1
-•?w % A Word of Warning! Use freely in Uonsccleaning Roth Balls, NaphtHaline Flakes, Camphor Gam ana Frederick's Bug-Killer. Also Chloride of Lime, Banner Lye, Carbolic Acid, Piatt's Chlorides, Copperas and Bromo Chloralum. The neglect oi the use of these articles often brings about a dan- gerous condition of affairs. fgjpTrices right. AT Opposite Fost Office, PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. -THE- S N. Y, (Successors 60 SOWXES & EDWABDS) Complete Line.., ...Hea^y aiui Snelf Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings. GLAZED WORK A SPECIALTY. Corner Blocks, Base Blocks, Threshold and Stair Work, Lime, Cement, Plaster, Mortar Hair, Iron, Steel, Nails, Axles, Barbed and Plain Wire, Wagon Wood Work, Plate Glass, Colored Glass, Plain Glass* lazza Columns, Newel and Landing Posts, Balusters, Hope. All fclnds of Building Paper, including 3-ply fiooflng Agentstfor Iron andSteelBooflng. Agents*or Johti'sFloor Paint Agenu. for F O. Pierce Flour Paint. ^i.geuta:fort;onnor'sFloorJ'alnti ! _ .,,. „^^, *"ABrent9Tor"E0gerS*T r toor'>aInt. Sole agents for Kellogg's Prepared House; faints, nest ma<l& Sole agents for Reynolds' Interior and Ex- terior Mni=li- Meyer & Leoowestine Adamant Finish. Complete line Paints. Oils* Glass and Varnish, Grind Btoaes, Forks, Hoes, Bakes, Wheel Bar- rows, Horse Nails, Atlant c Lead, Tinting dolors, Sfeeins and Boxes. Sraphlte Elastic Paint for Tin Roofs. Smoke "tacks etc. AD¥ERltSS M 'OTE DAIOLY PRESS PWEHSPJ ~War In the Levant Majf Sprjead , All Over Europe. 0M&G&EE ON £L&NS, King George Is Preparing to leave Greece on a Russian Vessel. THE »ELTANKIS 1KNISTEX FA LLS. t>cmetrlu» Italll, the Opposition IA ader Is ttrow Prime Mintate*.-Outllnci M3s Policy as ««Peaoe Through, War" and Says He Will Accept STo Mandate* J fmta King or Chamber—More Flghtlnj in Eplrua and Thegialy, With Apparent Indecisive Eesutts—-Turkish. 'War rtilpa Grounded In the Dardanelles—Mos- lems Encouraged (Over Report* of i Vic- tories—JSdhem Pturtia'a Movements. Washington, April 30^—The -powers of Europe have not met with succe 39 in arranging peace between Turkey Greece, according to newA' which reached the Washington embassies, embassadors of Austria and Germany at Constantinople resent the action of France in threatening to uphold Greece and hint that France is. acting 1 by proxy for Russia. ! The autonomy proposed for Cre^e is causing dissensions. Ea*h nation de- sires to dictate the plan of it* I!ng- l&nd wants to place the island u:ider British suzerainty, with a .proinjsi} to hand it over to» Greece at the Brst.op- portunity. Austria and'Italy Want a governor of Italian or Gertpan lineage. Emperor William is trying to stem and has The e*ty| t must-As- :recogh;l*edv 1 A m t h e premier designated by" events." QiJpoaitlori le&aefa mmt^mAlk] ixW^'&iiim the pvogtm si Aftvit "Tested 99 1 1 f in ROCOUE have their usual full selected s t o c k o f Peter Henderson's Tested Seeds, Field, Flower, Vegetable and Lawn. Seeds, Plants, Bulb?, &c. ordered daily if not in stock. "Only Henderson's Tested Seeds kept'' SMITH & LaROCQUE, City Pharmacy, Plattsburgh. BREWSTER'S Meat Market, W. B. BREWSTER, Prop. 30 Margani Strati, Opposite Wifhtrill House, Fresh and Salt Meats, Oysters, Canned Goods, Fruits and Vegetables THE BEST GOODS FOE THE LOW- EST CASH 1PBIGES. Goods delivered to any part of the linage. 668-tf PARKHURST & TAYtOR. Accident Insurance .Marlon Block. ClkitonSt. M/f. PAi««U*JS]r, - S. TAYLOR jfc» the ;!»#.#«& H*t .rooking A*k joor ^fWrnf^SJ^mf' :fp" for tfaeo. - Ae the torrent of popular indignation in Athens against the royal family, it is learned at the German embafisy. The German minister to the Grsek capital has had a personal interv ew with King George. It is surmised t lat the message he delivered from the ejm peror caused the king's order for retirement of Delyannis. The emperor has been Incenied against the premier since the lattt r's bold stand in urging the Greeks to c is- regard the powers and to fight; fortheir Cretan brethren. William believes Oiat With a different leader the Greeks y 'ill pursue a policy more agreeable to Ger- many. At the French embassy it is believed, that Greece will he witling to Suspend hostilities only oh obtaining XJK te. Otherwise she will try to continue the war and in this manner hourly jnen4ce the peace of ..Europe. Therefore. France,, Russia and Eijg" land .have already told the sultan give up Crete to Greeee. THe; oilier three jiow^raJdnlenjte -oapatti fhixaw £fe» of .settlement,, and consequently yfyebsti. diplomats fear that:the peace of iju- rope may be, disturbed very Soon: The news from Greece eontiniies alarming, and it is understood that Hussian ship is lying at Piraeus, Ihe port of Athens, ready to embark iihe royal family. RALL! IS NOW PREMIER, DelyannlB' Ministry Overthrown and New Cabinet formed. . Athens, April 30.^—As was anticlpatfea, the Delyannis ministry has fallen, and the Opposition, under the lead of 'M. Ralli, has formed a cabinet. The 1 it- lowing is a list of the new minister^ Premier and Minister of Marine—pit ORalli. • I Minister of War-^M. Tsamavos. Minister of Finance—GVf. SimopoulcL Minister of Education—M.Carapah ?S. Minister of the Interior—M. Teotao id. M. Delyannis, the retiring premtir, has made the following statement: "King George summoned me to iJaa DEMETEIEIS EALM., IThe New Greqdak Ereihiex.J palace, yesterday <aad aeelared exeeptional circumstances him to replace the compel! ea catilnet" a u d i o form a new ministry fronj the ra?k> of the Opposition. Me begged me second his efforts. X Refused to ten< ier my resignation* »ot hecause of lay love of power, but 'to ^order that au oh, o* a step might not ne misinterpreted, urged the king to tia& the iprlvilege the ; crpwn, declaring that I was reajftf to sign the royal decree ^provided the latter east no Tilame npotk vtSi I adifleiji that there was jjo reason to fear t(|| such a measure would be consider «8 by Europe as a ^ensureUpon the giifc; ernmertt's poll^yi Judgment would B* formed as to that after the new capi-^ net had been islei' M. Delyannis added: *X caamot iU* vulge the policy which 1 consider eff aeeesBary. i can crdy «ay that ii»B country would have -emerged from ; lt# Mais without ItieiB vt tJESisitory a»ft couia bave obtainea * ratifieation" <M' the northern frontier a>y , '*bandonJ[Sf Crete, according taiQ&g deiiitods of 1M powera The latter measure would he m facUitated -the tfufo ln*amti6h its i n* principle of itox$/am W&e&ts 1 ' wo\m not liave been taipaired. while p* jpeace %E Barppfi'. im/mH-. * w v e 'been- aured bseattse trf-ljie *ec*«Icatloh of pm frqotier.llnt Adjudged jft ijjc; treaty aJireteS m* 's&pwtiiiiiw tot tut 'b*>\ cciuitructip* «f..ihe mjaJstr*, from :i*< Ojnw^MUWk'IK.'leigtt' «ot>»oie4 the ^co- jK*al « , « « * ? • H. itotlropeuJe wmttt. and MM, "Sttttar «i»« aU f*l»e m +• * the CHambeix WA must have sat absO' lutelyl free hand," * ..•"", public tension |s rfttcli. Teli?^.a; e change of mlni«t^r^aii^ %i fa ! lelieved iha,t ajl serlousf danger of; aal disorder is-r^mov#. Ralirs pqUcy may briefly b% ^e-" d a s honor^bie a>eace ^secirrad- :h w a r . 3Ke^b.rts a s ; to tlie prosr' pectS jof the InterVen^ott'Of the powers ; are vjery conflictinfir, w i i l e the news from•. she seat of war is very indecisive. ACcbrding to A dlspatcbfroni 3Pbarsa- 1a, General SniolenSki's brigade has been ior Sfe bovra engaged in tierce coti- fliet wjth ia. Turkish army corps be- yoaa RTelestiho, in the directidn -of Ai- vali. jA battalion Of eViOttes ahd A biat- tery &t artillery have been *ent tb re - enforce the GreekB, wfepse jkpsition; S»T pearsko be favorable AivAli^s seifCfl miles southwest of Velestino and plose to the railway conneefing^ that ^lafce' ^tth feiaisaiai It ift Just midway be* tweeri '^elestinp And tbe iGreek head- JUUartfers.' The OroWri Prinee Cohs.tantlne is.-sf^i-i itinjgr ikhe various camps iand Inspiring cohtidBnce-and hope. General Mavromiona-eiiB, late chief of, 'ike d[re^k stalfe bas hsft the Greek camftjana iB^T^idriflngtb AthenA, lit the dlfeotion of tferikhala tbe Greeks liave two battalions of infantry,; s e v e r a l ' b«ttjeriej9? of ArtiOery and a sftuadipn of .cavalry. A dispatch re>: ceivedt from - PharsaJA .'saysk that A! Turbish army' corps from fcarlssa has occupied Triishala unresisted. The Turkilh at«th,oritle% are striving to prevent |he exceis'ea of th"e iutkiBh soldlerfe. In thje towns. TBhe tturks bave destroyed six guns found at iarlssa, . It appears that the Ttttte ftre jpre-, paring'; SimiiltaneonBiy to jattacls the greeks; at ,I*harsB:ia from, the east And: She west. Already there a*c rumors that tb!e Greeks find their positions un- tenable and are preparing to fall, back on Thermo'Eylffi. • k The import from Constantinople,"by way si Vienna, that Canaan PishA Is going t» Jarilha with 'iO.dOO additional troops is, ;not confirmed. The G** ee ^ % me jC £®t u red the maga- sine at' Falppiada, in Turkish Epirus, -with.A la*ge quantity of annninatfon' a n d lO.DOO s h e l l s . There were several iiiinor skirmishes yesterday along the line*., y. .j: ,-, •:. irvi*-- " "*•- '-•*•—-«--•" -A ' 'The iBre^ks have occfipiea the heights of Pfentepigadia, nor0i of Arta and about half ^way "between that place and Janlna, in Bpirns. The Greek trootis have intrenched themselves on * the heights mentioned. .**W* mHitm -*. . 4est ~. «reAkSis#; ov££.;&erv It is belleved-tbe'-wiirvelWH!*; thisfeiew,:but M. .©eiigeoi3gi» refused Join I the ministry iiriieas- the premier werej chosen outside the regularly con* stitufied'parties in the bouid. To this' Hi m n i .replied that he could not, ahd would not Attempt to form a. minlittxy witltdiut the support of the other ^»ppo- sltiott seoUons in the isseinbly r and Ae tried to induce |at toelfgeOrgis t o tfOln. A tnewspa^er corre^pftadeat bAd a h intertiew With XL MalU t duringr which, this kmbitious Greek, statessnan. »otit- linealtois poUcy. HL. itatti Midi "3Sy poiics will; oonsist in the reorganista-f. tiott of the army, whose recuperative forces^ are practically inexhAijuttitoley And the re-establiahment tit order,, ttr getber with a fiatisfactory soltrtloft ol Ohr foreign relations.' "We refuse to 16-' cept a mandate from the Atag or fromf Sondopy April 50.^-A dispatch to Ta#! ^tctbriftis of tbfe TArklsh: troop* Aavac enormously ralited, the mlUtar# 1 ispirlt Ofjthe tfcurkS^ ^hd the <Kmndenci fhtw lhlpirea in Tu-rkey* vitality lii reAlovirir *hfe^is»Atits*aetibn M% -*it»: the ^preseh't r^i%e» *hife stt .the :«smA time reijaering the powers* scheme et : rsfbrmf ist the Dttcman empire harder, of reftllsitfidi, ' " - it-is- ^noutteid that the Strst dlvjti »ion of the? Turkish; army At Blassoai has entered • € & & t«irrttory front ttti viclfilty;,6jf,Dttrna«l and hita capttirei? the;tbwA*f?-55&rk!oi>* te'lthportaht-GreeA. baie ^'tiperatlo&s, about ^18 miles wcsl AftkrlgsA "••: ''•••_ : . : : '; .' Greek* X«»*Inr Tufkhih Territory. ' .'' to Demetrius Rallii theTiewpremierand minister of marine, was th,e leader of the Opposition. He has been^mlniater of justice and minister of the interior, and is well known throughout the country as an 'able lawyer and orator: He is 50 years old and studied at the universities of Athens and Paris. Anargyros SimopOulo, the new min-, ister of finance, is a deputy from Pat;- "nessis, andy like the other members At the cabinet, has been a prominent member of the .Opposition* Severai times Me has been jflbilster of justice. s Constantine Garajanbs is A :deputy fjcom Axta and .jine j>f tther most ;dis-' tingiilshed financiers of Greece. Th}s is the second tihie that he has been Ap- pointed tto this department- of the csibi- yxet. - . -_. George Teotaokl i s a deputy from Corfu and was minister of jthe-Interior -under ijrime .Minister Tricpupls. M. Tsamavos has Ipng been asso-^ elated with M. Ralli in his campaign against royalty. ,; An Armistice Asked For. Berlin.* April 30.