% HIGHT AT APIA War For the Samoan Crown Going on Actively. — WARSHIPS TAKE PART. Signs of International Friction Not So Numerous as They Were a Short Time Ago— Berlin Treaty Considered a Fallure —Lord Kelborne Refers to Recent Trou. bles in Samos in a Speech at St. Albans, Auckland, New Zealand, (By Cable.) Particulars of the fighting in Samoa, con- tained in advices received here from Apin under date of April 15, show that in a recent battle between the friendly natives and the rebels at Vailels the rebels lost 100 men killed or wounded, On April 17 a battle was fought at Yalle- ma. The fighting was desperate, the rebels holding strong fortifications, which were shelled by the American and British shipe. A party under Lieutenant Gaunt, of the British navy, delivered such a heavy fire that the rebels retreated to .a second and stronger fort about 150 yards back. Partol the “friendlies” bolted, but Gaunt went out to the firing line and drove them back at the point of his pistol. They then advanced to attack the second fort, but found the posi- tion too strong, and lost several men killed and wounded. London, Eng., (By Cable.)—The Earl of Seiborne, Under Secretary of State for the Colonies, addressing a Conservative mass. meeting at St, Albans, Hertford, said he thought that if .any justifieation of Lord Salisbury’s polley ware wequired it was afforded by the present relations between the United States and Great Britain, “At a trying time,” said his lordship, “the government preserved their seif-control and waited for coolness, justice, and common sense to reassert themselves, Now the dark, miserable cloud which so long hung over the Anglo-Saxon peoples has drifted off, It is only a few days since British and Ameri can officers and men fell on the same fleld of conquest, Shoulder to Shoulder in Samoa. “They were not eugaged in fratricidal strife, but were fighting shoulder to shoulder, and, small though tbe incident was, it will be of importance in the history of the world.” All must regret, continued Lord Selborne, the lamentable eause of the incident; but the only three natious concerned wera what be might term the “three cousin nations of the world.” He remarked that he bad nodoubt America and Germany, in this matter, would prove as amenable as Great Britain to the @ictates of common sense, NAVAL COURTESIES AT APIA, German Commander Denles Some of the Stories of Friction, Berlin, Germany, (By Caule.)—With tbe view of rectilylog the reports of the discord sald to exist between the three paval com- manders at Samoa, the Norddeutsche Zeit. ung publishes extracts from the reports of the commander of German warship Falke up to March in which Capt Schoenleider says: “The wildest ramors are current concern- ing the relations between tbe officers and erew of the Falke and the Americans and Euoglish, The reports are due to some of our countrymen, who do not tire of ereatiog J-feeling between the officers and men of Whe three countries by promoting such rumors, As a matter of fact, the relations between the different commanders and offi- cers are thoroughly courteous snd of an ac- eommodating character. la spite of the arduous nature of his guard duty, Capt. Sturdee attended the fuseral of a (German) sailor, Wishl, with a deputation of an officer and sixteen men, and Admiral Kautz bolsted his flag at ball mast. No disputes lave oe- curred between the German and the Ameri can or Eoglish erews, “At u recent meeting, the military repre. sentatives of the three powers expressed in. digoation at the rumors and whenever the commander and offiesrs of the Falke meet the American snd British officers and Con- suis social forms are strictly observed.” Dealing with the commencement of hos tilities, March 15, and the faet that a frag- ment of one of the Philadeipbia’s sbells en- tered the German Consulate, the report sayr: *“The German Consulates was not previous. iy notified of the commencement of bostlil- ties and was stlil inhabfted, I immedistely dispatched an officer to Inform Admirai Kautz that the German Consulate was pot evacuated and that his shots bas struck the building, and requested him to cease firing over Apia until the Germans were in safety, Admiral Kautz told the officer that owing to my representations he would not continue firing over Apia, asd the following day he sent bis flag Lisutenant to me and expressed regret at the oceurréner, “Admiral Kautz, March 18, directed that uniformed officers and men should be als lowed to pass freely at all times, The Amer- jeans on guard duty were always most civil,” Commissioners Salil for Samoa, San