THE NEWS. Bt. Louis detectives claim to have located Rev, Francis Harman, 8 fugitive from Salt Lake City, on the cloudburst flooded Gypsum City, charge of murder Kan., the adjacent country. D {f the Atchils Railway Company, St. Louls on vice president ( Banta Fe the presidency 0 has n f t} { the and San | YR PANY A severe Mo., caused thelr The wind blew a perfect gale for é almost terr Francisco Railway ( windstorm in Bt, Joseph, many to seek cellars, wople in i peop : i about hall | ken. | Ker an hour, and manywer retrl A trolley car of Company's system fnto a at Orange. The wagon Was wreeked, and the | driver, a farmer named Wagner, was killed, i Two other men who wers with Wagner, sus prisoners os i ‘onsolidated Traction | Newark, N. J., Bloomileld aveoue, in rap | i wagon near tained serious injuries, Six caped fro WwW. Va. jail, | of whom aptured Josep! Windrath, convicted of the murder of Care) B. in Joseph Moore, aged twenty, white, had both | m the Favetteaville three were re h, was executed Chicago tre Mire legs cut off by a ( hesapeaks and Ohio tral: at Coalburg, W. Va Heh wl gone to sleey on the track, and the train atru kK him, ting off both legs near the body. John Clarence Lee, Ph. D., has been ed President of St. Lawrence University Canton, N. Y., and has accepted has been a professor at Lombard I, Corbin, the millionaire, carriage at Newport, N. H., and receive of Galesburg, twelve years was thrown | A his _ f er hot AuUsaeq w i juries which feath in a fs His coa dent. Ohio So 1 Ky., Edward Dead and 1 killed, » was also killed in ilision Railroad tobert Packe -Inac uthwestern near [he battleship Massachus K. Two by nmi iy Massia, Phiiads of the in tured. He was handsome Mahone | le Otelia propert ia the serving murder, others seri gas at th 1 ' kin, Pa 8S. H. Boper, an aged feal engineer, who h years on a steam b ad worked twenty WAS ton by being thrown from the unmanageable ! machine, ——Hix h mon took Jessie Slayton, colored on trial for assauiting i a women, from the court-house at Columbus, Ga., and haaged him, The sloop was capsized In Hampton roads, and six of | the aight persons on board were drowned, ses TH 050 instead of were drowned at the unsuccessful launch of Bmith at Newport News The steamer Grace Williams, In tow of the tug Temple | feyele, killed undred armed Irena | persons one, oh ! Las Emery, bound from Buttens Bay for Two | Rivers, Wis, foundered about midway be tween the Manitous and the west shore, The crew escaped to the tug. rr IIc SON'S AWFUL RESENTMENT. Kills His Pather For Whipping Him asd Abusing His Mother. J. A. Baker, ex-County Commissioner of Ward county, N. D., was shot and killed by his son William, a boy 17 years of age, at his ranch, 20 miles north of Minot. Just before the killing Baker had given his boy a hard whipping, after which he started to abuse thie boy's mother, The boy ther shot his father twice, killing him instantly. ARBOR BILL VETO Justified Under Present Treasury Conditions. BIG APPROPRIATIONS. The President Says the Bill Opens the Way to Insidious and Increas- Ing Abuses, Stimulating a Vic- lous Paternalism. The President sent the foll the House: To the Ho “I return House wing message to 9" i 86 of Representalives: herewith without entitled approval bill pumbered 7977, ‘An act ropalr and preservation of certain for other publio works on rivers and karbors and Rog. “There are four hundred and seventeen is of appr ontalped in this bill, pation © nd every part of the country is represented distribution of its {avors, “It directly appropriates or provides the immediate expenditure of nearly four teen millions of dollars for river and harbo, im is in addition to appropria- ancther bil for similiar more LLDAD nti yf dollars, which have already sidered at the present ses. The result is that the con- fate exper for the Oontracts are, in { 7? k whi agreed with the governme yf thelr aration ar ilems opens the way to and is In itaelf so extravagant as to be especially tH yus and increasing abuses, to these times of depressed business and resulting disappointment in government This e by the prospect that the publie treasury will be