V PLAXXTDBALKft Uemsof General Interest Paragraphs. I COMPLETE NEWS SUMMARY. SU*NM*t of H»nmila|i of Hnh or Uttl* lapnrWfeM from All Parte mt th* entitled Workl--Incidents, KatwpHiM, Accidents, Verdtots. Crlam ni Wu Solomon Holema and Sam Frye, Choctaw Indians, placed on trial at Paris, Tex., for the murder of three alleged witches. Emotional insanity is the defense. Booker T. Washington and others told how to solve the lynching prob lem. Think evil may be checked by inculcating more respect for the law. General Corbin opposed Funston's promotion to brigadier-general. .Told Congressman Long he was merely a boss scout. Philadelphia merchant with an arti ficial arm was caused much embarrass ment on his arrival from Europe by the immigration authorities, who re quired assurances he would not be come a public charge. Chicago Great Western will extend its line to Omaha, which will require 274 miles of track and cost $8,000,000. Organization of the steel trust, it is estimated, will necessitate the pay ment of a |700,000 revenue tax. General Chaffee ordered toy the pres ident to take no part in razing the Chinese forts and establishing a chain of fortified posts from Pekin to the cofcst as planned by the powers. Twenty-eight victims of the Boxers hitherto unaccounted for were burned to death in a church at Houpec, in which they had sought refuge. lUneBs of Premier Waldeck-Rous- seau exciting- apprehension in French government circles. Russian officers fought duel at Nice, one of them being wounded in the arm. , Another confession by Valet Jones made public in thtf Rice case at New York, in which Lawyer Patrick is charge'd with giving chloroform to the millionaire. Scheme to bring all the great rail way systems under one management said to be seriously contemplated. Passenger train on the Jersey Cen tral wrecked, killing one person and Injuring four others. Charles W. Meyer of the Schorr stable won the Gaston Hotel Stake at Memphis. " \ Miss Rose P. Duffey, aged 19, deputy postmaster at Parnell, Iowa, charged with embezzling $1,009. Joshua Levering, Prohibition candi date for President in 1896, married Helen Woods at Baltimore. Leech Lake Indians complained lum ber men are cutting green timber on their reservation. Ifrs. P. H. Ames offered to give Uni versity of Cincinnati $100,000 for a marie hall. Aguinaldo preparing a manifesto asking the insurgents now in the field to lay down their arms and accept the sovereignty of the United States. Peace to be proclaimed when this is issued. Rumored insurgent leader has been Invited by President McKinley to visit United States. Shipload of emigrants left Porto Rico tor Hawaiian Islands. Boers brought suit in United States .court at New Orleans to stop shipment of mules to British in South Africa. Governor Leslie M. Shaw of Iowa, according to A. B. Cummins of that Mate, will be a Republican presidential .candidate in 1904. Tolstoi, in a magazine article, point ed out the root of evil in the social system. He declared the inequalities of life due to degeneration of Chris tianity. False faith taught. Hotel Chicago at Oconomowoc, Wis., destroyed by fire. Loss is $40,000 to $50,000. partly covered by insurance. Mexican congress opened by Presi dent Diaz. Colonel Gonzalez, former insurgent governor of Manila, surrendered to Americana. Venezuela -will be asked to pay dam ages for destruction of British vessels. Sir John Stainer, a famous organist and composer, died at Verona, Italy. Panic caused in the Yildiz palace, Constantinople, by an earthquake. Count Tolstoi said to have oeen ban ished from Russia on March 26 because of the attempted assassination of Privy Councilor Pobiedonostzeff, which Is charged to Tolstoi's teachings. Retiring Moderator E. H. Curtis at annual meeting of Chicago Presbytery characterized the Presbyterian creed as out of date. Government crop report for March Indicated unsatisfactory weather con ditions in the Missouri valley •tntes and the upper lake region. Records broken by the earnings of the Santa Fe road, the gross receipts for the year ended February 28 being $50,647,099. Russia is said to have informed Cfeina that failure to immediately sign > the Manchurian convention will result In a rupture of present relations. Senator Proctor, just returned from Cuba, says island will accept Piatt amendment. Engineers' strike likely to tie up fifty-eight Milwaukee boats. Ice in the Mississippi at La Crosse Went out, causing great damage to the lefee. Charles R. Flint, trust organizer, de- , dared the commercial supremacy of the United States to be due to consoll- ,s ^ 4ated management. , Accident to dredger caused blockade ' i-ir4*? ships in Suez canal, including the Ophir, with the Duke of York aboard. Lieutenant Dean and thirty men the Sixth Cavalry cut their way | through 200 insurgents in Calisa"y. " Northwest Texas swept by one of ";£fce worst blizzards of the season. Emperor William believes that the •Jfory he received at Bremen was mmed by abnllet from an ton. LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. Winter Wheat--No. 1 «a, 74%i I ml; f hard, 71 > hard, n*®*; No. 4 hard. Spring wfc«at^iwji. 1 Northern. No. 3 spring:, No. 4. 