a THE NEWS. —— Isaac Pequa has been elected President of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, in place of C. P. Huntingdon, Bishap Fow. ler, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, does not think women will ever be admitted to membership in the General Conference of the church, Park Colliery, No. 2. at Park Place, Pa., was burned’; loss, £150,000: par- tial insurance, In the colliery were employed seven hundred hands, An unsuccessful at- tempt was made at a bridge near Oxford, 0O,, to wreek an express train on the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad. furniture factory, and dwellings at Williamsport, Pa., were burned; loss, $75,000, partially insured. Clark, wanted in New York on some charge growing out of the failure of the firm of Hunter, Clark & Jacob, of which he was a member, was ar- rested in Chicago. Luppert's SONG Herman over fifty buildings, embracing the entire portion of the city of Barry, in Pike county, Ill. The loss is estimated at $200,000, Trouble {is expected to follow the threatened strike of the coke-workers in the Connellsville region, Orders have been issued for starting up the Belmont blast furnace of the Iron and Steel Company, Fire destroyed Wheeling The cotton mills in Augusta, Ga., have or- ders sufficient to them to run months, Major Wm. N. Evans, one of the best-known bandmasters in the West, died at Chicagoe,~——C, P. Huntington, H, E. tington and Charles W, Crocker have resigned from the directorate of the Central enable six entrench themselves in a strong tion whereby the Southern legal Pacific Company ehall pay the holders of Central Pacific securi- ties the annual sum of $1,800,000 in dividends. ~Fire did $40,000 damage at South ington, Mass,-———The steamboat Sea running between Red Bank, N. J., York, ran ashore near the Atlantic Highlands, The passengers were taken to Oceanic in small boats, and from that place walked to Red Bank, The Supreme Court of Massa- chusetts decided that a note given in pay- ment of a bet on horse racing is illegal, The right of way of the South Pennsylvania tailroad will be sold as unsettled lands, Guy T. Olmstead shot and killed Letter-car- rier Clifford on the street, in Chicago. Fram- Bird, Judge Butler, in the United States Philadelphia, deci i ] did not violate the | when it absorbed Philadelphia st of Denver, quashed the fire and pe Governor Waite, Sugar anda an sume their duties, facturing Comj ders, Employes of the Swampscott Ma. chine Company, of th Newmarket, N. H., applied to the receiver for the company in ourt for the : Bre cure $5,200 in wages several months ¢ —H. 8, Loucheim & Co., ers and brokers of Phi) signment, ——Lieutengnt John West Pointer and the military Alexander, a instructor at ber’s chair at Springfield, 0. The machine } ¥ ’ . *Grler re big shops of the Columb ing Railroad, at Columbus, O., were James Mulien, a Wis. cide, near Ressvyill and ox ‘armer murdered his wife ymmitted All the Kanawha Valley sumed work. Protessor Hartshorne, Neweastle, Pa., was santen the penitentiary. While playing Mass, Henry Myers, aged teen, was shot and probably at Stoughton, fatally wour by George Mackintosh, a Rev. Dr. Charles pastor Mary's Catholic Adrian, Mi treasurer © h Nati ym panion, oy Reilly, formerly League in America, has recedy in Paris April 12 jssdoners, have unearthed a ambling dens which the police had failed te Cantains Chris Colleen and John Jour numer « Be, nee and Bergeant John P, Boyle have beer suspended and charges them, The mutilated body of comparative stranger, was found about miles from Fort Dodge, Ia. up the riverina with timber Provi- preferred against Charley Tiffany, a seciuded spot grown over and brush, Joseph H. Bourne died in dence, He was sixty-seven years old, and was one of the best known horti England, and the founder of the Rhode Island Hortieultural Society, Three yonng women who represent the Rhode Island mille, started for Washington from Providence to before the Finance Committee of the to protest against the passage of the vislturists in New Henate Wilson bill, mils, ~The dead body of aged twenty-three, youngest son John Deatty, of Columbus, O,, the banks of a ¢reek four miles from pieville, a village in Ross county, —The ad. Philadelphia Kennel Philadelphia Tattersall, The show promises to be the best ever given in that eity, as the list of entries is unusually of General {iiiles. nual dog show of the Clab opened at the dogs, many of them champions or prize win- pers in their classes, Major J.W, Bickham editor of the Dayton (Ohio) Journal, is dead ce WITH AXE AND RAZOR. Father Killed by Mis Wife and Daughter---Pamily Quarrel the Cause J. F. Willis, of Homer, Ga., was killed by his daughter Lillian and his wife, The news of the tragedy did not leak out for