McHenry Plaindealer. tie company has promised to cooc«4te ' While she went to visit . a their demand*, bat'thia is denied by the House. It is supposed that the officials. *•?. ' wr THE JHcHENKT PLAINDEALER CO. Pato. „ ' I'd McHENRY, ILLINOIS. " r f \ s \ k""\' s it f t WEEK'S NEWS RECORD V While at Parish's home in Lima, Ohio, ^Jlarry Huffman pulled a revolver and fold Ed Parish that he would show him Jow to kill Mexicans. The pistol was ischarged and the bullet entered Par ish's breast, killing him? Huffman was ;/;.<ftrrested. YS Chancellor R. B. Kelly has appointed §1. A. Mitchell df Gadsden and O. IJ. Porker of Anniston, Ala., receivers for gjhe Gadsden Land and improvement /"Company. The suit was brought for the purpose of winding up the affairs of the Company. Benjamin Finnell was shot and killed t>y his son-in-law, Austin Stephens, at Morning View, Ky. Stephens and wife separated about eight months ago, and •he got a divorce. Stephens blamed Fin- pell as the author of his troubles. Ste phens escaped. As the congregation was leaving the Methodist Church at the clpse of a ses sion of the Pine Bluff district conference, 'field in Grant County, Ark., an unknown "assassin fired a load of buckshot into Van H. Williams, inflicting fatal wounds. No cause is known for the crime. William Dolan anil Jacob Shester. 16- jrear-eld boys, died at Fall River, Mass.. Ifrom injuries received in the Algonquin ihill. They were piling clothing in a dry- «r when a valve admitting steam was ac cidentally turned on. The boys were a1- ' most naked and escape was impossible. Erie passenger train No. 7, west bound, crashed into a freight express which had been derailed a mile east of Lackawaxen, Pa., and was wrecked. Four cars, in cluding two sleepers, were burned. Two persons were killed and twenty-one in jured. The wreck was caused by a land slide. Robert Miller, aged 50, residing near Centerville, Ohio, tried to kill himself by <futting his throat and then setting his bed on fire. Miller would have died soon, but his family rescued him, and, by the aid of a physiciap, may save his life. He Is a wealthy farmer, and gave no reason for the rash act. Mourned as dead for five days and as many nights, Jesse Castle, a boy aged 8, has returned to his home in Columbus, Ohio. During all the time that his grand mother, with whom he lived, mourned Him as dead, the child was the prisoner «f some colored man in the vicinity of Gahanna and Delaware. Three people ended their lives in the Ohio river in front of Evansville, Ind. !l?hey are: August Mattingly, 17 years of mge; Miss Pearl Cheaney, 14 years of age, and Miss Marion Onan, 20, of Hen derson, Ky. The young people were caught in the rapids in front of the mail line wharfboat and their skiff capsized. . A light engiue going west on the Union Pacific collided with an overland passen ger train one and one-quarter miles west ef Walcott, Wyo. Fireman Koneld was killed. Engineer Walter Marsh of No. 4, a resident of Laramie, was fatajly injur ed, dying a few minutes after being pick et up. Both engines and mail cars were ^demolished. The current number of Bradstreet's anys: "Special activity in the iron and Steel industry is reported at Chicago, Where heavy advances have been made in finished products, and numerous ship ments are reported. The cereal markets Bote little change in price, but trade opin ion seems to favor steady demand and fipw fluctuations, in view of admittedly Itrge necessary takings by foreigners." The standing of the clubs in the Na- Houal League race is as follows: / * W. L. 'Brooklyn ...60 27Cincinnati Boston 53 Philadelphia. 51 Baltimore ...50 "St. Louis... .50 Chicago 46 33 Pittsburg .. 35 Louisville . 35 New York. 36 Washington. 33 31) Cleveland ... 15 W. .44 .44 .37 .35 .Following is the standing of the clnbs In the Western League: W. L. W. L. Indianapolis. 50 32St. Paul. 39 45 Minneapolis. 49 36Milwaukee . .38 45 iilrand Rap. .44 39Buffalo 37 46 Detroit 43 41 Kansas City. .35 51 BREVITIES. r In a fight in a saloon in Omaha, Neb., , v , Ed Joyce was instantly killed and Ed s ; Callahan mortally wounded. f . ^ Will Deitrick fell from a Cincinnati, v ;t'V Hamilton and Dayton freight he was |l, • Mealing a ride on north of Lima, Ohio, „ and was ground to pieces. 