Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 22, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 March 1895 — Page 2

A. R. ZIMMERMAN, Publisher.

PLYMOJTH. 1N2 AN 4. FIGHT IX THE CHIJKCH BOLD BEARING OF AN PRIEST. OMAHA Nine Italians Lynched - Kiubczzler Taylor Kim Ihiwu in Mciico-Kvans-Ion Bankers Charged with Embcz-zIcracnt-L.ortl Hostbcry to liesien I'ricMt Hepcls Invaders. The fight over the possession of St. Paul's Catholic Church. Omaha, which has been in progress for six months, took n decidedly interesting turn Tucsday morning immediately after mass. The Rev. Steven Kanninski, the priest in charge, had just finished the service and the congregation had left the sacred edifice for their homes, when thirty-live men approached the building, and. after a brief parley, ten of the number entered the church and demanded that the priest deliver the keys to them. lie refused and ordered them to have the place. They attacked him. Only the fact that the priest was unaccustomed to the use of firearms interfered with the coroner's having a wholesale inquest. As it is, F. Dargaczowski has been permanently disabled by a bullet tired by the priest, and John Kozicka badly wounded by another. Joseph Inda, who defended the priest, is so badly beaten about the head that he will die, while the list of those who suffer minor injuries reads like the muster roll of Kosciusko's army. Indict the Hunkers. The Federal grand jury at Chicago Tuesday indicted, on charges of embezzlement, Henry Wells. K. Hill. John Austin end K. T. Paul, the first three officers and the last one director of the defunct Evnnston, 111.. National Bank. Paul is the only one in the vicinity at the present time. He lives at Wilmette. and is now in the real estate business. Wells is said to be in Pennsylvania, Hill in Missouri and Austin in California. No warrants for the arrest of the men hav been issued as yet. The aggregate amount alleged to have been embezzled is 44.500. The bank was capitalized at .S10U00. and when it failed in May, IM:?, the liabilities were $lLM.KJO, and the assets were supposed to equal that amount; but afterward it was found the assets were far less than litis. The receiver declared dividends to the amount of only 2,00.000." Race War in Colorado. Southern Colorado is all aflame over njMjrts that come from apparently the best of authority that a wholesale war of extermination has begun in the Walsenburg district, where the Italian miners are in the majority. Late Tuesday evening it was reported at House Junction that the party of nine Italians, which had started from House in charge of three deputy sheriffs, had been ambushed and wiped off the earth by American miners who were bent on avenging the death of A. J. Ilixon, the saloonkeeper. Miner? Gain a Point. After being in session all night, the manngers of the Kinnickinuick, (J lens Falls and Farnuin mines and their employes arrived at a settlement and t'00 men returned to work. The operators granted the rate of 35 cents per ton, which is the price asked by the men for machine mining. Other differences were compromised. The demand for coal has greatly increased of late. Taylor Is Caught. Advices received at Jacksonville. Fla., via Tampa, announce the arrest of W. W. Taylor, ex-State treasurer of South Dakota, who absconded with thousands of dollars. His capture was effected Sunday in Mexico by Pinkerion agents. JfoMtbery to Quit. It is stated at London that Lord Rosebery. owing nominally to the present state of his health, has determined to place his resignation in the queen's hands immediately after the Faster recess. BREVITIES. An unsuccessful attempt was made tt tvreck the fast express on the Nickel Platt road near Valparaiso, Ind. The old Forsyth Street Methodist Kpiscipal Church, at New York, celebrated the 105th anniversary of its founding. During a heavy gale Monday morning the oyster dredging schooner Ida V. Seward, of Oxford, Md., was capsized in ltroad Creek. Talbot County, and it is supposed all hands, seven men, were drowned. Nine Italians have been arrested at House, Colo., for the murder of A. J. Ilixon, a saloonkeeper. Several of the prisoners have confessed that Lorenzo Danaino, one of those arretted, struck the fatal blow. The New York post ollice averages 57,fo0 letters sent to the dead-letter ollice ca.-h quarter. In the last three months 7,50 Ocrman, 4,000 Italian, 3,000 Russian, l,f KK) French and 400 Spanish letters could not be delivered. Benjamin Harrison felt much stronger Tuesday morning and would have left his room to breakfast, but his family thought he should remain in his room on account of the damp weather. Dr. Jameson reports that Mr. Harrison is entirely out of danger. The district along the New Orleans river front was. the scene of rioting and murder early Tuesday morning. At 7 o'clock, while a gang of negro screwmen were marching to the dock of the Harrison Cromwell line of steamers, they were fired on by a gang of striking white screwmen, and six or seven of the negroes are reorted killed. Henry D. Pixloy, ff Ptioa, N. Y., has been elect d president of the Commercial Travelers' Mutual Accident Association of America. Richard MnnstieM has leased Harridan's Theater, at New York, for ten years and will change its name to the "Jarrick." He will open with a stock company in the fall. Catarina flarza. the Mexican bandit and revolutionist, was killed in an attack on Rocas del Toro, Colombia. The California Supreme Court has refused a new trial for H. M. Leonard, the Banta Clara Muk wrecker.