several days until on son Francis, 11 years of nge, told it to neighbors, Daughter and mother were both arrested and given a preliminary trial. The boy testified that his father came home from work after dark and called for his sup. per. After beginning to cat his meal a diffi. culty arose between his father and mother, but the former sat down before the fire, when Lillian, » girl about 15 years of age, struck him with the axe, cutting a gash in his skull, Willie threw back his head and the mother took the axe from the girl and eut him across the throat with it. Willis died a Tew minutes later, ig The girl says she struck the blow with the axe after having cut her father's throat with @ razor, while Willis was choking her mother to death, Her plea was that she did the deed to save her mother's life, The jury, after be. ing out for some time returned a verdiet of not guilty, PRESIDENT'S VETO He Withholds Approval of the Bland Bill. LOOSELY DRAWN MEASURE. it Would Rob the Treasury of Gold and Would Retard the Re- vivalof Business Prosperity in the Country. The President sent to the House sentatives a message vetoing the Bl seigniorage bill, The President vetoes that it is loosely drawn and he bill on the gr would our gold. The vet within the 10 days given message was sent 10 Congres by the constitution, Sundays are not ine There is no question of the veto. without my approval titled **An act directing silver bullion held My strong posed legisiation , IY © responsi hold forbids the desire, and inexorably bh is die i) ir res nothing she leaner i at this time 8 lower “ia Forum ron i rh ir hase iestroy faith . ia ten it distressing plight » INTRINSIC VALUE “5 8 parity in estimation and con { the people use our money in their dally transactions Manifestly the maintenance of this par . and in th factod by these Treasury notes timation of the hol if the same, by givit to such holders, on their redemption, coin, whether it is gold or silver, which thes prefer, It follows that while oir to be paid on sac the Secretary of Treasury, the exercise of this discretion, opposed to the demands of the holder, is ler in terme the law leaves h rede If both gold and sliver Are supply our people a safe and stable currency, Such necessity has been repeatedly conceded in the platforms of both political under which the bullion now on purchased, This law insists upon the “main- dollar at all times in the markets and in the payment of debts.” The Recretary of the Treasury has, there. fore, for the best of remsons, not only promptly complied with every demand for the redemption of these Treasury notes in gold, but the present situation, as well as the letter and spirit of the law, appears plainly to justi. fy, if it does not enjoin upon him a continua tion of syah redemption, CONDITIONS PRESENTED, The conditions I have endeavored to pro sent may be thus summarized: First—The Government has purchased and now has on hand safMeient silver bullion to permit the cobnage of all the silver dollars necessary to redeem, in such dollars, the Treasury notes lssued for the purchase of said silver bullion and enough besides to coin, us gain or ssigniorage, 556,166 681 additional standard silver dollars, Second There are outstanding and now in cirenlation Treasury notes lssued In payment of the bullion purchased amounting to #152.- 951,240, These notes are legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, ex. copt when otherwise expressly stipulated they are receivable for customs, taxes and all sublie dues; when held by banking associa. ons they may be counted as part of their Iawful resorves, and they are redeemed by the government in gold at the option of the hold- ers. These advantageous attributes were dos liberately attached to these notes at the time of their Issue, They were fully understood our people, to whom such notes have been distributed ae currency, and have inspired confidence in their safety and value, and have undoubtedly thus lwducsd thelr continued and contented use ne money instead of anxi- ety for their redemption. Having referred to some incidents which I * deem relevant to the subject, it remains for me to submit a specific stutement of my obe jections to the bill now under consideration, HIS OM ECTION TO THE BILL, This bill consists of two sections, excluding one which merely appropriates a sum suffi. cient to carry the act into effect, The first section provides for the immediate coinage of the silver bullion in the Treasury which rep- resents the so-called galn or selgniorage or which would arise from the coinage of all the bullion on hand, which gain or selguiorage this section declares to be 856,156,681, It directs that the money so-colned or the cortificates jssued thereon shall be used in the payment of public