. Mich., was reduced from $to,000 to $11,000. and the sum taken from this appropriation was added to the apnropriation'for the inner harbor at the same point, making itflO.OOO Mr. Boen? offered an amendment appropriating^10.000- for a survey of the Red River of the North, which was defeated. An amendment was agreed to appropriating $8,000 for the rectification of the channel of the White River in Arkansas. Mr Ellis of fered an amendment Increasing the ap propriation for rebuilding lock No. 2 in Green River. Kentucky, from $f5.000 to $105,000. Tbe consideration of the bill without action being taken on a«.v further amendments was continued until shortly after 6 o'clock, when tbe committee of th** Whole rose, reported the bill t^ tbe House and it was passed. The Senate continued '̂ its tariff debate. Ancient Smelting. The book of Job, written about 1520 * fl. C., describas very accurately sev eral processes of smelting metals. Bits of Thing*. SMOOTH taper fingers ara generality in the highest degree artistic. ? FOOTBALL was a crime in England during the reign of Henry VIII. . IN the space of one minute the poly pus can change its form 100 times. GLASS blowing is represented on an Egyptian monument dating 2009 B. G. ' 'THE frcck coat first made its appear ance in England in J54G, in the reign of Henry VIII. HENRY PETTITT, the English play wright whodiedreoently, left an estate valued at about $25 !,000. ANTOINE GREEN, of Wyalusing, Pa,, is a man in excellent physical condition and can work as hard as any ot1' his neighbors, but in his forty years of life his pul^e has never beaten faster than 24 a minute. LAWYER SHELLY, OF counsel lor the defendant in tbe Pollard-Breckinridgs suit, is one of the moat irascible men in the legal profession. His temper is of the explosive variety, and goes off by percussion. "THE portable whisker" is the inven tion of a Pittsburg printer. He claims, to be able to adjust a beard, mustache or real (ialway t?luggers to any stereo type cut of a smooth-faced man with vary lUOeaad alteration,. -