Francisco, Cal, (Rpecial, }-The Unie ted States dispatebeboat Dadger, with the Samoan Commission on board, sailed for Apla. The steamer will probably stop at Honolulu for coal. the 23, KAUTZ CAUTIONED, Letter From the Nuvy Department Sent to the Admiral. Washington, D, C., (Special, j=-It has been felt proper to admonish Admiral Kautz to be more careful _sither "in writing such let. ters as that published from Cinelnoadl or In guarding bis letters from publicity, asd a jetter of that character was addressed to him, Theoretically, a letter addressed under the olreumstances attending the Kautz leiter, may be regarded as strictly private, yet practically the writer must secept the con- sequences that wou'd follow the putlication, In the cass of Chief Justices Chambefs, whoss brother made public a letter eritiels- ing the Germans in Samon, the effect will certainly be injurious to the Chief Juuiice, Though the letter nndoubtediy was a privaie communication, yet the State Duwpatiment was bound to take noties of the fact that this publication bad done much to injure thie usefulness of the CUhlef Justice and to render his retention in the offics afier the reconstruction of the islaad’s government improbable, : U, 8, 8, Ranger's Dock. 1. San Francisco, Cal. , (Special, )—The Unit doek trial at Mare Island, aud will soon be ready to go foto commission, & new ship to wil futents and purposes, he will be sent to Manila as of her light THE NEWS, President McKinley, several members of bis cabinet and Mrs, U, 8. Grant attended the unveiling at Philadelphia of an eques- trian statue of Gen, U. B, Grant, Admiral Schley and Gen, Joseph Wheeler were the guests of honor at a banquet given in Pittsburg by the Americus Republican Club, A colored man was lynched in Georgia by his own race because of his activity in searching out former culprits. The case of Mrs, Anon George, charged with the murder of Gisorge D. Baxton, Pres. ident McKinley's brother-in-law, is now in the bands of the jury at Canton, Ohlo, A tull professorship of $100,000 has been endowed by an anonymous friend of Prince- ton University, The professorship will be in general polities, embracing the dspart- ments of international law, political science, diplomacy and kindred subjects, While a sheriff's sale was In progress on the second floor of J, E. Snyder's implement warehouse at Goldsboro’, Pa., the floor gave way and about one hundred men fell to the floor below, Articles were filled at Trenton, N, J., of ths United States Fiour Milling Company, with an authorized capital of 825,000,000, of which one-half is to be preferred stock, with 6 per cent. cumulative dividend, The Grant Monument Association cele- brated the anniversary of the birth of Gen- eral Grant with a banquet at the Waldor!l- Astoria, N. XY. Geo, Wager Swayne, presi dent of the association, presided, and at the tables sat Congressman J. P. Dolliver, of Iowa; Elihu Root, Gen, Wesley Merritt, J. A. Kasson, Gen, G. Dodge and Dellon M. Dewey, son of Admiral Dewey, The Fourth Virginia Regiment was mus- tered out at Bavanoab, Ga. The soldiers left over the Central Batiroad and the Fiori da Central and Penlpsular. Companies A, B and E, of Norfolk, were furnished a special train by the people of Norfolk, No. 8 Chesapeake and Ohio Fast-Fiylng Vizginia train, west-bound, was wrecked at Bt. Albans, W, Va, by rusning isto an open switeb, Toe train was going at a rate of filty miles an hour, and four coaches, a bag- gage car sod the engine left the rail, one of the coaches landing on its side, Btrange to fay, not a traloman nor a siogle passenger was injured. Passengers were travslerred to a special train and traffic was delayed but a few hours, Charley Bear, a switchman at the Ameri. enn Car and Foundry Company, was run over by a yard engine and killed. He was a fireman on the Oblo River Raliroad for mauy years, and formerly lived at Ravens. wood, The Queen City Cotton Company, Burling- ton, Vi, has been exempted from taxation for ten years on condition that & new mili to be Lulit by the corporation shall cost, with its equipment, pot less than £300,000, and shall give employment to not less than 150 additional hands, Work on the pew factory will be begun at onee, Dr. E. A. de Schweinitz, of the bia- chemie division of the Department of Agri- culture, and dean of the Medical Sehool of Columbian University, has been appointed Ly the Secretary of State a delegate to the congress on tuberculosis which will meet ia Berlin, Germany, May 24-27. In the Rhode Island House of Represents- tives a resolution forwarded by the Summer Association of Newport condemning outs rages in the South was defeated alter long debate, The President has jssued a proclamation snsounciog the ratifleation of the new ex- tradition treaty between the United States and Mexico, and the convention is now in foree, A tornado swept the farming country 20 miles east of Anawa, In. Three persons are reported to have been killed and great dam- age done to property. 