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weer en ite ny at iad Re THIS WEEK'S NEWS, A Summary of Current Events—The World's Doings for the Past Six Days Gathered and Condensed for Our Readers, General. William Small, class of ‘96, Tuft’s College, was found dead in bed. Count Boniface de Castellane and his bride, formerly Miss Anna Gould, have arrived at Monte Carlo. A gang of counterfeiters was caught at San Francisco. They manufactured fraudulent certificates to Chinese. “Col.” Gilbert, who was exhibited in dime museums throughout the coun- try as “Dahomey Giant,” is dead. The sloop John H. Thomas sunk in the Choptank River off Cambridge, Md. James Jones, colored, was drowned. The court house building at Regina, N. W. T., containing all the records of the Northwest Territory, was total- ly destroyed by fire. Gen. Oli P. Gooding, of Wash- ington, D. C., was found to be insane. He had written a bock in which he threatened the President. Henry L. Fish was found dead in bed at his home in Rochester, N. Y. He was twice Mayor of Rochester and member of Assembly in 1872. The Washington brewery, owned and operated by Paul Ritter at Cum- berland, Md., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $30,000; insurance, $14,000. The trustees of the Connecticut River Savings Bank, Charleston, N. H., voted to petition the court to place the bank in the hands of a receiver. The young colored woman who was murdered and whose body was muti- lated in “Jack the Ripper” was identified as Pearl Ivory, of Newark. a pretty Danish girl of cured a $5,000 verdict }00 breach of promise suit against H. D. Alyeworth, a railroad man, Almede Chattelle was put on trial at Stratford, Ont. He is accused of the murder of Jessie Keith. He refused a lawy himself. The Countess Perponcher, arrested in Berlin for perjury in denying her intimacy with the Count’s family doc- tor, has been released on 120,000 marks bail. Blanche Kerrigan, aged two years, was fatally burned by her clothing taking fire from a stove in the home of her father, William Kerrigan, of Clyde, Wayne County. It is rumored that Oscar Wilde left London suddenly to avoid being pres- ent at the trial of the suit for libel which he has brought against the Marquis of Queensbury. John A. Brown, aged thirty years, of New York, shot his wife, Mrs. E. B. Brown, at Philadelphia, Pa., and then committed suicide. The woman has but slight chances for recovery. Helena A. Pearson, aged twenty- two, a domestic in the employ of Hen- ry Mai u, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was smothere presumably by smoke, from a slight fire in the house. Alfred Martin and Henry James, miners, of Central City, Col., were crushed to death in the Sleepy Hol- low mine by a mass of dirt and rock which fell upon them in a drift. Grand Master Werkman Sovereign, of the Knights of Labor, in an inter- view in Columbus, nominated Eugene V. Debs as the candidate for the Peo- ple’s party for President in 1896. The residence of Phoenis Christen- sen, a carpenter, was consumed by fire at Minot, N. D. ranging in age from three te five years, perished in the flames. The woman suffrage clayse in the proposed Constitution of the State of Utah has passed. An amendment fa- voring the submission of the clause to the vote of the people was defeated, 70 to 30. The Hon. R. Bond, G. Emerson, E. P. Morris and W. Horwood left St. John’s, F., for Canada in order to solicit terms for the entrance of New- foundland into the confederacy. They were hissed. The five-story malt house at Wain- wright’s brewery, Pittsburg, Pa., col- lapsed. The weight of the grain stor- ed in the upper floors caused the dis- aster. The loss will be $30,000. No one was injured. Charles McKeever, Charles McCar- thy and Jack Fogarty, charged with engaging in a prize fight at Philadel- phia, were convicted. This will