Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 34, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 May 1895 — Page 6

AVHEKLY C0U1UER.

JAsl'RU. INDIANA. UkV. AltCHUIALD Fakkar. 1). D.. cation of Westminster. wa, on the S'-'d. appointed dean of Canterbury. Ut. Hon. Aktiii'K Wkllesi.e Peel, espeakcr of the lfritish house of commons, was oh the S?d. elevated to the peerage, with the title of viscount. llox. JrsTrs F. Temvle, aged 9 years, of Waynesburg. Pa., died, on the 25th, at the residence of his daughter iu Allegheny. Mr. Temple serTd as uuditor-geueral of Pennsylvania from ls74 to laTsComptrollkr Eckels has accepted an invitation to deliver a speech at the banquet of the Detroit (Mich.) chamber of commerce on May 2. His speech will be devoted largely to the financial Situation of the country. Ox the 23th the navy department received a telegram announcing that Coxswain John Johusun had been killed on the new cruiser Olympia off San Diego, by an accident happening to a five-inch rapid-tire gun. Mrs. P. P. Mast, wife of Mayor Mast, the millionaire manufacturer of Springfield, U., was found in an unconscious condition in her bath room on the morning cf the L'lst. and died before medical aid could arrive. Thk department of public safety at Pittsburgh. Pa., issued an order, ou the 24th. that the gold and stock tickers reporting baseball games,- horse races and other sporting news will not be allowed in saloons or other resorts this season. In the Hritish house of commons, on the 24th. Mr. T. W. Russell's bill, providing for the perpetuation of the existing temporary regulation closing the drinking saloons in Ireland on Sundays, passed its second reading by a vote of 10s to 09. MKS. makv lir.owx, a monogamian ltith, at her pensioner, died, on the home 5 miles from Knoxville, Ienn. She was the widow of Joe Drown, a soldier in the revolutionary war, and was born in 104. Her husband died fifty-one years ago. The Ohio republican state ceutral committee will meet in Columbus, on the 27th, to call the state convention which nominates a successor toGov.McKiniey. who has positively declined a renomination, as he desires to approach the next national republican convention as a private citizen. Tun earl of Lonsdale was summoned to court at Melton-Mowbray, England, on the 23d. upon a charge of assault in having struck a gentleman named lloden upon the head with a hunting whip. Ihs lordship offered an apology to Mr. lkxlen, which was accepted, and the summons was withdrawn. The faculty of Mount Union college at Alliance, O., have determined to prevent courting among the scholars. Several of the young ladies and gentlemen were reprimanded, on the 21,th. 1'resident Marsh remarking: "It is said that matches are made in Heaven; I think a branch otlice has been opened at Mount Union college." Associate J r stick Jackson, of the United States supreme court, intends to leave his home at West Meade, near Nashville, Tenn., about May 4 to sit with his colleagues during the hearing of the income tax petitions. After the consideration of these petitions, he will return to his home, and remain until the October term of court. The official canvass of the vote cast in Michigan at the April election shows that the plurality of Judge J. 11. Moore, republican, for justice of the supreme court, over Justice MeGrath. democrat, was OT. The pluralities of the republican candidates for regents of the university were: Roger W. Hutterfield, D0,U0, and Charles H. Hackles'. 4,I3. Per r advices of the '.'3d state that tome modications in the Chino-Jap anese treaty of'peace have been agreed upon. Of the five new commercial ports to be opened, it has been decided to substitute Nankin for Pekin, and Woo Chow, on the west, bank of the Canton river, for Iluchow. Wei-Hai-Wei is also to be garrisoned by Japanese at China's expense for a term of years. Joh.v L. Waller, formerly United states consul at Tainatave, arrived at Marseilles, France, from Madagascar, on the 20th, aboard the steamship Djemnah, and was taken directly to Fort Saint Nicol, where he will be confined unti transferred to the civil authorities. Waller was convicted by a French court martial of conspiring with the Ilovas against the protectorale in Madagascar. O.v the morning of the 22d, at St. John's Episcopal church, one of the historic churches of Washington, Hon. George Nathaniel Curzon, M. P., of London, England, and Miss Mary Victoria Leiter, eldest daughter of the Chicago millionaire, L. Z. Leiter, wer married in the presence of the Hritish ambassador, the president and Mrs. Cleveland and a large and distinguished assemblage. The new Spanish minister to the United States, Senor Dupuy de Lome, arrived at New York, on the 21th, on the steamer Palama from Havana. The new minister said that the excitement in Cuba was quieting down, and that CapL-Gen. Martinez Campost who Is now visiting the disaffected districts, would in all likelihood speedily succeed in quelling what little trouble there was left, in tb island.

