e, .. , -j. rfw Sti " "-'r'.-5HPr5SB BOOMS SOONBNTED ".iBy Using the Cent-a Word C'ol- tonus ot The Dispatch Ah Adlet Saturday or Saaday Will Ho It. ROOMS SOON RENTED By Using the Cent-a-Word Col nmns of The Iispatch An Adlet Saturday or Sunday Will Do It. ftfc Wfttong FORTY SEVENTH TEAK . PITTSBUEG. HUDAT, APRIL 22. 1892-TWELVE , PAGES. THREE GENTS. EVERYONE HAPPY AND ALL'S WELL, A Unanimity of Sentiment Among Pennsylvanians at the Nation's Capital THE KEYSTONE PLATF0E5T Considered a Work of Art, Especially by Free Silver People. DEMOCRATS CAN'T t DO MORE. Dalzell and Btone Delighted With the State Convention. McDowell's Nomination a Peculiarly Happy One A Queer Situation in Politics Harrison Tickled "With His Indorsement, Even without Instruc tionsThe 1888 Ticket a Sure Re peater Free Coinage Republicans Take Hope Once More Bland on the Pennsylvania Platform The Noyes Eockwell Case Eeady for a Vote To Day History and Possibilities. rEFECIAL TELEGRAPHIC X.ETTXB. Btoeau or The Dispatch, ) WASHnfOToa. D. C. April 31. J Both of the Allegheny county Congress men expressed themselves to-day as being highly pleased with the -work of the con vention. Mr. Stone did not think it was possible that a convention -which had to deal with several candidates for Supreme Judge and many aspirants for Congressmen and delegates at large could have done its work to leave fewer sore spots, enmities and evil reflections. Mr. Dalrell declared himbclfto be entirely satisfied. The plat form was an admirable one, the ticket ex cellent. Mr. Dalzell paid a warm tribute to Judge Dean for dignity, integrity and ability, and pronounced his nomination an honor to the convention and to the State. The nomina tion of Alexander McDowell, the Mercer county banker, for one of the Congressmen at large -will give the Twenty-fifth district two Congressmen, though, of course, Mc Dowell will represent the State at large. He will be a Senator in the House, as it were. A Very Rare Situation In Politics. It is a rare "situation" in politics, that of the Twenty-fifth district at this time. Two years ago 'McDowell and Thomas W. Phil lips ran for the same office in the same dis trict. The entire Republican vote cast was upward Df 21,000, nearly 8,000 mwrrtera; the Democratic vote, yet GillespieTlhe sit ting Congressman, a Democrat, was elected. McDowell and Phillips re ceived nearly equal support Sow McDowell will be elected as a Con gressman at large and Phillips will be elected to represent the district. The voters who fought against one or the other two years ago so bitterly will next Novem ber vote for both. Mr. McDowell's nomination is a peculiar ly happy one, in view of the cruel circum stances by which he was deprived of his seat two years ago. All unconsciously on his part three of the Beaver delegates were bribed to vote for him by persons in Law rence county, who, while they cared nothing for McDowell, were willing to run any risk to defeat the nomination of Townsend, the Beaver county nominee. McDowell's Former Lack of Judgment. Innocent himself of any wrong in the affair, McDowell, with a lack of judgment which I would never have thought possible in him, persisted in accepting and insisting upon his nomination, though it could not have been his without the three bribed voters. Innocent as he was, to claim the nomination under such circumstances could not result otherwise than fatally. Mr. Phillips was nominated as an inde pendent Republican candidate, and of the three candidates in the field McDowell had the smallest number of votes, though he fell short of Phillips only 10S votes in more than 21,000. It was a cruel rebuke, which, however well deserved, was expiated in the suffering it entailed. All the candidates were wrong,and there sbouldjbe no lingering grudge to gratify next falL McDowell is one of the most genial and companionable of men. He is chockfull of wit and humor, and for witty sallies, apt stories and good jokes, will dispute in the House the ground now occupied jointly by John Allen, of Mississippi, and John O'Neil, of Missouri. Pennsylvania Republicans Well Pleased. Pennsylvania Republicans in this city also appear to be much pleased with the re sult of the convention. Some of them seem to have expected there would be some fric tion, either in the organization, in the reso lutions, or in some manner expressive of the antagonism which is supposed to exist in regard to the re-election of Senator Quay, and are much surprised that the only flurry of excitement should have been the injudi cious attempt of Phillips, of SchuylKill, to force the Senatorial questicn upon the con vention, which was promptly squelched by both the friends and the opponents of Senator Quay. I am informed directly from the "White House that the President and his closest friends are profoundly pleased by the hearty and unqualified indorsement of his administration. They are not disappointed at the failure o'f the convention to instruct the delegation to vote for the renomination of Harrison. Harrison Not at All Alarmed. That was not expected, and the President is not in the least alarmed at the omission. He is well convinced that the only thing that can defeat his renomination will be the intervention of death, and he is a firm be liever that manifest destiny and a judicious courting of good health, by liberal duck shooting will dispose of any pretensions the specter on the pale horse may have in his direction. Of course, the failure of the convention to instruct is seized, upon by the sensational ists who are determined to develop a con spiracy to defeat Harrison, as new proof of the correctness of their theory, and they launch forth with new bugaboos in regard to the extent of the movement of Quay, Piatt, Olarkson, Dudley and others to de feat the renomination of Harrison, bat it is plain that these theorists have no facts, but merely a conspiracy of the imagination. Every candidate who has been thought in opposition to Harrison has dropped out, either formally or informally, and at this late day it would be almost impossible for the most astute managers, and with the arms of the machine reaching to every State, to arrange any scheme to defeat the renomination of the President Harrison and Morton Once More. Harrison and Morton is generally ad mitted to be the nearly inevitable ticket of the Republicans and Cleveland and Gray that of the Democrats, though believers in the Cleveland slate are somewhat discon certed by the new favor with which the silver men look noon Senator Hill since his cunning vote upon the Arizona funding act bill. The free coinage Republicans of the House and Senate are greatly pleased by the reso lution of the Harrisburg convention pro nouncing for the issue ot certificates for silver bullion. Even Senator Teller, who yesterday warned the Republican antwree coinage people and the anti-free coinage President that sevwal Republican States will go over to the Democrats if something be not done to propitiate the free coinage element, admitted to-day that the Pennsyl vania convention had doubtless sounded the keynote of the party on the silver question, and that the silver plank probably repre sented the most tbat can be expected from the Republican party in the direction of free coinage. He doubted if the Democrats would go farther, in view of the treatment free coinage had received in the House with its enormous Democratic majority. Bland on the Keystone Platform. Mr. Bland also admitted to me that the silver plank in the Harrisburg platform is a very shrewd one. intended to discount the possible action of the Demooratio National Convention. He does not believe the Dem ocrats will go farther, and assumes that the Nation Republican Convention will adopt a similar plank, and thus rob the Democrats of any advantage they might secure on that question, aside from the personal views of the candidates, which are of very little im portance, so long as Congress and parties fear to adopt the free coinage view. Three days of the time of the House have been already occupied by the Noves-Rock-well contested election case, and two or three hours of to-morrow will be consumed before the vote is taken. It is one of the most remarkable cases ever contested in the House, and is well worth the time con sumed. It is practically a contest of the majority of the committee for the sustain ing vote of the House, which is apparently growing in the opposite direction. A Brief Statement of the Case. The Committee on Eleotions consists of 15 members, nine Democrats and six Republicans. All the Republicans and seven of the Democrats voted to seat the contestant, Noyes. Two Democrats, Cobb, of Alabama, and Gillespie, of the Twenty fifth Pennsylvania district, made a minority report in favor of Rockwell. Inadvertently, in writing a day or two ago of this case, I stated that Gillespie stood alone as Rock well's defender in the committee. This was true up to the last moment before the reports were made. Gillespie is the man who will have saved Rockwell if he be saved. It was upon points brought out by him that Cobb signed the minority report with him, and which led Paynter, of Kentucky, to vote with the majority with a reservation that he would change his atti tude on the final vote if he desired. The case can be stated in a few sentences: Noyes and Hockwell were opposing candi dates in the Twenty-eighth New York, known as the Elmira district Rockwell was given the certificate of election on the ground that certain votes which would give Noyes'anuxjority w HlcgsL -- r s The Matter Left to Congress. Noyes took the matter from the district authorities to the Court of Appeals, which issued a mandamus requiring the votes shown on the face ot the returns should be counted. The Court simply refused to go behind the returns. At the conclusion of the opinion, however, the Court said that "it it be claimed that the actual result at the polls was different in fact from that shown by this statement, the question must be left for the determination of a higher tribunal," meaning, of course, Congress. On the face of the returns Noyes had a majority ot 6, but it was shown beyond dis pute that 1G votes cast for him had been marked in a manner by which the voter could be identified, which was a direct In fraction of the law, and which rendered the votes void, and imposed a heavy penalty on the offender in case he could be found. Rockwell's counsel made a poor present ment of his case. They assumed that the Court of Appeals bad erred, and that'itsde cision must be overthrown. The Commit tee on Elections almost unanimously disa greed with this view, holding that prece dent and practice precluded it proceeding counter to the decision of the court A Pennsylvsnian Makes a'Point Gillespie, coming into the case at the last moment, he having been at home in atten dance at the court of his countv, hotly con tended that the court itself had remanded the whole case to Congress, the "higher tribunal," that it was competent to go be hind the returns and act upon evidence much of which was not disputed by the con testant There was no doubt that 16 votes had been marked in a manner contrary to law. Bribery had been charged and had not been disputed, une person, snown upon sworn evidence to have been guilty of bribery of several of the 16, brought a suit for libel azainst a newspaper which procured and published the facts, but when the suit was speedily brought to a trial he failed to ap pear in his own defense. In one of the clearest legal arguments that have been made in the House this