put an end to boxing contests in Philadel- phia, as this was a test case. The Florida Legislature has con- vened for its bi-ennial session of sixty days. Gov. Mitchell, in his annual message, devoted considerable space to lotteries and prize fighters, and urged legislation against them. George Scott, who for four years has had the position of cashier at Beels- lough, Minn., for the Mississippi Log- ging Company, is reported to be $20,- 000 short. He has been in the employ of the company for fifteen years. Deputy United State Marshal John- son and a posse of six men fought a gang of moonshiners in the mountains of Hempstead County, Ark. Two of the outlaws were killed, a third cap- tured alive and an illicit still was confiscated. Archbishop Kain has arrived in St. Paul from an extended visit to the Bast. Concerning the scaling down of the allotment of money for the support of Catholic Indian schools he said: “I think the Government has broken faith.” J. W. Hicks, better known as “Dyna- mite” Hicks, an ex-priest, who lec- tured in Pine Bluff, Ark., against Catholicism, has been arrested on complaint of Father Lucey and others ona charge of slander. He is a grand- son of ex-Gov. Hicks, of Maryland. “Jack” MeGouldrick, of Watertown, and “Ike” Farrell, of Rochester, light- weight pugilists, indicted, tried and found guilty at Watertown, N. Y., were sentenced to pay a fine of $50 or to go to jail for six months for en- gaging in a prize fight. McGouldrick ‘paid; Farrell goes to jail. vices and is defending | Five children, ' | RYE—Seiling Iu the street market at 54 @ 55 | Advices from Lima state that peace nas been restored in Peru. Hays City, Kan., was ravaged by The telegraph wires were de- ed, Mrs. Julia Ireland, aged eighty- ears, mother of Archbishop Ire- land, is dead. Spain is said to be on-the verge of nchil bankruptcy. The attempt to a loan in Paris was a failure. The severest snow storm of the sea- son raged over Colorado Saturday. Business at many points was sus- pended, The body of Mamie Dean, a school girl of Harmony, Md., was found. Her throat was cut from ear to ear and she had been maltreated. The boiler at Johnson’s Mill, near Shelbyville, Tenn., exploded, killing Elijah Cunningham and seriously in- juring Humphrey Cunningham. President Norton and Supt. Quinn, of the Atlantic Avenue Railroad Com- pany, Brooklyn, charged with violat- ing the ten-hour law, were acquitted. Douglass M. Standfield, proprietor of the Victoria Hotel, New York, as- signed to Joseph C. Youcnes without preferences. Liabilities $75,000; as- sets more. Eighteen cars were thrown off a burning trestle on the Norfolk and Western road near Portsmouth, O. The wreck caught fire and was consumed. Loss about $30,000. An injection of anti-toxine was ad- ministered to Bertha M. Valentine in Brooklyn by Dr. Kortright as a rem- edy for diphtheria. She died in ten minutes, This is the first fatal result of the treatment. Frederick Beauchamp Eagan Sey- mour, Baron Alecester, G. C. B., is dead. He was an admiral and com- mander-in-chief of the British naval forces in the Mediterranean and Egypt in 1880 and 1882. W. D. Riley, a negro, accused of the murder of Fred Williams, at Mason, Mich., was frightened by a bogus lynching party into making a confes- sion and implicating Ross Spears. The latter was arrested and the money re- covered. r The Bible Barred. Scranton, Pa. April 2.—By a deci- sion of Judge Gunster in the Waverley borough school case, the reading of the Bible in the public schools of Pennsylvania was virtually declared illegal. In his opinion Judge Gunster said: “Denominational religious exer- cises and instruction in sectarian doc- trines have no place in our system of common school education. They are not only not authorized by any law, common or statutory, but are express- ly prohibited and forbidden by our Constitution, the fundamental law of the Commonwealth. Editor Stone Dead. New York, April 3.