CUIiHEXT TOriCS.

THE 2JEWS U BRIEr. PERSONAL AND GEN ERAL. Portions of human Wklies cast upon the bench ut Westerly. II. L, on the 2ist, were identified by clothing as parts of the remains of Charles Corney ui.d a sou of (.apt. Tucker, both of whom were lost iu the barge wreck olY Point Judith last winter. Thk small cattlemen in Oklahoma are arming their boys with Winchesters to resist the occupation of the grazing lands of the territory by Dan Waggoner, of Decatur, Tex., who lias leaed all the school lands in three or four comities from the territorial government. While clearing away the ashes of a burned hay stack, on the 20th, William McCord. north of Anderson, Ind.. found the charred remains of a man. It is thought it was a trump who had crawled under for a night's rest. Charleston. a point a few miles from Chattanooga, Tenn., is very much excited over the discovery of what is believed to be a paying silver and lend deposit. Ores of these two metals have recently been found on several farms in that vicinity. A general order was issued at the war department, on the 22d. announcing the retirement of Maj.-Gen. Alexander I). McCook, in which the services of the retiring officer were spokeu of in terms of the highest praise. The Chinese government has opened negotiations for an indemnity loan of 25.000,000 with a syndicate of Hritish, German and French bankers. Ex-1'xiti:i States Skxatoi: James F. Wilson died, after a protracted ill ness, at Fairchild, la., on the 22d. A DIM'atch from Kobe says: On April 13 and 14 fifty-eight transports left Ujiuana for Talien-Wan with SO.OQ0 Japanese, troops. It is believed that these troops are destined to make a descent upon Taku and Shan-llai-Kwan directly the time of the armistice shall expire, unless the treaty of peace shall have been ratified meanwhile. The boiler connected with the rane in the kitchen of the Egnew house in Mount Clemens. Mich., exploded, on the 22d, completely wrecking the, room. Donna Wetzel and Kate Ponsey, waitresses, were severely injured, but other persons in the room escaped injury. FlKE broke out in the laboratory ot the patent otlice end of the interior department building in Washington, on the 22d. caused by the explosion of some chemicals. Two persons were injured, and a young lady employe was carried unconscious from the building. A dynamite explosion occurred in Wakefield. Ma-s., on the 22d, in which John Glynn and Charles Rooney lost an arm each, and their injuries may result fatally. They were heating dynamite, holding it on a shovel over a lire, when it exploded. Another violent earthquake, accompanied with thunder, shook Laibach, Austria, on the 22d. Eight or ten buildings collapsed, and the few families who hail returned to their homes lied back again in terror to the fields. The jury in the federal court at Council liluffs, la., returned a verdict of guilty, on the 22d, against the Griswold bank robbers, "Spooney" Hit tier, the noted.Pittsburgh cracksman, and J. W. Smith, alias Wilson. IIeai Sawyer Fhaxk Mavii.le fell upon a saw in Walls ,t Weber's sawmill at Saginaw, Mich., on the 22d, and met a horrible death. 1'rm.lCATtON of Kate Field's Washington, a weekly paper established by Miss Field iu 1Ö0, will be suspended until winter, owing to ill-health .of its owner. At 1 o'clock on the morning of the 23d a furniture wagon in which a party of young amateur actors were returning to Providence, IL I., from the town of Pontiac, was run into and demolished bv an elecrie car, and five of the party were Injured, one of them, it was thought, fatally. The Nicaraguan government was advised, on the '1d, of the arrival of three Hritish war ships at Corinto to enforce the Hritish ultimatum. President Seelaya cabled to Lord Kimberly, Hritish secretary of state for foreign allairs, asking time. Much surprise was expressed that there was no American war vessel at Corinto. Jrr.iA Gnoss. a red 1ft. whos narpnts inienueu to senu ner to tue nouse oi the Good Shepherd, jumped from a fourth-story window of her home in New York, on the 23d, and killed herself. Petitions for a rehearing of the income tax cases will be heard in the United States supreme court on May 6, when, it is thought, Associate Justice Jackson will be present and break the tie. Cathekixe