—— ———————— = THE NEWS ——— All efforts to sell the Exposition buildings as a whole having failed, President Donues- berger, of the South Park Board, has decided to dispose of them separately or in groups.” Wm. Whalen, the bogus stock floater hin been convicted in St. Louis,——The state of Texas has not a dollar in its treasury,——An unfinished building was demolished by the wind in Park Ridge, Ill. One man was killed and three seriously injured, —— Bishop Tuttle sour, has joined the auxiliary branch of the Salvation Army.——A man and two women were drowned while skift ridin g at Keokuk, fowa, ——63,500 Chinamen have been regis- tered in Californian, ——Fire nearly panic among the students in the Abbott Fe male Seminary at Andover, Mass, —The as- sessors in the town of North Bridge decided to tax bicycles, Ross Cullen and Delmar Farries are held in Brooklyn, N. mer's body.——It is reported that Mayor Hopkins will appoint Mrs, Potter Palmer a member of the Chicago Board of Education, on August 1st, to succeed Mrs. Flower whose term then expires, Mrs, Palmer will soon visit Japan.——Jake Brown was hanged at Jefferson City, Mo,, for the murder of Frank Mackin, ——Barray Facks, of Philadel- phia, shot his mother in the head and then killed himself. The woman will recover, - The House chusetts, agreed to of Representatives of Massa- the constitution, embracing the principles referendum by a vote of 156 to 2, Sixto Ceroda, the of a band of brigands that has been terrorizing the peo- ple of the district around the town of Capala, in the state of Cinalo, Mexico, has been tured by a force of rurals after a long and exciting chase, after four of Ceroda’s band were killed, will Tha Allan Line steamship Corean arrived at Phil- adelphia after a stormy voyage, having been pennéd in for four days by lcebergs.- Nicolai de Raylan and A. E. Rachbette, Rus- sian officials connected with the World's Fair Commission, were arrested in Chicago on the charge of disorderly conduct, ——Edward Mills, the United States Express Company guard who shot Edward Devery, was present- ed with a watch and chain by Mrs, Braunschwager, of the leader a} - Ceroda be shot, bedroom in a three-story tene lyn, was burned to death. lamp set fire to the carpet cock, of Shelby City, Ky by Pat Cain, a drunken laborer, —eMarshal Sil was shot and killed Senator Wolcott was bur in effigy ina mining camp ja the Cy eause of this recent An imp sentatives of nearly all the heid in Philadelphia, to ta abouta combination of | called industrial navy Provincetown Mass, a by fishermen, are t Washingto Francisco hundred Comm movement, Smith der of Oakland, ——8everal com; da, under command of C firing a shot, compelled Colonel Galvin's tachment of Fry's army, ot Mt, Sterling, Ohio, to & O. train which they took j she Broad Rilk Weavers’ Union declared a strike in the Taragon in Paterson, N. J., becanse fused to recognize the sh pe anies of Ohio mili ionel Colt, without Creneral SACRE OR © silk he company m- wnmittes organization, The dred hands out +f hundred of whom men, Presiden Helmer and Vice President Helmer, Merchants’ Bank, of Lockport, N, Y., strike throws two employmen abogt Are We . Were indicted for receiving money when the bank was insolvent, — Nicholas Monsurrat, president and genera: manager of the Cleve land, Akron and Columbus Railroad, has re- signed, to take effect June ist. ——C, M. Car peuter, a traveling salesman for a New York house, but who registered Baltimore, died at the Hotel ‘Richmond, Va. from an overdose of mor; hige, ~-While Lot- tie Rowe, a while girl, »as returning to her home, near Staontor, Va., from a dance in company with John Bradford, they were at- tacked by Lawrence Spiller, a negro, who, after knocking Bradford senseless, murdered the girl, and placed her body on the milroad track. The negro was arrested, and vice from Dodsui, the militia was called out to guard the jall and prevent a lynching: Nearly all of five boatloads of hunters be longing to the ship Retriever were lost at sea, The earriage-body factory of Francis & Smith, in Amesburg, Oregon, was burned, Mountsin fires were reported to be maging at Westport and Keating, Ps. destroying bridges flames to save property. Attorney