expenditures, and pro- vides that if the needs of the Treasury de mand it, the Becretary of the Treasury may, in his decretion, silver certificates in excess of such coinage, not exceeding the amount of seigniorage in said section authors ized to be coined, The second section directs that as soon as posaible after the coinage of this selgniorage the remainder of the bullion held by the gov- ernment shall be coined into legaltender standard silver dollars, and that they shall be held in the Treasury for the redemption of the Treasury notes issued in the purchase of sald bullion, Fhe entire bill is most unfortunately gtructad., Nearly every sentence presents certainty and invites controversy as to moaning and intent. The first pection is ecinlly faulty in this respect, and it is remely doubtful whether its language the consummation of its supposed pu HEAT TWO FAULY m led to believe ti this for the cotuage of the bullie gain, or seigniorage, standard silver dollars, ¢ tively nothing in the inage into any descripti now suthorized under the I suppose this sectd the needs money faster than 134 actually be 00 CRs suver certificates | issuance of sue unt of selgniorage as shat which weuld not represent an « int 1 Fhe debate PYREUrY, this section ‘ gp faruest anc p y jis obi clionr that the pros RITRERM ENTE t ana un IY is nothi chara teria 1" 2) If t indicate th these certificates, character as silv or existing all pu this WOrtRnt ross setion 1 shall ns the werniend as heretofore rion of the ho PrOvIs it for T'ressary phew wil 1 that this scheme dangerous, As an ultin sperntion Treasury notes which are er for all debts public and private, are redeemable in gold and silver tion of the holder, will be replace silver cortiflcates, which, whatever ma their chametor and description, will none of these qualities, In anticipation « this result, and a» an immediale effect, the Treasury notes will naturally : value and desirability, The inact that gold can upon them, and the further fact that their destra tion has been decreed when Treasury, must tend to thelr withdrawal from general cireulation, to be immediately presented for gold redemption or to Ix hoarded for presentation at @ more conveni ent season. The sequel of both operations ill be a large addition to the silver currency n our circulation and a corresponding re- duction of gold in the Treasury, The argument has been made that thes things will not occur at once because a long time must elapse before the coinage of any- thing but the seigniorage ean be entered upon, It the puysical effects of the execution of the second section of this bill are not to be real. ized until far in the future, this may furnish a strong reason why it should not be passed so much in advance, but the postponement of its actual operation cannot prevent, the fear and loss of confidence and nervoul preosu- tion which would immediately follow its pas- sage and bring about is worst consequences, i regard this section of the bill as embody- ing u plan by which the government will be obliged to pay out its scanty store of gold for no other purpose than to force an unnatural addition of sliver money into the hands of our people, This is an exact reversal of the policy which safe finance dictates, if we are to preserve parity between gold and silver and maintain sensible bimetallism, We RSve sow outstanding more than $338 . 000,000 in sliver certifoates issued under ex- isting lawe, They are serving the purpose of money usefully and without question. Our gold reserve, amounting to only a little more than #100,000,000, is directly charged with the redemption of #346.000,000 of United States notes, When it is proposed to inflate our silver currency it is a time for strength. ening our gold reserve instead of depleting it, 1 cannot conceive of a longer step toward silver monometallism than we take when we spend our gold to buy silver certifioates for circulation, especially in view of the practical dificulties surrounding the replenishment of our gold, This leads me to earnestly present the de sirability of granting to the Secretary of the Treasury 8 better power than now exists to issue bonds to protect our gold reserve when for any reason it should be necossary, Our currency is in such s confused condition and our financial affairs are apt to assume at any time so critical a position that it seems to me = Bhd ate re hinvye § apprecats in be realized 1 am not insensible to arguments in favor of coining the bullion selgniorage in the Treasury, and I believe i could be done safe. ly and with advantage if the SBecreticey of the , had the power $0 wie bonds at a Sem a hry i saat, tution now suited to the protection of the Treasury. I hope u way will present itself in the near future for the adjustment of our monetary affairs in puch a comprehensive and conser- vative manner ag will accord to silver its proper place i our currency; but in the meantime 1 am extremely solicitious that whatever action we take on this subject may + such as to prevent loss and discourage. ment to our people at home, and the destruo- tion of confidence in rent abroad, our financial manage IVELAXD, (rROVER (3 5 . 