I riv l f T- ai - j v W3KflBS5RW t THE WORLD OYER LATEST NEWS FROM EVERY LAND HAS OFFERED TO QUIT SHERMAN SAID TO HAVE TEN DERED HIS RESIGNATION ffho Anarchist Assassin of Premier Canovas to Be Garroted Old St Xionls Negro Who Saved Grant from Capture Is Dead Has Offered to Resign A dispatch on Monday to the Chicago -Tribune from Hotel Champlain N Y -where President McKiuley is spending his Tacation says It is learned here that there has been considerable correspondence over the man agement of the foreign department of the government and a report comes here that Secretary Sherman inspired by rumors of he presidents displeasure at his lack of diplomatic etiquette in discussing matters f the department has written the pres ident asking if it is his desire to have a change The president has been in communica tion with Judge Day almost constantly his departure from Washington but Stti not believed hero that the assistant secretary is any better informed as to Mr Shermans intentions than any one else That there will be a change in the state department is considered certain but Judge Day is not regarded as the likely successor of Mr Sherman in any event Should Mr Sherman retire Whitelaw 3teid it is believed will be the presidents choice TRIBUTE TO THE STRIKERS Judge Collier Commends Miners for Their Peaceful Conduct The hearing in the injunction case against the striking Pennsylvania miners came up before Judges Slowe and Collier at Pittsburg Monday and is perhaps one of the most important and interesting ever ield in a Pennsylvania court From the -testimony adduced and from the expres sion of the court it can safely be said that here will be some surprises That the in junction will be materially modified there can be no doubt which on its face would indicate a victory for the stukers Judge Collier said in court that the Strike would go down in history as one of ilhe wonders of the country remarkable lor the lack of disorder for which the strikers are commended and have the sym pathy of the court He said This can te ho question as to what our duty is under jail the testimony but I am somewhat in doubt as to whether or not the order should Jbc juodified We cannot determine this Tvithout a consultation Judge Stowe said Monday afternoon This injunction will not justify the is suing of an attachment against any anarclier3vho are not found in company Tvith the men named in the injunction SAVED GRANT FROM CAPTURE -Id St Ijouis Negro Who Spoiled a Confederate Scheme Is Dead Thomas Jefferson Saphiugton an old taegro who saved Gen Grant from capture iby the confederates was buried Sunday Hear Saphington a suburb of St Louis tin 1863 when Gen Grant came back to Jxnake a short visit to his farm near that ity Saphington who was first lieutenant -of the Second Missouri militia learned Ithat a number of the most radical sympa thizers with the south had planned to cap jture Grant and take him south a prisoner Saphington determined to thwart the ischeme He hurried to St Louis and met Grant just as he was starting for his farm The result was disappointment to the men xvho were lying in wait for him TO BE CHOKED TO DEATH Fate of Man Who Assassinated Premier Canovas Michel Augiollilo the anarchist assassin jof Premier Canovas has been tried by 4cout martial at Vegara Spain and found guilt3r and sentenced to death Upon hearing his sentence the prisoner turned deathly pale and had to be assisted from Jthe court room He will be garroted in jprison To Dawson City by Balloon 31 Aver a real estate man of Oakland iCal proposes to establish balloon service between Juneau and Dawson City K A JHughson is with him in the scheme as soon jas he can induce those interested to sub scribe 2000 M Ayer who has evolved 4this plan is an old balloonist and says the scheme is practicable He says the trip JCram Juneau to Dawson City ought to be jnade in twenty four hours Over 34z Years on the Bench Associate Justice Stephen J Field of the supreme court of the United States on iffonday broke the record for continuous service on the supreme bench having Jrerved thirty four years five months and HSix days one day longer than the former ichief justice John Marshallwhose services jbitherto had been the longest of all justices incethe establishment of the national tribunal of last resort Disastrous Storm in Ohio A terrific storm swept over Hicksville iDliio the other day doing 10000 damage fjn unroofing and otherwise injuring build togs The loss to crops in the surrounding Country is great Moonshiners in Chicago Internal revenue officers Saturday irrested Samuel Marlow and son whom