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MALVA SURRENDERS Insurgent Commander Tires of Fight ing Our Soldiers HIS FORCES LAY DOWN THEIR ARMS The Insurgent Leader Also Ordered the Complete Surrender of All His Men to the Nearest Force. Manila, By Cable.-General Malvar has unconditionally surrendered to Brigadier General J. Franklin Bell. at Lipa, Batangas province, with the e2 tire insurgent force of the provinces of Laguna and Batangas. General Bell says his (Bell's) influence is sufficient to quell the insurrectionary movements in Tayabas and Cavite provinces and capture all those in the field who have not yet surrendered, but Malvar has ordered the complete surrender of ev ery insurgent to the nearest force. General Wheaton, reporting to the division headquarters, says that all re sistance in his department has ended and that the surrenders just announced mean that the ports will be opened and that the Filipinos in the detention camps can be allowed to return to their home in time to plant the crops. General Wheaton is especially pleas ed with General Bell's care of the na tives confined in the camps. The offi cers in charge are held personally re sponsible for the quality and quantity of the food served out and for the gin eral welfare of the occupants of the camps. After securing the mountain passes General Bell employed volunteer bolomen for protection against ladron lam. Numbers of Filipinos volunteered and expressed the liveliest satis,.ction at the treatment accorded to them selves and to their families who were In the concentration campt General Wheaton gives General Bell great credit for his indefatigability in conducting the campaigz He was in the field on 'horseback day and night personally superintendiag the arrange ments. The people of Manila are des lighted at the prospem of a resumption of trade with the pacified provinces and are anxious to show Generals Chaffee, Wheaton and Bell. their appre ciation of the fact that the Insurrection Is really over. About 3,300 rifles have been received by the American officers in Batangas and Laguna provinces during the past tour months. Genera3 Malvar personally requested '.n interview with General Bell in or der to make his complete submission. Flassacre of Soldiers. Washington, Special.-The following cablegram from General Chaffee, dated at Manila, was made public at the & War Department: "With reference to my telegram of 23rd ultimo, reporting attack by Moros, reconnaissance under ,Forsyth, March 15th, soldier of Twen ty-seventh Regiment, United States In satry, murdered by Moros in the vici aity of Parang, March 30th two sol ,diers of the Twenty-seventh Regiment, United States Infantry, having one gun were approached .with semblance of friendship. by six, Moros, r}ar Mala bang. The ri -emed'-Tr61 nd ether severely 'woWiIedbut escaped. The murder was without 'provocation or justification In any way. The murderers are known and demand has been made for sur render. 'Thus far dattos have refused to deliver them, Have been to Mala bang and tried to confer with them. Waited three days. Dattos refused to come In. Expedition of 1,200 men un der Colonel Frank D. Baldwin, cavalry and artillery, before formed, leaving for Lake Lauo about April 27th, pur pose to arrest the murderers antd pun ish the dattos. Every care to be tak en not to bring general war with Moros about the lake, absolutely important. Scouts say reported by these that sov ereignty United States fully acknowl edged. Have addressed letter to this effect dattors at the same time Inform - ing them of friendly lisposition of gov ernment to punish only those giving offense; that government claims right explore country between Ilamar Bay and Ilantia, and that the purpose is to do so now and at any other time. Ac complishment this object necessary; retain battalion 17th two months long er. By belief present time is that a large majority of the dattos would sup port those implicated in the murders." 'Cannot Be Merged. Knoxville, Tenn., Special.-In regard to State interference in case of a merger of the Southern Railway and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad lines in the State of Tennessee, it has been learned that the Tennessee law absolutly forbids the acquisition by any one road of parallel and compet ing lines of railways. According to *this law it would be impossible for the Southern road to secure possession of the Louisville & Nashville and operates it as a part of Its system. It could only be operated as a separate and dis tinct road. Women Attack Escaping Prisoners. Kokomo, Ind., Special.