? pattsmouth Journal C W. SttEKUAX, rafclUher. PLATTSMOUTII. : NKBUAKKA The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Regular Session. Os 'the 21st the tariff bill was further dis Qtoied In the 8 e sale and a message was re- erred from the .president transmitting Ha' 'wallan correspondence. ...In the house the diplomatic appropriation bill was further con 'ldered and eulogies were delivered on the late Senator Gibson, of Louisiana. X the senate on the 23d the tariJ bUl was 'further discussed. A bill was Introduced by Senator Peffer "to dispose of idle labor and 'discourage Idle wealth In the District ef Co lombla".... In the house the time was devoted to District of Columbia business. Toe bill ai lowing racing and pool selling in tke district "Iras defeated. Os the 2tth Senator Mill, closed the general 'debate on the tariff bill in the senate. He earnestly advocated its passage, though it did not meet his views. ...In the house the post office appropriation bill was passed. IK the senate on the 21th debate on the tarl3 Mil by paragraphs was begun, Messrs. Palmer, Aldrlch and Piatt taking part.... In the house an amendment to the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill requiring consuls at princi pal ports to turn all tees into the treasury was defeated. Mr. Meyer's seigniorage bill, sail to have administration approval, was postponed for the session by the committee on -coinage. - III the senate on the 30th Mr. Jarvls, recently appointed senator from North Carolina to suc ceed Senator Vance, was sworn In. Senator Allen's resolution censuring the district author tiles for proclaiming against tht admission of the Coxeyttes to the District of Columbia was discussed and the tarLff bill was further consid ered ...In the house 'he diplomatic and con ' auiar appropriation bill (SI, 5 13, KM; was passed. DOMESTIC Dcrixg a school debate sear YVin- Chester, O., a free fight began in which Nathan Mansfield was stabbed to death, Edward Carroll had his skull crushed and Henry Steman had his brains beat en out. The plant of the Deweese Wood-Iron company at Pittsburgh, Pa, closed for en indefinite period, throwing 1,000 jnen out of work. Elbert 15. Mosroe, a member of the .United States board of Indian commis sioners, dropped dead at his country . home near Tarry town, X. Y. Ix the school elections held through out Illinois women took a prominent part, electing one of their number at v and alia. Tee steamer Los Angeles ran on the rocks at i'oint bur ligntnouse near Monterey, CaL, and sank, and four of the passengers were drowned. Tom Black, John Williams and Toney Johnson (negroes), charged with in cendiarism, were taken from the jail at Tuscumbie, Ala., by a mob and hanged and their bodies riddled with bullets. While working at the Arcade file works in Anderson, Ind., William Da vis had both eyes gouged out by a piece of flying steeL The fire losses for the week ended on the 21st, estimated from telegraphic re ports, amounted to $2,22 9,000. judge j. t: u briex, recently ap pointed United States attorney for North Dakota, was found dead in his office at Devil's Lake from heart dis ease. Mrs. Frank Warxkb was killed and three other persons fatally hurt in a runaway at Decatur, Ind., while going to a funeral. Col. T. R. Ript, of Lawrenceburg, Ky., the Largest distiller in the state. made an assignment with liabilities of 1500,000. Because a colored waiter refused to marry her, Edna Lehman, a white girl of St. Paul, drowned herself in Lake Calhoun. IL T. Dick and wife, of -Newmarket, Tenn., celebrated their golden wed ding, and the same minister and at tendants were present who saw them married a half century ago. The vwible supply of grain in the United States on the 23d was: Wheat, 63,425,000 bushels; corn. 14,546.000 bush- els; oats, 2,605,000 bushels; rye, 271,000 bushels; barley, 300.000 bushels. The fishing schooner Dauntless was ' wrecked on the north California -coast : and four men were drowned. Jeff Tugole, a negro who killed Fred Hainan, a coal miner, near Weir - City, Kan., was taken from officers by i a mob and lynched. The District of Columbia commia- aioners Usued a manifesto .advising i common wealers to remain away from ' Washington and saying the laws w&uld be rigidly enforced. a wo little girls, aged Z and G. were found murdered in the woods near Tus cogee, Ala., and in a millpond near was found the body of an insane negro. who, it was thought, killed the chil dren. Nearlv 130,000 miners in 6ttes -east of the Mississippi obeyed the carder of the.'Lmted Mine Workers to otpeud work. A reconciliation is likely between Princess Colonna. "Bonanza" Mackay's daughter,-and her husband, to escape - wbom