EASTERN. The Gale Shoe Company, at Haverhill, Mass., has refused to treat with its striking employes, except as individuals. George W. Rush & Sons, coal and lumber dealers at Wilmington. Del., have railed. Liabilities, $250,000; assets, $450,000. Bromley Bros., of Philadelphia, have granted their art square weavers an advance of C per cent, in wages, to go iuto effect at once. The New York Central is building a theater ear, on which performances will be given on night trains between New York and Buffalo. Charles Frohman has finally arranged for the presentation in London of the representation of the American drama, ''The Girl I Left Behind Me." Three masked men near Sharon, Fa.. tortured Mrs. Stephen Ross by fire until she revealed the hiding place of her money. The men got $50. The Rev. Willy Morgan Cross, of Baltimore, has been charged with conduct unbecoming a minister, because he courted two ladies at the same time. All the criminal suits against the factions of the Order of Solon at Pittsburg. Pa., have been withdrawn and the affairs of the order will be wound up. Three masked men beut two male occupants of Stephen Ross' house, at Sheakleyville, Pa., into insensibility and then forced Mrs. Ross, by blistering her feet and other torture, to reveal the hiding place of $50. The victims, bound and gagged, were found insensible by neighbors. An attempt to burn St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church, in the Dorchester district, Boston, while 1,200 people were attending evening service, was made Wednesday night. The blaze was discovered In time to prevent serious damage to the building and, although a stampede of the congregation occurred as soon as it was known a fire threatened, no one was seriously injured. The cordage works of William Wall & Sous in Williamsburg, N. Y., have been shut down and all the employes discharged. The plant during the last few years has been controlled by the cordage trust. It gave employment to nearly 1,000 men and was started more than fifty years ago. It was said that the large area of ground occupied by the factory will be cut up iuto building lots. Hen j.' F. Wing, cashier of the Grafton. Mass., National Bank, was found dead in his barn, with a bullet hole through his head. Beside him lay the revolver vith which he had taken Iiis life. Mr. Wing had been in poor health for some time, and the settlement of a large estate which was attended with numerous law suits had served to unsettle his mind. There were pending against him suits aggregating more than $L00,XH). It is understood that the directors of the bank held a meeting, and it is supposed Mr. Wing was with them. None of the directors will talk. Mrs. Micah Dyer, Jr., a Boston, Mass., society leader and member of twenty women's clubs, filed a voluntary petition in insolvency. Her liabilities are about $ 100,0t JO. The value of the assets is not known, but it is said she will pay about 40 cents ou the dollar. Mrs. Dyer's difficulties are due to signing notes for her son, Dr. Willard K. Dyer, manager of the American Health Supply Company. Ho is -12, a Harvard graduate, and a physician of high standing. He abandoned his profession and sunk $70,000 in the health food enterprise. Mrs. Dyer's husband is wealthy. He says he would settle his wife's indebtedness if he knew how her affairs stood, but he does not, and therefore advised the course she has taken.