-A wholesalE daylight jail delivery was frustrated by scrub women here. In the absece o1 the sheriff, the prisoners sawed the bars and escaped through them. When the women opened the doors to scrut the floors of the corridor, the prison ers made a dash for liberty, but were clubed back by the women, who dic work with the brooms and mops. Afte the prisoners were repulsed and driver back, Turnkey Applegate came to thi assistance of the women. Americans Want Bonds. New York. Special.-It was an :aounced in Wal street that J. P. Mor gan & Co. and Baring, Magouau & Co.. of New York: Drexel & Co., of Phila delphia, and Kidder. Peabody & Co., of '.oston, had been authorized to forward applications for allotments to the is sue of ?32.000.000 British consols of which ?16,000,000 have already beer placed. The price of issue was fixed LiVE ITEMS OF NEWS. Many Matters of General Interest In Short Paragraphs. The Sunny South. North Carolina Day was celebrated at the Charleston Exposition last week. A monument to the Confederate General Polk was unveiled at At lanta, Ga. For killing Deputy Marshal Frank Taylor, at Dukedom, Tenn., Tor Blanchard, a farmer, was lynched. Eight hundred square miles of prairie land in Terry County, Texas, was swept by fire, hundreds of cattle being burned. Five men in a Sheriff's posse are said to have been killed at Jones boro, Tenn., while arresting Jim Wright, wanted for murder. A heated argument resulted in the fatal stabbing on A. T. Sharpe, travel ing salesman, by an unknown man, at Memphis, Tenn., late Saturday. The upsetting of a boat near Quit man, Miss., caused the drowning of Mrs. W. T. Baynes, her two daugh ters and Charles Fleming, who tried to rescue them. With his skull crushed W. J. Polk, an insurance man of Decatur, Ala., was found dead. One man was killed and three hurt by a collision on the Illinois Central near Memphis, Tenn. Smallpox was discovered in the jail at Norfolk, Va. For a 10 per cent. wage increase 800 cotton spinners at Augusta, Ga., went on strike. At The National Capital. Minister to Chile, Henry L. Wilson, reached New York for a vacation. Secretary of War Root conferred for several hours Thursday with General Schofield, retired. Count Albert Freiherr von Westen bolz, of Germany, was presented to President Roosevelt. At The North. Andrew Carnegie gave $18,000 to Cincinnati, 0., for public libraries. Brewery workers in four establish ments at Hartford, Conn., went on strike. President Draper, of the University of Illinois, had his right leg ampu tated yesterday, the result for a run away accident Sunday. Steamers reaching New York Satur day brought in 4,162 immigrants. From a beating given him by strik ers Thomas W. Smith died Saturday, at Chicago, Ill. Circulating counterfeit money is charged against Genero Agone, under arrest at New York. A dust storm that obscured the sun and did considerable damage swept Southern Minnesota Saturday. The Telephone Company, at Day ton, 0., a part of the Everett-Moore syndiCate, has been sold for $90,000. Lieutenant Governor Stone, of Wis consin, ill at Chica ~ll.,, gg The Duke of Newcastle was the guest yesterday of .the University Club, Boston, Mass. . Burglars secured $1,000 cash from D. P. Lapham's private bank, at Dear born, Mich. Secretary Shaw has asked the resig nation of Assistant Immigration Co.m missioner McSweeney, of New York. Half the flour mills of Minneapolis, Minn., closed last night indefinitely because of high freight rates and a decline in the demand for flour. The sub-treasury at New York has sent $100,000 to CincInnati, 0., for crop purposes. The breweries of Boston, Mass., started to break the strike by ad vertising for new men. Rather than make a daily detailed statement of their work, 4,000 em ployes of the American Can Company in New York, went on strike. Fifty thousand dollars is left to John A. Dowie, head of the Zionists, by the will of Frederick Sutton pro bated at Chicago, Ill. A quarrel over money caused Earl Garman to kill his father at Glen wood, Iowa. From Across The Sea. The British budget, introduced in the House of Commons, shows a defiait of $225,000,000, to make up which it is proposed to tax grain, meat and other articles. Peaice negotiations continue at Lon don and Pretoria and, it is said, Impor