session, Representative Gillespie to-day E resented the facts as to marked ballots and ribery, the plain letter of the law bearing on the case, and summed up in an admirable plea for Rockwell. It was his first speech in Congress, but its clearness and force, and the fact that he had saved the committee from going unanimously for Npyes, got him the very complimentary attention of the House, and the congratulations of members of all parties. Present Prospects of the Tote. As the feeling runs to-night the vote to morrow will fix Rockwell firmly in his seat If so, the result will not be due to any in fluence of Senator Hill, but to the plain view of the case adopted by Gillespie and taken up by some of the ablest and fairest Democrats in the House, who were at first inclined to go with the majority of the com mittee, before their attention was called to the fact in the case. Democratic members of the committee who support Noyes are making a desperate plea for the support of the House. O'Fer rall, of Virginia, the fiery Chairman, will make a last effort to-morrow to stem the tide tbat has been setting strongly against him. On the power of his closing speech depends the indorsement or rebuke ot the committee. The outlook to-night is that the majority of the House will adopt the view ot Gillespie. Lightner. T0XTEN BACK IN THE BANKS. He Will at Once Rejoin His Old Command, the Fourth Artillery. New Haven, Conk., April 21. Special Lieutenant Charles A. L. Totten has re ceived orders from Secretary Elkins in forming him of the appointment of Captain James S. Pettlt, of the Pint Infantry, aa military instrnctor at Yale. Captain Pet tlt will report at the school July 18, and the orders will go into effect on August 1. Lieutenant Totten will rejoin his com mand, the Fourth Artillery. He has been military instructor in the Sheffield scientific department for four years. THE LION WILL ROAR If the Very latest French Outrage on a Loyal'British Subject IS EOT SPEEDILY REDRESSED. An Innocent Man Arrested Without. War rant as an English Spy. HE IS THE0WN IN RAYACHOI3 CELL London, April 21. Another arrest of an Englishman has been made in Paris, which, coming as it does so shortly after the arrest of Mr. Pardie and his brother, the two En glishmen taken into custody at the Auteuil races on suspicion of being pickpockets, which arrest led to diplomatic correspond ence, is likely to result in tension between England and France. France refused to make either reparation or apology for the arrest of the Purdies, but in this last case it is believed that England will take such steps as will leave no doubt as to her inten tions in the matter. The latest victim of the extraordinary vigilance of the French police is a Mr. Del mard. He was the agent of an English pro jectile company, and had previously been employed by the Nordenfeldt Company. On" March 31 he was discharged, the man ager of the company saying 'he was in bad odor with the police, and that it would be best for him to leave Paris. The Particulars of Delmard's Arrest The following Monday he started to visit Madame Rougeron, for whom he was writing the music for a ballet which had been ac cepted for production in Vienna. As he was entering Madame Rougeron's residence he was stopped at the door by a gendarme, who seized him, chained his wrists and bustled him into a cah. The cendarme took him to the Prefecture of Police, and, not withstanding Delmard's request for an ex planation, no reason was given for his arrest He was put into a wretched cell, where he was confined until the next morn ing. He was then taken to his lodgings. Once there he declined to move until a warrant for his arrest was shown. Delmard said he was a British subject, and that he would appeal to the 'British Embassy for protection. Chief Detective Goron said he' did not care a fig for the British Embassy, which would not dare to interfere in the matter. Delmard refused to move, where upon he was struck in the face and knocked down. His captors then took him back to the Prefecture, where part of his clothing was taken from him,andhe was again placed in a cell filled with vermin. Anarchists His Cell Companions. The next morning he was examined by a judge, who said he had proof a that Del mard's presence in France was detrimental to the Government The following day he was taken to the Mazas prison. Here he was stripped and kept naked for an hour and a halt. Then he was put in a cell measuring 6x2 feet His companion in this cell was Anastay, who was executed a few days ago for the brutal murder of his benefactress, Baroness Dellard. At night he slept in a dormitory, with Anastay on one side of him and Ravachol, the Anarchist, on the other. The next morning he was placed in a cell with Rava chol. The latter expressed much sympathy for Delmard, and said that his arrest was a most uniust and unwarranted proceeding.' Ravachol, in discussing the Englishman's arreit'astSdWniV "Do .you wonder now why we wish to blow up these people. He ad ded, "That is the only redress we have for our wrongs. There have been thousands of arrests similar to yours." Ravachol Threatens the Prefecture. Ravachol declared that it was the inten tion of the Anarchists to blow up the Pre fecture. Ravachol was very excited, and kept dashing his head against the wall. On the wall of the cell Ravachol had scratched the words, "Vive l'Anarchistj" "Ni Dieu, nl Roi. ni Judge." Delmard was subsequently subjected to another examination by the Jndge, who said that he had letters addressed to him (Del mard) by foreign governments, asking in formation in regard to the French Balloon ing Corps. Delmard proved that these let ters were old and of no importance: The Judge, nevertheless, said he had proofs that the Englishman was a spy, and sent him back