WESTERN. J. Howard Payne, County Attorney, was found dead near Arapahoe, Ok. lie was a relative of and named after the famous author of "Home, Sweet Home." The lower house of the Oklahoma Legislature has passed a bill forbidding the manufacture or giving away of cigarettes or cigarette paper under penalty of $500 fine. The Seattle Chamber of Commerce has appointed a committee to investigate the question of the boundary between Alaska and British Columbia and to arouse public opinion to the importance of maintaining American rights in the matter.Two 8-year-old Los Angeles, Cal., boys were poisoned with strychnine contained in cakes given them by a neighbor. One boy died; the other is still alive. The woman denies all knowledge of the poison. She says she found the cakes on her doorsteps over a week ago. At Cincinnati, Ohio, during a heavy fog Friday morning, as the steamer Longfellow, belonging to the Cincinnati, Memphis and New Orleans Packet Line Comshc crashed against a pier of the Chesashe crashed against a per of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway bridge and sunk. Six persons are known to have perished. Two desperadoes robbed the Adel State Bank at Adel, twenty miles west of Des Moines, Iowa, Wednesday morning, shot the cashier and put a bullet into a depositor whose presence proved unpleasant or inconvenient to them. After an exciting chase across country the robbers were cornered in a barn. One of them was shot and the other captured. The latter is likely to be lynched if cither of the wounded citizens of Adel dies. As an outcome of the late Senatorial fight in Oregon, which resulted in the defeat of Senator Dolph and election of Mr. McBride, Representotive Cole brought suit against the Portland Oregonian for $45,000 damages, charging malicious libel. Mr. Cole was the leader of the Republicans who bolted the caucus nomination of Dolph. The Oregonian editorially denounced Cole as a "mercenary scoundrel" and "varlet" for having violated his anteelection pledge to rote for Dolph. At San Francisco, Cal., Rudolph Spreckels has secured a temiorary injunction agnnist the Nevada Bank to prevent the transfer of 5,000 shares of stock in the Pampus sugar plantation, which he says belongs to him. Rudolph hints that the idea in making the transfer is to vote the stock against him at the next election, depriving him of all his right in the company and practically injuring him to the extent of the value of the stock, $1,250,000. Judge Hubbard will hear the case later. The four-story and basement structure at the southeast corner of Champlain and Beaubien streets, Detroit, Mich., was destroyed by fire Friday night with all its contents. The budding was occupied by several manufacturing concerns, the principal of which are the Detroit Stamping 'Company, the .Detroit Corkscrew Company, A. A. Fast wick & Co., manu-

facTDrfr of dynamos, motors, etc.; the Detroit Dynamo Company, Frdinanu & Co., tinware manufacturers; -Joseph M. Smith & Co., printers. The total loss will be upwards of $75,000. The people of Dungaunofi. Ohio, have been temitorizing wiih a saloon whi-di has been run in violation of the law. Mrs. T. Miles armed herself with a revolver and an ax and knocked softly on the door. When Gus Wagner, the proprietor, answered the call the plucky woman pointed the revolver at him ami demanded that he hand over his stock. Wagner lost no time in complying and in a short time the irafc woman was in possesion of more than a dozen jugs and demijohns. Mrs. Miles then br ught he ax into use and broke the vessels into a thousand pieces, the contents flowing down the street in a stream. Ex-President Harrison is down with an attack of the grip at Indianapolis, and owing to the tenacious character of the malady the attending physician is somewhat disturbed at the possible outcome of the disease. Gen. Harrison was taken ili Sunday, but did not regard his case serious. He is said to have exposed himself for two or three days, until Friday there was a marked development, which caused the physician to take alarm. It is reporter from Mr. Harrison's residence that he is doing as well as could be expected, and hopes are entertained that his strong constitution will enable him to successfully combat the attack. At Minneapolis. Minn., warrants were sworn out Friday night against two of the witnesses for the defense in the Ilayward murder trial, charging them with perjury. They are Maggie Wa htlcr and George A. Grindell. The former is charged with perjuring herself in that part of her testimony in which she swore Clans Blixt, in his statement to Mr. Odell before the trial, began to relate a story in which he charged Adry Hayward with conspiring with him to murder Catherine Ging. Grindell is charged with swearng falsely that he saw Catherine Ging stop her buggy at a corner near the West Hotel just after leaving the hotel the night of the murder and hold a conversation with a "third" man. The rail mill at Boone, la., has long been a resort for tramps, who would congregate there and spend the