1894, Execurnive Mavsiow, Mi FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS, BENATE. Bérn Day, Alfred Holt Colquitt's death was announced to the Senate this morn. ing by Mr, Gordon, the colleague of the desd few touching words he sounted the services of the dead sen- rin field, in * and in his resolutions of regrets offered at the Mr, Colquitt's of the Mount at 12.15 senator politi domestic ransacked no hn ly after the services over the { Benator Colquitt, In the Senate a joint resolution Mr. D abrogating the treaty Mr. Peffer intro- repealing all laws granting t waadrgd Mra clays and disap ad MoGarrahan bill orang hour wa i passage of t, and proceedings passage at arms ie Mr. Reed, For four i agains the ap ® the veral times ge appeals fron the gr nade Progress JR EO ere vilese a Viiege. as irtiish the reasons When the » snw fit onda _— sday Dex Prose NINE BURNED TO DEATH. streyed Their Home News WwW. Va The residencs of has just been received in John Witt, al that place, ind and with it children and a servant was burned to the gre were srenatod eight sma girl named Mary Hendricks, The details of the fire are horrible in extromne, Mre. Witt, her twin babes and six other obil- dren, ranging in ages Mary Hendricks, the servant girl, were sleep ing alae in the house, At an early hour Mrs, the house was enveloped in flames, frightenad woman ran from the house but re. children, The flames, which had spread however, and she was foread to give up, and barely escaped with her lie, The neighbors were quickly aroused and made herofe efforts to save the nine occupants of the building, Nothing was seen of the Int- ter, and it is supposed that all were suffoca- od by the smoke before the flames reached them. The house was completely destroged and in the ruins were found only the charred bones of the eight children and the servant girl, which were gathered together and will ail be buried in one grave, The cause of the fire was a defective flue, Mr. and Mrs, Witt are prostrated by the ter rible calamity which has befallen them and it is feared they will lose their minds, MURDER IN A BANK. A Cashier Killed for Refusing to Obey 8 Demand for Money. A man entered the branch office of the Ran Francisco Bavings Union on Market Street and presented a note 0 Assistant Cashier A, Hor rick, stating that the bearer should be given money or he would blow up the place with dynamite, Upon Herriek’s refusal to comply the man drew a pistol and fired, The first shot went wide of its mark and Herrick fired in return, but missed, then the follow shot again, The bullet entered Herriok's head, onusing instant death, The miirderer was enptured after a lively chase and sald his name was Frank Dore. man, He was taken through a demonstrative erowd to the jail. FIVE LIVES LOST: Powder Works Blown Up With Terrific Force, ONLY 2 WORKMEN ESCAPE. Eleven Thousand Pounds of Ex» plosives Demolish the Entire Acme Plant In Black's Run, Near Hulton, Pa. Probably Due to Carelessness. Ten thousand pounds of dy ok's Pittsburg, at 7.20 A. M., and who knew anything about it namite blew ug the only persons were seattered The dead are: William aged 28 Mrs, Belle Arthur, of William Arthur; Sadie sister of Mm, Arthur Allegheny Artin nged 27 YOurs, Bemaley, aged 21 Years, Charles rs, of the injured, and died in the West ] Hospital, ) Foreman Willlam Mooney 19 wears, sister of of the dynamite Epinter Mat and mon house, was injured by a flying engineer, Bradley packer, although near the injured. They ran Winds empty nitro-glyoer mpsed and fallen thus saved fron which eame down nearly a The Acme minute, Powder W four botton:, About 100 yards Wore use, whero the warding house » Hon wis | » boned iebiris the 3 rer DIUTAd Drom tm peer jurad, becuus I Mooney's warning, He saw the fire croes t and The ea hE E. ward the building. t of the ravine, SITKA'S CASTLE BURNED. £ Building About Which Clustered Many Traditions of Russian Splendor Steamer advices the from Si fm 23 mn ~ famous Barmnofl »d on March 17th by a fire origin, and that its onls Slates Commissioners Roles capped with dim A i% hus jity Casi days of the Russian 1 Grovernor sought to while tie winter by reproducing s« the gayetios of court life in 81. Petersburg Was a massive long bullding perched high upon a steep hill and approached only by a It took saranoff, who built iit long stairway, He name from Gos early in and whose memory survives