—-The FTanAtort :Zel- iyng publishes a dlBpateh from- Con- stantinoijie saying thAf ; bwing to the Greek foreign minister Aaying: ma&£ the request to the Russian minister At Athens the embassador?1 of xireat Brlt- alii, France and Russia at Constantino^ pje,have asked the'TuTklsh gcverflinetit' to !grant Greece an •arnrfstice, ., All the talk AoSir is of the Interven-' fion o f t h e powersr Even Germany wishes to save Greece from the tjoisc- auences m defeat, and At Is stated'in Berlin oiflclal circles that the powers "VEiH i n t e r v e n e p t t h e i r o ^ n i n i t i a t i v e i f Greece dies not invite them, Aocoraiiig to v. dlspatcA fcom Cbn- utaatinoBle t o The itokslansseiger, the $uitan Tvill accept the ^ollpvang cohdi-, tlons as^Bie basis of peace;- The with- drawal pi the Greek troops from Crete, and the teiestabbAhment sl,fke frph^. tier ot lisp, Greece -to ^e'excliiaea-irojiit *u the Advantages pf capitulations and t o D a y JriSe&ml^y;. f . Oonflitlon» $$• ^Jxete. .. A^xii ,sdi-r-A dispatch to The 1 ^Khanla Aoyjr'that the ad- the international ifieet Aave ifisttrgeajA * t iAkroWri -.snd longed "conference with the teadfrs. lAArfllrAl Canevaro; ihtcrmed them st the fall of i*ar|uia *Ad of-ithA .retreat •& .the JSrMf uxoir* 'Th^ '^«a* sgemny mov&s. »na%a*featoheASo*fea . t o > o t o ] •Gwsisce t o t y s h t .afpr jB9njr ! '<weor.se. J '[.•••'••.'''' ;' The admiral*- then announced their' Intention! to. rfelax theTapcltAae, whlcfe j the» «Atd> wai'.'jnoi Intended to •*t«rvA the isfttaaers into #uT*tecJipn. \*&m AJ-' aored tnf in«urireAtt=.tAAt they wonta; be permitted to come into ti» town* ^oyiaed'-lthey •e»Aae. tm*cat^l* jto'aaaf-- <*»»• anythinc they might need, and :.mor»o^«eFtJw* thAf swwtld b# *tr#flw4- . Trim * a f»oor* 'to- *ms& *i»«n' a«almit Cn«irtsi#tnaote, April AA-«a»e «>«*-' life •quadkoB A w w * y*t left the OM- i^jswa|Baii*i JHWWS^^^^WW -.-w»#*^w^ < M^V I .^••^^P' ' l»v« mii-Np'nMl !»_«>*» * "TM>&-piq$i- Arta^ays; ^TAe Sreek,'(Soldiers are pouring IntA the. to*rh in ^ a t m o a t libbrojten coi* umn,- comtegiappsretttjy- froftt eiiferiv •ppiht of the Turkish territory hitherto' ^ecApied % t h e Sreelts.'' '4 - The Titties^ Aorr^spopdeiitr adds thatt ithese soldiers «hoys- Ajpvsigftis^ot a de«| sire to ( ie6)fttlniie the figiilt agaihst. thf; Turk8, And their presAhCe crowds {be{ town ayCfold abovj|'Sts^nOrAiAl capaci*, ty, 'canslng serious -inconveniences atif threatenhife anless jwmefhing; 1# dctt- to* relieve the (pressure, a seriouA dSgQ' - ' Greece W»y Xv»qn»te Cret«. HiortdoA, AUrir ^b.~Mr. Benry 3S6r« 1 1 BRITAIN AND THE BOERS Harcourt Accuses the Govern- merit of Favoring War, 1ITTEELT ASSAILEf CHAKBSEliilH. •«o. man, The JJaily'vOhrohicie^ corre-* defeated "by the good sense and feeling sppnaent At'A.ihenf, says; :'*t bAye iS,4 of the people of Cape Colony, and he verypi^tr«aj^rti>bteli§vethAtiGreeee: pointed to'the adoption of the recent is-AOw disposed to retAW her «ofce* tram 'EpiroA and Aren: tb evacuate the; isT«i.n* 0fC*ete»*- a*wp^^ hundred thCusahdj tion of this war policy, adding /WomeA and jehilaren ^re hohieiess and. destitute rin^^ !piessaiy, and the. J goVern' ment is -unable to. relieve their AeedA" 3The Se«ret»ry For the Colonieo T»Vk* Back »nd.Acca*es the l.lber»l[te»d#r oi Seine t7«n»ntriotIc—Tre»»ttry [ Heqnlrea •liOOO.000 ITor "Cape Town XK|f«nte». I>ondon, April 30.—During tjhe debate on the budget .estimates in the house of commons Sir "William Harcourt, the liberal leader, referring td the £200,» M0 ($1,000,000) set apart in thk budget estimates for„ strengthening she Brit- ish garrisons in South Africa, said this sum was for a war policy In South Africa which the Opposition was de- termined to resist. Sir 'William Harcourt then accused Sir- Chamberlain of trying to farouse a War feeling and of using in. ail his re- cent statements "exasperating lan- guage, calculated to excite feeling of, *aclai hatred in South Africa, which, however," he added, "thank God, has lailed." W Sir William Harcourt's remarks were met with cries of "Oh!" :ContinuIng,.he said the policy of the fet-retary of state for the colonies, in- fending to produce a racial Tf&r, was 1 fJ IF YOU DOUBT IT, TRY I' JS MARSHALL FIELD TO WEDt ftmnor of Kl* JBfogage&ieni; t« the Widow .of G«ner»l Shpritlan, Chicago t A p r i l SO,*—The D a i l y Kew« ssys that lit is common talk in Chicago society circles that Mr. Marshall Fietd is engaged to the widow of the late General Phiilp H. Sheridan and that the wedding will take place in the near future. I Mr. Field, Who has just returned to the oity,. declined to see a reporter. ; Mrs. Sheridan was formerly Miss Sucker, daughter df Oeneral Rttcker of the reguUr army, and was married to General Sheridan in this city about 80 conciliatory motion in the parliament of Cape Colony as heing a-cohdemna _ that he was happy to'say the" peaceful jpolicy was supported -toy the government of Gape Colony* The secretary of state for the col- onies, Mr. Joseph. Chamberlain, jhere en- tered the house, and amid cheers Sir William Harcourt remarked; "In the presence of Mr. Chamberlain j repeat that it was a defCi\t 01 an ut- terly -unjustifiable attempt to eWte ill feeling. When we are asked to refute a re duction of the taxes of Great Britain Shot His Wife «nd Killed Hmuelf. ' " Phllardeipbia, April go.-r-FrAnk SArt- Aal, an, engineer on the Philadelphia*: W^hiJflgtoA A n d Balflhtore railroad, ?ftiot-Aha".probably fktal}y wounded hisj wife Sophia at his: boarding Aouse anat then ;comttjit^ed .sulfide,! shooting hint- Belft, >g?he 'tragedy ivas the resuit of ddr niefjfe'' djfricuHies, ^hfe ".0001116 were married six years, but recently Ha*t- 1, : ln order to contribute money, to pro- Aet 1 treated :her Ibrutally, and she wAs! *? ote 'warlike, aggressive operakions In forced, to leave him About twowdnfhsl South Africa, we oppose a mog> deter- Ago, teewjpent for her' to meet. MAM mi&e d resistance. The proposal to ap- with A yie^ to •Wconciiing their^^ differ-r^ ] y money to unjustifiable riuposes enAea;' 'They talkecT tor 1 a short time,, AsramBt the will of the people and gov- ahd: thett S m | t « weAt fco bis room oh- ernment of Cape Colony is oni of the sonie pretext, .B^tiu^fhgjJv^th a * e - * ost Injurious things v^ith refe-ence to Volyer, Ae AOmmltted flhe double brime.' * he empire ever submitted to the Aouse "-••. ' •, .; ,.;•'• ; "' ' J rof commons." Bad.'Outlook For'Havana. M Mr. Chamberlain Ketallatcs. City pt Mexico, April 30.—^General!? .Mr..Chamberlain said he had not ex- .WiiUsms, .formerly consul geAcral :ot;|Pected to have to reply to "pefnielous the JUniteiii State's to HavAmv is Aere. ; He. rep'orig business completely i»resv tratedthere, and^he inhabitaints >ot the isiand arc reduced from opulence to the direst poverty. Others arrifuig front CubaAtate that the country'; is iraiaed, and there is no hope *or hAul A century; of its recovermg its former importance^ A Spanish volunteer who i?jja served AIAtbiie aA.tbe^a-rriiylhas hedme to Mexi- co. He states that the troops there want to crush what they call'the '.'black rebels" and return to Spain ahd. upset the monarchy And establish *, re- pubiic . •:•••..'••. BrooWyn'B Trial Trip SatiBntotory. t.' Washington, April 3^^prarhodbre Dewey, o£ the caaval trial jioard ihas reported,briefly to the seeretary of the navy from Newport that thtesea trial of the Brooklyn ;was ^uce.essful in ev- ery respects The rnacAineryin Darttc- uiar, about which nome apprehension was felt, is .said to Aave worked «with perfection, The .'destination of the Brookiynfln England was settled irpoA as Spit Jaead, where the foreign snips wblch viiil par,ticlp8*fe in the Jubliee programme will assemble. ,' Jjfo TlOlne* of Howlanol. N e w B e d f o r d , M a s A , A p r i l iSo.-r-TJie m m tresstirer, WiHiam ij. ©roWlapd; Js: itfii tmisaing. TEhe police: are tbllowing; up every cle\v, but as yet.,Aave met With no success. Q. *^M.:XihBsb!tiry i a cotton broker, wAo Islaftbe city* Aays' that'Conductor Bice of flie Old Coiohy diyislon -of the 'Consplidateia road is Very positive, that Mr. ^o^lanpt wAa A> passenger on his train-into" Providence •last asriday evening. 3He thinks Mr. iHowiand boarded the t^alfi At Taun» ton. . ,. '" ilnrderer Sentenced. Fairfax Courthouse, #&,, April SOi-* #udge JJpscomh sentenced the negro Ijewls, whose outrage and jmnrder of: 'Mrs. Ble^ 61 ^ u s e d a Q l d Je|:citemera, in this section aAd nearly'resulted in ; a "lynching, to^be hanged oii 'June & tEhe Montieello guar,d>, ordered hereby iGoy-. ernor O'SArrah to jprevpnt mob «ip- lehce,: Aai*c gaAe haAk to .Ohajjottee- vilie, And the exjatementlaap «ubBldeji, and dangerous language." He classed Sir William Harcourt's utterances as %belng "unpatriotic in the highest de ,'gfee, embarrassing to ^he government v aAd injurious to the., cause of peace." I Continuing, Mr. Chamheriain [assert- ed that Sir William Harcourt's .state- raents to the effect that the Aovern- jjment's policy Aad been Rejected by the ISKpe-govermnen't and~>eorJle were ab- solutely inaccurate, The policy of ,the government, he explained.-'J'hnd not Changed from the first.! Only eircum- stances had changed tb some extent. The government A jpolieyi Mr. Ch amber- lain added, is to maintain its obliga- tions, .not to engage in Any agg ressive operations or to attack, the inc epenfl- ence of a friendly state, "but "tc main- talr our own rights and the Tights of the nation." jl U I had ioped/L continued Mr. Cham berlain,, "that our policy wouli con- t&tue to he nonrJartlsan^ but tlu t hope Juis disappeared in the face of Sir Wil- liam Harcourt's speech, and I no weh&l- lenge him to raise the isnjue. Are 1 he Op position prepared to take issue T rith us wAen we say that, while we intend to observe our own dbligatsonB, we intend that obligations toward lis shall also 3be .maintained? "The question hstween TIS and the Transvaal- is, not 3r terfer- ence in the 'internal jaffairg at the Transvaal or an attack Jupon'-theXon Aon ^convention upon 'pur pait; but hreaches of the convention up in the part .of the Transvaal, and we a « call- ing upon-them in -friendly terms to give Attbgeid Xtetffe* 3te«pon»lbIUty. • C h i c a g o , A p r i l 30i-T^EJx^(3qV:erAor : M%* ;geld, -whose iname from tiine to tlnje lias been connected, with the affairs of the< defunct Globe Bavinge hanky gave ^out An tnterview, in WAich Ae' dehied t h a t A e Tfeas I n a n y i v a y respoAilble for. the irregalarittfiB ot\ Its mahake- menfc ISe admlteJamyinigr Jfeen A AM* rower Irom-^he AaAk, ! ; b*ut flays 'it w a a itirapiyAtoatterofbuafnejis. ' •"'*'.•• iPittsburg,, April tt>.~5?he Westing 'house AdrbrAke jKunpsthy posted aiotfoea, JA its foundry rdepartmenjt ^nhouhciSs^' a, reduction of *agej» raHginR tiom 8Q to i^^per cent.- ln. : ,p«ome- |sases the' cAt' equals M cents a day* TAere Is ,cotw Ittderabie'. itftlft arnons ;th# 50ft Affected of refusing to Acceptthfl^dttctioA, '• /.-. ' TBig j n b » j | » * W ! < ^ o , • .-' •'•),• ,'TOrbAto>-'"Aprii Zbr-Whel-ln. Si-jBci- -hardij^t Wholesale- ^Kpoeiy Acre-..aid oAraafe ts the extent of *m;<m, '^0* stock and buildings *r«c£ JAsured t«f •#BJ0OJ . OAe of' the 'Ibemam 'NWMi -oyer- poxm _»y 'MAoAg *»St fen. trpm * Jadderi. ^lieifc. ."• - -'- '. . . - ) --.'•-' '. New TotJc. A»ril »>•—Fire de*trorttfl * four Atofcr txr** brtaai** -A** the tost - i»#.HortkT^lflA jrtf*tt, Brooklyn, twd for stora^ by tA« Pratt JM«ml«rd OU Company, A c<»»1deritf»te aowwuit of : m»mmr' -mm |*aQy dam*od. :i& xts satisfaction." I Sir William Harcourt ihere int irnipt- pd Mr. Chamberlain by remarking; "Tou are asking for £200,600. "What nonsensel", exclaimed Mr. Chamberlain. Aotly. Prolonged cheer- ing greeted the sharp |answer of the aecretary of state for the colon! ;s, who continued: < "We are asking for £500,000 -wl [en 'ev- erybody Anows 1iie Transvaal is asking lor a million and for Aundreils and Aundreds of thousands. The'Trsnsvaal has been awning to an extent abso- lutely unjustifiable' by' any ordinary pClicy of defense. We have noj. com- iplained, Tmt the result has beep that the present armaments'of the Trans- vaal are altogether disproportionate to •Hie defensive resources 'of Cape Colony, and the Transvaal's nrma|ments, ftfter expending considerably over a million Upon them, are still going on. Batteries of artillery andt maxim guns, millions ;and millioniS of cartriagjea and AUndreais -of thousands of rifle: i have Tieeh imported into the Tra,nsYfl»l." .Mr, Chamberlain concluded by say- *1 do »ot believe there is ja feelling to repudiate the policy of the itoyer.iment. On the contrary, I believe the feeling of every loyal British subject it the Cape to be one of gratitude and satis Miction with Aer maJesty^s gover iment. I understand that they.recogni* J their position as the representatives at the paramont power in South AfrtoA and axe determin^dy...tn the often used words, to maintain the integrity of 4ll our irlKbt* 'under the convention*" JEBW Itor Xa>wla«Knter. i, Boston, AprJI a©.—Jobn S, Moylan, chai-Bed witji manslaughter in cjtueing the Aeath of Thomas Saul, whs died slj Station ? last Sunday night, was before Judge Adams'in the muhicjpal criminal court and was held in [$10,000 for » Aeartn* Jfcty 7, ^Saul died {%• the -result of te*uria« Alleged to Aavf Aeen sustained white lo a crowd wittmsing a . s t r e e t fyrfci* { '"•.