NEELY1ZED TtiE CASH. John Sheridan, a PilaJ Official Cuba, fnies Wrong. in THEFT OF $1,300 IS ADMITTED. The Authorities Thought ol Making Him Post matter When Tboirpron Was Removed Confessed Ills Uuilt and Admits Hiving Destroyed th: CheJ." Appointed Prom Boston Postoffice. Havana (Special). Jc'.in Sheridan, who ha been In ehnrge f the money urdrr department of the Havana Post office, was arrested and formally ae-ruse-d of the theft of $1300 sent from Hie postmns-ier at Gunman liuo. Decem ber 6 $1233 In cash and $t!. In clu-ek. He has confessed his guilt and admits having destroyed the check. Sheridan was nppninted from the Boston Postofllce on the organization of the service In Cuba. He was made postmaster at Matnnzns. About a year ago he was placed at the head of the money order department. In Havana with a salary of $1700. He soctiu- 1 to le n trustworthy man. and the authori ties considered the expediency of ap . pointing htm p.isiitiastrr m th time former Postmaster Thompson was re moved. An investment of $0u in stocks In Bo. ion first at tracted sus picion to Sheridan. He now offers to refund what he has taken. A mass-meeting of planters, mer chants and representatives of the vari ous political parties held In Havana adopted resolutions asking the I'niied States to lower Us duty on Cuban pro ducts and advoi ruing vac suppression of the export tax on tobacco. One number of each of the bodies partici pating in the meeting w is appointed as a delegate to go io Washington to lay before Congress arguments in favor of tariff reduction. Were on the Inside. Wa.shingi.on l Special). Several rlerks 1n the Deadletter OfBee of the Postoffire Dcpar.ment have been dis missed on charges of having bought packages at the deadletter sale, know. ing in advance their contents and falsely representing their character In the catalogue. The scheme was un earthed by the Postmaster General in nn lnv -tipatittn carried on for over a month. In order to avert suspicl n by the presence of local detectives in the office during the sale of December 17 last, inspectors from New York. Bos ton and Maryland carried on the In vestigation and located the plot in the property division of the Deadletter Of fice. Killed by Fulliug Walls. New York (Special). An old flve etory building In East Twenty-third Ktreet. once used as a dwelling-house, "which was being rfon strutted and modernized, collapsed, untl two men were instantly killed by being burled under falling bricks. Kdward Nelson, foreman of a gang of Ironworkers, and his brother. William, also an iron wcrker, were swipt down in the ruins and killed. Th? collapse was caused by the hoisting of heavy Iron girders. Jamew F. Stevenson, one of the build rx, cand John H. Wellington, one of the foreman, were arreted, the police charging carelessness in not providing proper safeguards. Cracksmen in New Baltimore. New Baltimore, Mich. (Special). William F. Sandell & Co.'s bank here was broken into by cracksmen, who forced open the safe and secured about $.'1000. No one was aroused by the noise, and the thieves escaped with their booty unseen. The sledge ham mers, picks and other tools which were used in forcing the safe were left on the floor of the bank. The thieves es caped on a hand ear, which they stole from the Papl.l Railway ioolhouse. It was found at Orr's Junction, five miles south of here. The robbery was the work of professional bank robbers, probably tne sam gang which has been opera tin;, in the state for several months. I'gly Head-on Collision. Norway, Me. (Special). A head-on collision between freight trains on the Grand Trunk Railroad, near Locke's Mills, resulted in the death of five men and serious injury of (several others, and four locomotives and 12 cars were demolished. Both trains were very heavy, each being drawn by two en gines. The cars took fire, explosions sewttered the embers in all directions, and prevented effective work in put ting out the fire. Woman Attempts Suicide. New York (Special). A woman who bad registered as Mrs. Sam T. Jack was found unconscious from gas In the South Hotel. She was taken to Belle vue Hospital, where the physicians aid she had a chance of recovery. Great mystery surrounds the woman's identity. Shortly after her arrival at the hotel a man who knows the widow of Sam T. Jack very well called at the hospital to identify the 'dying woman. He declared positively that she was not Mrs. Sam T. Jack. Trolley Car on a Rampage. Newcastle. Pa. (Special). The fail ure of the brakes to work caused a traction car to run wild on the PI is- bur? street hill. It left the track and dashed Into the City Hall, tearing on; an entire corner. John Hoke, the motorman. Stephen Allen. Lewis M; Curdy and a man named Mitchell were seriously Injured. Several of the pa.i engers were cut and bruised, but had tno bones broken. It is thought that two of the seriously Injured will die. Explosion Kills Ten Persons. London (By Cable). Ten persons were killed and many were injured as 1 the result of an explosion in a hat fac- j tury at Denton, near Manchester. j Vanderbilt-Frcncb Nuptols. Newport, K. 1. (Special). The cere mony that united In marriage Miss El len French, the daughter of Mrs. Fran ces Ormond French, and Mr. Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt. the second son of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt, and head of the Vanderbilt house, was celebrated at high noon. Newport has seen many fashionable weddings, but none has ever taken place here that for grandeur of arrangements or for the social Mantling of the participants has equal ed this one. Price Set on Pat Crawe's Head. Omaha, Neb. (Special). At a secre: ncctlng of the City Council it was d. dided tu offer a reward of fauou for Pat Crowe, dead or alive, Irrespective! of the suspicion that, he may ave been concerned 1n the Cndahy kidnapping. The? conditions make no reference- to any particular ciluv. This makes a utal price of $13 OMi on Crowe's head. Thcfe Out $5,050. Jamestown, Tenn. (Special). The People's Hank, of Livingston, Overton county, was rubbed of gjuno. No traai of the burglars has been discovered. NEWS IN BRIEF. A ".Honor's jury In Philadelphia on the body of Fa. her Klegcl brL-.uc.it In n I verdict that his doalh was duo to opnm p its lnlng. naming die person i now under an t it in responsible with others put yet caught. I Mnrfsp Clr.pp. of St. Paul, was nnnii I nated for Hie s!ior;-ieim I'nltvl States I senator-ship on the first ballot nt the Republican caucus In St. Paul, .Minn. By the will of the late Marcus Daly, (lied In New York, the widow gets a third of the estate, an. I the balance Is divided equally nnioiig his children. Mrs. Mary Prltehard, of Parkersburg. W. Va., was frightened Into fainting by a masked man, w ho awakened her with a demand for money nnd food. The four-mas, ed si h.-oner William .1. I.lpsett. of Seiners Point. N. J., went ashore on Winter Quarter Shoal, near Lewes. i:nd will ln a total wreck. Tw mortgages given by the Grand Trunk Western Ka'lway Company lor j!H .Mio.outi were tiled for record in Mar shall. Mich. The remains of former (1 ivoinor James A. Mount, of Indiana, were burled in Oik Hill Cemetery, In Craw fonlsvil'.e. Real Admiral Gors W. Sumner -act -ceded Rear Admit al Silas Ciuey in the coiur.iand t.f .he Ph.Iadclphl.i navy yanl. A building In New York that was being reconstructed collapsed, and two men were killed by the falling bricks. Thomas Shaw, a promirn nt inventor of Philadelphia, died from paralysis in Hanimontoii. New Jeisey. The two convicts who escaped from the Virginia State farm were rcip liircd near Richmond. Isis Morgan, a lovesick yoit..h of 19 years, commit. cd suit'ide In Fairmont, W. Va. The dendloek In the Delaware sena torial situation Is still unbroken, but Addlcks declares that he can secure enough Democratic votes to elect him whenever he wishes. The American Board, in Boston, was advised cf the death. It Constantino ple, of Rev. Dr. IClias Riggs, the oldest missionary of the board. Michael Snyder was shot and killed In Mahanoy City. Pa., by his brother Albert, whom he had discovered in Il licit relations with his wife. At the conference of foreign mission boards, h-'d In New York, a reply was decided upon to be made to a Buddhist circular. , which attributed the troubles In China to mistakes of missionaries. Ev-CJovernor Tanner has retired from the race for senatorial honors in Illi nois. Messrs. Cannon. II it t and Prince also retired, leaving the place open to Senator Cullom. I'nited States Marshal Aleott, of New Jersey, seized $17.(100 of diamond? found concealed on Antonio Ansonia, who came from Germany on a Ham- P burg-American liner. Mrs. Ella J. Roberts and Wllllnt. Berry were arrested In Richmond. Va.. on the charge of causing the ruin of Surah E. May, a girl of 15 years. I.uther A. Porter, until recently cashier of the Warren Deposit Bank of Bowling Green. Ky., Is said to be about JjO.OOO short ill his accounts. Miss Alta Rockefeller, youngest daughter of the millionaire, was mar ried in New York to E. I'armelee Preu the, a lawyer, of Chicago. Eight Indictments were found il Buffalo against Attorney David C Fitzgerald for subornation In conduct' ing a divorce mill. Andrew Carnegie offered to give Syracuse, N. Y., SiMju.ono for a library it" the city would spend $30.0U0 for its maintenance. Josfijh I). Parkinson, proprietor of the Hotel l.awience til I.tiray. Va.. di there. George Lewis Arganbright celebrat ed his one hundredth birthday in Staunton. Va. Democratic members of the Senate and House of the Pennsylvania legis lature who aided In the election of Mr. Quay as I'nited States senator have been read out of the party by their fellow-members. The body of the man found in a trunk in New York harbor was iden tified by a woman as that of Michael Weisbeiger, of New York. He was en gaged in selling jewelry on the instal ment plan. Cornelius L. Alvord, Jr., the default ing note tidier of the First National Bank of New York, was sentenced to 13 years' Imprisonment. The amount of his defalcation was $090,000. Scott Wike, of Illinois, well known as a Democrat, and assistant secretary of the Treasury during Mr. Cleveland's second term, is dead. Frank Crowell lost his life in an apartment fire in Chicago, while try ing to save his bank book and life in surance policy. B. R. Tillman has been re-elected United States senator by the South Carolina legislature j Edward P. Allinsou, a Philadelphia lawyer, Senator 1'enrose's partner, is I dead. j Fruitless ballots for I'nited States senators were cast at Lincoln, Neb., i and Dover, Del. The Pennsylvania State Senate pased a resolution endorsing tne M.ip ' Subsidy Bill Ex-Governor Mount, of Indiana, dropped dead at the Denlson Hotel in Indianapolis. The Tennessee legislature has elect ed E. W. Car mack I'nited States sena tor. The widow of Henry B. Plant, who accumulteiKi a fortune of $10,000,000 in Southern railroads and steamship line, is suin;; in New York to have his will upset. Mr. John Hunn was inaugurated gov ernor of Delaware at Dover. In the West Point hearing Congress man Driggs scored Cadet Barnes, and said that the hazing practice at the Academy Is brutal cowardice Hon. Thomas M. Patterson, Populist Democrat, was elected United States senator by the Colorado legislature. Assemblyman Abbel has Introduced a bill Into the New Jersey legislature to prevent combination of rallroadn. Elijah W. Blalsdell, who was among t..