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TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES There was another tumble of three cents in wheat in Chicago. A change of venue is asked in the Murraysville, Pa, murder and riot cases. The New York firm of Kauffman Bros., dealers in picture frames, has failed. George W. Corwin, of Greencastle, Ind., has failed, with liabilities of $20,000. Ross won three of the five bouts with Flagg in the mixed wrestling match at Cleveland. Henry D. Stout, one of the oldest newspaper men of Ohio, is dead. He was seventy-six years of age. Ferdinand Ward has filed an assignment for the benefit of his creditors. George C. Holt is the assignee. J. S. Wilkins, a leading jeweller of Memphis, has assigned, with liabilites of $42,000 and assets of about $10,000. John A. Walsh told the Springer Committee a number of interesting facts during the progress of his examination. In the contested election case of Wallace vs. McKinley, the House Elections Committee has decided in favor of Wallace. The mills of the Kentucky Lumber Company at Williamsburg, Ky., were burned. Loss, $60,000; insurance, $40,000. Senator Sabin was a large borrower in Eastern cities for the Northwestern Car Company, which has just gone under. A Madison County (Ind.) farmer, named Frasier, shot and killed W. H. Hupp, a neighbor, without cause or provocation. A slight run was made on the First National Bank of Stillwater, Minn., growing out of the Northwestern Car Company's failure. The seventh annual regatta of the Mississippi Valley Amateur Rowing Association takes place at Moline, III., on the 10th and 11th of July. Jersey Central Railroad employes will hereafter work only two days a week at the Philipsburg, Odenwerden, Hampton and Elizabethport shops. An unprecedented cut in rates is announced by the agents of the Burlington, Missouri, Union Pacific & Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Roads. A servant girl in the family of James B. Lansing of Corry, Pa., was shot in the abdomen by young Lansing, who didn't know his pistol was loaded. Thefts of coupon passenger tickets on the Wabash Road have been going on for months. One of the conductors who was suspected of being implicated got frightened and skipped. At the African Methodist Conference, in session at Baltimore, a resolution passed giving worn-out preachers, $400 a year; widows, $100, and orphans under fifteen years $50. A bill authorizing the construction ofs road from Sioux City westwardly via Niobrars Valley to a point on the Union Pacific Railroad will be favorably reported by the House Committee on Pacific Rafirgade.