khr. fled from Pans. At Bessemer, Mich.. John Gesi was : accidentally killed by his wife. .She became a.raving maniac and died within t a few hocrs. . Tke state president of the United .Mine Workewj says 24,000 miners are .on strike in .Illinois, out of a total of 63000. The Pennsylvania coke strike was (aid to be spreading. its wife .having become hopelessly insaue fro-n the .grip, M. A. Hunt, a Terre Haute ,(Ind. florist, committed (Suicidi Chief or Dttuos JIrexxak was or--dered Vy the council to prevent any of the divisi oils of tthe tttmmonweal army ,entrinjr Chicago. Xue ,ooal miners' strike was rapidly spreading, and it was estimated that J 40, 000 mJ were idle. It was reported tha.t qaines in the Hocking- (0.) valley lad been fired by strikers. Mrs.. Amelia. Muklleb, a Cleveland O.) widow, probably fatally injured her father and mother and then killed herself. The forty gambling houses in Den Tr, Col., werd promptly closed in com pliance with ari order of the new police judgtt i Ex-Postmaster Gexeral Fraitx Hattox, one of the editors and pro prietors of the Washington Post, was stricken with paralysis and was in a dangerous condition. LIekry F. Bachelor, president of the Stock Growers national bank of Miles City, Mont, was found guilty of will ful misappropriation of WOO.OOO of the funds of the bank. Edward J. Workman, oldest son of Rev. T. C. Workman, the renowned evangelist, shot his wife and himself on a street in South Lebanon, Ind. Domestic trouble caused the deed. As explosion of dynamite in a black smith shop on Mount. Washington, near Pittsburgh, instantly killed Andrew Hugo, aged 17, and fatally injured Michael Gallagher and his son. William McGarrahax, whose claim to the New Idria mine in California has been before congress since 1863, died in a Washington hospital at the age of 60. Edward Rosewater, editor of the Omaha Bee, was sentenced to imprison ment for thirty days and to pay a fine of 8500 for contempt of court The Merchants bank of Enid, O. T., failed with liabilities of t'30,000. De positors pursued the cashier, but he escaped pn a train. A boiler explosion destroyed Ilouser & Foutz' tile mill at Huntington, Ind., and killed Elmer Anson and fatally in jured David Ilouser and Adam Foutz. Br a gasoline explosion in the home of Casimir Nigg near Carondelet, Mo., two children were killed and Mr. Nigg and his wife and Caroline Vogel, her mother, were fatally injured. Hoqan'b brigade of the Coxey army seized a Northern Pacific train at Butte, Mont., and the United States marshal was ordered to capture it at all hazards. A SILL giving women the right to vote in school elections was passed by the lower branch of the Ohio legisla ture and is now a law. Mat wheat broke all records and 6old on the board of trade in Chicago a 57 h cents, the lowest price ever re corded. Seven Memphis firemen were severe ly injured by the collapse of a burning buildinsr on which they were working. Mrs. Edward Hot acker, a bride of a day, committed suicide at Kalama zoo, Mich., with poison. No cause was known. The Saranac Lake house at Saranac I Lake, N. Y., was destroyed by fire, the loss being 1 125,000. Albert T. Beck, a noted Indianap olis lawyer and politician, was found dead in bed with a bullet in his brain, and opinion was divided as to whether he committed suicide or was murdered. The supervisors of Woodbury county, la., were charged with having misap propriated $250,000 by a taxpayers' committee. IIogas's industrial army, numbering 300 men, coming east on a stolen North ern Pacific train, was captured by fed eral troops at Forsyth, Mont Dep uty marshals who tried to stop the army at Billings were Burrounded and disarmed. Preparations were being made in Washington to receive the common wealers. Subsistence funds were being raised and extra guards placed. The business part of Floriston, CaL, a small town on the Central Pacific, was destroyed by fire. Union Pacific railway earnings in 1893 showed a deficit of (2,595,641, com pared with a surplus the previous year of 12,069,757. Two negro convicts, Henry Single ton and Horace Smith, were hung in the Jackson (Miss.) penitentiary for murdering another convict. Lula Payne. The Union house at Cheboygan, Mich., was destroyed by fire and Dr. no well, a veterinary surgeon, and a man named Clune were asphyxiated. A sixty-days drought in California was broken bj showers and fruit pros pects were good. Father Dominick O'Ghady shot and killed Mary Gilmartin in Cincinnati lie was in love with the girl, whom he had followed from Ireland. Philip Boland, a switchman, shot and killed his wife in Chicago because she pleaded with him to stop drinking. All the business houses at Jackson