'I"/* H. H. McConnell and his wife, an aged ... • A. ; Couple, were killed by lightning at their J |ome near Cottage Grove, Tenn. Both V • Had their clothing burned off. ' ; ^ Senator J. B. FoTaker was notified by ^^ ilelegraph of the death of his aged moth- ; • er at Hillsboro, Ohio. Mrs. Foraker had seriously ill for the past three iponths. ; f . . v . At Springfield, Ohio, Mitchell Post, G. • - A.. R., voted not to attend the next na- --~ -stional encampment in Philadelphia on ac count of trouble over stop-over privileges With railroads. There is another hitch in the Alaskan boundary controversy. Canada wants to establish docks, wharves and and other terminal facilities at the proposed leased port on the Lynn canal. Sidney Hall, who recently died at Hart ford, Conn., left the bulk of his estate, Inventoried at $11,120, in trust for the £urpose of combating the doctrine of the nmortality of the soul. 1 The store of Hoyt, Kent, Sefton & »v'". ®t Cleveland has been placed in the kands of a receiver on application of H. fe? H. Hoyt, who charges other members of ' ' Tthe company with mismanagement. ^V .. The Kentucky Populist State eonven- % :y: fion denounced both the old parties and . Hiominated a full State ticket, headed by ^ V" "* (jTohn'G. Blair for Governor. Howard A. Santton, an emissary seek- miners for Missouri and Indian Ter- . v'fitory coal fields, was fatally stabbed in r';/;|Mhe coal fields at Bramwell, W. Va. His :-*:^|*saiIants are unknown. ^5 In consequence of the disturbed condi- _ •'< "jlkia of affairs following the assassination " r " |(f Presidefat^Heureaux of San Domingo, 'M'J. ^|he United States warships New Orleans . #ud Machdi* have been ordered to Santo j] |)omingo city. • ASTERN. , •>./ 0 Gideon J. Tucker, formerly Secretary *ii>f State of New York, died at New York *£ >^pity. He was 73 years old. The new passenger steamer Mistassini been burned at her wharf at Rober- .leal, on Lake St. John. Loss $50,000, no X-~ Insurance. IK It is announced at New York that the ; •«•/' ^JRubber Goods Manufacturing Company absorbed the Dunlop Rubber Tire iCompany. , ^ The strike of Western Union telegraph $ iV %»egsengers atPittsburg is ended and the "'trays are all at work agate. They claim A inoncmeat to the mcuwi? of Justus H. Rathbone, founder of the Knights of Pythias, was dedicated at TJtlca, N Y. Every lodge in the country had contribut ed to make up $14,000, the cost of the monument. Daly's Theater in New York--that is its eight years* lease and renewal, with ell its furnishings, scenery, properties and costumes--has been purchased by Messrs. Klaw & Erlinger for , Charles Frohman. The price was $100,000. The Finlayson-Bonsfiold Company, lim ited, of Grafton, Mass., has joined the thread combine and the property has been transferred to the trustees of the trust. The price, as shown by the revenue stamps upon fhe deed, was $227,000. ~westkrn7 * The army worm is causing great dam age around Fort Scott, Kan. W. D. Hooper, a wealthy grocer, d^ed at his home in Hot Springy Ark. At Napoleon, Ohio, Daniel Howe, aged 19, was instantly killed by lightning. Rev. Charles F. Haywood of Silver Creek, Neb., was fined $25 for accepting u drink of whisky*. The Republican Iron and Steel Com pany of East St. Louis has increased the wages of its 1,000 employes 16 per cent. Girls' clubs in southern Kansas have resolved to wed men who served with Funston in the Philippines or remain sin gle.- The carriage trimmers of the Brown carriage works at Cincinnati have struck against a reduction of 15 per cent wages. Jessie Hoover, 14 years old, a daughter of the engineer of the scenic railway, was drowned at the Omaha exposition grounds. A passenger train was wrecked near Clarks, Nev., on the Central Pacific. En gineei- A. H. Real was killed and the fire man injured. At Athens, Mo., B. L. Hull fatally shot his sweetheart, Miss Florence Gordon, and then committed suicide, blowing his head almost off. . Andrew Carnegie has offered to give $50,000 for a public library in San Diego, Cal., if a site be donated and the library maintained as at present. Allen Thomas Wells, general freight agent of the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, died at Denver of diabetes. He wastorn at Memphis, Tenn., Jn 1854. The excursion steamer Queen arrived at Seattle from Alaska. Among her passen gers were United States Senator George F. Perkins of California and Henry Vil- lard. Lloyd Tevis, the California multi-mill ionaire mining king, turfman and stock raiser, died at his home in San Francisco. His estate is estimated at from $10,000 - 000 to $20,000,000. A cyclone struck the eastern portfon of La Forte, Ind., and wrecked the boot and shoe store owned by Buttetwort^i & Co. Several other buildings were also leveled to the ground. At Denmark, Ind., Charles Wolfangel chopped his wife and two daughters to death, then cut his own throat and died on the floor by his wife's bedside. He is thought to have been insane. Cincinnati messenger boys are on strike for a raise of compensation. The matter became serious the other night when two boys were stabbed, several hit by missiles and many slugged with clubs. The Topeka, Kan., Daily Capital has been sold to a