Scott, the oldest woman .... i, ... , in llrooklyn. died, ou the 23d, at the advanced age of 103 years. She was born in Ireland and came to Hrooklyn seventy years ago. OsCAit Wilde's Talnable collection of prints, Moorish pottery and bric-a-brac was sold at auction on the 24th. The articles sold included Carlisle's writing table. Instead of a few thousand dollars, as at first supposed, the defalcation of the late Paul Schultz, who was land agent of the Northern Pacific railroad at Tacoma, Wash, will amount to 5.100,000, and may be more by S2Ö0,O00, according to the report of the experts who are engaged iu examining the accounts of the deceased. This shortage and disappointment in love are believed to have led to his suicide. At the London foreign otlice it was officially stated, on the 2th, that the three Hritish war ships in the harbor of Corinto. Nicaragua, were there for the purpose of enforcing the demands of (treat Hritain.sct forth in the Hritish ultimatum. Kecii'Rocity between the United States and Hawaii in shipping regulations has recently leen brought about by the action of the treasury department iu giving to Hawaiian merchant vessels the same advantage euioved bv American ship.

Six us of nitro-glyivnne In the factory of the Ohio and Indiana Torpedo Co. at Luna, O., exploded, on the -itli, doing considerable damage in the ucighWi hood. No lives were lost. OX ttu : ith the president made the fotiowittg appointments in the army: ltrig.-Gen. We-ley Merritt. to be majorgeneral; Col. S. K. Hliss, Twenty-fourth . infantry, to W brigadier-general; tVl. John J. Copi inger, 'I wenty-third mfantry, to be bngadier-generai. i SKt rtKTAHY Ghksham. on the 21th. reI ceived a dispatch from Mr. Haunts Taylor, United Mates minister at Madrid, assuring him that Spain would ac- , cede to the demands f the United States in the Allianca all'air, and that : the commander of the Comic Yviiaditu

would be put on trial for his otfen-e for tiring at an American ves-el outside the zone. Fun: at Sylvtinia, O., on the 21th. destroyed seven buildings and at one time threatened to sweep the whole town. Toledo's fire department went to the rescue and saved the town from destruction. A dispatch from Vienna says that the Rus-ian government has oxpeled Mine. Modjesfca, the well-known actress, from Warsaw, owing to a violent speech she made against Russia in Chicago. Mine. Modjeskn has also been uotitied that she may not again appear on the Russian stage. Mils, VllH.IMA MARSHALL HhOWX has I teen granted a divorce from Archibald Dixon Drown, at Louisville, Ky. The defendant is Gov. John Young Hrowtfs son and secretary, and the pluintiil' is a member of one of the most prominent families in the state. Mus. Ann M. st.vxi.ky. wife of lien. D. S. Stauley, governor of the oldiers home at Washington, D. C, died at the Johns Hopkius hospital, Haltimore, on the 23d, after a long illness, in the presenceof her husband and daughter. A KEsoi.rnov, presented by Mr. OGrady, was adopted by the New York house of representatives, on the 21th, favoring the annexation of the Dominion of Canada to the United Matesand inviting the Canadian people to cast in their lot with us Hy the burning of McDonald's tobacco factory, in Herlga. a suburb of Montreal, the largest of its kind in Canada, on the -1th, a large numbpr of girls employed therein were competed to jump fi.fr their lives from the upper tloors. None were killed outright, but a dozen received fatal wounds, and many were less severely injured. Loss, about SO0.0IK); no insurance. While trying to escape from pursuing officers at Huckhannon, W. Va.. on the 25th. Everett Miller, a greengoods man, jumped into the river and was drowned. Iiis partner, C. D. Lewis, was arrested. John McCahe. 