M li CI If'. I THE BED CLOUD CHIEF. A. C. nOSMEK, Publisher. RED CLOUD. . . . NEBRASKA. THE WORLD AT LARGE. Summary of the Daily News, CONGRESSIONAL. Mast petitions, bills and resolutions were Introduced in the Senate on the 9th. Among them were bills for the admission of Idaho and Wyoming as States, and a bill by Sen ator Plumb to equalize bounties. Senator Turpie presented a resolution looking to the suppression of trusts, and after an ex ecutive session the Senate adjourned.... In the House Mr. Payne (X. Y.) introduced a bill defining the duties of sergeant-at-arms. After the introduction of several resolutions the Speaker surprised the House by an nouncing several important committees, be ing the committees on Ways and Means, Ap propriations, Manufactures, Elections and Mileage, with Messrs. McKinlcy, Cannon, Kclley (Pa.), Kowcll and Lind chairmen in the order named. The House then adjourned until Wednesday. Wue.v the Senate met on the 10th Mr. Mor rill reported adversely the bill for the organ ization of National banks with a capital less ithan $30,000. After the introduction of bills SenatorTurpie addressed the Senate in favor ,of his resolution for the suppression of trusts. Senator Evarts introduced a bill for holding the World's Fair at Xew York in 1S92, and after an executive session the Senate adjourned The House was not in session. IH the Senate on the 11th a number of Ue publican Senators resigned from certain committees in order to make places for Sen ators from new States. By request Senator Insalls introduced a Service Pension bill. The Senators then proceeded to the hall of the House of Itepresentativcs to participate In thecentennial ceremonies In commemora tion of the inauguration of George Washing Ion In the House no legislative business was transacted. The Senate, the President and Cabinet, diplomatic corps and other notable persons were received at one o'clock and the ceremonies commemorative of the Inauguration of George Washington as first President proceeded, at the conclusion of which the House adjourned. A number of bills, petitions and resolu tions were introduced In the Senate on the 12th, among them a bill by Senator Stewart for the free coinage of gold and silver; a bill by Senator Itutler for the emigration of col ored persons from the Southern States. Sen ator Gibson offered a resolution on the same subject, and Senator Ingalls a resolution for a holiday recess from December 19 to Janu ary ft. The Senate then adjourned until Monday In the House Mr. Iluttcrworth (Ohio) offered a resolution for a special com mittee to investigate certain forgeries'of sig natures of members of Congress during the late campaign in Ohio, which, after an amus ing discussion, was adopted. After a lengthy debate upon the report of the special com mittee to investigate the late defalcation by the cashier of the sergeant-at-arms, the death of Mr. Gay, of Louisiana, was an nounced and the House adjourned until Monday. WASHINGTON NOTES. The beef combine investigation at Washington on the 9th heard witnesses who testified that the "Big Four" had refused meat at wholesale prices to parties who had secured Government contracts when bidding against the combine. Mks. Scott-Lokd, the sister of Mrs. Harrison, died at Washington on the 10th. The centennial ceremonies over the inauguration of George Washington as first President of the United States occurred in the hall of the House of Representatives on the 11th. The President and Cabinet and other dis tinguished native and foreign digni taries were present. The oration was delivered by Chief Justice Fuller. A fuxd for a monument to Jefferson Davis has been started in Washington, with a subscription of $100 by General W. II. Payne. The Senate has confirmed the nomi nation of Green B. Ilaum, of Illinois, as Commissioner of Pensions. THE EAST. TnE following are the new officers of the National Association of Trotting Horse Breeders elected in New York: President, II. A. T. Mali, New York; first vice-president, L. Stanford, Cali fornia; second vice-president, J. V. Baker, Jr., Ohio; secretary, L. D. Packer, New York. Hakvky Kennedy, one of the old est and most prominent Wall street brokers, died recently. Peter Clauseh, a New York line man, has been burned to death by electric wires. Rev. J. R. Kexdrick was found dead in bed by the side of his wife at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., the other morn ing. He was at one time president of Vassar College and was widely known. The Johnstown, Pa., theater owner, in whose place the panic occurred, has been censured for not having a proper number of exits. New York sheep breeders prefer the