60®«7c. Oom --No. 2 and X yellow, 43c; No. s. otto: No. S white, «%e; No. 3 yellow, 4ttMN3%o; No. 4, <!#, Oats--No. 4 white, 2S^c; No. 3 whit*, WUc; No. 2, 26c. Cattle--Native b®ef steers, J4-60®6.K>; etockers and feeders, |3.7B@6.00; western fpd steers, J4.45@5.25; Texans and Indians, 14.25^5.00; cows, *3.25®4.50; heifers, «3.?50 4.80; canners, J2.3&U3.15; bulls, ftttfM.00; calves, *4.5006.25. Hogs-Heavy, t6.06$«.lS; mixed packers, 3S.K&L10; Hffht, _ B.97M; pig:*. $4 75®6.70. Sheep-Western lambs, J5.00@5.25; western wethers, $4,809 6.00; western yearlings, 14.76^5.10; ewes, *4,00®4.60; culls, *2.75@3.75; spring lambs, *6.504i 7.50. Potatoes--Rurals, 35@38c per bu.: peer less, 30@35c; Hebrons, kings, empires, 25®32c. Poultry--Dressed stock: Turkeys, selected, 11c; chickens, hens, 9$9%c; roos ters. 6Vfrc; broilers, 14@l5c; capons, large, 12®12tyc; geese, 8(§f8%c; ducks, choice, 10^@llc. Butter--Creamery, extra, choice, 20^£c; dairies, choice, 18@19c. Cheese--Full cream, daisies, choice, 10%@llc; Young Americas, full cream, ll%@ll%c; twins, Eggs--Fresh, 12@12%c. Apples- Baldwin, choice to fancy. S3.3>®3.50 per bbi.; greenings, good to fancy, S3.00®3.50; Ben Davis, choice to fancy. J2.75#3.2S; King*, fancy, $3.75#4.00; russets, 32.QQ93.Mi. Riotous Soon* at Aatnitauu. •t Rock Island, 111., a small riot growing out of strife between the sophomores and freshman classes took place at Augustana College. After a number of exciting encounters between the two classes during the day a mob of hoodlums, forty in number, assem bled near the college and made an at tack on the gymnasium. There they found a number of students, whom they roughly handled, some being in jured. The building was considerably damaged. The police were summoned, but the mob dispersed before their ar rival. A niynber of warrants were jewora out, and arrests will be made. lAad-OwBM Kll'ed. As sequel to a trivial controversy over a land boundary, B. P. Caldwell, a prominent land owner near Man chester, 111., was struck on the bead Wednesday afternoon by I. N. Swart- wood, a neighbor, and died of his in juries a few hours later. There were nq witnesses to the affray, and Swart- wood's version is all that can be ob tained as Caldwell died without regain ing consciousness. Swartwood escaped and was pursued by the sheriff of Scott county with bloodhounds. Caldwell is survived by a widow and one son. He was a wealthy land owner, known throughout the state. Noted MMIIOIB I* DM ̂ i ' Mrs. Clarisse J. Huyler, wife^^tffm J. Huyler, and who succeeded Miss De Bar as Luther R. Marsh's favorite medium, died at Middletown, Ky., after long illness. She was 62 years old. Mrs. Huyler, though a woman of little education, is said to have been gifted with rare mediumlstic power. Mr. Mfirgh hftd boarded witli her cvsr since he came to this city, over ten years ago. It was through her medi- umship that Marsh received the com munications for biblical characters that made up his "Voices of tbe Pa triarchs." ?*• Old Kentucky Warrior Shoots to Kill. * HTCH£D BATTLE AT HOUSE. The Hor* of Two Wan aad Mmy Boots Mm* White Halt Agala*t OStoers Who Attempt to Imom hoM^Good* A pitched battle, in which the par ticipants were General Cassius M. Clay, the old lion of White hall, on one side, and a sheriff's posse, headed by Deputy Sheriff R. W. Collyer, on the other, took place Friday morning at White hall, the home of General Clay, eight miles north of Richmond, Ky. The officers were attempting to seise some househould goods belonging to Mrs. Mary K. Clay, the general's daughter, which the general refused to surrender. Some time ago General Clay, who, since his divorce from his child wife, IiMra Richardson Clay, has been liv ing alone, induced his daughter and her son, Attorney Green Clay, to make their home with him. Everything went smoothly until Sunday, when the general's daughter returned from the city with a number of young girl friends. As the gay party drove