syndicate, including Del Kelzer, the present business manager; Harold T. Chase, the present editor, and F. O. Poponoe, a local capitalist. Three thousand five hundred brickmak- ers went on a strike in Chicago, nearly every brickyard in Cook County being shut down, with the resultant prospect of tying up building operations indefi nitely. A new steel cage built far the four in corrigible convicts in the Ohio State pris on at Columbus has been finished and the men placed in it. They are known as the "prison demons." Each one has shot or stabbed a guard or two since his incar ceration. The bodies of two white men, supposed to be father and son, have been found in the:.brush by>.the Tahlequab road, four miles trom Fort Gibson, I. T. The names of the victims are not known, but it is stated that they were from Barton Coun ty. Missouri. By the men accepting the proposition of Manager Campbell to pay the same wages paid prior to 1892 the big strike among the employes of the finishing mills at Youngstown, Ohio, was settled. This means practically an advance of 25 per cent in wages. City Marshal John Gates of Strong City, Kan., shot and almost instantly killed Mrs. Johnson on the Santa Fe plat form there. He had ordered ber off the platform, whereupon she attacked him with a "knife, and to save his life the offi cer fired at her. The famous Mariposa estate, territo rially one of the largest gold mining properties in the United States, and the first quartz property developed in Cali fornia, is to be reopened and worked af ter a suspension of operations for nearly thirty-five years. Detectives arrested John Connors at the Dittenhoffer shoe factory in Cincin nati and charged him with a sensational murder that occurred a year ago in St. Louis, Mo., when Charles A.- Brant, a stenographer, was held up by three men and shot to death. John Doyle, engineer of the Garfield Grouse mine, at Cripple Creek, Colo., was carried off by twenty masked men. Doyle was released by his abductors after they had given him a severe beating. He pro fesses not to know who the men were or why they punished bito. W. A. Thayer, the balloonist from Col lins, Mich., was killed in sight of many persons at Streator, 111. He fell from the parachute when the balloon was up 200 feet, landing *>n his back on the rail road track. His back, neck, both legs and both arms were broken. Charles L. Taylor and John M. Fulton of Iteno, Nev., have bought from Sam uel Hunt, Orin Bennett and S. D. Thack- er the largest antimony mine in the Unit ed States, there being over 20,000,000 pounds of high-grade ore in sight. The mine is in Humboldt County, Nev. At Moorhead, Minn., a woman giving her name as Mamie Brown was found masquerading in man's clothes and was fined $10 and ordered out of town. It has been learned that she is the oldest daugh ter of a highly respected Baptist minister who lives in a southern Minnesota town. t>bor'» . * was •et on fire by the children. Three negroes were lynched near Sal- fold, Ga., believed to have been mem hers of a gang that robbed J. fi. Ogletree, agent of the Plant system -l Saffold. The home of Col. Hooks, a prominent citizen of Hooks, Texas, was blown up by dynamite and Col. HoOks was killed, The crime is believed to have been coin mitted by a negro named Will Jackson. The home of D. H. Knupp, at Black Mountain, thirteen miles east of Ashe- ville. N. C.( was burned. E. Fogote, an architect, and an Englishman, whose name is unknown, perished in the flamesi Samuel Ketchum, the train robber re cently arrested at Cimarron, is dead at the penitentiary of blood poisoning, re sulting from the wound in the arm he re ceived in the fight with the sheriff's posse, He refused to make a statement. Chick Davis, the negro murderer of William Grin, a respected farmer, was lynched at Wilmot, Ark. He was over taken in a cornfield and snapped both barrels of his gun at the pursuing, party and was then fired upon by them and killed instantly. FOREIGN~ The Paris Politique Coloniale sfiys that Russia and Japau are arming, with view to a possible conflict in Coren. It is stated that the Government at Christiania has decided to proclaim a 1 introducing a purely Norwegian flag for consulates. The Government of Honduras 1 made a full report, from Its point of view, of the killing of young Pears last spring, for which indemnity has been claimed by the United States. An expedition comprised of troops from San Pedro Macati, Pasig and Morong, under Brig. Gen. R. H. Hall, captured Calamba, an important trading town on the south shore of Laguna de Bay. During a thunderstorm forty persons who were leaning against a wire railing at the Charlott«?hburg, Germany, cycle track were struck by lightning. Three were killed and twenty were