(71
Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina.
A. II. MITCHELL, Editor anil Kusiness .Manager.
KSTAllMSHKI) Issr,.
EDENTON, N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 189:
I j 1 1 1 : 1 ; i to it v i ' a is : r V vW.
!' ADVANCE.
3 KJllfiTM.
NO.
HERMAN
AND
I'M
I)
1
W. M. BOND,
Attorney at Law
EOENTON, N.
rmC ON KINO STI5KET, TWO DOOM
WZ8T OF MAIN.
cUe la lite 8aperir Courts of Chcwcn M
Moinlnj eonntlMi, and In the Supreme Court mt
r-Colltlomj priBipt! made.
DR. C. P. BOGERT,
Surgeon & Mechanical
DENTIST
7
PATIENT VISH T.D WHEN R EG C STEjB
WOODARD HOUSE,
EDENTON, N. C.
J. L. ROGERSON, Prp.
This c!4 tad eubl!thed bol ii.UI offers Ir
data accommodatloni to the traveling public.
TERMS REASONABLE.
hampls room for trarelln? ealasmen, and ee
rejancet farniaho'l when deflred.
trFrer liaok at ail trains and ateamera.
firit rlax Bar attached. The Beat, Imported
raid botneiitic 1tqoora alwas oa hand.
a o. l
C. 6. UNDER & BRO.,
("oniniiHslon JI o re- liun t h mitl
AVlioli-i-su In Oeulers In
FKE8H FISH
Came and Terrapin
30, 31, 40 & 41 Dock St. Wharf, .
rilllAOIUil'IHA., - I A
Consignments Solicit nil. No Agenta.
NEATLY m PROMPTLY
-BT TEF-
Fiiiherman and Farmer
Publishing Company,
EVER! m liS OWN DOCTOR
J:v.l Hamilton A.v-r-. V M..M.P.
This Is ;i ino-t V;:ln:i)il- I'-m.'k
tor tie- Husftii'l-I, tt ii' liiii- as it
..s tin- n-ilv-illst iu;uisri'.'il
s inpti.ins of .i'-rMt l senses,
i he Pauses mi. I Means f I re
entlni; sn-h pi-casi ami Hie
SnM'l'-t l-'epieil'i-s uliicii v ill a!
!-.- late or i-'irt1.
.'.-is la-es. IT-tiis Iv Illu.-IrateU.
The !iw'j is written in plain
i vit -.lav Knchsli. ami Is tree
hi, in the technical t. i ins wiiii-h
ren.b-r nv'si I . -f r Hooks si
alM'-less to the Kl'lll T'llity of
i :i. l. rs. 'I'll UimiU is in
len.leil In In' ill MTvicc in
iln- I ninilv. i ii'l i so avoimIciI
a folic i-t'.'lililv UUitcitoii.l Ity nil
OM.Y tillit-. 1STIAII.
1'ostiije St:inis I :il;r;i.
Nit only lines this look enn
liiin so iniie'n Inforni.'iuou Itela
livc to I!seae. Lilt i itv 'i "-l r
1 wives ;t ' tn i ili-to Analysis of
everything ferlainiiii; to ('inirt-i-tilp.
.Manla..'e an. I the I'ro.lne
tion an. I i:eaiiin,r of tlialtliy
rainilies.toitetliei- wlili V:.liialle
IteetiH-s anil l'res. rii.tloii, Ki
t'lanatlonsot' llotnnteal I'la.-tiee,
t'orreet use.f inlinary HiTli-,r
("oMfi.vrK. Ivt.rx.
hook I'i'ii. urn
l.'J 1 l-ronii! il t., . V. t'ily
Si
fi
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
TIIK DROOKIiYX DIVIXK'S
DAY SKR3ION.
sux-
Sul)jcctr "Helpful Churches."
AND KFFKrT.
IF 011 i
Text . "Send ihf help from (he tnncbi
ary." Psalms xx., 2.
If you p hould ask fifty men -vrhat the church
Js, thfy would tfiv Jou fifty diffprent an
swer". One man would say, "It is a conven
tion of hypo'Tites." Another. "It is an as
sembly of people who feel thms"lves a great
deal better than others." Another, "It is a
plaw for tfoseip, where wolverine disposi
tions devour eich other." Another, "It is a
plaee for the euilivation of superstition and
cant." Another, "It is an arsenal where
theologians k to j?'t pikes and muskets and
Bhot." Another. "It is tin art gallery, whero
men e to admire grand arches and exquisite
fresco, and musical warble and the Ian
tsque Jn gloomy imagery."' Another man
would say, "It is the best pUce on earth ex
cept tny own home." If I forget thee, O
Jerusalem ! let my right hand forget her cun
ning" Now. my friends, whatever the church is,
my text tells you what it ouarht to be a
jrreat. practical, homely, omnipotent help.