-JBewRrly, MMML, April «(,. ljOirttt, «x-«aayor of BabuuA.. l*i* *, prominent nssidaot of fljedli«n,a»«4-«p years. BA •r, j ni^iir ttAK dty, Holt 01 u. «*«iMk iMK HILL WILL CONTROL IT The Northern Pa sorbed by the Grea ific to Be At^ t Northern HBSTDElSfrWIIf'risillSISHAtClOtef Map. IPHEL gHERIDAKr. years ago. 1 She has three children, twin boys, 'aged about 18, and a daughter. Since the death of her husband Mrs. Sheridan has resided in Washington. She is a devout Catholic,, and her chil- dren are "being educated in schools of that faith.l Mr. Field has been a widower for about a year. He has two children- Marshall - Field, Jr., who resides on Prairie avenue, and Mrs. Arthur Tree, who has since Aer marriage resided at. Leamington, England. ROW FOLLOWS RECEPTION, *Jew York |Citl*en Knocked Down by a a United States Navy Xlentenant. New York, April 30.—The Herald tills morning Aas the following: Those who stopped very late in the Waldorf after the reception to the naval officers Wednesday night wete treated to A round of fisticuffs in which a lieutenant of "the "Cnited States navy and a well known man about town were the principals. It was about 4 o'clock In the morning, when about 30 survivals of the fittest" were Sitting about the tahles in the p a l m Toom" finishing u p t h e a m p l e s u p - ply of champagne which the commit- tee in charge had provided tor the re- fection of guests. Among the group were many officers of Uncle Sam'** navy and of the -foreign warships, with a sprinkling of civilians. "Everybody was immensely 3olly* and ~no thought of trouble was harbored ajs the'polyglot talk went bravely on, •Suddenly, as if a torpedo "had been •xploded, the American aieutenant" made a shqrp remark to the civilian. > "You liel" was the angry retort. Then the 1 right Aand of the angry lieutenant shot, out, catching the civil- ian squarely "between the eyes, and Ae went down'in a heap among the wine coolers. | The greatest excitement ensued. The civilian, "byl najmeans satisfied, sprang to his feet and both men, pale and furiouBi [confronted each other for a fight,'out cpoler counsels prevailed, and furtner~*hostiIitiesj were checked. Then ^ome-jneiribers of the commit- tee went about among the 3D men pres- ent and exacted from each a promise on,honor that the names of the two combatants "should be .kept .a secret and that the incident itself should not he made public, , GUTHRIE'S DISASTER. 1 Smaller Number of Xive» £o«t Than at iSTirst Keported. Guthrie, 6. *JT-» kprH 30.—Heroic ef- forts toward the rescue of the urif ortu- nates whose lives are still endangered and for the 1 relief <of the AUndreds of destitute and Aungry are being made. It now seems a certainty that the loss of llf e In the deluge will not exceed 20. Many persons supposed to have been drpwned have been found clinging to bushes or driftwood down the stream on the west bluffs or scattered in farmhouses ,for miles. For a long" time the torrent cut off communication with the suhmerged districts, apd in the excitement the death list was swelled to hundreds. The family of Wesley McGill, report- ed as frowned, was found safe. The only additional bodies tound were those of Mrs. Fannie Buffln and five children, all lodged ini a pile of driftwood. These, with George, Owen, drowned while res- cuing-others, JFrank Meyers, Mrs. Jane Watt, Mrs. Francis Moore, Mrs. Drum- roond, Mrs. ^Dennis apd child'and Mrs. Watson^ ar*| the only identified dead, though many are still missing. Five hundred Aomes were swept %wayy 150 houses were wrecked, and 20 stores were 1 devastated, leaving 1,000 people homeless and half as many des- titute. ' The-damage to property will be in the peighborhoo^l of $100,000, wbfle that sus- tained in crop* may equal or perhaps double that Amount. .Married In a Shroud. Max Bine, |a merchant *>f Piedmont, W. Ta. r and Miss Fannie JKork were married according to {ancient Hebrew and Hussion lites recently. The groom] wore A shroud, in wbioh he intends to be buried, and while the bride and groom remained standing the guests anarehed around 4hem -three times, all ear- xylmjligbteol tapers. TAe marriage compact, giving the bride dower rights', was written in Chaldaic. -The guests vied with each other-in giving present*, and when one would present something -out of the ordinary others would ruth opt .to secure something to ex- CClIfc * "I &* *» X-lkely to Be Itttjcc^eded by EJt- Secretary of War Jtattioat—The tte.il %t«aits an End of CoDiirieation Between tfae Ttvo Great Bailwaffc New York, April M-^At a raee ing of the board or directors >tt this Northern Pataia> railroad tie resignation of Preisllbttt JMwia V. Winter was submittedt, to take effect' upon, the election of his successor* There were rumors taat some frit tion occurred In the meeting becauie of the desire tp have p& ilel S« Lannori t, formerly secretary o| t?ar, elected sit once to take charge of the railroad, 153 i t w a s i n t i m a t e d l a <6b[ei;e- d i s p a t c h e s % short time ago would be Acne, . It%as stated, however, that the see-; «ilqa was entirely barrht Abas, and tbe resignation of President.Winter wa|s temporarily laid on thektable Because J. Pierpont Morgan and: 3 p^ti^s tiahie]*, two of the voting tmsteulof the stocl:, are Absent In Suropc:&Aa]ifr:was desira- ble tor confer with them'before acttoji was iaken. -.•.^-^•. >. r r' At the time of thi*. j^fen^aAho|iaA4 ment in these dispatlhes that Colouli Xtamont had been select ad as the cbrd» •ing-'president of the%srttiern, PAci#J and that this was due chiefly to tbjs influence of President S imes ;*.• Hijl 9!' the Great Northern* nearly All of th^ interested persons deh&d the story, a|u well, as the statement that Mr* Wl^i ter Intended to resigfiii 'MK.^Winter wafc in ISt. Paul at the |fme of ttte election, hut he authorized l tfae statement thai'; his resignation was.tenterediA Vies^ oil the recent acquisition pj a co&slderabK 1. minority intere'st in tlie ptcperty Mj parties of whose co-opefatioA he Is AC1; assured, and that with<fut such assuje- ance he is unwilling ip cohtihtte: hi,«, administration,' •",{'; The stock of t h e ^ p r t b A r a . fiaclfi;q Hallway company is.he|d by these Ave votiner trustees; J. .^terpoAt, j|pr*a^| George Siemens, August BeiraPnt, Johpson Livingston ahpl Gbafles LaA-i ier. , , -| : '; * ' Stockholders of %e Road. j | The ''majority interest" referred to\, bv MJS. Winter is the syndicate headedj; by the Deutsche bank,,which recently acquired very large Ml&lhgs of tooth stock and bonds of: th£ SJOrthern. Pa- oific, giving it a strong voice in the management- The SejpmaA ihterests for a long time past hasfe favored Pres- ident BCill of the Great Sferthesn, and: they were anxious for .a eonsolidatiQ& of the two properties. This, however, was precluded by the laws of the^ -west- ern states., j - ' It has been assumed) for some time in Wall street that Mr* HtU was acting in.Aar'h.aay with JCe* „.„ the latter was willlAg WAee.SSfK BiliA, Influence r e c o g n i z e d -ijo. d i r e c t i n g the management of the Northern .Pacl,flCi Messrs. Hill and :&ampnt are cJo|e triendp, a n d the app.oinjtnient of the lat- ter will mean a dose alliance between, the two companies, according to Mr*< Hill's ideas'. j •%• •-' Colonel iiamont's opjy railroad expe* rlence -wa§ as president of the SSoastofe West Street and PaVonla Ferry raft-: road, wbjich, leased : the-jBroadwayroad and several other city Ji^es before the Metropolitan Traction . fbrhpany. { ?pas organized. Colonel jiamOpt, ; however* in the] opinion of railroad men," AR9 shown much executive, ability as etcre- tary of war, having ':reduced expenses in the executive division ^alone rnore. than $!00,O0O during, his term of office. er»«3 ^uesstioti t|e 1kst of the, Standard or High-Grade EELS. In appeatance,a perfect Beau^r* with material attd nj?orkmaash%, an* mnth $ioo mi qmutf wheel* $m a* catt se .«ixaratn<|d Sowks Hardware Sto|r«. CIIAS.'mvANWIE» Ag« r •• m m aKtade ttifler tovcr, always fresh and £Ieari„ 1WHE1 -«* «ttd^« *npWffer %»CS( are.^ade...©:! t % iuiest V M 4 6 'Havana fohaoQ & $m) ^vdrld ajsd are l!tricffl|r0^i»^ 1 1 HAyana-fphaccC' im~. It as long*s.money wIH n areaanjostoatof reacA 1 * «. * ^ i ^ 11 ^«W Wee* rjp^^p^bj^p^^wayiin^feBlfov t H a v e y o u s e e n o u r Plp*i»»? Y«tt«w* &$h-M J#?Bwfc BJciet K life with wym ' Igrwjtyifcwr Winter Talks Tery Plainly. St. l a u l / s A p r i l 5Q.irr-i;t i s s t a t e d that the resignation, of EdWih W. Winter as.'. president ojf the NorthgrA Pae.iflc will be followed by the resignation of the Aeads of all the executive departmentsi of the roadJ These *5U Ineiude General Manager Kendrick, General Traffic Manager BAnnaford and Chief Engi- neer McHeney. Speaking of his res- ignatioh. President Winter saifl : : "I resigned because President Hill of the Great Northern an'd those asso- ciated with him have succeeded in gain- ini control p£ sufficient stock, combined with friendly holdings oh the Continent, to entitle Mm to a strong voice in the management^ of Northern Pacific %,£- fairs. J regard Mr. Bill as my friend, Aut he could not name a sum that would jndujje me to work under his di- rections." J To Reorganize a X>oan Association. KAoxvilleT April 30.---A large number of investing stockholders In the South- ern Building' and t.oan ^assodatlon of Knoxvijlle have formed a reorgamAa^ tion committee composed of large stock- bolders, each state being represented by one or ]more members. The new com- pany wfll at once be reorganijied, known as the Loan and Beposif company of Georgia and will have a full paid capi- tal of $a,ooo,m v . Mhtk WJiU* at Ttmfer. ITbUe proyipg to ohrash atTjtawh, York *wu»^r, S, O,, ^eopnar, Jonah Croiby, colored, toupi|t * mg pistol in hi* hip pock- ,«t unoomforiabla In wmoTlng it the mmw---vm>0i&#Qi&k -i»9uAd|pa mm 0^m^mm^i^m^'^ms^»M' the: j w u » r # * l w » i s t h * first . to 1 ^ mornings nowf "tJoSf* •.••*-••*** s o t ft Ihftw •**Vkn#m. *mA"- ' •'"" Attempt tto Burns Hotel. Narragansett PIer» ®. J., April 30.*— Incendiaries entered the •Coptineptaj; hotel here, and after'j*aturAfin# a pfie of mattresses with Jterdsehe attempted to set fire to the buiUJhif. IfShe w a t c b * man was awakened- w the noise made by the mev. in entering the hotel by a rear-windowl He pursued the firebugs for som'e distance and fired two shots after them,-but without effect The Continental is one of the largest hotela Aere. IrtK**d $D mud Burned to Deatb- XrfttUstfille, April 30.'-News coraee from Hancock eoun^f, Tenn., that Mary, kulu and .John HatAeld were burned to death in a mountain cabin about five miles from Sneedville, Their mother, who is a widow; had gone to a neighbor's house, locking the children in the bpase- ' name atta photograph whea r<m *•• aipauntto'liMXLwa-bettetoaeA tmM *§•«•- •»* bretr St»- linai -iSfcltain *^iij^«* l^hnined and tJ^triromed ?!#% Oiuldr«a*s Heae tyeaf, in Silk, Mull and Cloves in all tiie Shades,' Ladies' and Childr sn's Straw; J jr|fiw Spring ! ^m^hlngs 16 ferinkejrfcoffi S t . eroppoaite post oat L seooi !* door wmoi Mrs. ©. K. eilbertSdrug ptor& \ ffh Tracttoti Co.»> AE ears run thro^ugfaj vIHage tf> Depot, ^orajiai §&IQQX and, Barracks at ten-niifltj^ in- tervals. ! !. . v Tickets, $ for 25c.|* wedlm mheti ears, and S^tripj faoofes at $2,oo, are for sale i t dtrl.ee, 37 Clinton street, m4 Smith & LaRo&fatf^s ^RB* Store* The Curf«w Win Kot King. loosing, Mich., Aprfl Sfc«-C3overnor Pingree vetoed the ©onovap curfew bill, which provided for the arrest of Children allowed upon the streets after * p. in. The governor characterizes the :*et a* taterierence Jsy the state in mat- ter* of purely domestic concern. l*to the Elevator Pit. _.,.._ April 30^-rErnest Stupps, ««ed 1>,assistant engineer of the Cham- ber of Commerce building, while oiling tTjtattfav iL a4MB»> ''t& #*e«*tor, fell wvtn stories into- the *-W ** •*7 , *^» 'trim pit ifm w«9 mriPWAf WJed- DERBY & BI^WN, Undertai:^rs .. aM En^almers. Upholstering and Furniture Reiairinir IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. NO. 28 RIVER STREET.! We guarantee our worfe sattefactory to ail desiring to place their orders ia our hands. NIGHT CAfctss W, S . DERBY. 116 Margaret St. 39 Ni Catherine St NOTICE. "The Carpet Duster" will com- mence running Monday, April 12. Orders can be left and bills paid at Mr. O. T. Larkin's store the same as heretoCcu-e, 819012 G. w,. ^ g y p T" ~~ z ~~~- M. A. DIAZ. 4 BeaiTBLT and Civil SBguieDr, C. H. Moorea f\ N«r Biofk..ciuAoh^ar«et. Pt*tt(ibarit)fc w.x, ' - ' . • m !."• ;1