severely in jured. The Roman Catholic reformatory ship Clarence was destroyed by fire at Liver pool. The boys on board worked with the utmost discipline until they were forc ed to leave the ship with the officers. No lives were lost. Official reports show that the condition of winter wheat is very good in nine de partments of France, good in 67, fair in eight, and bad in one department. Spring wheat is very good in four departments, good in 30 and fair in 13. In the English House of Commons, Sir Matthew White Ridley, the home secre tary, said that he was unable to hold out hope of exceptional treatment of Mrs. Maybrick, and added that he was not aware of the existence of any reason for royal clemency. IN GENERAL. Independent lake vessel owners are talking of forming a combine. Consul McCook at Dawson says that $10,000,000, instead of $20,000,000, in gold will cover the product for the last twelve months. Jealousy caused Mrs. Annie Ryan to throw carbolic acid in the face of her neighbor, Widow McCarthy. Mrs. Mc Carthy is dead. Admiral Dewey has decided to accept the banquet tendered him by the city of New York, but has declined that tendered him by New York millionaires. Lacking but a few days of 106 years, Mrs. Catherine Dillon, the oldest woman in Bucks County, is dead at Bristol She was born in Ireland July 27, 1793, and came to this country early in life. R. E. Brown, an American citizen, has filed a claim with the State Department for $2,000,000 against the Transvaal Government. Brown waa engaged in mining in the Transvaal and the title to his claim being questioned it was thrown into the courts. Ah Yu of Shanghai, China, a landsman who enlisted in the navy in 1884 and was formerly attached to Dewey's flagship Olympia, has been granted a pension of $30 a month for lung trouble. He has the distinction of being the first Chinese pensioner of this Government. The Villa Marie Bank, one of the old est financial institutions in Montreal, sus pended payment. This was due, it is claimed, to the defalcation of the cashier, F. Lemieux, and the paying teller, J. H. Herbert. Both these men have disap peared, lea. ing a shortage of $58,000. The steamer Daniel entered the Halifax harbor towing the steamer Alnmere, which is disabled. The Alnmere hails from Newcastle, England. The Alnmere's shaft snapped in a gale, and in the rolling seas the propeller was carried away. The steamer was driven about for eleven days, until the Daniel came in sight. The ownership of the Anchor Line of steamships plying between Glasgow, New York and many other ports has changed hands. The long-established partnership of the well-known ship own ers, Henderson Brothers of Glasgow, owners of the Anchor Line, has terminat ed, and a company has been formed to acquire the entire business of the firm. The company has been incorporated with a capital of £575,000. CART BEFORE TH£ HQRSB, 'Jpf. --St. Paol Pioneer Press. DEATH OF LUETGERT. Notorious Panoaite-Maker 8nddenly Kxpires in His Prison Cell. Adolph Luetgert, who was serving t life sentence in the Illinois State peni tentiary at Joliet for the murder of his wife, Louisa,, died suddenly at a few minutes before 7 o'clock Thursday morn ing. The probable cause of his death was heart disease. It was thought at first that he might have killed himself, but the prison phy sician, after examining the body, con cluded that death resulted from natural causes. There were no indications of poisoning, nor were there any marks on the body. To all appearances Luetgert had been in the best of health, although he had been suffering from rheumatism. The chaplain of the prison said that in the several talks he had with the pris- P ADOLPH L. LUETGERT. oner he had always declared hi's inno cence of any crime. He was confident he would be vindicated in time and that the Supreme Court would grant him a rehearing. He frequently spoke about his case and all his thoughts seemed to be upon it. The warden and his deputies all pronounce Luetgert to have been a well-behaved prisoner. The only trouble which they ever had with him was a little argument he got into with a repre sentative of a large packing house over the meat furnished. He had to be placed in solitary confinement as a punishment for his condnct. Luetgert's passing away marks the closing chapter of one of the most grew- some murder mysteries in the annals of criminology--his debt to the law which was fixed by a jury at life imprisonment has been wiped out. SOUTHERN. A large portion of the town of Lewis burg, Tenn., was destroyed by fire. Loss $25,000. Jesse Adams, aged 30, living on Tug river. West Virginia, killed his wife, aged 24, then killed himself. Jealousy is given as the cause of the tragedy The secret sen-ice has received infor mation of the arrest in Ivnoxville, Tenn., of Frank Farrell. charged with raising new $1 silver certificates to fives.. Three negro children were burned to MARKET REPORTS, Chicago--Cattle, common to prime, $3.00 to $0.0(1; hogs, shipping grades, $3.00 to $4.75; sheep, fair to choice, $3.00 to $5.25; wheat. No. 2 red,170c to 71c; corn, No. 2, 32c to 33c; oats. No. 2, 23c to 25c; rye, No. \ 32c to 53c; butter, choice creamery, 16c to 18c; eggs, fresh. 