ville, iil, were ciosea oecause or re vival services being conducted by Rev. Chapman. uver o.uuu cotton weavers went on a strike at New Bedford, Mass. Reports from all sections of the United States say that the seventy-fifth anniversary of the birth of odd fellow ship was appropriately observed by over J, 000,000 members of the order. The Colorado Bmelter at Butte. Mont., was burned, the loss being over tioo.ooo. The commissioners of the District of Columbia say that members of Coxey 'a army will not be allowed to hold open air .meetings in Washington. The McKinley Tariff league, with headquarters in Washington, issued a call Jor a cqravention of the colored re publican clubs of the United States, to be-held the first Monday in July. Edward Ryan, Jr., and his sister Nel lie, of Boulder, Mont., were drowned on their way to the Crow reservation in search of a ranch they could take up. Col. SIdney L Wailks, one of the best-known men in Maryland, was charged with forgery in Baltimore to the extent of $30,000. At Jacksonville, FJa.. Abram Cor raat died at the age of 94. He was a veteran of the Mexican and Indian wxrs and had been married twice and was the father of forty children. Seveh horse thieves were killed by vigilant in Oklahoma near the Texas line. Ret. C. E. Butler, an Episcopal clergyman at Fort Meade, Fla,, hung himself. Thuke children of Philip Schneider, who lives near JScranton, Pa,, were burned to death during a fire which consumed their home. Col. J. A. Watbous, of Milwaukee, was chosen commander of the Wiscon sin department G. A. R. at the encamp ment in Janesville. All overtures for a peaceful settle ment of the Great Northern railroad strike were declared off. Nick Martin, a member of the coro ner's jury investigating a murder at Omaha, was arrested for the crime. Reports from twenty-three Btates and two territories give a total produc tion of 11,507,607 long tons of iron ore in 1893. a decrease of 29 per cent, over 1892. Gasport, a village in western New York, was practically destroyed by fire. The officials of St Joseph's Roman Catholic church at Denver sued Father Malone for f 12. 060, which he was charged with converting to his own use. Floyd Radraugh, a young farmer living near Big Springs, O., rendered desperate by domestic troubles, hanged himself and his two children. Deputy marshals engaged a gang of desperadoes in battle near Coal Creek, L T., and three of the bandits and one officer were killed. William C Green killed a woman who had lived with him for years at Adams, N. Y., and then killed himself. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL, Jesse Selioman, of the New York and London banking firm of J. & S. Seligman, died at Coronado Beach, CaL, aged 67 years. The republicans ot the Seventh dis trict of Indiana nominated Charles L. Henry, of Madison county, for con gress. Mas. Claudia Herrera, a Mexican woman, died in San Francisco at the age of 120. H. W. Ooden (dem.) was elected to congress at Shreveport, La, to fill the unexpired term of N. & Blanchard. Indiana republicans met at Indian apolis and nominated a ticket headed by W. D. Owen, of Logansport, for sec rectary of state, The platform con trasts the prosperity existing under the Harrison administration with the panio now; commends protection and reci procity and condemns the hostile atti tude of the democratic party to these policies; a currency of gold, silver and paper; declares for a liberal construc tion of all pension laws; favors re stricted immigration, and denounces the Hawaiian policy of the present ad ministration. George XV. Fithian was renominated for congress by the democrats of the Nineteenth Illinois district Gen. R. S. Granger, U. S. A., (re tired), died in Washington, aged Si Rev. Nathaniel Butler died at his home in Burlington, Wis., aged 69. For fifty years he had been a minister of the Baptist church. FOREIGN. The total numoer of deaths caused by the earthquakes in Greece is 227. Nicaragua was said to have seized an American mail boat and to have sold the property of the Nicaragua Canal company for debt The woolen mills at Ivanovo, Russia, were burned, the loss being 1,750,000 rubles, and ten persons were killed during the fire. The Wellman American artic expedi tion sailed from Aalesund, Norway, for Spitsbergen on the steamer Ragnvold JarL Of the 213 persons arrested in War saw for taking part in the Kilinski cen tennial celebration 209 have been sent to Siberia. Thousands of artisans were affected by the failure of the Discount corpora tion of Ireland, with liabilities of S2.500.000. Great damage was done by a storm on the Irish coast Forty-five vessels of the Manx fleet were missing and over fifty persons were