gjRlBHK Admiral Heartily Cheered aa He Left Manila. A CHANCE FOB THE FILIPINOS. preatdent Schurman, of the Philip pines CommlKHlon. MM Thorn a Mont Liberal Government The Doe amen t Waa Framed at Wnahlnsrtoii. Manila. May 22. When the United States cruiser Olympla, with Ad miral Dewey on board, left here on Saturday afternoon for New York there were scenes of wildest enthusi asm. As the steamer got away the Oregon, Baltimore and the Concord fired an admiral's salute. At the first hot the band of the flagship played a lively air and her white-clad sailors crowded the decks and gave a tremen dous cheer. As the Olympla passed the Oregon the crew of the battleship pave nine cheers for the Olympla, who responded by throwing their caps so high that downs of them were left I lobbing In the wake of the cruiser. Then followed the noisiest half hour known In this harbor Blnce the battle which linked Its name with that of Dewey. The din of guns and brass hands echoed through the smoke, a fleet of steam launches shrieked their whistles, the musicians of the Balti more played "Home, Sweet Home, her flags signalled Good-bye and those of the Oregon said "Pleasant voyage." The merchant vessels In these waters rtlDDed their flags, the ladles on the decks of the vessels of the fleet waved handkerchiefs, and the great black British cruiser Powerful, which lay the furthest out, saluted the Olympla. The latter's band then played God Save the Queen," and to this the crew of the Powerful responded with hearty cheers for the Olympla. The last music heard from aboard Dewey's flagship was "Auld Lang Syne." 1. 1 II Fit A 1. GOVERSMEST OFFICII El President Schnrman Snbmlta Our Proposal to the Filipino. Manila, May 23. Prof. Schurman, head of the United States Philippine commission, has submitted the follow ing written propositions to the Fili pinos: While the final decision as to tne form of government is In the hands of congress, the president under his military powers, pending the action of congress, stands ready to offer the following form of government: A governor general to be appointed bv the president, a cabinet to be ap pointed by the governor general, all the principal Judges to be appointed by tne president, the heads of departmentsand Judges to be appointed by the presi dent, the heads of departments and Judges to be either Americans or Fili pinos or both, and also a general ad visory council, its members to be chosen by the people by a form of suf frage to be hereafter carefully de termined upon. The Filipinos have made no definite proposition, except for a cessation o hostilities, until they can present the question of peace to the people. Prof. Schurman told the Filipinos they had no means of gathering the people to gether, as the Americans control most of the ports. He also reminded them that a liberal form of government was offered them, and pointed out that it was better than the conditions exist ing under Spanish rule. Goraga, president of the Filipino commission, replied that nothing could be worse than Spanish rule, and ad mitted that the form of government proposed was liberal. The civilian members of the Filipino commission have declined to co-operate with the other members of that commission, as the former consider Aguinaldo'8 latest demand to be pre posterous, after Major General Otis' refusal of an armistice, referring to his wish for time in order to consult the Filipino congress. FRAMED AT WASHINGTON. The Proposal Submitted to Filipinos an Offlolal Document. Washington, May 23. The writteu proposition submitted to the Filipinos yesterday at Manila by the American commission was framed in Washington by Secretary Hay. It is the intention to give the Filipinos, Just as the presi dent has promised, as large a measure of self government as they seem able to exercise with safety to themselves and due regard to the welfare of other nations. Therefore, it is proposed to allow them to choose their own In ferior Judicial officials to begin with and perhaps the principle may be ex tended If it works well In the lower grades. While it Is not so affirmed at the department, the present movements of our troops in the Philippines is gen erally believed to mark the end of the active campaign before the wet weath er sets In. MacArthur is at San Fer nando, south of Arayat, where Kobbe and Lawton are now Joined. This is the point that has previously been spoken of as a possible summer base for the American northern outposti. The reported dissolution of the in surgent forces, which are said to be In bad condition at the Arlace, and the statement in General Otis' dispatch that he had again denied Agulnaldo's request for an armistice, are taken to Indicate that there Is some likelihood that the commission's offer of a form of government may be speedily ac cepted. The Steamer Paris on a Rock.lSjJl Falmouth, May 22. The American line steamer Paris, Captain Watkins. from Southampton and Cherbourg for New York, struck on an outlying ridge of the Manacles at a point half a mile from where the wrecked Atlantic transport liner Mohegan lies and Ave miles from Falmouth. Soon after 1 o'clock In the morning, at high tide, and In a dense fog, she ran ashore. From the first there was no danger. Lifeboats and tugs were soon literally swarming around the veasel to render assistance. A majority of the pas sengers, who numbered 380, were brought to Falmouth, where they ob tained lodgings for the night The craw am board. C.'BA'S ELECTION LAWS. fi'iinp 'apote "tuilylttir the Law of Other KatldlMa Havana, May 22. Seacr Domingo Mer.dtz Capote, sccrela.y of govera nor.t, lias been devoting considerable time to a study of the electoral laws of various nations, with a view of for mulating plans for Inauguration here. Universal suffrage Is considered advis able In some respects, but It woiliu have many objectionable fcat'tro:. O.i the other hand Senor Cr.po'e 'hlnk; an educationnl qualification would not prove ! Isfactory. unlo3s lUfTkltntly comprehensive to exclude those tAUght especially for elections. He ssys the Cuban league Is doing much in the way of preparing the voters to exerd .' the electoral function. Day and nh.ht schools are conducted In all the vil lages for this purpose, the education being gratuitous and attendance being numerous and enthusiastic. The great objection to a property qualification is that a majority or those In cities who formerly had prop erty, the Spaniards In particular, and many capable Cubans, h.e been to tally ruined during the last three years and would not be Justly treated were a property qualification enforced. Sono; Capote Is carefully considering the problem, and will submit his views to Governor General Brooke nbout the middle of next month, when he wiil ask for the issuance of such a decree as he wilL then have in readiness ANOTHER TEXAS TORNADO. several Persons Reported Killed and a Large Number injured. Houston, Texas, May 23. One of the worst tornadoes that has visited Texas since the storm which destroyed the town of Cisco, three years ago. aril in which some 60 people were killed, passed over Titus and Erath counties Sunday. Several homes anil church buildings were wrecked in several lo calities. At Mount Pleasant, Titus coun ty, the storm struck a church Just as services were closing. A bolt of light ning and the wind descended upon the house simultaneously, wracking it and scattering the debris In all directions. William Kauffman whs Instantly killed and some 15 other persons were injured, some fatally. Three are In a dying condition. The tornado struck Stephensvllle and did considerable damage, wrecking many houses, but no ono was killed. Two churches were unroofed and badly damaged. One man was killed and three were In jured near Dublin. It Is reported that several persons were killed six miles southeast of Stephensvllle, but this has not yet been confirmed. Trees and crops In the path of the storm are re ported to bo totally destroyed. NO BIO STEEL TRUST. The Talked Of lillllon Dollar Combine Not Perftciad. New York, May 23. Leading men in the steel and Iron trade said today that the incorporation of the new Carnegie iron and iteet combination under the lawsof Pennsylvania means the failure of the contemplated big iron and steel trust, which was to Include the Fod eral Steel company, with a Joint capital of nearly $1,000,000,000. This opinion was considered as corroborated by the abandonment by the Carnegie coni pariy (headed by Mr. Frlck) of Its New Jersey charter, recently filed, and the fact that many of the sub-companies of the proposed consolidated compa nies filed notice at Albany yesterday of their Intention to do business In this state. The fees, etc., incidental to the taking out of a charter In Pennsyl vania, which was to have been paid by Mr. Frick's company, amounted to nearly $1,000,000. a Whole Family Exterminated, Centre, Ala., May 23. A horrible accident occurred nenr here yesterday which resulted in the total extermina tion of an entire family. William Evans, section foreman on the Rome and Decatur railroad, with his wife and little child, started on a drive for Fort Payne when their horse became frightened and ran away, upsetting the buggy and instanly killed Evans and wife. The horse ran back home with nothing but the harness on, when a negro servant went out on the search and found the almost lifeless body of the Infant, which he carried to a neighbor's house, where It soon died. Rev. Dr. Samplo Choaon Moderator. Minneapolis, May 19 Rev. D. R. F. Sample, of Westminster church, New York, proved an easy winner In the contest for the place of moderator of the annual assembly of the Presby terian church in the United States, which convened In Westminster church yesterday. Dr. Sample was elected on the first ballot after a spirited con test, receiving 338 votes, 300 being necessary for a choice, to 127 for the Rev. Mathias Haines, of First church, Indianapolis, and 133 for Rev. Dr. R. F. Coyle. of Oakland, Cal. Dr. Sam ple's election is regarded as a triumph for the conservative element. proposed Currency Hoforms. Washington, May 22. It is under stood that the house Republican caucus committee oppolnted to frame a scheme of currency reform has agreed upon a maasure along the following lines: The redemption of all obligations of the government in gold on demand; greenbacks, when once redeemed, for gold, to be reissued only for gold; per mitting national banks to Issue notes to the par value of their government bonds deposited in the treasury, in stead of 90 per cent, as at present; permitting the minimum capital of na tional banks to be $26,000 Instead of $50,000, as at present Austin Formall vChumcI With Murder Bellefontalne, O, May 23. Ernest Austin, the man who is suspected of killing his mother and brother at Mld dleburg and who is believed to have tried to kill himself, may recover. He is still at the house of a neighbor, where the Inquest was held yesterday. Austin told the coroner that a robbber shot his mother and brother and him self, but no credence is given the state ment. Austin was yesterday charged with the murder, and is now under guard. There Is great Indignation among the people of that part of the county, and threats to lynch Austin if he recovers are freely mad. , , -, , , ., A. Anibassaaor v Into s relictions Ai.nnt Kip Vf-nrp flnnfhrrtTHMI anew me rpaoe uonieronoei MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION. Think the Conference May Aetvn( some COBolnalon, Thoun'i Not Oh Mirntory Hope to ut Leoat Human ize War Aire. The Hngue, May M. Andrew D White, the United States r.mVa8f at Berlin nnd head of the American delegation to the peace confers ice, In an interview here With a pre?w repre sentative said he regarded the liiUii tlon ns promising, and that the first work of the orgattttttlc :i WM well I'ono. He said: "1 am hopeful that It will he possi ble to reach practical conclusions. The Sceptlslsm of the first few days must yield to serious hopes without St the same time Indulging In exagger- i ated expectations. The v.onbi of r.tn pe.ror William have contributed to improve the situation. "I think we may arrive at some re sult on the subject of mediation and arbitration. Although it is undoubt edly impossible to make such a con nection obligatory. It can be rendered at least optional, and I believe that after the conference the powers Will recognize that they have at their dis posal a means of regulating their dif ferences otherwise than at war. That will be an immense advance. "I am also ronflde-.it that Important Improvements ure achievable in the laws and usages of war, to humanize BARON DE STAAL. war, especially In extending to naval battles the Geneva convention of 1864 and in Increasing the protection of private property In naval wars. Rela tive to the reduction of armaments, I am not In n position to speak on the subject." Other ambassadors who ore dele gates to the conference were also In terviewed and expressed similar views. They said they were moBt hopeful that the deliberations of the conference would result in the adoption of prac tical recommendations tending to ward peace and rendering war more humane. All were dominated by a sense of Immense responsibility to achieve something, especially In the direction of arbitration. The delegates were unanimously of the opinion that the question of the reduction of armaments would be the most difficult to meet and they be lieved It would be relegated to the rear of the other two features, espec ially since the special object of the conference Is now acknowledged to be an endeavor to establish means for the solving of international difficul ties without recourse to war. thus In creasing the rarity of wnrs and. ns a natural consequence, lending to the reduction of armaments. After an active exchange of views the chiefs of the various delegation! arrived last evening at an agreement regarding the selection of the presi dents of the various committees. TblD agreement was communicated to the delegates, who had been summoned to meet in plenary session at noi n to day for the sole purpose of formally confirming the agreement. Baron De Staal. the head of the Rus sian delegation, who was fleeted presi dent of the conference, has made him self very popular with the meaibera. THE BUFFALO STRIKES. The. tiralu hovelorn still Ncirotmt Inir With Contractor Conner. Buffalo, May 23.--During the last 24 hours very little has been accomplish ed by either the strikers or employers to bring about an adjustment of their differences, and it looks as If the strike will be prolonged till the end of the week. Many conferences have been held in different parts of the city, but at none of them was any definite plan adopted. President Daniel J. Keefe, of the In ternational 'Longshoremen's associa tion, labored all of yesterday with committees from the different unions In an effort to come to some arrange ment. He advised the scoopers to adopt a proposition which called for two men to be selected from New Local 51, two to be chosen by Contractor Conners, and with Keefe as a fifth, to form a committee to pass on tho eligibility of shovelers who should be recognized by the new union. This was adopted, and it Is now believed that all the men, or as many as there will be work for, will be laboring by the end of the week. Blown to Atom by Nltro Olyeerlna. Chicago, May 23. Three Chicago men, employes of the Aetna Powder company, at Aetna, Ind., were blown to atoms in the explosion of a tank of nitro-glycerlne Sunday night. The dead are: Frank Bbler, axed 19; Samuel Errlck, aged 24; Charles Mor ris, aged 27. A pipe leading from the engine burst, igniting some sawdust and leaves near a flue leading into the room containing the nltro-glycerlno tank. Not a vestige of the building remains and no portion of the bodies has been recovered. Collecting Cuban Aran, Havana May 23. The Cuban arms quwtion is apparently nearing m plete and rapid settlement. The pay ment and dispersal of half the armed bands that have been voluntarily or involuntarily quartered on the country will begin, according to the present program, next Saturday in this city. sY WEEK'S NEWS CONDENSED. "tVednendav, Mar IT. New York's aldei men and council voted $150,000 for the reception of Ad- mimi Dewey. rosr Admiral Watson sailed from gRn ,.raiut8c0 lo luniia, to relieve Admiral Dewey. Mr. and Mrs. Bradley-Martin, before leaving New York to reside in London, gave a $10,000 dinner to 80 persons. Chief of Sctuts William H. Young, who has distinguished himself In the Philippines, died frcm a wound re ceived in battle. Rev. Dr. Bdward Everett Hale has resigned the pastorate of the South Congregational church, Boston, after 43 years service. The (Sari of Strafford, wl o married Mrs. Colgate In New York last De cember, fell before an express train at Potter's Bar. England, and war, killed. Before the Mazet Investigators, in , New York. Mayor Van V.'yck vigorous ly rebuked a suggestion that he was "in" with gamblers, Mazet apologised, Thursday, May is. A cyclone at Manchester. In., killed four persons and seriously injured foil'- 0tner Three boy babies horn to Mrs. John , O'Keefe, of Norfolk, Va., arc uumiMi Dewey Sampson and Schley. General Joe Wheeler, of Alabama, will deliver a Memorial day address before a Boston 0, A. It. post. A cyclone at Montpeller, o., wrecked a schoolhouse, fatally Injuring the teacher and four girl .mpils. The magnificent sword voted by con gress for Admiral Dewey is in a saf" deposit vault awaiting the admiral's coming. General Wade Hampton, In a grate ful letter, declines the propositi of South Carolinians to build him a home on the Bite of that recently destroyed by Are. General Henry, late military gover nor of Porto Rico, declares American capital con find profitable investment there, but there will be no demand for American labor. Friday, May in. Andrew Carnegie has subscribed 1, 000 to the Gladstone memorial fund. A strike of the mull carriers In Paris lasted less than 20 hours, the men weakening and returning to work. The cznr's disarmament conference met at The Hague und chose Baron do Staal, of Russia, as president. A mob of Cubans lu Havana tore down Spanish Hags which had been hoisted by merchants in celebration of the king's birthday. The Duluth, Minn., striking street car men wrecked another cur with dynamite Wednesday night, but no passengers were hurt. K. E. (Mark, of Cedar Rapids, la., wus elected grand chief conductor of the Order of Hallway Conductors at the Detroit convention. Saturday, May VO. Mayor Jones, of Toledo, will prob ably be a laber candidate for governor of Ohio. President MrKlnley and party re turned to Washington from Hot Springs, Vu this evening. Charles R. Buckalew, ex-Cnlted States senator from Pennsylvania, died at his homo In Bloomsburg, Pa., aged 78 years. Deputy sheriffs shot and killed Dick Reese and Richard Grant, who defied i the former und drew revolvers, at I Columbus, Tex. The Presbyterian general assembly. I at Minneapolis, adopted resolutions urging a vigorous light against Sab bath desecration. The house of the Texas legislature I passed Anally Its bill placing one per I rent, tax on all personal incomes in excess of $2,000 a year. It Is asserted that If the present rate ,.f ....nonnnifian of riii' iron is main tslned much longer many mills will soon lie forced to shut down for lack of material. Monday, May 8ii. A fire at Dawson. Alaska, did $4, 000.000 damage, with not a dollar's worth of Insurance. The Philippine Islands, though nn agricultural country, do not produce food sufficient for the Inhabitants. The strike situation in the Pittsburg (Kan.) district Is apparently more fa vorable to tho striking coal miners. Cornell students celebrating a base ball victory fought police and firemen who put out their bonfires. Many were hurt. In Jersey City John Moretta stubbed his wife to death In the presence of several hundred people viewing a ball game. A Michigan volunteer soldier arose In a Calumet church and rebuked the minister for the latter's criticism of the government's Philippine policy. Tuesday, May S3. George Smith, colored, is under ar rest In Asbury Park, suspected of hav ing fatally beaten Mrs. Lavlna Har mon, also colored. The death of aged MIbs Agnes Sut ter at Newburgh, N. Y., was caused by the upsetting of a lamp by a cat while the woman was asleep. A woman of Watmea, Hawaii, mur dered her stepchild, and a neighbor who rushed Into the cabin killed the first woman's own daughter. The navy department has received no confirmation of the report that the cruiser Detroit had fired on and sunk the Nlcaraguan gunboat San Jacinto at Blueflelds. The Philadelphia Produce Market. Philadelphia, May 22 Flour firmly maintained; winter superfine, fl l'w.i2 30; Pennsylvania roller, clear, 1303.20: city mills, extra, I2.4O02.S5. Kye flour steady at $3.15 per barrel for cnolce Pennsylva nia. Wheat strong: No. 2 red, spot, In elevator, 7S676c. Corn firm; No. .1 mix ed, spot. In elevator, S8S"ac; No. 1 yel low, for local trade, 41MlHc. Oats quiet and steady: No. 2 white. 34Hc.: No. Z White, clipped, 34M35c. Hay firm; choice timothy. 313013.50 for large bales. Beef ! steady: beef hams, fil.50320. Pork quiet: family. 111.10612. Iard iteady: western steamed, IS.S5. Butter steady; weatern creamery. 1541 Mc. ; do. factory, lmoilc ; ImlUtlon creamery. 13H15c. ; New York dairy. 13Vt017c. : do. creamery. lSjlSc fancy Pennsylvania prints Jobbing at 21 f,24c.; do. wholesale, 20c. Cheese weak; large, white, Hc. ; small do., 'WHc.; larre, colored. 8:.; small do.. 4tfHa. Egfs firm; New York and Pennsylvania, UUc.: western, fresh, 1515Hc.; southern, 14tfUa PROBING TOE HORROR. Inquest on the Terrible Railroad Disaster at Exeter. DEAD AND DYING WEEE ROBBED. Tho Teat Move Will He to Arrest the ('hnlll. n It In Helleveil They Are Known Brakeman Had Not Time to signal Pro parly. Reading. Pa.. May 23 Coroner W. II. Rothermel's Inquiry Into the Phila delphia and Reading railway horror at Exeter. In which 29 people were killed and nearly 80 injured, opened here yesterday with a large audlenre in t.t tendance. Unusual Interest wus mani fested by all. The first witnesses examined in cluded William Luta, the hotel keepor nt Exeter; Robert A. Jackson, of Nr riatown; .lames Toal, of Exeter; MaJ 'i Henry Pennington, of Philadelphia; J. BllWOOd Sanders, of New York, ant! William C. Fox. of Bchulyklll Have .. Their testimony esta'. lislio;! the fact thi.t the first train ran past Hxe.er station, and that it was while It was backing near the front of the depot that the accident occurred. The rear brakeraan of the first train, Charles Miller, said he did not hnve time to run back very far before the collision. Another tact fully substantiated by the above witnesses was that the dead and injured were robbed with the greatest freedom. Bdward Sentman, conductor of u freight train lying at Exeter on the niuht of the wreck, gave Importanl testimony He saw the collision und saw the brakeman running up the track waving a red and white light, The air brakes of the second section were put on too late, Oilier witnesses said the trains were running but throe minutes apart. Robert A. Jackson, of Norrtstown, who was a passenger on the second sec tion, testified that he was In the third car from the engine. He said he had the window open. He heard the air brakes put down, and upon looking out of the window snw a man running with a lantern, and the next the col lision occurred. He was sitting on the right side, but was uninjured. Considerable testimony was elicited showing thi.t since tho accident tho company had increased us precau tion In the running of trains. The un doubted testimony of two witnesses that ghouls were at work robbing the dead and dying wub the most sensa tional of the day's proceedings and the next move will be to arrest tho parties, as It Is believed they are known. Hind Rrakomnn Chnrles E. Miller, of the first section, engineer Wllder muth. of the same trnln, nnd M. W. Brommer. the conductor, testified as I to how they were stopped by the coal .train, and how Miller rnn bark to stop the coming express. All the testimony showed that tho trains wore running ! exceedingly close together. Itohhed a Famonn Shrtne. Santiago de Cuba, May 23 The ! startling discovery was made on Sun- 'day thai tho famous shrine of NuestrS Senora Carldad, at El Cobra, had been I robbed of Jewels valued at 125,000, and that tho head of the statue had been ' broken off and removed. The report caused groat excitement In the town, where the shrine has long been the principal attraction. It Is supposed to have miraculous healing powers, and Is visited annually by thousands nf ' pilgrims from all parts of Cuba, from Mexico and even from Europe, who have loaded the image with rich gifts. Killed wiiii ii Baanball Bat, Wilmington, Del., May 23. William , A. Montague, aged 24 years, of this 'city, died yesterday as a result of be Ing assaulted with a baseball bat, mid tno coroner's Jury last night held MontylOO Cole, aged 24 years, of To ronto. Canada, responsible for Monta gue's death, and be was held without I ball for trial. Cole is B dental student at i the University of Pennsylvania, ami it j Is said comes of a prominent family, i Evidence was brought out indicating that the assault was the outcome of i Jealousy on the part of Cole. Boer Officials' Conspiracy. London, May 23. Tho Johannes burg correspondent of the Morning Post, in a dispatch dealing with the re cent arrest of former British officers on the charge of a conspiracy to pro mote a rising, says he is now convinced that tho conspiracy was primarily formed by Boer officials. Police Com missioner Srhutte woh the prime mover. Schutto, who evidently used President Krugor's son as a tool, has been forced to resign, but will appeal to the volksrnad for reinstatement. Sent the Empress' Picture Jfoseleasi Akron, O., Moy 23. Adolphus Tell kamp. a business man of Hamburg. Germany, yesterday brought lUit against tho Akron Cereal company for $5,000 damages. He alleges that ho I worked up a large tierman business , for cereal foods, but that the Akron company sent him packages with the I figures of the empress of Germany I printed on them, but that the face of the empress was noseless. As a con I sequence the Germans would not buy and he lost heavily. Tho Volunteer' Iletnrn From Manila Washington, May 23. Tho War do nnrtmen t Is nroceedlns on tho theory ' that by the end of July not a volunteer i soldier will be left In Mnnila. nnd General Otis' report yesterday that the ' transport Warren has arrived advances the time when the homeward move I ment of the volunteer troops will be 1 gin. Already notice has been Issued I that mail for the First California and ! Second Oregon volunteer regiments should not be sent to Manila, but to , San Francisco. I A Mammoth Steel undue For Japan. Philadelphia, May 23. The Phoenix J Bridge company, of Phoenixvllle, Pa., ! yesterday received the contract from ! the Japanese government to build a I large steel bridge for the Imperial railway of Japan. The bridge will 1 be in six spans. 130 feet high, and will weigh something over 1,000,000 pounds. I It will be the largest steel bridge ever contracted for by American builders j and one of the handsomest structures 1 of the kind in the world. EX-SENATOR BTCKALfcW DEAR. t"he Vatftran lcnii- Iviiiib Democrat Succumbs to Henri Failure. Bloomsburg, Pa., May Js. -Ex-United States Sennti r Charles R. Bucka lew died at his home here yesterday, after an illness of less than a week Mr. Buckalew was stricken wkh n slight attack of heart failure last Mon day night. Owing to his advani el ago he gradually grew weaker until Thurs day night, when he appeared to be. much Improved. Yesterday morning however, he took u sudden relapse from which he never rallied. He lejavei a widow and a married daughter. Thr funeral will take place next Moudaj Services will be held in the Maritf Street Methodist Episcopal i bun ' Interment will bo made in the fxmil; lot In Rosemont cemetery. Charles Rollin Buckalew was born lA Columbia county Dec. 2S, lS'Jl Hii ancestors were Huguenots, w! a fVotl this country on the revocation of tl -edict of Nantes. I'ntil he W&l H years old he lived on I lie home ."..ixu i and then entered Harford a idnmx For some years he acted as iMU'hci and merchant's clerk, but finally com menced the study of law in Berwici: and was admitted to the bar of C ilucr.i bla county In 1843. In 1S44 he settlui at Bloomsburg and made bis how there untl his death. In 184.1 Mr. Buckalew was appotnle prosecuting attorney of ColBTUUli county. In lSao he was elected a mem ber of the state senate and wua re elected In is..:', and 1S57. He w pointed commissioner for tho exchang i of the ratifications of the treat, lie tween the United Slates government and that of Paraguay, and In 1851 Wl elected a senatorial presidential elec tor, in isr" he was chairman of thi state Democratic committee, and in the same year received the appoint ment of commissioner to revise tho penal laws of the .state. He resigned the position of state senator and com missioner In is.'s to accept the ap pointment of resident minister to Ecu ador at the hands of President Bu chanan. In 1M13 he was elected to the I'nileu States senate by a majority of SSSS vote, succeeding David Vvilmot, Re publican. At the expiration of hl term, in 1809, he was succeeded by John Scott, in l sto be was elected u the Btute senate for three years. ;init in 1872 received the Democratic nomi nation for governor, but was defeated by General Hartranft. Afterward he was elected to eoncress. serving in lh Fifty and Fifty-first congresses ITEMS OF STATE NEWS. Bethlehem, Pa., May 23. Kicked to drnth by a vicious horse which he was. driving to a work-OUl cart yesterday, Wli'iam V. Delameter was dragged half n mile before his lifeless liody fell Into the road. The crown of hir bend was cut off by the horse's hoofs. He was E yonrs of age and married. Busquebannn, Mny 20. Br. a. O Btimpson, sn aged physician. was found dead toduy.in his office, in Thompson, with a bullet bole in ills head lb had evidently been dead several days He I served as regimental surgeon during the late war with Spain. An Investlgar tion is being made to dcte .nine wheth er or not he was murdered. I Towanda, May 2.:. Jacob Cape well, 2! years old, of Sugar Uun. died at the Holcomb hotel, in tills borough, yesterday from the effects of a blow on the head delivered by Samuol Heenuui. I mi.. lo,t. ma iwimmlllait In bit l.v I HO 1, Hi' 1 hub ... j Coroner Pratt, A number 1 f witnesses swore at the Inquest thai Heoman struck Capewell ith his bare fist Reading, .May 20. Booty valued nt more than $1,000 stolen from the resi dences of James Dodson and J, Walter Lovett, of Bethlehem, has been recov ered In this ritv and Charles Mantetl. 11 young colored man. Inn been arrested at Norrtstown for pawning the valua bles. Among the articles recovered are diamonds, a sword and jewelry. More than $:i.niin worth was stolen in all. Easton. May 21. Lafayette college will dedicate on May 111 the restored Pardee hall. This structure, erected by the generosity of Arlo Pardee, c 1 Ha v.leton, WB1 one of the earliest of thr scientific buildings which were added to the older colleges. It was nearly de stroyed by fire in December of iso. when Professor George Stephens ap plied the torch in his career of vandal ism about the college, for which act of Incendiarism he is now serving a sen tence In prison. Hazleton, Pa., May 20 No atlcmpt was made yesterday by the United Mine Workers to intone the order recently given out by President Huffy that the union would not work with non-union men at the Audenried and Honeybrook colleries of the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal company on an I after May 19. This order of President Duffy. Issued about two weeks ago. was followed by a notice served by tho company that a permanent suspension of work in the mines would be ordered if the men struck. Lnncnster. Pa. .May 23. Counsel for Ralph w. Wiwback, sentenced to be hansed June 7 for the murder of Bank President D. B. Landls. ster day afternoon made application to the. court for the appointment of a com mission In lunacy. The petition stated that nine physicians, insluding several prominent experts, had examined Wlrcbaok and found him Insane. The commonwealth objected and the court dismissed the petition. Wirabai k's counsel will take a writ of error to tho supreme court and also ask tho state board of charities to intervene. York, Pa.. May 22. The most im portant session of the general synod" of the Evangelical Lutheran church ever held In the United States will con vene In this city on Wednesday even ing. Three hundred delegates will be present and the session will bo marked by unusual features. One of these, features will be the presence of an un precedented number of fraternal dele gates. The general council of the Luthern church of the United States, a split from the general synod, will be represented by Rev. Dr. Spelss. of the Broad Street church. Philadelphia. This will be the first time that body has been represented In the general synod since its secession in 1867. The united synod of tho south, which was formed by a deflection from the gen eral synod during the civil war, will also send fraternal delegates. mi