khey found making moonshine whisky in -he heart of Chicago Several others have Ibeen located and - other arrests are ex Jpected Crack Bike Kacers Matched Bald Cooper Loughead Kiser and ISanger have been matched for a race on Jthe Buffalo XY Athletic field August j24 and for a 1000 purse The raceMs to be jrun in mile heats best two out of three BLOODY RACE RIOT Three Men Dead One Dying and Two Seriously Wounded The bloodiest race riot in Arkansas in months took place at Palaram station thirty miles from Little Rock late Satur day evening Three men are dead an jthcr fatally wounded and two others Dadly Injured R D Owens a deputy sheriff from Perry County had a warrant for Harrison Kerr a negro charged with murder When he attempted to make the arrest at Palaram Kerr opened fire on the officers The first shot struck Owens in the groin and Inflicted a serious wound The money in Owens pocket probably saved his life Charles Andry and J T Clark went to Owens assistance and five more negroes joined in with Kerr A pitched battle ensued in which over fifty shots were fired When the shooting was over Andry and Peters lay dead Clark staggered into his office and fell upon the floor Owens was lying in a ditch near the station and Kerr and the remainder of his companions had disappeared The entire town was at the scene of the shoot ing and a posse started in pursuit of the fleeing negroes Harrison Kerr was found lying dead in the road a mile away literally shot to pieces blood running from five wounds in his body The other negroes who partici pated in the battle continued their flight and have not yet been captured The whole country is in a fever of excitement and should Kerrs associates be captured they will never come to trial BELLEFORTAINE STIRRED UP Excitement Over the Murder of the Detricks Is Growing There were many detectives at work in Bellefontaipe Ohio Sunday on the rumors regarding the double murder of David Detrick and his wife While Tony Ford and Lew Deerwester are under arrest for the crime it is believed there are others who know something about it In connec tion with the rumors in the neighborhood Dne man attempted suicide on his wifes Srave because he was suspected and a woman after brooding over the horror took morphine with suicidal intent Sat urday Mrs Chas Spellman a relative of Mie Detricks charged her father-in-law Mack Spellman withcriminal assault and ihere was talk of lynching the father in as well as Ford and Deerwester but no violence is anticipated although the excitement is intense The developments of the past week have been such that many are apprehensive of the result The sensation now is the al leged confession of Ford to Mrs Wm Ells worth previous to his arrest that he com mitted the double murder Ford now de nies the confession DUEL OCCURS NEAR PARIS Prince Henri of Orleans Worsted by the Count of Turin - A Paris dispatch says The Count ol Turin and Prince Henri of Orleans fought a duel with swords at 5 oclock Sunday morning in the Bois de Marchaux Yacres son The seconds of Prince Henri of Orleans were M de Leontieff governor general of the equatorial provinces of Abyssinia and M Raoul Mourichon The Count of Turins were Gen Count Avagadro de Quinto and the Marquis Carlo di Binori The fighting was most determined and lasted twenty six minutes There were five engagements of which two were at close quarters Prince Henri received two serious wounds in the right shoulder and the right side of the ab domen The Count of Turin was wounded in the hand A STAGE IS HELD UP Yellowstone Park Has Its First Rob bery of that Character The first stage robbery ever reported in the Yellowstone National Park occurred Saturday Col Young announced it to the secretary of the interior in the follow ing telegram Fort Yellowstone Wyo Aug 14 Transportation stage robbed by two men on Sol Fortuara Plateau this morning 500 taken Have ordered out everything available possible within the means at my disposal and desire authority to offer re ward for capture Young The acting secretary of the interior de partment has no authority to offer a reward for the apprehension of the robbers DOUBLE OHIO TRAGEDY Young Girl Accidently Shoots a Companion and Suicides Maud Youngs aged 16 and Jennie Mey ers aged 19 were visiting with Mrs Jane Leak at Montpelier Ohio They were in a side room talking and laughing when a report f a shot was heard in the room Maud came out and excitedly exclaimed I have killed Jennie Jennie had been shot in the head and is not expected to live Maud rushed back into the house and shot herself and died in an hour They were close friends Murder of Mrs Hauptraan Ten days ago the aged widow of Peter Hauptman a wealthy wholesale cigar dealer of St Louis was found dead in their parlor with her throat cut from ear to ear It was supposed that Louisa aged 25 a daughter of the couplewho had been demented for some years killed her mother From what can be learned now it seems that Wm Hauptman her brother may have committed the deed William who is 28 years old has recently developed signs of insanity He became so bad that he was taken to an asylum William was with his mother when Mrs Windscheim a sister found Mrs Hauptman dead ne could not be made to say a word about the crime Price of Beef Is Lowered Ali Kansas City packers simultaneously raised the price of dressed beef to the local trade to 6 cents a pound recently Thi action being an advance of nearly a cent caused protests from all sides The result has been a reduction to 5f cents notwith standing that the price of live cattle in the yards is even stronger than when the price of meat was first advanced Every packer in the city announced the reduction all at the sanie hour ANAROHI8T AND A RAZOR STATE OP NEBRASKA A Combination that Causes a Bloody Scrimmage in Pittsbnrg James Elbert an Austrian arrested in Pittsburg Pa as a suspicious character and supposed to be an anarchist created much excitement Sunday morning at No 8 police station house by slashing five policemen with a razor One of the officers George Mclntyre is horribly cut on the face and hi3 condition is serious The other officers are badly cut but not seriously Elbert after cutting his way through the guard of fifteen policemen made his escape from the station by jump ing thirty feet from a rear window hotly pursued by the officers while blood streamed from their wounds After a chase of several blocks Officer Corless finally fired his revolver the bullet taking effect in Elberts arm and he was then captured The man fought desperately and had to be clubbed into insensibility before he could be taken back to the sta tion R G DUN COS REVIEW Wheats Rapid Upward Rush Fea ture of the Week R G Dun Cos Weekly Review of Traae says Every city reporting this week notes an increase in trade and nearly all bright crop prospects The strong rise in stocks the growth of bank clearings and railroad earnings the heavy specula tion in many products but most of all in wheat have made the week one of sur passing interest even to those who best remember the upward rush In 1S79 In all the great industries a heavy demand for products appear with strong speculation in materials and intermediate products In the iron and steel branch starting of many works after settlement of wage3 keeps prices low and even decreases some but the fact that the demand is growing leads to heavy purchases of iron ore Failures for the week have been 239 in the United States against 298 last year and 80 in Canada against 36 last year IS SAID TO BE LEPROSY Several Deaths from the Disease Re ported in Minnesota There is a revival of the report of the existence of leprosy in Clay County Min nesota between Georgetown and Perley The death of Hans Aldrich which occurred some months ago is said to have been due to this disease He was sent to Mt Clemens Mich for treatment and hastily sent home on the ground it is now learned that he was affected with leprosy lie went in a public car Other cases of death are reported to be due to the same cause New cases are said to have been recently reported The county will take steps to investigate the matter and if lep rosy is found stringent quarantine will probably be enforced permanently It is said few or no precautionary measures have been carried on against the spread of the disease DEFAULTER AND BIGAMIST Embezzler Green Marries in Brook lyn Under an Assumed Name Wm R Green the defaulting cashier of the Hannibal and St Joseph Railroad who was arrested in Brooklyn N Y on Mon day proves to be a bigamist When he fled from Kansas City in March ISOB taking with him it is charged 4000 or the companys money he left a wife and two children in Ottawa Kan In Brook lyn under the name of W W Bowen he married a young woman of respectable family and was living at 281 Jay Street When arrested Can Now Remove Tobacco LaLucha the government organ pub lished in Cuba Is authority for the state ment that the Spanish government at Mad rid has issued an order that all claims for tobacco by American manufacturers have been allowed and the tobacco can be re moved Not Andrecs Balloon Dr Nansen the explorer is of the opin ion that the balloon sighted Saturday by the steamer Konghalfdan was