EELS....-•?w % A Word of Warning! Use freely in Uonsccleaning Roth Balls, NaphtHaline Flakes, Camphor Gam ana Frederick's Bug-Killer. Also Chloride of Lime, Banner Lye, Carbolic

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Page 1: EELS....-•?w % A Word of Warning! Use freely in Uonsccleaning Roth Balls, NaphtHaline Flakes, Camphor Gam ana Frederick's Bug-Killer. Also Chloride of Lime, Banner Lye, Carbolic

-•?w

%

A Word of Warning!

Use freely in Uonsccleaning Roth Balls, NaphtHaline Flakes,

Camphor Gam ana Frederick's

Bug-Killer.

Also Chloride of Lime, Banner Lye,

Carbolic Acid, Piatt's Chlorides,

Copperas and Bromo Chloralum.

The neglect oi the use of these

articles often brings about a dan­

gerous condition of affairs. fgjpTrices right.

A T

Opposite Fost Office,

PLATTSBURGH, N. Y.

- T H E -

S N . Y ,

(Successors 60 SOWXES & EDWABDS)

Complete Line.., ...Hea^y aiui Snelf

Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings.

GLAZED WORK A SPECIALTY.

Corner Blocks, Base Blocks, Threshold and Stair Work,

Lime, Cement, Plaster, Mortar Hair,

Iron, Steel, Nails, Axles, Barbed and Plain Wire,

Wagon Wood Work, Plate Glass, Colored Glass,

Plain Glass* lazza Columns, Newel and Landing Posts,

Balusters, Hope. All fclnds of Building Paper, including 3-ply

fiooflng Agentstfor Iron andSteelBooflng. Agents*or Johti'sFloor Paint Agenu. for F O. Pierce Flour Paint. ^i.geuta:fort;onnor'sFloorJ'alnti!_ .,,. „^^,

*"ABrent9Tor"E0gerS*Trtoor'>aInt. Sole agents for Kellogg's Prepared House;

faints, nest ma<l& Sole agents for Reynolds' Interior and Ex­

terior Mni=li-Meyer & Leoowestine Adamant Finish. Complete line Paints. Oils* Glass and Varnish,

Grind Btoaes, Forks, Hoes, Bakes, Wheel Bar­rows, Horse Nails, Atlant c Lead, Tinting dolors, Sfeeins and Boxes. Sraphlte Elastic Paint for Tin Roofs. Smoke "tacks etc.

AD¥ERltSS M 'OTE DAIOLY PRESS

PWEHSPJ ~War In the Levant Majf Sprjead

, All Over Europe.

0M&G&EE ON £L&NS,

King George Is Preparing to leave Greece on a Russian Vessel.

THE »ELTANKIS 1KNISTEX FA LLS.

t>cmetrlu» Italll , t h e Opposit ion IA ader

I s ttrow Prime Mintate*.-Outllnci M3s

Policy as ««Peaoe Through, War" a n d

Says He W i l l Accept STo Mandate* J fmta

K i n g or Chamber—More F l g h t l n j i n

Eplrua and Thegialy, With Apparent

Indecisive Eesutts—-Turkish. 'War rtilpa

Grounded I n the Dardanelles—Mos­

lems Encouraged (Over Report* of i Vic­

tories—JSdhem Pturtia'a Movements.

Wash ington , April 30^—The -powers of E u r o p e h a v e not m e t w i t h succe 39 in arrang ing peace be tween Turkey Greece, according to newA' which reached the W a s h i n g t o n embass ies , embassadors of A u s t r i a a n d Germany at Constant inople resent the act ion of F r a n c e in threatening to uphold Greece and h int that France is. ac t ing 1 by p r o x y for R u s s i a . !

T h e a u t o n o m y proposed for Cre^e i s c a u s i n g dissensions . E a * h n a t i o n de­s ires to d ic tate t h e p lan of it* I !ng-l&nd w a n t s to p lace the i s l a n d u:ider Brit ish suzerainty , w i t h a .proinjsi} to hand it over to» Greece at the Brs t .op­portunity. Aus tr ia a n d ' I t a l y Want a governor of I ta l ian or Gertpan l ineage.

Emperor Wil l iam i s try ing t o s t em

and h a s The

e * t y | t m u s t - A s - :recogh;l*edv • 1 A m t h e premier des ignated by" events ."

QiJpoaitlori le&aefa mmt^mAlk] ixW^'&iiim the pvogtm si Aftvit

"Tested 99

1 1 f i n ROCOUE h a v e t h e i r u s u a l f u l l s e l e c t e d

s t o c k o f

Peter Henderson's Tested Seeds, Field, Flower,

Vegetable and Lawn. Seeds,

P lan t s , Bulb?, &c.

ordered daily if not in stock.

"Only Henderson's Tested Seeds kept'' SMITH & LaROCQUE,

City Pharmacy , P l a t t s b u r g h .

BREWSTER'S

Meat Market, W. B. BREWSTER, Prop.

30 Margani Strati, Opposite Wifhtrill House,

Fresh and Salt Meats, Oysters,

Canned Goods, Fruits and Vegetables

T H E B E S T GOODS F O E T H E L O W ­

E S T C A S H 1PBIGES.

Goods del ivered t o a n y part of t h e l i n a g e . 668-tf

PARKHURST & TAYtOR.

Accident Insurance .Marlon Block. ClkitonSt.

M/f. PAi««U*JS]r, - S. TAYLOR

jfc» the ;!»#.#«& H*t .rooking A*k joor

^fWrnf^SJ^mf' :fp"

f or tfaeo. -

A e

the torrent of popular indignat ion in A t h e n s a g a i n s t the royal fami ly , i t i s learned a t the G e r m a n embafisy. The German minis ter to the Grsek capital h a s had a personal i n t e r v ew wi th K i n g George. I t is surmised t la t the message he delivered f r o m the ejm peror caused the k ing's order for ret irement of De lyanni s .