night. Saturday night fifteen or twenty gathered; they got a couple of gallons of alcohol and held a drunken carouse. Charles Elliott, the night foreman of the mill, was struck over the head when he tried to protect the company's property and knocked senseless. The tramps drove off the railroad men and the police were called uiHin for assistance. The three policemen on night duty attempted to arrest the fellows. The tramps attacked the officer?. Officer Campbell shot Jas. Freeman through the heart, killing him instantly; Tim Lallan through the back, wounding him so seriously that it is believed he will die within twenty-four hoi irr., and a third through the hand. After the shooting the olliccrs captured twelve of the gang and took them to the city jail. Thirty-three girls confined in the State Home for Juvenile Offenders at No. 3111 Indiana avenue, Chicago, revolted Sunday night, overawed the attendants, broke half the windows in the establishment, smashed all the crockery they could lay hands on, demolished furniture galore, and as a result a posse of police fiv-ui Ahe Stanton avenue station had to take possession of the institution before order could be restored. Five of the girls were arrested. The girls claim the insurrection was the direct result of the treatment to which they have been subjected for a week, alleging they have been fed on bread and water, beaten, and chained to the floor for infractions of rules. Mrs. Dayton, the superintendent, and one of the other matrons say the girls were unurly and that discipline was necessary. It was also stated that the trouble is a result of disagreement in the Board of Directors over the selection of matrons. The riot caused a big sensation in the vicinity, and a crowd of over 1,000 people blocked the streets for hours. SOUTHERN. Bribery is charged in connection with the award of the public printing contract in the North Carolina House. The seventh congress of the ScotchIrish of America is to be held at Lexington, Ya., at a date yet to be fixed. W. II. Mills, land agent of the Central and Southern Pacific railroad, says the demand for town sites and lumber lands is greater than at any time during the last ten years. Judson Hyatt, a Macon drummer, was killed at Fort Gaines, Ga., by Sheriff McAllister, of Clay County, In a hotel bedroom when no one else was present. The coroner's jury exonerated McAllister. Loonce O. Des forges, Thomas Haley, Peter B. Canfield, and some other Councilinen of New Orleans, were indicted for blackmail of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company for a switch track. Miss IManche Chapman, the supposed daughter of a poor bricklayer at St. Augustine, Fla., has been left $00.000 by the death of the Rev. Boynton Crystal, of New York: It is believed that the girl was the minister's daughter. Several weeks ago Montgomery Ward & Co. of Chicago received an order from a man in Alabama for a package of gold wash. The other day the firm had an oplortunity of noting the admirable quality of the wash in the receipt from the man of Alabama of a silver dollar made golden by the wash. The word one on the coin had been cut away and a clumsy attempt at carving filled up the space with the word "twenty." The correspondent requested that an overcoat be seut to him for the "inclosed twenty dollars." The firm turned the coin over to Captain'Porter of the secret service, and the man from Alabama is in imminent peril of finding himself in the penitentiary for "raising" the coin.

WASHINGTON. Manuel Almagro, private secretary to Dr. Zeball'js, Argentine minister to Washington, is under arrest for "blowing" legation funds in gambling. Owing to the fact that the sugar liounty appropriation will fall short $1.200,000 of the amount needed to pay all claims. Secretary Carlisle proposes to prorate the payments to about 05-100 of a cent a pound, instead of eight-tenths of a cent. Under this arrangement all claims will fare alike and any scramble for precedence will be avoided. Charles A. Dana and William M. Laffan, editor and publisher, respectively, of the New York Sun, were Thursday indicted at Washington for crnniual .libel uiou Frank B. Noyes, business manager

of the Washington Evening Star. The indictment was found by the grand jury of the District Court, a Federal tribunal", and is based on an editorial which recently appeared in the Sun charging Mr. Xoyes with being a "dishonest director of the Associated Press." An effort will be made to bring the accused to Washington for trial, and the understanding in legal and newspaper circles is that Editor Dana and Publisher Laffau will waive all habeas corpus and other proceedings of delay and meet the issue. They may seek to have the case transferred to the New York courts. This is the second time an iudietmcnt has been made against Mr. Dana in the District of Columbia, and for the same cause, alleged libel. For many years the New York editor carefully kept clear of that jurisdiction in order to avoid process. About two years ago he paid his first visit to the capital since 1872.