—David M. Stone, aged eighty-eight, who for forty-four years was editor of the New York Journal of Commerce, died last night at his home in Brooklyn. He died from a complication of heart troubles, having been ill about a month. Democrats Carry Oneida. Oneida, N. Y., April 3.—The char- ter election was very exciting. The Democrats| have «anried through a majority of their ticket, headed by W. M. Baker for president. GENERAL MARKET REPORT. Latest Quotations From the Leading ‘Trade Centres. W YORK.—Latest quotations are as fol- low: FLOUR—Receipts 515 bbis. Sues — Winter wheat patent $3.85 @ $3. Indiana and St. Louis Roller, ¥ Minnesota bakers, 83.00 @ 33. patent #415 @ & irye flour €3.0) to #3. graham $3.00 ; 50 oat fake, $4,50 @ $5. granulated meal.. $4.25 to +4 ~-Steady. Albany inspe yellow, 503-4. No. 3, 50 1-4. Steady; Nu. 2 white, 28 @ 38 1+ vbis 3; Ohio @ 33.00 spring wheat ceuts per 60 Ibs. i eae wheat, ae packed, 7. 50 to 0; rye feed 33 to ri per cwt. TRAW 3 No.1 hay 2, Sdc: straw. No. Lrve 45c, oat 40c. —We quote choice western 65 @ ey Minesota 65 @ 7); Canada 67 to ts according to ile. Janada, 75 @ six rowed state, 7? @ two rowed state, 70 24c. Western @iic. Market quiet and frm with usuai trade demand. HOPS—Choice pops are scarce. We quote choice New York State crop of 1894," 6@ 11 vents; fair to good, 6 t» 12 cents. BEANS—Marrow choice H. P. $2.00; mediums, $210 Peas. $2.10. BUTTER--Steady, Creamery, Westeru extras © 20c., Creamery, do good to cnoice. Is @ 19; State ey fresh extra 15 to 16 old do 12 d vestern Baie 16 tu 18; rolls 16 to 18. State Full air to 10 to Lic. EGGS—state. fresh new laid 141-2 to 1512 fall | athered, 22cents ; Western, tresh.14 tol4 1-2 RK—Slow Trade. Koneiess $14.50: to — per bbl.; clear, $14.0 to — short mess $13.50 3 pork: bellies, 300 1b. SMOKED MEATS—Breakfast peconn a cents smoked hams, l21b; average, il.; 15 lb. do 1810 to 2% Ibs., average 104 skin backs, lc. California hams 71-2c; snoulders, 7 smoked beet, l2c LARD—Pure leaf. 9 cts: kettle rendered, com- pound 6. ots. SALT--Steady. Mined rock salt, 200 Ib. bag- 60c.; new process and fine sifted, $2.50 per 10U 4b, bags; $3.00 er 10051b; $5.50 per 100 1,. 1b. Syracuse--Common fine, $1.00 per bbl. of ws bag * 190 Ibs., Burlap bags, 55c.; 18f Ibs., 40 Iba., 450, Syracuse solar salt0 bushel of 70 Ibs. barrel of 28) medium (BO), $1.10; 561b. b ¥5c. Barrel of 280 |bs., not screened, oe Foreign sult--Ashton's bag of 224 lba 56c, Higgins’ 224 1b. bag, 2 Turk’s Island per bushel of 70 per bag of 70 Ibs., 30c. TEA—Firm. Japan, 16@10.c; nibs, 14Q25c. Gunpowder, 2/G85.; English Breakfast, 18@ T5e ; Oolong. 2U0@75c.: Young Hyson, 15 @éUc. Japan dust 3 @ltc. COFFEE—Firm Roasted Rio, 20@2%c: roasted a 26@280. ; Java. 0@3ie.; Mocha. W@_ ound coffee. 16@80c.: chickory, 6@9c. Suga Lower, Pressed loaf 4 7-Sc; cay loaf 4 7-80.; (powdered, 4 1-2 pecenulered 4.21 0; standard A. 41-20. off A. 4; white. extra C.3 38 yellow extra. O. 3 t-te; OC. 3 54 @ 33-80. '—Sieady, ‘California layer and clusters to $2.00; Culifornia loose $1.10 to $1.75 ; California loose 48 1 2, Vaiencia raisins 6 to 7 lezhorn citron 10 to 14 ; currauts 3 1-2 to 7. MOLASSES—Firm. New Orieans. new crop, panies @ 4%.; paces 38_@ B80. : good, 2 @ 86c.; common. 20 @ 30c.; Porto Rico. tancy ponce 53 gmp! fancy Grips 35 @ 40c.; sugar 3 choice, 20@ 26c.; fair to good 20 ment AL nese pol ‘ket 2, 3 fees a mar! ae unwashed, R oi Toe median ad rene washed. if @léc., washed, 12 @ 120, PEpROLEG Row JYore,Geie lal get water whi . per including barrels. POTATORS—$1. 