confronted with other appropriations made sideration is emphasized at the present session of Congress amount- Economy and the exaction of clear justification for the appropriation of public moneys by the servants of the people are not only virtues but solemn obligations STIMULATES PATERNALISM, “T's the extent that the appropriations son- tained in this bill are instigated by private in- torests and promote local or individual pro jects thelr allowance cannot fail to stimulate a victous paternalism and encourage a santi- ment among out people, already too prava- lent, that their attachment to our govern. ment may properly rest upon the hope and sxpectation sf direct and especial favors, and that the extent to which they are realized may furnish an estimate of the value of gov- srnmental care “1 helleve no greater danger confronts us as n nation than the unhappy decadence of genuine and trust. affection for our govern the embodiment of the highest and among our people worthy love and ment as best aspirations of humanity and not as the giver of gifts, and because its mission is the enforcament of exact justice and equality and not the aliowaree of unfalr favoritism, I hope I may be permitted to suggests, at a time when the issue of governmeut i onda to maintain the « of the country is asubjebt of criticlam, that the contracts provided for in this! fil would create obligations of the United Btates no less binding than its bonds for that sum, vGurover CLYvELAND,' re STORES AND HOUSES BURNED Nearly $60,000 Worth Fire of Propert v Destr yed al Parksley, Va and Parksloey, of the towns on ane prettiest flourishing the Eastern She Virginia, was destroyed by fire three and four o'clock We 1. F. to be from the barrel Ihe southe Hineman's on fire wind wie ast, and apread to town. to save their pr the main busit The lnhabitan hat they co 13id iron pert fire 1 #0 rapidly that but little was save than an hour business part ashes, Twelve stores, tha Dost i I VOI A out tr by the State Histord #1 pninass fi ners, The ond Chamber of Commerce, Col fn division 3 nial Dames, Daughters of the Revolution, Hermitage As sociation, ighters { ¢ Confederacy, Christian Tem Union and civic orders, The third was Confederate bivouscs, T. P Enights Pythins, Hoo-H« other orders in uniform. The fourth Yarious division mposed of ex- A As of and yweiation, of various division contained citizens in carriages, numerous labor organizations and centennial ~uarda, The fifth was the eoclared division, which was very large, and Included gations many organi- in uniform, benevoient and social societies and workingmen, Notwithstanding the weather, the parade was one of the largest and most enthusiastic aver witnessed in the history of the State, At the park, after the proclamation of President Thomas and the flag-ralsing, the anniversary exercises were held in the audi toriam, opening with a prayer by Rev. D. C. Kellay. Then the siagiog of “America,” by the children's chorua Hon. J. M. Dickin- son, Assistant Attorney General of the United States, delivered the address of the lay. The prize centennial poem was then toad, Alter these exercises there were exercises held in the Woman's Ballding, which was olilefally turned over to the woman's board, sud then followed open air concerts. At night there was a grand display of firs works ard ao noert by the Marine Band at the park, attended by large crowds, 0000 KILLED. est Sufferers. FATAL CRUSH AT A FEAST. The Czar Had Prepared a Feast, Which Attended Given Away ple as Souvenirs of the Occasion. The closing Moscow tressing « and has thr gloom, Mere inys of the coronation fe murred by a « st ywin the whole tes ot have been aver . city The popular fete of the coronatio the alamity which has {ive int held on Kbhodynsk! the Petrofl Dies Was { Py waite 1 is estimated tended, For Plain vy Palace, that ! lays past from awniting the froe feast the full of peasants country, all pectation had rea shed the highest it was kn anything tion with the constructed wore distributed free MURS 4s & s feast, whi they crushed and babie that man The tivitien, these beldg lisaater has o¢ rarred monies The formed