FOREIGN. The reported killing of Manuel Garcia, the Cuban rebel, is denied. The New South Wales Assemblv voted down tue motion of want of confidence in the ministers. During a debate in the British House of Commons it was charged that diseased meat is packed in Chicago for shipment to Europe. American manufacturers have been asked to exhibit agricultural machinery at an international exhibition to be held in Yienna May -1-7. Captain General Calleja. of Cuba, has demanded the recall of the American Consul General at Havana. At a Cabinet council in Madrid it was agreed to support the demand. At Washington it was impossible to secure any information in regard to the matter. The last Government blue book, dated July 1, 1S93, gives the name of the Consul General at Havana as Ramon O. Williams, of New York. No information on the subject had reached the Spanish Legation here up to 1) o'clock Wednesday evening. Advices from Madrid say: The Queen has given an audience to Senor Groizard. Minister of Foreign Affairs. Gen. Calleja, Captan General of Cuba, has sent a dispatch to the Government asking that the re-enforcements for the troops on the island be sent direct to Santiago de Cuba equipped and ready to take the field. The war office is hurrying the preparations and there is great enthusiasm in military circles at the prospect of a campaign. Detachments from various garrisons to form the first seven battalions are mustering fast at Santander, Cadiz. Corunna, and Barcelona, from which ports they will embark. The cruiser Mercedes will carry to Cuba i:,0OO,H!O cartridges. IN GENERAL Heirs of the late Frederick Douglass may contest his w ill w hen it is offered for probate. More than 1,ieo American and Canadian excursionists are now on the Mediterranean. Mrs. Ballingtou Booth, of the Salvation army, has been given permission by the courts to marry two faithful soldi rs. The president of" the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens has sent a buffalo bull and cow to Prince Bismarck as a birthday gift. During the seven months ending Feb. 1. 11".;75 immigrants arrived at United Slates ports, a decrease of 40 per cent, as compared with the like period of 1S'J.'M. Rev. William A. Newbold, recently relieved of his position as secretary and assistant treasurer of the American Church Missionary Society, is said to be $111,000 short in his accounts. Mexican bankers are becoming apprehensive of the currency situation in the United States, and several important houses refuse to purchase drafts on New York when not made expressly payable in gold. This rule is enforced on sixty-day drafts. The German Consul at New Orleans, Count von Meysenberg, has demanded of the Mayor of Gretna, opposite New Orleans, the arrest of all those who participated in the attack on the German steamer Markoinannia Saturday. He also gave notice the facts connected with the outrage would be laid before the German Ambassador at Washington. H. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: "Congressional adjournment and proof that though the rate of exchange rises to and even above the shipping ftoint gold does not go out have produced a much better feeding. Prices do not improve, and there is on the whole no gain but some loss in wages, while strikes of 15.1KH coal miners near Pittsburg and several thousand building workers, besides strikes in ten or twelve textile and iron establishments, further lessen purchasing power for the time. But there is anticipation of improved demand for goods in general, and many are manufactured, and there is buying beyond present needs on the strength of it." MARKET REPORTS. Chicago Cattle, common to prime, $.'U5it;a.'25; hogs, shipping grades, ZM '4.50; sheep, fair to choice, $11.006X4.75; wheat. No. 'J red, 526j5."c; corn. No. '2, 4.'Vff.4!c; oats, No. L "'JS'fL'Oe; rye, No. Ü. 5'2'f5tc; butter, choice creamery, lS'i lS'irc; eggs, fresh, 146 15c; potatoes, car lots, per bushel, 706SOe. IudianaiMjlis Cattle, shipping, $50O6i 5.50; hogs, choice light, $;;.00o4.50; sheep, common to prime, $l!.0O6?4.5t; wheat. No. 2 red. 5.(5,'ie; corn, No. 1 white, 41( 41V; oats, No. 2 white, XMiXlMfi. St. Louis Cattle, $:UHX5.73: hogs, $:i.K';,4.50; wheat. No. 1! red, 5'J5.; corn, No. L 1164LV; oats, No. '2, ÖOGj.'ilc; rye. No. '2, 5eVri5.Se. CiueinnatlCattlo, $.'