tant concessions will be made to the Boers. Dora .stutnener reoports severe ngnt ing in South Africa last week, In which the British and Boers divided honors. King Edward had a t)ox especially constructed in the pit of Drury Lane Theatre so that he could get a good view of the chariot race In "Ben-Hur." The general strike order took effect in Belgium and thousands are Idle in all the cities. In a battle at Soacha, Colombia, the Government troops won, 400 men be ing killed. Colombian revolutionists are threat ening Bocas del Toro. Miscellaneous Matters, Illinois capitalists have bought 57, 000 acres of land for $500,000 in Cuba for a mule farm. An .early spring is expected in the Klondike. The bank at Fowler, Col., was rob bed of $1,100. A police commistionership in Utica. N. Y., has been accepted by Clifford Lewis, a former Philadelphian. While his wife was returning from church Sunday night, Clyde Cooper, of St. Mary, 0., shot and killed her. During a hard snow stcrm Sunday, the Steel Trust steamer Charles E. Van Hose grounded in Lake Michigan IN CONGRESS. Detailed Doings of Our National Law makers. HOUSE. Ninety-fifth Day-With the close of the Cuban reciprocity debate in the House, the leaders announced that all danger of the bill being weighted down with undesirable amendments was over and that they felt assured that the bill would pass in the shape which it came to it. It was announced that the entire Republican delegations from Michigan and California, who constitute the head and front of the opposition, had agreed not to vote to override the rul ing of the chair. Mr. Wilson, of Indi ana, who is acting as the whip for the majority, does not believe over a dozen Republicans at the outside will jrin the Democrats upon the proposition. It would require more than 20 Republican votes to place upon the bill the amend ment which might endanger its ultimate passage, as several Democrats, It is said. have also declared their intention to stand by the chair. An unsuccessful effort was made again today by Mr. Payne to secure an agreement to post a limit upon the general debate. When the House adjourned today there re mained 35 members who desired to speak. The debate was without particular interest. The speakers were Messrs. Swanson, of Virginia, for the bill, and Smith, of Michigan; Dayton, of West Virginia; Burgess, of Texas; Meyer, of Liulsiana, and Southeriand, of Utah, against it. Mr. Swanson argued that the bill was in line with the Democratic policy of tariff reform. That statement made him a target for the questions of some of his Democratic colleagues who .dif fered with him, and he had sharp clashes with Mr. Bartlett, of Georgia; Mr. Wheeler, of Kentucky, - and Mr. Cooper, of Texas. Mr. Tawney, of Min nesota, asked Mr. Swanson wh'thcr the proposed legislation would not force Cuba to enact our immigration laws. In reply Mr. Swanson declared-that the question showed the inconsistency of the opponents of the bill who on the one hand claimed that this bill would dragoon poor, distressed Cuba into ac cepting something she did not want and on the other hand insisted that Cuba was prosperous and did not need the contemplated relief. Mr. Swanson argued that with 20 per cent. preferen tial duties in our favor we should be able to monopolize the Cuban markets. Hd declared that the Anierican people would tolerate no person or party which asserted that we owed nothing to Cuba and that our trade relations with her should be no closer. than those of other countries. Personally, he said, he would hail the day when Cuba be came a part of the United States. "Have you begun your propaganda for free trade with the Republican ma jority?" asked Mr. Littlefield, of Maine. "We have," replied Mr. Swanson. "We have infused the majority with 20 per cent of our views and we are encouraged." (Laughter.) Mr. Meyer laid stress upon the hard ships which the ruin of the sugar in dustry .would entail upon the black la borers of Louisiana, who, he continued, would be entitled to as much consid ' SENATE. Ninety-fifth Day-The debate on the Chinese exclusion bill was practically concluded In the Senate and voting on the bill and amendments will begin at 1 o'clock tomorrow. By general consent a vote was taken today on two amend ments offered by Mr. Fairbanks, of In diana, striking out the definition as to. Chinese students and teachers, and they were agreed to without discus sion. These changes were made