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Col. Robert E. Crofton, Fifteenth infantry, has been arbitrarily relieved by order of the president. Edward J. Ivory, who was arrested on a charge of complicity in a dynamite conspiracy in England, arrived in New York. The First national bank of Griswold, Ja., suspended with liabilities of $80,000. The national good roads congress in session at Orlando, Fla., effected a permanent organization, and Gen. Roy Stone, of Washington, was elected president. Maas & Schwarz, cotton factors at Selma, Ala., failed for $300,000. There were 311 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 5th, against 331 the week previous and 323 in the corresponding period of 1896. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 5th aggregated $1,047,109,766, against $961,245,228 the previous week. The increase compared with the corresponding week of 1896 was 4.9. The president sent to congress the complete report of the World's Columbian Exposition commission. The First national bank of Franklin, O., suspended with liabilities of $75,000. The Northwestern national bank at Great Falls, Mont., closed its doors with liabilities of $700,000: assets, $750,000. John K. Gowdy, chairman of the Indiana republican state committee, announces that he has been appointed and has accepted the post of consul general to Paris. Joe Richie and John Thomas, stonemasons, were killed in a premature dynamite explosion at Frankfort, Ky. Anderson Parker, a farmer of Rock Castle county, Ky., in a drunken rage struck his wife and fractured her skull with a club. He then shot his son through the wrist, when the boy secured a revolver and killed his father. Cashier C. E. Breder. of the First national bank of Bethlehem, Pa., was said to be a defaulter to the extent of $15,000. Thirty thousand people in the towns east of Shreveport, La., are said to be in a starving condition. Charles Radbourne, the famous baseball pitcher, so long identified with the National League clubs of Providence and Boston, died in Bloomington, III., aged 43 years. A revival of industry is beginning in the Monongabela (Pa.) valley, over 4,000 men having been given work in the past week. In a collision between freight trains on the Louisville & Nashville railroad near Montgomery. Ala., Sink Kirkland, engineer, and Brakeman Weller were killed and the fireman fatally hurt. A severe earthquake shock was felt at Bengles and Chase's stations in Maryland and also at Baltimore. After a quarrel with her husband the wife of Robert Cort, a well-to-do rancher living near Big Timber, Mont., drowned her three children and herself. A large portion of the business part of Shellrock, Ia., was destroyed by fire. Judge Goff, of West Virginia, has, it is said, declined a cabinet appointment because of his wife's poor health. John Hardisty and Miss Cora Akers were killed by the cars near Caliente, Cal., while gathering wild flowers. The president has signed an order reducing the number of pension agencies in the United States from 18 to 9. In a freight train wreck near Tolono, III., 30 fine horses were killed and five cars of merchandise destroyed. The New York Central's four-track steel drawbridge over the Harlem river in New York, the largest bridge of the kind in the world, has been completed. It cost over $3,000,000,and work was begun on it September 1, 1895.