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W~ W"" ; LEGISLATORS IN TDKHOIL ^ Oay of Great Excitement in Kentucky's j State House. ! CM ED MEN GUARD THE DOOR. Blood %Va? Nearly Shed In the Contest at Frankfort for United States Senatorship?Republican Representatives Unseat a Democrat and Democratic Senators Onst Two Republicans. Frankfort, Ky., March 12.?The attempt to elect a United States Senator came near resulting' in bloodshed. As it was it led to extraordinary measures in both the Republican House and the Democratic Senate, and the joint session was converted into a disturbed assemblage, no attention being paid to the forms of law or parliamentary prao tice. V The unseating of Kaufman, Democrat, in i the House, promptly followed by the unseating of Walton and James, Republicans, in the Senate, created the most intense excite- , ment of the present turbulent session of the Legislature. Crowds of angry and excited . men surrounded the halls of both branches, ( and bloodshed was several times threatened, j When the House convened, in order to . stave off the Thorne Distillers' bill, those opposed to it demanded the consideration of j the Dunlap-Kuufman contest case as privileged matter. The vote was taken on the minority report s In favor of unseating Kaufman. It was ? adopted by a vote of 49 to 46. The final vote was then ordered on the majority report, as r amenJed by this minority unseating report. \ All the Democrats left the House. The la- t dies withdrew from the lobbies. Mr. Poor, j Populist, staid in and fifty-one members x were present. Mr. Kaufman was unseated, f The wildest excitement prevailed all over t the State House within a minute. Senators t huddled together in the middle of the Senate Chamber, while a mob crowded every entrance. The mob declared that Jame3 and "Walton should not go in. Several men with pistols stood at the door daring Republicans * to attempt to brint; them in. f The scene in the Senate immediately after ? the unseating of Kaufman and whileJames j and Walton were being unseated was riotous. The Lieutenant-Governor ignored the Clerk putting motions. He broke his gavel and ^ left his chair. The Democratic Senators ' shouted their votes like commanding officers * giving orders in battle. ' J Senator Holloway left the chamber and 1 threatened by his manner every Democrat who tried to make him go back. When the S Clerk announced the result of the vote on S the motion to unseat, Senators rushed to the c House door and the crowd roared like a 1 mob. The real danger was that an attempt r would be made to take James from the { House, into which he had slipped while being unseated, ttepromisuu ui? w nuum . not try to vote until a further settlement of , the matter. , Any attempt of Walton to force his way in j would undoubtedly have caused bloodshed. Dunlap refused to qualify. Senator Blackburn was in the crowd coun- { seling coolness. The crowd was furious 1 when it learned that James had already slipped into the House, and had done so c while he was being unseated in the Senate. ( Dunlap approached the door, but was waved I back. JSpealerBlapford, of the House, refused to j recognize the Senate, hoping that Dunlap h y would come in, but at 12:11 Lleutenant-Gov- 3 / ?rnor Worthington took the gavel from t r Speaker Blanford almost by force and called 3 / thf joint session to order. c The Chair ruled that the Democratic E Senate Clerk should call the Senate roll and the House Clerk the House rolL The roll * call was then begnn, the Republicans refraining from voting. There was a whisper that the Republicans misht at the last mo- * ment vote for Carlisle. c Eight or ten Democrats voted for Carlisle. The vote stood: Blackburn, 54; Carlisle, 10; I Buckner, 1. The Chair announced no quorum n voting. The session adjourned. The doors r were thrown open and the members filed out t and mingled with the crowd, all seemingly & in a good humor. 7 As Dunlap will not qualify as Kaufman's c successor, the joint session vote is again a tie. RHODE ISLAND DEMOCRATS. State Convention Nominates George L. J Littlcfleld tor Governor. ; The Rhode Island Democratic State Con vention was held in Musio Hall. Providence. ' Chairman Franklin P. Owen, of the ITemo- 3 cratic State Central Committee, called the j convention to order, and the roll of delegates was called by Clerk J. H. Conley. Bichard ] i P. Comstock was elected Chairman of the convention. Thomas H. Vance placed in nomination for Governor the name of George L. Little- ^ field, of Pawtucket. which nomination was unanimously ratified. The remainder of the ticket was nominated# A3 follows: Lieutenant-Governor, Augustus S. Miller, Providence: Secretary of State, George L. Church, of Tiverton; Attorney- jj General, George T. Erown. of Providence; ' General Treasurer, John G. Perry, o? South 1 Kingstown. 1 IOWA REPUBLICANS. Only One Plank in Their Platform, and Thxt is Allison for President. The Iowa Rspublican State Convention met in De? Moines to select delegates to the National Convention at St. Lcuis and to inaugurate the candidacy of Senator Allison for President. The convention was one of the largest ever held in the State. J. N. Bfildwin, of Council Bluffs, offered a resolution naming Senator John H. Gear, Congressmen W. P. Hepburn ana David B, Henderson, and J. S. Clarkson as delegatesat-large, and the resolution was carried unani imouslv. The resolutions are in th?