not Andrees balloon Inventor Haskell Dead Col James R Haskell inventor of the multicharge gun died at his home at Passiac N J Sunday aged 65 years HAKEET QUOTATIONS- Chicago Cattle common to prime 300 to 550 hogs shipping grades 300 to 425 sheep fair to choice 200 to 450 wheat No 2 red Sic to 82c corn No 2 27c to 29c oats No 2 17c to 18c rye No 2 45c to 40c butter choice creamery 14c to 10c eggs fresh 10c to 12c new potatoes UOc to 75c per bushel Indianapolis Cattle shipping 300 to 500 hogs choice light 300 to 425 sheep common to choice 300 to 375 wheat No 2 77c to 79c corn No 2 white 27c to 2Sc oats No 2 white 21c to 22c St Louis Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 425 sheep 300 to 400 wheat No 2 88c to 90c corn No 2 yellow 26c to 27c oats No 2 white 17c to 19c rye No 2 45c to 46c Cincinnati Cattle 250 to 500 hogs 300 to 400 sheep 250 to 400 wheat No 2 85c to S7c corn No 2 mixed 28c to 29c oats No 2 mixed 17c to 19c rye No 2 44c to 46c Detroit Cattle 250 to 525 hogs 300 to 400 sheep 250 to 400 wheat No 2 85c to 87c corn No 2 yellow 27c to 28c oats No 2 white 19c to 20c rye 45c to 47c Toledo Wheat No 2 red 87c to 88c corn No 2 mixed 28c to 29c oats No 2 white 17c to 19c rye No 2 46c to 47c clover seed 430 to 440 Milwaukee Wheat No 2 spring 87c to 88c corn No 3 27c to 29c oats No 2 white 21c to 23c rye No 1 45c to barley No 2 35c to 42c pork mess 750 to 825 Buffalo Cattle 300 to 525 hogs 300 to 450 sheep 300 to 475 wheat No 2 red 84c to 86c corn No 2 yellow 32c to 33c oats No 2 white 21c to 22c New York Cattle 300 to 550 hogs 350 to 475 sheep 300 to 450 wheat No 2 red 87c to 89c corn No 2 32c to 34c oats No 2 white 21c to 23c butier creamery 12c to 16c eggs Westerri 13c to 15c NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON DENSED FORM Pour Hundred Thousand Acres of School Lands on Which 2556879 of Rent Is Past Due Restored to State Control Other State Items Reclaims School Domain The board of educational lands and funds have cancelled delinquent lease and sale contracts in thirty three counties in volving 435287 acres and the amount of rental and interest which is lost by reason of its being necessary to make such can cellation is placed at 226879 the pay ments having been allowed to become so far delinquent that the holders of the con tracts will not pay up Many contracts are delinquent seven and eight years while in other cases speculators have paid only 1 or sometimes less for a quarter of a section and have paid nothing since these running delinquent two three and four years It is not the policy of the present board to cancel contracts held by persons living on the land and who are making an honest effort to pay for the same and where this fact is proven to the commissioner of public lands and buildings and a part of the de linquency paid extensions to the end of the year nave been granted with the understanding that the remainder will be paid Commissioner Wolfe is traveling over the state leasing these and other school lands as rapidly as possible with the result that a great deal of the land which has been idle rental having been lost by failure to keep up collections will now begin drawing rental and will con tinue to do so if the present policy is fol lowed much of this land having been held heretofore by speculators and others who have paid little or nothing for the use thereof Offers to Pay Depositors in Full A meeting of the stockholders and di rectors of the defunct Nebraska National Bank of York will be held on August 21 to take action on the proposition made by the City National Bank to assume the lia bilities of the former The latter bank offers to pay depositors in four equal pay ments in six twelve eighteen and twenty four months time with interest at 4 per cent Tne depositors have been canvassed and it is thought they will agree tc the plan and thus avoid the trouble and ex pense of a receh er Ride all the Way on One Horse Jim and Kid Gabriel passed through Nebraska last week on their way to Chi cago where they are to finish a contract to ride 2500 miles with one horse each The object is to test the western range horses and to introduce them into the Russian cavalry They started at Sheridan Wyo went north to Delb River Northwest Ter ritory down to Miles City Mont then to Belle Fourche S D through the Black Hills to the B M Railroad The horses look well Woodmen at Wayne The second annual picnic of the North cast Nebraska Logrolling Association Modern Woodmen of America was held at Wayne last week and it was the biggest eventof the kind ever held in northern Ne braska Nearly thirty camps