"Send thee help from the sanctuary." The
pew ought to yield restfuln?ss to the body.
The color of the upholstery ought to yield
pleasure to the eye. The entf serviceougbt
to yield strength for the mostly struggle of
everyday life. The Hacrs u ht to behar
neped to all the six eek, draw
ing them in the ri.111 Peanuts vhe cjmrch
ought to be a m mightily
affecting all the -i the worshipers.
Every man getsTb-.rlly jostle 1, gets abused,
gets "ctir, gets insulted, gets slighted, gets
exasperated.
J5y the time the Sabbath comes he has an
accumulation of six days of annoyance, and
that is a starveling church service which has
not strength enough to take that accumulat
ed annoyance and hurl it into perdition. The
business man sits down in church headachey
from the week's engagements. Perhaps hq
wishes he had tarried at homo on the lounge
with the newspapers and the slippers. That
mau wants to be cooled off and graciously
diverted. The first wave of the religious
servica ought to dash clear over the hurri
cane decks and leave him dripping with holy
and glad heavenly emotion. "Send thee help
from the sanctuary."
In the first place, sanctuary help ought to
come from the music. A woman dying in
England persisted in singing to the last mo
ment. The attendants tried to persuade her
to stop, saying it would exhaust her and
make her disease worse. She answered "I
must sing. I am only practicing for the
heavenly choir." Music on earth is a re
hearsal "for music in heaven. If you and I
aro going to take part in that great orches
tra, it is high time that we were stringins;
and thrumming our harps. They tell us that
Thalbertfaad Gottsohalk never would go into
a concert until they had first in private re
hearsed, although they were such masters of
the instrument. And can it lie that we ex
pect to take a part in the great oratorio of
heaven if we do not rehearse here? But I
am not speaking of the next world. Sabbath
song ought to s"t all the week to music. We
want not more harmony, not more artistic
expression, but more volume in our churcb
music.
Now I am no worshiper of noise, but I be
lieve that if our American churches would,
with full heartiness of soul and full emphasis
oT voice, sing the songs of Zion this prt of
sacred worship would have tenfold more
power than it has now. Why not take this
part of.the sacred service and lift it to where
it ought to be? All the annoyances of life
might be drowned out of that sacred song.
Do you tell me that it is not fashionable to
sing very loully? Then, I say, away with
the fashion. We dam back the great Mis
sissippi of congregational singing and let a
few drops of melody trickle through the
dam. I say. take away the dam and let the
billows roar on their way to the oceanic
heart of iod. Whether it is fashionable to
sing loudly or not, let us sing with all pos
sible empuasis.
We hear a great deal of the art of siuging,
of music as an entertainment, of music as a
recreation. It is high time we heard some
thing of music as a help a practical help.
In order to do this we must only have a few
hymns. New tune.? and new hymns every
Sunday make poor congregational singing.
Fifty hymns are enough for fifty years. The
Episcopal Church prays the same prayers
every Sabbath, and year after year and
century after century. For that reason they
have hearty responses. Let us take a hint
from that fact, and let us sing the same
bongs Sabbath after Sabbath. Only in that
way c:m we come to the tull fore ) of this
exercis". Twenty thousand years will not
wear out the hymns of William Cowper and
Charles Wesley aud Isaac Watts. -
Sutpos now each person in this audience
has brought all the annoyances of the last
365 days. Fill this room to the ceiling with
s icrjd sonir. and you would drown out all
those aiiuoyances of the ..) days, aud you
would drown them out forever. Organ and
cornet are only to marshal the voice. Let
the voice fall into line, andin companies, and
in brigades, by storm take the obduracy and
f-in of the world. If you cannot sing for
yourself, sing for others. By trying to give
others good cheer you will tiring good cheer
to your own heart. When Londonderry,
Ireland, was besieged, many years ago, the
people inside the city were tarnishing, and a
vessel came up with provisions, but the ves
sel ran on the river bank and stuck, fast. The
enemy went down, with laughter and de
rision, to board the vessel, whea the vessel
pave a broadside fire against the emeny, and
by the shock was turned back into the stream,
and all was well.
Oh. ye who are high and dry on the rocks
of melancholy, give a broadside fire of song
against your spiritual enemies, and by holy
rebound you will come out into the calm
waters. If we want to make ourselves
hwppy, wo must make others happy.
