i r iff e it diT fititf t PITTSBOROvN. CM FRIDAY, 8EFTEM BRnO71902 : J VOT I NO: 42. i V ( TOtYhU 5 llil. tNUtU m r r r ii-i -an vntn vii r r- The President Praises the South For . Its Industrial Procress. GREETED WITH ENTHUSIASM w4 Catae Oat Km Him at Maaj ltaUMi.Dlto th Maaaar Trae Amerlraata Folate Oat That aetlaaal IMfterafe Are Trivial at AsberUle. N, C No more delightful nffins for the President a tour to me 'South could have been defied than his visit to Ashevuic. The places of bonor in the proeessiou which escort ed Jthe President through the city, and on the platform from widen he apoke, 1 I ana men bowed down with yeara and J wearing on their faee traces of that oecponaency wuicu aiusi cuiue o im loser In a mighty struggle. After the city meeting wai over the President went out to George Yander trilt'a crreat estate at Blltuiorc . hrrHi To(i eneoun- ' tered on the run froin Ashcvllle. was at - Hickory. The ehort speech be made at that plane wa enthuaiaailcally re- I reived. He said in part: - Traveling to-lay throuch North Car . Wina and yesterday through Tennessee I have been struck by the evidences of t Licdostrla! gTowth of which tth town , la itself an example. The Industrial ' t auHfcenuig of the South, or which '. thi-'e have been so uiauy evidences ',rt durie tte last few years. Is a feature I fraught with swat benefit to tb ftontb and to the entire country. Because. -v remember, my fellow-citutens. we are j rolug to go tip or down together. Some of us will feci He good tunes more than other, some h-s, but we all feel the. pood time somewhat, and wIihi bad times come Me will all lw put back.- Bad tkiK io not flop at State lines, and lUe industrial awaUeu. Ins -of the South, which Is going on. and which 1 believe will go on with ever increasing rapidity, menus jrw5 fortune not merely for the South, but for till the Anwlcsq pob. "And k. my feliowitiiena, I ba'l your indufirlal Rrowth. I hail the tnaniffslatliius I. free here In this.fjtate, atul which I saw" yesterday in Tennes see; the nianlfestatlona of tho rapid ap-prtw-li of the tieoriod of treniftidwits Induitrial developments in the South. .rr - aMKKK'aN FAHMKIS NOW 1 hall It for the sake of the South, aud I bail it for the sake of the nation." I i Salisbury. N. C. President Roose velt left ou the train for Washington, tifter making speeches at Ashevllte. Old Fort, Connelley Springs, lllckory, BtetpHvllle aud at this place. My forefathers," he said, "fought tinder Marlon. My forefathers fought with the Georgin and South Carolina troop, who battled throughout dark lays when Cornwall! and the Red lragoon of Tarleton overran the Southern States. They were nresent at King's Mountain, at the Cowpcns, and they saw the final triumph when the men In blue and buff who followed Hreene wrested victory out of defeat, and when at last the flag of thirteen Htate waved without a rival along the coast and along the fooMiills of the mountains. . "It is a. mighty good thing for any American to meet hi fellow Ameri cans of different parts of the coutitry In order that he may realize how trivial are the point of unllkenes and how essential are the points of likeness. A ?nod American la a good American, end don't care a snap of my linger wheth er ho cornea from the North or the South Or the Kast or the West. If he la ft straight and decent man I am for film, and if be la not I am not. 'We never can succeed In making tbl country what It can aud shuil be tnado until we work together, not n Northerners or Southerners. Kasterner er Westerner, not as employe or em ployer, townsmen or countrymen, cap italists or wageworkers, but primarily a American cltliswi, to whom .lhe tight of brotherly friendship mid Com radeship with all other decent Ameri can cltiiicn comes as the Urst uind greatest of privileges." When tlx President reached Wash ington he had traveled Itiiltl miles aiiice be left there ou T'riday evening. .He went at onca from Wanuingtcu to f)js ler Bay. . m' Jm WEATHER CROP REPORT Corns Advance to Maturity Causes" Great Satisfaction. ; Wheat TaiaHIn;'akes rstoraW Tra- f craaa Cotton' CoadHiaa U All " ; That Caa B Espactait. ; Washington, P. C-Following is the Agricultural lepartmenr weekly summary of crop conditions: AUboUfib the week was cool in the central valley., and lak regions, with more than the average rainfall in por tions of the upper Mississippi Valley, maturing crops have made generally favorable, though not rapid, advance ment. The greater part of Texas. In which State severe -drought prevailed at the close of the previous week, has received abundant rainfall, and drought conditions In the middle Atlan tic coast districts have also larse ly relieved, but the Interior aud middle Atlantic States, Ohio Valley and por tion of the lower lake region and Sofltu Atlantic States continue to need rain. Light to heavy frosts were very pen era! In the Northern .district, from Montana to New Knclaud. and the mid dle Atlantic States, from the 3d to the titn. with bnt alight Injury. Ksin Is much needed In Washington and Ore gon, but otherwise tUe pent-rni nudt tions on the Pacific coast were favor able. ' Notwithstanding the prevalence of low temperature tltreughot't the corn beit and copious rainfalls ju portions, of the upter Mississippi Vall y. the corn crop has made. very satisfactory advancement toward mntnrity. ami wholly '"escaped injury in the Staten eastward of the Mu-Ki:ppi Iliver from frosts ocenrriujr- on the 4th and iih. with' bnt slight Injrry In the States to the westward. The bulk of the corn crop in MNcourl and Knns and much of the early planted in Nfbraska aud the States of the Ohio Valley are now safe. In Iowa, where com ba ripened very iIowlr. two-third 'of the crop will probably he iafe by September and the btihince will require ten day Jonger. The thrashing of spring wheat,, al- PUTS MOfiGAN IN THK SHADE. Minneapolis Journal. though further retarded, has made more favorable progress than In the previous weeks. ' Texas and a large part of the cen tral and eastern districts of the cotton belt have received, abundant rainfall during the week, but it Is doubtful whether the bcucndal efforts of these rains to late cotton will offset the In jury done to the open staple. Cotton has opened more rapidly than it could be picked. In portions of the central nud eastern districts many held ate already nearly cleaned, and the report generally Indicate that the clop will be gathered much earlier than tittual. KfLLED BY FAITHLESS WIFE, Mrs. O'Neill HUjr Her ttuiband aad II p Mir la N w York City. New York City. - The killing of Charles O'Neill. Janitor of the Fruit Exchange building, by his wife, and the subsequent suicide of the woman, was the result of n cpnfession of Infi delity which Mrs. O'Neill made to her husband two week ago. The tragedy followed the first meeting of the two lu their own homo since Mrs. O'Neill made her confession. ? It tame after O'Neill. In fit of Jeal ous rage, had placed the muzzle of an unloaded revolver at his wife's head and threatened to kill her. The woman dldu't know that the pistol waa unload ed, and Invited her husband to shoot. Instead, he dropped the plstpl declar ing that he couldn't hurt a woman he loved ns he did her. She rushed from the room, secured n plHlol ftotn a neighboring olllce, came back, shot her husband twice In the breast and then blew her own brains out. Mr. K, r, Jnhaaoil ButcliU. . Mrs. K. P. Johuoii. a well-known woman sttffraglet, committed suicide at her home at St. I.ouls.- Insanity, which I supposed to have resulted from the bite of a mad pet doog, la be liared t have led to the suicide. GOAL STRIKERS ARE FIRM Declaration of President Mitchell in a Speech at Philadelphia. MONE 'flAISED FOR THE M1NEJIS Mitchell I Opposed to Couipnlkorr Arbi tration Declare That the Mine VI ork rs OhJrt ta the Eu1uirpt of Sorh a Law mi.v Co?rar Stone Plan aa Ultra Keaelon of the I-cgl&latare. Philadelphia. P.-esWeut John MiUh till of the Tufted Mine Workers of America, na!d again here that up to date be had no reason to believe that the coal strike Is ucaring au eud. "It will end when the ojK'i'ators grant our deiuaud-s"' toe id: TLe miners will not reirarn to work and arbitrate thrir difference afterward Our posi tion is stronger now than It wa at the beginning of the strike. I kuo'vv of nothing which would indicate au early settlement of the strike." This view of President Mitchell Is shared by " Senator tjuay, who feus beeu making strenuous efforts to bring tattnitt a - ai-trloment. "The operating eoiil. compauies," said Senator Quay, "will make no ctoessloua, and the miner seem -equally determined. For the present, at least, no outsi'tiev In fluence of any character .will produce results." Mr. Mitchell came to Philadelphia to address a meeting in the Labor Ly ceum, and be was given about $.1t. by the organized workmen, of this city4' for the benefit of the striking luiite workers. The presentation took plaiv at a joint if meeting of" the Foiled -Trade Association, the Allied ISuildiug-Tnidea and the Central Lalor ; I'lUon. he!l at l.aUtr Lyceum Hall. . i Mr. Mitchell s given cn euthnM atic reception. Al ter the relief money had.be-iJvf'iruui.v presented to bin), he made a fhort nddre.ss. He aid the mine workcre" tbxht-was a '. fight for trades uulouiiiin, .without which' 'the workmen of the cooutry could not get fair treatment from the employers. The spokesman of the operators, h? wjntiuued, couteiled that they are iiiukiug a fight for individual lib erty, and for a principle, iiut he (Mr. Mitchell; claimed the operators are battling to give wages satis factory only to lite-Coal Trust. He said the strikers were just as firm to day they Ave re four months ago. If lie fstrlUe were to be lost, which he fcald is not 1'kely, it would not uiesu the "iliMntegnitioii of organized labor, but it would, be a ebock which would !e seriously felt. Mr. Mltciic'll said it wa diilii t:h to keep the peace uuiotig such a g-eat army of men struggling for living wastes, but the miner,- he thought, weiy keeping within the law as best they can. He admitted there bad been some luwiessnes. but "of the six per sona killed In the coal Ucldw .-ittee the strike was started, three were mur dered by the -coal and iron policemen." Hi- 4'haractcrizcd most of ilio speowl Ixdicemeti s "criminal :::id thugs." Cortiuuing, the miners' PresMeut al.t: "(iovernor f-'t .'am U wnicinyihiMtix itn extra sessiuu of the Pennsylvania Leg fIature for the purpose of having en acted a -ompuls-.try arbitration law. The 'miner are willing to arbitrate, but they arc not willing to have com pulsory arbitration. They it re not will ing to enslave the workmen of Penn sylvania in order to gvt out of their own ditllculty. It has been the invaria ble rule fur workmen throughout the country to abide by the decision of ar bitration boards, and also the rule for organised workmen to stand by their coutracts." Mr. Mitchell asked the citizens "of Philadelphia to further assist the strikers. "We cannot win the strike alone." he said, 'but Aviih the help of the trades unions of the country victory will be ours. .ThlsJ the struggle of our time, aud it 1 the duty of every organized workman lti the country to do what he mil for our succc??." ,, FIRE IN TEXAS OIL FIELD. ' ConBacratloii at Hnauiaont Caut by a TareleM Workman. Iteaiimont, Texas. The fire which began in the oil held litis burued Itself out. The loss' caused by the tire is va riously 'estimated. The lowest tigoies by any one competent to Judge place the total loss at about T..tXM). From this ligure the estimate ranges iq to WoO.iHHfc So far as can be tiscvrtaiucd about thirty .derrick were destroyed. The los on these was. comparatively small. Fifteen tank, some of them tilled with oil, Avere burned out, .and they will have to be repaired before they are again serviceable, Severn! pumping plants were put out of service and are rendered useless, aud In (his lie the heaviest loss outside of the oil destroyed. The lire was started by the carclcss nes of a workman, whose name has not yet been oscerlained. He went Avlth a lighted lantern ' Into a tank which was partially tllled'wlth oil, and there was un explosloii of gas wljieh Ignited the oil. The man escaped, al though he Is badly burned. Advlies rillplnot to Work. Governor Tn(t, at a banquet in Ma nila, denies that the Federal party is a creation of the Philippine Cotnmisslou, He advised the Filipinos to work and refralu fiotu agitation. VICE-CONSUL A FORGER W. II Stuart, of the British Service in Boston, Insane, Ba Can Note For SJlOn.OOO aad YVat chart 15, OOO la Consulate rnade ,- Pnt In aa Atylain. Boston. The announcement has been made that the British Vice-Consul here, W. II. Stuart, Avho has been in the consular service for about thirty years and has been well known in so ciety, had beeu placed In the MeLeau Asylum nt Waverly at the instance of his sons. The developments of the fif ternoon show that the Viee-Couxul is a forger and defaulter. It is said that Stuart is short in his accounts at the consulate to the extent of fl..(sf.t, and that note's bearing the alleged Indorsement of Mrs. Stuart to t he amount of MOrt.OXiO are held by various persons. Mrs. ftuart is the daughter of Millionaire Enoch Went wortb. and when Stuart came to the British Consulate, the then Consul was. a friend of the Wentworth family into which Stuart was Introduced and where be met his wife, who was the widow of. a Mr. Erickson. The SUKi.btio of paper i said to have been forged by Stuart, aud it has been rjvj'1! o li!r It redeemed bv his father:in law. The latter, howeA-er, re fuses to take care of the deficits in the account of the consulate. Stuart was born in Woolwich, Eng land. fifty-flAe years ago. It is under stood that be ha always lived with his father-in-law and has had no house hold expenses to pay. His salary was ?2K and perquisites increased ihisto nearly $Pk). Stuart bore a reputat'op for correct living, although he wa said to be unsoclal.de, but it Is alleged that he has develo'H'd " a fondness for the card table which proved his ruin. SENATOR STEWART'S WIFE KILLED Thrown -Oot of aa Aatoruobile While l;i1iC at Alauteda, Cal. ' ) San Francisco, Cal.- Throvvlr-ta--uc-cldeut. while riding with her nephews ' un auti'tuubile, .Mr, Stewart. Avife of United states Senator W. M. Stewart jt Nevada, lost her life, expiring withiu an hour of the aecidtnt. Mrs. Stewart, who ha U'eu visiting her brother, W. W. Fooie, of OaklauJ, wnt out for a ride Avith Charles I'oiOf. her nephew, uml a young friend named Taylor. The party rode' to Ahimotla, aud AAblle speeding iilong the boulevard the" -machine- became utiHiauugeubie'i After diishhig raii(J)y aloug fur about Its 'yards the automobile jqi-.hleuly swerved and ran into a telegraph poie. throAviug the o'-cupants to the grotuid. Mr. Stewart struck heavily n tin curb, and several of the ribs on her left ide were crushed in. It .av bti thought that her injuries were iut of a. seriou niiturc. She died uIiuom. air hour ;fier lvcciying her injuries. The force of the tdiock was fo geut that -the telegraph pule avih snaiqieil off and the-autOMiobile was complcr.cly Avrwked. Mrs. Stewart's companions wj-re almost unhurt, rcci iviug only tliut I ruiw CIRL HELPED THE HANGMAN. ' !ouJ on Scaftuld, AA aO hril I atliet 'i, luv.r Hie anil Cat Kjwti I'.ixIj. Nashville, t!.l. Hoiy liry.iut wns lmi::ed liere for the murder o'f Town M.irih.il