c t ti XX p, tl P; ai K. fo' ;i t5cl I poj tee sta: pattsmoutli Jourmil , C "Y. KILE 11 M A?i. FablUher. rLAlTsMGUTII. : NKWIASKV The IsTews Condensed. Important ln!e!!igence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Regular Session. The senate oa the 5th received the nomina tor. of Seneca Hazletoa. of Vermont, for tnln-itt-r to Venezuela. anJ Georce Keenan, of Wis t.ii;ia, fur consul to Bremen. No business of Importance was trar.3aetsd....The house was not in session. IN executive session the Chinese treaty was til. !eJ for six hours in the senate on the 7th. t-n.ui.cr McPherNon introduced a M-l for the Tr.vl of Ri-ar Admiral Stanton and the oCloers av.l enlisted men of the wrecked Kearsurgc. tT.ator Ix! Introduced an amendment to tlie tariff bill providing that as against Great Iir:ta:n or any of her colonies a duty double the amount imposed in the proponed tariff bill sha 1 be levied and a duty of 35 per cent en all BriKW oa the froo list.... In thw house the JCew York and New Jersey bridge till was passed. A resolution was Introduced making it -.u order to amend any genvrul appropriation bill so as to reduce or repeal the bounty and tut t-irilf on sugar, or either of tliem. i:: the senate the new tariff bill was briefly tTsciis.-ed on the 9th la the house Mr. Hatch icp.n ied his anti-option bill and the naval ap trcDiMinon bill was called up and briefly ex p: .ii.ea in some of Us parts. Os the Sth the tariff bill was discussed In the senate and during the debate Senator Mills (Tex. t snnounced that under no circumstances -would he supporfthe amendments proposed by the compromise bill In the house the bid cuihfr.ziug the construction of a bridge across tlie Mississippi river at St. Louis was passed tn.d a bill was favorably reported by Mr. Springer (111.) to suspend the taxation or 10 per cat on state bank issues. Alter hearin? Gen. Coxev the committee on labor decided to re port a rsjlutioa for a joint investigation by a tpecial committee of the senate and house of tl:e Coxey movement and the depressed condi tion of labor la general Is the senate on the 10th, John Patton, Jr., the new senator from Michigan, took the oath cl ofSce to succeed the late Senator Stock bridge Tlie resolution to investigate the al luded 'police clubbing. May 1, was discussed, but no ac.ion was taken. The tariff bill was lurtaer considered.... In the house a bill was introduced for pensions at the rate of one cent pt r day for each day ofrservice and one for;a currency commission to be composed of fifteen persons, not more than seven to be bankers, to investigate the currency question and report to c nress in December. Mr. .Taibot briefly an nounced the death of JMs colleague, R. F. Brat tan, of Maryland, and the customary resolu tions were adopted. DOMESTIC. Rev. T. DenYitt Talmage completed his twenty-five years of continuous service as pastor of the Brooklyn taber nacle. Miss Florence Kelly, inspector of Illinois factories, reports having found in five months 0,570 boys and girls un der 10 at work. The W. '. White.y reaper and mower works at Muncie, Ind., were destroyed by fire, the loss being S245.000, with no insurance. A band of kidnapers was supposed to be at work in St. Joseph. Mo., as five children had disappeared within two days. Tahoe City", on the shore of Lake Tahoe, CaL, consisting; of about fifty houses, two hotels, stores, etc, was de stroyed by fire. Twelve indictments were returned by the grand jury as a result of the in vestigation into alleged election frauds in Chicago. A hi.'T at Miles switch, near El dorado, Ark., in which was a negro sick with smallpox, was burned by a mob and the colored man was cre mated. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 7th was: Wheat, 65,15S,000 bushels; corn. 10.353,000 bush els; oats, 2,659,000 bushels; rye, 352,000 bushels; barley, 225,000 bushels. Col. J. A. Watrois. commander of the Wisconsin G. A. R-, charges that money sent from the north to the Rich mond (Va.) post for use in decorating soldiers' graves has been diverted to other purposes. Charles Craglv, John Ilutton and William Dindgrove, papermakers, were drowned in Lake Winnebago, Wis., while fishing. Uxe.mpi.oted laboring men threat ened to burn the business portion of Anderson, Ind., unless given aid imme diately. II. A. Hill, the famous trick bicycle rider, with his manager, Eugene Hol tier, started from the city hall in New York on a bicycle for a trip around the world. Hannibal Pcrcell, aged 82, and Benjamin Simons, aged engaged in a half-mile foot race at Logansport for $100 and