with a view to reconciling some of the oppo sition to the measure, which has been directed against the rigid restrictions on students and teachers, and the uu necessary convenience this would Im pose on the educated Chinese classes coming to this country. The debate to day was participated in by Senators Heitteld, of Idaho; Penrose, of Penn sylvania, and Turner, of Washington, in favor of the bill, and Senators Pritchard, of North Carolina, and Spooner, of Wisconsin, in opr -sitionl. Mr. Turner made the assertion that politics had crept into the discuss&on and that most of the members ot :he majority were opposed to the bill. This brought out a sharp rejoinder ?r3rt Mr. Spooner, who maintained that pol itics had not figured in the discussion and that the opposition to the present bill was due entirely to its conflict with the treaty and not because of any op position to Chinese exclusion, which was an established doctrine of the gov ernment. Mr. Pritchard opposed the bill mainly on account of the injury it would cause the South in reducing the cotton exports to China. Mr. Mallory, of Florida. expressed surprise at the amendment proposing to strike out the senen's clause so-called. He said this was one of the most salutary featu.res and should be retained. Gift to Columbia College. New York, Special.-Public announ ~ement will be made after the official nstallation ceremonies in Columbia ollege of a munificent money gift to :hat institution by Andrew Carnegie, ccording to information which reach as the press. The exact amount is nown only to the president and board >f trustees. but there is good reason to elieve that it is not far short of $1, 00,00. This will be more than suf icient to build a college hall, a chapel >r dormitory, to which purpose the gift s to be aunlied. Strike Averted. Roanoke, Special.-The differences between the machinists of the Blue Seld (W. Va.) Norfolk and Western Railway shops and the officials of that road have been amicably settled. t is not known just what concessions were made on either side, but it has been given out that there will be no trike, the committe3 which came ere from Bluefield yesterd~ay to con rer with the Norfolk annl Western ilicials having reached that conlus some young men faM is love and some lum in with both feet. BOY THIEVES IN CLOVER Robbed 200 Churches Between Pitts burg and New York City. Operated Without Detection-Finally Struck a Varnish Factory and Found It Richer Than a Mint. New York City.-Louis Lester and Thomas Riley, who were arrested in Brooklyn, have in the last two years robbed hundreds of churches, furnished rooms and small stores. Lester is twenty-two years old and Riley nine teen. Lester, in making a confession, said- "My home is In Galveston, Tex. I was graduated from the high school and rani away from home. I first broke out in :'1s business two years ago, in t Pittsbu:;. where I picked up my pal, l Riley. We found it easier to break a into churches than anywhere else. There is no risk, no burglar alarm, no dog, or watchman. You can always 0 slip In at a cellar window and make your way up into the building and help a yourself to what you want. "After we had touched off a few churches in Pittsburg we drifted to ward Buffalo, robbing a church in one ( town, pawning the stuff we would get t in the next town: doing a church or d two there, and so on to the next town. f If there was an .asy proposition in the d way of a little s.ore with money in it a we would take that in, but that was t not often. Churches for ours, every a time. "I suppose we've broken into 200 t churches and got away with the goods. s When we came to New York City a few months ago we found a warehouse tl in Seventy-fourth street that was like I1 getting money out of the bank. We I1 took 1000 gallons of varnish out of that I place in two months, working only on g Sundays. We got $2.50 a gallon for it. We took seveLty-five imported razors e out of a barber shop near the Charles t Street Police Station, in New York d City, a few weeks ago. We went g through about thirty churches. in Brooklyn as near as I can figure it." o Many pawn tickets were found on c the prisoners. They were held for the t: Grand Jury. CUBAN BILL PASSED. c Republicans Join Democrats to Defeat the House Leaders. Washington. D. C.