-.c first to suggest Lincoln for the presidency, died at Rmkford, 111. W. A. Clark locks one vote of elec tion to the I'nited States Senate by the Montana lcglrlature. Al the rational Capital. The sum of $100,000 will be appro priated by Congress for repair to the American legation at Pekln, China. The bronxe equestrian heroic statue or Uen. Joiin a. Logan arrived on u. schooner from New York. Solicitor General Richards replied to Mr. Smith's argument in the Hawaiian insular ease before tho Supreme Court. I The Postofflce appropriations amount to $12-',700,000. I The Congressional Postal Commls ' slon, which has been invest gating 1 postal matters tor two years, submitted j its rep irt. QUEEN BREAKING DOWN. The Aged Victoria Ctinntit Sinn;! Strain l War TrotiMss. NOW IN HI K EIGHTY-SECOND YEAR. The Officials Admit that the Ureal Strain Upon Her Powers During the PaM Year Has Told I'pon Her Nervous System-fly Advice ol Her Physicians She W ill Ahrtsln From Trammeling Business. London (By Cable). Members of the royal family are now gathered In n room adjoining Queen Victoria's bed ehanihcr at Osborne House, Isle of Wlyht. The Queen is unconscious and the end Is expecttd al any moment. London (By Cable). Queen Vlctorln. the ng.'d ruler of Great Britain, Is breaking down. The heavy loss of life and the great suffering entailed by the war In South Africa, together with the Infirmities of old age, are having e s, 'lions off eel upon the venerable sov ereign. Alarming rum.iis were In clrculai lo.i In london. They spread through mt the I'nited Kingdom and to the Euro pt an capitals. Inquiries as to the Queen's condition p uired into the offi ces of the government officials. At first denials were sent out. but the fol lowing itliuial announcement regarding the Quei ifs health was Issued from Os borne, Isle of Wight: "The Queen has not, lately been In her usual health, nnd Is unable for the present to take her customary drives. "The Queen during the past year has had a great strain upon her powers, which has rather told upon her ner vous system. It l.as. therefore, been thought advisable by Her Majesty's physicians that Her Majesty should be kept perfectly qulit 111 the house, and should abstain for the present from transacting business." Sir Francis Laking. surgeon to Her Majesty, has been called In to consult with Sir James Held. Her Majesty's resident physician. The Queen has been suffering greatly from Insomnia of late. The reports of her Illness caused considerable excitement, and affected the stock market adversely. CO NG R ESSION IaiTTrOC EEDI NGS. Some ol the Wotk BeinR Done By Ihe Na tional Legislature. After voting down a number of amendments in the Senate the friends of the Army Reorganization Bill suc ceeded In getting a vote on it. and tho bill was passed bv th.1 safe majority of 43 to 22. In executive session of the Senate the confirmation of Mr. James Shanklin Harlan, son of Associate Justice Har lan, as attorney general of Porto Rico, provoked angry words between Sena tors Foraker and Pettigrew. The House Mililary Committee decid ed not to go on with the Military Ap propriation Bill until some conclusion was reached on the Army Reorganiza tion Bill now pending in the Senate. In the Senate Messrs. Allen "nnd Money denounced hazing In the sever est terms. The House passed the River and Harbor Bill without division. In executive session of the Senate Mr. Pettigrew objected to the confirma tion of Mr. James S. Harlan as attorney general of Porto Rico because of his relationship to Associate Justice Har lan, of the Supreme Court, before which important suits affecting Porto Rico are pending. The Senate Finance Committee shows a disposition to reduce the tax on tobacco and to leave the tax on beer at the figure fixed by the House. In the House the River and Harbor Bill was further discussed. No Im portant changes were made In the bill as reported by the committee. The Senate passed a bill granting a pension of $.10 per mouth to the father of th- late Senator Davis. He was a commissary captain. End of filibustering tactics against Army Reorganization Bill in the Sen ate is believed to be in sight. Senator Morgan Introduced a resolu tion declaratory of the noneeffect of the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty upon the right of the United States to construct the Nicaragua Canal. The resolution cites the protocol with Nicaragua and Costa Rica as a preamble. Neely Must Go Back. Washington (Special). C. F. W. Neely, charged with embezzlement of the public funds of Cuba while acting ns financial agent of the department of posts of that island, will be taken back to the scene of his depredation for trial. The Supreme Court of the United States has decided that Neely Is subject to extradition. Justice Har lan handed down the court's opinion, which was unanimous, and Immediate ly after the opinion was concluded an order was issued requiring that tho mandate In the caw be Issued at once. Americans In a