The emperor has been Incenied aga ins t the premier s ince t h e lattt r's bold s tand in urging the Greeks to c i s -regard the powers and to fight; f or the i r Cretan brethren. Wil l iam be l ieves Oiat With a different leader the Greeks y 'ill pursue a policy more agreeable to Ger­many.

At t h e French embassy it i s believed, that Greece will he wit l ing to Suspend hostil it ies only oh obtaining XJK te. Otherwise she will try to cont inue the w a r and in this manner hourly jnen4ce the peace of ..Europe.

Therefore. France,, Russ ia a n d Eijg" land .have a lready to ld t h e su l tan give up Crete to Greeee. THe; oilier

t h r e e j iow^raJdnlenjte -oapatti fh ixaw £fe» o f .settlement,, and consequentlyyfyebsti . diplomats f ear t h a t : t h e peace of iju-rope m a y be, disturbed very Soon:

T h e n e w s from Greece eont ini ies a larming, and i t i s understood that H u s s i a n ship i s l y i n g a t Piraeus, I h e port of A t h e n s , r e a d y to embark iihe royal family .

RALL! IS NOW PREMIER, DelyannlB' Ministry Overthrown and

New Cabinet f o r m e d . . Athens , April 30. —As w a s anticlpatfea, the D e l y a n n i s minis try h a s fallen, a n d the Opposition, under the lead of 'M. Ralli, has formed a cabinet . The 1 i t-l owing is a l i s t of the n e w minister^

Premier and Minister of Marine—pit ORalli. • • I

Minister of War-^M. T s a m a v o s . Minister o f Finance—GVf. SimopoulcL Minister of Educat ion—M.Carapah ?S. Minister of the Interior—M. Teotao id. M. De lyanni s , t h e ret ir ing premtir ,

h a s m a d e t h e fo l lowing s t a t e m e n t : "King George s u m m o n e d m e to iJaa

DEMETEIEIS E A L M . , I T h e N e w Greqdak Ereihiex.J

pa lace , y e s t e r d a y <aad aeelared exeept ional c i r c u m s t a n c e s h im t o replace t h e

compel! ea catilnet" a u d i o

form a n e w min i s try fronj t h e ra?k> of t h e Opposit ion. Me begged m e second h i s efforts. X Refused t o ten< ier m y resignation* » o t hecause of l a y l ove of power, but 'to ^order t h a t au oh,

o* a s t ep m i g h t n o t n e mis interpreted , urged t h e k ing t o tia& t h e iprlvilege t h e ;crpwn, dec lar ing t h a t I w a s reajftf t o s i gn t h e r o y a l decree ^provided t h e la t ter e a s t n o Tilame npotk vtSi I adifleiji that there w a s jjo reason t o fear t ( | | s u c h a m e a s u r e w o u l d b e consider «8 by Europe a s a ^ e n s u r e U p o n the giifc; ernmertt's poll^yi J u d g m e n t would B* formed a s to t h a t a f t e r t h e n e w capi-^ net had been i s l e i '

M. D e l y a n n i s added: *X caamot iU* vu lge the pol icy which 1 consider eff aeeesBary. i c a n crdy « a y that ii»B country would h a v e -emerged from ; lt# M a i s wi thout ItieiB vt tJESisitory a»ft couia b a v e obta inea * ratifieation" <M' t h e northern front ier a>y ,'*bandonJ[Sf Crete, according taiQ&g de i i i tods of 1M powera The latter m e a s u r e would he m facUitated -the tfufo ln*amti6h its i n * pr inc iple o f itox$/am W&e&ts1' wo\m n o t l i a v e been taipaired. while p * jpeace %E Barppfi'. im/mH-. * w v e 'been-aured bseattse trf-ljie *ec*«Icatloh of pm f r q o t i e r . l l n t Adjudged jft ijjc; t r e a t y

aJireteS m* 's&pwtiiiiiw tot tut 'b*>\ cciui truct ip* « f . . i h e mjaJstr*, f rom : i*< Ojnw^MUWk'IK.'leigtt' «ot>»oie4 t h e ^ c o -jK*al « , « « * ? • H . itotlropeuJe wmttt. a n d M M , " S t t t t a r « i » « aU f*l»e m +• *

the CHambeix WA m u s t h a v e sat absO' lutelyl free hand," * ..•"",

public tension |s rfttcli. Teli? .a; e c h a n g e o f m l n i « t ^ r ^ a i i ^ %i fa !

lelieved iha,t ajl serlousf danger of; aal disorder i s - r ^ m o v # . Ral irs pqUcy m a y briefly b% ^e-" d a s honor^bie a>eace ^secirrad-:h w a r . 3Ke^b.rts a s ; t o t l i e prosr'

pectS jof the InterVen^ott'Of t h e powers ;

are vjery conflictinfir, w i i l e t h e n e w s from•. she sea t o f w a r i s v e r y indecis ive.

ACcbrding t o A d l s p a t c b f r o n i 3Pbarsa-1a, General SniolenSki's br igade h a s been i o r Sfe bovra engaged i n t ierce cot i -fliet w j t h ia. Turk i sh a r m y corps b e -y o a a RTelestiho, in t h e directidn -of A i -va l i . jA bat ta l ion Of eViOttes a h d A biat-t e r y &t arti l lery h a v e b e e n * e n t tb r e -

enforce t h e GreekB, wfepse jkpsition; S » T p e a r s k o be f a v o r a b l e A i v A l i ^ s seifCfl m i l e s s o u t h w e s t of Ve le s t ino a n d plose to t h e r a i l w a y conneefing^ that ^lafce' ^ t t h feiaisaiai I t ift Just m i d w a y be* tweeri '^e l e s t inp And t b e iGreek h e a d -JUUartfers.'

The OroWri P r i n e e Cohs.tantlne is.-sf^i-i itinjgr ikhe v a r i o u s c a m p s iand Inspir ing cohtidBnce-and hope.

General Mavromiona-eiiB, l a t e chief of, 'ike d[re^k stalfe b a s hsft t h e Greek camftjana iB^T^idriflngtb AthenA,

lit t h e dlfeot ion of tferikhala t b e Greeks l i a v e t w o battal ions of infantry,; s e v e r a l ' b«ttjeriej9? of ArtiOery a n d a sftuadipn o f .cavalry. A dispatch re>: ceivedt from - PharsaJA .'saysk t h a t A! Turbish army' corps f rom fcarlssa h a s occupied Triishala unresisted.

The T u r k i l h at«th,oritle% are s tr iv ing t o prevent | h e exceis'ea of th"e i u t k i B h soldlerfe. In thje t o w n s . TBhe t turks b a v e destroyed s i x g u n s found a t i a r l s s a , . I t appears t h a t t h e T t t t t e ftre jpre-,

paring'; SimiiltaneonBiy t o jattacls the g r e e k s ; a t ,I*harsB:ia from, the e a s t And: She w e s t . A lready there a*c rumors t h a t tb!e Greeks find their posit ions u n ­tenable and are prepar ing t o fal l , back on Thermo'Eylffi. • k

T h e import from Constant inople ,"by w a y si Vienna , that Canaan P i s h A Is g o i n g t » Jarilha w i t h 'iO.dOO addi t ional troops is, ;not confirmed.

T h e G** e e^ %me jC£®tured the m a g a -s ine at' Fa lpp iada , i n Turkish E p i r u s , -wi th .A l a * g e q u a n t i t y of annninatfon' and lO.DOO shells. There were several iiiinor skirmishes yes terday a long t h e line*., y . .j: ,-, •:. irvi*-- " "*•- '-•*•—-«--•" -A ' 'The iBre^ks h a v e occfipiea the he ights of Pfentepigadia, n o r 0 i of A r t a a n d about half ^way "between t h a t place a n d Janlna , in Bpirns . T h e Greek trootis have intrenched themselves on * t h e he ights mentioned.

.**W* mHitm -*. . 4est ~. «reAkSis#; ov££.;&erv It is belleved-tbe'-wiirvelWH!*;

this feiew,: but M. .©eiigeoi3gi» refused t» Join I the min i s t ry iiriieas- the premier werej c h o s e n outs ide the r e g u l a r l y c o n * st i tuf ied'parties in the bouid. T o t h i s ' H i m n i .replied t h a t h e c o u l d not , ahd w o u l d n o t At tempt t o f o r m a. minlittxy witltdiut t h e support o f t h e other ^»ppo-sltiott seoUons i n t h e i s s e i n b l y r a n d Ae tried t o induce | a t toelfgeOrgis t o tfOln.

A tnewspa^er corre^pftadeat bAd a h i n t e r t i e w With XL MalUt duringr which, th is kmbit ious Greek, statessnan. »otit-l ineal to is poUcy. HL. i t a t t i M i d i "3Sy po i i c s will; oons is t i n t h e reorganista-f. tiott of the a r m y , w h o s e recuperat ive forces^ are pract ical ly inexhAijuttitoley A n d the re-establiahment tit order,, ttr ge tber w i t h a fiatisfactory soltrtloft o l Ohr fore ign relations. ' "We re fuse t o 16-' cept a m a n d a t e from the Atag or f r o m f Sondopy Apri l 50.^-A dispatch t o Ta#!

^tctbriftis of tbfe TArklsh: troop* Aavac enormous ly ralited, t h e mlUtar# 1

ispirlt Ofjthe tfcurkS^ h d t h e <Kmndenci fhtw lhlpirea in Tu-rkey* vitality lii reAlovirir *hfe is»Atits*aetibn M% -*it»: the preseh't r^i%e» *hife stt .the :«smA t i m e reijaering t h e powers* s c h e m e e t :

rsfbrmf ist t h e Dt tcman empire harder, of reftllsitfidi, ' " - i t - i s - ^ n o u t t e i d t h a t t h e S t r s t dlvjti » ion of the? Turkish; a r m y At B l a s s o a i h a s entered • € & & t«irrttory front ttti viclfilty;,6jf,Dttrna«l a n d hita capttirei? the;tbwA*f?-55&rk!oi>* te'lthportaht-GreeA. b a i e ^' t iperat lo&s, a b o u t 18 m i l e s wcsl A f t k r l g s A "••: ''•••_ : . ::';

• .' Greek* X«»*Inr Tufkhih Territory. ' .''

to

D e m e t r i u s Rall i i t h e T i e w p r e m i e r a n d minis ter of marine , w a s th,e leader o f the Opposition. H e h a s been^mlniater of jus t i ce and m i n i s t e r of the interior, and is wel l k n o w n throughout t h e country a s a n 'able l a w y e r a n d orator: H e i s 50 y e a r s old and studied a t t h e univers i t ies of A t h e n s a n d Par i s .

Anargyros SimopOulo, the n e w min- , i s t er of finance, i s a deputy f rom Pat;-"nessis, andy l ike t h e o t h e r m e m b e r s A t t h e cabinet , h a s been a prominent m e m b e r of t h e .Opposition* Severai t imes Me h a s been jflbilster of jus t i ce . s

Constant ine G a r a j a n b s i s A :deputy fjcom A x t a a n d .jine j>f tther m o s t ;dis-' t ingi i lshed financiers of Greece. Th}s i s the second t ih i e t h a t he h a s b e e n Ap­

p o i n t e d tto th i s department- o f t h e csibi-yxet. - . -_.

George Teotaokl i s a d e p u t y f r o m Corfu a n d w a s minis ter of jthe-Interior -under i jr ime .Minister Tricpupls.