abolition of internal taxation to any reduction of the tariff. By a cave in at Bundy's coal mine near Butler, Pa., one miner was killed and another fatally injuied. M es A. Shaw, formerly a lumber merchant at Towanda, Pa., has been arrested is Washington on a warrant charging him with false pretenses. It is claimed he worked the "pious racket" and succeeded in defrauding the citi zens and banks of Wellsboro andBloss burg. Pa., out of $100,000 and the citi zens of Plainfield, N. J., out of a like sum. General JosErnB.lnn, ex-Secretary of State, is in St Luke's hospital. New York, with tumor of lower jaw. A section of the jawbone has been re moved. He can not talk. Judgments for $90,00 damages against the New York City elevated xoads have been docketed. J Jf e Franklin, colored, 107, aud Amelia Whitson, 102 years old, died in New York City one day recently. Boston business men gave a ban quet at the Hotel Vendome on the 32th. Among the speakers were ex Ikeslfent Cleveland and Henry W. Grady. E. N. Dicsersox, the noted New York patent lawyer and leading coun sel for the Bell Telephone Company, died in New York City the other nigB Marie Dobsey, under life sentence for the murder of her rather, Benjamin J. Burton, of Newport, B. I., died at tht State prison. THE As awful panic occurred at the Park Opera nouse, Johnstown, Pa., on the night of the 10th. Thirteen resi dents of the unfortunate city were killed and about 75 injured. The calamity was due to an alarm of fire. Sister Mary Kelly, of the Roman Catholic convent at Harrisburg, Pa., tried to commit suicide by jumping from a window of the third story of a house, but was prevented. She was insane. B. R. Johnson, clerk of a Detroit jewelry firm, sustained fatal injuries the other morning by falling from a fourth story window of a hotel which had caught fire. Other guests had narrow escapes. TnE Chicago Auditorium was dedi cated on the 9th in the presence of President Harrison. Colonel J. II. Rattiboxe, founder of theKnightsof Pythias, died at Luna, O., on the J)th. TnE deadlock over the selection of Senators in Montana continued on the 9th. By a collision between a local freight and a work train near Crawfordsville, Ind., the other day a fireman was killed and three men badly hurt. The Missouri Democratic State Cen tral Committee met at St. Louis on the 10th and elected Frank Walker secre tary. Walker is a Francis or anti-Vest man. Robert Snyder, who shot and killed his wife and his mother-in-law, Mrs. Sarah Collins, at Eldorado, Kan., Au gust 10, has been sentenced to impris onment for life at hard labor in the penitentiary. Jonx Tissle, a brakeman, on a gravel train, was accidentally killed at Atoka, I. T. He fell under the wheels and his head was severed from his body. TnE new Union Depot at Moberly, Mo., was the occasion of a demonstra tion on the 11th. The building is an elegant structure and the citizens are justified in their pride concerning it. General Davis Atwood, editor of the SUite Journal, of Madison, Wis., died recently. He served a term in Congress and was one of the leading Republicans of the State. He had been connected with the press nearly fifty years. It is now openly stated that gross frauds are being perpetrated in Kan sas under the pretext of voting bonds for sugar manufacture. A dispatch from Cheyenne, Wyo., says: "Kettle Jack's" gang of horse and cattle thieves in the Big Horn val ley, eleven in number, are reported to have been lynched by a band of settlers. Expert burglars broke open C. A. Whyland & Co.'s safe in their commis sion office, near the Board of Trade, Chicago, the other night and secured 5,000 worth of negotiable bonds. Charles Crook, a well known char acter living near Sioux City, Iowa, af ter a hot race with a train, tried to cross in front of the engine and was torn to fragments. Jonx Martin, aged eight years; Ambrose Donnelly, aged ten and Bert Sheldon, aged twelve, broke through the ice while skating on a mill pond at Irontou, in Sauk County, Wis. Martin and Sheldon were dead when their bodies were recovered, ten minutes after the accident, but Donnelly was resuscitated. Judge Samuel Maxwell, a mem ber of the Supreme Court of Nebraska since the admission of the State, has been offered the position of chief at torney for the Consolidated Street Railway Company of Omaha, with $10,000 salary. Andrew J. Dexisox, for thirty years a merchant of Chicago and an enthusiastic Democrat, died the other night of pneumonia. Before adjourning the Indiana State Grange declared in favor of Chi cago as the place for holding the World's Fair. The estimated damage by flood in the vicinity of Colusa, Cal., will reach $1,000,000, mostly to crops. John Gillman, the murderer of Mrs. Ettenhover and child, has been hanged at Empire City, Ore. TnE current expenses of the State charities of Kansas for the month of November amounted to $26,849.28. THE SOUTH. Southern students at Johns Hop kins University passed resolutions of condolence on the death of Jeff Davis. By the explosion of a boiler in Dean & King's saw mill, near Birmingham, Ala., four men were killed. Two thousand 'longshoremen of Sa vannah, Ga., went on a strike on the 10th. Not a bale of cotton was loaded. The trouble had its origin hi the deter mination of the stevedores to stand by the ship merchants as against the own ers of vessels in the case of custody of customs fees. The funeral services over the re mains of Jefferson Davis occurred at New Orleans on the 11th. Bishop Gal leher, of the Episcopal Church, offici ated, assisted by Bishop Thompson and clergy of other denominations. The procession was lengthy and was an im posing display. The body was laid in its temporary resting place after mili tary rites. Louis Wilkowski, the mayor of Starke, Fla., was shot and killed by Albert Thrasher at Gainesville, Fla., recently. The affair was due, it was said, to family complications. Several days ago the trainmen of the Pratt mines, near Birmingham, Ala., struck for higher wages. Later over 1,200 free miners stopped work, demanding that the trainmen's request be granted. They say that they will not run the risk of operating the mines with green hands, and propose to sup port the strikers. Jonx Tierxey, a wealthy railroad contractor, fell from a construction train near Granburg, Tex., and was horribly injured. Carter Wilkixsox, colored, has been hanged at Plaquemine, La., for killing his paramour. UK.VERAE. Fifteen thousand seals have been killed in the Gulf of St. Lawrence dur ing the past few days. Three renowned German artists have been commissioned to paint a pan orama of Stanley's and Kmin's adven tures for the American World's Fair. The Hotel Suiss, Amsterdam, was destroyed by Hro the other night. Tho guests all escaped. TnE sou of Minister Lincoln, reported very sick, has greatly improved. TnE National League magnates havo commenced legal proceedings against the Brotherhood ball players. There are efforts in France to scaro up a boom for General Boulanger. McDonald, the alleged candy poisoner, of St. Johns, N. B., has been proven insane. Ex-Consul Sewell is to be reap pointed Consul at Api, Samoa. General Sickles' daughter, by his second wife, eloped recently with a bartender. There is a rumor that Silcott, the defaulter, is on his way to Chili. Bombay dispatches say thero will bo no famine in the Madras presidency. Rain has fallen and supplies havo gone from the north. It is reported from Rio do Janeiro that the jewels of the Empress of Brazil have leeii stolen. They were exceedingly valuable. Emin Pasha is pronounced by his physicians to be much better and in ex cellent spirits. He, however, requires constant attention from his physicians. The Bell Telephone Company h:is declared a dividend of $.'5 per share, payable January 15. The natives of Swasilaud, South Africa, have agreed to permit a trium virate of two Englishmen and one Transvaal Dutchman to govern their country. Robert Browning, the poet, died at Venice. Italy, on the 12th. Ho was bora in London in 1812, aud started a new school of thought, many cities in America and Europe having branch so cieties. Edward Bradley, whose writings as "Cuthbert Bede" have gained him world-wide celebrity, died in England recently. The threatened strike of the coal porters employed by the London gas companies has been averted by arbitra tion. All the printers in Berne, Switzer land, have struck for higher wages. Several papers were unable to issue their usual editions. Owixg to the scarcity of farm labor ers in Germany, the project of import ing Chinese farm hands has been re ceived with great favor. English newspapers, without ex ception, print extended obituary no tices of the poet Browning, bestowing upon his achievements a measure of praise which they as unanimously withheld from him during his life. They agree that he possessed and dis played a high degree of genius, but are inclined to the belief that much of what passed for admiration of his works was really affectation. Great excitement has been caused in high circles in Berlin by the arrest of a woman occupying an exalted position in society on the charge of being a pro curess. Le Carox, the spy and informer, is shortly to publish a book relating his personal adventures and experiences, in which enterprise he is understood to be backed by several men prominent