Hymts. Mit. Kita Hyml.i I'urker. daughter of-the murdered of -tieial, watched the execution from the scaffold trap. As soon a Bryant was pronounced dead, Mr. I'arUer, -with her father's knife, cut down the body of the murderer. The crime' for which Bryant was hanged tvas committed in Adct, Un., a near by village, last May. The negro was wanted in the town on a misde meanor charge, and Town Marshal llytids attempted to arrest him. As the marshal ' approached Bryant, the negro drew a pistol aud tired ou the otllcer, mortally wounding him. Bry ant escaped, but was captured a few days inter. FAIR ESTATE SETTLEMENT. . ' bl.Oilfl.llOO la Cash miJ l"roirrtT for tlin Mother of Mn. I'harle I.. Fair. PiainKcld, N. J.-Wllllam B. Smith, a brother Ot the late Mrs. Charles 1.. Fair, ret timed from San Francisco, Cal., and gave the details of the amica ble settlement of the estates. His ac count varies widely from that pub lished. He says that efforts Avere made to keep the negotiations secret. He declares that Mrs. Hannah Nel son. mo! her of Mrs. Fair, received $1,. ooo.iioo In cash and property In Purl. France, valued at $lOO,(KHi. Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Nelson, of New Market, obtained $'!oO,tXM); Mr. aud Mrs. Charles Smith, or Boulder, Col.. faAO.INHl, and Mr. ami .Mrs. William B. Smith. $3.Vi.. 000. The five children of Mrs." Minnie Lender, a sister of Mrs. Fair, received foOO.uUO to be distributed among them SIJICIDE BEFORE MARRIACE. ' Ir. Holt Killed Hliotelf When llli AVeil rilua Bella Kecan to Ring. Peoria, III. While the Aveddln'g bclln Avere ringing for Dr. Otto-F. Holt and Miss F.va Ham, aud while the bride Availed impatleuily at the church door, the physician decided to die. Arrayed in his wedding clothes he drank carbolic acid aud died in a few minutes. Word Avas first scut to the bride that he was ill. Later she was told the truth and was prostrated, . Dr. Holt left a note to a frleud. The cause la a mystery, for both were tvel' to tlo aud popular. A SENSATIONAL WIT Mrs. Dauphin, a Weahhv New Orleans Woman, Chareej With Perjury. HUSBAND'S FORTUNE VANISHED fie AVan Tresideat of tlie Louisiana Lot tery aud tbe I Accused f Stealing - i 4 VJ.OJO ..r Ui Ktte Srrurltte VA ro Taken Kit t Tear ace . Ktartlluc Charree. Jfew Orleans. La. The Grand Jury a few days ago announced an indict meut in blank for perjury. Noav it is announced that the indictment was against Mrs. Kosa , La Branche Dauphin, widow of Maximilian Dauphin, for many years President of the I-ouislana State Lottery, and that it was not made public in order to en able the District Attorney to get the necessary requisition papers from Gov. ernor Heard and arrest Mrs. Daupu. who is aid to be ill lu or near New York. The indictment is the result of one of the most bitter aud sensational case ever tried in Louisiana. Mrs. Dauphin, horn Itosa La Branche, is of an old Creole family, aud is worth fottu.wu or more. Dauphin, who was President of the Louisiana Lottery Company, died in 1S91. He was supposed to be in good circumstances, but not wealthy, and his estate was inAen torknl at 1u(Mhkj, his widow and a friend leing executors. There were other heirs, including Dauphin's mother. The estate was settled up, and the widow, as legatee, came, iuto posses sion of the rest of the property, after the other heirs were paid. Eleven year after the settlement, among the effects of Judge Porche. an ex-Justice of the IxmiKlana Supreme Court, who had been Mrs. Dauphin's lawyer in' th probate ca?, au old aud badly worn paper Avas 'found, giving a list of a large number of bonds which appar ently formed a part of the Dauphin estate, but Which bad not figured in the inventory. Mrs. Dauphin was called on to ex plain. She failed to appear before a Ivouisiana court on the ground of ill health and nervousness: but piece by piece, the trouble, buried