to prison. On April 14 Delmard was liberated. The Judge apologized to him for his arrest and said that the police were to blame. Delmard was penniless, the police having taken everything from him. He procured money and has now returned to London. The matter has been laid before the Foreign Office. Delmard asks heavy compensation from France for his outrageous treatment SHORT A HALF MILLION. Heavy Defalcation In Hone; Kong A Trust ed Banker Gets Away With Over 350,000 No Trace or the Defaulter How He Worked It New Yoek, April 21. Special Mea ger details of a big defalcation in Hong Kong reached New York to-day by way of San Francisco, and were corroborated by A. M. Townsend, the New York agent of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corpora tion. The comprador of the bank, a' trusted Chinaman, who had been in the bank's service many yeart, was said in the press dispatches to be a defaulter to the extent of (600,000, but Mr. Townsend says his tele graphic advices put the amount at 500,000 Mexican. dollars, or about $350,000. The 'compradoris a very important per son in the big English banks in China. He is always a Chinaman, and places all the bank's loans at the Chinese firms. The comprador personally secures the bank for the amount loaned through him, and in loaning the money, obtains satisfactory se curity from the Chinese merchants to in demnify himself. There has been a great depreciation in the price of silver in Hong Kong recently, which, with the failure of several enter prises, has put some of the native firms in a very tight place. The bank had loaned out with several of the native banks, and the last mall advices received by Mr. Townsend were to the effect that it was going to call in these loans. In the absence of particulars, Mr. Town send thinks the calling of these loans dis closed the deficit The comprador was heavily interested in the native banks, and it is supposed the securities which he had placed with the Hongkong bank to cover the loans have proved to be bad. BACK TO HER FIRST LOVE. A Divorced Wife Weds the Man Whom She Rejected 21 Tears Ago. Sioux Falls, a D., April 21. E. A. Demauriac, a New York banker, and Mrs. Laura W. Leavitt,' formerly of Flushing, L. L, but for the past year a resident of this city, were married to-day. Mrs. Leavitt is the daughter of the late Judge White, a prominent New York lawyer. Twenty-one years ago, when 17 years old, she married Leavitt at Cooperstown, N. Y.,v through the influence of her family. De mauriac was a rejected suitor, who after ward married a wealthy New York lady who died 11 years ago. Demauriac is a member of the Stock Exchange, a banker, and is rated at over 11,000,000. Leavitt be came a very wealthy wine merchant at Flushing, L. L About two years ago Mrs. Leavitt visited her mother at Cooperstown for three weeks, and on her return her hus band refnsed to admit her to the house or longer support her. She returned to Coop erstown and a year ago came to South Da kota. A few months ago, at Brookings, she seoured a divorce on the ground of deser tion and non-support Her former lover wrote her here, renewing his offer of 21 years ago. He was accepted and the wed ding followed. HARRISON'S REVENGE. Piatt's Lieutenants Who Refuse to Look Oat for the President Made to Resign One Way to Take Care of One's Own Boom. v New York, April 21 Special It be gins io look as If President Harrison had at last declared war against the New York State leaders who are opposed to his renom ination at Minneapolis. They think it is a little late'in the day, for the reason that they have already captured the majority of the delegates to the National Convention. Secretary Foster took John B. Milhol land's head off, on the ground that he had "failed to arrange matters satisfactorily with a N. Bliss." The night this was done Mr. Bliss entertained at dinner in his home the enemies of Har rison. Mllholland, with H. O. Armour, was promptly elected a delegate to the Na tional Convention from the Sixth Con gressional district Charles H. Murray, the leader of the Third, Assembly district, and a delegate with John D. Lawson from the Seventh Congressional district to Minne apolis, announced to-night that he had been removed from his place as special attorney for the Immigration Bureau in United States Attorney Mitchell's office. Colonel 8. V. R. Cruger, on his visit to Washington duripg the height of the Mil-holland-Bliss Eleventh district row, in formed Secretary Foster that Mr. Murray and Bernard Biglin were the chief support ers of Milholland in his fight to control the district. Secretary Foster,before he started for Ohio on his trip" to capture the conven tion of the Buckeye State on April 28 for Harrison, signed the letter removing Mur ray. But one meaning was put upon the re moval of Murray, that the Harrison ad ministration bad declared war upon Piatt and everybody in New York opposed to the President's renomination. Mr. Piatt is not any the more inclined to come to terms, all the same. MISPLACED CONFIDENCE. The Tiffany, of New York, Systematically Bobbed by a Man With Whom They Dealt The Culprit's Father an Old Friend of the Firm. New Yoek, April 2L James A. Palmer, of this city, was arrested this afternoon, charged with the larceny of $50,000 from Tiffany & Co., the jewelers. Palmer was captured at his warerooms, on West Seven teenth street, and when he learned that bis misdeeds had been found out, he exclaimed, "O God! I wish I had shot myself!" He acknowledged his guilt to Inspector Steers later at police headquarters. The stealing had been carried on for more than five years in a very systematic manner. Charles L. Tiffany, the head of the "firm of Tiffany & Co., and James F. Palmer, the prisoner's father, were close friends from boyhood days