General Hancock gave a hearing to labor organiza. tions petitioning him to begin proceedings for the dissolution of the Standard Oil Com- pany. -Hugh Dougherty, an engineer, was fatally cut by David Mark because he insisted on going to bed, Adam Fleischman, a Poughkeepsie saloon-keepor, committed sui- cide by getting in the way of a Central Hud- son express train,——State Veterinary Bure geon Gresewell, of Colorado, started for the western part of the state, having been notified by tnspectors that siousands of diseased Utah sheep were crossing the line into Mesa and Routt counties, Governor Waite says he will eall out the militia to prevent the invasion, if necessary, The Virginia prison authorities have met with vigorous opposition in their efforts to secure a farm on which to put con. viets to work, ——The Hollander, Bradshaw- Folsom Company, which conducted a large department store in Boston, made an assign- ment. The assets are $256,000 and the Labil- ities $141,000, The Danish consul at Chi eago has received a letter from Denmark stating that Peter Anderson, one of Coxey's army, is hedr to n large estate in that coun. try. Ma E. G. Pendleton, of Washington, D. C., has a tame swan, which he eaptured one day while out hunting, that answers to his call and Ie very domestic, running slong with the ame geese and other animals of which he is the owner, nt nn II rin. Taw young American bicyclist, Frank from a. Lenz, who has been traversing Asia east to west, has arrived at J —- COLEY AND HIS 300 Weary "Wealers at Last Reach Their Destination, IN CAMP AT BRIGHTWOOD. No Clash With the Authorities— Greeted at the District Line by Thousands of Curious Per~ sons—Escorted to the Camp- ing Place by One Off cer. On the very threshold of the nation's cap for the invasion whic he tional banks, overthrow the whole by himself, He promises that it will bring f other The force through which all this is to be done {8s not so formid When he n Easter Bun desirable things prominent, Ohio, « ington an five hundred thousand The Brightwood Driving Park, a suburb of army of wee which just marched in the Wash ington, numbered exactly 336 n entoen dogs, This paueit) bers he he feels wap 4 severe | wears his the great reve tha silon. That he e« capital a much doubt, the army's mareh uid have br there Recruits haw been refused ¢ arger force line Uniontown, "1 been in small bodies of The best fortunes with the Comn 3 march to Washington haa § ge arkable one, The start raging storm with 756 men bered 600 at Pittst worse shape slid Pere y ¥AVIY in the neTon Massillon, when be saddle, dro-ged his head an without spliit, harnessed to one missary wagons, A short distance wl ag badly, scinewhat more press; were sandwiched in unes and the beavy mane the led were passed to their ive tune and, wi the Hue Crowds IIIng Army s strange bearers band started up a t foot forward, wont fo marched « had all along the line to see the aggrogati han ans Brightwood Park, been talked of ane ond of the at has agitated Co y reesption the rom and for wha District o sdoners have made such elaborate pre ation, When they saw it they realised y fear, The Commenweal entered Camp Thaddeus ens, in Irightwood Park, shortly after 1 Oo clock, about four The camp grounds are from miles the Capitol, whose from camp, and city limits, on Drigivt- vetuith 1 alot s 1 vi £1 wl electrio line runs As indie from the 8« few hundred yards mweal neared the camp gro the county was a member of the Greely Relief Expedi- tion, joined in with two pate the way in, The eurlosity of the people of to seo the aggregation was remarkable, In the throng which swept out of the of camp, the Comme dios, whe a, and led with Senators, Representatives families, swells of the foreign and legation everywhere, to the demand made upon them, Senators Mandarson and Frye, with their wives, were in handsome onrringes, Senntor Coke and Representative Duckley Kilgore, of Texas, stood wedged in by the populace, and the long gray beard of Benator Dolph, of Oregon, shone conspicuously, Representa. tive Doliver, of Towa, was at the head of another group of Congressmen. Mrs, Anna L. Diggs, of Kansas, the populist speaker, stood with a baby in her arms, and beside