the championship of Indiana. The former won in 5 minutes and 58 (seconds. The fire loss of the United States and Canada for the month of April, as reported, amounted to $11,540,000, against ?i4,ib'J,yuo during the same period in 1893. Miles C Mats and his wife died within ten hours of each other at Van- dalia, I1L They had been married just one month, and both were taken sick a week ago on the same day. The State national bank at Wichita, Kan., suspended, with deposits of S-!07,- 000 and assets of (400.000. The steamship La Touraine made the trip from New York to Queenstown in five days and sixteen hours, the short est time on record. The work of the senate special com mittee on the tariff bill was completed and it was reported to the full commit tee. Fearing he would be hanged for using a canceled postage stamp, a (swede named Johnson drowned him self in Boston harbor. A. N. ScncsTEJt & Co., wholesale deal ers in clothing at St, Joseph. Ma, failed with liabilities placed at $500,000. t avokable crop reports were re ceived at Washington from all sections of the country except the Pacific coast and the southern portion of the cotton region. Organization of the state constitu tional convention was affected at Al bany, N. Y., by the election of Joseph II. Choate as president. Refusing to obey a request to go around La Porte, Ind., Gen. Randall and his staff were put in jail. A de termined effort was being made to nreak up the army. Miss Della Frank, of Lima, O., who tried to commit suicide a week ago be cause of her poverty, has fallen heir to 59,000. Gov. Jonas Wolf, of the Chickasaw nation, was indicted by the Chickasaw grand jury upon the charge of embez zling between ?25,000 and 475,000 of the per capita funds. The village of Pawnee, I1L, was nearly wiped out by an incendiary fire. Coxkv, Browne and Jones, the com monweal leaders, were found guilty in Washington of violating the law. A motion for a new trial was entered. Turks convicts in the state prison at Jackson. Mich., overpowered a guard and tried to blow down the wull with dynamite. A catastrophe was narow ly averted. Discoverv of irregularities at iioston impelled Secretary Carlisle to order an accounting of stocK in all the bonded warehouses of the country. William Crawford shot and killed Jessie Lowery and himself at Jackson ville, O. They were lovers, but he was out of employment and despondent. Col. Carpenter and Capt, Logan, commanding an army at Sutter"s Fort, CaL, disappeared with t-300 of the in dustrial funds. At the annual meeting in St. Louis of the National Union of Chiefs of Police President Seavy, of Omaha, was reelected. Mrs. Moi.lie Page filed a bill for di vorce in Chicago from her husband in the morning, and meeting him in the afternoon was reconciled. The National Temperance society at its annual meeting in New York elected Mai Gen. O. O. Howard president. The patents on tj-pe distributing ma chines, seed planting machinery and fare registers have expired. Fire in the little village of Norway, Me., destroyed seventy dwellings and a number of business places, the total loss being f 500, 000. Commissioners of the district of Co lumbia declared the commonweal camp a nuisance and ordered its abatement within forty-eight hours. Gi'S Weisiirodt, treasurer of Middle- town, O., was said to have used 30,000 of the city's funds in trying to beat the races. Colorado commonwealers who stole a Missouri Pacific train got around ob structions placed on the track at two points, but were stopped by an engine and two cars piled up in a cut near Chivington. Kelly's army of commonwealers left Des Moines, la., on flatboats. At Sharon Springs Kan.. William McKinley and his son, Lewis, were lynched by a mob for inciting a young er son to murder Charles Carey, his brother-in-law. Kate cutting in the trans-Atlantic steerage business has reduced the price of passage from London to New York to 612.50. A battle occurred at Yakima, Wash., between deputies and commonwealers, in which two deputies were shot, one fatally. Albert Woodlet, a painter, in a fit of jealousy shot and killed Mrs. Jennie Buchanan at her home in Allegheny City, Pa., and then shot himself in the head. At the hotelmen's convention in Den ver the United States Hotel association was disbanded and the Hotelkeepers' National association was organized with D. C. Shears, of Cincinnati, as president. The Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers met in biennial session at St. Paul. A storm of unprecedented severity swept over Stillwater, Minn., and side walks and street pavings