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About Townsend Star (Townsend, Mont.) 1897-current | View This Issue
Townsend Star (Townsend, Mont.), 24 April 1897, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075288/1897-04-24/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
istorica! Society of theta VOL. _ • BALDWIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. - Office south sidt - ro - f - Itroadway. Legal business promptly attended to. • TOWNSEND MONTANA JOHN M. MCDONALD, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Mining and Water Right a Special Broadway, opposite Townsend Ho el TOWNSEND • MONTANA I L. BELCHER, M/D. PHYSICIAN A - VD - SURGEON. _ Office - elorner' of Cedar and Broadway TOWNSEND MONTANA G. W. GILHAM, M. D. _PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in P. C. Hall, up ,stairs, Center Broadway. TOWNSEND „. .... . . MONTANA HERWAN SPERLING, I0 -ROOMS- AU Work•T`irst-class. TOWNSEND 'TOWNSEND, MONTANA, APRIL 24, 1897. MADE IT UNCERTAIN. Grain and Stock Markets in a Flurry Because No One -Knew What Would Happen. • New York, Apr) 23.-R. G. • Dun & , -.Co,'s Weekly Review of Trade to -mor- row will say: If either Turkey or Greece had been wholly burled In the sea th markets might have been af- fect less than by the ou:break of' war Europe. Like fire in the hears of a crowded city, it raised the question whether a general conflagration IrlaY spring out of it. TO this possibility, and not to the direct influence of,, either Turkey or Greece upon the world's Mon- ey or ptoduce markets, was due the ex- citement in grain and stocks. As the unknown is magnified, the American markets were much more flighty than the European,' where the possibilities havesben discussed and partly discount- ed for months. The : uncertainty re: mains, and will affect the Movement of money and staples until it disappears, creating a larger demand for American products -at higher prices,• causing hasty speculative selling of securities at times. The past week, like others of late, has witnessed the Starting of operations by N_IT_ several iron works especially in black sheets for. flrming,,and yet prices of' pig iron and unfinished products are lower, the demand not yet equaling supply. Bessemer pig has sold-a.s_loW as $9 05 at Pittsburg, •and Grey Forge at $5.50 its, Birmingham. Steel billets _fell _to $14.25 at Pittsburg *and angles to one cent, but wire rods cannot be supplied -f.st - enough at $21.(e. a s are strong, and a_few more structural' orders are pending. Large sales of copper ar& reported at ' $11.50 with the production of 18,213 tons MONTANA i n Ma e. - , r 'Sales of wool have been largely of- fering, receipts being swelled by arriv- als of quantities t'Old - sometime ago, usi imports at Boston for the week were 32,000 bales. For the three chief cities the sates were 34,036,800 pounds in three weeks. 20,271,300 being foreign, against 15,906,500 in 1892, including 7,574,000 for- eign. But manufacturers are doing scarcely anything, and orders -for goods improve very little, though for some- what better grades of goods. Failures for the week 218, against 238 last year. SOCIETIES. - - , F. L. T. . North Star. Lodge No. 19; I. 0. 0. F. Meets every Monday evening at ,8 o'clock in P. C. Hall, - Visiting brothers cor- dially, invited, to attend. T. N. AVERILL. , N. G. E. E. ROMIG, Secretary. , ' VALLEY LODGE NO. 21, A. F. te,„ A. M. Meets every- fourth Saturday evening in P. C. Hall. All visiting brothers - cor- dially invited to attend. _ W. W. HARVEY,- W. M. DR G. W. GILHAM,. Secretary. .. The Lodge Saturday Masonic A. 0. U. W. regular meetings/sof TOWnsend No. 6 are on the first and third evenings of each month, at Hall, Broadway, Townsend. brethren are cordially -in- to attend. • • J. L. BELCHER, M. W. C. WHALEY, Recorder. • GURNETT, Financier. Sojourning vited • W. _ „M. • • O. E. S. Meets every seconcUSaturda,y in Ma- sonic - Hall. All visiting members of the order cordiallY - Invited to attend: -- - MISS T. WINNIFRED POWERS, . W. M. MISS ANNA' KEENE, Secretary. PAtRIARCHAL The regular meetings ple No. -1, Patriarchal ica, -are-held on the CIRCLE. of Valley Circle last Saturdays o'cloele• cordially • '- ' Acting Tem- of Amer- in each Month at 8:30 iting,Patriarchs aye attend._ ' E. S. POLLARD, p. m. eVis-'_ - invited to I - ] Secretary. 