drowned. Returns from all Grecian districts affected by the recent earthquake show 250 persons killed and 150 injured. Great Britain, Germany and the United States were corresponding on the subject of the annexation of Samoa to New Zealand. LATER. No general business was transacted in the United States senate on the 27th, the time being occupied in discussing the tariff bill. A proposition by Sena tor Aldrich (IL L ) to take an imme diate vote on the bill was defeated. In the house twenty-one private pension bills were passed. The bill making ap propriations of ti, 450, 000 for the sup port of the department of agriculture for the fiscal year 1895 was reported. The exchanges at the leading clear ing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 27th segre gated $858,508,059, against $909,889,815 the previous week. The decrease, com pared with the corresponding week in 1S93. was 20.6. Samuel Vaughan was hanged at Fayette ville. Ark., for the murder of John Gage in September, 1891. There were ISO business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 27th, against 219 the week previous and 216 in the corresponding time in 1893. The 72d anniversary of the birth of Gen. Grant was appropriately observed in many places throughout the country. Ex-Gov. N. S. Berry, the oldest ex trovernor in the United States, died in Bristol, N. II., of pneumonia, aged 93 years. Fourteen business houses were de stroyed in Talequah, I. T., by an incen diary fire. It was said that hundreds of people in Iron Mountain, Mich., were on the verge of starvation, and Gov. Rich had been appealed to for aid. Edwin Turned (colored) died at Clinton. Ia. , aged 105 years. His wife, 90 years old, survives him. Another earthquake destroyed man villages in Greece, and it was feared the loss of life was heavy. Among the cities totally wiped out of existence were Thebes and Atalanta Henry Newman & Co., importers of clothing supplies in New York, failed for $1,500,003. The premises of La Porte, Martin A Co., wholesale grocers at Montreal, were burned, the loss being $150,000. The general business situation throughout the United States was less favorable, as was shown by reports from more than fifty important dis tributing centers. i- Citizens of Burlington, Ind., rid the town of an obnoxious saloon by burn ing the fixtures, wrecking the building and spilling out the stock of liquors. Sevknty-four valuable horses were burned in a fire in the stable of Richard Fitzpatrick in New York city. THE TARIFF BILL.. Merits of the Measure Discussed by the Senators. On the 80th Senator Galllnger (rep.. N. H.) aid the anomaly Is presented to the senate of a bill that it Is asked to enact Into law which nobody thus far has ventured to unqualifiedly Indorse or approve with the exception of the senator from Mississippi (Mr. McLaurin) and the junior senator from Indiana (Mr. Turple). Even Its distinguished author In the other house (Mr. Wilson) felt called upon to enter an apology for the measure. Be pointed out the likeli hood of a future invasion of American markets by foreign cotton. The proposed leg islation, he said, threatened the transfer of the lumber trade to Canada; It would drive farm ers from the soil of the state of New Hamp shire; It would close up the woolen mills He pointed out the Importation of ho siery factories Into Rhode Island as a re sult of the McKinley law, and asserted that the industry was doomed if the Wilson bill is passed. Senator Galllnger took up In turn cotton manufactures, cutlery, granite, and other New England industries, aud pointed out the harm that would come to them If the bill passes Tne Increased tax on spirits would benefit the whisky trust alone. Free wool, ho said, would ruin sheep husbandry in this coun try, and the Income tax proposition he de nounced aa sectional, inequitable and unjust The laboring masses of the industrial north have set their seal of condemnaclou upon the Wilson bllL Factories are Idle, homes com fortless, and wires Lnd children suffering for the necessaries of life. Senator Galllnger was followed by Senator McMillan (rep., Mich.), who said: "A compari son between the Wilson bill as It comes from the house and the new Canadian tariff shows bow close an understanding must have ex isted between the framers of the two measures. No American can doubt that the ultimate destination of Canada Is to become a part of the United States That da; will I be a welcome one to the people of Michigan, I who are now hemmed In on the east by a i territory with which there are fair exchanges. To the people of the dominion also a union with the United States would be advantageous In the highest degree. To the tories in their