were torn up and a number of houses were under mined. The general federation of women's clubs met in biennial convention at Philadelphia. The report on mineral resources in the United States for iS?3 shows an ag gregate valuation for the product of SG09,5Si,0S3. a decline of . over 5175,000,- 000 from the previous year. Tue twenty-three members of Gal vin's commonweal army who were ar rested for attempting to capture a freight train were sentenced at Pitts burgh to twenty days in jail each. A careless man sitting on an oil barrel and smoking a pipe caused the destruction of 1 100, 000 worth of prop eriy on a dock in New York. John Porter, an Izard county (Ark.) farmer, tried to ford Strawberry river with a wagon and his wife and three children were drowned. E. B. White, a painter at Houston, Tex., killed his wife and himself. Passenger and freiarht trains collided at Menomonie Junction, Wis., and En gineer James Jeffreys was killed and four other men badly injured. Business houses and residences in Indianapolis were unroofed by a vio lent storm, and a child of S. J. Hunts man was killed by flying debris. Ex-County Recorder J. P. M. Good man died at Ashland, O., after having lived thirty-nine days without eating anything. Patriotic women unveiled a mjno lith to the memory of Mary Washing ton at Fredericksburg, Va. President Cleveland made an address. Sanders and his band of train steal ing Coxeyites surrendered to United States marshals at Scott City, Kan. Richard Croker has withdrawn from the leadership of Tammany hall in New York. Chief Hazen, of the secret service, will wage active war on firms counter feiting world's fair medals and di plomas for advertising purposes. Official figures show that nearly one-fourth of the old corn crop of Illi nois is yet in the hands of the pro ducers. Commonwealers at Elkhart, Ind., seized a Lake Shore train and started east. Seven men armed with Winchesters robbed the bank in South .vest Oity, Ma, of 4,00o, and shot four citizens.' Maj. J. W. Powell, at the head of the government geological survey, has resigned, owing to failing health. The total number of Chinese that registered throughout the country un der the exclusion act was 105,314. The total Chinese population by the census of 1890 was 107. 4S2. Women of the Ashland district In Kentucky have determined to petition Breckinridge to withdraw from the congressional race. The freight depot of the Pennsyl vania Railway company at Columbus, O., was burned, the loss being S10O.OO0. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL, At the republican congressional con vention in Geneva, 111., Congressman A. J. Hopkins was renominated. Horatio Nelson Clark. C3 years old. who discovered the spring of water in Andersonville prison during tbe war, was run over and killed by a train at Amsterdam, N. Y. Edward Lane was renominated for congress b3' the democrats of tho Eighteen Illinois district. Mrs. Sarah Ann Phcenix died at Del avan. Wis., aged Do years. She was tho widow of the man who founded tho town in 1S3G. Gen. Matthew M. Trlmbull died nt his residence in Chicago, aged 08. He did brilliant service in the civil war and had written exhaustively on the tarill and labor questions. Roll A Hart was nominated for con gress by the Democrats of the Ninth Kentucky district to succeed Congress man Thomas Paynter. The republicans of the Twenty-second Illinois district renominated George W. Smith, of Murphysboro, for congress. Finis E. Dow.nino was selected as a candidate for congress by the demo crats in the Sixteenth district of Illi nois. Congressman Robert F. Brattan died at his home in Princess Anne. Md., after a long illness. The republicans of the Fifth district of Indiana nominated Jesse Overstreet, of Franklin, for congress. Minnesota republicans will hold their state convention at St Paul on July 11, and the republicans of Mis souri will meet at Excelsior Springs on August 14. FOREIGN. The German steamship companies hive ordered the reduction of steerage passage rates from Italian ports to New York to SJO. Four persons were killed and thirty injured by an explosion of acids at the Cordite works near London. More than 200 Indians in the vicinity of Ungava bay in Labrador died of starvation during the past winter. A telegram from Buenos Ayres says that during the last ten 'days business failures have occurred there involving liabilities aggregating nearty 20.000, 000. A Canadian patrol vessel seized the American fishing boats Visitor and Leroy Brooks while cruising in domin ion waters. A telegram from