3 chief A MERCHANT ROBBED, Chioroformed By Barglars, Whe Got S168 And Other Valoablea Parkersburg, W, Va., (Special, )--Georgs I. Creel, an eccentric old merchant of Da- visvilie, W. Va,, awoke to find bis room ins dilapidated condition and muoeh steff of value stolen, Burglar had effected an ep- tranee, and, chloroforming Creel, beslped themselves, From an old wooden bureau in whieh Creel kept his valuables $168 in gold was stolen, the burglars overlooking a cigar box containing over $500, Two flae gold watches, valuable notes and aring were also stolen, Creel would not risk the banks, and in an old tin ean, which he kept iu the kiteben sale, be bad placed all the goid pieces coming into his possession in 20 years. This ean, which contained nearly £3,000, was also overlooked, Officers with bloodmounds are searching for the burglars, and parties io town are under surveiliaoee, THE HEAVIEST B. & OO. TRAIN, New Engine Hauls Fifty Cars of Fifty Tons Capacity Each, When the Heoelvers of the Baltimore & Ohblo Baliroad began the now famous series of improvements of the physical econdtiion of the entire system their object was to ioe crease both the train load and the number of revenue tons per mile and at the same time reduce the cost of transportation. Much has been done, and by the lowerlag of grades, siimination of curves, laying of new steel! ralis and the pdrchase of heavy motive power they have very materinily added to the number of cars per tralo. Bat It was rot nati! the 17th of Mareh inst thar a dem. oustration was made of what might be ex- pected of the new Baltimore & Ohio Rail. round, Esough new 0-ton capacity steel enrs bad been delivered to give the operat- ing department & ebanecs to experiment Pity steel ears, each welghiog 34000 pounds were loaded with an average of 08 000 pounds of coal, To them was coupled a pew 20x28-inech Consolidation loeomotive weighing 168,700 pounds and baviag Hd-lach driving wheels, The start was made from Camberiand, Md, and the designation was Brunswick, Md., on the Second Division, In bis report General Superintendent Fitz. gerald says the train was palied with com parative ease sad that the class of engines used will be able to handle 50 cars of 3 tons eapacity each on that division without trouble, Hithesto the train load on that di vision has been 325 units of 6); tons each or about 2,900 tons, a 40 per cent Inorease uvefthat of five years ago, The B0-car train was computed as containing 487 units, or [casa 200 pounds gross. The net weight of 7 Jo the train was 4,758,100 pounds, LAS AE THAIN WRECKED, Four Persons Injured ina Emashup on Tie Norfolk and Western, Potersburg, Va., (Special, )-A westbound passenger train, No. 33, on the Norfolk snd Western Rallroad, dus bers about 10 o'clock p. m., wes wrecked about four miles esst of the city. The locomotive was overturned on the malin teack and literally wrecked, as ontv, the patasvger ocualiat and slespar ran ROUTED BY M ARTHUR. Aguinaldo’'s Picked Troops Driven Out of Apalit, AMERICAN LOSS SLIGHT. One Man Kitted and Nine Wounded, In- cluding Three Officers, All Belonging to the Montann Volunteers—Gen. Lawton's Division Remches Normmguray Grestly Exhausted by Their Forced March. Mantis, Philippine Islands, (By Cable.) Gen. MacArthur's division crossed the Rio Grande and advanced on Apaiit, com~ where two trains were awaiting them, left hurriedly, presumably for Ban nando, The towps of San Vincente and by the natives, tured, including a Spaniard, The American troops also captured a brass cannon and nn quantity of arms apd ammu- a Maxim gun on the raliroad, The fighting lasted from noon until 4 o'clock, The Amerloan loss is one man of the Moc tana regiment killed and threo cfficors sod six men wounded, The enemy were very strongly intronehed op the river bank, near beth sides of raliroad bridge. Gon, Wheaton sent Col, Funston across, with two companies of the Twentieth Kansas, Begiment, a couple of privates swimming the swift stream with a rope, under a galling fire, for the purpose of guiding the raft. The men crossed In squads of twenty, snd attacked ithe left flunk of the rebels, who scuttied like rabbits into covered ways and trenches, The rest of the