up to the house General Clay appeared at the door and ordered his daughter and her girl visitors away, emphasizing his order with a revolver. Mrs. Clay returned to the home of her sister at Richmond and sent her son out to see what had caused the sudden hostility. He, too, met a hos tile reception, and had to take refuge behind a tree to escape the murderous bullet of the irate old general. Seeing it was useless to try to pacify his grandfather. Green Clay secured a writ of delivery for the goods, attd, |j| < Arberttts Lin**aier, aaetOn •deraum family, died ii| hospital on Tuesday after' livni for #** years on a diet and water. Lindmaier'a father was a general in the German army and one ©f his ferotbsim isprofessor of lan guages In a German university. Und ldaier became estranged from his fam ily and got but little of his mother's large estate. A scholar, speaking ten languages, fitted to shine in almost any calling had it not been for his •ccentrictles, Lindmaler five years ago gave up a place he bad with Delmonl co's, where he was a sort of superin tendent, and thereafter took upon him self what he called a "penance," sus taining his life solely on bread and water. Although wasted to a mere shadow, no amount of persuasion could make him change his mode of living. Durirfg the day -hfe sat in the park reading. ° At night he slept in aome Bowery lodging-house. M^ Sr'fs BwIm BlOom An Killed. The London Daily Express has re ceived the following from its corre spondent at Geneva: "A terrible riot has occurred at Dienne, in the Valley of Chamonix, owing to the Municipal Council selling land on which the peo ple had enjoyed grazing rights. The inhabitants tried to set fire to the town hall and a fierce conflict ensued be tween the rioters and the gendarmes. Ten persons were killed and ftfteeshin- Jured." . Hanging for Kidnapers. Kidnaping for ransom is made a capital offense, according to a bill which has passed the Illinois house. It carries an emergency clause, giving it immediate effect if the senate takes similar action and the governor agrees. It also provides that the kid naper may 'be tried in any county through which the criminal may have been carried by his captors. The bill went through without debate. Victim of HaabMd'i Doe|$f* ̂ Mrs. William Hancock and her hus band of Helena, Mont., quarreled a short time ago and Hancock told his wife that they were not legally mar ried. She took his word for it and married a railroad man named Mc- Call. Then Hancock had both of them arrested, and Mrs. McCall has, upon the advice of her attorney, pleaded guilty to bigamy. She was sentenced to three months in the penitentiary. Bia Mother and Brother. M Kline's Grove, a small country village, a few miles from Sunbury, Pa., John Gulick, aged 32, killed his moth er, aged 68, and his brother Phillip, aged 27. After committing the terrible crime he coolly placed the smoking revolver in his pocket and walked off in the direction of Danville and is still at large. Chnrch Dial Ike* Lone Sermoae. As a result of dissatisfaction over long sermons and subsequent bicker ings the relations between the First Reformed church of South Bend. Ind., and its pastor, Rev. J. Dirk, have bees dissolved by mutual consent. toys He Killed Millionaire Rice. Valet Charles F. Jones, who con fessed originally that Lawyer Albert T. Patrick chloroformed the old mil lionaire, William Marsh Rice, and con fessed, secondly that Patrick killed Rice by administering mercury, testi fied at New York that he himself pois oned Rice with mercury and oxalic acid and killed him with chloroform, all at Patrick's suggestion, because Patrick's plot to get the old man's money hsd reached a point where Rice must die to make things safe. ' tfcurter*a Stealings Lncatrd. ,, - Officers are said to have found the whereabouts of nearly all the $722,060 which Oberlin M. Carter, former cap? tain if engineers, was convicted of stealing while he had" charge of har bor improvement work at Savannah, Ga. The money is invested in real es-, tate and securities, and it is expected that a considerable sum will be re covered for the government The ar rest of two or three well-known men charged with knowingly protecting Carter's operations is likely to follow. Carter is now serving a five years' term of imprisonment in Leavenworth penitentiary as the result of convic tion by a court-martial. The govern ment lost $2,500,000, but much of thfcf went to Carter's accomplices. k Boy Slavs In a Quarrel, An ill feeling has existed' between the town and country boys at Odon, hear