extremity the Wilson bill come as It comes to every foreign nation bringing Joy In the prospect of larger markets and greater profits while to our own people Its portion Is smaller wages aod restricted activities." Senator Dolph (rep, Ore.) followed in speech against the bllL Mr. Dolph went over the history of progress under protection for the last thirty years. The free list of the Wilson Mil was the object of sarcastic remarks by the senator. He argued at length also to show the superiority of spectflo over ad valorem duties. Various provisions of the bill he oeclared would be disastrous to the Pacifio coast, amon others hops, prunes, lead, lum ber and coal. Mr. Dolph quoted from Presi dent Cleveland's tariff message ot ItsOT esti mating the loss to the wool grower on a flock of City sheep to be only 136 a year and on 100 sheep 172, and said that the president, liv ing in a mansion provided by the government, surrounded by servant and by alt that wealth could purchase for his comfort and enjoyment and drawing a salary of I50,XX) a year, forgot that (34 or fTi a year might represent all that many families could afford to expend for cloth ing. Mr. Dolph pointed to the rejoicing in Eng land over President Cleveland's free-trade mes sage, the Mills bill and the Wilson bill. He said the question to be determined by thU con gress Is whether it shall legislate in the inter est of the people of England, Europe and Asia, or for those of this country. On the 21st Senator Dolph (rep.. Ore.) took up the question of paper making and wood pulp making in the state of Oregon, and ap pealed to the senate not to destroy this indus try of his state. Senator Gray (dem.. DeL) askeJ whether he wanted to levy tribute on the state of Dela ware in order that Oregon might have a monop oly of the paper business? "I did not say I wanted a monopoly of any industry lor my Mate," replied Mr. Dolph. He went on to say that Oregon used a great quantity of goods from Delaware, and he paid a high tribute to the industry of that state. Senator Gray thanked him for his compli mentary words about Delaware. The present depressed condition of affairs ia Delaware and other states, he said, was due to the cultiva tion of thirty years of high protection. We were living under the highest protective laws the country had ever known. There had not been a single industry of Delaware benefited by the McKinley bUl, and he predicted that upon the passage ot the pending bill prospects all over the country would brighten. The senator from Delaware might preach that doctrine, said Mr. Dolph, but there were thousands of workingmen out of employment In his state who would convince him of the fal lacy of that doctrine. Senator Gray closed the incident by declaring that they were out of employment because the McKinley law was in force, and Senator Dolph resumed his speech. In considering the income tax question a dif ference of opinion was discovered among the republicans Mr. Dolph had given his expe rience In the collecting ot the Income tax In Oregon when it was in force, when not more than one-tenth of the tax was collected. Mr. Teller (rep.. CoL) said that his experience had been very different from that of Mr. Dolph. He did not think It was evaded any more than the personal property tax. In Colorado, where an income tax was in force, there was not as much difficulty in collecting it as there was in collecting the personal property tax. He did not think it was a good argument against a bill to say that the people were too dishonest to have the tax collected. In his opinion it was the most Just and equitable tax that could be collected. It might be unprofitable, however. "Mr. President, " he continued, earnestly, I want to say to the senator from New Hamp shire" (Mr. Chandler, who had just expressed the same views as Mr. Dolph) "and to the sen ator from Oregon, and to any other senator who makes the claim that an income tax can not be collected because the people are dis honest that it is slanderous to the American people. It Is an assumption that the American people for a mere pittance will commit per jury. ' On the 23d Senator Washburn (rep., Minn.) discussed briefly the various tariff acts since IM. The present bill, he declared, would be disastrous to the manufacturing interests of the east. Speaking for his own stato he said the people ot Minn esota were only to a limited extent direct beneficiaries ol the protective sys tem, although they had learned that the well paid laborers of the east were better consumers ot their products than the poorly paid laborers of Europe. "But," said Mr. Washburn, "there is another provision in this bill which will affect the farm ers of the northwest more disastrously than even the reduction of duties to which I have re ferred, and that ia the repeal of the reciprocity provisions in the law of l9u There is prob ably no section of the country where the effect of reciprocity treaties with foreign nations con summated by the wisdom and persistent efforts of Mr. Blaine under the late administration have been so marked and favorable as the states of the northwest. "You can, therefore. Mr. President, well Imagine that the people of Minnesota, as well as the other northwestern states, look with more alarm upon the repeal of this reciprocity legislation than any other of its provisions. 