M. T s a m a v o s h a s Ipng been asso-^ e lated w i t h M. Ral l i in h i s c a m p a i g n a g a i n s t roya l ty . ,;

An Armistice Asked For. Berlin.* April 30.—-The FTanAtort :Zel-

iyng publ i shes a dlBpateh from- C o n -stantinoij ie s a y i n g thAf ; bwing t o t h e Greek fore ign m i n i s t e r Aaying: ma&£ t h e reques t t o t h e R u s s i a n m i n i s t e r A t A t h e n s the embassador?1 o f x i r e a t B r l t -alii, F r a n c e and R u s s i a a t Constantino^ pje ,have asked the 'TuTklsh gcverfl inetit ' t o !grant Greece a n •arnrfstice, .,

All the ta lk AoSir i s o f t h e Interven-' f ion of t h e powersr E v e n G e r m a n y w i s h e s t o s a v e Greece f r o m t h e t j o i s c -a u e n c e s m defeat , a n d At Is s t a t e d ' i n Ber l in oiflclal c ircles t h a t t h e p o w e r s "VEiH in tervene p t t h e i r o ^ n in i t iat ive i f Greece d i e s n o t i n v i t e t h e m ,

Aocorai i ig t o v. d l spatcA fcom Cbn-utaat inoBle t o T h e itokslansseiger, t h e $ui tan Tvill a c c e p t t h e ^ol lpvang cohdi-, t l o n s as^Bie b a s i s o f p e a c e ; - T h e w i t h ­d r a w a l p i t h e Greek t r o o p s f r o m C r e t e , a n d t h e t e i e s tabbAhment sl,fke frph^. t i e r o t l i s p , Greece -to ^e'excl i iaea-iroji i t * u t h e A d v a n t a g e s pf cap i tu la t ions a n d t o D a y JriSe&ml^y;.

f. Oonflitlon» $$• ^Jxete. .. A xii ,sdi-r-A dispatch to The 1 ^Khanla Aoyjr'that t h e a d -the in ternat iona l ifieet A a v e ifisttrgeajA * t iAkroWri -.snd

longed "conference w i t h t h e teadfrs . lAArfllrAl Canevaro; i h t c r m e d them st the fall of i*ar|uia *Ad of-ithA .retreat •& .the JSrMf uxoir* 'Th^ ' «a* sgemny mov&s. »na%a*featoheASo*fea . t o > o to] •Gwsisce t o t y s h t .afpr jB9njr!

'<weor.se. J ' [ . • • • ' • • . ' ' ' ' ;' T h e admiral*- then a n n o u n c e d t h e i r '

Intention! to. rfelax theTapcltAae, whlc fe j t h e » «Atd> wai'.'jnoi Intended t o •*t«rvA t h e isfttaaers i n t o #uT*tecJipn. \*&m AJ-' a o r e d t n f in«urireAtt=.tAAt t h e y w o n t a ; be p e r m i t t e d t o c o m e i n t o t i » t o w n * ^ o y i a e d ' - l t h e y •e»Aae. tm*cat^l* jto'aaaf--< * » » • a n y t h i n c t h e y m i g h t need, a n d

:.mor»o^«eFtJw* thAf swwtld b # * t r # f l w 4 -. Trim * a f»oor* 'to- *ms& *i»«n' a«almit

Cn«irtsi#tnaote, Apri l AA-«a»e « > « * - ' l i fe •quadkoB A w w * y * t l e f t t h e O M -

• i jswa|Baii*i JHWWS^^^^WW -.-w»#*^w^ < M ^ V I . ^ • •^^P '

' l » v « m i i - N p ' n M l !»_«>*»

*

"TM>&-piq$i- A r t a ^ a y s ; ^TAe Sreek,'(Soldiers are pour ing I n t A

t h e . to*rh in ^ a t m o a t libbrojten co i* umn,- comteg iappsret t t jy - froftt eiiferiv •ppiht o f t h e Turkish territory hitherto' ^ecApied % t h e Sreelts.'' ' 4

- The Titties^ Aorr^spopdeiitr a d d s that t i these soldiers «hoys- Ajpvsigftis^ot a de«| s i re t o (ie6)fttlniie t h e figiilt agaihst . t h f ; Turk8, A n d t h e i r presAhCe crowds {be{ t o w n ayCfold abovj|'Sts^nOrAiAl capaci*, ty, 'canslng serious - inconveniences at i f threatenhife a n l e s s jwmefhing; 1# dctt-to* rel ieve t h e (pressure, a seriouA dSgQ'

- ' Greece W»y Xv»qn»te Cret«. HiortdoA, AUrir ^ b . ~ M r . B e n r y 3S6r«

1 1

BRITAIN AND THE BOERS Harcourt Accuses the Govern-

merit of Favoring War,

1ITTEELT ASSAILEf CHAKBSEliilH.

•«o.

m a n , T h e JJai ly 'vOhrohic ie^ corre-* defeated "by the good sense and fee l ing sppnaent At'A.ihenf, says ; : ' * t bAye iS,4 o f t h e people of Cape Colony, a n d h e v e r y p i ^ t r « a j ^ r t i > b t e l i § v e t h A t i G r e e e e : pointed t o ' t h e adoption of t h e recent is-AOw d i s p o s e d t o retAW her «ofce* t r a m 'EpiroA a n d Aren: t b evacuate the; isT«i.n* 0fC*ete»*- a*wp ^ hundred thCusahdj t i o n of th i s w a r pol icy, adding /WomeA a n d jehilaren ^re hohieiess and . dest i tute rin ^ !piessaiy, a n d the.JgoVern' m e n t i s -unable to . re l i eve their AeedA"

3The Se«ret»ry F o r the Colonieo T»Vk* Back »nd.Acca*es the l . lber»l[te»d#r o i S e i n e t7«n»ntriotIc—Tre»»ttry [ Heqnlrea •liOOO.000 ITor "Cape Town XK|f«nte».

I>ondon, Apri l 30.—During tjhe d e b a t e on the budget . e s t imates in the house of commons Sir "William Harcourt , the l i b e r a l leader, referring td t h e £200,» M0 ($1,000,000) se t a p a r t i n thk b u d g e t es t imates for„ s trengthening she B r i t ­i sh garr i sons i n South Africa, s a i d t h i s s u m w a s for a w a r pol icy In South Afr ica which t h e Opposition w a s de­termined to resist .

Sir 'William Harcourt then accused Sir- Chamberlain of t ry ing t o farouse a War fee l ing a n d of us ing in. ail h i s r e ­cent s ta t ement s "exasperating l a n ­guage, calculated t o exc i te fee l ing of, *aclai hatred in South Africa, which, however," he added, "thank God, h a s la i l ed ." W

Sir Wi l l i am Harcourt 's remarks w e r e met w i t h cr ies of "Oh!" • :ContinuIng,.he sa id the p o l i c y of t h e

fet-retary of s t a t e for t h e colonies, i n -fending to produce a rac ia l Tf&r, w a s

1 fJ

IF YOU DOUBT IT, TRY I' JS MARSHALL FIELD TO WEDt ftmnor of Kl* JBfogage&ieni; t« the Widow

.of G«ner»l Shpritlan, Chicago t April SO,*—The D a i l y K e w «

s s y s that lit i s common t a l k in Chicago soc i e ty circles that M r . Marshal l F ie td i s e n g a g e d to the w i d o w of the la te General P h i i l p H . Sheridan a n d t h a t t h e wedd ing will t a k e place in the near future. I

Mr. Fie ld , Who h a s jus t returned t o the oity,. declined t o s ee a reporter. ;

Mrs. Sheridan w a s formerly Miss S u c k e r , daughter df Oeneral Rttcker of t h e r e g u U r a r m y , a n d w a s married to General Sheridan in this c i ty about 80

conci l iatory m o t i o n i n t h e p a r l i a m e n t o f Cape Colony a s h e i n g a - c o h d e m n a

_ t h a t he w a s h a p p y t o ' s a y the" peaceful jpolicy w a s supported -toy t h e government of Gape Colony*

T h e secre tary of s t a t e for the co l ­onies, Mr. Joseph. Chamberlain, jhere e n ­tered t h e house, a n d amid cheers Sir W i l l i a m Harcour t remarked;

"In the presence o f Mr. Chamberlain j repeat t h a t i t w a s a defCi\t 01 a n ut­t e r l y -unjustifiable a t t e m p t t o e W t e ill feel ing.

W h e n w e are a s k e d t o r e f u t e a re duction of t h e t a x e s of Great Bri ta in

Shot His Wife «nd Kil led Hmuelf . ' " Phllardeipbia, A p r i l go.-r-FrAnk S A r t -

Aal, an, e n g i n e e r on t h e Philadelphia*: W^hiJflgtoA A n d Balf lhtore rai lroad, ?ftiot-Aha".probably fktal}y w o u n d e d h i s j w i f e Sophia a t his: boarding Aouse anat then ;comttjit^ed .sulfide,! shoot ing hint-Belft, >g?he 'tragedy ivas t h e resu i t of ddr niefjfe'' djfricuHies, ^hfe ".0001116 were married s i x y e a r s , b u t recent ly H a * t - 1 , : l n order to contribute m o n e y , to pro-

Aet1 t reated :her Ibrutally, a n d s h e wAs! *?ote 'warlike, aggress ive operakions In forced, t o l e a v e h i m About t w o w d n f h s l S o u t h Africa, w e oppose a mog> deter-Ago, teewjpent f o r her' t o m e e t . MAM m i & e d res istance. The proposal t o a p -wi th A y i e ^ t o •Wconciiing their^^ d i f f e r - r ^ ] y m o n e y to unjustif iable riuposes enAea;' 'They talkecT tor1 a short t i m e , , AsramBt the wi l l of the people and g o v -

ahd: thett S m | t « weAt fco b i s r o o m oh- ernment of Cape Colony i s o n i of the sonie pretext , .B^tiu^fhgjJv^th a * e - * o s t Injurious th ings v^ith refe-ence to Volyer, A e AOmmltted flhe doub le br ime . ' * h e empire ever submit ted t o t h e Aouse

"-••. ' •, .; , .;•'• ; "' ' J rof commons ."

Bad.'Outlook For'Havana. M Mr. Chamberlain Ketallatcs. C i ty p t Mexico , Apri l 30.—^General!? .Mr. .Chamberlain sa id h e h a d not e x -

. W i i U s m s , . formerly consul geAcral :ot; |Pected to have to reply t o "pefnielous t h e JUniteiii State's to H a v A m v i s Aere. ;

H e . rep'orig bus iness c o m p l e t e l y i»resv t r a t e d t h e r e , a n d ^ h e inhabitaints >ot t h e i s iand arc reduced f rom opulence t o the d ires t p o v e r t y . Others a r r i f u i g front C u b a A t a t e t h a t t h e country'; i s iraiaed, a n d there i s no h o p e *or hAul A century; of i t s r ecovermg i t s former importance^ A Spanish vo lunteer w h o i?jja s e r v e d AIAtbiie aA.tbe^a-rriiylhashedme to M e x i ­c o . H e s t a t e s t h a t the troops there w a n t t o c r u s h w h a t t h e y c a l l ' t h e '.'black rebe l s" a n d return to Spa in ahd. upse t t h e m o n a r c h y A n d es tab l i sh * , r e -pubiic . • : • • • . . ' • • .

BrooWyn'B Trial Trip SatiBntotory. t.'

Washington, April 3^^prarhodbre D e w e y , o£ t h e caaval trial j ioard ihas reported,briefly to t h e seere tary of t h e n a v y from N e w p o r t t h a t t h t e s e a trial of t h e B r o o k l y n ;was ^uce.essful i n e v ­e r y respects T h e r n a c A i n e r y i n Darttc-uiar, about which nome apprehension w a s fe l t , i s .said t o A a v e worked «with perfect ion, T h e .'destination of t h e Brook iynf ln E n g l a n d w a s se t t l ed irpoA a s Spit Jaead, w h e r e t h e fore ign s n i p s wb lch viiil par,ticlp8*fe in t h e Jubl iee

p r o g r a m m e w i l l assemble . ,'

Jjfo TlOlne* of Howlanol. N e w Bedford, MasA, Apr i l iSo.-r-TJie

m m tresst irer, WiHiam i j . ©roWlapd; Js: i t f i i tmisaing. TEhe police: a r e tb l lowing; u p every cle\v, b u t a s y e t . , A a v e m e t With no success . Q. *^M.:XihBsb!tiryi a cot ton broker, wAo I s l a f t b e city* A a y s ' t h a t ' C o n d u c t o r B i c e o f flie Old Coiohy d iy i s lon -of t h e 'Consplidateia r o a d i s Very pos i t ive , that Mr. ^ o ^ l a n p t wAa A> p a s s e n g e r o n h i s train- into" Prov idence •last asriday even ing . 3He t h i n k s M r . iHowiand boarded t h e t^alfi At T a u n » t o n . . • ,. '"

i l n r d e r e r Sentenced.