Washington, Ind., for some time, and it culminaced in murder. With a friend Harley Lamb went to Odon to attend an entertainment, and as they were riding down the main street several of the young men of the town angered them with jokes. Lamb and his friend leaped from their horses to resent the insult, and Lamb accused Walter Correll of leadership in the matter. Correll struck Lamb in the face and Lamb cut Correll twice with a pocket knife, one wound severing an artery in the neck from which Correll bled to death in a few minutes. Lamb returned to the home of his father, who is a wealthy farmer, and was ar rested in bed. GEN. CASSIUS M. CLAT. aciOmpanied toy Officers Terrell and Kennedy and Deputy Sheriff Collyer, went to White hall Ahls morning. The general met the officers at the door with a revolver and ordered them from the premises. When they endeavored to reason with him he opened "fire. Deputy Sheriff Collyer jumped be hind a tree and thus saved his life. After emptying his pistol the old fighter produced a Winchester and re opened the engagement The officers opened fire on him, and for several minutes the fusillade was general. The officers returned to the city without the goods. It is the belief of Mr. Collyer that General Clay was slightly wounded during the fight Brutus J. Clay, son of the general, will endeavor to secure the goods by peaceable means. If this fails a strong posse may 'be ordered out by Sheriff Collyer to capture White hall. General Clay is 91 years old, and this late outbreak has led his friends to believe that his mind is unbalanced. Crased by Spouse'• Deat*. Mrs. R. Gates Rice, a wealiSy resi dent of St Joseph, Mich., and a well- known society woman, became insane Friday from grief over the loss of her husband, who dropped dead in the streets there recently. She left home in the early morning and went three miles south of the city, where she lay down on the Pere Marquette railroad tracks and waited for a train to come and kill her. Mayor Nelson C. Rice, the unfortunate woman's 'brother-in- law, organized a searching party when her disappearance was noticed and the countryside was scoured. J. L. Cox had discovered the woman lying on the tracks and took her to his home, where the mayor and his party found her. Mrs. Rice recently created a sen sation at St. Joseph by payipg up the entire indebtedness of St Paul's Epis copal ehurch. Rich OH Strike In Iowa. News of an oil strike in Clay county, northwestern Iowa, has been received at Lima, 0., and a numiber of oil men are on their way there. The Standard Oil company quietly sent their best men to the scene several days ago, getting advance information. A num ber of oil men have left Lima and more will follow. The oil is said to be oozing from the ground and heavy flows of gas have been struck at a depth of 500 feet Carrier* Mar On Con tie** 'An innovation looking to the com fort of letter carriers throughout the country during the heat of summer probably will be introduced this year by official permission to them to divest their coats on their rounds when felt to be necessary. It is expected that the postmaster-general in the near fu ture will issue an order formally grant ing authority to postmasters for this purpose and modifying the require ments so as to allow the carriers to wear a suitable gray blouse, with a turn down collar and a black tie. Old Veteran End# HU Life. Captain Charles Palmatier, a mem ber of the G. A. R. and of the Loyal Legion, shot himself at Kenosha, Wis., dying almost instantly. For thirteen years he has been a sufferer from dia betes. Last month he went to Hot Springs, but failed to find relief. He returned a few days ago and seemed despondent While talking to one of his daughters he asked her to step out of the room, and, rising from the bed without even closing the door, he took his revolver from the 'bureau and shot himself. The decedent was 67 years old. He served all through the civil war. r v Shipyard Near Cramp*. An English shipbuilding company ia reported to have purchased Petty's Is land, Philadelphia, one-half mile from Cramps' shipyard, with the object of establishing on it one of the largest shipbuilding plants in the world. The island embraces about 300 acres and is completely surrounded toy water, and has long been regarded as an ideal spot for a shipbuilding plant. The price for which the island has changed hands is reported to be considerably less than $3,000,000. Charles B. Strieker of New York, who is said to represent Vickers Son & Maxim, was the purchaser. t Fainting