regiment was compelied io eross the bridge in siogle stringers, All the woodwork snd the rouwork had bess removed, Montana Regiment followed the across the bridge, The First Nebraska Regiment, acting as a reserve, attacked the relels In three lines of trenches, driving them out, silling sixieen and wounding many. In ih= meantime a large body of Filipinos, estimated at no fewer than 8,000 jed Ly Gen, Aotonio Luna on & black charger, that was evidently coming 10 reenlor ce the rebels, who were vagaged with the Ned Krne, appeared in field about miles to the left, Emerging from the formed an open skirmish Hoe nearly two miles in leagth, with very thick reserve bee bind, The men advanced doable quick until they wore about 2,000 yards from the mericas line, when Gen, Woenton ordered Lis troops to fire, I'he rebels, who were evideotiy unaware that the Americans had crossed the river, brok= and ran la the direction of Macabele, the file nloug the much of The First Rausnps fag» the open two s3 AD ov Let y the jangle, enemy noon was terrifle, but a dresching thunder storm, which came (ater, greatly refreshed the Americans, The ambulances, wilh a sirong escort, are bringing Geo. Lawion's wounded sand a fow of those who have been prostrated by the heat across the country to the raliroad, A report hes gained wide currency among the voiunteers that the goverament intesds to akk that there be no fightiog alter Calum pit is eaptured, and that it is the intention 10 replace them at the front with regulars which are transports, The committees of Filipinos organized to aldo fears to approach the rebels after the refusal of the latter 10 receive the Spanish commissioners who were bearing a white fing. The committee, aller consulting with the American commissiotiers, propose $0 teil conditional surrender could be offered after the lengths to which the war has been oar traditions of leniency to the conquered, and that there would be Bo pucishments or con fiseations of property if they laid down their arms, The leaders of the committeo told United States Consul General Williams that they would go if he would accompany them, bes Heviog the re trusted Me. Williams, The intter, however, refused, having po author. ity in the matter. He said: “I do not believe the Filipinos would harm me, but they might deiala me for months,” The American commission is bampered in them, that the “antl-expansionista’ may ob tain control of the American government, and cause the withdrawal of the American they cisim, leaving the natives who have assisted the Americans to the mercy of Aguinaldo’s followers, Under those elr. cumstances, ten of property are reluctant to risk the results with the Amerioan regime, CYCLONE KILLS MANY, Have Heobn Lost ins Windstorm, “X gathering storm that bad besa threat. ening all the afternoon broke upon Kirke ville nt 6.20 o'clock P. M. in all the fury of a eyoclone., A path a quarter of a mii wide and as clean nas the prairie was swept through the eastern portion of the eity, and about 400 bulidings-—~homes and mercantile ~were leveled to the groued in seattered ruins, “In the heavy rain that followed the pec. ple who had escaped turned oul to rescue the injured. For two hours not much was accomplished, as all was confusion, but by 8 o'clock 98 dead bodies had been taken from the ruins, “It is consdentiy expected that the list of dead bodies will reach between 50 and 60, if it does not vxeeed that, “About a thoveand people was moro or ines injured, Each biansbed face reports a new eslamity,” ar Dh Well Rhooters Blown te Atoms, Bradlord, Pa., (Bpecial.)~Two well shoot ere, Joseph Bmaliey and Daniel Lane, wore blown to fragments, and George B, Gibbons and John Knox were sion of a torpedo near the Kingua viad sixteen miles south of Bradlord, Chinese Tragedy at Baltimore. Ges Oh Yung, Chinese track I rd Frightful Explosion of Benzol in Philadelphia, — TWO CHEMISTS KILLED. Were Making Symthetic Extract of Vaniia ~ Over a Score Injured-Hurt by Fiying Debris From the Fleer Chewing Gum Factory, Where the Disaster Occurred — Walls Cracked. Philadelphia, Pa., (Specin!.)