in the leadership of the English Conserva tive party. THE LATEST. By the burning of a boarding house at Hancock Mich., the other night two women and a child perished. There seems to be no doubt that Dr. Minor, G. Morris Halles aud Louis Cox, prominent citizens were drowned at Seattle, Wash. Their bodies were not recovered. Three children were drowned at Port Hope, Out., recently, by break ing through the ice on a pond. A disastrous explosion occurred in the Belmez mines, Spain. Many of the unfortunate men at work were killed and injured. By two caves-in at the Big Champion mine at Iron Mountain, Mich., on the 13th three miners lost their lives. The Star distillery, non-trust, at Pe oria, HI., was burned recently. One man lost his life. By the explosion of a boiler in a saw mill at Covington, Tenn., Robert Jones and Mack Stewart, engineers, were in stantly killed, and Jack Chandler and Buell Euos, sawyers, were fatally in jured. Sam Brokaw, baggage master on the Grand Rapids & Ishpeming rail road, has been arrested, charged with robbing the mails. For the year past the mail pouches on his route have been rifled and thrown into the river. Mrs. Booth, wife of the General of the Salvation Army, who has been suf fering from cancer for some time, is sinking rapidly. All hope of her recov ery has been abandoned. Three trainmen were killed by a collision of a freight train with a flat car at Graham, Mo., on the 13th. Four others were badly injured. Tns strike at the great Pratt mines near Birmingham, Ala., has been ad justed. The Chicago Daily News published a sensational report of a plot to murder one of the Cronin jurors during the trial. Business failures (Dun's report) for the seven days ended December 12 numbered, including Canada, 290, com pared with 31C the previous week and 303 the corresponding week of last year. Secetary Tracy will call for bids for the construction of a new 3,500-ton and a 7,500-ton cruiser. The appropri ation for the former is 1,800,000 and for the latter $3,500,000. The bureau of statistics of the Treas ury Department reports that during .November the value of breadstuff ex ported was $10,053,446. SUGAR FRAUDS. Kerretajy Mohler Advised o' Fraud la Voting Itonda For Sugar Mills The Profit From Legitimate Haslness. Topkka, Kan., Dec .13. Secretary Moliler, of tho State Board of Agri culture, has received a dispatch from Meade announcing that hjg frauds had lwen unearthed in connection with the Miimuola sugar works and requesting ' him to start at once for Meade and in I vestigato the matter. He held a con 1 fcrence with tho Governor and then telegraphed that it would be impossible for him to leave the city at present, but that he would send some one to Minne ola to look into the matter. Later information was received that tsiveu uiiib ,pany. of Meade, is and oper- the American Sugar Comp; which O. B. Hamilton, of president, and which built and oper ated a sugar factory at Minneola, Clark County, last fall used imported barrel sugar in making its sirup in order to deceive the people who had voted lKnds to establish the works. Tho Adamson or "roasting" process was employed in this mill. W. G. Emerson, It. M. Painter and A. T. Bodle, are credited with the dis covery of the fraud. AH of them have been instrumental in helping the American SugarCompany introduce its plants, and tiny feel that ti ey have been shamefully duped. A dispatch from Meade states that fortunately the $00,000 of bonds voted in six different townships were not in possession of the American Sugar Com pany and would therefore be returned to those who voted them. Secretary Mohler said to a corre .spoudciit: "If Messrs. Emerson and Painter can prove the charge they make against tho American Sugar Company and it is reasonable to suppose that they can, for they are conservative men and would not take the position they now occupy without the strongest kind of evidence the sugar industry of Kansas will undoubtedly receive a serious setback. So far as indiscrim inate bonding of townships and coun ties is concerned the sooner it is stopped the better. While I regard profitable sugar making in Kansas I am free to admit that the experimental stage has not been passed, and it is folly for the people of Western Kansas to accept blindly the representations of men who wish to erect mills through purely sel fish motives. The mill at Medicine Tnil.TB wlifrli wnc luiilr liv fnlnnl Tvl- dred with his own money, has made a good showing this year, and from its work I expect to be able to gather be fore long reliable statistics concerning the industry. "I propose," continued Mr. Mohler, "to have the representative of every sugar