Lon( Lo*t h Found. The famous Gainsborough portrait of the Duchess of Devonshire, whose theft from a London art gallery cre ated a profound sensation a quarter of a century ago, and which has been, an object of search in every civilized country of the globe, has 'been recov ered in Chicago by Pinkerton detec tives. It was returned to the owner, C. Moreland Agnew, a week ago, and will be back in London in the next few days. : To Build Indiana Ballroad. The Fort Wayne and Wabash Rail way company, to construct and oper ate a single or double track standard gauge railroad from Fort Wayne to Wabash, forty-two miles, has been in corporated, with a capital stock of $50,- 000. The directors are Aaron N. Dukes, Richard A. Edwards, William B. McClintic, G. G. Stewart, John F. Ungar, Elbert J. Baker and Elbert W. Shirk. The line is to be built along the Wabash and Erie cans practicable,' <; ,• " m "Aunt Bettv" I) iwllnc Dead. "Aunt" Betty Dowling, born in Ken' tucky in February, 1796, and residing west of Seymour, Ind., where she had lived in a primitive log cabin, still in good preservation since its erection by her father in 1816, is dead. For years she had lived alone and almost unat tended, surviving all her immediate relatives. Residing for half a century within one mile of a railroad, she had never seen an engine or a train of cars, nor had she been five miles away from her rugged home since her girl ibeo<L "Aunt" Betty was never tick. • Sl»a 910,000 for a A Jury in Judge Neely's court at Chi cago rendered a verdict for $10,000 in favor of John Enright for the loss of a leg on Sept. 1, 1896. The verdict is against George A. Seaverns, for whom Enright was operating an automatic shovel used for unloading grain cars at the Seaverns elevator, when he wa3 hurt yr L .» Rmr Afwrney- General Kr«|. , £ The president made the first an nouncement that Mr. Knox had ac cepted the post of attorney-general to the cabinet Friday. His commission, which is dated Friday, was signed im mediately after the president had in formed his advisers of their new col league's acceptance. Wee Dwarf In a Tf<ttnn Two of the smallest people alive were passengers on the steamship Rhein, which arrived from Bremen at New York Friday. Their names are Fatma and Smaun, sister and brother, natives of Burmah. Smaun, the broth er, is 19.685 inches in height and his sister is just 20.4724 inches, or only a little taller than a magnum of cham pagne. Smaun will soon be 18 years old. Fatma is 19. They are profes sional actors and will make their bow to an American audience next Mon day. Big: Glass Plant for Ottawa. James and Joseph D. Oliver of South Bend, Ind., have furnished $750,000 and secured a controlling interest in the mammoth plate glass factory to he erected at Ottawa, 111., wfeiefe wiil be capitalized for $1,000,000. * Hatty Die of PiagUr. • Cape Town dispatch to thhe Ex change Telegram company of London, says there have been 304 cases of the plague to date, and 100 deaths. The latter included a doctor, and | other Europeans. v , Results «* Polls Monday #. ' Tuesday. "V, -.i; LOCAL ISSUES INFLUENCE. Carter 9. Harrison Bleeted Mayor of Chtoa**, Bona Welle Mayw of 8*. Loala--Prohibition tbo I*aue la Haay Kani Towa*--Cleotlon figaro* Carter H. Harrison was elected mayor of Chicago for the third time Tuesday by a plurality over Elbridge Hanecy of 28,257. The total vote was 296,596 out of a registry of 400,166. The number of voters who failed to go to the polls was 103,570, or over one- quarter of the electorate of tbe «ity. Jority. Komi.. by a amaU at$» CARTER H. HAHRISON. All of the remaining candidates on the Democratic city ticket were elected along with Mayor Harrison. In fact, Charles F. Gunther, the candidate for city treasurer, ran better than the mayor, his plurality being 33,376, or 6,119 more than that given the head of the ticket. Of the two other candidates both William Loeffler, elected city clerk, and Andrew Ryan, city attorney, suffered severely, and although they have safe pluralities, they are not large ones. Oscar Hebel, the Republican candidate for city attorney, heads his ticket :.