her, gorgeous in their satin, with long brajds hanging down their backs and red buttons of the nobility on thelr skull caps, were two sphynx-faced Orientals from the Chinese legation, It was notiesable, however, that the very class from whom General Coxey expeets the greatest encouragement wore not present in large numbers, These are the workingmen, the moehianies of the oity, Agent Redstone, who has been promising Mr, Coxey an esoort of 1,500 men, was also conspiouous by his ab. senoe, At 8 o'clock in the afternoon Carl Brown made a speech, reiterating his reincarnation theories, Mr, wext, He sald: “I believe the goorontn And Hom-iuterest-boaring. pond bill will be passed fn two works. You only have to piek up the papers to see what desperate straits these men dre coming 10 to Look at the trains that I don't believe it lawices- No, far from I We will to the Capitol steps and make our demands This rev- olutionary spirit of '7¢ is making the mongy- Congress takes two loft to itaelf, 10 vote on anything i Four million mon idle for nine That's what Grover Cleveland this country. Sherman and Tom Reed have helped hi, so months, has cost Democrats, If Congress knows what the is dighonest, We propose to give them the benefit of the doubt and show them the way out of the hole, Coxey at the Capitol. Yacob 8. Coxey marched his Army of the monweal to the Capitol according to the Yaft announcement he made when he Je Massl- Ohio, on Easter Sunday, five wee fon, for Washington, The procession, for wi % permit has been granted, was escorted by mounted polies to the Capitol groun is, There the line was deflected into I street, AS Hue of mounted trance to the Capitol grounds, policemen barred the Marshal Browne marsbaled the men into line after all had an early breakfast « {f eggs, There were four hundred the coffees and bread, «E61 with Philadel men, of whish sixty came phia division, marshalled by Christopher, Col- umbug Jones. Each man carried a bhoavy stick, to which was attached a small white “Peqoe on earth, good will W- denth to start +h, instructing them to disband , Insoriieq men, but %." Before the interest-bearing made 8 on renche ward Browne apitol and enter the grounds as in- dividuals, At 10,15 ook ready and Wk the army Was ut of the Brightwood Driving Park RR started iundred f sLrong. asdund interes A avenue 10 CEEOL 3 gr fenoe ana Marshal Browne stond at thelr disap po Gut went up from oy sssemblage. Mr, C1 srowd and mised hie hat, was deathly pale, Captain Garden, of Capitol police, stepy ed to one side of him and Lieutenant Kelly, of the eity police, Was al his other arm. The other formed idly ab him. The menacing officnrs wit crowd below Was keg viule, “What do ack by you want to do her 7 asked Captain Garden, { wish to make an address.” respon ied sv, his volee showing intense smo. ‘But you eannot do that:” said Captain Garden, quistly, but § rmly. “Then oan 1 read a protest?’ asked Mr. Coxey. There was a moment's hesitation, He drew from his pocket a type-writien manuscript and began to unfold it. There was A move ment among the officers, Capiain Garden quietly took Mr. Coxey by the loft arm and Lieutenant Kelley took him by the right They moved down the steps, the solid rank of officers following. Mr. thus impelled downward and forward, He was put under ar gt, but Srmly Coxey Was not pulled or pushed away. of shouts, Again the mounted officers charged, the erowd surged and for a time looked na though there would be troubde, Bat the ite tie knot of officers pressed forward with Coxey in their centre, They were finaked by the mounted officers, Thus Coxey made his exit from the Capitol entrance and the cast front. As he moved away he tossed the type-writton protest to & group of newspaper men and said ; “That is for the press,” There was no formal arrest of Coxey, The officers merely moved him away from the sontre of conflict. They were satisfied in having provented the use of the Capitol for Coxey's specch and its attendant demonstra- Hot. Wien the open area bad been cleared General Coxey was given unrestrained Hib erty. He turnsd toward his army, which still stood on Ii street, When the police had escorted Coxey to his sarriage he elambered into the