plant and process in the State present at the annual meeting of the Board of Agriculture next month, so that the public may leani the exact status of affairs as regards sorghum sugar making. In the meantime the charges against tho American Sugar lrtniivini- will Iia invnctifTfitml " XV11'...J ... J UlTlitJUglllV'l The process employed by the Ameri- can sugar company is the one which. its representatives promise to use in the mills they are now seeking to establish in Stanton and Haskell Counties through the aid of bonds. T. A. MeNeal, of Medicine Lodge, said that the Eldred mill, which uses the diffusion process, has made 450,000 pounds of sugar this year, most of which has been marketed at a good prie. Colonel Eldred has been experi menting with beet sugar with con siderable success. From four acres of beets he manufactured 9,000 pounds of good sugar, ne proposes to devote a large acreage to sugar beets next sea son and then be able to manufacture beet sugar after the regular sorghum season is over. In this way he expects to make his mill pay handsome div idends. THE FIRST PRESIDENT. The Centennial of the Inauguration of the First President Celebrated at the Capitol. Washixotox, Dec. 13. The two houses held a joint meeting Wednes day, in pursuance to a resolution of the last Congress, to celebrate the centen nial anniversary of the inauguration of tho first President. The meeting was, in fact, supplemental to the cen tennial celebration of the adoption of the Constitution observed in Plyladel phia last spring. The Hall of Repre sentatives was literally crowded and the gathering was in every respect notable. The great men of the Nation were in attendance and the foreign representatives were numerous the Pan-American congress being in at tendance in a body. At one o'clock Vice-President Mor ton called the vast assembly to order and after prayer Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller of the Supreme Court was introduced as the orator of the day. The new Chief Justice, little known in public life in the capital city, made a profound impression. His address was ornate as well as clear cut, and his analysis of Washington's character is judged as being one of the best crit iques ever spoken of '-the Father of ffis Country." He eulogized Wash ington both for his deeds as a war chief and his thorough conservatism and patriotism as the first Chief Magistrate of our country. Judce Ful ler spoke at length, but his essay was of a character to command and retain the attention of his great and intelli gent audience. Miss Sickles' Elopement. WniTE Plaixs, N. Y., Dec. 18. Thomas Dinham and Miss Alta Sickles quietly applied to Rev. F. B. Van Kleeck, pastor of Grace Episcopal Church here and were married. Miss Sickles is a daughter of General Daniel Sickles and granddaughter of George E. Sickles, who died at Xew Rochelle about three years ago leaving an es tate of about $2,000,000. She is eight- een years old and recently graduated x r -a--,. .. - .!. , i from a Catholic convent in Montreal. Dinham is about twenty-five years of age, and is employed as a bartender at New Rochelle. The affair turns out to be an elopement MANY ACCIDENTS. Fatal Wreck on the Wabash Road A Fatal Hoarding House Fire In Michigan Promlneut Citizen of Washington Drowned Other Casualties. ACCIDENT OX THE WARASn. St. Louis, Dec. 14. An accident oc curred last night on the Wabash rail road near the town of Graham, four teen miles west of here, in which three men were killed anil four badly injured. The dead are: Charles Seffenbaiigh, conductor, Sandusky, O.; James Ester brook, brakeman, St. Charles, Mo.; Ed Kennedy, engineer, Ferguson, Mo. The injured are: I. King, James Ken nedy, Charles King, Charles Stout. Tho men were on the engine of a abash ,ir . , . ,. - . . . J es,tern frf ht- aml were """ m H.ie tow?f Ksoii. A flat car ob- ! sjructed the track and m the collision the engine and tender were thrown from the track and the engineer, con ductor and brakeman killed. The in jured men were on the flat car and saved themselves by jumping. fatal flames. Milwaukee, Wis.,Dec.l3. A special from Hancock, Mich., says the Huron mine otlices, a large building, formerly occupied as a store, burned last night. The second story was used as a board ing house. Of the twelve boarders eleven wero working on the night shift. Ono man jumped, injur ing himself bady. Two Finlander women and a six-weeks-old child perished in the llauies. A fireman succeeded in getting one of them totho J window, but on account ot the dense smoke was compelled to leave the in sensible woman to save his own life. Portions of the bodies of the victims were found this