until Mr.Palmer died in 1878. leaving his business to his son. The Pal mers manufactured fine bronze goods for Tiffany Ss Co. He rendered the'firm many large bills. The son sras manager for the elderPalmer.and. dhtTh great deal of the business. On account of the warm friendship which existed between the elder Palmer and Charles Tiffany, the usual system of audit ing bills was not used In the settling of ac counts. When old Mr. Palmer died the same courtesy and loose way of conducting business was continued with the son. On Monday a discrepancy was discovered in a bill rendered by the prisoner on the 16th instant for $240. The items only footed up $220. The bill had been checked with the initials of T. C. Cook, a member of the firm of Tiffany &,Co. When Mr. Cook was shown the initials he pronounced them a forgery. The case was then reported to the police. Mr. Palmer's wife is completely prostrated at the turn affairs have taken. Palmer has been playing the races heavily. He was drunk when arrested. A NEW CANADIAN VIEW Exposed by a Conservative Member of the Present Parliament Boston, April 21 Special Hon. K. F. Burns, a Conservative member of the Canadian Parliament who is visiting Bos ton, gave a new version of the Canadian situation in an interview to-day. He said that Canada would never be annexed to the United States. "I think," he said, "that at some distant time there will be a separa tion from Great Britain, but it will be a friendly one. Canada will remain in dependent and not be united with the United States. Canadians have great faith in the possibilities of their country, and when the time comes, will prefer a sep arate political existence. We want no com mercial union that will compel us to dis criminate against Great Britain. That was the alternate submitted to the delegation we sent to Washington in favor of reciproc ity." "We see more benefit in being under the protection of England than the United States. England is a greater maritime power. Her navy protects our merchant marine the world over, and we gain access to her markets at no cost whatever. We govern ourselves completely. We pay no imperial taxes. Every cent we pay goes to the support of our own institutions. What better arrangement can we ask?" LIGHTNING AND FLOODS. Destructive Thunder Storms Visit Tennessee and Louisiana. Milan, Tenn., April 2L A terrible rain storm has prevailed in this seotion for the past 24 hours, and fences, houses, bridges and other property have been swept away and travel suspended. Dr. Bryant and two negroes are believed to have been drowned, and a great cro wd of people are now dragging the submerged bottoms tor their bodies. Several washouts are re ported on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. A dispatch from New Orleans says: Dur ing the thunder storm here at 8 A. M., Jean nette Pernadet was struck by lightning and killed and half a dozen persons in his com pany were prostrated. At Abbeville at noon.to-day ihe barn on Mr. Leblanche's lace was struck bv lightning and Aristode lOnglingan was killed and two other per sons injured. The rainfall from 6 A. M. to noon to-day was four inches, most of which fell between 7 and 9 o'clock, flooding the streets throughout tne city. The First Wbaleback No More. Deteoit, April 2L Whaleback barge No. 101, coal laden, in tow of tbfe steamer Tokima, sprung a leak last night and sank near Lime Kiln crossing. She will doubt less soon be raised. This boat is the first of its kind built, having been turned out at West Superior in 1888. She is 412 tons reg ister and is valued at $40,000. .Ex-Congressman Yardley a JBrldecroom. Doylesxown, April 2L Ex-Congressman Yardley was married this evening at the residence of the bride to Mrs. Rebe James, daughter of ex-Sheriff Purdy. QUAKING CALIFORNIA. More Shocks Yesterday, in Some Places -Severer Than Before. RUINS ALREADY MADfi FINISHED. The Buildings In the Afflicted Towns Very Flimsy Affairs. PE0F. DAYIDS0N EXPOUNDS HIS THEOET San Francisco, April 21. There was a recurrence ' of an earthquake wave in the central part of the State this forenoon, which was perceptible in this .city and was noticeable as far east as Reno. Telegraphic reports show that it was felt as far north as Red Bluff in the San Joaquin Valley. This shock was not so severe as that of, Monday night, and the only damage of any con sequence reported was to the buildings in the towns of Winters, Woodland, Dixon and Vacaville, which had been weakened by Monday's shock. The shock was sharper at Sacramento than any 'previous one, and caused some excitement in the State Capitol building, owing to the Over-turning of one of the plaster figures over the main portico and its precipitation to the ground. 'The shock was chiefly felt at Vacaville, but at Woodland several brick walls fell down and a number of chimneys were over turned. At Dixon and Davisville several brick buildings fell which had been injured Monday. A Very Poor Class of Buildings. A survey of the damages at six towns in the Vaca and Sacramento valleys shows that the buildings injured were of frail character, the construction of which would not have been permitted in any city with building regulations, and a number of which would have collapsed in the event of a severe storm of anyharacter. In this city and in Sacramento the shock was not noticeable in strong business blocks, nor in the mission churches, many of which are over 100 years old. Several of the country houses which partly collapsed were lightly constrncted and could not have withstood any shock, The only personal injury reported is that of a workman at Dixon, who was struck by part of a falling wall. Governor Markham offered to send tents to people at Winters, whose houses were destroyed. This morning's shock at Winters com