F a i r f a x Courthouse, # & , , A p r i l SOi-* # u d g e JJpscomh s e n t e n c e d t h e n e g r o Ijewls, w h o s e outrage a n d jmnrder of:

'Mrs. B l e ^ 6 1 ^ u s e d a Q l d Je|:citemera, i n this sect ion aAd n e a r l y ' r e s u l t e d i n ; a

"lynching, to^be h a n g e d oii 'June & tEhe Montiee l lo guar,d>, ordered h e r e b y iGoy-. ernor O'SArrah t o jprevpnt m o b « i p -lehce,: Aai*c gaAe haAk t o .Ohajjottee-vilie, And the exjatementlaap «ubBldeji,

and dangerous language ." H e c lassed Sir W i l l i a m Harcourt ' s u t t erances a s

%belng "unpatriotic i n the h ighes t d e ,'gfee, embarrass ing t o ^he government •vaAd injur ious to the., cause of peace ." I Continuing, Mr. Chamheriain [assert­e d t h a t S ir Wi l l iam Harcourt ' s .state-raents t o t h e effect t h a t t h e Aovern-

jjment's pol icy Aad been Rejected b y t h e ISKpe-govermnen't and~>eorJle w e r e a b ­so lu te ly inaccurate , T h e policy of ,the government , h e explained.-'J'hnd n o t Changed f r o m t h e first.! Only e ircum-s t a n c e s h a d c h a n g e d t b s o m e extent . The government A jpolieyi Mr. Ch amber-la in added, i s t o m a i n t a i n i t s obliga­t ions , .not t o engage i n A n y agg ress ive operat ions o r t o attack, t h e inc epenfl-ence of a fr iendly s tate , "but "tc m a i n -t a l r o u r o w n r ights a n d t h e Tights of the nation." • jl

UI h a d i o p e d / L cont inued Mr. C h a m berlain,, "that our p o l i c y w o u l i con-t&tue to h e nonrJartlsan^ b u t t lu t hope Juis disappeared in t h e f a c e of Sir W i l ­l i a m Harcourt ' s speech, a n d I n o weh&l-l e n g e h im to r a i s e the isnjue. Are 1 he Op pos i t ion prepared t o t a k e i s sue T rith u s wAen w e s a y that , wh i l e w e i n t e n d t o observe our o w n dbligatsonB, w e in tend t h a t obl igat ions toward l i s shal l a l so 3be .mainta ined? "The quest ion h s t w e e n TIS and t h e Transvaal - i s , n o t 3r terfer-ence in the 'internal jaffairg at t h e Transvaa l or a n a t t a c k Jupon'- theXon Aon ^convention upon 'pur p a i t ; but hreaches of t h e convent ion u p i n t h e p a r t .of the Transvaal , a n d w e a « ca l l ­i n g upon-them in -friendly t e r m s to g i v e

Attbgeid Xtetffe* 3te«pon»lbIUty. •

Chicago, Apr i l 30i-T^EJx^(3qV:erAor :M%* ;geld, -whose i n a m e f r o m t i i n e t o t lnje l i a s been connected, w i t h t h e affairs of the< defunct Globe B a v i n g e hanky g a v e ^out An tnterv iew, i n WAich A e ' dehied t h a t A e Tfeas In a n y i v a y respoAilble

for. the irregalarittfiB ot\ Its mahake-menfc ISe admlteJamyinigr Jfeen A A M * rower Irom-^he AaAk,!; b*ut flays 'it w a a itirapiyAtoatterofbuafnejis. ' •"'*'.••

iPittsburg,, Apri l tt>.~5?he W e s t i n g 'house AdrbrAke jKunpsthy p o s t e d aiotfoea, JA i t s f o u n d r y rdepartmenjt ^nhouhciSs^' a, reduct ion o f *agej» raHginR tiom 8Q t o i^^per cent . - ln.:,p«ome- | sases the' cAt' equals M c e n t s a day* TAere Is ,cotw Ittderabie'. itftlft arnons ;th# 50ft Affected o f re fus ing t o A c c e p t t h f l ^ d t t c t i o A ,

'• /.-. ' • TBig j n b » j | » * W ! < ^ o , • .-' •'•),•

,'TOrbAto>-'"Aprii Zbr-Whel-ln. Si-jBci--hardij^t Wholesale- ^Kpoeiy Acre- . .a id oAraafe ts t h e e x t e n t o f *m;<m, '^0* s tock a n d bui ld ings *r«c£ JAsured t « f

•#BJ0OJ . OAe of' t h e 'Ibemam 'NWMi -oyer-poxm _»y 'MAoAg *»St fen. trpm * Jadderi.

^lieifc. ."• - -'- '. . . - ) - - . ' • - '

'. New TotJc. A»ril »>•—Fire de*trorttfl * four Atofcr txr** brtaai** -A** the tost -i»#.HortkT^lflA jrtf*tt, Brooklyn, twd for stora^ by tA« Pratt JM«ml«rd OU Company, A c<»»1deritf»te aowwuit of

:m»mmr' -mm |*aQy dam*od. :i&

xts sat i s fact ion ." I Sir Wi l l iam Harcour t ihere int irnipt-

pd Mr. Chamberlain b y remarking; " T o u are ask ing for £200,600. "What nonsensel", exclaimed Mr.

Chamberlain. Aotly. Prolonged cheer­i n g greeted t h e sharp |answer of the aecretary of s t a t e f o r the co lon! ;s, w h o cont inued: <

" W e are a sk ing f o r £500,000 -wl [en 'ev-erybody A n o w s 1iie T r a n s v a a l i s a sk ing lor a mil l ion a n d f o r Aundrei ls and Aundreds of thousands. T h e ' T r s n s v a a l h a s been awning t o a n e x t e n t abso­lute ly unjust i f iable ' b y ' a n y ordinary pClicy of defense. W e h a v e noj. com-iplained, Tmt t h e result h a s beep t h a t the p r e s e n t a r m a m e n t s ' o f t h e T r a n s ­v a a l are a l toge ther disproportionate to •Hie defens ive resources 'of Cape Colony, and t h e Transvaa l ' s nrma|ments, ftfter expending considerably over a mi l l ion Upon them, are sti l l go ing o n . B a t t e r i e s of ar t i l l ery andt m a x i m guns , mil l ions ;and millioniS o f cartriagjea and AUndreais -of t h o u s a n d s o f rifle: i h a v e Tieeh imported into t h e Tra,nsYfl»l." . M r , Chamberla in concluded b y s a y -

*1 do » o t bel ieve there i s ja feelling t o repudiate the pol icy of the itoyer.iment. On the contrary, I bel ieve t h e feeling o f e v e r y l o y a l Br i t i sh s u b j e c t i t t h e Cape to b e one of grat i tude a n d sa t i s

Miction w i t h Aer maJesty^s g o v e r iment . I unders tand t h a t they .recogni* J their pos i t ion a s the representat ives at t h e p a r a m o n t power i n South AfrtoA a n d axe determin^dy...tn t h e often u s e d words, t o mainta in t h e in tegr i ty of 4ll our irlKbt* 'under t h e convention*"

J E B W Itor Xa>wla«Knter. i, B o s t o n , AprJI a©.—Jobn S, Moylan ,

chai-Bed wit j i m a n s l a u g h t e r i n cjtueing t h e Aea th of T h o m a s Saul , w h s died slj S t a t i o n ? l a s t S u n d a y n ight , w a s before J u d g e A d a m s ' i n t h e muhic jpa l cr iminal cour t a n d w a s he ld in [$10,000 f o r » Aeartn* Jfcty 7, ^Saul died {%• t h e -result o f te*uria« Alleged t o A a v f Aeen s u s t a i n e d whi te l o a c r o w d w i t t m s i n g a . s t r e e t fyrfci* {

'"•.-JBewRrly, MMML, Apri l «(,. ljOirttt, «x-«aayor o f BabuuA.. l*i* *, prominent nss idaot of fljedli«n,a»«4-«p years . B A

• r , j n i ^ i i r t t A K d t y , Holt 01 u. «*«iMk iMK

HILL WILL CONTROL IT The Northern P a sorbed by the Grea

ific to Be At^ t Northern

HBSTDElSfrWIIf'risillSISHAtClOtef

Map. IPHEL gHERIDAKr.

y e a r s ago. 1 She h a s three children, t w i n boys , 'aged about 18, and a daughter . Since the death of her husband Mrs . Sheridan h a s resided i n Wash ington . She i s a devout Catholic,, a n d her chil­dren a r e "being educated i n schools o f t h a t faith.l

Mr. F ie ld h a s been a w i d o w e r for about a year. H e h a s t w o c h i l d r e n -Marshall - F ie ld , Jr., w h o resides on Prair ie avenue , and Mrs. Arthur Tree, w h o h a s since Aer marr iage res ided a t . Leamington , Eng land .

ROW FOLLOWS RECEPTION, *Jew York |Citl*en Knocked Down by a

a United States Navy Xlentenant. N e w York, April 30.—The Hera ld t i l ls

morning A a s the fo l lowing: Those w h o stopped v e r y la te in t h e

Waldor f after the recept ion t o the n a v a l officers W e d n e s d a y n i g h t w e t e treated to A round of fisticuffs i n w h i c h a l i e u t e n a n t of "the "Cnited S t a t e s n a v y a n d a wel l k n o w n m a n about t o w n were the pr incipals .

I t w a s a b o u t 4 o'clock In t h e morning , w h e n about 30 s u r v i v a l s of the fittest" were S i t t ing a b o u t the t a h l e s in the p a l m Toom" finishing u p t h e ample s u p ­p l y o f c h a m p a g n e w h i c h t h e c o m m i t ­t e e in c h a r g e h a d provided tor t h e re ­fect ion of gues t s .

A m o n g the group w e r e m a n y officers of U n c l e Sam'** n a v y a n d of the -foreign warships , w i t h a sprinkling of c ivi l ians. "Everybody w a s i m m e n s e l y 3olly* a n d ~no thought of trouble w a s harbored ajs the 'polyglot ta lk w e n t bravely on ,

•Suddenly, a s if a torpedo "had been •xploded, t h e American aieutenant" m a d e a shqrp remark t o t h e civi l ian. > "You l ie l" w a s t h e a n g r y retort.

Then the1 r i g h t Aand of t h e a n g r y l i eutenant shot, out, ca t ch ing the c iv i l ­i a n squarely "between the eyes , and Ae w e n t d o w n ' i n a h e a p a m o n g the w i n e coolers. |

T h e grea tes t e x c i t e m e n t ensued. T h e civi l ian, "byl n a j m e a n s satisfied, s p r a n g t o h i s f e e t and both m e n , p a l e a n d furiouBi [confronted e a c h o t h e r f o r a fight,'out cpoler counse l s prevai led, a n d furtner~*hostiIitiesj were checked.

T h e n ^ome-jneiribers of t h e c o m m i t ­t ee w e n t about a m o n g t h e 3D m e n p r e s ­e n t and exacted from each a promise o n , h o n o r t h a t the n a m e s of t h e t w o c o m b a t a n t s "should be .kept .a secret a n d t h a t t h e inc ident i tse l f shou ld n o t h e m a d e public, ,

GUTHRIE'S DISASTER. 1

Smaller Number of Xive» £o«t Than a t iSTirst Keported.

Guthrie, 6 . *JT-» kprH 30.—Heroic e f ­f o r t s t o w a r d the r e s c u e of t h e urif or tu-n a t e s w h o s e l i v e s a r e s t i l l endangered a n d f o r the1 relief <of t h e AUndreds of dest i tute a n d Aungry a r e be ing m a d e . I t n o w s e e m s a cer ta in ty t h a t t h e l o s s of l l f e In t h e deluge wi l l n o t exceed 20.

M a n y persons supposed t o h a v e b e e n drpwned h a v e been found c l inging t o bushes or driftwood d o w n t h e s t r e a m on t h e w e s t bluffs or scattered i n f a r m h o u s e s ,for mi les .

F o r a long" t i m e the torrent c u t off communica t ion w i t h the suhmerged districts , apd i n t h e exc i t ement the death l ist w a s s w e l l e d t o hundreds .

T h e fami ly of W e s l e y McGill, report ­ed a s f r o w n e d , w a s found sa fe . T h e only addi t iona l bodies t o u n d w e r e those of Mrs . F a n n i e Buffln a n d five children, a l l lodged ini a pile of driftwood. These , w i t h George, Owen, drowned whi l e r e s ­cu ing-others , JFrank Meyers , Mrs . J a n e W a t t , Mrs . Franc i s Moore, Mrs. D r u m -roond, M r s . ^Dennis a p d ch i ld 'and Mrs. Watson^ ar*| t h e on ly identified dead, t h o u g h m a n y are st i l l miss ing .

F i v e hundred A o m e s were s w e p t %wayy 150 houses w e r e wrecked, and 20 s tores w e r e 1 d e v a s t a t e d , l e a v i n g 1,000 people homeless and half as many des­titute. '

T h e - d a m a g e to property wil l be in the peighborhoo^l of $100,000, wbfle t h a t s u s ­ta ined in crop* m a y equal or perhaps double t h a t Amount.