> shape of an address to the country on the claims of Allison for the Presidential nomination. Tne platform, briefly, is the public record of Allison, with which alone the platform deals. i Found His Wile Standing l)ezd. ] Washington Johnson, of South Sixth 1 avenue. Mount Vernon. N. Y.. went out to j his bara. leaving his wife in the house pre- ^ paring breakfast. He was absent about flf- , teen minutes. When he returned he found HIS Wlie in IUS Iwicuucu sinuuiug mi-, uuu hand claspins the closet door and her head fallen forward. H* spots to her and she did not reply. When he approached her he found she was dead. Her death wa3 caused from heart disease. <v. The Monadnock "the Pride of the NaTjr." The monitor Monadnock has returned to Ban Francisco from its sea trial. It made 11?^ knots am behaved admirably. The commander said: "The vessel is a perfect type of its class and deserves to be called the pride of the navy." The machinery worked without a hitch, and the vessel proved to be a sood sea boat. ; ' Locomotive Explode.*; Four Men Killed. A locomotive on the Delaware, Susquehanna and Schuylkill Railroad blew up at Gum Run. Pt*nn!. killiue John Chamber?, Jona> StFwarr, Micha-M Boyle and Frank O'Douneii. an i injurinsWilliam Timony. Prominent l'eoplc. P;f!rnw:,:i> price* for r-hyins the piano at n private reception is $500 a minute. It was announced that President Cleveland and his family would make a tour of th? worid in 1C97 and 1893. Dr. W. G. Grace, the famous English cricketer, has received this year $12,000 in the shape of testimonials. The Queen of Italy is about to publish a > book of personal experiences in Alpine climbiutr. illustrated with drawings made by herself. * Ex-Queen Lilioukilana of Hawaii haa been "pardoned," but she is forbidden to leave the Island of Oa'uu without President Dole's qonsenr. fv., M/ . THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, *j Waihlnxton Item*. Pprm'or Hftar made an argument against the adoption of t'.in conference report on the Cuban resolutions, and Senator Allen Intro- 111 duced a joint resolution authorizing the President to investigate the present state of the war in Cuba, 'appropriating $10,000 for the inquiry President Cleveland left Washington on a *r uuiik-auvuilug The Postoffice Appropriation bill was passed by the House. The report of the Board of Engineers which inspected the proposed routes of the Nicaragua Canal was made public. The first instalment of Venezuela's case was presented to the Boundary Commission. Ground was broken for the first building of the American University in Washington. The President has approved the Military * Academy Appropriation bill, the Invalid jei Pension Appropriation bill and the bill au- jei thorizing a bridge across Lake St. Francis, Ark. Senator Chandler wants th? number of employes in the United States Senate reduced '01 and the expenses of that body cut down. ?o< The recent dock trial of the torpedo boat ?ia Ericsson at New London. Conn., insures the acceptance of that vessel by the Government. J. M. Housman, of Delaware, messenger in the office of the Solicitor of the Treasury, ? dropped dead at the Fifteenth street entrance of the Treasury Department. The Massachusetts delegation in Congress held a meeting, at which Senator Lodge presided. Resolutions were adopted eulogizng the late Governor Greanhalge. Senator Lodge and Representatives Knox, Apsley, Silletts, Barrett and At svood were appointed i committee to attend 1 he funeral. Secretary Herbert has ordered that hereifter but one schedule of wages be nald in iach navy yard. Secretary Lamont has approved the plans ecommended by a board of engineer officers or the construction of the new bridge across he East River from New York City to Jrooklyo. The plans provide that the m'ninum height of the structure shall be 135 eet in the cpntre at mean high tide, and for v* i distance of 200 feet on each side of the cen- S re. The pier-heads are to be 117 feet high. Domestic. Ohio Republicans indorsed McKinley for he Presidential nomination iu a platform ' avoring gold, silver and paper money, and selected a State ticket headed by Charies linney, of Scioto, for Secretary of State. General Calixto Garcia and six others, who vere associated with him in the steamship an, Jermuda expedition against Cuba, pleaded ^ lot sruilty in the United States Court, New fork City, to indictments charging a viola- tb< ion of the neutrality laws. 1 Lexow's Greater New York bill passed the me Senate at Albany, N. Y.. by a vpte of 38 to 8. foi Senator Lexow attacked Lieutenant-Govern- str >r Saxton for publishing his letter to the th< >? T> o /.nnanHHoHnn Vr, ,?5V. X?. *J, OtVX iO wwov?uuk?vU. T Tho storm which struck New York City nu noved out to sea, after a vain attempt to alt mitate the blizzard of 1888. sti A false report on the New York Stook Ex- 1191 ihange supposed to emanate from "insid- .j irs," put tobacco stock up to 82%, and those Jj" Tho were in the secret made about a million J?1 lollars on the turn. The State Bank of Bloomfleld, at Bloom- SQ) leld. Knox County, Neb., closed its doors. stc Jo statement was made. William G. Wattson, who was shot in his vol >fflce at Weehawken. N. J., by ex-Detective fro Clifford, died from his wounds at Roosevelt the lospital, New York City. be While Sergeant-at-Arms Reinhardt, of the roe lew York Assembly at Albany,'ana Door- Th :eeper Bauer were endeavoring to force As- ba< emblvman Otto Kempner, of New York City, Bd o take his seat by order of Speaker Fish, he 1 truck both of them. A scene of great ex- of ltement ensued, and in the end Mr. Kemp- tei ler carried his point. &u The Albion Paper Company, at Holyoke, a lass., Is in serious financial trouble. "? Of 105 counties in Kansas 104 elected Mctinley delegates to the State Republican j invention. mc Stephen Powell, a wealthy citizen of ha< lempstead, N, Y., was murdered and robbed iear his residence. Several men were arested on suspicion. ? The new religious movemeVw inaugurated y Commander and Mrs. T>allington Booth ras launched at an enthi siastic meeting in Jooper Union, New York City. Professor Pupin, of New York City, by use f the X ray, photographed seventy-four hots in a man's