1 am not only opposed to termination of the reciprocity arrangements already existing be tween the United States and other countries but I am in favor of applying the same princi ple In all our foreign trade." Senator Dolph then followed with a second Installment of his speech. On the 24th Senator Mills (dem., Tex.) closed the general debate on the tariff bilL At the outset he declared that legislators often had to make an election between two parliamentary measures neither of which met their approval. It must necessarily be so, tor no .man could frame a measure to meet the approval of every one. Every act of a legislature must be a compromise measure, and no act more so than one regulating taxes. "This bill does not meet my approval." said he, "and I doubt If it entirely meets the ap proval of any gentleman on this side of the chamber. But, such as it is. it will have my Hearty support." He might want to offer some amendments to the bill, but whether or not he was able to secure their adoption he would bow lo the will of tis party and vote for the meas ure as they ordained li should be. It was a strictly party measure and bad been a party measure from the foundation of the government and from the foun dation and organization of the dem ocratic party. If he had been chosen to construct this bill and had had the forty-four members of the democratic side ot the chamber In accord with his views he would have constructed it on far different lines Ha would not have left coffee on the free list and would not have put cotton, coal and Iron on the dutiable list He would put on the free list metals, wool, cotton fibers, iron snd steel in pigs and all yarns everything which required to be manu factured. He would do this In order that the manufacturers of the country might manu facture their goods at the lowest possible price so that they could go iuto the markets of the world. The republican policy, he said, was to provide a home market, but there was 15,000, 000,000 worth of goods made in this country Where were the people to come from to con sume themf Ia order to carry out the repub lican policy people would have to be Imported to consume our surplus agricultural products It would require 114.00J.OW people to consume these products and would require the Importa tion of Chinese. Japanese. Singalese, Maltese and chimpanzees to join Coxey's army. 'Emancipate our people," he said. "Give them a chance to show their skill, their genius as a natural and heaven-born right. Give them back the ocean and then the workingmen will not bo comlDg o Washington to implore the government to do something tor them." Mr. Mills lauded the action ot the committee in reporting a tax on incomes. Why should wealth not be taxed? The object ot all Just government is to secure to all its subjects all the rights with which they were ejjdowed by nature and protection In the enjvyment of those rights in which they were guaranteed by their government. "1 would like to know." he said, "on what principle the owners ct millions insist that they should not be taxed!- He said that the opponent of the income tax said it was Inquisitorial, anarchistic, socialistic, to lay a tax of 2 per cent, on incomes, but when a poor fellow wants a shirt and ia taxed 100 per cent, for it nothing is said about Its being so cialistic and anarchistic. He enunciated the principle that a tax should be collected in pro portion to the tax payer's ability to pay It, and that depended on the amount of protection be received. It was said that the income tax was unjust and iniquitous, sad the senator from New York (Mr. Hill), in his speech a few days ago, had called It by all kinds of vile names, yet when he was governor of the state of New York for six years he had never told the legislature that the lnoome tax which was on the statute books of the state was unjust and Iniquitous. It was useless to denounce the income tax as iniquitous, unjust, etc. It was useless to make any sophistical re marks about the difficulty of collecting the tax. The law was