were repre sented and 5000 Woodmen and other citi zens were present from every town in that part of the state Tho principal address was by Lieut Gov Northcott of Illinois on woodcraft Girl Bitten by a Rattlesnake A little girl of Henry Kiesters of Jun iata while playing around one of the large cribs of corn in that village was severely bitten above the knee by a rattlesnake She ran home at once and her parents began giving her whisky and took her to a physician who drew out all the poison possible and burned the wound More whisky was given her until she was quite drunk She is reported all right now In Jail for Passing Bogus Checks Mr Perry took a steam swing to Has tings some weeks ago and is now in the county jail charged with paying his ac counts about the city with bogus checks He skipped out and went to Columbus where he was captured and taken back to Hastings He had his hearing before the county judge and was fined 5 and costs Failing to pay the fine he is serving his sentence in the county jail Fatal Hog Disease A fatal hog disease has been invading the swine on the bottom lands in Dakota County and now but very few fanners have escaped its ravages The disease is quickin its results oftinies performing its deadly work inside of twelve hours and somewhat resembles typhoid pneumonia All sorts of remedies and preventives have been resorted to but the disease keeps on spreading Two Children Drowned Willie and Mary Yogel aged 4 and 10 years respectively were drowned in the Blue River at Crete They fell from a narrow walk and were carried over a mill -dam to the rocks below A 12-year-old brother swam manfully to the rescue and for a while kept them to the surface but the current was so swift he was obliged to let go Dragged by a Horse for a Mile While Harry Boyle of Kearny a deliv ery boy was delivering some meat on horseback his horse became frightened and threw him oil His foot caught in the stir rup and he was dragged for over a mile before the horse was stopped When found his head was badly bruised both arms broken and he was taken up for dead Boy Killed by Lightning The 10-year-old son of E E Pickring a fanner living eleven miles northwest of Monroe was struck by lightning and iu stantly killed recently Drowned in a Tub The 2-year-old son of FredXangenberg of Norfolk fell into a tub of water while playing around the house and drowned before help could arrive Cure Him with Anti Toxine Frank Vavra a Bohemian farmer living about five miles from Crete was caught on his farm by a wild pig which attacked him and bit him terribly on the left thigh Symptoms of tetanus or lockjaw appeared and the doctor telegraphed to Chicago for anti toxine to which lately recoveries have been attributed Meantime he tried to check and lessen the severity of the spasms and the first injection of the anti toxine was given in twenty four hours over the original wound Spasms stopped at once after the injection and the patient is doing very well the recovery being sure f 352tiHfrilWB W J 4C3ffiS Invents a Beet Harvester A Philipp a Stanton man has brought out an invention which is likely to becomo a necessary factor in beet harvesting The machine is so constructed that it tops and lifts the beet at the same time carries th tops and all rubbish away from the row and leaves the beets exposed to view and ready to be picked up and loaded int wagons The topping is done by a knife onto which the top3 are forced by a revolv ing wheel both working automatical s that beets standing deep in the ground aw topped with surprising uniformity At the tops leave the knife they are caught bj a shield or plow similar to that of an ordi nary road grader and carried to one side of the row A double plow passes under the beet and lifts it to the surface Mr Philipp estimates that one of these ma chines will harvest from three to five acre of beets per day Beatrice Files an Answer City Attorney Prout on behalf of the citj of Beatrice has filed an answer in th United States district court to the sui brought by the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company to recover 50001 bonds issued by the city to the Kansas City Beatrice Railway The bonds were delivered on the agreement that the roac was to be built into Beatrice but the com pany only completed the road to Virginia thirteen miles away and for about a yeai leased the Rock Island track and later thi line was sold to the Missouri Pacific sys tem and its terminus is now at Virginia The answer questions the jurisdiction oi the court and the right of the plaintiff tc invest its money in such securities and as serts