hand. William E. Brockway, counterfeiter, was entenc8d to ten years in prison and to pay , fine of $1000, in Trenton, N. J. His acomplices got four years. At Chicago, 111., James Hubert McYickor, or thirty-nine years proprietor of McYicker's Theatre, died of paralysis, the third stroke if twhich came upon him a month before. Ir. McVicker was seventy-four years of age. ^ Thousands attended the funeral of Mary ^5 iullivan. the murdered girl, in Paterson, J. J. The reward for the capture of the ^5 aurderer was increased to $5000. w In New York City, Charles A. Pa^hin, lorris Goldstein, Charles Murray and John Vcela were held in $15,000 ball each, charged *lth making and passing counterfeit two lollar bills. Major Heany, one of Dr. Jameson's close issociates in the famous raid, arrived at New fork from England on the St. Louis and vent at once to his family home in Baltinore, Md. Alger Vincont Allen, thirty years old, a CQt itudent in the Boston University Law School, ^ vas found dead in a room in Brigham's Ho- brf el, Boston. ^ The firm of Dan Talmaga's Sons made an pu issignmcnt at New York City. The firm is dai he biggest in th? rice business. The firm sw t-aa hw TAhn P T^onial anrl "Hnvlrl. The State Attorney-General of New York . 1 ias scoured the indictment of several men on he charge that they have sold and made Ma 'orged charters of associations for Fire rai Lloyds Association to evade the law. W. G. Wattson. Superintendent of the Hudson River division of the West Shore Railroad, was shot in his private office in :he station in WeehawkeD, N. J., by Detec:ive Edward Clifford, whom he had dis- i iharged for drunkenness. res th( Fovelcn Notes. tei OB Pending the arrival of the Peace Com- be< mission appointed by the President of Sal- soi i-ador, the Federal troops and the revolu- 0u lutionists in Nicaragua wiil desist from ac- ate live operations. Mr Captain-Genera! Weyler will remove his r. headquarters from Havana to Matanzas. The th( town of Mouteguelo was burned by insurg- ac! ents; the towns of Macagua and Pilotas were tio partially destroyed. Ob General Rafael Reyes, Colombian Minister of the Interior, has resigned his portfolio in a8 order that he may be eligible for election to the Vice-Prssidency. The republic is tranquil, aud precautions have been taken to P? preserve order. ,n Twenty-two countries have given notice of their intention to take part in the exhi- ^ bition to be held in Paris, France, in 1900. ex Emperor William of Germany conferred rlc upon Count Goluehowski. Austrian Minister of of Foreign Affairs, the decoration of the su Order of the Red Eagle. po About 200,000 Armenians are in a starving condition, aud are solely dependent for the re< necessaries of life uooa the charity of tuo he British and American public. th The three children of James Beausoliel were locked in the house u few miles fro? ^ PenetanguisheDe, Canada, while the parents went to see a neighbor. Shortly after the 'u house took fire. an<t be'ore assistant could ",c be giveu the children were burned to death. tn I fit was reported in Mudrid that the re'oeU lJ under Gomez and Maceo were advancing upon Havana and 'hat a great battle seemed imminent. Isaac Elchonon, chief Rabbi of the Hebrew Church in Russv*, died in Kovno. Joseph Chamoeriain has appointed Sir Ilichard Edward Rowley Martin Administra- cr tor of Police in Bechuanaland, Motabele- * land and Mashonaland, to succeed Dr. rj Jameson. The Administrator will bs solely responsible to the government, ana not iu the British South Africa Company. He hus le served in South Africa lor many years. j? Dr. Jameson and his officers in the Transvaal raid were arraigned in the Bow Street Court, London; there was no popular demonstration; the hearing was adjourned for le< a week. ?.c tn st \ ' I MTl-ilEBfllM MOT. e United States Consul's House ir Bilbao, Spain, Stoned, [BATING CUBAN RESOLUTIONS e Spanish Police Swept Aside by a Mol of Many Thousand Men?An Attac) Upon the Consnlate Prevented and th Rioters Finally Dispelled?Ministe Taylor's Precautions. Jilbao, Spain. Maroh 10.?Fully 12,00 sons took part in an anti-Amerioan rio :o Sunday afternoon. The demonstratioi s started by a group of young men at i oet corner who began cheering ever; dier who passed by. Their oonduct wa >n imitated by other groups. Some musi D3 who refused to repeat the Nations them were hustled, beaten and otherwls treated. The excitement increased rapid!; MENELEK II., KING OF 2 i riotous groups formed In the mai: eets, cheering for 8paln and d6nouncin 5 United States. Che authorities did everything possible t iintnin nrHfir. Almost the entire colic :ce was turj.ed out 8j soon as the demon ation assumed a threatening aspect, an i rioters were dispersed again and again entually. however, the crowds became s merous and excited that the police wer nost helpless. The mob was armed wit] oks aud cudgels and the police were swep Ide. La immense crowd then got together oi j leading thoroughfare, and marohe ward the residence of the United Btate nsul, shouting "Long live 8palnl" "Dowi th the Yankeeal" On the way to the Con t's house the members of the mob hurlei mes through the windows of stores oni ,vate residences, cvorturned a number o txioles, pulled several mounted polioeme; im their horses, and generally behaved L ) most riotous manner. Stores supposed t American or dealing In American good solved the most attention from the mot e windows of the Consul's house wer ily shattered, although the police defend the building. a A In fVi A LilO LUUU IUUU ^iUUUUuuu ua iuw vu?w>?v. the United States consulate, evidently in idlng to stone that building also, but th thoritles bad taken the precaution tosen< trong force of pollco to guard It Th ters were dispersed, yelling and hootlnj the authorities and shouting "Down wit: ) Yankee?!" and "Long live Spain!" During the whole alternoon there wa ire or less disorder, and after the mob i been quieted down and the polioe ha SEXOB CAKOYAS DEL CASTILLO. (Spanish Prime Minister.) 