—By the ex- plosion of 76 gallons of benzol in the lab- oratory of Frank H, Fleer & Co, manufac turers of chewing gum at 2343 and 2345 Cal- lowhill street, two men were killed, three persons seriously injured, and over a score of others were mors or less injured by fiylug | debrle, Of those injured, Harry Randall, an em- ploye, and Ars, Givison and ber l-year-oid child are the most seriously burt, but they { will recover, i The explosion was a terrific ope, and for { atime caused the wildest excitement, No | loss than 100 buildings In the vicinity, most of them very small dwellings, Were | damaged, The laboratory building was a two-story structure, At the time of the explosion thers were only four men working in ihe bullding, who were preparing a mixture for the making of vaniliine (methyl ether of protoeatechule aldehyde). The doors to the room in which they were workipg were closed, but the fumes from the benzol in some manner reached the fur- nace in the next room and the explosion in- stantly followed, Walter Manwaring was instantly killed, and Charles McKinley was 80 badly hurt that he died several bours later in a hospital, Randall's escaps was remarkable, blown through the roof sud lasded sdjoining buliding. At first it was thought he was dead, but alter treatment In the hospital be regained consciousness, Although badly burt, be recover, George Conner, the fourth employe iu the room, escaped with a few severe bruises, As Mrs, Givison, with her child on her He was 00 AL ’ i id arm, was hurriedly leaving ber home, whieh was directly opposite the laboratory, ber dress caught fire from a fiylog ember and she and the child were badly burned, Their recovery Is doubtful, The explosion was so terrific that the buildings sdjoinicg each side of the labors tory were completely demolished, Os both sides of the street for & whole square the ex- plosion wrought destruction, were broken, fixtures were smashed, and walls were eracked, Fire added to the de- struction in & number of the places, but the they did any considerable damage, Tue score of persons injored were all ten- ants of the many dwellings, and were in no way connected with the lsboratory, Bome wore severely cut by glass, while many of them were struck by the fying debris, The money loss la estimated to be consid- srable over $100,000, MURDER AND SUICIDE, Wife and Child, Camden, N. J., (Bpecinl, wald, sn instrumentmaker, Edward Os aged o'd daughter, Gussie, at their home, No, 962 Jefferson avenue, Centreville, a suburb of this city. He then cut bis throat, asd was | taken to the Cooper Hospital, where be is not expected to live, The souple came here lo | husband was employed. Apparently iheir {| domestie relations were happy. tout o'clock In the morning & pext-door neighbor beard Mrs, Oswald seream, ing ball-way out of a window with blood { flowing from a wound in her bresst, Bbe sald ber husband bad attacked her and ber | two children with & bread knife, but that ove of the istter bad ecseaped. The door was broken open, and Mrs, Oswald ran out witli ber dead child in ber arms aod fell dead on the sidewalk, Oswald was found under the bed with a gnpiog wound in bis throat. He resisted | arrest, acd was beaten into sobmission and removed to the hospital, It is believed be became suddenly insane during the night. WHOLE PARTY DEAD, Poisoned Meat Sapposed to Have De strayed Several Feopile Astoria, Ore,, (Special, )—That the entire party which jolt Seaside, April 7, on a tim- ber cruise are dead Is an accepted fnct, as the bodies of three have already been found, aud search is still in progress for the fourth, | who wes the oidest and weakest member of the party. As soon as H. Doty's body was found, ou Saturday, Louis Chance, known as “Indian Loule,” aud John Burke were engaged to start out in search of the re. | mainder of the party, which consisted of P, | £. Helkman, oivil engineer, of this city; W. | T. Rader, a timber locator, of Portland, and A. J. Ciostrie, of Seaside, who accompanied | the party as a goide. “Indian Loule™ bas returned, and states that they found the desd bodies of Heikman and Rader at the | toot of Sagar Loatl Mountain, some distance apart aod about three miles from where Doty's body wes fourd, Itils generally supe posed that denth was the result of eating poisoned canned mest or vegetables, | MUST CONQUER FILIPINOS, Every Man Neecessnry Wil He Used for the Parpose, Washington, I, C., {(Bpeecial.)~A Cabinet ofMeer said that the Cabinet bad st no time discussed the subject of the future disposi- tion of the Phllippiones, “It is the present that wa are thinking about,” said be, “and there Is not the slight. ost lntention of deviating from the present program, 1 belive in the unasimous feel. {ae of the Cabinet that nothing shall be des elded as to the future status of the islands until we have piased them satisfactorily un- der the control of the United States.” He sald that every dolinr asd évery man necessary 10 | ring the sands under the de a“ HON, SAMUEL T, BAIKD DEAD, Was a Member of the House From Louls, funs In the Lest Congress. Washington, D, C,, (Special, )—HRepresen- tative Samuel T. Bajrd, of Louisians, died fu Washington from a complication of dis vasee, The remaius were taken to Bastrop, La., for interment, Iu addition to the family the following named Senators and Representatives aseom- panled the remains: Becators Caffrey, of Louisiane, and Bacon, of Georgia; Repre- sebtutives Meyor and Davey, of Cleary, of Mionesots; Mareh, of llincis; Glison aud Brownlow, of Tennessee; Cum- mings, of New York, sad Ciayton, Under wood sud Bankhead, of Alabama, who will act as honorary paill-bonrers, Bamuel T. Baird was well-known fn norih- eru Louisiana, where for seventeen years he bas been 8 promioeat factor at the bar, on the benob aud fn polities, He was a native of that State sud was thirty-eight years old, Born st Osk Ridge on May 5, 1861, his prim- ary lostructious were begun very early sad at Vincenues, Ind, In 1879 be sommenced ndmitted to the bar. lu 1884 be was elected district attorney of the sixth judicial efreuit, then vacated it to become district judge lor the sumie distriet, for lour years and then relinquished It to resume his private practices. Io April, 1806, tie was elected to the Btate Benste, He was & delegate to the national Democratie cou- vention lo Chicago in 1806, Mr. Baird had just finished his first term in the House of the Alty-sixth Congress, SPANISH-AMERICAN ISLANDS, A Maanlia dispateb states that there is hope that Lieutenant Glimore and his party from the cruiser Yorkiwwwa may bave best res ported, General Otis cables to Washington that the “betier class” of Flilpluos sre tired of war, The European junta of the Filipluos says General Gom~z has docided to declare in favor of Americas proteciorate until Cuba is Porto RK cans are sironsly opposed to the reported isn of the lusuiar commissioners to put Americans at once iuto ail the princi ple offices of tue island, Admiral Dewey has heard nothing to de termine the fale of Lisutepaut Glimore and Late advices(from Mindana state that war is ilkely to break out there ns soon as the A spili bas occurred lu the European justia Six Americans were killed and forty-three Toe Fulpinos were routed, © Hwiseuberg was among the i, Two Spanish comaissioners who atiempt- order tc confer Spaniards lo Cuba are uneasy, asd a num- ber of them say they will leave the island when the American troops are willidraws, € onepiracy Romance Dented, * Washingion, D. C., (Special. }—A cabinet alieged conspiracy in peace negotiations sdberenis of Bot at the [root of Ireguent Banner Year of Our Foreign Trade, Washisgton, D, C., year 1808 was the banner year of the foreign trade of the United Bate, record-breaking fl:urrs of ithe precedisg year Uy $174,284 310, ©. the other haod, whe Imports during 18885 were the smallest sinee 1888, their values being $616,049,664, » decline of $148,680.758 from te figures of 1897. The exports of agricultural produce wege 70.08 por cont. of the total, or $858 507, #42, u gains of neariy 25 per cent, over 1887 ViELD OF LABU A Cramps’ shipyard employs 5,000 men. A Brazil coffees plantation has 500,000 trees, Chicago musicians’ unions have amaiga- mated. 8t. Paul Globe (vewspaper) has been un- ionized, Missourl is to have a State printisg trades council, Boston borseshoers want time and hall. time for overtime, A Western newspaper man who eaught Prof. A. Graham Bell on the wing last week represents the latter ns saying that be did not regard telephony without wires as an fmpossitdity, but he was not prepared io go into detalles, in Germany forty-one ol the fifty-four cities of over 50.0.0 Inhabitants have their own gas works, There are 208 municipal gas plants In Great Britain and Ireland, The system of public ownership has made its way Into Holland, Usiglum, Austria, Nor- way, Sweden, Switgeriand, France Italy, Greece, Mexico, that own their own gas works, California than elsewhere in the country, and the experimenters iu this line of Indus. try are meeting with a fair degree of suo- cons, The Angora goal yields on an avers age of four pounds of mohair at a shearing, the product selfing for from 32 10 37 conta n pound, CG FP. Bailey, of San Jose, sold last wear a trifle more toan $80.0 woria of mc. tale from his flock, Herbert Lang, writing for the Englneoriog and Mining Journal, says that the great Iron Mountalu mine of California contains about 129,000 short tous of metalile copper, 8,500,000 ounces of silver, and gold to the THE KEYSTONE STATE News Gleaned from Various Parts. IL atest ibn. THE KISSER LAID LOW. His Operations Cut Short bys Plucky Malden Armed With a Club-She Fun i=iiod Him Until He Begged