.Married I n a Shroud. M a x B i n e , |a merchant *>f Piedmont, W.

T a . r a n d Miss F a n n i e JKork were married according t o {ancient Hebrew and Hussion l i t e s recently.

T h e groom] wore A shroud, in wbioh he intends to be buried, and while the bride and groom remained standing the guests anarehed around 4hem -three times, a l l ear-xylmjligbteol tapers.

TAe marriage compact, g iv ing the bride dower rights', was writ ten i n Chaldaic. -The guests vied wi th each other-in g iv ing present*, and w h e n one would present something -out o f the ordinary others would ruth opt .to secure something to ex -CClIfc * "I

&* *» X-lkely t o B e Itttjcc^eded by EJt-Secretary of War Jtattioat—The tte.il %t«aits an End of CoDiirieation Between tfae Ttvo Great Bailwaffc

N e w York, Apr i l M - ^ A t a raee i n g of the board or directors >tt this Northern Pataia> railroad t i e res ignat ion of Preisllbttt JMwia V . W i n t e r w a s submittedt, to t ake effect' upon, t h e election of h i s successor*

There w e r e rumors t a a t some frit t i o n occurred In t h e m e e t i n g b e c a u i e o f t h e desire t p h a v e p& ilel S« Lannori t, formerly secretary o | t?ar, e lected sit o n c e t o t a k e c h a r g e of t h e rai lroad, 153 i t w a s in t imated l a <6b[ei;e- d i spatches % s h o r t t i m e ago would be A c n e , .

I t % a s stated, however , t h a t the see-; «ilqa w a s ent ire ly barrht A b a s , a n d tbe res ignat ion of P r e s i d e n t . W i n t e r wa|s temporari ly laid on thektable Because J . P ierpont Morgan and: 3 p ^ t i ^ s tiahie]*, t w o o f the v o t i n g t m s t e u l o f t h e stocl:, a r e Absent In Suropc:&Aa]ifr:was des ira ­ble tor confer w i t h t h e m ' b e f o r e acttoji w a s i aken . -.•.^-^•. >. r r'

A t t h e t ime of thi*. j ^ f e n ^ a A h o | i a A 4 m e n t in these d i s p a t l h e s that Coloul i Xtamont had been select ad a s t h e cbrd» •ing-'president of the%srt t i ern , PAci#J a n d t h a t th i s w a s d u e chiefly t o tbjs influence of Pres ident S i m e s ;*.• Hi j l 9!' t h e Great Northern* near ly Al l o f t h ^

i n t e r e s t e d persons deh&d the story, a|u well, a s the s t a t e m e n t t h a t Mr* Wl^i ter Intended to resigfiii 'MK.^Winter wafc i n ISt. P a u l a t the | f m e of ttte e lect ion, h u t h e authorized ltfae s ta tement thai'; h i s res ignation w a s . t e n t e r e d i A Vies^ oil t h e recent acquis i t ion pj a co&slderabK 1. minor i ty intere'st i n t l ie p tcper ty Mj part ies of whose co-opefat ioA h e I s AC1; assured, and t h a t with<fut s u c h assuje-a n c e h e i s unwi l l ing i p cohtihtte: hi,«, adminis trat ion, ' •" , { ' ;

T h e stock of t h e ^ p r t b A r a . fiaclfi;q H a l l w a y c o m p a n y i s . h e | d by t h e s e Ave votiner t r u s t e e s ; J . .^terpoAt, j | p r * a ^ | George Siemens, A u g u s t BeiraPnt, J o h p s o n Liv ings ton ahpl Gbaf les LaA-i ier . , , -| : ' ;

* ' Stockholders o f % e Road. j | T h e ''majority interest" referred to\,

b v MJS. W i n t e r i s the synd ica te headedj; b y t h e Deut sche b a n k , , w h i c h recent ly acquired v e r y l a r g e M l & l h g s o f tooth s t o c k a n d bonds of: t h £ SJOrthern. P a -oific, g iv ing i t a s t rong voice i n t h e m a n a g e m e n t - T h e SejpmaA ih teres t s for a long t i m e p a s t hasfe favored P r e s ­ident BCill o f t h e G r e a t Sferthesn, and: t h e y w e r e a n x i o u s for . a eonsolidatiQ& of t h e two properties . T h i s , however, w a s precluded b y t h e l a w s o f the^ -west­ern s t a t e s . , j - '

I t h a s b e e n assumed) for s o m e t i m e in Wal l s treet t h a t Mr* HtU w a s a c t i n g in.Aar'h.aay w i t h JCe* „.„ the la t ter w a s will lAg WAee.SSfK Bi l iA, Influence recognized -ijo. direct ing the m a n a g e m e n t of t h e Northern .Pacl,flCi Messrs . H i l l a n d :&ampnt are cJo |e triendp, a n d t h e app.oinjtnient of t h e l a t ­t er wil l m e a n a d o s e a l l iance between, t h e t w o companie s , accord ing t o Mr*< Hi l l ' s ideas'. j •%• •-'

Colonel i i a m o n t ' s opjy railroad expe* rlence -wa§ a s pres ident of the SSoastofe W e s t Stree t and PaVonla Ferry raft-: road, wbjich, leased :the-jBroadwayroad a n d several other c i ty Ji^es before the Metropolitan Tract ion . fbrhpany. {?pas organized. Colonel jiamOpt,; however* in the] opinion of rai lroad men," AR9 shown m u c h executive, abi l i ty a s e t c r e -tary of war , h a v i n g ':reduced expenses i n the execut ive division ^alone rnore. than $!00,O0O during, h i s term of office.

er»«3 uesstioti t | e 1kst of the,

Standard or High-Grade

EELS. In appeatance,a perfect Beau^r*

with material attd nj?orkmaash%, an*

mnth $ioo mi

qmutf wheel* $m a* catt se .«ixaratn<|d

Sowks Hardware Sto|r«. CIIAS. 'mvANWIE»

Ag«r

•• m

m aKtade ttifler tovcr,

always fresh and £Ieari„

1WHE1

-«*

«ttd^«

*npWffer %»CS( are.^ade...©:! t% iuiest V M 4

6 'Havana fohaoQ & $m) ^vdrld ajsd are l!tricffl|r0^i»^

1 1

HAyana-fphaccC' im~. It as long*s.money wIH n areaanjostoatof reacA1

* «. * ^ i ^ 1 1 «W Wee* r j p ^ ^ p ^ b j ^ p ^ ^ w a y i i n ^ f e B l f o v t

H a v e y o u s e e n o u r Plp*i»»? Y « t t « w * &$h-M J#?Bwfc BJciet K life with wym '

Igrwjtyifcwr

Winter Talks Tery Plainly. St. l a u l / s A p r i l 5Q.irr-i;t i s s t a t e d t h a t

the resignation, of EdWih W . W i n t e r as.'. president ojf the NorthgrA Pae.iflc wil l be followed b y the resignation of the Aeads of a l l t h e execut ive departmentsi of the roadJ T h e s e *5U Ineiude General Manager Kendrick, General Traffic Manager BAnnaford a n d Chief E n g i ­neer McHeney . Speak ing of h i s r e s -ignatioh. Pres ident W i n t e r saifl::

"I resigned because Pres ident Hil l of t h e Great N o r t h e r n an'd those a s s o ­ciated wi th him h a v e succeeded in g a i n -i n i control p£ sufficient stock, combined wi th friendly holdings oh the Continent, t o ent i t le M m t o a s t rong vo i ce in t h e management^ of Northern Pacific %,£-fa irs . J regard Mr. B i l l a s m y friend, Aut he could not n a m e a s u m t h a t would jndujje m e t o work under h i s di ­rections." J

To Reorganize a X>oan Association. KAoxvilleT Apri l 30.---A large number

of inves t ing stockholders In the South­ern Building' and t .oan ^assodatlon o f Knoxvijlle h a v e formed a reorgamAa^ tion committee composed of large s tock-bolders, each s tate being represented b y o n e or ]more members. The n e w c o m ­pany wfll a t once be reorganijied, k n o w n a s the Loan and Bepos i f c o m p a n y o f Georgia and will have a full paid capi­tal of $a,ooo,m

v . Mhtk WJiU* at Ttmfer. ITbUe proyipg to ohrash atTjtawh, York

*wu»^r, S , O,, ^eopnar, J o n a h Croiby, colored, toupi|t * m g pistol i n hi* hip pock-,«t unoomforiabla I n w m o T l n g i t the mmw---vm>0i&#Qi&k -i»9uAd|pa mm 0^m^mm^i^m^'^ms^»M' the:

j w u » r # * l w » i s t h * first . to 1 ^ mornings nowf

" t J o S f * • . • • * - • • * * * s o t ft Ihftw

•**Vkn#m. * m A " - ' •'""

Attempt tto B u r n s Hotel . Narraganset t PIer» ® . J., Apri l 30.*—

Incendiaries entered t h e •Coptineptaj; hotel here, a n d after'j*aturAfin# a pfie of mattresses w i t h Jterdsehe a t t e m p t e d t o set fire to t h e buiUJhif. IfShe watcb* m a n w a s a w a k e n e d - w t h e no i se m a d e by the mev. in enter ing the hotel by a rear-windowl H e pursued t h e firebugs for som'e dis tance a n d fired t w o shots af ter t h e m , - b u t w i t h o u t e f f e c t The Continental i s one of t h e larges t hotela Aere.

IrtK**d $ D mud Burned t o Deatb-XrfttUstfille, Apri l 3 0 . ' - N e w s coraee

f rom H a n c o c k eoun^f, Tenn. , t h a t Mary, k u l u a n d . J o h n HatAeld were burned t o d e a t h in a mounta in c a b i n about five mi l e s from Sneedvi l le , Their mother, w h o i s a widow; h a d gone to a neighbor's house, l ock ing the chi ldren i n t h e bpase- '

name atta photograph whea r<m *•• aipauntto'liMXLwa-bettetoaeA tmM

*§•«•-

• » * bretr St»-

linai -iSfcltain

* ^ i i j ^ « *

l^hnined and tJ^triromed ?!#%

Oiuldr«a*s Heae tyeaf, in Silk, Mull and

Cloves in all tiie Shades,'

Ladies' and Childr sn's

Straw; J

jr|fiw Spring !

^m^hlngs

16 ferinkejrfcoffi S t . eroppoaite post oat L seooi !* door wmoi

Mrs. ©. K. eilbertSdrug ptor& \

ffh Tracttoti Co.»> AE ears run thro^ugfaj vIHage tf>

Depot, ^orajiai §&IQQX and, Barracks at ten-niifltj^ in­tervals. ! !. . v

Tickets, $ for 25c.|* wedlm mheti ears, and S^tripj faoofes a t $2,oo, are for sale i t dtrl.ee, 37 Clinton street, m4 Smith & LaRo&fatf^s ^ R B * Store*

The Curf«w W i n Kot King. l o o s i n g , Mich., Aprfl Sfc«-C3overnor

P ingree vetoed t h e © o n o v a p curfew bill, which provided for the arrest of Children a l lowed upon the streets after * p . in. T h e governor characterizes the :*et a* taterierence Jsy the s ta te in mat ­ter* o f p u r e l y domest ic concern.

l * t o the Elevator Pit.

_ . , . . _ Apri l 30^-rErnest Stupps, « « e d 1>,ass istant engineer of the Cham­ber o f Commerce building, while oil ing

tTjtattfav iL a4MB»> ''t& #*e«*tor, fell wvtn stories into- the * - W ** •*7,*^» 'trim pit ifm w«9 mriPWAf WJed-

DERBY & BI^WN, Undertai:^rs ..aM En^almers. Upholstering and

Furniture Reiairinir IN A L L I T S B R A N C H E S .

NO. 2 8 RIVER S T R E E T . ! We guarantee our worfe sattefactory to ail

desiring to place their orders ia our hands.

NIGHT CAfctss W, S . DERBY. 116 Margaret St. 39 Ni Catherine St

NOTICE. "The Carpet Duster" will com­

mence running Monday, April 12. Orders can be left and bills paid at Mr. O. T. Larkin's store the same as heretoCcu-e, 819012 G. w,. ^ g y p T"~~z~~~- M. A. DIAZ. 4 BeaiTBLT and Civil SBguieDr, C. H. Moorea f \ N«r Biofk..ciuAoh^ar«et. Pt*tt(ibarit)fc

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