pleted the destruction of the two-story Ma sonic Hall, of the Chadwick building, Ber tholet's two-story stone building, Humprey Brothers' one-story stone building, and gen erally demolished goods, fixtures, etc One man was badly Injured by a falling wall. Three brick and stone farmhouses west of town, injured Monday night, were ' com pletely wrecked to-day. Even Worse Than the First Shock. At Davisville the shock lasted no more than five seconds, vet in severity it seemed to exceed that of tne morning of the 19th. The additional damage is ' scarcely notice able, save in the rear of the Masonic and Odd Fellows' halls, where' the fissures show considerable enlargement and are now really dangerous. In Campbell's drug store sev eral bottles were thrown from the shelves, and at B. F. Liggett's glass was crushed in the front Many brick chimneys will have to be torn down and rebuilt .Dixwi. reports -that. oidytWwtta1rfT;??C-' " Bto-tef Eat brick buildings in town are safe. . The occu pants of bnck buildings who remained after tne preceding shocks moved out to-day. There were many narrow escapes. The people are panic-stricken, and believe the ruin of the town will be completed before the shocks cease. Every available mechanic and laborer is at work attempting to clear awav the wreckage and taking down the condemned buildings. Finished the Rains Already Made. At Woodland the quake was fully equal to that of Tuesday night The damage is light, so far as ascertained. The buildings were cracked in many new places and the recent breaks somewhat enlarged. The most noticeable effects are seen in the Capi tal Hotel, Christian Church, Odd Fellows' Hall and the express office. The earthquake at Vacaville was not as severe as those of the preceding days. Some shaky walls were demolished and a number of ceilings were cracked, but no serious damage was done. A dispatch from Esparto says: A severe earthquake shock occurred here this morn-, ing, completely leveling the brick portion' of the town. Every brick chimney was thrown to the ground, and the wooden buildings were wrenched out of shape. W. H. Shultz, engineer, was seriously, if not fatally, injured by a part of the walls of his blacksmith shop falling upon him. .Levy & Schwab's brick store is almost a complete wreck, the entire firewall and part of the east and west walls being down. Barnes' Hotel suffered a severe loss, making a hole eight by six in the 'east wall. The brioks crashed through the roof and the floor of the balcony, and the cement walk was torn out of shape. Mrs. J. R. Davison was taken out ot the debris of Levy & Schwab's store unconscious. A baby in her arms was unhurt Reports from the surrounding country show great destruction of property. Teams broke and ran away, wrecking valu able vehicles and injuring stock. Exten sive fissures are reported between here and Woodland. Another slight shock of earthquake oc curred here (San Francisco) at 7:15 this evening. Shocks this evening are also re ported from a number of other places in the northern part of the State, and also from Carson, Nev., but no damage is reported. THE SCIENCE OF IT. Prof. Davidson Says the Shocks Were Caused by the Continual Shrlnkace of the Earth's Surface Evldenoe of Lava Overflows la' the Sierras. San Teancisco, April ZL Special Prof. George Davidson,of the United States Geodetic Survey, who has made a special study of earthquakes on the coast, says of the shakes which have done so much damage: The consensus of Judgment? among physi cists is that the earthquakes lesult from shrinking of the surface of tho earth, and from the ceaseless dissipation of its heat into the cold of space. As this loss of heat progresses, strains are inaugurated through out the surface ot the earth, and on account of that surface being of unequal strength, there arrives a moment when a breaking or a part of the surface takes place along the weakest part thereof. Every miner Is familiar with "faults" which he encounters In the line of his drifts. Rarely can ho tell whether the continuation of bis vein 1 above or below him, when he comes to a bare wall at the abrupt end of bis vein. Along this roast, lines of rupture of weak Snrts of the earth's crust are shown in tne cpression of the plateau of the Pnciuo ocean bed, and the parallelism of at least four lines of the Sierra Nevada end Cascade ranges: and these Hues and the closely ad jacent country must be tho seat of seismic obanges, as each gradually loses its heat We have evidence clearly before, us tbat along the rupture of these ranges there have been many overflows of lava, forming basaltic lavers visible In the Sierra Nevada in certain localities, and especially In many outflows along the northern part of the Cas cade ranse. The dynamical tbeoryaccounts for these- exhibitions, and it is easy to Imagine there must have been many other exhibitions of electrical and volcanic forces. In the great chain of the Aleutian Islands, where so many extinct and active volcanoes exist, every earthquake along this weak line In the earth's surface is accompanied by THE SAME OLD CHARMER. renewed activity in the living volcanoes, and It may be safely assumed tbat all tho phenomena may be traced to contraction and rupture of some part of the surface or crust from the ceaseless but slow cooling of our planet. THE RUSTLER'S SIDE Presented in the Form of a Petition to the President They Ask, Not for Venge ance, but for Justice Ramon of a Cattlemen's Victory. Buffalo! Wyo.. April 21. The follow ing is the first part of a telegram from the citizens of Buffalo t(r"v5 President: We do solemnly fc, "-it, contrary to all lawB of God af &n '"d body of capitalists with hlrfl, Q . -4 our county with the open an-17 . jr ." nf talHncnnapqafnn nt and " f J .""'I.. anmA In thnlr nam