Riot. Kingston. Jam. (By Cable). News was received here of serious fighting December 23 and December 24 between parties of American foremen and Ja maican laborers working on railway construction In Ecuador at Bocay Junc tion. The fighting there developed De cember J4 into a riot, revolvers being freely used on both sides and many persons being wounded. The Ecuador ian troops had to be called to restore order. Editor's Wife Badly Burned. San Francisco, Cal. (Special). Mrs. M. A. Millican, wife of the editor of the New York Medical Journal, was badly burned In a fire which partially de stroyed the house In this city In which she resides, and no hopes of her recov ery are entertained. She was rescued from the flames in an unconscious con dition. F0KEIU.N AFFAIRS. Reports were received In Paris that the conduct of several of the officers and some of the crew of the wrecked steamer Russle, off Marseilles, was contemptible. Herr Fischer, Social Democrat, In the Reichstag, made a bitter attack upon Count von Posadowsky-Wehner, secre tary of the Interior in the German Cabi net. Henry A. Delille, who married Olive Logan many years ago and who aided Napoleon HI. in a confidential capacity, died In poverty in Ixmdon. Arguments were made before the Philippine Commission in Manila in opposition to the giving of religious Instruction in the public schools. King Alexander announced In the Servian National Assembly that his father, the former King Milan, had left Bervla forever. The London newspapers continue to make comparisons between British shortcomings und American enterprise. A forse of 800 Boers attacked Kaal fontein Station, but the British garri son, after a hot tight, drove them off. The Boers blew up the railroad line beyond Kaalfontein. Samuel Lewis, the notorious money lender of Ixiudon, is dead, BURNED AT THE STAKE. Was Suspected of (he Murder of Pearl Forbes Last November Near Leavenworth. leaven worth. Kan. (Special). Fred Alexander, the negro who. on Satur day evening, attempted to assault Miss Eva Iloth. and who was supposed to have assaulted nnd killed Pearl Forbes In this city, in November last, was taken from tho sheriff's guard by a mob nnd burned at the stake at the scene of his crime, hnlf a dozen blocks from the center of the city. Probably eight thousand people wit nessed the lynching. 1 he negro was taken from his cell at. the State Penitentiary at three o'clock In the afternoon, placed in a hack and brought to town. Fifty deputy mar shals surrounded him, nnd Deputy Sheriff Stance Myers and Thomas Brown sat in the hack on either side of him. There were fifty buggies and wagons In tho procession which followed the hack. The trip to town was made quietly, nrtl there was no attempt to create a disturbance on the road. The crowd first, attempted to gain ad mission by peaceful means, but. Sheriff Kverhardt lefused to deliver the negro. Then the crowd pushed Its way to the side door, and, using one man as a battering ram. the door was forced from the hinges. Then the crowd surged into tho corridor by the narrow doorway. A huge iron bar was secured and the Iron door of the cell room at tacked. This was finally bent so that it could be forced far enough back for men to climb over it. Several gained an entrance In this manner. In the meantime, the crowd had pushed down the side gate of the stockade, and In a moment there was a yelling pack In the Jallyard. Then the cry went up: "He is not here! He has escaped!" "Search the courthouse. There is a tunnel between there and the jail, and he has been taken out that way." Then a man with sharp eyes espied the negro crouched down In one of the corners of the dark cell. An exultant cry went up: "He Is here! We've got him! Bring the keys!" ISTHMIAN CANAL TRAFFIC. Government Expert Estimates the Tonnage at 11,250,003 By P2. Washington (Special). Senator Morgan submitted another report on the Nicaragua Canal. It contains q special statement, of Prof. Emory R. Johnson, a member of the Isthmian Commission, of the traffic, resources of the canal nnd its effect upon the canal industries of the United States. Pro fessor Johnson says that for tho year ending June 30, 1S99, 3.420.752 cargo tons of United States comnu l-i-o could have used the canal, and 3,340,3" i tons for South. Central and British Ameri ca, and Fi.736,4i6 European tonnage. The commission estimates that 7,500, 000 tons of traffle will be available for the canal in 1IH4 after the canal has been opened: the traffic will increase to a traffle of 11.2rj0,000 tons in 1924. A dollar ton toll is estimated as most feasible. LI I1LN0 SIGNS NOTE. The Aged Statesman Suffering From Bright's Disease ol the Kidneys. Pekln (By Cable). The Joint liote of the powers has finally been signed by the Chinese peace commissioners. It is understood that the malady from which Li Hung Chang is suffer ing is Blight's disease. Prince Ching has protested to the court against the appointment, salil to be contemplated, of Viceroy Chang Chlh Tung as a plenipotentiary In the place of LI Hung Chang. He thinks the latter's advice absolutely essential, although he believes if might be ad visable to appoint a third plenipoten tiary for China, and reiterates his de sire for the appointment of Sheng, who woiiTd be acceptable to the for- igners. Southern Yarn Spinners. Charlotte. N. C. (Special). At a meeting of the Southern Hosiery Yarn Spinners' Association held here, at which 150,(100 spindles were repre sented in person or by proxy, an