-The House has t passed the C-7an Recip'acity bill by g a vote of to 52, after adding to it an amendment cutting off the differen tial on refined sugar. The sction of the Democratic cau cus was reflected In the action of the a House, the united vote of the minor- p Ity and of the beet sugar Republicans I being sufficient to override the ruling t of Chairman Sherman and attach an n amendment to the Cuban Reciprocity e bill abolishing the differential duty 0 on refined sugar during the existence r of the reciprocal treaty with Cuba. r The combination was exerted only t, on the motion of Mr. Morris, of Min- : nesota, to strike off the differential, all ' other amendments being either ruled d out of- order, or voted down by the C entire Republican vote. It was showfI, , 1%tee of the wholi, when, after Chair- r; man Sherman, of New York, had ruled i, the amendment out of order, he was t1 reversed on appeal taken by Mr. Mor- t ris, over thirty Republicans joining t the Democrats in sustaining the ap- d1 peal. There was a majority of nearly a fifty on that proposition, and a slightly a larger one on the adoption of the t amendment in the committee. n This Is the first time in many Con greses that the leadership of the Re publican party has been overthrown a~ by the concerted action of the Demo- s crats and bolting Republicans. V COERCION IN IRELAND. Three Sections of the Crimes Act to Be Enforced in Many Districts. Dublin, Ireland.-Three sections of 1. the Crimes act have been put in force In a large number of districts of Ire land by proclamation, issued by Earl Cadogan, the Lord Lieutenant of Ire land. C These sections provide for summary y jurisdiction in cases of criminal con spiracy, intimidation and unlawful as sembly, for trial by special jury and for change of venue at the option of the Crown. The-.counties affected by the enforc ing of the Crimes act are Caven, Clare, C Cork, Leitrim, Mayo, Roscommon, Sligo, Tipperary and Waterford, as I well as the boroughs of Cork and WVat. t erford. t. These are the districts in which the United Irish League has been most c active. The League itself has not yet r been proclaimed, but It is believed that t this step will be taken soon. CHINESE EXCLUSION BILL PASSED.t S Senate Adapts the Platt Amendment Re- n Enacting the Present Law. Washington, D. C.-After spending p an afternoon in voting on innumerable f amendments to the Chinese Exclusion r bill, the Senate composedly dropped v that measure and adopted the Platt' substitute by a vote of forty- -ignt tc t: thirty-three. Having made this sub- ~ stituton, the Senate passed the amend- t: ed bill by a vote of seventy-six to one, a Mr. Hoar alone voting in the negative. ~ The Platt substitute simply re-enacts the present law and extends It to the Philippines. It was the bill contended tor by the conservative element which Is opposed to all rigorous modes of Clhi-t nese exclus:on, and was also voted for by those who regaid It as too strong. but milder than the proposed bill. It wvas offered by Senator Platt, of Con- e necticut. SHERIFF CUDEN'S REMOVAL UPHELD ne Supreme ,Court Reverses the Decision .of Justice Gaynor. New York City.-The Appellate Di vision of the Supreme Court has up held the action of Governor Odell in nl removing Charles Guden from the E office of Sheriff of Kings County and 2 appointing Norman S. Dike in his 8! place. g Guden appealed to the Supreme t: Court, and Justice Gaynor decided he g was still Sheriff.g AN lORMERS ARE HIM Or hree Brothers Convicted of the Mur- en der of Peter Hallenbeck, tu 0 DIE IN THE ELECTRIC CHAIR so H es rhis is the Saddest Moment of My Ca- ar reer," Said Justice Chester in Sentenc- th ing Them-At Dannemora Prison, Dur- of ing the Week of May 30, They Will W Expiate the Killing of Their Uncle. W p1 Hudson. N. Y.-The jury in the trial D f the tiir'e Van Wormer brothers- M G'.is, Burton and Fred-ciarged with be murder of their uncle, Peter Hal ?nbeck, came into court at 9.30 o'clock . m., and announced a verdict of mur er in the first degree against all three dr f the defendants. at The case went to the jury at 4.40 p. fir i. on the previous day. When the ver- he let was announced by Solon Smith, oreman of the jury, former Judge ady. counsel for the defense, asked hat the jury be polled. As this was th one each man responded. finding de- CI endants guilty of murder in the first ot egree. Judge Cady then moved for te new trial, which was denied. A mo ion for an arrest of judgment was Iso denied. Each defendant then in .rm, clear tone,without a trace of emo ion. said he knew of no reason