Hakodate. Japan, reported the loss of the scaling schooner Matthew Turner with all on board, twenty-three in number. It was said that gold had been found in the state of Guerrero, Mexico, equal ling in extent the gold fields of South Africa. An earthquake destroyed the cities of Egido and Merida and several vil lages in Venezuela and 10,000 lives were said to have been lost. A vast nihilist conspiracy was said to have been discovered in St. Peters burg and 100 arrests had been made. The Kingston milL a large cotton spinning company at HulL, Eng., failed for 1400,000. Ex-President Caceres was reelected president of Peru. Elections in Hawaii for delegates t the constitutional convention -were orderly. The complexion of the con vention will be strongly coawrf itive. LATER. The tariff bill was considered in the United States senate on the 11th and several of the amendments were adopted. Senator Gallinger spoke on his amendment providing for a re taliatory clause against Canada but no action was taken. In the house the bill providing that the first session of each congress shall begin the first Tuesday after March 4, instead of waiting until the following December, and the second session to begin on the first Monday in January, instead of De cember, as at present, was favorably reporteiL The cieil appropriation bill was discussed. Two Coxeyites were shot and 100 captured in a fight with officers at North Yakima, Wash. There were 20tt business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 11th, against 233 the week previous and 257 in the corresponding time in 1S93. Thomas Burke, who was 100 years old last Christmas, died at his home in Merritt, Mich. "Tip." the ferocious elephant in Cen tral park. New York, who has de stroyed eight men, was killed by poi son by the authorities. In accordance with a resolution adopted hy the general grievance com mittee 3,500 operators at the Pullman car works in Chicago went on a strike. George Dunlat, crazy from alcohol, ism and confined in the bridewell in Chicago, beat his cellmate, James Maher, to death with a bucket. 1. J. O'Connor was elected president of the National Ancient Order cf Hiber nians at the Omaha meeting. Gus Meeks, his wife and two chil dren were murdered at Browning, Mo., by men against whom they were to be called as witnesses. New York men have commenced ac tion to secure possession of lands in Lyon county, la., valued at S3!-9,200. Charles D. Walcott. of New York, has been appointed to succeed Maj. Powell as director of the United States geological survey. At the session in Philadelphia of the general federation of women's clubs Mrs. Charles Henrotin. of Chicago, was elected president. Ten business blocks at Red Jacket, Mich., were destroyed by fire. Thk exchanges at the leading clear ing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 11th aggre gated f903,225,545, against 1955,219,455 the previous week. The decrease, com pared with the corresponding week in 1S93. was 34.2. FATE OF A FAMILY. An Atrocious Murder Committed Near Browning-, Mo. Gas Meeks Slain to Prevent IIU Appear, a nee as a YVltnenn IIU Wife and Two Children Also Killed Sus pected Hea Flee. PUT OUT OF THE WAT. Milan, Ma, May 12. A most atro cious crime was committed Thursday night near Browning. Gus Meeks, his wife and two children were murdered outright and another of the children a girl 7 years old was so badly injured that she may not recover. The circum stances leading up to the crime are about as follows: There are a number of criminal cases pending in Lynn and Sullivan counties against William F. Taylor and George Taylor, brothers, the former being a banker of Browning and tho latter a farmer. The charges against them are forgery, arson and larceny. William P. Taylor, Gus Meeks and others were jointly indict ed and Meeks pleaded guilty at the last term and was sent to the peniten tiary. About a month ago he was par doned by Gov. Stone in order to use him as a witness against the Taylors, who were in consequence anxious to bo rid of him. It is said the Taylors had arranged with Meeks to give the latter a wagon and team to get out of the country so that he might not be present when the case against the Tay lors was called for triad. From Meeks' mother it is learned that on Thursday her son received a letter from the Taylors at Browning, telling him to be ready at 10 o'clock that night to go away. Gus Meeks and children waited for Taylor until midnight, when two men whom Meeks said were George and Bill Taylor came to their home in a wagon. Meeks and his family got into the wagon