11c to 13c; potatoes, choice new, 25c to 35c per bushel. Indianapolis--Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $.".75; hogs, choice light, $2.75 to $4.75: sheep, common to prime, $3.25 to $4.75; wheat, No. 2 red, 60c to 68c; corn, No. 2 white, 33c to 34c; oats, No. 2 white, 27c to 29c. St. Louis--Cattle, $3.50 to $6.00; hogs, $3.00 to $4.75; sheep, $3.00 to $4.75; wheat, No. 2, 71c to 73c; corn. No. 2 yellow, 31c to 33c; oats, No. 2, 21c to 23c; rye, No. 2, 53c to 55c. Cincinnati--Cattle, $2.50 to $5.50; hogs, $3.00 to $4.50; sheep, $2.50 to $4.50; wheat, No. 2, 69c to 70c; corn. No. 2 mixed, 35c to 36c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 26c to 28c; rye. No. 2, 58c to 60c. Detroit--Cattle, $2.50 to $6.00; hogs, $3.00 to $4.50; sheep, $2.50 to $4.75; wheat, No. 2, 71c to 73c; corn. No. 2 yellow, 34c to 36c; oats, No. 2 white, 28c to 30c; rye, 55c to 57c. 1 oledo--Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 72c to 73c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 33c to 35c; oats. No. 2 mixed, 24c to 26c; rye, No. 2, 52c to 53c; clover seed, new, $3.95 to $4.05. Milwaukee--Wheat, No. 2 spring, 71c to 73c; corn, No. 3, 32c to 33c; oats, No. 2 white, 24c to 27c; rye. No. 1, 52c to 53c; barley, No. 2, 39c to 41c; pork, mess, $8.75 to $9.25. Buffalo--Cattle, good shipping steers, $3.00 to $5.75; hogs, common to choice, $3.25 to $5.00; sheep, fair to choice weth ers, $3.50 to $5.25; lambs, common to extra, $4.50 to $6.50. New York--Cattle, $3.25 to $5.75; hogs, $3.00 to $5.25; sheep, $3.00 to $5.25; wheat, No. 2 red, 77c to 78c; corn, No. 2. death near Anderson.,)S. C. The wife of I *^„t0 ^c; ®at®' 2, 27c to 29c; butter. Ilenry Thompson left the children alone £ to 9c; e8sa> 14c EVANSVILLE MINERS RIOT. Non-Unloniats Attacked--The Mayor Forbids Parade. * Rioting and disorder prevailed at two of the Evansville coal mines Wednesday. As the colored non-union miners came from the First avenue mines they were met by a crowd of boys who carried tin carfsT^-jSeveral stones were hurled at them. ^Vhen a block away from the mine ^he minevs pulled their revolvers and opened fire on the crowd. No one was hurt. Several hundred people gathered and the police dispersed the crowd and es corted the miners home. Nearly 1,000 striking miners, their families and sym pathizers were at the John Ingle mine when the colored miners quit work. Both the strikers and non-union men were armed. Mayor Akin issued a proclama tion forbidding the miners to parade. TO REMOVE THE DAMS. Illinois Valley's Demand on Chicago lirainage District. Dredging of the Illinois river and the removing of all dams therein is demand ed by the Illinois River Valley Associa tion before the water of the Chicago drainage canal is turned into it. If this is done the association, by implication, promises to withdraw opposition to the plans of the Chicago drainage district. This was the net result of the meeting of the association at Whitehall, 111. Five thousand persons were present and the result of their deliberations was incorpo rated in a set of resolutions which will be presented to Gov. Tanner and Presi dent McKinley. The former will be ask- INDEMNITY FOR LYNCHING. Relative* of Italians Stain at Tallnlah Will Be Recompensed. Italy will be paid an indemnity for the lynching of three of the five Italians at Tallulah, La., and the State Department will lay down the principle, once for all, that an alien does not become a full- fledged citizen of the United States un til naturalization papers have been for mally issued to him. Of course the State Department will pursue the regular legal course for as certaining the facts in connection with the lynching, ARE LOSING THEIR HAIR. Tonne People In Indiana Belt Becom- hiK Bald. An Anderson, -Ind., dispatch says that men and women living in the Indiana gas belt are losing their hair. Physicians have found that a new form of hair dis ease is sweeping the entire section. It was at first thought to be some scalp dis ease which had become epidemic, but in vestigation during the past two weeks has developed the conclusion that the univer sal loss of hair is due to action of natural gas vapor, which permeates the region and which is undergoing some evolution. OTIS PROCLAIM8 NEW CONTROL He