morning. The books of the mine office were saved. The cause of the fire is unknown. The loss is several thousand dollars. THREE CITIZEXS DROWXED. Poktlaxd, Ore., Dee. 14. There seems to be no longer a shadow of doubt as to the sad fate of Dr. Minor, G. Morris Halles and Louis Cox. Flags are displayed at half mast all over Seattle, and the city hall is draped in mourning. A meeting was held by I the Bar Association and Chamber of I Commerce to take suitable me- morial action in " respect to the , memory of the dead. A large party t has been organized to institute a thor- ough search for the bodies of the three men. Hie ueacn will be patroiieu uay and night near the scene of the drown- The bodies are expected to be J f J!' found within a short distance of where the Indian canoe was found, but they are not expected to rise for several days j'et, THREE CniLDREX DROWXED. Port Hope, Ont., Dec. 14. A very sad drowning accident occurred here in which three children Iwlonging to very respectable families lost their lives. Two little bovs, sons of Joseph J Mallette, and a son of E. M. Mitchell, of the Port Hope Gardens, were skat- l ing on the electric light pond, where I they were last seen. They undoubted ly broke through the ice and were j drowned. An energetic search party is now looking for tho bodies, KURIED IX A JIIXE. IsnPEMiXG, Mich., Dec. 14. Three miners were buried by a fall of ground in the Big Champion mine at Iron Mountain, Mich. William Leech was rescued badly burned, but alive. Au gust Magnusson and Gustaf Erickson were taken out dead. At six o'clock last evening another fall took place in the "C shaft of the same mine, kill ing Ed Parmenter. The body has not been recovered. FATAL FIRE. Kaxsas City, Mo.. Dec. 14. Early yesterday morning the Oklahoma House, Thirteenth and Walnut, was discovered on lire by Policeman Morlan, who dashed through the flames and smoke and aroused the sleeping in mates. James Russell, aged twenty two, however, was overcome and perished. Two others were hurt. There are suspicious of incendiarism aud Charles Marchaunt, the cook, has been placed under arrest, CAUGHT IX THE MACIUXEP.V. Lixcolx, Neb., Dec. 14. Isaac George, a miller of this city, was hor ribly mangled in the machinery of his mill yesterday morning. His leg was caught in a pulley and ground to a pulp to the knee, the skin being en tirely torn off from that point to the hip. He can hardly recover. FEARFUL 31IXE EXPLOSIOX. Madrid, Dec. 14. Tliere has been an explosion in the Belmez mines. Fif teen injured persons have been brought to the mouth of the pit. The number of dead is unknown, but it is thought to be large. Republicans Defeated at Chicago. Chicago, Dec. 14. A board of waterways of nine members was elect ed Thursday. The Independent "Cit izens'" ticket, consisting of Judge Richard Prendergast, A. P. Gilmore and J. J. Altpeter, Independent Demo crats, and II. J. Willing, Christopher Hotz and Murry Xelson, Independent Republicans, were elected. Of the straight Democratic ticket, John H. King, William II. Russell and Frank Wenter were elected. The straight Republican ticket was snowed under. Diamonds Found In Wyoming. Dexveb, Col., Dec. 14. A topaz which differs from the African diamond has been discovered in Popoagie canyon, Wyoming. The stone is reported as being plentiful, and many have left for Mm nonr "li;imrmil field-: of Wvoniillf." Found Dead on HI Claim. Guthrie, I. T., Dec. 14. Dr. Martin Cheney, formerly of Kingman, Kan., was found dead on his claim about six miles southeast of here yesterday after noon. He had been shot in the head with a rifle and was still warm when it was reported and the deputy marshals reached him. When shot he was sitting on a log at the edge of the woods and was probably mistaken for a deer, as several hunting parties were .. . . .. Z . TT scouring the woods ai mai piace. xie had been here since April 22 and had a fine claim and no contest. He leaves a sister and two children in Waco, Tex. FRAUDS CHARGED. Cirave Accutatlns Ag:tlnt Henry Craw ford, of Chicago. Chicago, Dee. 15. For two davs past two prominent Indiana lawyers, General Lew Wallace and Lew Hatch, have been at the Grand Pacific Hotel on a secret mission, and extraordinary measures have been taken to prevent publicity. The object of the visit, how ever, was manitestfd when they ap peared in Judge Gresham's chambers and laid before the judge charges of a sensational character against Henry Crawford, the well known Chicago lawyer and railroad speculator. The accusations against Mr. Craw- " :, in unci, mai in isn he. bought the Midland Itaihvav Company of ll.Uana for mim Jt a -foriV,,;sili saIe aml Wlthm a