that the company has failed to com ply with the state law relating to outsidi companies Only One Encampment Some official information has been ex changed within the month between Gov Holcomb and Adjt Gen Barry on the sub ject of an encampment of the Nebraska National Guard While no decision haj been reached it is probable that regi mental encampments will be ordered fo 1897 and a brigade encampment for Omahs in 1898 The question of expense is the one on which the matter hinges The las legislature declined to heed the recom mendations of the adjutant general and refused to increase the appropriation foi the support of the National Guard It ij thus impossible to hold the annual brigad6 encampments without incurring a deficit of at least 56000 which Gov Holcomb U unwilling to sanction Soldiers Reunion The fourth annual reunion of the Doug las County Veterans Association was held at Waterloo and eclipsed in point of at tendance any encampment heretofore held under the auspices of the association In honor of Commander-in-Chief Clarkson of the Grand Army of the Republic the camp was christened Camp Clarkson The camp was situated on the eastern border ol the town in a cool and shady grove on the banks of the Elkhorn River The local committees and members of the local Grand Army of the Republic post in pre paring the camp grounds spared neithei labor nor expense Wheat Nearly Pays for His Land John Stollar a farmer living west oi McCool Junction bought on time an eighty acre farm on which he gave mort gages for nearly all of the purchase price amounting to 1500 He finished thrash ing winter wheat last week which he raised on this land and thrashed out 2200 bushels of the finest quality of wintei wheat for which he will receive 00 cents per bushel returning him 1800 Ewing Will Have a Flour 3IUU Ewing is to have a flour mill Arrange ments have been made by Saunders Brothers of Badger Holt County to erect and operate a flour mill having a capacity of fifty barrels per day The mill will be run by water power and work has begun and will be pushed rapidly It is expected to have the mill in working condition within ninety days Caught Under a Clay Banlc William Volk and Carl Schneidberg were caught under a falling clay bank while at work in the brick yards of Her man Gericke at Norfolk Schneidberg who is an old man was buried beneath two feet of earth Two ribs were broken and probably fatal internal injuries were re ceived Volk was only partially buried and will recover Robbed on a Freight Train Adolf Berger a broom manufacturer of Columbus was slugged and robbed on a freight train between there and Schuyler by a gang of tramps Berger was goingdto Schuyler to buy some broom corn and could not wait for the passenger He was relieved of 531 No arrests were made Nemaha County Settlers Picnic The annual picnic of the Nemaha County Old Settlers Association was hold at Ne maha the other day and was a grand suc cess in every sense The crowd was esti mated at 5000 Stock to Be Fed in the Winter Many thousands of sheep are now on the way to Shelton for the winters feeding and many more will be shipped in by rail Several thousand cattle will also bo fed there Nebraska Short Notes There are 315 old soldiers living in York County A large number of land seekers are re ported in the vicinity of Bayard Cheyenne County The county of Holt through the efforts of County Attorney Buttler has a first lien on all tiie property of ex State Treasurer Bartley in that county and the state through its attorney Mr Smyth has only a second lien notwithstanding all reports to the contrary County Treasurer Johnson of York County has paid 37500 of the old railroad bond issued in 1877 which have been draw- ing 10 per cent interest There is still 6000 more of the bonds out but the mone is on deposit at the fiscal agency in New York to redeem them The stateof Ne braska held 28500 of these bonds which was redeemed on August 2 The bonds were payable on August 1 1897 A number of Bayard horsemen have just completed a fine half--mile track The wheat and oats crop in Webstei County is the be3t as well as the best quantity ever raised The Grand Army reunion of the south eastern district which was to have been held this month at Table Rock has been declared off Small grain is a heavy yield in Cuming County The average on wheat is run ning all the way from ten to thirty bushels per acre while the prospects are that tho averageson oats will be at least forty five buslie3 per acre WOMEN AID THE STRIKERS Lend Their Kffbrts to Assist the Coal Miners The Present Situation The week has seen ho