0 years old, ex-chief of the New York fire department, committed suicide in the Milholland club rooms. New York city, on the 2.1th, by shooting himself in the right temple with a revolver. The Nicaragua canal lward met at the war department, on the 2.1th. and organized. No officers were elected, as Col. Ludlow, it was understood, will act as chairman and disbursing otlicer. Application will be made for the attaching to the commission of a naval surgeon. The complaint sworn to before a justice of the peace on- which Lord Sholto Douglass was arrested for insanity at Hakersfield, Cal., was withdrawn, on the 2jth, before the case was called up in the superior court, and the judge at once discharged the prisoner. LATE NEVS ITEMS. r.Mii.Y iHor.XTOX ihakl.es men at her home in Washington city, on the f 5th, in her fifty-sixth year. She was i native of Indiana, having leen born and reared at Lafayette, in that state, she was a writer of much force and a poet of no little merit. She wrote almost exclusively under the nom de plume of '.'"Emily Hawthorne." The treasury gold reserve was increased, on the 20th, by 5113.541, to :yl, 170,2.11 $.1,000 of which came in the ordinary course of business and $?4,s41 from the Helmont-Morgan synlicate. Tiie syndicate still owed the government over $10,000,000 on its contract, but it was said to be still ahead jf the terms of its agreement. John Pkukimle. shot and killed his wife at Sydney. O., on the 20th. Mrs. Perkpile had been arrested, in company with several men, and sentenced to fifteen days imprisonment. Perkpile went to the jail to pay her fine, and calling his wife to the bars diew a revolver and shot her dead. A wagon load of nitro-glycerine.con-taining 700 quarts, exploded 3 miles from HlutTton, O., on the 20th, with a shock that was felt for forty miles. Will Elmer, the driver, was blown to atoms, and of the team only a part of one horse's neck could be found. DuniXrt the week ended the 20th failures in the United States, as reported by H. 0. Dun it Co., were 230, against 17Ü for the corresponding week last year. For Canada the failures numbered 7, against 20 last year. Fike, on the 20th, destroyed the greater portion of Minnexvaukan, in uortheru North Dakota, near the Manitoba border. Only two business houses were left. The aggregate loss is 40,000, with Sl.1.200 insurance. Mus. U. S. Gisant and Mrs. Sartoris and the latter s daughter, the guests of the Chicago Press club, attended the club's Celebration of (Sen. Grant's birthday anniversary at the Auditorium on the evening of the 27th. AX explosion of fire damp took place in a colliery at Denny, Cat-sterling, Scotland, on the 20th, while 177 men were working in the pit. Thirteen of the nuin&cr were killed and several were injured. llox. Geoiiok N. Cmzox and his bride, lately Miss Mary Victoria Leiter, embarked on the Cunarder Etruria. which sailed from New York for ; Liverpool on the 20th. A company has been incorporated at Newark, N. J., with $1.1,000 capital, 10 per cent, paid in, to manufacture perpetual motion machines.

INDIANA STATE NEWS. Wit lmm s. lurr, of Kiehmond, mretary of the Indiana Fish and Game association. Las received -.urd in m the United States commissioner of fish and fisheries at Washington that 5H(xo pike and iereh have been assigned tb Wavue county, and will be delivered within sixty days. Arrangements kave been made by which 2,imi small-mouthed black basR will le bought at Warren and placed in the streams of the county at the tame placke. At Decatur, an attempt vvas made to assassinate County Clerk John H. Lenhart. He was sittiug in his jarler reading, when some one from the ouiside fired a revolver at him, the bullet crashing through the large plate glass window, passing about six inches above Mr. Lenhart's head. FAii.Mr.its near Decatur captured a tramp who confessed that "he" had burned a barn. The indignant grangers were preparing to whitecap "him" when "he" was discovered tole a woman. She won't tell her name, and is now in jail. AiiTiifK Snyder, of Alexandria, was shot dead on the streets by Officer Harvey Painter, who immediately gave himself up. The two had an old grudge. A stray shot from the officer's revolver struck a third man in the head and he will die. Mus. L. E. Taylor. Dedford. was found lying in the yard unconscious. Had been splitting wood, stick 'lew up and struck her on the temple. Will recover. At Kokomo, Mrs. Elizabeth Cassidy was granted a divorce a few days ago from Thomas Cassidy. who she thought until recently, had died twenty-eight years ago. The couple were married in l'i1. Caxxeli.tox is maintaining a quarantine, backed by armed guards, against Tell City, which has four cases of small-pox. Farmers of Madison county prcpo:sc to fight the Kiehmond Natural Gas Co.'s efforts :o pump gas.