shorl tnm. u f ;uri are. in oriel, mat m i.v i. ter originated a scheme for lloating bonds for 810,000,000 upon a road the value of whose rolling stock, right of way and all other :uets was not over 8175,000. Fraud of a bold and ingenious kind is charged against him, and on a portion of the $H,lMM, 000 issue of bonds $2t,000 are known to have been obtained with a prospect that this is only a part of the sum fraudulently realived. Messrs. Wallace and Hatch represent the Loan & Investment Company of Xew York, which claims to be a victim of Mr. Crawford's railroad financiering i to the extent of SIGO.OUO and b the first to complain. A GRAVE STORY. Evidence of the Premature llurlal of a Voting Ctrl. Madisox, Wis., Dec. 15. A sad case I of premature burial has just developed here. About a month ago diphtheria appeared in the house of a prominent family. A young domestic was terri bly frightened and desired to go to her home in the country, but the attending' physician would not permit her, not from fear of spreading the disease, but to render assistance to the family. A young child died of the dread disease, and this, with the horror of diseases, caused the girl to take to her lied, and she apparently died in a few hours, and was at once buried by the author ities. A few days ago her parents ob tained permission to remove the Iody to the country, and upon opening the casket they were horrified to discover that the body was lying on its face, the hair wrenched from the head and the flesh literally torn from the face and hands. THE SUPREME COURT. Reasons Why the Xumlier of Justice Should Be Iiicrraaed. WAsniXGTox, Dec. 15. One of the reasons which the Supreme Court Jus tices think should have weight in favor of the passage of a bill to increase the number of Justices of the Supreme Court bench is the large territory over which some of them have to preside when they go on circuit during the summer recess of the court. Justice Miller's circuit includes Colorado, Aikansas, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and the Northwest. This circuit is the one Judge Brewer has presided over, and there is a unanimity of opinion among lawyers that it is too large for one Circuit Judge, and that the extreme Western territory should be divided by creating at least two additional Su preme Court Justices to sit with the Circuit Judges in the new made dis trict when not on the bench at Wash ington. NATIVES SLAUGHTERED. 5e.rpa 1'anta Accused of Deceit and the Killing of M:tkoloi People. Zaxzihar, Dec. 15. Mozambique advices state that Serpa Panta, after deceiving British Consul Johnson by declaring his intentions to be peaceful, obtained reinforcements iiiMozambique and proceeded to theMakoIolci country, where he and his party entrenched themselves and declared war upon Ma kololo, slaughtering hundreds of men with Gatling guns. It is rumored that the Gatling guns were lately placed at the disiosal of Serpa Panta by Consul Johnson. The Makololo people were thoroughly suldued. and, believing that the English had abandoned them, accepted the domination of the Portu guese. Serpa Panta has publicly an nounced his intention to subdue the entire country to Nyassa. Murder and Suicide. Gkaxd Rapids, Mich., Dec. 15. John McDonnell, a farmer of Tyrone township a few miles north of this city, went hunting, leaving his home and farm in the keeping of his wife and hired man. Upon his return about noon he found his wife dead in the house and Gilmore a corpse in the woods across the road. The wife had been strangled with a leather thonjr tightly wound about her neck and from the appearance of the room had made a desperate struggle for her life. Gil more committed suicide with an old musket loaded with buckshot and his throat and breast were riddled with bullets. The motive for the tragedy is thought to have been Gilmore's in fatuation for the woman. Saved HI Neck. Dexver, Col., Dec 15. Henry Ty son, who was arrested in Kansas City some months ago and convicted of murder in the first degree for the kill ing of John King in Denver, has saved his neck, the jury having returned a verdict that Tyson is insane. Took IIU llrhle Alone- CiiEVEXNE, W. T.,Dec. 15. Thomas It. Adams manager of the cattle ranch of the Milwaukee & Wyoming Invest ment Company, has absconded. His defalcations are estimated at 815,000. He has been married about six weeks. He took his bride with him. Drink and gambling are the causes attributed. Business failures (Dun's report) for the seven days ended December 12 numbered, including Canada, 290, com pared with 316 the previous week and 303 the corresponding week of last year. c A r A. i Irl ti --' JE -T--mMmm