change in the coal miners strike The mn who are out still maintain their resolute stand and declare that they will not go back until their just demands are acceded to The women of the Turtle Creek valley of Pennsylvania have joined hands with the strikcrs Their attention has been call ed to the fact that the injunction which prevents the strikers from venturing upon the property of the New York and Cleve land Gas Coal Company applies to men only and that nothing in it is said about women They have been urged to go where the men are unable to and add their entreaties and prayers to those of the strikers in their efforts to have the men who are yet at Avork lay down their tools The women will enter heart and soul into the work and do all in their power to coax the men out A bomb was thrown into the camp of the striking miners at Sandy Creek when the New York and Cleveland Gas Coal Company refused to pay the wages due its -men A hitter light will be made in the comas by the United Mine Workers to gain the money for the strikers The New York and Cleveland company has individual contracts with all its men that are binding and tight One of the pro visions is that in case the mn quit work voluntarily against the wish of the com pany they sacrifice all watres yet unpaid in the hands of the company This Dis trict President Dolan of the Mine Work ers who will make the tight in the courts for tho men considers grossly illegal and will make a test of the legality of the con tracts with the men as early as possible He says the company violated them in two instances and that they have thereby dissolved all binding obligations on tho inen The amount due the Sandy Creek miners is their wages for the first two weeks in July The miners are acting in a peaceable and orderly manner and although several mass meetings have been heM during the week no violence of any kind has beeu threatened TO WED MRS LAMGTRY Austrian Prince Who Is to Marry tho Jersey Lily Prince Esterhazy De Galaatha who it is announced will soon lead Mrs Langtry to the altar is a noted character in Eu rope although not well known in Amer ica He is prominent in Austria and is very favorably known at the court of his TKIXCE ESTERHAZY HE GALATHA country Mrs Langtrjs prospective hus band is 54 years old but it i3 said that he does not look or feel his age by twenty years His marriage may provoke no end of comment in continental journals but it is highly probable that Prince Paul will care little what the journals say about him Mis Langtry s recent divorce leaves her free to wed OHIO POPULIST TICKET Middle of the Road Men Nominate Coxey for Governor Governor Jacob Coxey Lieutenant Governor Morris Whitcomb Supreme Judge D C Iomeroy Attorney General C A Reider State Treasurer F M Morris The above ticket was nominated by the Ohio Populists at Columbus in one of the most exciting conventions ever held in the State It was a turbulent assembly and the efforts of the police wor necessary to preserve a semblance of order Chanres wero made that Senator Ilanaa and John R McLean furnished money to aid the cause of anti fusion and fusion respec tively and several fights were indulged in on the floor The middle of the road element carried the day and nominated their ticket headed by Jacob S Coxey Charges of corruption were openly made against delegates who it is alleged re- reived money for railroad expenses and a committee was appointed to investigate Mr Coxey addressed a large ratification meeting at the State House at night Anthony Hope the novelist is coming to America to give a series of readings James Feiimore Cooper s old home at Cooperstown N Y is to be turned into a park Mrs Marion Crawford wife of the nov elist has dark eyes and golden hair a rare combination Secretary of State and Mrs Shermai will celebrate their golden wedding anni versary ict year J Nat Harbin Senator Hearsts oltt mining partner thought to be dead for fifteen jears has been found living io Mexico Friends of Gen Lew Wallace are ac tively managing his campaign for elec tion to the United States Senate to suc ceed Senator Turpie There is a 15-year-old widow at Coving- ton Ky The girl was married a year ago to a 19-year-old boy all the parents consenting Her husband died a few days ago United States Senator George Frisbee -Hoar of Massachusetts and Senator-Julius C Burrows of Michigan are study ing modern Greek in Washington with s Turkish tutor Ambassador Hay and his family are al ready popular in London society Misa Helen Hay in particular having won so cial success Miss Hay has also mads her debut as a poetess w - fj I i v