- , WoIIa Wlna at St. trals. ,, ^ Rolla Wells, the Democratic nomi nee for world's fair mayor of St. Louis, has been elected and with him the en tire city ticket. Based upon the re turns it would seem that Wells' plural ity is about 10,000. ^ r Wlaeomln Vote Seattera. { Joshua E. Dodge was elected t#lf& Supreme court Tuesday in Wisconsin without opposition. About one-half the usual vote was cast in the judicial election at Milwau kee. The only real contest was be tween Paul D. Carpenter and Judge Emil Wallber for county judge. Judge Wallber is an old wheel-hcrse Repub lican whom tradition has said for twenty years it was Impossible to beat for office. Young Mr. Carpenter turned the trick and defeated him by a nar row margin. According to the incom plete returns from the city the vote stands Carpenter 12,143, and Wallber 11,958. The Democrats elected two of the five aldermen in the new wards of Milwaukee, and will contest the elec tion of one alderman on the ground there la no vacancy. The Democrats retain control of the^ council. Returns of results in other towns are as follows: Racine--Michael Higgins (Dem.) elected mayor by 500 majority. Repub licans elect the rest of the city ticket and. a majority of the council. Oshkosh--Democrats won by about 250 majority, a gain of 159. John Mul- va was elected mayor. Ten Democrats out of fourteen aldermen were re turned and the council will be Demo cratic. Marinette--Democrats elected Camp bell for mayor by 400 majority, and also city treasurer and assessor. Waukesha--The entire , Republican city ticket was re-elected by an in creased majority. The Republicans gained three aldermen. County Judge M. S. Griswold and Municipal Judge D. S. Tular were re-elected. Fond du L$c--A Democratic mayor and a majority of the aldermen were elected. A Republican county judge was elected. The council is Democrat ic. Grantsburg--The temperance people won election and license was voted down by big majority. All the old tickets were re-elected. Janesville--Republicans won by ah increased majority, Mayor Richardson being elected by 420 majority, a gain of 304, The Republicans elected three out of five aldermen. ' Madison--Professor Storm Bull, nephew of the great violinist; Ole Bull, was elected mayor on the Democratic ticket The complexion of the council is unchanged. Appleton--Democrats win by a small majority; no political change occurred. Wausau--Democrats elected all the city officers and sixteen out of eighteen Boors Plaa Big Coup. That General French is to have de termined opposition in the Tranavall and that he will have to fight for his foothold there is indicated by dis patches received from both Cape Town and Brussels. These advices are that a body of 13,000 men has been collected and that the entire force will be under the personal command of Generals Botha and Dewet, who will join the army at once for the purpose of under* taking a long, hard campaign. Th# Coatoat 1a gaa--. ; Myatrtpal eI»ctlonB were l^ l« iS| the 'Mufett cities of Kansas Tues4ay. Party lines were not drawn generally and in numerous cities the issue waa prohibltion» Mrs. Nation's erusade hav ing arowMM t^e temperance people to demm<t MfflKKMment of the law against liqugiNittitt^g. In Tbpeka the repnbllcan ticket, headad % J- W. F. Hughes for mayor and supported by the temperance peo ple, was elected. In Atchison J. w. Orr (dem.) Was elected mayor by 500 majority. At Leavenworth the entire demo cratic ticket was elected jay a majority of 500. The democrats carried Galena, etoct- ing J. V. McGann mayor. Concordia--H. J. Messall, for mayor, and remainder of anti-temperance tick et was elected by 300 majority. Reethini la HleHlvanu Advices from ail points in Mlclittil& indicate a light vote last Monday. The Republicans elected Justice Montgom ery of the supreme bench and Fletcher and Carey, candidates for university regents. Out side of Detroit local is sues figured largely in the elections. St. Joseph bonded itself to build a $10,- 000 viaduct Kalamazoo defeated prop ositions to build a new city hall, im prove the river at that point and build a central fire station. Jackson voted down a proposition to purchase a park and to appropriate $75,000 to build a city hall. Owosso elected a prohibi tionist for mayor, although he was the only member of his party to get in. Cadillac voted to appropriate $10,000 to be distributed as bonuses to manu facturers and decided to build a $6,000 city hall. Republicans were success ful in Ann Arbor, Benton Harbor, Big Rapids, Greenville, Kalamazoo. St. Joseph, Traverse City, Grand Rapids and Sault Ste. Marie, while the demo crats carried Albion, 3ay City, Ionia, Manistee, Niles, Menominee, Marshall, Lansing and Jackson. The citisena* ticket was elected in Gladstone. Municipal Election* In Mlnneeota. Municipal elections were held in the various cities of the thii% class throughout Minnesota Tuesday. Party lineB were not drawn, and in many cases there was but one ticket in the field. Wherever the issue