Hnrxo Haxs. who fell from a trapeie at Ft. Wayne, died. Diphtheria is raging in Washington township in the southeastern part of Shelby county. As a result of fearful burns received the other day, an s-year-old daughter of George W. Patterson, of Jackson township. Cass county, died. Harrison Collins, of Point Isabel, Marion county, was bitten a few days ago by a dog. He was immediately sent to the Pasteur institute at Chicago, and vord came the other day that the symptoms indicate a case of hydrophobia. lUnni Lyons, of Terrs Haute, attacked the reformers there for bringing ex-Gambler Quinn to the city. Two bloodhounds will help out Anderson's police force. Granville Gcxx. a farmer of Wabash county, who has been deranged at times during the past seven years, committed suicide by shooting himself through the heajl. Mr. Gunn had a sunstroke several years ago, and has made two attempts to kill himself previous to this. The monument near Westport which marks the center of population of the United States has been badly defaced. 1 he act creating a new court in Lake, Porter and counties will be tested. Charles m-mmers died at superior La Porte his home near Winchester the other aged nearly si) years. Mr. morning. Summers was a native of Virginia. He settled southeast of there on a farm between sixty and seventy years ago. All the old settlers who entered land about him in that long ago are dead or gone. Henry J. P. Dykes, one of the oldest ministers of Henry county, died at his home in Middletown recently, after a protracted illness of diabetes. He was nearly 70 years old and had spent many years of his life in the ministry, being a member of the Christian (Newlight' church. He probably officiated at more weddings than any other man in Henry county. One of the biggest gas wells in the Indiana gas belt was opened on the farm of W. IL Fleming a mile south of Middletown. The well outclasses the old-lime "gushers." being estimated to have a daily output of ten to twelve million feet of gas. The roaring of the well can be plainly heard in town. The Irondale Steel and Iron Co.. which has a tin-plate plant here, employing 400 men. has recently opened several good wells, and altogether Middletown has a brilliant outlook for the summer. This excellent well is highly encouraging as it puts to rest any existing doubt that Middletown is not in the very heart of the gas belt. The town Is booming. The new superior court in Lake county is in full running blast. The six coal mines at Carbon are in operation again. The eight hundred plate glass workers at El wood are jubilant over the fact that the plant there is.to resume operations in full May 1, with one thousand operatives. Postmasters appointed the other day. J. A. Stagg, Harris, Decatur county, vice C. E. Sturgis, resigned, and Washington Newton. Wickliffe, Crawford county, vice T. S. Ililey, resigned. One hundred Terre Haulers filled out income tax. SotTH Hem says her post office business is increasing 810.000 a year. At the funeral of Mrs. Edward Ethel at the family residence. Muncic. a floor gax-e way, dropping many hundreds of people three feet to the ground. Excited men and women leaped out of the windows, and a half dozen ladies fatntei. The Hroadway Lloyds Fire Insurance Co., of New York, and the Council DlutTs Fire Insurance Co., of Iowa, were blacklisted, a few days ago, by the state auditor, who claims that they have not complied with the laws of Indiana Haokrstow.v will lay two miles of cement pavement this summer and ! considering a plan for water works.

THE BRITISH DEMAND.