50 @ $2.00 per bbl: 20 cents per BWEBTS—#000 to $9.50 per BL. 40 to 60 conte a 3 per cream fancy white i11-2 | PRINCE BISMARCK. ‘The Celebration of the Eightieth Anniver- | sary of His Birth. Hamburg, April 1—To-day is the eightieth anniversary of Prince Bis- marck’s birth. There are 6,000 ste dents gathered here to take paz 2! the procession. On all the houses xq ! the city flags are displayed. Many of the shop windows are converted inte small temples for the glorification of Bismarck. In these busts of the ex- Chancellor surrounded with suitable ‘lecorations and inscriptions are to be seen. To-night Roman candles will be burned on the roof of the Bourse for two hours. In the centre of the inner harbor a hundred barges are stationed, from which fireworks will be set off. The special features of this display will be Bismarck and the Bismarckian coat of arms in brilliant fire. More than 2,000 rockets will be fired from the quays. The police stopped all traffic after 7 o'clock this morning. At that hour 4,000 students from the universities as- sembled in the Moorweide, and at 8 o'clock they started on their march to the Kloster-Thor -tation, where they took a train for Aumehele. At 9:30 last night the city presented a fairy- like spectacle. The roadways were crowded with sightseers, and in some places almost completely blecked, es- pecially in and around the Zoological Gardens, where the students had a kommers. IS SHE A FAGIN? 4n Elizabeth Woman Said to Teach Chil- | dren to Steal, Elizabeth, N. J., April 1—Fourteen- year-old Julia Haber and Emma Ru- dolph, also fourteen, were arrested upon the charge of shoplifting. The charge was preferred by Lk. F. Wahle, who keeps a notion store at No. 82 First street. Wahle says he has been sing goods from his store for sey- eral months. Finally he saw the girls take some trinkets from a box on his counter. The Rudolph girl says that she was taught to steal by her companion. There is a regularly or- ganized gang of girl shoplifters in town, she says, and Julia Haber’s mother is their instructor in stealing. Several months ago the two older sis- ters of Julia Haber were arrested by the police, and one of them was con- victed of stealing shoes from Dilk’s shoe store on Elizabeth avenue. MYSTERIOUS MURCER. The Body of a Colored Woman Found with the Legs Cut off, 4 SUBSCRIBE LO THE New York, April 1—The body of a young colored woman was found in | an alley in the rear of the New York | Bank Note Company’s building, cor- | ner of Sixth avenue and Waverly place, yesterday morning. The legs | of the woman were cut off above the knees and with the body were wrapped up in an old table cover, a piece of carpet and an old rug. Around her | neck was tied a string made of cheesa cloth, double-knetted. This was the immediate cause of death. A scrap of paper bore the name of ‘James (or Jane) Surindell, Rahway, N. J.” The police have no clew. j Children Who Bark. New York, April 1—Sadie Brown, thirteen years old, was brought to Bellevue Hospital by her mother, Mrs, Mary Brown, of No. 762 Third avenue, ! The child suffered from hysteria and barked like a deg. While in the re- ception room of the hospital she had | a fit, and her barking and struggles | created excitement. Two weeks ago , her brother George, eleven years old, ! was brought to the hospital suffering | from a similar attack. He was dis- charged as cured after a short con- finement. Another Cigarette Fiend Dead. New York, April 1. — Edward J. Wilkins, a paper-box manufacturer, jof No. 118 West Highty-third street, died from heart disease caused by ex- essive cigarette smoking. Wilkins was a hard worker. He spent Friday night over his books and did net re- tire until late. He became ill. Phy- sicians were summoned, but he died before their arrival. Wilkins smoked from five to six packs of cigarettes every day. Tapping the Wires. Berlin, April 1.— The French and German foreign offices are exchanging communications as to the conduct of French telegraph officials. The Ger- man Embassy in Paris learned facts | which proved almost conclusively that its cipher messages to Berlin were copied at the French office and efforts | , Were making to translate them. Imprisoned Americans. Kingston, Jamaica, April 1.— Pas- sengers from Santiago de Cuba report that two American citizens are dying in prison in that city. According to the passengers’ story the imprisoned ‘ Americans have all the passports and papers required by law, and their in- carceration is considered an outrage. Chicago “Times” Burnea Out. Chicago, April 1—Shortly after 2 o’clock yesterday afternoon fire broke | out on the fifth floor of the old Times | building, and before it was extinguish- | ed the building was flooded with wat- | er. Loss $40,600, unless the Times | presses are wrecked, and in this even# the loss will be heavy. | No More Boxing tn Buffalo. | Buffalo, April 1.—There will be no | more professional boxing contests in | his city. After considerable delibera- don, the police authorities have de- | cided not to allow any more ring events, and the Daley-Dunfee contests have been declared off. Delougherty Knocked Out. Kansas City, Mo., April 1.—Oscar Gardiner, known as the “Omaha Kid,” knocked out Mike Delougherty in two rou in Leavenworth County, Kan., yesterday afternoon. Gardiner weigh- ed 120 pounds and Delougherty 145. ee | For Colored Bovs. | Philadelphia, Pa., April 1.—St. Em- ma Industrial School fer colored boys, that Col. and Mrs. Edward Morrell, of this city, have established at Rock Castle, Powhattan County, Va., will be formally opened about May 1. Rese Ter Eee Advertise in the HE*D END COL 7 | i Two Maiu Passenger Trainsin a Wreck-- Kinted and I-jured. Bangor, Me., April 2.—Maine Central train No. 93. which left Bangor at 6:45 o'clock this morning, carrying local passengers to Old Carivou. crashed in- to iain No. 64, the night express from St John’s, N. B., which was ninety minutes late. The collision occurred on a down grade, three miles above this city. The out-geing train was a heavy one, drawn by two engines. The conductor had orders to cross the St. John express at Veazie, one mile be- yond where the accident oceurred, but the conductor of the express had re- ecived no cros8ing erders, and there- fore supposed he had the right of way as usuai. As it happened, both trains were running slowly at the time of che collision. The three engineers and the three firemen jumped, and all escaped with bruises, except James Ward, of Ban- sor. fireman of the express, who was caught beneath the debris of a postal ear which shot out past his engine, and was instantly killed. Baggage- master Eben Shaw jumped and was severely hurt. Postal Clerks Caleb F. Palmer and Fred S. Woodbury, of Bangor, were buried in the wreckage. They were crushed, and were rescued with difficulty. Henry A. Appleton, of Bangor, jumped and sustained a compound fracture of -the left leg above the ankle, the bone protruding several inches through the flesh. The three engines were telescoped and crushed, a postal car and a bag- gage car were smashed into splinters, and several other cars were damaged. It is the worst wreck that ever oc- curred on the main line of the Maine Central road east of Bangor. FIVE MEN ARE A Fearful Boller Explosi-n in Woburn, Mass. Doz n Men in the Ruins. Woburn, Mass., April 1—At 6:53 this morning, just as the men in Loring & Jones's leather factery were preparing for work, the boilers ex- ploded with tremendous ferce, tearing out the end of the building and bury- ing in the ruins at least a dozen men. The huge chimney, which was over eighty feet high, came down with a crash. A general alarm summoned the whole fire department, and tele- phone messages were sent to the Wo- burn Centre police station for doctors. The force of the explosion was such that one of the boilers was thrown clear through a heavy partition into the main part of the building. The following were killed: Austin Clem- ents, foreman; Patrick Lally, Patrick McGonigle, Frank McMahon, Patterson. The injured, who were moved to the adjacent residences and eared for, are: Patrick Kelley, John Kenney, John Tracey, Patrick O'Keefe, Octavio Sunders, colored. The factory is one of the oldest in the city. It was originally built by Horace Conn, and has been succes- sively oceupied by Bryant & Kiag, Loring & Avery and Loring & Jones. About fifty men were employed in the building at the present time. Had the accident occurred ten minutes lat- er the loss of life would have been much more serious. There were four boilers in the building, two of which were new. The cause of the explosion has not yet been determined. KILLED. STOLE $75,000. How Two Young Men Bent theU. 8. Ex- press Company. Jersey City, N. J., April 2—Herbert Harding, aged twenty-six, and Clar- ence Warbeck, aged nineteen, who have systematically robbed the United States Express Company of ec. o. d. packages valued at $75,000 during the past six months, were arrested and confessed to-day. JAPAN’S FORCES. The Little Follow Has Over 100,000 Men in the Filed. San Francisco, April 3.—The steam- ship City of Rio Janeiro arrived this morning from the Orient with Tokio advices up to March 14. At that time Japan had 100,000 troops in the field, with 15,000 more of Imperial Guards assembled at Hiroshima awaiting em- barkation. MADDENED HORSES. Two Hundred of Them Loose in New York Streets. New York, Apri] 2—The Lion brew- ery stables at Columbus avenue and One Hundred and Seventh street were burned this morning. Two hundred maddened horses were turned loose in the street and created great excite- ment. CAPT. HOWGATE. The Signal Servtce Office Is Again Indie- tea. Washington, April 2.—Capt. How- gate has been indicted again for al- leged frauds on the Government dur- ing the time he was disbursing officer of the signal service. Fatal Railroad Wreck, Elmira, N. Y., April 2—Erie extra freight train No. 90, east bound, met with an accident at the western limits of this city yesterday afternoon, which resulted in the death of Brakeman John Griggs, of Hornellsville, and the total destruction of six cars and a vortion of their contents. The train was running about eight miles an fnour when a journal on one of the box cars broke. Irish Political Prisoners Released, London, April 2—Herbert Asquith, Home Secretary, announced in the House of Commons last evening that the Irish political prisoners O’Calla- ghan and McCann had been released. Each had served twelve years of his term. O’Callaghan’s eyesight is going fast, Mr. Asquith said, and McCann has passed his seventieth year. Strike of Belgian Glassmakers, Charleroi, Belgium, April 2.—A par- tial strike of the glass workers of the Charleroi district has been declared. Ten of the factories are closed, throw- ing 4,000 persons out of work. The expected strike of the miners has not occurred. a, JAPAN'S COND: TIONS. She Demands Verenes + South Mane hurta, and 400,000,000 Yon London, April 2.— dispatch from Shanghai $ ported that the conditions of pez that China shall pay 400.060 indemnity and cede For Southern Manchuria, Japan guarantees pending the paymen: indemnity and the settlement « boundaries. The Times corr in Pekin says that the Gov has issued orders in accorda the conditions of the armist that the prospects of peace a favorable now the Mikado has showy a friendly disposition towards Li Hung Chang. Paris, April 2—The Europea tion of the Herald has ¢ under yesterday’s date spondent in Shanghat: that Taku and Shanhatwan wil handed over to the Japanese as guarantee of the observance of ¢ conditions imposed upon the Cr by the armistice. Thousands of ( nese troops are arriving at i defend the southern ports of the Yang tse-Kiang. The Japanese troops i province of Kiang-Su are captu towns north of the Grand Canal.” CRUSHED AND MANGLED. Four Men Fatally Injured in a Freight Wreck. New Comerstown, O., April 2. men were probably fatally injure a freight wreck on the Pan Han Railroad near here. The injured John Wilson, Oscar Hurzey, Wi Mercer and Willis Berkshire. T men all stood on the end sill of a in the centre of the train. As t train approached the siding to for the limited, the engineer m: emergency stop. The force brok car coupling just in front of the « the men were on, and they fell to t ground. Wilson went off to the side and was twirled into the « A car overturned upon him it not been for woula have been crushed Internal injuries make his re hopeless. Berkshire was pinr the rail on the other side, and ing to pull his legs loose found t both off below the knees. Hurze right arm was broken in two pla Mercer had a shoulder badly cru and has internal injuries. Th were smashed and several others dam aged. A MAD MOTHER, She Kills Two of Her Children With a Razor. Columbus, O., April 2—Mrs. W. B. Williams, wife of a real estate 1 residing at Grove City with her th children, Annie, aged fourteen, Mau aged twelve, and Harry, aged registered Saturday at the P: tel. Mrs. Williams left the hot yesterday afternoon two of the dren, Maude and Harry, wer dead in bed with their oa Annie said that her mother cautior her not to say anything. Mr. Willia arrived later, but would not pe his daughter to talk. Last even Mrs. Williams was arrested. showed no evidences of i nity. She said she came to Columbus to kill berself and her children. She seeured some opium and all three took the drug Saturday night. It took effect only on the little girl Maude. She secured a razor and ited till yester- day morning. She first cut the little girl’s throat, then the boy’s. Annie begged her not to cut her throat and she relented. Domestic troubles are alleged as the cause of the crime. SULTAN BENT ON REFORM. Said to Have Admitted That There Are Great Abuses in Armenia. Berlin, April 2. — The Koelnisch Zeitung professes to have the bes thority for the statement that the Sul tan of Turkey has told Sir Philip Currie he is convinced that lamentable misgovernment exists in Armenia and is determined to reform the abus London, April 2.—The Daily News correspondent in Constantinople says: “It is reported that the Porte intends submitting to the foreign envoys a scheme of Armenian reforms, namely: Two or three provinces shall be unit- ed under a Governor-Cieneral beneath whom fifteen Armenians, who have studied in a State school, shall serve as carmakans, while ten Turks shall serve as mutessarifs. It is stated that the Governor would be either Turkan Pasha, late of Crete, or Chakir Pasha, late Ambassador in St. Petersburg. It is said that Von der Goltz Pasha will organize a gendarmerie composed of Christians and Mussulmans.” GEORGE GOULD SETTLED. Widow of the Man Killea by Bis Spee!al Remunerated. { Wabash, Ind. April 2. — Geor, Gould, of New York, has paid $1, in settlement of the suit for damages against the Wabash Railroad broug!it by Mrs. George Jones, whose husban: was run down and killed by Go special at Roan, this county, C 21. The train was running rapi and as a slight rain was falling had the side curtains of his up and did net see or hear which struck the carriage, kil and both horses. George Got was on his hunting trip W and made careful inquirie: Jones’s family. A damage sui brought for $10,000, and the Wa company offered to make up ence between $3,600 and $: widow’s demand. Manufacture of Spe Washington, April 2.— executed at the United ‘ during March aggregat Pieces of the value of follows: Gold, $2,866.1 $573,536.50; minor coin, $70,1° Republicans Carry Michiga! Detroit, April 2. — Ind that Moore, Republican. Grath, Democrat, for Gover 000. Ohio Elections. Cincinnati, O., April from municipal elections Republican victories exc rus.