for eleven years, Avas brought to light, nud from a single ioh:l bono the whole animal was reconstructed,, Dauphin had never possessed a bank account., lie kept blii money and securities . hi it box in hi room. :uid was a much wealthier-maii than many Mippoted. From tiirJ bos hi willow, it is' charged, lad stolen from the csiate and secreted Stn-! .') Ill gilf-:d;.e:! securities acd S40.W la 4Hi. Io orcb-r to cover up her woru khe sold the bond-', invesnei and rein vested U.e money hi new flocm-ities k- 1h.it no tiaee could tie fuu;d of it. fal lowing the exi.nip'e of her hr.shaed in keeping no bank nta-oun:, bttt ha frcqncnrly $!iKMt:i lu ;is-!i Avith her. She pt'oved a ooil KpecitliMor and in creased her fortune.- By d;ii',cnt i!ivc:igation Judge I.rxa rus. counsel for' the holr, siicved-V, In ivjicliiu (ic.,i bond. lor move tii.-i!i twelve jv:i!s w-fy lino ii.-inp'ein's hand-", then into Mrs.-Dauphin's pos session, where they had no right to be. Hli.l finally to tiii bre-i'ii! bolder.-. The cae iViis so ileaily prtivcd ilnii court auaviied juiit;meni apalust Mrs Dauph'u 'for o, the . cuiiiv a mo iiut. Ilcr liMtidsrtmc lioiue here Avas "seized, only to J!nd that sile had removed everything of value. The m.tt ter was laid before the Grand Jury, and the result av;is an indictment-for perjury in the case, delivered before it commissioner in Mississippi. Mrs. Dauphin Avlll be brought back to New Orleans for trial. FALL IN BEEF PRICES. Graci-fed Cattle In Kama City Bring Tito and Three Cent! Lnt a I'oumt. Kansas City, Mo. The 'statement made by the packers nud cuttlomeu some time ago that tie price of beef to the consumers A.'ould bo "'coil-' siderably lower ns, soui as the grasr led cattle came lu is now vciitico. Within the last ten days the price of bef to the Kansas City consumers has fallen two and three cents u pound. That reduction has been coincident with the rise In the. receipts of cattle at the Kansas City stock yards' from l-'OOO a day to more than tWWO i day. The cheap new corn has not been in I'xisfence long-enough to be. trans formed into bef, and not until the holidays will the heavy beef be cheaper, " "OLD NANCE" OSCEOLA DEAD. SeialnuU Brave Brine this New ami 3!C Gator Hide. Fort Myers.- Fla.-.' BI11. BroAvu," a Seminole brave, arrived this week from the Big Cypres with his eight-iu-hand tea to of oxen, after n supply of mer chandise for the Indians. He brought In 31H1 'gator hides. Bill brings the news of the death of "Old Nance," widow of the famous old chief. Osceola. "Old Nance" was about eighty-four years old, and became blind four years ago. Seveu chlldreu survive her and Chief Osceola. They are Char lie, Toinmle. JImmie, Blllle and Johnnie Osceola, and Lucie Osceola, and "Lit tle Nauce,".the au.ua ay of Billle Con.v patehoe. lUvelt Asnlnd Kins Male-- Bevolt ngalmst ring rule lu Fust Or ange, N. J., has been begun by the for mation of a citifti us' union. lid EVENTS OF THE IB Wflsliintton ofticiais spjwove the ar tiou of ;e:ui.iiy in s.h.tv.ng th- Hmir ' tian jruulx-at Crete-a-Piemt. a:d tfeuik' It will piove a salutary lesson to Ssutl and Central American involution!. , The Internal Kevenue Bureau tuA pulilic the fact that in th CttsSicifi States in the fiscal year etnV d July 3J last there Avere li.tw 1 'j:,i" cijar umnufaeture. This made a per cap ita allot tueitr for each li'au, truMS and child of over 1S cigar. , Oil as a fuel for ships, it;stad of !. as tried out !n a s.pi' i-.d trip. Is rcctviu inendcd by " Cnitcd' Staici naval cer. .Commander MCre. of the t;nit-el States Navy, bus reported the aicjw which he took to prouvt cotitiiorcc at Haiti. f Many messages of congratulation ma rrrsidei:t BoovcH's rsutpe from death were received- at the t'ta: le partment. orn auorrru isi.at. ' General Chaffee has ordered general Sumner to lead a strong force of infaa lry, cavalry and artillery against Ut Macin Moros. , The case agaii.s Sautij:go Igleiaif was dropped in the Porio B:can court. DOMESTIC A complete fystrm o' ppeutuatie lubes is to f'e es;aunsiied U nrr IIj; New York General PostofiiVv and the-sub-stations. Th.