order lor a curtailment or production war, passed. Charles Adamson, president of ihe association, says this means an entire stoppage of night work. It this does not bring about the desired amount of curtailment, an order may be issued for the mills to run on short time during the week, but this Is un likely. In vlow of the order for the curtailment of production all present list prices of the Southern Hosiery Yarn Spinners' Association are aban doned, as prices are expected to In crease as production Is decreased. Not a Dollar Led. New York (Sp-clal). While Corne llus L. Alvord, Jr., the bank defaulter, was on the railway train that carried him to Slug Sing Penitentiary, to serve a sentence of thirteen years, Mr. Al vord spoke of his downfall, attribut ing it to speculation In Wull strefc'. After telling how from a small oegln nlng he became involved to the amount of $if)0,00(), Alvord said: "I haven t a dollar hidden away. It. Is gone. I made restitution to the bank. They got all that was left I didn't expect my sentence would be so hard. 1 thought I would got elgtit or ten years on the first Indictment, but I didn't look for the live years on the second count." Councilmcu Too Religious. Hiawatha, Kan. (Special). IW-ause a majority of tho City Councllmea refus ed to leave a revival meeting and at tend the regular weekly Council meet? Ing, Mayor S. Hunter has tendered hia resignation. Unable to secure a quorum to transact business, Mayor Hunter sent a sheriff to the revival to compel the Councllniep. to' present themselves at the City Hall. A major ity sent word that they "had to attAnd the revival and couldn't come." Watchman Perished In Fire. Benton Harbor, (Special). Tho Gra ham & Morton propeller City of Louis ville (steamboat) was burned at thf dock, wheie she was tied np for the winter. Charles SouLhwoiuh, of Sau catuek, the watchman, was burned to a crisp. When the lire was discovered by persons on the dock, the pumps In the vessel were working, showing that Watchman Somhworth had been fight ing the lire whe'n he met his death. It Is supposed that Southworth was first overcome by smoke and then burned to death. Durkia Inaugurated. Indianapolis (Special). Vm. T. Durbln was inaugurated Governor of Indiana. In the presence of the Gen eral Assembly and mauy spectators, the oath was administered by Judge Howling of the Supremo Court. Civic and military display marked the occa sion. At the capllol Colonel IJurbln was Introduced by retiring Governor Mount. In hia Inaugural address Gov ernor Durbln favored tho non-partisan management of State Institutions and warned the Legislature against the danger of too much legislation. He strongly recommended arbitration of all labor difficulties. SECOND DEGREE MURDER.1 Verdict1 in the1 Jennie Hosschicfcr Case In New Jersey. JUDGE SAYS VERDICT IS A JUST ONE The Three Cruel. Cowardly Assailants C the Prelty Mill (ilrl May Re Given -i. Thlrry-Year Sentence Under the Nci Jersey Law-A Fourth Defendant Is Yet to Be Tried. New York (Special). Walter C. Me Allster. Andrew J. Campbell and Wil liam A. Death, thnv of the four per sons Indicted for tho dtath of Jonnii Bosschletcr, n mill girl, of Pnterson N. J.. who was murdered on the nigh! of October 18 last, were adjudged guilty of murder In the second degree. According to the New Jersey law the maximum penalty for the prisoner Is 30 years' lmprlsonn" nt. The jury took 14 ballots nnd after summoning Judge Dixon, filed into the courtroom The prisoners appeared very nervous MeAlister seemed more excited than any of the others. He sat biting his Hps while waiting. Campb'll thnisl his hands In his trousers pockets and Winched his fists In Hum. Death looked anxiously nbrmt tho courtroom for a moment and then assumed the same attitude ns Campbell. When the verdict was announced the prisoners exhibited neither elation noi relief. Judge Dixon thanked the Jury one said he believed the verdict a Just one. He then dismissed the jurors. The court then rose, and the prisoners were taken back to the jail. SHOT THE PEACE ENVOY. General Dc Wet's Summary Treatment of lh Burgher's Agent. London (By Cable). The war office has received the following dispatch from Lord Kitchener: "Pretoria. About 1400 Boers crossed the line, attacking both Zuurfonteln nnd Kaalfontein stations, but were driven off. They are being pursued by a cavalry brigade." Lord Kitchener reports also several skirmishes at different points, with tri fling British losses, and adds: "Three agents of the peace commit tee were taken as prisoners to De Wet's laager, near Llndley, January 10. One, who was a British subject, was flogged and then shot. The other two, burgh ers, were flogged by De Wet's orders." London. The brief report of the fate of the three members of the peace com mittee, who were sent to see Gen. De Wet excites the deepest Indignation on all sides. One or two papers express n hope that Lord Kitchener has been misled by fulse Kal!lr reports, but it is generally felt that he would not have reported the mntter to the War Oil'"' without undoubted evidence. CRIME IN FARMHOUSE. Son Beaten lo Death and His Aged Mother Brutally Assaulted. Portland, Me. (Special). Thomas C. Mushier, a farmer, was murdered and his mother, Mrs. Rufus Mushier, aged seventy-two, was brutally assaulted at their home In Gorham. by two men, who forced an entrance Into the Moshicr residence with the evident In tention of robbery. After completing their ghastly work, the men ransacked the