MlnUttr Ciumttii spi-nil Srnt lloiir utlli SriTflury irrlilii. Imt ltrel tZiirmtnict-iiM-iit No .Mori Talk .UhiiiI MiiiiiIIhi; hy llif .Monnn Iu-lrln. Nlnmtfii i III I'roli illj ll.t t PtiylliK In-tU-mnlt)-OiMiiiiliilrtl. Washington. April 20. The Niea-ragu-in minister, Dr. Guzman, spent several hours at the state depurttnent in the early morning yesterday, hoping to obtain from Secretary Gtvshnm some further Information as to the Utttnde of this country. The president and his cabinet were in the meantime Wing photographed, ai.d the secretary of war and secretary of the navy immediately afterwards started for Philadelphia. In the afternoon Dr. Guzman called again at the department, but saw the secretary only for :i moment. What passed between the two gentlemen has not Wen divulged, but in reply to an inquiry last uight Dr. Guzman simply said tliat the secretary had no information to impart, while he, the Nicaraguan minister, on the other hand, could advance no suggestion as to the outcome. Some embarrassment has been caused to the Hritish ambassador. Sir Julian Panncefote, by the connecting af his call upon Secretary Gresliam Wednesday with the dispute between his country and Nicaragua. The Hritish ambassador is frequently compelled to visit the department in view of the numerous matters constantly arising Wtween the United States and his government, and it is positively itated that Sir Julian's call upon Secretary Grcshnm Wednesday had no reference to the current Nicaraguan ncident. The Hritish minister to Central America has been at Managua for several weeks. He will remain there until the pending troubles have been adjusted. Whatever communication Lord Kimberly desires to make to Nicaragua will W made through the medium of the Hritish representative there, Mr. Uosling. Nothing can be obtained officially from the state department in regard to the present attitude of the United States in the Nicaragua affair. It is understod that the president is unalterably opposed to the giving out of anv information as to matters which may W made the subject of more or less delicate diplomatic negotiation. The reticence which has been observed toward the American public, however, is not so carefully maintained with diplomatic otlicers of other governments, and thus much that would atherwise W a sealed book becomes natter'of public information though :hesc channels. It is distinctly understood that the United States has taken the ground that the dispute Wtween Great. Hrittiu and Nicaragua is one involving questions of national honor and dignity in which the United States has no right to interpose. It is therefore inferred that should Nicaragua hold out nid Hritish marines take possession of the Corinto customhouse this morning no objection will W urged on the part ot the United States. It is positive that no United States war vessel has been ordered to Corinto. The two American war ships reported in a Nicaragua cable dispatch as having been seen on their way to Corinto are mythical creations gro wing out of the feverish hopes 'of the Nicaraguan people of United States intervention. It is conceded even by friends of Nicaragua that no harm can come to Corinto or to the republic itself from a temporary occupation of Corinto by the Hritish. It is Wlieved that after a few days have elapsed and if the United States should fail to secure any extension of time or change in the mode of payment, as asked at Nicaragua's request, Nicaragua will then gracefully yi,eld to the inevitable and come forward with the required indemnity. The armored defense vessel Monterey, according to the information of the navy department, may have left Acapuleolast night for Panama, in accordance with her itinerary, which provided that she should leave that port yesterday, and, after touching at such intermediate ports as desirable, should arrive at Panama not later than May 7. A shipment of supplies will leave New York on the :s0th inst. by steamer due at Colon on the same date. The shipment is made upon the representation of Capt.Higginson that he wished to receive the supplies at Panama on that date. It is not known at the navy department just where the Monterey was to stop on her way to Panama, but it is expected thatCapt. Higginson will not stop at a port unless he ascertains in advance whether he can secure additional coal or not He could learn this from merchant steamers spoken at Acapulco. There is no regular coaling place between Panama and Acapulco, although at times steamers' fuel in small quantities is obtainable at several of the Cenlr.il American ports which can W. entered bj a vessel of the Monterey's draft, and Corinto is the mpst probable of these ports, the others Wing accessible only in fnir weather. The navy department nor CnpL Higginson is "oilidally" aware of any complication at Corinto, or the hostile presence of a Hritish licet there: otherwise it would safely be assumed that the Monterey would uvoid thut port. WILL GO SCOT FREE. rhr Kxtrnilltloit of Iter, .fount linn Itrll Will Not tP Aikr.t For. Detroit. Mich.. April 20. The Detroit authorities will not ask for the arrest of Hcv. Jonathan Hell, of Primrose Villa, Kowley, Staffordshire, England, who sent Emily Hall to n lyingin hospital here last January, and where she died from the effects of a criminal operation. The prosecuting attorney, after siftingall the evidence, has come to the conclusion that he would be unable to make a showing to isk for the extradition.

A FRIGHTFUL STOHM.