why entence should not be pronounced. ta Justice Chester thereupon sentenced l be three defendants to be electrocuted a Clinton prison. at Dannemora, dur- cy zg the week beginning May 30, 1902. m n passing sentence the Justice said ravely: fo "It is the saddest act of my official bi aree- to be compelled to sentence bree young men, three brothers, un er a verdict of murder in the first de ree." The case will be taken to the Court f Appeals as soon as necessary papers an be secured. The prisoners were ransferred to D nnemora. b No dispositio s yet been made of b arvPy Bruce's case, and it probably i!l g, over to the May term. Bruce's jC ounsel is willing that his client plead rc nilty to such offence as would war- cc ant the Judge in sentencing him to be State Reformatory at Elmira, but hi be District Attorney will not accept ex ach a plea. re Peter A. Hallenbeck was shot in his tt ouse at Greenport, N. Y., where he ni ived with his aged wife. The story, ' s brought out on the stand by the Al risoners themselves and their cousin. arvey Bruce, who, while he was with hem at the time of the murder, was ot on trial, was that the Van Worm rs bought face masks at the store of ne Imond Venner in Kinderhook, m rhere the lived. on the day before hristmas and then hired a one-horge eam at a livery stable and drove near r twenty miles to their uncle's house. 'hey first peere' into the church win ows at that place .to make sure that b) harles Hallenbeck, the old man's son, i Jn.bsrife were not with their~fath- ti r. Then they proceeded to the house1 ang the boll and as soon as the door of pened bega'a firing 'with revolvers at ra be aged man When he was dead ti be went ba -k to their team, which bey had hitched in the yard, drove a istance down~ the road, removed their insks, turned their coats rightside out nd reacled 1Kinderhook again late at night. The motive for the murder t -as declared by the prosecution to be * ue to a family feud. The trial was conducted with un sual celerity, the jury having been ti ~cured only thirteen days before the s< erdict was rendered. LABOR WORLD. . Ten thOusand mill, operatives havea een locked out in Augusta. Ga. c An advance of seven per cent. in ages has been made in the cotton ils of Connecticut. Oer 2000 mioulders. have struck at hattanooga,. Tenn., refusing to work rith negroes in the union shops. d There are in Germany about 1500 ines or shafts in operation, which bi ie employment to 40,917 miners. towa operators are preparing for la rouble, and will not admit the claim ni f drivers to be classed as miners. The hod-carriers of Chicago have oi een granted an increase in wages by n4 le employing plasterers of from birty to thirty-five cents an hour. .3 stice GLynor. In the Supreme Court la f Brooklyn. N. Y.. has decided strikers mny maintain a picket line. The Jus ieo denied an injunction asked for. The master painters of Lowell, lass., have laid off all employes until bey are willing to return at the old c chedule of $2 a day. A demand was r ade for $2.25. The employes of five firms of Mont- ' ~ller, Vt., together with the entire W arce of city employes, have comn menced work on a nine-hour schedule ei ith ten hours' pay. fi: Six thousand miners, employed in b e Bock coal fields of Clay and ad ining counties, in Indiana, quit work tl brough a failure to agree on a scale, di ndl the mines will be indefinitely P losed. The employes of the Lake Carriers' ssociation have drawn up a scale of al rices in advance of the prevailing si rages last season. No difficulty is an- ai icipated in coming to a satisfactory m greement. The agitators in Russia, at the pres- a nt moment, have no formidable pro- ti ram beyond the May day working- tI en's celebrations; but strikes and s ckouts, It is anticipated, will occur t the spring and summer- t s1 Pensioners in states. - The state In which there is the least 0 umber of government pensioners ish evada, in which they number only n 75. There are 800 in Wyoming and 5 in Utah, Ohio and Pennsylvania to ether have 210.000--only 10,000 less I ian the total number of persons en- C aged in the federal service of the hI nite 2tate at home and abroad, NEW REGIME IN CUBA. der Convening the Republican Govern ment Published. Bavana, Cuba.