was "li cense" or'"no license" the former has been successful. In several instances the question of issuing bonds for vari ous local Improvements was voted upon. At New Ulm a proposition to issue $30,000 bonds for a municipal electric light plant carried, while at Le Sueur a proposed tax levy for a pub lic' library was Hefeated overwhelm ingly. Republicans Win at Denver, Colo. Leading democrats at Denver, Colo., concede the election of the body of the republican ticket by 4.000 to 5,000 plurality, while claiming the moyar- alty in doubt. The council will be mixed. **Gotden-1ttil«" J«ne« Ro>»ttet»d. Returns from Toledo indicate that Mayor Jones will be returned for the third time toy a majority of about 2,- 000. ' New Mayor of Kvan<tvlUe, Ind. The official count of the municipal election at Evansville, Ind., shows Cov ert (rep.), elected over Boehne (dem.), for mayor, by 82 plurality. Tarkey Win Pay Claim*. There is reason to believe that Lloyd C. Griscom, secretary and charge of the United States legation at Constan tinople, who is now on his way home, has earned the credit of effecting a final and satisfactory settlement of the American missionary claims against Turkey that have taxed the abilities of no less than three of the ablest ministers ever sent by the United States to Constantinople. It appears now that Mr. Griscom has finally suc ceeded in arranging with the Turkish government the principle upon which these long standing claims shall be set tled and the pledges • of the Turkish government Is in such a binding form that it is not doubted that payment will soon be made. Rebel Chief Urges Peace. 4 Aguinaldo has the assistance of Chief Justice Arellano and of Mr. Fischer, General MacArthur's private secretary, in preparing his manifesto at Manila. The work is not completed and the tenor of the contents is noi divulged. Chief Justice Arellano had a long conference with Aguinaldo. He says Aguinaldo is realising the futil ity of further resistance and is desir ous of sparing the Filipinos addition al distress, trusting to the justice and generosity of the American people. • v; To Avoid Homestead "Runs." . A lottery scheme will probably be adopted as the most satisfactory meth od of distributing the public lands upon the Kiowa, Comanche and Apa che reservations in Oklahoma when opened to settlement next fall. Con gress at the last session strongly dis approved of the old "run" for home steads, and directed that a more suit able method be devised. ^ Kills nu Wife: Shoot* Darius Bachelder, aged 60, shot and killed his wife, aged 35, then shot him self through the head, at Adrian, Mich. Their son- had left home about an hour before the tragedy, but says there was no trouble, but it is known Bachelder was jealous. They have been married nineteen years. Girl Trlae to Die by AoM. Despondent because of ill health and piqued because of a supposed slight, Miss Fannie Heath, 16 years old, attempted suicide at Joliet, M-. by drinking carbolic acid. Nearly an ounce of the poison was taken, but it is thought she will recover. Walter Simpson, 27 years old and unmarried, blew the top of his head off in the' same city with a shotgun. He is the son of a prominent merchant and the cause of the rash act is unknown. Looted Chadron, Obi-. Bank. Half a dozen robbers blew open one compartment of the big safe in the Citizens' Savings bank at Chadron, O., and after securing $125 and nearly $50,000 in negotiable paper made their escape. Before committing the rob bery the men, after a desperate fight, overpowered Night Watchman Pome- roy and Dr. Hudson, who came to his assistance. Both men were bound And gagged. Three charges of dynamite were used before the robbers succeed ed in opening the safe. A compartment containing $50,000 * was not reacted. **!»•«» Jbvwt oa Sltaatto* Praaeisoo. al San th« polOta brnmb <* sparine hospital sefvioe, J™ is tm #ut Tbe stateMt is In It are experts which made stmnnent •*9** Him ftfsMair'lia -earn -of lit tea re- Ported since the beginning ofJMjryear, • O o f t h e m b e i n g f a t a l , t i e o f eases and deaths on each ftitit 'men tioned are identicaL They^pi!