IntATflfltS! thi& f their Rim vim to terrorize and det o 3 ! the ennntv to their own aegrnndizeraeu. murder and kill any and all person o. persons resisting them, regardless of reputation or calling; that they have been deterred in the , act or com mitment of such murders and killings; that they have with firearms resisted arrest by the civil authorities and have defied all laws; that when surrounded bv the Sheriff's posse and their capture certain, they were arrested bv the military, which military Is now ordered to escort them safely to the railroad. The band comprises some of the wealthiest people of the State, and they ODenly aver that their wealth will buy them protection from the Government. Our peo- File have been, calm, patient and miraculous y submissive to law and order all through the troubled ordeal. They ask not lor vengeance, but Justice. The petition concludes: We most respectfully ask, will It be the pleasure of the President to receive a com mittee of our people who desire to explain the true condition of our county and how grossly our people have been maligned? The habeas corpus hearing of Dr. Charles B. Penrose at Cheyenne was again post poned to-day until May 23. A dispatch from Deadwood, S. D., says: Word has been brought to this city that a battle between rustlers and cowboys was fought Monday near Little Powder river, resulting in a repulse for the rustlers who had been emboldened by their recent victory over the cattlemen. It is expected that trouble will ensue again, and the rustlers are determined to get into the spring round up and the cowboys are equally determined to keep them out 100 YOUNG FOR A FBEAK. A Little Deformed Refugee's Hard Strngcle NEW YOEK, April 2L Special Samuel Kautman, 9 years old, came here from Austria six months ago with a number of Russians, one of whom fraudulently passed the boy off as his son. Young Kautman went to work for a man named Schachlman, on Rivington street, from which house he was taken three weeks ago and sent to North Brothers Island to be treated for typhus. He was discharged as cured three days ago. He applied for aid at the He brew Charities Society and was not ad mitted. Being homeless and without friends he wandered about begging, and finally brought up at police headquarters Wednesday night. This morning he was taken to the Jeffer son Market Court, where he aroused great interest from the fact that hehad six toes on each foot and five fingers,besides thumbs, on each band. He said that a Bowery dime museum manager had offered him $18 a week to exhibit himself, but afterward withdrew the offer because the boy was not old enough to come within the legal limit Justice Grady sent the boy to the Commis sioners ot Immigration. A CTOI0TJS SI0EY DENIED. Senator McMlUIn Says That He Is a Folly Naturalized Citizen. Washington, April 2L Special A curious story is flying around to-night, that charges have been made against Senator Mc Millin, of Michigan, that he is sitting in the Senate as ah alien, having never been naturalized. The story is an outgrowth of the great political fight tbat has been going on in Michigan for some years, and the charges are said to emanate from ths friends of Mayor Pingree, of Detroit, who is a candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor and who is op posed by McMillin. When asked to-night in regard to his citizenship, the Senator replied that he is a native of New Brunswick, but was naturalized in 1864, and that he has all the papers in his possession for Mayor Pingree or any otner man wno wisnes to see tnem. Three Deaths From Coal Gas. Saleii, N. J., April 2L Three fisher men were fonnd in their cabin at Hope Creek this morning, suffocated by coal gas. When taken out they were in a dying con dition. The men were Edward Press, Ed ward Turner and William Grosscup, ill liv ing at Hancock's Bridge, six miles from Salem. An Opium Victim's Suicide. DAOTON, April 21. Dr. Albert H. Gable, a physician, addicted to the opium habit, committed suicide this evening by shooting. He was unmarried and a protege of the late Mrs. Thomas Ster, sister of the late General George Crook. THIS JIOENING'S NEWS. Topic Page. Washington Views on the Ticket. 1 England Growling at France 1 California Towns Still Shaking 1 A Little Ohio Eloper Caught 1 Women After the Smoke Makers 2 Hunting Opium Dens In Pittsburg 3 Allegheny County Realty Jumping 2 Editorial and Miscellaneous 4 Republican Convention Gossip 4 News ot the National Capital S Kennedy Oat ot Allegheny Council 6 Indiana Cheers for Cleveland 7 Lieut. Hetherington Defended 7 France Will Conqner Dahomey 7 Intombed Miners Probably Dead 7 The Baseball Disappointment 8 A Clubhonse for Amateur Athletes 8 Emigrants Mangled on the B. O .-r. 8 A Grand Wedding in Now fork 9 News of the Business World 9 A Bigamist With Thirteen Wives 9 The Trimble Estate Fight 10 Chess and Checker Problems ...10 Oil and Commercial Markets 11 The Chinese Defended In Congress IS Allegheny Finances Explained 13 MAY HOWELL HMD. The Little Girl From Alliance, 0., Who Ran Away to Be Married, TURNS UP IN NEW YORK CITY. She Was' Fonnd There Tuesday and Has 'Had the Best of Care. THE SINGULAE ST0EI I0LD BT HER ISFKCIAr, TZLEQEAM TO TITE DISPATCH.! New Yoek, April 2L May Howell, the lost girl of Alliance, O., was picked up on the street here Tuesday. She left home Monday evening, under peculiar circum stances. She is 13 years old. May and Chaaley Vosper, who is 12, had' planned for their elopement, and were boarding a train, when Officer Spicer arrested the boy. The girl escaped. The boy has served a term in the House of Correction. . May's mother is a widow, and highly re spected. She was much relieved when she was notified that her daughter is safe. Be fore the girl left home she broke into her brother's