1 I CHURCHES. i , METHODIST Sunday -school 'p. m. Preaching Sunday evening service Thursday Sunday mornings day of month, fourth Sundays,- Sunday, Winston.' ciety, Friday GEORGE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Sunday at 230 1 1 1 and N So- ( ( , every .in -at evening. as Radersburg; Beaver Young evening. D. Townsend every' 7:20 p. tn. Prayer Preaching follows: First ' Sun- second 'Creek; third People's KING, Pastor, . 1 . M. -E. CHURCH, SOUTH. Public services at the different points ; as follows: Townsend -Preaching at 11 I a. m. each Sunday. Sunday -school at e 10:30' a, m. Prayer - meeting Tuesday s evening. Toston '=Preaching ,first Sun- S day at 8 0: rn., and act Deep' Creek at a 3 p. ni. -Lavinia . ,,,C1rhel-Second and r fourth Sundays in the evening. Crow c 'Creek -Preaching third -Sunday in the ! evening. All are cordially invited to ,I attend.' W. T. GOULDER, Pastor r a joili8[NO . AND . ' _111188[[ STAGE LINE, Runs every day except St4iday. Fast time made and the best accommoda- tions. Leave 'orders at Dewell & McDonald's stables. DEWELL & MoDONALD,' ,Props. TOWNSEND MONTANA au'horized to negotiate with the oppo- sition to the end of se, uring a division of these places. The pi-‘ces of both the secretary and sergeant. at .arms of the senate are vacant and the republicsins think they should 'be allowed to name the•man to fill one of these places. The details of this negotiation will be., left to a subcommittee consisting of McMil- lan. Lodge and Spooner. The vacancies in chairmanships to be filled -are the following: Coast defense's, examination of the several branches of the civil service, naval 'affairs, privil- eges and elections, public lands, territo- ries and forestry reservations. Of these places it is practically certain that Senator Hale will be assigned to the head of naval affairs, Senator Chan- dler to privileges and elections' -Senator Hansbrough to public lands, and Sena- tor Shoup to the territhries. • Divided the Debt. Great Falls, April 2:;: --Judge Dudley DuBose, George F. Danmcr, chairman of the board of county commissioners, of Meagher county, and J. J. Ellis, chair- man of the board of Cascade, finished their Tabors - W -day in appottioning that part of Meagher county's indebtedness that Cascade is to assume. The amount finally fixed upon was $21,719.19. The value of property that cnineS along with this indebtedness, according to the laat assessment!' is $561,079. Meagher county's total debt was $198,052. ' : ..Barry Is Little Champion. San Francisco, April 23.-;Fh:e thousand people saw Jimmy Barry and ,Jinuny An - - thony, bantamweights, fight 20 rounds be- fore the National Athletic club, _the club that-oondnateil . the Fitzsimmons -Sharkey fight. Arrangements were very poor, ,and the big crowd was exceedingly uncomfor- table in a - hot arena. The tight was for a $2,000 purse. 75 per 'cent to .winner, and at 115'ppunds. The men were well . trained and entered the.- ring at 10 o'clock. Very was -wasted, --as' Barry s4t the pace. He led time and again and got ways 'without a return. In the second round An- thony led but failed to land. Barry jabbed right and left Into his face. It waS evi- dent that Barry was.the cleverer man of / the two, - but, his blows did not seem to hurt the Australian. In the third round after Barry had landed several right jabs without a return, Anthony became aggres- sive, whereupon Barry swung viciously but missed and fell to floor. In the teurth .New York, April 23.-Bradstreets to- Barry led- with his right. btit *as hotly morrow -will say:Change - in - conditions - countered. He -then-land --with-both underlying the general trade, while both hands three times - without' return, slight this week, has been in the direc- and the round closed with Anthony swing- tion of the Improvement. The depres- ing wildly. sion in iron steel continues and besse- Barry was confident that'll/riled his man mer - pig steel billets have reached an-- when the fifth round openedl:and he land - Other 25 centsa ton. - ed a stiff right - on - the - Auittrallaes - fae - The outlook favors an increase in la- and followed it up with right and left on bor disturbances to resist midsummer Anthony's Jaw. Both came' 'Up smiling -for wage reductions: - - The bituminous coal the sixth. Anthony rueltelAlint was ciev- mining industry is worse than the an- eriy stopped by left off nose.\ Anthony thracite, with rumors of strikes. poked his left into his opponent's stomach There is less life in the 'wholesale dry . and received a right in face as a retUrn. goods trade, and little relief has been Barry led several times but his blow experienced, notwithstanding large ,-auc- seemed to lack steam. In the seventh, tion sales of cotton goods last week, buy- Anthony, cleverly stopped a lead and .the era continuing to supply immediate round closed with Anthony fighting hard__ needs only. ._ Little or no fighting was (hone in _the The tendency- toward more settled eighth, but in the ninth Anthony showed weather has 'stimulated 'the retail de- signs of improveMent, -for he stopped all Oland, more particularly at the 'north- blows and landed several times on west, notably for dry goods, hardware and' millinery, the Chicago boy's stomach. In the -tenth The only large cities reporting - in- both fought veryjhardl,_but. tarry -- -w ethe_MOvernent of merchandise as evidently taking no chances. He rushed, are -St. 'Paul, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, 'but was stopped.' In the eleventh, Barry and Kansas City, where the distribution landed a right and tried again With a left of dry goods, shoes, hardware and build_ swing, but Anthonymade a quick duck ng materials - have - been more conspic_ and got out of - the way. The fighting was nous. At almost all other large centers sit)* during rest of the round. _Barry went here has been no material gain in in- - after his man in 'the twelfth and landed ustriel or commercial - lines, whenever and wherever he, pleased, but There are 216 business failures he could not put the little man from Aus- hroughout the United States for the tralia out. eek, with 190 last,week. In the : thirteenth Barry landed twice on Bosten,--April 23.-_The_Boston__Co -- - Anthony's nose without return and push- ercial Bulletin will say to -morrow of e m ar bony rallied, however, he wool market..The'market is•dull, but and rushed' the Chicagoan all over the prices are firmly -held in spite of small ring. In the fourteenth Barry poked An - ales of domestic wool; liberal deliver_ thony's sore nose again, and as the gong es of foreign wool c_o_ntinse. The larg.. sounded punched him on the neck. This st wool scouring plant in New England was Barry's round. In the fifteenth Barry. Is running - 116 hours a week, night and did all the fighting, landing rights and lefts ay. Last week was - the best Easter on Anthony's head. jaw and stomach. lie week that retail clothiers have - known the Sixteenth Anthony came up with a or years. The sales of the_Week are black eye, but was strong.- Barry„ hist as ,465,000, pounds, domestic and • 4.010,000 the round -closed; swung his left on the oreign, against 1,795,000 domestic and Australian's jaw and the latter went to ,352,000' foreign last - Week, atin - Y,180,000 his cotner - Tfrk - groggy eondittont • pounds domestic and 635,000 foreign for 'Anthony camp up _fresh - for the seven - he same week last year., teenth and stopped g left lead for face. Barry then jabbed _him several times, on the nose and' then slipped to the floor. He got up quickly, and received , a light coun- ter_ on the. jaw 110th of AnthonPs eyes were in mourning in the eighteenth rouni, but he was still strong. The only impor- tant blows'Istruck in this reglad -were a right on the - foreigner's Jaw, and a stiff left on his nose. Barry plainly outclassed him as far as Cleverness is Concerned, , Two Shells Enough. Philipsburg, April 23. -Louis Bourque as found dead this evening at 7:30 'clock, lying near the Bland tunnel ump, - in Brown's gulch, and about two Hes north of this city, with his head town completely off. The weapon that id the ghastly work was a double- arreled shotgun, both barrels having teen discharged apparently at once. he discovery of liourque's dead body as made by Adrian Swanson, a wood - hopper, and 1101 at once reported to udge Miller, who impaneled a jury, lad drove to the scene of the tragedy, ourque was -Last seen alive at two 'clock to -day, when the borrowed a hotgun from Tougas brothers. Seeing hat Bourque had taken but two shells, ougai told him -to take more, but he plied that \two would be enough,\ nd started for the hills. The dead art was about 42 years old. 15p to cently he, had ,been in the employ of C. -Johnson, at Quigley, as harness