1 been recalled, It was decided to kee :h the police proper aad the gendarme lflned to barracks until further orders, a re seemed to be danger of another out sab of popular fury. Che united States consulate is no^ arded by ti strong detachment of gen rmes armed with carbines, revolvers, am ords. They have instructions to proteo > consulate at any cost. Hr.sHann's Taylor, th? American Minis , is aoout to send his family away frot idrid. Their baggage was taken to th Iway station. SENATOR HALE CALLS A HALT, rone Opposition Developed to the Cnbn KflRolationa. iVashinotox, D. C., March 10.?ThoHous lolutions recognizing the belligerency c ) Cuban insurgents and suggesting the is vention of the United Statoa to secure rec Qitlon of Oubaa independence, which hai jn acceptod by tho Senate conferees, me ne opposition In tho Senate wheu a vigor 9 fire on them was opened by two Sen )rs from New England, Mr. Hale, o kiue, and Mr. Hoar, of Massachusetts. Chore wore largo crowds in tne galleries n ) opening of thu session in anticipation o :ion and diaoussion on the Cuban rosolu us. At 1.10 p. m. Mr. Sherman (Itep. ilo) called up tho conference report . Hoar offered a resolution, which wa reed to, requesting the President to com inlcate to the Senate (so far ascompatibl th the public Interests) all tho facts in hi ssesslon relating to the existing oontllc the Island of Cuba, and especially sue] affect the interests and duty c a United 8tat es in the premises, Mr. Hon nmnii n. ilpiMrtnd fUsnoaltion to Question th pedienoy of recognizing the belligeren ?hts ot ttie insuqjents in Cuba on the stat facts so far presented to Congress. H ggested that further consideration be posl ned until April 6. Mr. Hale, for the opponents ot Cuba cognition, made a speech, nearly tw >urs in length. Ho denied absolutely thr e situation in Cuba warranted a recoj tion of tha insurgents as belligerents, an toted General Orant'3 opinion of tho cor tions of war which prevailed in Cuba dui g tho previous insurrection. As soon i i concluded, nnd as it beenmo npparer at the Cuban question was to be laid asid r i be (lay, the crowds dispersed. Minor Mention. B^rbourviile, Ky., has twenty-two drun lers among its residents, and cballengt ?y town in the world to count as many i oportlon. The tallest stand pipe in New England wt impleted at Kennebunk, Me., a few daj co. It is 105 feet high and some 13,5C vets were used in its construction. Tho city of Des Moines, Iowa, after a Ion Kal flght, has compolled its gas corapan submit to a law obliging it to pay into tL ty treasury two per cent, of its not profit The Japannese of Hawaii are demandin at they shall be admitted to the prlv ges of citizenship, and that Jnpanei >ods should be admitted into Hawaii o e same terms as goo is from the Unite ates. THE ITALIAN CRISIS. 1 Official Reports Show That the- Abysslnlana Lost Heavily. The official reports of the battle fought on 1 March 1 between the Italians and Abysslnians, at Adowa, confirms the previous reports of the heavy losses on both sides, those of the Abyssinians having been enormous. General Arlmondi was wounded and is a prisoner in the hands of the Abyssinlans. In nViariionna +r> th? order of General Baldissera. Kassala has been evacuated by the Italians. General P.icotti, Italian Minister of War, ' has abandoned his proposed reduction ot the t army corps. It is probable that Signor Yenosta will become Minister of Foreign AfB fairs. r King Humbert ordered the abandonment of the fetes which it was proposed to hold on the fifty-second anniversary of His n Majesty's birth, March 14. The Austrian Premier visited Berlin to t confer with Prince von Hohenlohe, the Gern man Imperial Chancellor, In regard to the a situation In Italy as affecting the alliance between Germany. Austria and Italy. Ems' peror William, who will shortly go on a s oruise in the Mediterranean, will meet King Humbert at Naples, instead of Genoa, as has 1 been announced. C i 0 n Menelok II., Emperor of Shoa and Ahysy sinia, King of Kings in all Africa and mon w ' <il /LBYSSINIA, AND Hia QUEEN. a arch of Ethiopia, is the man who is causing g all the trouble to Italy by not allowing that country to "protect" him. This great ruler is, perhaps, the most interesting monarch in 0 all the world. He claims to be a line e descendant of the famous Queen of i- Shebu and that his realms are 1 the famous Ophir of the Soriptures. i. He was born in 1848 in his .father's kingdom 0 of Shoa. His mother was a beggar whom e the King took a fancy to and married. He ti ruled in Bhoa after having spent his youth In t all sorts of wild Adventures, and when King John of Abyssinia died in 1889 Menellk a marched to Abyssinia, had himself orowned 1 Emperor of Abyaslnla?and Shoa and prois claimed himself King of Kings. He was ena abled to do this with Italian Interference, i. but he later flung aside this alliance because, 1 as he said, Iialy desired to absorb his king* 1 dom. The country he rules !s very rich in f gold, luxuriant In vegetation and in etery a way a deelrable place. Ita population is a 8,000,000. 0 1 UPRISING IN ST. KITTS. ? Laborers Revolt Throughout the Little Island. 