Establishes Provisional Rule for the Island of Negros. Gen. Otis has proclaimed a provisional government for the Island of Negros. The island will be under a military gov* ernor, and a civil governor and advisory council will be elected later. This Gov ernment is established pending the ac tion of Congress on the constitution for the Island of Negros. Bacolor will be the capital. A cabinet consisting of sec retaries of treasury, agriculture and in terior will be appointed by the military goveraor. These, together with an at torney general, will exercise the execu tive power. All male inhabitants of 21 years of age, who can read and write Spanish, English or Visayan, and who - possess $000 in realty, and who have been resi dents for one year are eligible to the franchise. The military governor will prescribe the time and place of elections. He will also appoint three judges to sit at times aod places designated. A free school system will be established and the teaching of English will be required. The advisory council to be presided over by the civil goveraor will devise a system of uniform taxation. The mili tary governor will collect the customs and control the postal service. The sec retaries will draw $3,000 a year. The civil governor will receive $6,000 a year. The military governor will have the pow er. of ve^o in all legislative action, sub ject to the approval of Gen. Otis. A Washington dispatch says that the President has no intention of relieving Gen. Otis from the military command in the Philippines. BODY IS CREMATED. Remains of Col. Ineeraoll Incinerated at Freah Pond, L. 1. The body of Col. Robert G. Ingersoll was creniated Thursday at Fresh Pond, L. I. The coffin was plain and covered with black cloth, having neither handles nor plate. It was only used to convey the remains from the house at Dobbs Ferry to the crematory. A special train was in readiness at the Dobbs Ferry sta- FRESH POND CKKMATORY. tion, and there was a special train also on the Long Island Railroad. The mourn ers remained at Fresh Pond until the cremation was completed, when the wid ow carried the ashes back to the home in the cinerary urn selected for her by George Gray Barnard, the sculptor, who took the cast of Col. Ingersoll's head af ter death. GEN. HALL. HALL ROUTES REBELS. Insurgent Town of Calamba Captured by American Troops. A Manila dispatch says that Brig. Gen. R. H. Hall, with 1,000 men, has captur ed Calamba, on Laguna de Bay. The loss to the United States forces was four killed and twelve wounded. Calamba is a town on Laguna de Bay, about thirty miles southeast of Ma nila. It is much farther south than the United States troops have yet penetrated on land. It is in the prov ince ofV,aguna. It has a population of 11,476 anjl is twenty- seven miles from Santa -Cruz on the east ern shore of the bay. Its capture is not considered of any strategical importance, except as a part of the plan to harass and worry the insurgents. 8park» from the Wires. Pat Malone killed by the cars, Akron, Ohio. > Falling telegraph pole, Pittsburg, killed Frank Scope. J. C. Saylor, school teacher, shot dead from ambush on Pickett's creek, Ken tucky. Prospectors are leaving Dawson City by the hundred for Nome, the new gold field. A $9,000,000 fertiliser trust is proposed. Ex-Commissary General Eagan baa re turned from Hawaii* Herman Klein dead in Cincinnati of lockjaw. Accidentally shot July 5. John Coughlin and sister, 14, drowned at Fort Worth, Texas, while boating. P. R. Brady bounced from treasurer* ship of Orinal County, Arizona. Short $7,000. Joe Foerder, Jr., 12, Ripley, Ohio, acci dentally killed with a fiobert rifie by his brother. About 1,000 miners at Nelsoaville, O., went out agalnBt scales that do mot reg> .ister accurately. Some 150 telephone linemen in Clew- land struck because of sympathy far the street railway striken. SAN DOMINGO RULER SLAIN. President Benreavx Finally l4>U a Victim to Aasaasin. Gen. Ullses Heureaux, president of the Dominican republic, was assassinated at Moca, Santo Domingo, Wednesday after noon. Several at tempts formerly have been made to kill him. The mur derer, Ramon Ca- ceros, made his es cape. The death of Gen. Ulises Heureaux has cast a gloom over the entire Dominican Government. Immediately up on the announce- ©EN. HKUREATNC. ment of the president's death Vice-Pre»- ident Gen. Wenceslao Figuereom assum ed control of the government of the Do» minion. Several attempts have begn made be fore to take the life of President Heu reaux, but they were frustrated. On one occasion while passing through the arch ed entrance to the palace between lines of guards his quick eye caught one of the soldiers, who appeared to lower his rifle in his d|rection. Quickly pulling a