pairer, and during the balmy days f Granite he held a similar position with Frank Durand. Every indication points to suicide. Bourque had been a resident, of this county for an rmaber Of years; and was ,highly esteemed by his friends' Willing to Take It. Washington - , ' April 23. -- Republican senators in cauctisIo-day decided to ac- cept the preposition made:hy the Oppo- sition for the filling of senate eomtnit- tees, leaVing the arrangements of de- tails to Senator 61cMillan'8 committee. Tbe °micas also' considered the queS- tibn of filling electiveoffices of`the sen- ate and the managing committee wa In the nineteenth round Barry was much the stronger of two and countered his opponent on the jaw. Anthony landed a right hook, but there was no force in the blow, and Barry Uppercut savagely. 1_, The twentieth and last round was all Barry's. He simasiAl his opponent on the' eye and the jaw repeatedly. Although An- thonr - efas still on his feet when the round* closed, the referee announced that,as' the bout was for points Barry was clearly en- titled to the decision and the -purse, and was the champion bantamweight of the world.- • Bob - Armstrong (colored) made Pruett, - a local colored heavyweight, quit in the first round. Armstrong hit his man four times on the face and when Pruett saw blood he ,quit. An Agreement Reac - hed. Atoka, I. T., April 23. -The Dawes corn mission , this morning - reached an agree- ment with the Choctaw and Chickasaw 1 • Indian cemmissitoners 'for. a division of their lands. This agreement makes pro: vision for town sites, persons owning sub- stantial improvements to be Permitted to purchase lots on which 'buildings are al- ready erected at two-thirds of actual val- ue. All coal and mineral interests are re- served for the respective nations, individ- ual royalties are to cease on the ratifica- tion of the agreement by congress, Al- lotment of land is to take place immediate- ly upon its approval. No. I. motion to concur was defeated, 40 to 70. This motion was equivalent te -agree- ing to a motion to non -concur. The amendment *qualifying the right of the children of an Indian mother and a white man to inherit, by requir- ing densent ot a majority of the mem- bers of the tribe, was also, non -con- curred in. In all, eight of the 18 amendmentS' were agreed to. When the • committee of the whole made report to' the house, under the threat of no 1 11 1 0-., rum, instructions to thenonference rel- ative to the Uncompahgre reservation were not passed, with the understand- ing, howeVer, that the question should come separately., before the house. The bill was then sent tO conference, and Messrs. Sherman (N. Y.), Curtis (Kan.) and Allen (Miss.) were appointed con- ferees. - • - Representative Maguire, (Cal) - 'intro- duced a resolution to -day in the house . that the War between Turkey and . Greece was a war between Moslem and : Christian civilization, and directing that the sympathy.„Of the United States , he extended to Greece with the hope that her struggle may he successful. The resolution was referred to the com- mittee- on foreign- affairs, but as that committee is not yet appointed, no ac- tion. will be taken at present. . - Representative Don (W. Va.) to -day introduced a . to repeal the civil service law. Under a resolution adopted earlier in the day the speaker appointed the fol- lowing committee to attend the Grant tomb dedication exercises at New_York; tion which the attorney-general could TWPeaker, Messrs. Lowe Cummings furnish on the subject had already - been Payne, McClellan, Ding - ley; Bailey, Hitt, transmitted to the senate. The attorney McMillin, Dalzell, Allen, Burton Hart - - opinion to tile. president. Bailey sup - general. could by law only give his legal i lr E ll i,e li i i . er o ce v i e % rs l t V r a e lk t er lisi ( t V z a p . a ), t - r irl s ea u g, way, Dinsmore, • Barthoidt, Tate and ported Blend, contending that the St- Ridgeley (Nan.).. At four o'clock the house adjourned until Mondey. torney general_ might go further -than he ,did in responding th the senate res- olution. - Debate was brought to an ab- rupt ciOae .o by the interpositlau of a point of order that a motion to lay on the - table was not debffrabler ---- Richardson (dem:I Tenn.) sharply con- tended that an appeal was always- de- ble, and it Could not be tut off un- s the floor was