1 G. Osborne Grant, General Secrelary of 0 the Loyal Gulanise Union of America, re1 ceivod the following fro:? St. Kitta, the 0 British island In the northern part of the ? Lesser Antilles! V A general strike took plooe in the West Indian inland of St. Kltts among the boatmen, * porters and estate laborers, whloh oulmlnatd ed In a general riot throughout the island. The principal buildings were destroyed by fire, set by the rioters. Stores wero looted of their stook, sugar plantation managers and overaeere were severely beaten, and a good many of them killed, Somo had to escnpo aboard vessels lying in jport in order to save their lives. Sugat oane fields wore burned In all the parish o?. The damage done to property is considerable, the sugar industry Is Jeopardized, and the whole1 island is in a state of bankruptcy. Business is completely suspended. The rioters, who were compelled to retreat before the British marines and blue Jackets, hare Joined In the country districts in beat* ing and killing sugar planters nnd destroy* lng machinery, buildings nnd cane fields on sugar estates. The trouble Is due to low wages. There are no troops In St. Kilts, with the excepi tlon of a corps of volunteers, who are Insufficient to handle tho riot St. Lucia is the nearest military station where troops can be obtained, and the authorities telegraphed there for a dctachment of tho First West Indian Iteglment, whloh was expected to arrivo in time to save tho island from entire destruction. >"o IIopo for Din. Maybriclr. Sir Matthew White Ridley, the British . Homo Secretary, after a careful examination p of the additional evldenoe submitted to him, 0 tins decided" that no alteration should be s made in the sentence imposed on Mrs. Florence Mavbrlek. tho Amorlcan woman, who Is undergoing life Imprisonment on conviction 7 or ImvJug poisonoil hor husband, a Liverpool . merchant, some years ago. I ? t Olft From Old to Kerr IJernc. Mr. J. B. Ploda, tho Swiss Minislor to the n Unltod States, rieilod New Kerne, N. C., as 0 its guest, and nt tho City Hall presontod a handsome silk flag. It was the special gift of the city of Eerde, Switzerland. At the eonoluslon of the presentation a public reception was givon to Mr. Pioda, wbloh was n attended by p9rsou9 of prominonoo from many parts of tho State. o if A Kentucky Senator Die*. l" Senator Rosoll Welssinger, Democrat, of ? Louisville, Ky., died at Frankfort, of pneu,t monia. He was the leader of thoaoundv money Democrats who were standing out h against Blaokburu. The vaoancy oaused by f his death cmnot be filled in time ior the successor to take his seat. The United States ,t Snnatoral contest was thus further compllif cated. llattla In Sumatra. f A Dutch military patrol has been attaoked 9 by the Atehineso near Anagaloeny, Island of e Sumatra. Eight Dutch soldiers were killod s and five officers and twenty-one men were t wounded, Tho Atehlne9o lost six of their (j leaders ana tniny-soven mea kiuuu uuu if wounded, ? Saw Her Child Devoured. >t Mrs. Jodon, a farmer's wife, of Geneva, 0 Ala., was burning trash when a spark ig? nlted her skirt and she wa9 fatally burned. While she lay helpless and dying hogs de? n voured her two-montbs-old child, wbloh 0 she had laid on tho grouud while she lt worked. A Ulnnlnc Runs Amuck. d A manlae who alighted from a train at > Broskville, Canada, shot oight men. Two men. Mooro and Boyd, are dead, and Chief of Poilco IIoso was fatally injured. Tho maniac himself xvas shot througli tho body and is now lu jail. ^ Seven New Women In Oklahoma. ?s Robert Smartwood, of Boavor City, Oklau homa, formerly No Man's Land, reports the organization there of a c.ittlo company by ' "* l?.? AttAMrt (n fKft is seven youug w?;uvu luuuucis m uumwi '3 schooLs. Euoh has filed a claim on a quarter 0 section or bottom luud and they now propose to consolidate tholr interests and engage In g tbe cr.ttle-ntfslug business. Beaver County y was formerly tho rendezvous of outlaws of l0 the worst class. s. ? g Consul-Ocneral Wlllinuas Ketlgns. 1- It is now ascertained that United States ;? Consul-Qoaeral Williams to Cuba has re,j signed, and that his resignation has reached the State Department at Washlngtqji. HE DIED CAME. A Desperate Outlaw Holds Trro T,. sand Men at Bay. Popalons Centre County, in the very he of Pennsylvania, was the theater of a tragi which the awful annate of early fronl life cannot outrival. The thunder dynamite bombs mingled with the cr of Winchesters and shotguns, sud the sky1 lurid with the glare of fire, a'..1 this i frenzied battle for a human life! For ho a desperate outlaw, barricaded in his villi home, and aided by his wife and childi held at bay a mob of 2000 furious and \ armed men, and in the end he proved victor. In the extreme eastern part of the coui lies Woodward, a village. William Etl ger. long known as a man wno would h tate at nothing, lived there, but he wa fugitive from justice. Constable Barner learned that the fuglt had surreptitiously slipped down to nome. tie took juepunes iuoiz uuu uua man with him to arrest the man. T1 reached the little shanty, to find Etlin with bis wife, their three-year-old daugt and two-year-old son, barricaded in the i ond story. They went upstairs and broke in a pane the door. Barner had crawlcd half i through the apertum when a shot rang fi Etlinger's gun, and the constable fell d with a bullet in his head. His deputies ] In terror. The news spread quickly, and the wli town turned out. Men gathered up all Are arms they could And. and ran for Etlinger house, but shots from the out and his wife warned them not to get too cU During the afternoon Etlinger shot Frn Guiswhite, who was sicfc in his house n door, one buokshot taking effect in the hei the other in the shoulder. A perfect fusillade was kept up betwi him and the guard, which was constai beincr angmented until about 2000 were hand and fully 509 shots had been fired fore dark. Then Mrs. Etlinger was seen to appro a window and light a fuse attaohed 1 dynamite bomb which she intended to 1 into the crowd. Some one fired at the fi: and she threw up her hands and fell bs ward. Eventually it was determined to burn villnin out. The torch was applied to liouse. The crowd, in breathless excitem watched the creeping flames and wa the denouement. They