$.50675.50; hogs, $.".0064.50; sheep. $l.564.50; w heat. No. 2, 5555'.'.c; corn, No. II mixed, 4"VJt 44 U; oats", No. '2 mixed, 3'2S2fa rye, No. 2, 5S650C. Detroit Cattle, $2.30675.50; hogs, $4.00 Q4.50; sheep, $2.0O(4.50; wheat, No. 1 white, 5765Se; corn, No. 2 yellow, 4:16 41c; oats, No. 2 white, ;U6j34c; rye, No. 2, 55$ 57c. Toledo Wheat, No. 2. red, 536J3uV: corn, No. 2 mixed, 4l(J-V.Vjv; oats, No. 2 whit p. :."67o4c; rye. No. 2. 556i5tV. Buffalo Cut He. $2..VO6t0.00; hogs, $.1.00 61.75; sheep, $.'1.006(5.00; wheat, No. 2 red, 5N650c; corn. No. 2 yellow, 4tJ6j47c; oats. No. 2 white. ;t.Vi;t."V,,-MC. Milwaukee Wheat. No. 2 spring, 51f( 55c: corn, No. l, 4.'6 l-'O-l-c; oats. No. 2 white, lil6.'?2c; barley, No. 2, ;k'?6755c; rye, No. 1, 526j5Ic; pork, mess, $l0.50'j! 11.00. New York Cattle, $.'UX)670.00; hogs, $4.00&T.00; sheep, 1.006i;4.75; wheat. No. 2 red, 006Ole; com. No. 2, 506j5lc; oats, white ..Western, I17(a41e; butter, creamery, 15621c; eggs, Western, 17(t ISc.

SEEKS CAUSE OF MOT

LEGISLATURE AFTER A CHISAGO INSTITUTION. Indiana Legislature Winds Up with a Free light Death of Worth, the Maker of Fashions Massachusetts Interested in Atlanta's Show. Sensation Lxpectcd. Alarming riots, disgraceful bickerings among the managers, and cruelty to the inmates have aroused the authorities at Springfield, and the State Home for Juvenile Female Offenders at No. .'Ill Indiana avenue, Chicago, when the mutinous outbreak of Sunday night was renewed Monday morning, will be investigated by the House Committee to Yisit I'enal Institutions. A number of prominent numbers of the House will accompany the committee, and the investigation promises to reveal some astonishing things. The result will have an iiuix.rtant hearing on the continuance of appropriations for the home. It is now costing the State the unreasonable sum of S1.0 for each girl who is being "reclaimed" there, and a continuance of a similar appropriation of $.'52.MMj j,.r year is asked of the House. The request of the Board of Trustees for an investigation by the State Board of Charities and Correction will be held in abeyance until the legislative committee gets through. Solons in a Ifiot. The Indiana Legislature adjourned at midnight Monday, at Indianapolis, in the nidst of a rough and tumble tight, in which at least seventy-five men took part, punching, kicking, scratching and slugging with mad desperation, l'rivate Secretary King, who had two bills in hU pocket from the Covernor and which had been hold till the last moment, at one time was on the floor with at least thirty members piled in a heap on top. clawing and lighting like dogs in a pit. Custodian Timothy Critiin of the State House had the life nearly crushed out of him at King's side, and a score of heads were pounded and cracked till they looked as if they had come from a prize tight. Itepresentative Adams, from Bark County, was badly mauled in the face and will be unpresentable for days. Representative Allen, of Washington County, chairman of the Ways and Means, was hammered until it was a question whether he could be resuscitated. No such scene of wild uproar was ever witnessed in the Indiana Legislature before. The trouble arose out of a w ell-planned scheme to balk (iovernor Matthews, who had determined to prevent the Assembly passing over his veto a bill to secure control of the State I louse. NEWS NUGGETS. Three carloads of negro emigrants U r Liberia have arrived in Savannah. An epidemic of something like smallpox is ranging in Mud Creek, in Floyd County, Ky. Two persons were killed an 1 many others more or less seriously injured in a railroad w reck which occurred at .Scotland. Ca., Friday morning. Vive President Stevenson delivered a lecture to the students of the law department of Center College, at Danville, Ky., on parliamentary procedure. In an explosion on the sje.-nner Rawninore. at San Francisco, two men were terribly bruised and burned, receiving what is thought to be mortal injuries. The lire in the Old Abe mine near White Oaks. N. M., was brought under control Sunday night, when the eight imprisoned miners were brought to the surface. Five were dead. Charles Boulter, a retired cattleman of Cheyenne, has been convicted of manslaughter for killing Thomas O'Neill. Boulter has killed three men in the last ten years, but has heretofore escaped punishment. Worth, the famous man milliner, is dead. The great dressmaker, among whose patrons were the queens of the earth, succumbed to a severe attack of influenza, which until a short time before Iiis death bade fair to pass away. Harry T. I lay ward, of Minneapolis, convicted of the murder of Catherine (iing. has three months to live. Sentence was passed on him by .Judge Seagrave Smith, after a motion for an arrest of sentence by Mr. l'rwin h. d been denied. II. L. Christy of Pittsberg lias been appointed to take testimony there which will decide whether "Curinne," the actress, ha violated the revenue laws and whetii-r she is entitled to retain possession of a gift of a Sl.'JPO wat. h from Canadian admirers. A committee from the Massachusetts Legislature has arrived in Atlanta for the purpose of investigating the industrial situation in the South and inquiring into the special inducements held out by Ceorgia for New l'ngland cotton mills to do business in that State. At lO:.",o o'clock Monday morning a large body of white men appeared on the New Orleans levee at the head of St. Andrews street and by threats and violence drove ofi the colored men. The police then came forward ami drove away the white men, firing a number of shots, but nobody w as hurt. At Baltimore. Md.. Judge Dennis in the Circuit Court decided the Maryland oleomargarine law unconstitutional o far as the sale of original packages imported from other Slates is concerned. The decision may be taken to the Court of Appeals for review. The mnstituficnality of the law in other respects is not affected by this decision. The wholesale grocery linn of Aland.' Scheurineyer A: Huiker, Cincinnati. Ohio, nssignMl. Assets and liabilities cadi over $.?o.ooo. The volcano of Orizaba, in the State of Vera Cruz, Mexico, is in violent eruption, nnd the earth for one hundred miles around is periodically shaken with subterranean vibrations. Japan has been notified that China accepts her conditions for a settlement of the war. Albert L Kieth, an Ann Arbor letter carrier, killed himself because his sweetheart gave him the mitten. . . . The first trial of the acoustic properties of Carnegie Music Hall, at Pittsburg, was made by Lillian Russell. The hall is good. The Rev. LTijah Teller, of Huntington, W. Ya., went for a walk, and his lnnly was found torn to pieces, it is thought bj Logs.

STRANGLED THE VETO

INDIANA LEGISLATURE BREAKS UP IN A ROW. Members Fling Themselves on the Governor's Private Secretary and Have a HoukIi und Tumble Fight While the Time Limit Iuft-cfe. Solon ifi n Itiot. The Legislature adjourned in a wiM riot Mondaj night, in which almost e ry member participated. Revolvers were drawn and many j-ersons were seriously injured. Adams f Park County jM-rhap fatally. IVr iuliy twenty minutes tht State House w::s filled with a howling, surging n.ob. Men who had been friends and sat side l y side during the session became deadly enemies and made every effort to injure each ether. My phi King, Covernor Matthews private secretary, was locked in the elevator, and a big, burly man guarded the doer and refused to allow him to Nave. The police linally drove the liiMi away and the se-ivtary Was released. When he arrived at the door f the House at 11:15 he found it locked. He had an important message from the Covcmor. and a great deal depended upon its delivery to the sjm :iUt of the Holls' before 12 o'clock. He pounded on the door, but w as denied admission. He -ri d that the door v. :.s locked and requested that it be opened, as he had a message from the ilovernor. Ills voice was heard by a number of Democrats who wen in the corridors, and they ran to his assistance. An attempt was made to force open the doors, but the crowd of Republicans who were keeping the "oveinor's secretary and bis iihs.;''- out resisted with all the force they rou'd command. The doors were unable to stand the pressure brought to bear upon them, and they were tinally forced open. King, who was in front, was fop-ed riht into the crowd of Republicans, who were bent on keeping him from reaching the speaker's desk. With one accord the men began striking at each other and the secretary was in great danger of being killed. Wanted to Kill the Secretary. "Kill him:"' "Kill him"- cri.