- mail Avapcus wtiii ie disjvensed with. ( - '' The D resr makers ProtectiTe Awe -ia!iou of America held a log con voli tion in New York, City. At New Albany. lndt Mis. IJ:nuley-, mother of the late Walter t. Gresliatu. has just celebrated lo r tyo:h biirhvfay ... P.y nest spring a i;cw fnt freight line of Hteaniphips will be d en;, ,bhsn: su ai the great 3aks. A l:irge eoiuiMoy now being formed for the purpose- i Toronto. Geoige Hale. late Cb'.ef of IN Fiit Ieparitn ut, Kansas '"sty. Mo., liaw It u n'iitC to ivore r.;.e ;Le 1-caJau' iKnglad' Fire Dvpurtu'..;!. , A trust fund an;cnmi:g to $:iMdU. boh! by Swiis Comle. isve.-ro. N.- Y.. i gone, and the Si;i'"iff Iras an eecutiou . to levy on Mrs, t'oi:d" perf rial prop erty. Tb" men' y was i . i y Miviis '. file's lucther, the ihcr.me to lie paai to heirs. Mis. C-)'i!e says tli tu'Jtl was fdaeed to h'-r tu.-baitd" K-rBOuatt account in tSIi.". i Joiin ('. B st. wa c'-cvoci'I for tlte tr.urder f Gecrge Pailvy, of Sauti, t in., at tip." State pri--" oi. IJ.-tsion. TI-, oi aiois i f chi.'d n ';'.-. II.-? to gair ."-.i rI?sioii the " v Ya k public ( hoc;.on the i.jicnit -'".-; n b o: Maswcll 1; 'V . n Stic 'l III-' '".r-l-.I-ii t : :.;',xo, : at. Bii- 't Smitb), . iJ-T;t'.3cy do v.. caa : t Lijrra ary, avosj for r ry till; 'dns lev ! alf r-t :m -.- 'si- Te. II. !, i.r I h l.b'SU'll AVjit hfrij. ::::;m. Ala. -. iKe-ciitaiivc Vi!li;.m Ah' I- i;I ;an. ari?ii;"cc-l Ins I.e .'.; i:i ill 1 S: !!:' r iJi.-Mh cf . D. en. aa.es -.fc.M i:'-l. As:-" tl: Bror-hlyii Lii b''.:-d ('.-. J r i.'s i :,; .-.ticr Ilr:.'-!:Iyi? ni t b.-Ing-1 .u!)y ' .?'.-.i.-i KgrOUlltJ. iiaged. ;t U Hsvi.-or. . iT'. i'.. of Vei t; New lV.dford am S. l ,-.r- I :. ; Ii! . AVi- found do: 1 lu b. .1 with p, i -il'i i iioie ,i io.:rit it,- le Hd. It is suf- p.i-Cil lie ki'.i! I'll'elf iK'c.iV.rJ,' of dc- s;,ir.'-: utey ,ver fiiiiidy ton' lit' the Avar ira.ne S"ir-.i and N;tr r.".'. ai"il Pi".'. B..!., vrrt h ;oiv: i allyr reduced to rains dui'ing :iti attack ley i no !' ct. Fnitcd States Cocfiil Aynnv l.naib louiie, who is in Chicago. presed fear thet Mont Peiee'a will bloAY out and cr.te awfcl eatt . de struct ion. Frosts were reported in Northwest- ern Nebraska. Wcsicrn lowu ami pat Is--of South Dakota. Murder in the second d?gre' la tli i rdlct against Bessie Hickland, who kllled Allen Bailey, twelve year old. at. Olathe, Kan. , Brcause tiny could ri-H get work Mi.. and Mr." .lames' B. 'Taj !or. cf . ! Mc'"c, Iowa, l.iiid th -.ie'vca WAU Nebraska Soclallwts nominated x State ticket, headed by George K. Ioav, of Lincoln, for Governor. Confessing assault upon a Avhti woman. "Hog" Wilson, colored. Ava handed by a mob at Stephens, Ark. Pnsiihtit Boosevclt gallopnl pvertlie battlcuchlof Chicknmmitra so rauUity that several trooM'rs of his escort, tU Seventh Cavalry, were iinhssrd the anibulau 't corps had to b. catted !nio action. ' King Leopold of Belgium fa tryiMR to compensate Ontend in some way fur having closed the gambling plaei. tliere. . . The recent riot fit Barcelona j 1h' lleved to have lccn planned by Aeuu--chists to cominemornte President IMe Kitilcy's assasbihalioh. Karthtpmke shocks were felt la tb Pyrenees and In India." i The Cxariua'B condition Is la cvtrr way satisfactory. , Extensive changes have been etnV in the physical features of the Iksuf fricre volcano, St. Vincent, as the rr tilt of its latest eruption. . , The pl.iclnjT of huge coal ordera frt; the Foiled States t:s improved tlx Lancashire coal trade. The Freiicfi Government han ntonsi the salarli's of eighteen priest of va rious parish.- Avho tot k part in tt:v tv-i-i'Vt mU ul tie nth a.