did not have loni wait. The woman with her two child was soon forced to flee to escape death the flames, but Etlinger lingered behind. It was thought he intended to die in house, but just when the building was at to collapse ho appeared at the cellar d The officers called to him to surrender, did not answer, but with a determina begotten by despair put a pistol to his b and blew out his brains. The body of constable was then recovered from the bi ing building. CRISPI'S CABINET OUT. Resignation* Announced, Amid Wild planse, In the Chamber. Beports from every city and town of coi quence throughout Italy show that the cltement caused by the Italian reverse Abys3inia displays no sign of waning, the contrary, in many places it grows grei as the meagre details of the defeat fl through the press from official sources. F1UHCE800 CBIBPI. (Resigned 'as Premier of the Italian Mi try.) Prime Minister Crispi and the other m hers of the Cabinet have been compelled retire from office, that fact having been aounced in the ' Chamber of Deputies Rome amid a scene that can fittingly be jcribed as pandemonium. The situation in Rome is so critical I the troops have been confined to their 1 racks, a measure of precaution that will able them to be hastily dispatched' to part of the city should their services be i jssary to quell disturbances. The univer has been closed, the authorities fearing 1 the hot-headed students would attempl make a demonstration, which, in the pre: :ondition of the popular temper, might J to serious rioting. Daspite the precaut taken, however, there were sever.il disti ances. but the police were able to handle 3rowas without calling upon the military aid. A number-of arrests were made for orderly conduct. The popular indignation is directed aga Signor Crispi and the other Ministers, v rightly or wrongly, are held to be respo ble for tho disgrace that has befallen Italian arms. American Arrested in the Transvaal Gardner Williams, ail American manf of tho De Beers Mines., was arrested at Instance of the Government of Cape Col< on the charge of havingsupplied arras tc Uitlanders of the Band to be used in t threatened revolt against the Goveramei tho Transvaal. It is said that Williams : supplies of arms to Johannesburg in tru the weapons beinp placed in the bottoi the trucks aud thun covered with c Williams was admitted to bail in the sui 85000. ? An Attack on the President. Mr. Hartman (Mont.) made an at: on President Cleveland in the House Representatives at Washington for his sp< before the Presbyterian Home Mission Be in New York, which, he declared, wh ainndop on Western States, and was era Improper. Mr. Powers fVt.) and Mr. U fMd.) nttempted to call'Mr. Hartmai order, but Mr. Hepburn, in the chair, dined to interfere. In concluding his atti Mr. Hurtmann declared that the grea need for the missionary existed in the W House. Whole Family Cremated. Fire destroyed the house of G. Oldhou: carpenter, who Uve3 about flvo miles fj A.lma, Wis. The entire family, cousistin Mr. and Mrs. Oldhouse and live child were burned to death. The Are is thoi to have been caused by the explosion c lamp. TVolcott Becoincs Governor. Lieutenant-Governor Wolcott issuec proclamation in Bostcn announc.ng his sumption, according to the Constitution the duties and powers of Governor of Ma chusettg. to succeed the late Gover Greeahulge. American Sheep for South Africa. Charles W. Mason, of* New Haven, shipped from New York flfty line wool At ican Merino sheep to South Africa, for trade in that country, where they brie big price In gold. Sheep of this variety Vermont Morgan stallions find re: ysale UfiiuHinr* T\nrnrw#>Q_ ^ 81,900,000 for German Warships. The German Reichstag hag appropria about $1,300,000 for four cruisers and s eral torpedo boats after the Minister Foreign Affairs disclaimed that the Qove ment proposes a big navy programme. i riiiimms7: iart 5dy Marches Around and Among Spanish 1 of Forces With Ease. J ack _____ i E MACEO'S BRILLIANT MANEUVER, j f en. v j veil The Latest Fiasco of the Spanish Cam- j the . 4 palgn?The Senate and Honse Con- j nty ferees Agree on Resolutions Favoring f the Acknowledgment of Belligerency?* 3 a Spain's Probable Action. fi ive Havana., Cuba, March 7.?Maximo Gomez, | his the Insurgent Commander-in-Chief, In the y 'er" recent movement of the main body of patriots } ger east from Havana province across Matanzas | iter to the line of Santa Clara and then back to ) 5ec* the centre of Havana province, again dls- f ,j 0{ played the genius which has made his mill- ' vay tary operations remarkable. j :om General Weyler, the Captain-General of j Cuba, with more troops, better organization, ] ? j th A>TONIO MACEO. ira* (Second in command in the Cuban Army.) more thorough preparation tor transportation, and a larger cavalry force than JlarAp. timez Campos had, has been outgeneralled by the Insurgent chief. Weyler's first failure was made when < ise" Maceo was allowed to enter Havana .prov- , er- ince from Plnar del Rio and effect a junction' i in with Gomez, in spite of the wall of men across 0n the island. Then all available troops were sent out to strenghen the columns which ] 1.ter were closing in on the twe patriot leaders, liter within twenty miles of this olty. Gomez countermarched to the middle of ~~~ Matanaas province, where he stopped to sea ? that the estates should not obey Weyler's ] orders to grind cane. Those found to be preparing had their cane burned, Maceo re- 1 turned to Havana province. He brought i with him his own oolumn of about 5000 men ! and as many more belonging to the column from the orient whloh have been moving west for about a month. These forces, added ' to those which remained in this province, 1 make the situation more serious here than 1 ever before. The outposts of the enemy are within ten miles of the city. < The Government holds nearly every railroad town, although most of these ->wns ( have been entered and partially t med down. Outside the fortified towns in this * province are many small towns which have been occupied by looal bands of insurgents for weeks. The Cubans melt away on the i approaoh of a large column of Spanish f troops, but reapnear when the Spanish go. 1 Gomez, In a talk with an American planter i recently, said: j "I divide the war into three periods: that j ofinvaslon^thatof occupation, and that of t i expulsion. wearenowinthesecondjperiod." 