and started for Brown ing. The details of the crime, as near as can be obtained, were told by the little 7-year-old girl, who was suffering greatly as she recited the story. It ap pears that when tha Meeks family and the persons accompanying them reached a-point near the schoolhouse in Lynn county, a short distance east of Browning, they were met by two other men who were lying in wait. Gus Meeks was first shot and Mrs. Meeks jumped. She also was killed. The murderers then took stones and beat the brains out of the two children and left the other for dead. The murderers then, it is supposed, loaded the whole family into the wagon and hauled them near ly 2 miles to the Taylor farm, where they were buried under a strawstack. At 4:30 o'clock Friday morning the eldest child came to her senses and made her way to the residence of a Mr. Carter, near by. The Carter family then sent a boy to the Taylor farm, where he found the murdered family as stated by the Meeks girL The Carter boy then saw George Taylor and inno cently told him of the murder as de scribed by the almost dying child. Geore Taylor immediately started for Browning on horseback, got his brother William and both departed on horse back. T'heir departure from Browning took place before the knowledge of the murder had reached there. The people of the neighborhood placed guards around the strawstack where the dead bodies were found. Upon investigation it was discovered that a bloody quilt around the bodies was on fire, the evident purpose being to cremate the bodies. Tlie little girl recovered sufficiently to describe some of the parties, and upon her evidence Sharon McCullough, of Gould, and George Howlett, of Lime county, have been arrested as par ticipants in the crime. A party of citi zens from Milan and Browning found at the place of the murder the revolver and a stone with which the murderers had shot and killed the father and motner and beat out the brains of the two children. The child says that they struck, beat and kicked her into Insensibility and thought her dead. At this writing the Taylors have not been arrested, but it is not thought possible they can escape. Great excitement prevails, and if the murderers are fully identified tho sher iff will be unable to prevent summary punishment. At a late hour a farmer came in from the northeast and said that the Taylors had left their horses, and that not less than 500 men were after them. WON'T TAKE PART. Coal Operators Will Not Attend the Cleve land Contention. Chicago, Maj' 12. The northern Illi nois coal operators, controlling what are known as the Wilmington, Streator and Third Vein coal fields, which have a daily output of 25,009 tons of-coal, will not participate at the conference called to meet at Cleveland on the 15th insU for the purpose of adjusting existing differences between coal operators and miners. This was decided Friday after noon at a meeting held in the offices of the Wilmington and Vermil ion Coal company in the Woman's Tem ple building. The meeting was a unit in opposing any participation whatever in the Cleveland conference. The op erators say the miners embraced in the northern Illinois district vitiated aeon tract with the operators, which did not expire until May 1, by leaving ttie mines at the time they did. PROPOSES A NEW SYSTEM. Con(rvwmnn Krdinxii SUKcest.s It.ldlral liaitgen in tlto (. Irll-fc-rrvice Law. Washington, May 12. Mr. Erdman (Pa.) has introduced & bill amend ing the civil-service law. It in creases the number of commission ers from three to four, not more than two of them to be of the same political party. Persons who pass the examination are to be divided into two classes, according to the two political parties .casting the largest vote. The patronage is to be divided equally among the several states and territories. THE TARIFF. Discussion Over the BUI as Amended by the Senate Finance Committee. On the Sth the tariff bill as amended by the finance committee was discussed by Mr. Boar (rep., Mass.) Two grea; disturbing causes, be aid. threatened the peace of the republic, and exposed us to the dauger of great social disor ders. One was tho acquisition la a few han1s of vast accumulations of wealth by dishonest or questionable practices, and the other the wicked and unscrupulous appeal to the preju dices and passions of large masses of people by political leaders spreading abroad throughout the country falsehoods which made the people dlssatistled with their own Institutions and their own laws. Four things he said omt from competi tion, viz.: High