of the ed profound have Cezar and Czarina, when ine extent of the disaster, express sorrow, and the Czar gave ders that everything should be i or se 10 viate the suffering of the injured, inck of authorities, The calamity was noi due to say precaution on the part of the people to eajoy the hospitality of the Caar, ISTURRD the THE DEAD AND it 1s now said that fatalities but it fs impossible yet to ascertain aceu rately the extent of the disaster. An official statement places the number of dead recov srod at 1,330 and the seriously or fatally in jured at 286. But, In contrast with this offi- cial statement, there are 1,282 corpees lying at the cemetery, besides the many hundred dead and Injured that are known to have peen removed froth the ill-fated fied by friends, SII SLAUGHTERED BY ORETANS. A Turkish Poros of Bighty- Five Reported 40 Have Been Out to Pieces. A Turkish detachment of eighty-five men, . which returned to Vamos, the town in Crete which was recsntly besieged, to remove wat matetial, is reported out to pleces by the in- surgents. Only two of the Tarks esenped, Epitome of News Gleansd From Various Parts the Blate ving near Mrs, Mary Beck, Frieden fuged 60 4 ville, le ) SK In the 1 Her Lody wis | thes, ome time The ge ( were th Ham Moses, J, hart, W. 8 At the parsonage FLIVETIWATY wer of valuabie 3 © o $4 pow i whi Lis There were ususily Articis ise of Harry Ml eaded . 43 Woria Mra last week, | visions of ¥ WHE MATTING this 1 basst £1 tude y ee urls of her Ih Bhe tes had idk however, executed | daring dave of her slokness, bequeathing ber body, after her death, to her nephew, Charles Brower, to to Pottstown the her death in re- a telegram from Proprietor Gilbert, of the Merchants’ Hotel, where the woman died, and removed the corpse to Dowing- The fact of her day of was buried, til after the removal of the body An pamed Stanislaus Zmudeinski, of Pittsburg, died from an elec- trical shook received ope week ago, when he was pushed against a hoop hanging from 8 trolley wire by companions. The boy be came on tangled in the boop. His feet, logs aod sides wer burned so thal the Desh fell ofl. Syear-oid boy, EXPLODED THE BAYE. Burglars Make a Vain Attempt to Rob a Bale at Procter, W. Va Burglars broke into the office of Dopler & Moore's flour mill, Proctor, W. Va, and blew open the safe. The explosion Was so violent that the safe was wroeked, and the noise wakened hall the people in town. in a few minutes dozens of men were on the street, half Arevsed and in pursuit of the burglars, who ran toward the river, Three of them escaped, but the fourth was shot through the hip and was captured. ST. LOUIS DAMAGE Ten Thousand Houses Practi- cally Destroyed. TANGLE IN CITY COUNCILS, The Appropriation of $100,000 Hangs Fire Because of the Provisions of the City Charter Forbids the Grant. omen r daughter, wei the women ing them with bay. the mothers and daughters were made 10 dance until ex- bausted. Afterward the soldiers assa slied | them, and leaving them une ter firing the house, The wotnen and girls were neighbors hefore the flames reached them, and after being revived related this story. The gitis and women have since died from their injuries sss IIo SA KATE FIELD IS DEAD. vax the mother « The drunken nd girls to disrobe hen mets to hasten them, onscious left, Sie dragged out by Brilliaxt in Josrnaliem sod as « lecturer—The Bod Came 22 Honeluln HH. Kohlssat, proprietor of the Chicago Times Herald, received a cable message dated Yokohama, and signed by Lorin A. Thurston, ex-Minister to the United Slates from the Sandwich Islands, which sald: “Kate Field died at Honolulu, May 19, of pueumonia.” Miss Field waz in the Sandwich Island as special correspondent of the Times-Herald, and the last heard from her was a letter dated May 4, in which she informed Mr Kohlsant that she had been doing a great deal of horseback riding, and that the exer- clas in the open air had completely restored her health, which, before ghe went to the tands bad been badly shattered No further particulars than those contained in the dis pateh of Mr Thurston ae known. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers