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Domestic. RECORD OF THE LEAGUE CLUBS. Per Per Clubs, Won. Lost. et Clubs. Won. Lost. ct. Wash'ng' 2 2 .500 Pittsburg 4 1 .800 3 750 1 Boston Louis. 2 3 .400 750 Louisville. 2 3 400 Baltimore. 3 1 .600 New York. 1 3 .250 Cincinnati, 3 2 Phftadel. 1 3 .230 Chicago 3 2 .600 2 2 .500 Cleveland. 1 4 .200 Brooklvn Morris Hopkins, colored, was hanged at Richmond, Va., for the murder of H. S. Parsons, his employer, whom he killed with a club. The defalcation of Paul Schulz, land agent of the Northern Pacific Railroad at Tacoma, Wash., is now estimated at $500,000. The New York City Police Reorganization bill was beaten in the Senate at Albany by a tie vote, three Republicans joining the Democrats in opposition to it. The Pennsylvania House at Harrisburg passed the "Greater Pittsburg' bill, and also the bills known as the second and third 'Greater Pittsburg" bills by decisive majorities. The defalcations of Cashier Risley, of the Willimantic (Conn.) National Bank, amount to $125,000. The city was in a state of cona sternation over the discovery, and a run on local savings institution took place. George Payne. aged sixty-four years. an old and respected business man of Rome, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor. He had been mentally deranged for several days. Civil Service Commissioner Roosevelt decided to accept one of the Police Commissionerships of the city of New York tendered to him by Mayor Strong. Louisville's Board of Trade authorized the appointment of delegates to the Memphis Sound Money Convention. Julia Gross, a sixteen-year-old girl, who was lured away by a young man from her home in New York City, and returned two days after, was found lying dead in the yard of her home. She had committed suicide through remorse. Edward B. Shaw. of Newburyport, was nominated for State Treasurer and ReceiverGeneral by the Republicans of the Massachusetts Legislature. The nomination was tantamount to election. Thomas S. Borden, agent and treasurer of the Metacomet and Anawan Mills, has fled from Fall River, Mass. He is short in his accounts to the extent of $6000. Salvatore Cavaliere, an Italian shoemaker. is in the Long Branch (N. J.) jail charged with a score of burglaries, committed during the last five years. Three houses are said to have been built by him with stolen lumber. He had enough stolen goods on hand to stock a store. Mrs. Catharine Scott, believed to be the oldest woman in Brooklyn, died at her home, in the city, aged 103. Despite her great age she had not a gray hair in her head, and read without glasses. The First National Bank of Willimantic, Conn., was closed by order of Controller Eckels. Itwasa surprise Willimantic business men. whose deposits in the bank aggregate about $250,000. Its cashier was unwilling to assume responsibility for some of its assets. H. H. Kohlsaat has purchased a controlling interest in the Chicago Times-Herald, whose former proprietor, James W. Scott, died a few days before, and converted it into a Republican, protection and hard money paper. This transfer left Chicago without a Democratic morning daily newspaper. A train struck a team containing Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frank, aged sixty-two and sixty-five respectively, near Richland, Penn., and both were instantly killed. The couple were wealthy. Beef is so high priced in Chicago the poorer residents of the city subsist on fish, which thousands are catching in Lake Michigan. Alice Walsh was murdered in Thompson street, New York City, in a fashion that strongly recalls the crimes in the Whitechapel district of London. By the capsizing of a skiff in the Delaware River at Philadelphia, Penn., three boys were drowned. They were Julius Haeflin, eighteen years old, and his brother, Ernest, sixteen years old. and John Miller, sixteen years old, all of the Kensington district. Paul Fenimore Cooper, son of the famous American novelist, died at Albany. N. Y. Senator Blackburn, of Kentucky, announced himself as in favor of free silver coinage at 16 to 1. Mrs. Delia T. S. Parnell, mother of the noted Irish leader, was assaulted and robbed by footpads near her home at Bordentown, N.J. Her injuries were serious. The Empire State Society, of the Sons of the American Revolution, presented a loving cup to the New York City Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. At Winchester, Va., Thornton Parker was executed. On March 5 Parker made an assault upon Mrs. Milton, of Middletown. R. C. Wickliffe, an ex-Governor of Louisiana, died at Shelbyville, Ky., at the home of J.C. Beckham. his son-in-law, fromgrip. He was born in Washington County, Kentucky, seventy-five years ago. Three workmen were killed, two others were fatally injured and one seriously hurt by the fall of a great derrick in the yards of the South Chicago (III.), Shipbuilding Company. A dead whale, sixty-feet long. picked up off Chatham, Mass., was taken to New York City for exhibition by the tug Taurus.