house, taking what valuables they could find. One of the men was a negro. About noon William Hands, a negro, was arrested nt Scarboro. In , his possession were found a bloodstain- en razor, marked witn Mosnier s. name, $40 in money, consisting chiefly of bills, which were also stained with blood, and a watch. His hands ami clothing were soiled and bloody. The man. ad mits having been ut the Moshicr farm house, and says he left his companion in Portland. Praise lor Our Bluejackets Washington (Special). Secretary Long has received a letter written by a number of missionaries to Com mander Winslow. of the hospiLal ship Solace, expressing not only their thanks for the courtesies of the voyaga from San Francisco to Yokohama, but adding a tribute to the splendid man agement of the ship and the admirable qualities displayed by tho American bluejackets. Mr. Long highly appro elated the sentiments of the letter, and says that if more of the people would go aboard our naval vessels there would be many testimonials of the same sort for our sailors and our ships. Engineer Killed. Richmond, Va. (Special). By the de railment of a train on the James River division of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, near Alberene, Engineer Wil liam H. McCartney was killed and Fireman Charles H. Clay was badly In jured. The accident was caused by the breaking of the flange of one of the wheels of the locomotive us It was rounding a curve-. Several cars were wrecked. Retired Army Officer Dead. Washington (Special). Gen. Beek man Du Barry, a retired United States Army officer, is dead. General Du Barry was of New Jersey. He was re tired by operation of the law December 4, 1802. For meritorious service dur ing the war he was made lieutenant colonel and brevet colonel in 1805. He became brigadier general In 1S90 and was retired two years luter. Alleged Plot Against Ciar. Nice (By Cable). The police have arrested Prince Victor Nakadchidze, a Russian, on the charge of plotting to take the life of the Czar on the latter's approaching visit here. Prince Nakad- chidze. who Is a Mhlllst. was condemn ed to death In Russia as an accomplice In the conspiracy or 1S8U against the life of Alexander III., grandfather of the present Czar. He was also con vlcted In Paris of being Illegally in the possession of explosive machines. IN THE FIELD OF LABOR. The Building Trades Council repre sents 250,000 men. Marble Is said to exist In twenty-four of our States. Coral, both white and red. Is found on the Florida coast. Seven dollars a month, with room and board, seems to be the highest ever paid to a waiter girl in German hotels and restaurants. Chicago Typographical Union, No. 10, has sent out circulars to all labor or ganizations, asking their members to purchase only union-made books. The referendum vote which Is being taken by the carpenters shows that the proposal to abolish the half-holiday during the winter will bo defeated by a two-thirds vote. Conductors In the employ of tho Chi cago Transportation Company, which conducts a bus line in opposition to thti caretti's that run from the North to the South Side, have been displaced by boys. The average pay of tho working classei In England Is less than a pound l $5) per week. Only one man In elevea Is in receipt of an Income of more thas 150 ($750) a year. At the present time the London docker receive an rverao of 12s. per week. (ilJNS AND DYNAMITE. ' A Racket at Corhin. Ky., In Which Tro Per nor! Were Killed. Corbln. Ky. (Sp-clal). As a rer.tlf of a riot here 'wo persons were killed one mortally wounded, threo or four others wounded, anil a building wreck ed by dynamite. At. noon James Shot well was shot nnd mortally wounded by R'dln White, who had be?om. angered with Shut well on being re fused to lunger keep company wltl: ShotwcU'a daughter. White nt once went to tho store of his brother, where he surrendered to i deputy sheriff. i Telegrams were sent lo Judge Mor row, end a posse was ordered to the sene from tin county sent. In the nioatiMine White was barricaded with his friends and the deputy sheriff in the store. When night fell the store was wrecked by dynamite. The sheriff's posse arrived nt mid night, and Rolla White is now In cus tody of the sheriff. Friends of the Shotwells searched every trnin for certain friends of the Whip's here nnd tit. Williamsburg. It w-ns (luring thesa proceedings that Judge Morrow asked Governor Beck ham lor troops. Fifty of the Chad wells, fmm Clay county, eaine to Crays Sutton, there Joining the Shot weil faction. Sherilf Sutton 1ms sworn a large force of deputies. The Shot wells o.-cupy the hills near the town, while the White forces are mostly in Corbln. All residences are barricaded. Then' has been some relief since Rm.it While and RalWgii White were acres', ed and taken to Williamsburg, ill" county scat. Roch White is crippled, nnd will lose both eyes as the result of tho explosion. BRITIAN CHASTENS ITSELF. Decadence ol Its Power a Favorite Then: In London Now. London (By Cable). Great Br'ta'n's decadence Is becoming a popular theme here. Self-debasement and self-flagel lation seem to be congenial to tho chas tened spirit of the nation, forced to realize, through the accumulation of reverses, military, diplomatic and in dustrial, that Great. Britain's predorrl- nnnce dream Is past. It is almost a dally occurrence for some leading London newspaper to parade the short comings of the country, instituting comparisons with the United States and little