-The Cuban consti ion has been published in the Official izette, together with an order con ning the new government. the order declares that the Consti ticnal Convention, which was dis ived by Congress, will assemble in avana on May 5 for the purposes of % amining credentials and counting d rectifying the electoral vote. The Senate will hold its sessions in e Second Palace, the headquarters the quartermaster's department, bile the House of Representatives ill meet in the building now occu ?d as the headquarters of the Marine apartment. The order provides that ay 20, the date upon which Senor strada Palma is to be inaugurated -esident, shall be a special holiday. Four Persons Burn to Death. !irs. Wallace F. King, her two chil-. en and a niece were burned to death . their home In Wallin, Mich. The e destroyed one store and two uses, causing a loss of $8000. British Loan Over-Subscribed. . Plerpoat Morgan, the Barings and e Rotbschilds took half of the new itish loan of $160,000,00n, and the her half, offered to the public, was a times over-subscribed. Sporting Brevities. W. C. Whitney has a string of renty-one horses in training in Eng ad. Signs of renewed activity among the clists of New York City have been any. Cycle racing has had Its inception r the season onuthe track at Vails irg, N. J. The Okoboji tribe of Indians, pro ssional wing shots, will hold their eet at Battie Creek in August or !ptember. Th famous broodmare Wasana. . im of Sunol. 2.08?4, died recently at * alo Alto, Ten of her produce have ,en sold for $80,000. Jake Gaudaur, the sculler, who In red his shoulder, will probably never w again. He has been asked. tM ach the Vancouver Row'ng Club. The Boston American League Club is signed Charles A. Clancy, of West-, ly, R. I., a young pitcher, who is ported to be of- rare promise. Columbia will not row Annapolis Is year, and will uphold Pennsylva a In her decision to hold the juilior arsity race at Philadelphia, and not Ithaca. Labor World. An advance of seven per cent. I. ages has been made in the cotton ils of Connecticut. Over 2000 moulders have struck at hattanooga, Tenn., refusing to yor ith negroes in the union a The hod-carriers of Chlg ; en granted an incressa e :.emnployiag-,SSferao irty to .thirty-fve cnts sab ustice Gaynor, in the Supreme Cot Brooklyn, N. Y., has decided strikers ay maintain a picket line. The Juu ee denied an injunction asked fo~. There are in Germany about 150k ines or shafts in operation, whl& e employment to 40,917 miners. Iowa operators are preparing for ouble, and will not admit the clainm drivers to be classed as miners. The master painters of Lowell,. ass., have laid off all employes until ey are willing to return at the old hedule of $2 a day. A demand was ade for $2.25. Six thousand miners, employed in le Bock coal fields of Clay and ad sining counties, in Indiana, quit worlk trough a failure to agree on a scale,. id the mines will be indefinitely osed. NEWSY CLEANINCS. The meat famine has affected Lou The March gold output at Johannes irg was 304,127 ounces. A new political party, organized by bor leaders, has been formed in Con eticut. Experts have found many evidences danger in food products in Con eticut. A monument to the Confederatte Gen a Polk has been unveiled at At nta, Ga. Illinois capitalists have bought 57, ) acres of land for $500,000 in Cuba r a mule farm. A genuine wild horse, with wooly at and.scant mane and tail, has been ceived at the Paris Zoo. At Beckton Road, in England, a boy as playing with a menagerie lion hen it- bit off one of his hands. The joint Army and Navy .manoeui' a in New York harbor have been ed for the first eight days in Septem er next. Chicago Postoffiee Clerks' Union, of te American Federation of Labor, has afted an appeal to the President and ostmaster-General for less work and ore pay. By the Kaiser's desire, fully fitted up, nbulance trains have been placed at ~venty-five German railway stations.. d telephonic communication has been ade with local doctors. Organized labor in Omaha, Neb., has oved into its new labor temple. .The mpe? soon to be erected at New Cas e, Pa.. will have an auditorium to at 2000 p)eople. At Indianapolis, Ind., e unions arc to erect a $50,000 labor mple. Leeds, England. has four lady black niths, thc daughters of a blacksmith,. ho has taught them the trade. Four :her daughters left the business on eir marriage. The girls work five mrs a day, during whIch time they ake several gross of hooks. ___ Mrs. Flynn--wAn' pEwal yar son ike doin' now, Mrs. Casey?" Mrs. sey-"Shure, Molke ain' doin' anny ng, Mrs. Fl.ynn. He's got a govern ent job,"-LesliS's Weekly.