for Mercy Actor Accidentally Wounded While Fencing, Dies at Pittsburg. A youug man who seems io have a mania for kissing and hugging young women whom he meets ou the street bas been doing au ac- tive beuiness at Conldals for some time. It remained for Miss Honore Jonshick to stop turning to ber home, She noticed a figure sibead of Lier, and thought of the “Jack 1he ilugger.” But this did not disconeert Ler, 20 years old, pretty and Bhs had prepared for the kisser by a club, In the strong. menn~ As she approsched tis shadow and aitempted to grasp Miss Jopsbick., Bhe did pot run or scream, but with a wellsdire ected blow of her club knocked ber sssuiinnt down, Following up her advantage, she one hand, while Electricity on the Farm, The Westinghouse Company, of Pittsburg, is about to make a vuigue electrical fnstaiia- ton, comprising a complete plant for light- of C. I. Beardsiee, near 8t. Johnsville N.Y. The power for the machinery wii nisbhed by two steep falls of a creek which courses through the farm, a power bouse having already been erected near one of them, Motors to operates bay cutters, a saw thi and other lar machinery will Le pinced in operation, The farmbouss wiil be i rillisatly lighted, cooking will be done with ewctiricty, siectrical flat irons will do the work lu tue lsundey and electric churns aud separators will take Gp the white wom- au's burden In the farm dairy, Farmer Bszrdaiee will have a surpius of power and Las already contracted supply two J be {at~ to vhoevilie manulsciurers, Si. Death Follows Sham Duel, Jobst Gardoer, of Pittsburg, as actor, died ui the West Peon Hospital from a wound ac gidenily received while fencing on with the plage another actor, ‘he accident occurred at Brownsville, Gangreae set io and Gard ner rapidly grew worse, His wile, who oaliy 17 years old, and lives io Butier county, sat Ly bis bedside lor alisost an hour thiuk- ing Lim asieep, and not wanting to wake bite. Then she called 10 an passing nurses aud expressed the fear that he might dead. The purses feit his puls~, right,” she replied, “he is dead. is be “lou sre New Steel Company. An application has been made at the Siate Department for & charter to the Tidewat-s steel Company of Phlladeipbla with a capi- tal of $1000, divided into 100 shares of #10 each. Tue Ineorporators are George 8 Grabam, Isase N, Bolle, RE. Robissop, Goorge McCall and E. F. Giens, all of Phil adeiplia, aod each boidiag twenty shares, it is understood that the charter will bs is sued this week and that the capitel is 10 be increased to $15,000, 00, Dire End to Arbutaos Hunt, Cassie Zeigler, the 15-year-old daughter of Mr. spd Mre, Charice Zeigler, was slimost instantly killed io a peculiar matoer al SBerantes. With 8 number of members ol the South Scranton Young Women's Curis tian Association, she was returningin a wagon from an arbutus party st No, b Lake, % bes in some manner Lot clearly explained The rear wheel passed over her bead and she was almost in- Sulelde by Shooting. Jobn Geliz, of Mount Troy, committed suicide by sending a bullet through bie He is thought to have been tempor. The bouse in which Geltz died i fis brother-dp-law, Andrew Lutz, shot hime self there, five years ago, snd his wife, Cath- inst year, Geltz was & veteran of the Civil War and 58 years old, Horses Dying from Splas] Meningitia An epidemic of spinal meniagitis is preva jent amoung the horses near Gretersiond. The disease ia generaliy fatal, Among the boaviest losers Is Hisser Detwiler, He bas Jost five horses within the last three days and the sixth borse is expected to die at any time, Big Government Order, Ine Norristown Woolen Mills has received a Government order for 50000 yards of cloth, This order in addition 10 the several orasrs on which the frm is now working, will keep the mill runciog at its full capacity for many months, —— Nowe in Brief Jacob Peterson, a 10-year-old boy, of Yard. ley, bad his feos Lorribly mangled by a vicious dog, W. H. Bowen, late one of the proprietors of the Chester “Evening News," bas bought out the “Borough Advoeate,” a weekly pa- per published In tue iuterest of Prospect Park and Ridley Park. All Maneh Chonk members of the Brother Brod of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen New York, eslied for the purpose of discuss ine grievances against the Central Raflroad of New Jersey, ? en .——————— Queer Legal Tangle . The will of Henry Yocum, who own ed the yacht Paul Jones, and was on it when it was lost in the Gulf of Mexico, left all bis estate to hiz dangh- ter, anu should she have died before he did the estate would have gone 3