-d a hundred voices. The Women who were in the galleries yelled and one or two fainted. All was confusion, and fri nds and enemies alike were lighting. The sole aim of the Democrats was to get King through the crowd to the sjH-aker's desk w ith the iovernoi's vto, and the Republicans were determined to hold him back until 1 1! o'clock, nl which time the Houso would adjourn -hie die. Inch hy inch the Democrats gained ground. Many persons were Knocked down and trampled under foot. Revolvers were flourished in the air. Put as fast as one was drawn the man holding it was knocked down. The heavy chairs were torn from the floor by the mob, -int the desks were broken to pieces. Doors leading to other rooms were shattered by persons in the corridors trxing to effect an entrance to the chamber. The police were powerless to (heck the n.ob. which seemed bent ell destroying cvor thing in the room. At 11:57 the excitement was iutne. Men were lighting in every part of the room, and s,-!-:;! of them were bleeding ;'roiii numerous wounds. The Demo.-nits were gradually forcing King toward tho speaker's desk. :.nd the Republicans were growing weaker en account of many of their number In ing injured. A few seconds lat r King, with his clothing torn from his body. :;tal his face bleeding, was pushed by main strength through the crowd and thrown heavily against the speaker's detk. He still held the Coventor's veto in his hand, but it never reached the speaker. Just as King was about to place it in his hands Speaker Adams kicked and beat back the crowd, and in a voice that could be heard aboe the horrible din. cried: Declared the House Adjourned. "The House has adjourned! T!k House has adjourn!!" This rnisd a great ry from the crowd, and -verybily made a rush toward the speaker. The veto was torn from King's hauls by a man who dashed out of the crowd with it and mad good his ese.-'pe. This practically ended the riot. S veral small fights oeeurr!. but the poli. e and others finally succeeded in driving the men from the chamh r. No less than two dozen persons were hurt. No arrests were made. The trouble originated over the 1 .11 1 to supplant Cu-fodiaa Critiin, a Democrat, with a Republican. The C.ovcrnor has three days in which to consider all measures. The bill was delivered to the tlovernor two nights before adjournment. It was his idea to hold it until the last minute a::d then the Legislature could not pass it over his veto, as adjournment would take place at TJ o'clock. The C.veriior's secretary started with tho bill with ten minutes' time. The Republicans attempted by force to prevent his reaching tie legislative ball with the bill in time. Adams, w ho w as injured, is the representative of luk County. He was kicked in the pit of the stomach and had to be carried from the hall. Told in a Few Li nets. The fire loss at Fort of Spain. Island of T-inidad, is now put at J?5.0OO.O0t. Coorge I,. Shoup was elected United States Senator from Idaho. Al Kinney was kilhl by a Ix-iler explosion in his sawmill near Hillsdale, Mich. Two dwellings, a s 1ih1 and church nt Rrewton, Ala., were wrecked by a cyclone. One hundred employes of the Covcrnmcnt print shop at Washington have be n laid off. The Postal Telegraph and Cable Com. pany will issue $5,0 X ,( H K) additional stock. The business heart of Flora, Ind.. was burned out Wednesday night, at .1 loss of $100.000. Three-fourths of the TOO employes of the Wilson winden mills at Trenton, N. J. are on strike. The Plymouth Rock Cants Companv. insolvent, has liabilities of $l,01Ü,'Mi0 and doubtful assets of $1,170,000. Work on the new Creighton Theater rtl tecum and llarney streets, Omaha cost S'JUO.OUO, began Monday. to The New Jersey Senate refused to pass the bill preventing school teachers from wearing any emblem of religion. The reason ex-Conductor J. A. Hamilton committed suicide at Denver is that he was blacklisted for taking part in the A. R. U. strike, and could not get employ mint.