vehicle, where his wife sat with the baby in her lap, and as he $tood there a loud cheer was sont up from the surrounding erowd, The army ns it marched down Heoot, street was followed by hundreds of poorly dressad men and women, who cheered it all the way without intermission, and houted Marshals Cari Browne and Christophet Joe lumbus Jones were the only persons arrested, They were marched off to the police station and locked up in adjacent cells, The entries in their reapective cases were: Carl Drowne, ! supation artist and jour aged forty-four, nalist, single, charged with dikorderiy cone duet, complainant, Officer Edward J. Beram- r Robertson, Christopher Columbus Jones, fifty-nine Yours old, pumpmiaker, married, charged with disorderly conduct, complainant, Officer Cos. lin Flathers: arrested by Officer Auldridge, reljeved yrowne had been when ha got to stod him. Browne appeared cast down d at the door of He a statement, his cell in reply to a reporter's knock, was asked if he desired to “I don’t the gponse, Dre miske wish to say apyi\bing until 1 hear from American poople,” Tite ywie was released on #500 ball, Carl Browne and Christopher Columbus Jones be the Police Co Browne be nrradgned the United will tried In art, § nl tates statute, the regulating the peli will be charged with dor FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. EERATE. 11415 Day. In the Senate pending amendment to the ange the date on which the into effect from June 1 to inmed, 1157 Day. The death of bridge #10 ped the wheels of nothing was done in the the announcement of 1 MeMilian, regret. debates « tari bil July 30 uly sho Wis re. Nenutor Blocy egnisiation and Renate but to re 4 death fror and adopt the usual resolutions of The Benate proceedings i, most of the afternoon Benator Mquire, 6 carol general opposition beelig VENGEANCE OF A MOB. Reddy Wilson Lynched in lows for Bhooting & Marshal, the most notorious Central Reddy Wilson, one of and Weal, is a cory wl wellorganizged band of citizens, ring paid the penalty for City Marshal Whitney In The principals to the Ivnching are burglars bhighwaymen in the of a determined Wilson we, the victim shooting and Missouri Yaliey. gnknown, having been earefully disguised and their faces hidden behind masks, About 100 men met at the schoolhouse at 12 o'clock. A leader was appointed and the others sent out to get more men, At 1 o'clock about 160 were gathered together and 400 more wore on the street, The le ader sent out parties to look up a rope and sledge-bammers, and the mob proceeded to the jail, Officers Lyon, Duel, and Norse were then with the prisoner, They drew their revolvers when the mob came up, but when they were coy ered by at least fifty weapons in the hands of the mob and were ordered to deliver the prisoner up they did so, Wilson was then dragged out Into the street, and the mob headed for the outakirts Wilson tried to make a speech. fense, but would say noting about his pals. Before the man had finished what he bad to tay his words were drowned by the eries of The erime which was thus avenged was the killing of City Marshal Whitney while that raid upon a place supposed to be the rendes- vous of a troublesome gang of burglars, the house of & man named Henderson, Marshal Whitney, Night Marshal Duel, Policeman Jim Wiseoup, and J. B. Lyons determined to search the house, In the room downstairs the officers found Henderson, and Special Policeman Wisecup was left to guard him, while the other three men went up stairs, There they found two of the burglars, and when Marshall Whitney ordered them to sur- render they opened fire on the overs, kil- Mang Whitney, Lyons and Duel then empted their revolvers at the burglars. One of burglars wae shot in through the lungs, once der, and once through each leg, L: a shot through his clothes, and it ic i £ po 900 NEN KILLED Were Holied Down the Mountain From the Cliff Nearly 1,800 Fest Above, Bounding From wall to Wall. News has just been received a terrible disaster which has over ps sent Yaquis In Bonora and The troops wes a narrow canyon, up the precipitous sides of ation of 1,500 to 2.000 {eet hugh wriel es DOWIGers were in pu Bierra de Bacatel, filth day of the guers into a long, dar