Cnuiiliii, Ark.. r'kiMlliy Hull mill Vtliul llitlNliiiii't Thii Im-lic In lil'iMii'li-r -rami tu llomv. "alt If. Sin- ", itinl Poultry Jinny Nixnif Keiril Klll.il 1'ropfrt) uIihmI t Thons. mmN Di-xlroji-il Tin' Wort Not Yi-t Knoun, Camdkn, Ark., April '27.--A destnicIve hail and wind tonn passed owt this town und vicinity befoivdaybrealf yesterday morning. Many of the hailstones were two inches in ditimeter. Tin storm lasted only twenty minutes, but during that time did great damage, reaching iu uiuouut to many thousand dollars. A negro cabin, inhabited by (ills Adens and family blew down on the inmates, all of whom were more or less hurt. In another cabin Amelie Hist died of freight, und on the streets a negress, name unknown, had two ribs broken by falling timber, and will die. The Wentz family, feeling their house shaking, ran out iu the storein, and had hardly got away when the house was blown from its foundation. All the glass in the city ou the north side of buildings is blown away. The breakage of plate and stained glass in stores, churches and public buildings is enormous. The three-story Knights of Pythias building is damaged several thousand dollars' worth. Trees are stripped of foliage and left as bare as in midwinter. Gardeners and farmers have to replant everything. Fences und outbuildings are blown down in every direction. Horses, cattle, sheep and poultry, wherever exposed, were killed by the hail or driven to death by the wind. Reports from surrounding points in the country are meager, but indicate even more serious damage than was sustained in this city, and it is certain that several negroes living in unstable cabins were killed. The hail stmies were so large, that after several hours' exposure in the sun they were still as large as partridge eggs. The storm passed through a channel not more than fifteen miles either way from Camden. A WOMAN SCORNED, Visits n lllooily Retribution Ppon Her Defrayer. New York, April ST. Prompted by jealousy. ""a woman murdered a man yesterday forenoon in front of 4-'s East Thirteenth street. The victim was Dominico Cataldo, M years old, who lived with his murderess at I J East Thirteenth street. The woman is Mary Harbello, and she is -'S years old. After being arrested the woman admitted having killed the man, and said she did so because he refused to marry her. She cut his throat with a razor and nearly severed his head from his shoulders. She is a tailoress, and lived until a mouth ago with her parents at HVi Molt street. She then left her home to become Cataldo's mistress. Uoth are Italians. Ever since they went to live together the woman says she pleaded continually with the man to keep his promise to marry her,, but he only scorned her in return. A BLOODY SEQUEL To the Mlntfr-IMiilli-y Trug ily One Klllril mill Oim l'at:lly Wounded. Cincinnati, April 27. A special fr.-m Montgomery. Ala., to the Post says: A sequel to the M inter-Dudley tragedy of a week ago occurred yesterday morning iu Selma. Ed Dudley, a relative of the Dudley in that tragedy, and Robert Drowning, related to M inter, met in the saloou of Henry Casson yesterday and, after a few words, became involved in a shooting a (Tray. Twenty shots were exchanged, ami Drowning, was killed outright, while Dudley, who received several wounds, is so seriously hurt that his life is despaired of. Two men who, it is believed, encouraged the difficulty, have been arrested, and are now iu jail. NICARAGUA WILL PAY, Hat In In No L'iidu Hurry to Ho So The People (irently Kxriled. New York, April 27. A special dispatch from Managua says: The government has assurances that it will receive from voluntary subscriptions more than enough to pay the Hritish claim within the time allowed by the ultimatum brought by Capt. Stokes, of the Hritish squadron, There is strong feeling among the people against acceding too qiticlcly tc Hritish demands. The money was offered by Leon City, anil the government seemed ready to accept it and pay the claim, but was deterred by the feeling that if too willing to serve England it would cause serious internal trouble. There is great excitement here. Two thousand men are ready to march at a moment's notice. The cabinet has met again. WILL LAND AT CORINTO. Not Ahle to I'ny by .Midnight A Tottitet MiiKilzlnr Kxploilm. London. April 'J7. The Standard if informed that Hritish marines will be lauded at Corinto to-day, also that Senor Guzman, Nicaragua's minister in Washington, received a dispatch from Managua yesterday saying that the government would not be able to pay the S7.1JK10 indemnity by midnight. The Standard learns that a powder magazine near the Corinto customhouse exploded yesterday morning, killing several men and wounding others. USED A SHEET. An A ceil InniKle of im Imune Anylnni Hullen llliimeir. St. Loft?, April ST. Charles F. Scott, an elderly Inmate of the insane isyJum, committed suicide yestenlny morning by hanging himself iu hit room on the third lloor oMIint institution. He stood on n buchet, fastened one end of a Wd sheet about his neck atid the other end to the transom and then kicked away the buchet. Some minutes later he was found dead by an attendant. Scott was 71 years old and was sent to the n.vlm (u.lä'jX