for the erueltios of his rule and the pomp the century roundings, Rich furniture and costly plate once adorn. od the castle and princes and princesses of the blood have helped to cast a glamor of romance over the old pile. But many dies are associated with it as well, and the Alaska touriet is told how in the carly days two shots rang out in its reception hall just as the beautiful Princess being foreed into a marriage with an old poble through the false report of her soldier lover's death, and the returning youth and the maid who loved him fell at the altar in each other's arms, rage. Olga was The Speaker Appointed to Bucoend Colquitt Without Bolivitation or Expectation, Governor Northen, of Georgia, bas ap- pointed Speaker Charles F. Crisp to succeed the late Renntor Alfred H. Colquitt, Not a word has passed between the Governor and the Speaker and the latter's name had not even been prosented formally to the Gove armor, Charles Frederick Crisp was born on the 20th of January, 1845, in Sheffield, England, where his parents had gone on a visit, but was brought back by them to this country the year of his birth, He received a common school education in Georgia, and at the out break of the war joined the Confederate Army, serving until May 12, 1864, when he was taken prisoner of war. At the close of the war bo read law in Americus, his present home, and afterward was admitted (0 the bar, He has boss on the bench and a mem- ber of the General Assembly in his State, In 1883 he was elocted to the Forty-Bighth Congress, and has serves] in that body ever since, He was olocted Bpeakor in the Fifty. second Congress and preselected at the open. ing of the Filty-third, PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS. Epitome of Hews Gleaved from Various Put; of the Stats, What promises 10 an exciting contest he. tween the two J 2 f Lapecamer (x was precip by the appointment by Judge Livingston avid FE. Mayer to fill 8 vacancy Ini OnIerh BGI { Allg : mig srubker, who is in fornia, The rep which will » Auditor General Greg, ready for distribution, places the total receipts f your at £13.- wt %15428 raua, igs Anns MeGinley, i him, James O'Don- be a wealthy Iowa farmer, had in ehureh on Easter woman told the priest nent was made without of Lycoming Fiate Conven- to vote for ar Gov 1 body was taken from the Gay. where ihirfeen miners were eh BYEIN Commas Baer, Eminent Gry Knights Tempiar of Pennsylvania, in Pittsburg, Fier it aid. has decided Beaver, it is sald, bas decided or Congress ided to place saint Prothonotary ave de recently avowed that he #t Judge Clayton's 1G BRI Radl- ole #40 in furnished the Navy Department in re Ter Homestead employees who ie for the Govern- & Cu not sustaining by Secretary Herbert their Congressional say that wi £ to prove assert. ons before a COG ~ Appearing Lsoorr:, of Seranton, fell head-dong # of an air shaft 150 feet deep and «d with slight injuries, k Gus & Ol Company was or , With Hon, J. H. Holt W at Spow Shoe resident, Twrxry«rwo residents of Laurel Gap, whe lost relatives and personal property when a car of dynamite exploded six yoars ago, have begun suit for damages against the Philadel- phia & Reading Ballroad Company, Gomann Evaxs, at one time a prominent citizen of Seranton, was found dead in a prison cell in that place, death resulting from alcoholism, A caves at the Indian Ridge Colliery car. ried with it the east and west tracks of the Lehigh Valiey Raliroad, cutting off all traffic between Shenandoah and Delano, Tax Grand Jury for Lackawanna County has reported that the Soranmton court is structurally weak, and that the roof is likely to tumble in at any moment, Tuene i= a possibility that a sew exchange will be organized by dissatisfied members of the Pittsburg Petroleum Stack and Metal Bx. change, miss camisnsse os III ccssasmssmine DROPPED FROM A BALLOON. An Jeresast Fell 1500 Feet Into the Lake and Was Drowned, An immense crowd gathered at Cannes, France, to witness a balloon ascent by Aeron. aut Wilton, who is well known In Amerion. No oar was attached to the balloon and Wilk. ton ascended hanging to a rope. When 1,500 feet high the ballon was caught in a current of mir that carried it rapidly seaward, It was apparent that Wilton could not control the valve at the top of the balloon which, had it been opened, would have allowed the gas to escape and the balloon to gradually descend, For some unexplainable reason the aaron aut let go his bold of the rope from which he was dangling and his body shot down nto the sea with frightful velocity, The accident oovurred in full view of the spectators and a nitmber of women fainted away. A number of pleasure boats hurriedly made their way to the place where Wilton bad fallen, and after death must bave hoon almost instattancous,