1 \ He alluded to his march westward, and to < ^ that ot Maceo through Pinar del Bio, as the ; invasion. His people certainly occupy a j large portion of tne territory of Cuba now. | How he proposes to expel the Spaniards he ] did not say. ] nls. "DEATH TO THE YANKEES!" A Mob of 3000 in Valencia Shout Their em- Denunciation# of Ua. L to Madbtd, Spain,Mafoh 7.?The demonstra- < i at tions in Valencia continue. A mob number- < de-- lug fully 8000 paraded the streets shoating ' "Death to the Yankees!" and in other ways j 3ar- showing their disapproval of the attitude of j en- the United States on the Cuban question, any The crowd proceeded to the French con- < lec- sulate and cheered enthusiastically for 1 slty France, this action being due to the belief l :hat that France would actively assi3t Spain in ' r ornnt nt t-pniihlB with America. The 3ent French Consul appeared on a balcony and lead bowed his acknowledgments. ions The reports of anti-Spanish manifestations arb- in the United States have added greatly to the the excitement in the large cities and towns. < ' for j d*9" Senate! and Bonce Agree. inst Washington, D. C., March 7.?The Senate < rho, and House conferees on the Cuban resolu- i nsi- tions agreed to the House resolutions t the without change. Mr. Sherman, Chair- | man of the Committee Ou Foreign Relations, 1 afterward presented the report to the Senate. < The report recommends that "the Senate t recede from its disagreement to the amendiger ment of the House and agree to the same." the Mr. Sherman's pro{ )sitlon was agreed to, oay ana the conference report was made a > the special order. j heix ] *t of TVeyler Restricts His 01tlcer3. ] sent i cks Havana, Cuba, March 7.?Captain-General . n 0j Weyler has issued a circular to military com- , oke< manders instructing them not to arrest ( n 0i civilians for deportation except upon Indisputable proof of their connection with the insurrection. All officers making arrests based upon evidence given by^nterested persons will be held to a strict account, * tack < > of Spain Prepared War Vessels. *0C*| Madrid, Spain, Maroh 7.?The Spanish ] a ? Transatlantic Steamship Company are fit-. 1 f ting out eight vessels as fast cruisers, j !??'* Their speed is twentv knots, and ' !~ they will carry nine-inch and tenj inch puns, and also rapid flrers of smaller calibres. The Pelayo, Almirante, Oqaendo, iteai Vlzca,va anci Intent* Maria Teresa are to ' fchit' start for Cuba as soon as their preparations f have been completed. f I Armenian Massacres Have Ceased, ic, b A cable dispatch to Secretary Olney from rom Mr. Alexander W. Terrell, United States g of Minister at Constantinople, states that no 1 ren, general massacres bave occurred in the Sul- 1 ight tan's possessions for two months, and that ' >f a much confidence is felt that they have i ceased. 1 Kentucky Republicans Nominate Boyle, j ? At a caucus of the Republicans of the Kennc. tucky Legislature, St. John Boyle, of Louis \ 0{ ville, a street railway owner and receiver of ( 'sa. the Chesapeake, Ohio and Southwestern nor Railroad, was nominated for United States Senator by acclamation. " , The Labor "World. Vt., The Brotherhood of Carpenters has a memaer bership of 60,000, I hia Diamond Workers' Union withdrew from < ig a the Central Labor Union. s aud Meta! Polishers and Buffers' Union joined f for the Building Trade Section. 1 Franklin Association of Pressmen and 1 Feeders of New Kork City intend to quit the ( j K. of L. ? . German painters held a meeting in New York: Citv, and advocated a State safety scaf)ev? folc.ing bill for Lithographers were successful in their genrn eral strike for increased wages in St. Louis. JJoston, Chicago and Rochester. < '" ' ' : ' " 1>EMONSTRATIVE YOUNG AMERICA.' | College Students Kzpreu Their Views on j Oar Btbilou With Spain* At Passaic, N. J., after a big entertainment n Whitehead's Opera House, a crowd of fifty, >r more young men, many of them meo- . j >ere of the high sohool cadet corps, narched to avenue and Washington )Iace, where, with loud cheers and shoots or the Stars and Stripes and with hisses ind groans for Spain they raised a Spanish lag In the air and set It on Are. Then, singng "The Bed, White and Blue" and '.'Amerca," the voung men stood around while the lag slowly burned to ashes. An American lag was waved during the burning of the oreign flag. At Chicago, Alfonso, King of Spain, was langed in efflgy In the vicinity of Madison . itreet and Campbell avenue. The crowd of. tnthuslaetia young persons who performed1 75 he Job escaped identification. The figure vas found suspended from a rope which! ' vas thrown over a telephone wire. Thai' ;-J ifflgy hung fifteen feet in the air. Upon! t was this Inscription. "Alfonso 13th. iing of. 8paln. Slo Semper TyrannisI" ; Students at Northwestern University tore np he Spanish flag. I President Patton, of Princeton (N. J.) Col-, lege, says the alleged demonstration there. igalnst Spain was merely the nonsensical: prank of a handful of Jocular students, j There was, he assertB, no feeling and the ' affair was most trivial. THE NATIONAL FLAG. I Secretaries Lamont and Herbert Amee to' * the Arrangement of the 45 Stars. * With the approval of the President, publicity was