wages, national inde pendence, varied employment and a stimulant of the inventive faculty. Upon high wages, he Insisted, depended constant Improvement la manufacturing processes which increased pro duction and diminished cost. It was said that you cstnnot interfere with the natural laws of Industry and trade, but Mr. Hoar contended that all the progress of human life rested upon such interferences. Talking about the methods used by the so called "conservative" democratic senators to secure concessions in the form of higher duties, Mr. Hoar concluded his statement by declar ing that democratic senators who would sup port the compromise bill .agreed upon by the democratic caucus would violate the constitu tion and their oaths. This statement brought Mr. Gray (dem., Del.) to his feet. He de manded to know what the Massachusetts sen ator meant by such a charge a charge, he said, which was unworthy of Mr. Hoar. "I meant to say." said Mr. Hoar, "that form democratic senator who subscribed to tbe doc trine of the Chicago platform that a tariff for protection was robbery, who went to the peo ple affirming his allegiance to that platform, and who now comes here seeking and obtain ing protective duties I mean to say that for ! such senator there is no escape from the logio I that be violated both his senatorial oath and the constitution." I Mr. Gray arose. This was the sixth week of I the tariff debate, he began. If there was any j doubt about the artificial character of the I edlSce of protection this debate had supplied : It. Every attempt to approach the monstrous j aggregation of folly and greed known as the McKinley bill had been met by those ' who raised a clamor about the interests of the people and by tbe greed of cor j porations. The culmination of McKlnleylsm i was characterized In this debate by the wild I statements and assertions of the advocates of : the system that had wrougnt so much ruin to I the country. They threw aside all restraints : of speech and dealt In the rhetoric of tbe slums, j They cast their foul aspersions on those who sought to do their duty to their country and I their party. To-day, in the speech of the sena ; tor from Massachusetts, the decorum of debate . had been violated, but .the language he had ln : dulged in only showed the straits to which he had been put j Mr. Hoar's temper was seemingly unruffled , when he replied in a few words to what Mr. '. Gray had said. He f-ald that the senator from Delaware had been too severe in his condem ' nation of the McKinley law, and he stood here on this floor advocating a measure dotted and crowded all over with protection. If protec i tlon was unconstitutional and robbery, this j was a wicked thing to do. Why did he not tell ' the senate, in extenuation of his course, why be had put a protective duty on sugar? ; -I do not propose to put a protective duty oa : sugar," ejaculated Mr. Gray from his seat j "Can the senator not understand the difference j betwet-n a protective and a revenue duty!" j Mr. Hoar Insisted that an attempt to show ; that Increases in duties were for revenue pur ,' poses and not for protection was simply aneva , sion. I When Mr. Hoar took his 'seat Mr. Palmer : (dem.. Ill) felt called upon to defend htmself from several of tbe insinuations In Mr. Hoar's remarks. As far as he was concerned, he de ; dared, half a loaf was better than no loaf at ! alL If he could not get in a measure framed by his democratic colleagues all he desired he ; wou'd take what he could get Mr. Hale (rep. Me.) inquired sarcastically ! which bill it was that the senator from Illinois thought the American people would approve j the Wilson bllt the first draft of the senate I bill, the bill ;introduced by Mr. Voorhees, tbe bill at present before the senate un der the management of Mr. Harris, or the new ' bill Introduced yesterday. The bill Introduced by Mr. Jones yesterday was no more like the bill berore tbe senate than the gavel of the senate was like an K flat bugle. Its make-up frm tho foundation was entirely different Certainly if it was right to pass anv one of these Ave bills prepared by the majority it would have been wrong to pass any one of the other four. Which bill, he asked, had receiveu the appro! ailon of the couutry and which part of the country! Mr. I'almcr, in response, said that he denied that any of the bills framed had received the Indorsement of the country. What he had said was that the country had overwhelmlncly dis approved of the McKinley law. As any one of the bills framed was preferable to that Infamous measure, he