complimentary to Great Britain. "Lost opportunities," says the Morning Post, "form the keynote. The Britain which could dictate its will to the ends of the earth Is to-day a myth." ADULTERATED FOOD IN AMERICA. Head Chemist of the Department of Agricul ture Saya Things Were Never Worse. New York (Special). Adulteration of food with chemicals has never been more largely practiced and was never more dangerous to the American pub lie than at the present time according to Prof. H. W. Wiley, chief chemist of the Department of Agriculture, whose paper on "The Legal and Medical As pect of Food Adulteration," opened a discussion on that subject at a meet ing of Ihe Society of Medical Jurispru dence held here. As an Instance of the scandalous way in which manufactur ers of the present time "doctor" food products, he said, he had found suffl clentusults of copper In a ean labelled "Green Peas" to coat a pocket lia.ife with the metal. Clark Elected Senator. Helena. Mont. (Special). W. A. Clark was elected United States sena tor on the first ballot. He required 47 votes to elect and received 57 of the 93 cast. When Speaker Corbett cast the last vote for Clark he did so with u whoop, and the audience and lawmak ers cheered to the crho. Among the first to congratulate Clark was F. A. Hintz. Mr. Clark thanked the legis lators and Incidentally referred to the defeat of Senator Chandler, of New Hampshire, who was his foeman In the senatorial Investigation. rThe ballot for short-term senator resulted !n no choice. $100,000 Fire In Washington. Washington, (Special). Fire in th ' three-story nnd basement structure, Nos. 817-819 Fourteenth street, North west, caused damage estimated at 1120.000. The building was owned nnd occupied by the Pope Bicycle Manufac turing Company, whleh used the first floor, and Mllo B. Stevens & Co., claims and patents attorneys, who had their offices on the second and third floors, Mr. Stevens' bus Is about $40,000. The fire, which is believed to have started in the basement, spread rapidly to the main floors and through the elevator shaft to .he third story. The losa of both concerns Involved i covered by insurance. Pennilcsa Boy Weds an Heiress. Paris, Tex. (Special). '-A romantic wedding took place at Clarksville, when Miss Mamie Smith, daughter of a millionaire from Honolulu, aged 19, was married to Emmet Burke, aged 20, son of a Texas Pacific section foreman betwee-n Paris and Clarksville, Mjjis Smith was engaged to marry a promi nent San Francisco lawyer, who had the management of her estate, Three wee-ks ago, however, while on a visit to Clarksville uhe met young Burke, who is penniless. A romantic attachment sprung up, which has now culminated in marrluge. Town Bank Robbed. .South Lyons. Mich. (Special). Six men broke Into Carpenter and Jacobus' Hank here, and after blowing off the outside door of the safe, blew open the steel money ohest Inside. The explo sions awakened G. D. Hamilton, who lived near the bank, and he beg an Investigation. Ho was discovered by the burglars, who opened nre on him Hamilton, after shooting at tho thieves several times, went for assistance1, and the burglars ran to tho railroad track, where they found a hand-car on which they escaped. About $300 was Ntoloa from the bank, Former Millionaire Dies Poor. Phlliaelphhi (Special). Samuel H Warwick, aged 70 years, who gave t.f the world root beer, and whose wealth 13 years ago was emimaten at over $1,000,000, died penniless in the hospl tul attached to the almshouse In this city und was burled in Camden, N. J by a relative Who elaimod the- body. During his prosperity it Is said ho gave thousands to friends In ni'e-d and enter tained In a princely fashion. Men prominent in polities and In social uf fairs of the city, State and nation were his guests. All but two forsook him when his fortune dwindled away. "Qtiiiy WIna Easily. Harrlsburg, Pa. (Special). Matthew Stanley Quay was electe-d to the United State Senate after having lived in enrorcea retirement rjr two years But one ballot was taken, Quay re ceiving 130 votca out of a total of 248, that numoer being thro moro than a constitutional majority, and a majority of 12 over all of the opposition candi dates. Fifty Drowned at Madagascar. Marseilles (By Cable). Mall advlfea from Madagascar, dated December 11 0, report the drowning of 60 natives from the capuizlng of barge. B THE KEYgONE STATE. News Happenings ol Interest Gathered From All Sources. BLINDED WHILE MILKIM0 A COW. Tlu Animal Kicked a Lnnlern Info a Powder i'.tf and was Killed by an Exftlopint Which Blew. Mrs. Hoskcy Through a Barn-Father Warned by Kldnappers-Thc Burglar Wjre Outwitted"0lhcr Live News. Mrs. Mary Hoskcy, living on the .lames Walker farm, while milking her unv, was blown through the side of the l.arn by the exp!oslon of six kegs of blasting powder which were In tho p'.a.-e. The barn and v'ae cow were blow n tti pieces, but Mrs. H.;3key will probably survive her terrible Injuries. She will remain blind. Before daylight Mrs. Hcskey R.arted to milk hvr cow. She h.id a ccal miner' lamp and put it on a 2ii-pound kng of powder, six of which were standing In a row. The cow kicked cac, tho lighi tipped over and the first keg exploded. Mrs. Hot key was blown through the bain door, nnd lo this she owes h?r life. Bef.m she struck th - ground outside Lie re maining live kegs let go. An oil der i Irk near 'the barn w js blown down, and farm 'houses half a ml!