given to the design agreed on be* tween Secretary Lamont and Secretary Ber-. bert for the arrangement of the forty-five stars in the National flag made necessary by the admission of Utah to Statehood. I rhe new arrangement, will be officially Inaugurated in the Army and Navy on July 1 next. Under the present arrangement the stare are in six rows, the upper and lower rows of eight stare each, ana the other rowB ot seven stare eaoh. Tne design agreed on by Secretaries Lamont and Herbert also arranges the stare In six rows, the first, third ind fifth of eight stars each, and the second, fourth and sixth of seven stars each, Noi new arrangement will be necessary through the admission of new States, as additional stars can be added te the second, fourth and sixth rows without disturbing the uniformity of the design. Heretofore the Navy Department ha9 not conformed, strictly to any official design In the arrangenent of the field, but the design prepared by 3ecretaries Lamont and Herbert will be adhered to in all naval Bogs. KEPT HIS PROMISE. g In Instance of Strict Honesty Under Try. Ing Circumstances. An Instance of strict honesty under trying alrcumstanoes is reported from Connecticut.; L police officer started from Danbury for Bridgeport on a railway train the other day with a prisoner sentenced to serve thirty days In the Bridgeport jail for drunkenness. rhe prisoner promised that If the officer would spare him the Indignity of the handcuffs he would go to jail peaceably. At South Norwalk there was a change of cars, and in the shuffle the officer became separated from his prisoner. The offloer started on a hunt all over the town for the supposed escaped prisoner. The latter, however, bad taken the right train and was on his way to Bridgeport. When the prisoner reached Bridgeport he hung round the station an . hour or two waiting for the offloer to oatoh ap with him and wondering what had besome of him, and then walked oVer to the fall and surrendered himself, explaining the slrcumstances. It Is possible that his honesty will have the effect of shortening his sen tence considerably. Reproved for Not Shooting. After the Phillips divorce cose terminated in the Olroult Oonrt In Kansas City, Mo., the spectators were astonished to hear Judge (V. J. Henry reprove the defendant, Balling L Phillips, for not using a gun to defend ills honor. There upon the plaintiff, Mrs. Het:le B. Phillips, fainted ana was carried from .he room. Tne defendant, Balling A. Phillips, tvas shown to De the injured party and received the decree. In giving his decision Judge Henry said: "The only fault I con 2nd with you, lir. Phillips, is that you have Seen too much inclined to lenienoy. If you aad taken a shotgun and vindicated the honor of your home you would stand better, before this court and in the community." ( For Peace la Nicaragua. Franoisco Boca, President of the revolutionary government of Nicaragua, has deserted. and he held General Ortise responsible for the terrible defeat of tne rebels at Nagarote. Boca also asked the President of San Salvador to Interfere in the Interests of peace. President Zelaya wants the complete surrender of the rebels. He guarantees the lives of the men, except as to military leaders, who will be Viw a <wnmartial. The rebels must M1VU KfJ U vwua v ..w. pay the expenses of the campaign, delivering up all arms. Belief for Farmers. j The report of the British Commission of Agriculture has been made public. It reo> ammends the remission of seventy-five per cent, cf the rates on agricultural land, a system of Government loans, ind farming Improvements. The Badi:al minority on the Commission sign i separate report. They declare that the rerait of the adoption of the suggestions of the majority will mean that $16.0 0,000 shall t>e annually given as State relief. Land5wners, they declare, should bear their share of local burdens. Lover* Die Together. At Oakland, Cal, because of parental obectlons to their proposed marriage, Diana t>acheco, eighteen years oid, and her lover, Edward Haok, aged twenty, oled together in 4 room at a lodging house. The bodies were lisoovered side bysldo, Hack having first ihot hi* sweetheart through the heart and hen sent a bullet through his own. Glanders Among Americas Hortet. Air. W. H. Montague, Canadian Minister if Agriculture, has been Informed of the ar rival in England of a number of American lorses that were suffering from glanders. Se has cabled to Ottawa asking that all lorses exported from the Dominion be subected to a veterinary examination. French Sailors Cheer. The sailors of the French warship Drome, it Malaga, paraded the streeta singing the Spanish National anthem and the "Martel liaise," and cheering for both France and Spain. "Railroad Bill" Shot Dead. "Railroad Bill," the terror of Louisville fl ind Nashville Railroad train hands, was I tilled in a store at Atmore, 8outh Alabama 1 jy thiee deputy sheriffs. He has murdered I i sheriff and a half dozen train hands In the I jast three years. I Boycotting American Ship*. I The steamship Whitney arrived at Key I 'Test, Fla., from Havana in ballast. The I Captain reports that the merchants of Cuba ire holding meetings to protest against the H mportation of merchaudise In American Q vessels. Telegraph Operator Steals 310,000. fl John R. Pierce, telegraph oper ator for the >ookmaldng firm of Sol. Sharpe & Co., of I Covington, Ky., got the combination of the I iafe from Cashier Payne upon a forged order rom Sharpe, and took $6000 from the strong B )ox. He drew $1000 from the bank with vhich SharDe did business upon a forged fl iheok. It 19 supposed he went to Canada aid sailed for Europe. Weyler's Proclamation. Captain-General Weyler, of Cuba, Issued i proclamation giving the rebels fifteen lays In which to surrender or be treated ki bandits.