yielded for a motion ay on the table, but the speaker res- lutely reaffirmed his decision. The house could not, he declared, be placed ba REFUSED TO AGREE. * The House Holds to, Hi Position on • the Uncompahgre Lands. • Washington, April 23. -The desk of the late Judge Holman was to -day cov- ered with ist black pall of mourning ' upon which were strewn lilies of the valley and hyacinths. • ' Bland offered a resolution relative to suits to foreclose the, first mortgage on Union Pacific railroad anti calling on the attorney general for information as to what steps have been taken- to pro- tect the interests of the government. He presented the resolution for a, privileged question on the ground that, as there was no committee to which', the resolu- tion could be referred this was the only Way it could 'be brought- before the house. The speaker ruled --that it was it not 'privileged, W6re7fpon -Bland an - pealed, Ond ‘ Dingley -promptly-moved to lay the appeal on the table. The chair ruled the motion 'was not debatable, -but brief debate was indulked in, Bland saying: \We want to know whether the liens of.tfie Union Pacific are to be liquidated, as the law requ)yes that the government may take possession of the road. We- desire to ascertain the policy of .the.governnient.\ Dingley pointhd out that all informa- at the Mercy - of one tmember. • If there was desire to hear bre appeal debated the house, had in its power to vote down the motion. The appeal was laid On the table;- 87 to 75, 22 present and not voting. - On motion of -Robinson (Ind.) Bland was added to the -committee to attend the - Holman - obsequies. The house then went into committee of the whole and resumed consideration of the senate amendments to the Indian appropriation bill. The pending amendment waft re- a.ting to the opening of the rUncompah- re Indian reservation. Cooper (rep., Is.) contended that members of con- gress sat here 'as trustees of the in- terests of the government and they Would be derelict in' their duty if they gave away these deposits, worth mil- lions of (Wars, for practically nothing. Cooper read a letter from an Indian agent in Utah who said the governor of Utah, secretary of state, state treas.: _urer, Sertaftuf'= - _Irenwn, and other publie - officials, had, through the state mining inspector as agent, filed claims on the reservation, March 4, when it was pre - stinted the Indian appropriation bill had been signed by Cleveland. These spec- ulators were, .Cooper said, all ready to jump the moment the reservation ,was opened. And yet, said he, the gentle- man is talking about depriving the poor prospector of his opportunities. Lacey. (rep., Iowa) offered a, substi- tute proposition to instruct conferees to insist tip_o_n_tLgi _provision to lease he gilsonite - lands.With such limitations as would prevent its control by combina- tions. Shafroth (sil. rep., Col.) proteai- ed against the change of policy toward mineral lands, - and said the 'valueof de- posits *as greatly exaggerated. ' Maguire (dem., Cal.) opposed the amendment. The policy pursued toward the natural- resources of ffire country had resulted in their monopoly. Bartholdt (rep., Mo.), in supporting the motion to concur in_ the senate amend; melit, sale ttle - SE - combanY WfitCh controlled the gilsonite mines in the vi- cinity of the Uncompahgre reservation did not desire any of these lands. Al! they desired was the opening of the reservation, so that a railroad might be built: Fleming (dent, Ga.) maintained that the Indians held an •unextinguished right in the lands,- under their treaty, until they were allotted acceptable lands elsewhere. Ile offered an amendment to reserve to the United State in pet- ,petuity a royalty of $4 per ton on all gilsonite mined, and. another to give six months notice of the 'opening or he reservation, - explaining that under the terms of the , senate amendment, by which the lands were to be opened on the signing ef the bill, speculators who had agents .in Washington 'would se- cure them all through, their advance in- formation. , Dingley said the question at issue was as to whether, in this particular case, laws applicable to mineral lands should apply. This was the only large gilsonite deposit in the country. If the royalty, obtained by Great Britain from aaphaltam land in Trinidad were ob- tained the 'government would profit to