asserted that any one of them would meet to a greater or less extent the ap- I probation of the reople. ll republican sena I tors were skeptical or Impatient on this ' score let them wait for the verdict at the ballot- : box. The discussion was closed by the venerable republican senator from Vermont, Mr. MorrllL As he hnd on previous occasions said some thing in derogation of the democratic tarill measure, he desired now to say something la approbation. The 4X amendments to the tariff bill offered, he said, showed that after listening to the republican speeches for six weeks the democratic senators had learned something. If the tariff bill were laid asid for a month and that month were devoted to study by his friauds on the other tide of the chamber be thought that at tbe end of that time they would bring in a bill which would be perfectly acceptable to tbe republican side and which would pass the senate unanimously. When Mr. Morrill took his seat Senator Quay (rep. Pa.) resumed the speech he has been delivering since April 15. He completed bis long, detailed account of the processes of refining sugar and took up the subject of wool and woolens, treating it in the same exhaustive manner in which he had dealt with sugar. A Lou of SI 00,000 Caused by an Explo sion or Oil. New York. May 10. A barrel of oil on the pier of the Clyde line at South and Oliver streets exploded. There were many barrels of oil on the dock and the fire immediately communicated to them, making a terrific explosion. In a few minutes all of the docks from Oliver to Catherine streets were ablaze. The bridge was packed with people who were looking down on the blaze. The burning oil made a dense volume of smoke. Iso one is reported injured and it is thought no lives were lost. The three fire-boats New Yorker, Have meyer and Seth Low, responded prompt ly and did good service. The build ings on the piers were all of wood and there was nothing to obstruct the flames until they had burned them selves out. The fire was under control at 2 o'clock. The loss is estimated at flOO.OQO. TUK Central Congregational church, of Brooklyn, sent to its former pastor. Dr. llenrv M. Seudder, S700 in gold and a congratulatory letter on the oc- ... . . ur u: l- ! casion of his gomen weuumg, mtu was celebrated at Winchester, Mass., recently. U.L- til 1 C illl"""" , are of open pattern, and many of them j are wrought in andykes. iney are the handsomest of this class of trim mings. Is 1S33 the population of the British , colonies numbered w-i.uvu.uw. REVIEW OF TRADE. Effects of Strikes and Tariff Uncertainty In liuslness Circles. New York, May 12. Bradstreec's re view of trade says: Prolonged warm weather has stimulated farm work as well as sales in seasonable lines of mer chandise, but renewed tariff uncertainty tends to prolong the period. during which merchants will continue to buy for actual needs only, evi dences of which fact have appeared. Dank clear ings this week amount to 1(103,000,000. a de crease of 5 5 per cent from the week before (which showed an Increase) and a decrease of 84 per. cent compared with the second week of May lost year, when total clearings were among the largest on record. The great coal miners strike has been extended in tbe far west and in portions of Maryland and the Virginias, and this has been followed by an increase in the number of industrial shut downs due to in creasing scarcity of fueL Kot far from 175,000 men are reported Idle in the coal trade alone, and with those idle or on strike in other line the total out of work la not less than 238.000. "General trade remains dull, as does busi ness in manufacturing lines at Buffalo, Cleve land, Detroit Cincinnati. Louisville. Milwau kee, Minneapolis snd Omaha, except that at the last-named more activity is reported la dry goods and hardware. Favorable crop prospects and activity in agricultural lines have checked trading by country mer chants. At Chicago, also, thero are increased volumes of sales with Jobbers in dry goods, mil linery and clothing, while tho natural result due to Bpring trade being completed and au tumn trading not having made itself felt felt at St Louis At Kansas Clty trade in staple lines is fairly good and crop prospects are excellent but at St Paul the volume of business is small compared with previous years. "The continuance of tho gold shipments to Europe, which amounted for the week toti.000, 000, has attracted attention, but appears to have influenced speculative sentiment In a very lim ited degree." R. G. Dun & Co.'s review for the week Bays: 'The