re volver he shot the man dead in his tracks, passed on to his private office, where he gave orders to remove a dead man lying at the main entrance. Gen. Heureaux was born in Porto Plata in 1846 and served in the war against Spain from 1868 to 1874. Later he was put at the head of, the advanced Dominicans, who sought to improve their country by inducing foreign capital to lo cate on the island. As he advanced all the wealthy inhabitants joined his forces and when he arrived at the gates of the historic city of Santo Domingo he was chosen president of the republic and serv ed his term of four years. At the ex piration of every four years an electoral college assembles in the city to vote for a president for the following term, but owing to Gen. Heureaux's popularity and ability he has always been unani mously re-elected and was serving his fifth term. ALASKAN MATTER BRIGHTENS. Mr. G. D. Ferris of Mexico, Mo* <• a prominent business man who holds the Interests of his town above everything else. He is not only the owner of the l^ l3Mexico Ope** House |>^and other valuable ' property, but is as athlete who goes la ; his shirt sleeves in ; the depth of winter, - A street fair is to be ; held in Mexico and 'the committee L is Temporary Settlement May Soon Be Reached with £ngland. Secretary Hay and Reginald Tower, the British charge d'affaires, expect soon to have the Alaskan boundasy line prac tically settled on a temporary basis. With Canada eliminated from, the controversy it is thought that the American and Brit ish Governments will have no difficulty in reaching an agreement. The map, made from Dawson's Cana- <^an map of 1887 and United States coast survey of Alaska, shows the boun- A DISPUTED ALASKAX TERRITORY. dary contended for by Canada, a dotted line near the coast, placing Dyea, Ska- guay and Pyramid harbor in British ter ritory; the line claimed by the United States north and west of the Lynn canal, and a conventional line proposed by Daw son which strikes through Pyramid har bor. The latest proposition by the Amer ican Government is to give Canada a free harbor at the head of Lynn canal. « MOB LAW IS INVOKED. Georgia and Alabama in a Fnry Over Deeda of Blood. A perfect carnival of violence and bloodshed is raging in Georgia and Ala bama. Murders, assaults on women and shooting affairs are reported from all di rections, and at various places troop3 are under arms to protect prisoners from the fury of mobs. Prominent physicians blame much of the violence on the pro longed heat. The trouble in Georgia be gan with the assault on Mrs. Ogletree at Saffold and it continued with unabated fury for six days, during which four ne groes have been lynched, four persons killed, one woman assaulted and numer ous attempts made to lynch alleged crim inals. Only the action of leading citizens of Bainbridge prevented the lynching of John Wjlliams, a negro accused of as sault. Three hundred men, armed with dynamite and carrying telegraph poles for battering rams, were marching to the jail whpn Judge Bower and two other men stopped them and pleaded that the law be allowed to take its course. There upon the mob disbanded, only to gather again at daybreak. The mob was pre paring to attack the prison when the Valdosta and Thomgsville militia com panies, which had been ordered to the scene by Gov. Candler, arrived and dis persed the mob. MRS. STYLES IS NOT GUILTY. Chicago Woman Freed from Charge of Murdering Her Mothrr. Amid the hysterical weepings of Mrs. Augusta Styles, Judge Waterman, in tt Chicago court room, read the verdict of not guilty, which freed Mrs. Styles of the charge of murdering her mother, Mrs. Catherine SchultE, on May 4. The jury was out but one hour and fifty minutes, only three being for conviction and a short sentence at any time. Mrs. Schultz was deliberately killed by Mrs. Styles May 4 after she had waited for her for some hours for that purpose. The cause of the 'trouble was Mrs. Schultz revealing the story of the birth of Mrs. Styles' daughter Belle. , First Chinese Pensioner. Ah Yuh of Shanghai, China, a lands man who enlisted in the navy in 1884 and was formerly attached to Dewey's flagship Olympia, Wednesday was grant- fd a pension of $30 a month for lung trouble. He has the distinction of being the first Chinese pensioner Inhaling Polaon Killed Htm. Philip Heger, aged .63, a prosperous farmer living a few miles west of Union, Mo, scattered poison over his potato vines to kill bugs. He inhaled so much of the poison that in spite of the best medical skill obtainable he died. Telegraphic Brevities. price of iron pumps will go up. Matches have advanced a cent a box. Assassins perforated Bush Isaacs, Drop Rock, Ky. Lightning destroyed the Park House* Nantasket., Strike of the district messenger boys In Cleveland settled. "Black Jack" robber band reorganized in Presidio County, Texas. Lumber has advanced $7.50 per 1+000 since Jan. 1, and it'll go higher. About 1,000 miners are stranded In the Ketaebee district and need help. charge wished to secure some special at- traction to draw the crowds. They went to see Mr. Ferris and he came forward with, a proposal which has at least the charm of absolute novelty. If the com mittee will raise $50 to be Igiven to the brass band of Mexico Mr. Ferris agrees to build on top of the court house domq a scaffold sixteen feet high. On top of this scaffold Mr. Ferris agreeB to stand on his head between the hours of 2 an<? 