the extent of $30,000,000. If these lands were thrown open to individual entry it would inevitably result in the trans- ference of individual rights -and: the creation of a monopoly which could put up the price. At Dingley's suggestion, Fleming withdrew his amendments. Bailey offered an amendment, which, was voted dewn, 40 to 70, to grant -the lands in the reservation to the state Of Utah for educational purposes. '• The proposition of Lacey then preVailed Without division. When the - Senate amendment to strike out the provision in the bill to ratify the gas and oil leases of the Sen- eca Indians was reached, C. W.' Stone (rep., Pa.) moved to concur: He de- nounced in unmeasured terms the methods by which it is allegd the lease was obtained from the Indians. The Bank Clearances. • New York, April 2,3. -The following table, rnl , lledisy - Bratistreets shows the total clearances at the principal cities and the , Per centage of increase or decrease, as compared .with the corresponding period • last year: New York .. .....$519,512,512 Dec. 9.'9 Chicago ..... 81,735;785 Dec. 7.9 , Boston .. . 69,309,454 Dec. 16.4 Philadelphia 67,212,348 Dec. 21.8 St. Louis 26,665,633 Inc. 10.6 San Francisco .. 14,153,173 Inc. - 15.5 1 . 3 alti1nore-- -- 12;852,271 - Dec. 2.2 Pittsburg . .... 18,979,300 Dec.'3.0 Cincinnati 11,778,000 Kansas City .. 10,788,735 Dec. 3.9 BN u e f w fal O o rl!i . n7 : : 6,803,239 _Dec. 26.6 3,627,609 Dec, 12.2 Milwaukee.. • 4,224,888 Dec. 6.2 Detroit .. , 5,142,397' Dec. 2.6 Portland, Ore .. 834,821 Inc. 2.7 Seattle 672,566 Dec. 6.1 Tacoma 415:63g Inc. 16.5 1 16 8 :5 3 589582 Spokane .. Galveston .. 3,509,500 Dec. 1.4 Salt Lake.. ... 1,414,813 Inc. 12.8 B.1\. Dec. 7.9 The Races. Cincinnati, April 23. -Five and a half furlongs -Peggy, Ora Lee, Little Nig- ger,1:08%; four-furlonge --Dah-Rice,-- Ruiz, .Bo - nneville, :49%; mile and one - sixteenth -Miss Francis, Umbrella, 7u - Ira, 1:47%; five and a half furlongs -- Lady Juliet, Waldorf, Lonely, 1:08; font* and a half furlongs -Lady Irene, My Maryland, Virgie Cook, :65 1 / 2 . Memphis, April 23. -Five furlongs - Dr. Wamsley, Eton Jacket, Sligo, 1:02 1 ,1,; seven furlongs -Revenue, Bats:mil, In- felice, 1:30%; Memphis Gun Club handi- cap, one mile -Macy, Sharon„ Lexing- ton Pirate, 1:42 1 Ai; four and a half fur= Etrialle; M Claficson, :67%; seven furlongs --Lady Doleful, J. A. Gray, Lillian E. 1:20; mile, hurdles -Mrs. Bradshaw, Cumberland, Roy Roy II, 1:54%. Chicago, April 23.-Three-quarters- Torranet, Jack of Hearts, Confession; 1:24%; half mile -Knowles, Mora, Al- phea, :63; seven -eighths -The Plutocrat, Fred K., Marie Woodlands, 1:35 1 / 2 ; mile -Doctor G., Sullio148, Selden, 1:4814; tee-quarterst-Horse Shoe Tobacco s - Santa Cruz, Dr. > Pitts, 1:21. ' „ , ' San Francisco, April 23, -Four and a half furlongs-Douster Swivel, Socialist, , Twinkler, :66%; six furlongs -Amelia Fonse, Strathrol, Montallade. 1:16 1 / 2 ; seven furlongs -\Refugee McFarland, Candor, 1:29%; four and a half furlongs -Rey -Sla ton, :56; ate, Mid teenth- 1;50. •• ar, Miss Remsen, Flushing- x furlongs--Torsina, Potent - 1:51 1 4; mile and one -six. Inctor, Imp. Trance, Grady, -Tahtaffiassçe, Fla., April 23.-Balloting,.2. for U ted-States senator to -day result- ' esLas olltiwo: Call 33, Chipiey 24, Ran- ey 17J.Hocker 11, Bushford 6, Darby 1, Htooijme 1, Wolfe 1; total, 93. Chipley gained two and Call one over the last ballot. Fr nkfort, Ky., April 23. -The fifty- sixth ballot, treatIlted: Blackburn 45, Martin 14, Stone 1; no quorum. Ad- journed. „ The breach in the republican ranks was healed tb-night when the republi c - can caucus,' after a long quid Stormy session, nominated.W. J. Deboe as the republican choice 'for United States senator. To -night there Is every rea- son to believe he will be elected by the state legislature to -morrow. The wild- est scene followed, the nominee was brought before the caucus and made a strong speech of thanks. Holt, who, after the withdraw' Of Hunter, became' Deboe's leading opponent, also made a felleitous speech. Seattle-, Wash., April H. Straub was hanged at Fridaf Harbor, Wash., to- day tor the murder obLeck Lanterman on Blakeley island, Abg. 30, m95. Washington. April 23. -The order detach- ing Rear Admiral' Beardslee from cora- tnand of the Pacific station ilas been modt: tied so that he will continue in command ' until July. • •