trunk and took $15. May whis pered to a girl companion on Sunday that she would soon be Charley's wife. Chief of Police McFarland, of Alliance, has notified the New York authorities to hold the girl until he reaches this city and takes charge of her. He left lor New" York to-night She will be taken home and put in the reform school. As Black as a Little Neipress. It was impossible to tell whether May Howell was a white girl or a negress when she was found on Tuesday afternoon wan dering about the Grand Central station in tears. She wore a dotted calico dress, and ' T fna nnil hanrla hfd iiTitwrTitlir Tint hApn J Ashed lor weeks. A vigorous aDDlication A vigorous application I- f soap with a scrub brash at the Gerry society's rooms took off the disguise and revealed a rosy-cheeked country girl, about 13 or 14 years old, whose thick, black hair fell in a heavy bang over her forehead. She told the policeman who found her that Robert Johnson, her uncle, had brought her over from his farm outside of Brooklyn and had left her at the station, sayinsr he would return. He did not come back. Superintendent Jenkins found 56 09 in May's pocket', and May said she had found $2 of the amount She told the Superintendent she was 11 years old and had come from her home at Mt Union, near Alliance, O., a month ago, with her uncle on a visit She stuck to her story, and in sisted that her mother knew she was going away with Johnson. Another Case of the Same Kind. Johnson had told her he would come back and get her a ticket and send her home, be cause he had received a letter from Mrs. Minerva Howell, her mother, saying she was ill, and wanted the child to return. May said her mother kept a boarding house for students of a college in Mt. Union. No trace of Johnson has been discovered. Superintendent Jenkins says May is in the same category as a girl of about the same age who says she lives in Indiana, and who was found wandering in the city six months ago. A woman brought her to the society, saying she had found her in the street. Subsequently the woman returned and said she was the girl's mother. The girl denied it, and the society has "been try ing ever since to find who the girl really belongs to. A dispatch was received from an Indiana man, last week, threatening to sue the Eocietyit Jixe girl was not instantly sent to him in the charge of a train condnctor. Word was telegraphed him to prove his right to claim the waif. She has been living at the society's rooms. "It is a case," said Superintendent Jenkins, "where a girl has been brought to this big city and deliberately abandoned. Such cases are not uncommon." M'KINLEY NOT A CANDIDATE. For Congress, bnt His Friends Are Boom ing Him for President. Columbus, O., April 21. Special Governor McKinley denies the report sent all over the country that he is a candidate for his old seat in Congress from the Stark-Columbiana-Mahonlng district. To a re porter the Governor said to-day: "No, I am not a candidate. I have not thought of such a thing. The story tbat I was is news to me. The idea never entered my mind, and probably never would had I not seen a suggestion to that effect in the papers." "But, Governor, if you were urged to accept the nomination would you give the matter further consideration?" "No, I am in ho sense a candidate," was his reply. The anti-Harrison men do not want Mc Kinley to go as a delegate to the Repub lican National Convention, for they intend to spring the Governor oh the convention as a candidate for President, and do not want him to be in a position where he can rise and decline. They expect to use the magic of the great protectionist's name to defeat Harrison. There will be a lively time over the selection of the four delegates at large to the National Convention. Already the storm flag is flying at Cleveland, and next week the battle will take place. If the Sherman faction controls the State Repub lican Convention no Foraker man need ap ply, and vice versa. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY CONFAB Likely to Be He'd in the United States Be fore Many Months. Washington; April 2L Special The announciment made in THEDlsrATCH this morning that President Harrison had invited the nations of the werld to a mone tary conference is confirmed to-day from an official authority that is beyond question. Private Secretary Halford admits that th arrangements for the proposed conference have been completed, and a bureau officer of the Treasury says that all "necessary steps have been taken, that the conference is now an assured fact, and that within a fortnight the responses will be received and made public. It is known that the United States Gov ernment has the co-operation of England and France in her proposition for the con ference, and it is further known that cer tain changes and concessions in the propo sition of the United States were made at the request of Chancellor Goschen, who talked over the whole subject with Secre tary Foster when the latter was in England last month. The President has inlormally received assurance from nearly all the gov ernments to whom his invitations were ad dressed that they would be accepted. SHE TORE TJF THE WILL. A Pretty Nebraska Girl Would Accept Neither a Lover Nor His Money. Lincoln, Neb., April 2L Some six months ago Arend Arends, a well-to-do farmer, hanged himself because pretty Mary Van Hove, a neighbor's daughter, did not return his love. Arends left a will in which he bequeathed his farm and posses sions, valued at 510,000, to Mary. To-day she came into court in response to a summons, but positively declined to file the will for probate, dramatically tearing up the document before the astonished rela tives, and renouncing her claims in favor of Arend's mother, who lives in Reynold county, Mo.