speculation in grain has again broken records with the lowest price ever made for wheat, although western receipts are a little smaller than a year ago, while exports are also smaller by more than a quarter. The prevail ing belief is that the yield will, as in other years, far exceed government indications, which are again pointing to a short crop It lb a striking evidence of the general want of confi dence that there is so little speculation w hlle money Is abundant almost beyond precedent "One larg failure about doubled the aggre gate of liabilities for the firms failing la the week ending May 3, which would otter wise have been quite small, but were I2,3--A7,9. The number and the general average of liabili ties are still encouragingly shrinking. For the last week the failures have been 209 in the United St3tes, against 257 last year, and 4" in Canada, against 23 last year, with nothing of especial importance, although four back fll tjre are Included." SHOT BY A CONSTABLE. CoL PuUley, of the Industrial Killed In California. Army Sacramesto, CaL. May 12. Tele phone advices have been received here to the effect that Constable Fleckenger shotand killed Col. Paisley of the indus trial army at Rock in, CaL At 4 o'clock a. m. Friday the industrial army, under command of Lieut. Gen. Smith, TOO strong, seized a freight train at Arcade station and went to Ilocklin. Engineer Williams, a member of the party, was placed under arrest by Constable Fleckenger, and Smith and CoL Paisley objected. A quarrel en sued and Fleckenger drew a pistol and pointed it at Smith, who jumped to one side. The Constable then killed Paisley. The industrials became furious and at tempted to lynch Fleckenger. Gen. Smith, however, protected him and aided him to escape. He is now at large. Engineer Williams was locked up, but the industrials demanded his release and the citizens fearing further trouble restored him to liberty. North Yakima, Wash., May li Another collision occurred between deputy marshals and commonwealers about 4 o'clock Friday morning and two of the latter are now confined at the hospital, suffering from gun-shot wounds. Word was received that 250 men had captured two freight cars at Ellcnsburg and wera coin ing down to liberate the Coxeyites im prisoned in the county jaiL The mar shals met the industrials and stopped their cars by throwing a rail across the track at a point 2 miles from this city. The industrials scrambled off the cars and started to ran, but were brought to a halt by bullets from the rifles of the marshals. Two of them were wounded, but not seriously. Others to the number of 120 were marched to the county jail and locked up. Fifty Coxeyites and a number of Yakima citizens, accused of inciting the army to resistance, were started on an early train under heavy guard for Seattle. GLAD THEY WERE CAUGHT. Zanders' Train Stealers Say They Will .Fare Kettrr an I'ncle Sam's Prisoners Topeka, Kan., May 12. The Sanders Industrial train stealers arrived here at 1:20 o'clock Friday afternoon as pris oners of United States Marshal Neeley, having been captured without even a sign of trouble at Scott City Thursday afternoon. Sanders and his men look upon their arrest as a beneficent act of Providence to hasten them on their journey to Washington. Sanders does not believe they can be punished, and that is why he counseled his men to fall easy vic tims to Marshal Neeley. Sanders said complacently just after he and his men arrived in Topeka: "We are very much obliged to Uncle Sam for helping us this far on our journey, providing ns with comfortable cars and keeping lis from hunger." A toxeylte Orowned. Washington, May 12. The Coxey forces have been further deplete d by the drowning of one of the members of the army, William Weisler by name, who joined at Hagerstown, Md., and who while taking a bath in the Potomac last night was seized with cramps and drowned before assistance could reach him. The body has not been recovered. He was about 30 years of age. - A Illoyol!r Kllleu. Chicago, May 12. -Charles Whittle, son of Mnj. Whittle, the evangelist, was killed by a train at Wheaton. He was riding a bicycle between the rails and failed to see the train approaching. Mr. Whittle was 25 years old and leaves a widow and twochildren. His father, who is now in Maine, was notified and will be here next Sunday. To Fill I'nwell'a Place. WAsniXGTOX, May 12. The president has nominated Charles D. Walcott, of New York, to be director of the goo logical survey, vice John W. Powell, resigned. - 3 vjw--, pm- ..-IS " j in i ii i i -in i --