|prise two on Jan. 15 and one each ott Jan. 6, Feb. 5,«, 7,10, ii and I2, and Maf&i •a. ^ Is »* Twalloy Car Deal Made. Colonel George B. Kerper and Colo nel John Kllgour, of Cincinnati, have purchased the Toledo and Bowling Green Electric railwayP Colonel Ker per is the owner of the Findlay Strdet railway, now being extended to North Baltimore. The two systems will be merged into one under' the name of the Toledo Northern railway and the gap between the two lines will be complet ed by Oct 1, when trolley cars will be run from Findlay to Toledo, a distance of forty-four miles. A power house will be erected at Findlay. The new line will form a part of the through Una between Cincinnati and Toled$, ---r • • "4' How Scale for Mlaen. The wages contract which has been signed by the Indiana operators and. minere for the ensuing year gives the miners an advance of pay from $2.10 ta $2.25 for one class of Inside day labor and from $2.28 to $2.30 for another class, and grants recognition of their organization for outside labor, such a& engineers and blacksmiths who had their own labor organizations and wanted to be recognized independently. There is, however, some feeling over the concession to the operators of the clause requiring miners to buy powder from their employers at $1.75 a keg: Big Corner la Peanut*. It was announced at New York Fri day that a firm in Hoboken, N. J., had cornered the peanut market, hav ing purchased all the nuts in Chica go, Boston and New York markets, as well as having secured(jthis week 12S carloads from Norfolk, Va. There was an advance In price of from 70 to 80 cents a bushel lately and a member of the firm says this is due to the corner, and expresses his opinion that it, will. go still • higher. , j • May Save piaymato'a Life. , Josephine Prlckett, daughtfcr W iJf. S. Prickett of Wilmington, Del.; has just submitted to an operation where by twenty grafts of her skin may be used on Joseph, the little son of Rev. Samuel Polk of Eddington, Pa., who was badly burned some time ago. Grafting was necessary to save the lit tle fellow's life, and the girl, who was his playmate, consented to the sacri fice. Klst Seals a Harder, Before turning a revolver upon him? self at Chicago, S. Stepenski paused to" kiss his murdered wife, then sent a bullet into his own breast. He is not expected to live. The tragedy took place in poverty-stricken rooms, where the couple had been living with their three children for the last six months. Despondency because of inability to obtain work was the cause of the dfpA.v mi *3$ J- I Ex-Banker Palmer (<!ven More Tim*. By the agreement of the attorneys? ih the case who held another confer ence at Nashville, 111., Edmund Pal mer, the defaulting president of tbto Ashley and Desplaines, 111., banks, was granted another indefinite continuance of time in which to make a settlement upon the proposition that he would be able to pay off his creditors at 40 cents on the dollar. Big Floor Mill Combine. ' 3$|h consolidation of practically ail the flour mills in the Philadelphia neighborhood was completed Monday with the transfer bjr the executors of the estate of James McCormick at Har- risburg, Pa., of the Paxton mills, and the leasing by the same persons of the Steelton Flouring Mill company to the Eastern Milling and Export company. Mwmaoat to .Oea. Harris*** A'systematic movement has 'been inaugurated at Indianapolis for honor ing Benjamin Harrison with a public monument. The Commercial Club, of which General Harrison was a member, will act in the matter as a body, and it Is understood that the Board. of Trade and other civic bodies will join in $ie movement C *¥ . "1# . v."' w fyS' Food Reealts. la a Will Winters was shot and killed tiy R. G. Evans at Legg, Montgomery ctfunty, Tenn. The man was shot four times in the head and back and died almost Immediately. The tragedy is the result of a long-standing feud. Ev ans is under arrest and claifhs he acted in self-defense. Agalast Saaday Open la* ' k mass meeting attended by abiSil* 1,000 persons was held at the Dela ware avenue Baptist church, Buffalo, at which resolutions were adopted pro testing against the opening of the Pan-American exposition on Sunday. Rev. J. W. Hathaway of New York, general secretary of the American Sab bath union, and others, spoke. Dr. Hathaway called attention to a mass of signed petitions containing, he said, over 1,000,000 signatures asking tliat the gates be closed on the Sabbath., / ; IP; - L, Si l<ar«e Army to Be Malntalaad. The army in the Philippines will t# retained 50,000 strong for mouthy to come. The establishment of a civil government will not relieve the war department of the necessity of keep ing strong garrisons at the more im portant places. The army now num bers about 74,000 soldiers, 50,000 being in the Philippines or on the way there, 5,000 in Cuba, 1,000 In Alaska, 650 in Porto Eica the United States* * - ' 4' mailto:3.7B@6.00 mailto:J4.45@5.25 mailto:J5.00@5.25 mailto:2.75@3.75