-3 off w?re sh-iken and their windows broken. At. the Cambria Rail Mill a Josiah Andrews, a bo.-s roller, was m iking an Mupression, his ci'.it was caught- In th- coupling b ixes nnd he wos pulled back ward, doubled up and drawn through a t pace six Incln j wide five or six times before 'tho machinery could be stopp 'd. Fellow workmen grasp.'d him as he was whirled around the revolving rolls, but were compelled to release lilm In order to avert a similar fate. Andrews' head and body were crushed and both legs were broken. He died an h mr after the accident. Some time afro Aloyslus Hlllfbrand was pulled be tween the coupling boxes In a similar manner, but he was not doubled up like Andrews. In spite of mi.iy broken bones Hillebrand recovered. A farmers' institute was held at Itlchloro, which was well attended. Rev. S. O. Lawsing, pastor of the Rlr.h boro Dutch Reformed Church, op.-ned the session with prayer, after which J. D. Nevins discussed the "Care and management of Poultry on the Farm" and Seth T. Walton read a paper on "The' Condition of Farming In Penn sylvania as Compared with Other Oc cupations." R. S. Seeds spoke- on "What Constitutes a Country Home," nnd Rev. John Watchom delivered a very Interesting lecture on "Our Indi vidual Duty to Our Country and Our Country's Duty io the World." A bold attempt was mude to kidnap Catharine, the pretty little daughter of ex-Police Officer John Ward, near her home, In Chester. While Catharine and her bjby brother were returning from a neighbor's two men made a dash for the girl, but she dodged and fled screaming to t'iio house. She ian up on the porca, followed by ono of tne men, but they were foiled by Mrs. Ward, who heard the screams, and suddenly opened the dii-or. The men fled and 'all effort to find them proved futile. Michael Snyder was mortally wound ed by his brc.Iher, Albert, In a quarrel which occurred nt. their home. Al bert, v.'l'.o la 40 jtars old and married, had been bearding at his brother's home for several years. When Mlcnael went homo he was tracked at finding hia wife and brother together. He became entaged and seizing a knife was about to a lack Albert, wheel the latter drew a tovol- ver and fired three shots. J lie erring wife and brother were arrested and Justice May committed them lo the county jail at Pottsvll'.o without bail. Some time before the death of Mrs. J. Holmes Wright, who committed siil- cldh two weeks ago at Allcntown, she lold her won, Aithur Wright, that In case of her death ho should have th1 mattre-sses in the house examined as they contained a secret which would bo of value to him. The boy is lu the Allentown Hospital, but ho Informed his nunt, Mrs. Wllhelm. of South Ea t , who cut open a mattre-ss and found $1010 packed away. The Jury in tne case ut itooert w . Taylor, the Mahanoy City druggUt. who was chnrged with attempting to murder his wife by jilacing poison In her drinking water, brought In a ver dict of guilty, being out Icsm than an hour. Taylor's counsel filed reasons for a new trial and moved for an arrest of judgment. Taylor will shortly bo tried for the murder of Elsio Myers, aged 14 years, his step-daughter, who drank the poisoned water and died. The general store of John M. Wilson. at Glenslde. was en:vreii by robbe'rs. but only a small sum of m-jiicy and a few valuable paper were secured. The store was thoroughly ransackedand ther cash register, which contained twenty- five cents, was carried into the road and broken open. The register was found In rile yard adjoining tho store, and the cash diawer of the safe was discovered along the lallrinud. Wind-blown coal tin si settling on the toofs and sifting through the win dows of a block of houses owned by Colonel W. J. and H. II. Harvey, of Wllkes-Barre, has resulted In a suit for damages, tho Lehigh nud Wllkes Barre Coal Company being the di'Iend- ant. The Harvey a d-K'.are t."at tne coal dust has di tiaoted from tho value of the houses and t'hey ore unable to rent them. Treasuring a ring placed on Ills An ger by his sweetheart In Europe, G. Uusken of Chester, locked It in his trunk for safekeeping. During his ab sence the trunk was looted and tire ilng nfole-n. Suspicion fell upon D. Perune, and ho was anested In Phila delphia by Detective Perry and Con stable Shinkle and commluted to Jail, hv Alderman Snilthin ik'fault of ball. The ring was not recovered. The report which emanated from Pittsburg to tho effect that tho Ameri can Tlnplote Company had purchased the Sharon Tlnplate Mill now building nt Sharon, was denle'd by F. II. Buhl, president of tho company, as being false In every particular. The Sharon plant Is the only Independent concern outuidu the trust. Captain T. F. McCloer'y, of Esplen, has received a letter In which his boy s threatened with kidnapring unless ihe father gives up $5000. The money was to have been fcft In a hollow tree which is a landmark In the neighbor hood. Th Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Coal Company, which has recently been making so many large purchases of Indiana county coal land, is about to add another large tr act 'to its holdings. This tiact consists of soma thlrty-thiva farms In -Center, BlackllcU und Whlto Townships and contains about 31 US acres. William H. Moser, of Fast Maueh Chunk, a brakeman on t'ho Central Railroad of New Jersey, was struck by an overhead bridge ut. Asbury, N. J., and fell under the wheels of the cars. His right leg was cut off near the kue and his left leg at the ankle, He waa Ukep to the t hk too iloepiul.