sierra de Dacatel, me proecipit al joast An additiona Grganige] io wonunde has boen mpaien agains the hed vigorousiy « said that r, alter the called Lan Arenas fell me party of Yagu » was slain lo a most cruel $e him walk, They Sierre de Bacatel is ir Sountry ono t is said that ond were in the rebellion, Yaquis, The Yaquis sre to Mexico what the Apaches are to Arizona, only, if anything, they are more cruel. They are magnificient specimens of manbood, few being under six feet, and inaugurate periodical raids from their lm. pregnable strongholds in the fastnesses of the Sierre Nevadas, © A SILVER AVALANCHE. Mint. A portion of the $50,000,000 that is stored away in vault C at the Mint in Philadelphin 12 foot and a width of 8 feet, mouldy and frail, About 3 o'clock as Well ington Morris, an employe, was standing on top of the pile raking Wm rome loose silver dollars, he tread into a bag and the silver dollars at onos began to slide out. Like a snow-fall on a mountain side the mass of silver dollars grew in side, There was an ominous ramble, and the clerks at the foot of the pile looked up in sur. prise, Seeing the impending danger, 8 wild break was made for the door. Dr. Caleb Whitehead, who represents the Mint Bureau, jumped over the sales at the moment when the dollars poured down with a roar, and ¥. A. Sartori and W, L. Bosbyshell, who are as sisting in the counting, scrambled out in the nick of time. Serious Injury to Norris was feared, but he succceded in escaping unhurt, it estimated that the amount which fell was valued st $2,000,000 and weighed 112,000 foitome of Mews Olexned from Various Parts (gf the State One minor was killed, another was fa injured and a third runaw wus seviousiy nurt y car in the Henry Colliery oi the nigh Valley Coal Company, Dear Wilkes Barre, It is beljeved in Pittsburg that Walter Lyon will be nominsted for Lieutenant OG that "Jack Robinson, of County, in the fight for the sake of IVErLOr, nnd Delawire in mereiy notoriety, Prohibitionists Delaware County met at Media nnd made thelr nominati who Rta ang Jerry Hockman, enlisted In the army n Williams who for nea ears has been mourned as dead, ha glanglon, Two Omen were gt wi iliaionm of ext Clason Oi CX} fot looking to towns within a Man, Bar Widonler Cornelius Doyle, © 2. tells a remarks #0 her of the firs MOnLtnE ago. The Arabtdon ool Hazle Seven arrests annual oon of the Evangel A nog GARY & sas tiaw, who is confined y Jail, was arrested in Beadin Lancaster, in connection ved to e in the Parker Colliery, have been cated Girards John Weidensaul, 81 sours tacked by bees death. med Welsh ung Moun 4ig nd y tp Min ouliaw, we arrest vending, Lancaster | anty officers, charged with ing & participant in the robbery of the Cody ane postoffice The twe Women's Fore Presbyte was niy-fourth annual session of ign Missionary Society of ria Church {Philadelphia Sect begun at Scranton, with 200 delegales, representing six States, in atten innoe Mrs Carrie Y. Kilgore was admitted to practice 4s un lawyer io the courts of Berks eounty, that Charies Hafler, a burglar, who was caught being the first of her sex to distinotion these, attain robbing a wealthy farmer, near Quakertown, was vursued by a crowd of men and boys and captured and he was lod 0 Quakertown by a rope tied around his wrists, Mrs. Adam Loagenscker, 40 years, oomne mitted suicide by hanging in the atic of her home in Maytown, Lancaster County. It is likely Delaware County Prohititionists will nominate Lewis D. Vail, of Philadelphia, for the Judgeship. Luther M. Fine, City Clark, of Easton, fol) BLAZE AT WINCHESTER. An lseendinry Fire Causes the Lome of S100, 000 Worth of Property. Winchester, Va, had a $100,000 fire of in. condiary origin, This is the second fire with. fn the month. The Qre started on Main street opposite the historic Taylor Hotel, and burned the heart out of the best business block of the town, The principal josers are: Solenberger & Stouffor, stoves and hardware, $12,000; John Vilwig, furniture, $3,000; Adams Express £1,000; C. W. Hensel, dry goods, #150004 » Atwell, clothiers, 815.000, and a number of gor & Stouffer's building. His loss is $10,000, All partly insured, Charles Drosdway Rouss, the New York