8 o'clock each afternoon during the fair* W. L. Dunlap, the newly elected com mander, Indiana department, G. A. R* is 59 years old. He was born in Franklin, Ind., and entered the Seventh regiment-- the first one to leave the State, the one to lead the first charge in the four years' war, the first one to have a soldier killed. He participated in' the forty-one battles in which the regi ment took part. He w a s n e a r J o h n Smith of Shelbyville **• DUSTLAP. when he was killed. He was the first mi killed in the Union ranks in recognised warfare, though four Massachusetts men had been killed in the Baltimore riots. He was with the Seventh when it led the charge against the stone wall at Winches ter--the charge which gave Gen. Stone wall Jackson his first defeat. He wat ia the charge at Phillippi June 3, 1861--the charge that opened the war. He was at Gettysburg and on the other great fields of the North. There died a few days ago in Terre Haute, Ind., an unassuming man who left behind him a diary covering fifty year's of active life. The book would not make exciting read ing, because it telle only the simple story of, a man who did his duty faith fully and without fault. It is the" daily record of the life of Andrew Walker, railroad engineer. It show* that during his fifty years of active ser- AMDRRIV WALKER, vice j^r. Walker guided his engine oyer 1,600,918 miles of track, and that during all that time no train of which he was the pilot met with an accident of a serious character. Only once did Mr. Walker leave his work on the railroad. That was in 1862, when for a few months he tried farming near In dianapolis. With that exception his ser vice was continuous^ Civil service reformers, who are dis turbed by President McKinley's recent order, first gained national recognition ia 1871. In that year- Congress passed a bill authorizing President Grant to appoint a civil service commis sion. The members of this first commission were George William Curtis, Alexander G. Cat tell, Joseph Medill, D avidson A. Walker, E. B. Ellicott, Joseph o. w. CUKTIS. H. Blackfan and David C. Cox. In 1850 competitive examinations of applicants for certain positions were begun in a lim ited way, but it took twenty years of agi tation to induce Congress to act. In Eng land free, open competition throughout the public service was established in 1870. The civil service commission of 1871 dopted rules governing the examination of candidates, which were in force until Congress refused to make an appropria tion for the work, and President Grant declared them temporarily suspended in 1875. George Bruce Cortelyou, who has been appointed secretary of President McKjn- ley during the indefinite absence in Eu rope of Secretary Porter, was made assistant secretary in 1808 and for the past few months has been filling the principal post and conducting affairs a t t h e W h i t e House. iMr, Cortel- yon is a native of New York and is a lawyer of ability. He has the degree of bachelor and master of laws and hie extensive experience amply fits Uu for the preseat position. O. B. COBTS1TOU. College News Note*. Lafayette will erect a new Ubrarr building. Radcliffe Alumnae Association now more than 200 members. Only five of the 300 members of tha aenior class of Yale failed to graduate. ' Wells College Alumnae will try to raise an endowment fund of $100,000. The Rev. Samuel May, now of Leices ter, Mass., is the oldest living alumnus of the Divinity School of Harvard Uni versity. He is the only survivor of (he graduates of 1833. Dartmouth's graduating class numbers 105, the largest ever graduated from the college. The Boston Herald criticises Harvard for calling her proposed new hospital an "infirmary." Antioch will establish a new depart ment to be known as the Horace Mann Teachers' College. Five consignments Of bopks,' each con taining several thousand volumes, have been received at Princeton from abroad. At the commencement of Berea Col lege in the eastern Tennessee mountains 1,500 saddle horses were picketed on tW grounds.