going to be passed, he declared, emphatically; If not by this congress, then by the next "The people," concluded Mr. Mills, "jrant the bill passed now; they do not want to -wait until they are starving to death: they do not want to wait until the whole country U paralyzed, but they want to do it now. Then the business pros perity of the country will revive. Then the con dition of things will be changed; night will dis appear, darkness and distress will leave the land, prosperity will come to our borders, light and sunshine will lighten up all our faces and the country will once more resume its career in prosperity." BATTLE WITH RIOTERS. Desperate Mob of Hungarians Coma Into Collision with Austrian Troop. Buda Pesth, April 24. Sunday 800 workmen marched to the town hall of Hold-Mezo with the intention of recovering a number of pamphlets, belonging1 to socialist leaders, which had been seized by the police. The ' spokesmen of the mob asked for the return of the pamphlets claiming' that tbey had been illegally seized. The authorities ordered the workmen to dispetse. The mob re fused and the gend'armes were or dered to charge. The police were met by a shower of stones and driven back. The municipal authorities called for a detachment of troops, and upon the arrival of the soldiers the gen d'armes made another attempt to dis perse the mob, but were again re pulsed. Then the mob began stoning the military. The soldiers fired blank cartridges at the rioters. The latter, seeing that nobody was killed or wounded, continued stoning the troops, and a second volley, this time in real earnest, was fired into the mob, wounding six of them severely and slightly wound ing a number of others A detachment of huzzars then charged the mob with drawn swords, driving them away from the town halL The huzzars also rounded in sixty prisoners, who were lodged in jaiL the prison being strong ly guarded by troops. The streets are still patrolled by huzzars and gend'armes. WILD BATTLE WITH WOMEN. Sheriff and His Deputies Forced to Fight for Their Lives. Cnio-town Pa., April 24. A wild battle -was fought here Monday, in which a mob of women was arrayed against the sheriff and his deputies. A striker bad been arrested, and a mob of fiity women, led by the pris oner's wife, attempted to release him. Screaming and cursing, the women, armed with every con ceivable weapon except firearms, attacked the officers. The leader of the furies rushed at Deputy Sheriff Richards with an uplifted ax. He evad ed the blow and knocked her sense less with his revolver and she lay sretched at length on the ground with blood gushing from a gash in her forehead. The other deputies threw off all restraint and started for the women. Many of the amazons were felled with blows from maces, others were beaten with the stocks of Winches ters, and the sheriff had great difficul ty in preventing the men from shoot ing them down like dogs. The situa tion at Oliver is alarming. KILLED BY MOONSHINERS. The Vlftlm a Member of the Oanff Who Was Suspected of Treachery. Atlanta, Ga.. April 23. Henry Wor ley, a Murray county farmer, was shot dead in his field by white caps. He was formerly a member of a gang, most of whom are moonshiners. They sus pected him of treachery and last week caught him out at night and strung him up. One of the gang slipped back, gave him a knife and Vor ley cut himself down. He was fired on as he ran away. It was thought he left the county, but he did not, and declared that he was going to Atlanta to give Uov. Northen the names of 100 members of the ewg. Before Worley could carry this out he was murdered. There are TOO members of this organization. Their object ia to nrotct their illicit stills, which abound in the mountains. Six deputy marshals left here to-night to arrest and bring- back the ringleaders. MORE MINERS QUIT. Leaders of the strike Kay Over 140,000 Have Stopped Work. Columbus, O., April 25. The great miners' strike continues to grow. Tel egrams poured into the national head quarters of the United Mine Workers in this city Monday indicating many additions to the ranks of the strikers and giving assurance that those already out would stand by the order for a gen eral suspension. President McBride's estimate of th number of strikers in detail is as fol lows: Alabama 8,000'Indtan territory. 2.0T0 Tennessee and Illinois 27.0)0 Kentucky S.OOOi. Missouri I.9u0 West Virginia. .. 2.0UI Pennsylvania 50,000 Indiana 5,000i Michigan S00 Ohio. 2.ooo Iowa 13,000 Total. 143,200 At many places where there was no indication of a strike Saturday tha miners refused to go to work when the whistles blew Monday morning. This is true particularly in Illinois Presi dent McBride received a telegram from P. II. Penna. national vice president, and John Fahy, members of the na tional executive board at Murphysboro, I1L, stating that 2,600 miners there and at Duquesne had voted not to return to work. The miners leaders in Iowa tele graphed President Mcllride that the miners in the southern part of that state are all out, but that a general suspension will not occur until after May 2, when a state convention is to be held at Albia. The situation in i'ennsylvania re mains practically unchanged. Efforts are being made to induce the miners at Turtle Creek pass, who are the only ones working, to strike. Information was sent out from Irwin Station, Pa, to the effect that there was some doubt about the miners there refusing to quit work. A telegram from Cameron states that the miners there have reaffirmed to a man their decision to suspend work. A telegram from Indian territory states that every miner in that district is out. Accessions to the ranks of tha strikers are also reported from tha Kanawha river district of West Vir ginia. As 6tated the miners in the Laurel and Pittsburgh regions of Kentucky, and Jellico and Xewcombe regions of Tennessee, to the number of 4,000, are idle. A telegram was' also received from the Big Sandy district in eastern Kentucky that the miners there had re fused to go to work Monday morning, welling the total number of strikers in the two states to 5.000. Reports from all parts of Ohio indi cate that the strikers are quiet and peaceable. The Monday mine, near Nelsonville, O., was fired Monday morn ing at the mouth of the shaft, and there is a suspicion that it was dona by an incendiary, although there is no direct evidence on this point. Toledo, O., April 2S. A 3a percent cut was made Thursday ia the wages of the 1,500 employes of the Wheeling A Lake Erie railway. Orders to this ef fect have been issued from the general offices here in this city. The cut will affect all grades of employes from the top down. This action is caused by the present big strike among the coal miners. AN EDITOR JAILED. Mr. Rosewater, of the Omaha Bee, la Contempt of Court. Omaha, Neb., April 2fi. Edward Rosewater, editor of the Bee, was sen tenced to imprisonment for thirty days and to pay a fine of t-500 for contempt of court. Without being given an op portunity to appeal Mr. Rosewater was ordered taken to jail at once, and for six hours he was behind the bars of tha Douglas county jaiL At 6 o'clock the state supreme court granted a super sedeas and Mr. Rosewater was released until the case can be reviewed by the higher court. The alleged offense committed by Mr. Rosewater was in allowing to ba printed in the Bee a local article, in which it was announced that there was evidently some partiality shown to certain criminals in the district court, as of two men caught robbing a rail road depot, the poor man was sen tenced to prison and the son of wealthy parents was given his liberty without the case coming to trial. THE STRIKE STILL ON. Great Northern Conference Ends Without Accomplishing? Anything. St. Paul, Minn., April 2". All over tures for a peaceful settlement of tha Great Northern strike have been de clared off and the company and tha American Railway union have begun a test nt strength that mav cause consid erable bloodshed before it ends. Presi dent Hill started the first freight for two weeks Thursday. A very important side issue in this contest is the fact that the strike was declared and is being managed by the new organization, the American Rail way union, practically in opposition to the federated brotherhoods of railway engineers, firemen, conductors and trainmen. The freight that went Thursday afternoon on its way to the coast was manned by brotherhood men and guarded by deputy marshals. Jesse Sellffinan Dead. Hotkl Dkl CoROXAto, CaL, April 2i Jesse Seligman, of the firm of J. and S. Seligman, bankers. New York and Loudon, died here on Mon day morning from pneumonia and Bright's disease. He came to Coro nado four days ago direct from New York with his wife and daughter. His condition had become so serious on his arrival that all members of his family were telegraphed for, but he died be fore their arrivai Sold at Last. Chicago, April 27. At last the world's fair buildings have been dis posed ot They were sold outright at a special meeting of the south park board to Graff & Co., housewreckers of this city, for fsr.500 and will be turned over to the buyers in a few days The work of tearing them down will be be- Run. Off for Darkest Knssla. Warsaw, April 26. Of the 213 per sons arrested here last week for taking part in the Kilinski centennial celebra tion 20'J have beea sent to Siberia. 1 w