"Mythology tells us of Amphian, who played
his lyre until the mountains were moved and
the walls of Thebes arose, but religion has a
might W trgjUUaUjtfjMW Chr stlan song
YOU WANT ) 7 T II Fj I R
THEM TO-' J- WAY
even if yoi merely krrp ihem a diversion. In or
rtpr to iaii'lle 1'owls jmlleleiisly, you must know
pomeihini? al.ont t!:ein. 'i o men his wnnt we are
(.elllns: a l-ck riTiii ti e exi'er.en.-e i rtulw OC
of ( ion J poultry raiser forW!UJf twin
tw-cntv five years. It wes written by a man who put
all his mlmll an t time, ami ii:onoy xt Tnukirijr a suc
Chieken raisintr notaaa pastime. it as n
lntsin-c-,an1 If you will rrofit l.yhis twenty flvo
years' work you can save many Chicks amm.-.lly,
mn v.ii'i'i.i -Jr ff!?!?TS1Ti nies or eternal joy Hua
lift the round earty into sympathy with the
skies. I tarried mny nights in London, and
I used to hear.. th bells the. small, bells ot
the city strike th'e hour of night one, two,
three. "four, an after they were done strik
ing the hour of night, then the great St.
Paul s Cathedral would come In to mark the
hours, making all the other sounds seem ut
terly insignificant as with mighty tongue it
announ-e I the hour or tlie night every
fctroke an overmastering boom.
My friend's it was intended tnat an mo
cstr sounds of the world should be drowned
out in the mighty tongue of congregational
s.mg boating against the gates of heaven.
Hovouknow how they mark, the hours In
heaven? They have no clocks, as they have
no candles, but a great pendulum of halle
luiah swinging across heaven from eternity
to eternity.
Let those re 'use to stng.
W h never knew our Oorl,
But children of the heavenly king
Should speak tite r joys abrca I.
& train T remark that sanctuary help ought
,nn.u from the sermon. Ut
T.-.nnle in this or any otner
- - J - . mil
ft1"1 'IM-IV
a tnousana
nudience. how
" Raiainij Chickens."
and mr.ite voir Kowls earn uollors for you. The
no-nt is, that you must be aole to detect trouble In
the Pouitrv Yard e.s soon as it ajipei-rs, and know
Low to reined- It. IhU tuxi'; will U-ai-h you.
It tells how to detect and eure disease: to feed for
run ; n.l al for tatteninr; w hicli fowls to save lor
l.rr.il.i.i; l'"rl oses: aud everything, lud ed, you
aneuKt know on tins sut.jeet to make it profitable.
.Sent postpaid fcr twtuty live cents in Ic o 3c.
at&ii-i s- .....
BooK Publisning House,
1J.5 j.s.iNAHii sr.. X. Y. vriiy.
many want sympathetic help? Po you guess
a hundred? Do you guess 500 lou havo
truessei wrong. 1 win ten you ju i.
imrtion. Out of a thousand people in this
audience there are just 1000 who need sym
These vounir people want it
iust as much as the old. The old people some-
;, ,.om to think thev have a monopoly
of the rheumatism, and "the neuralgias, and
the headaches, and the physical disorders of
the world. But I tell you there are no worse
i,Mriii,hM than are felt DV some oi tursa
vniinir neorile.
T)o von know that much of the work is
done by the young? Raphael died at thirty
1 III at thirtv-three. Gustavus
Adolpnus died at thirty-eight ! Innocent III
meto his miarhtiest influence at thirty-
seven ; Oortez conquered Mexico nt thirty j
Don Juan won Lepanto at twenty-flve ; Gro
tius was Attorney General at twentv-four.
..t T huvn noticed ri.mid all classes of men
that ;om of the severest battles and the
inniiKt wor'.- comes before thirty. There
fore? we must have our sermons and our ex
hortation in praver meeting all sympathetic
with the TOUH2.
And so with these people further on in life.
What do these doctors aud lawyers and mer
chants and mechanics care about theabstrao
tions of religion? What they want Is help to
bear the whimsicalities of patients, the brow
beating of legal opponents, the unfairness ol
customers, who have plenty of fault finding
for every imperfection of handiwork, but nc
praise for twenty excellences. What does
that brain racked, hand blistered man care
for Zwingle's "Doctrine of Original Sin," oi
Augustine's "Anthropology?" You might as
well go to a man who has the pleurisy and
put on his side a plaster made out of Dr.
Parr's "Treatise cu Medical Jurisprudence.'
While all of a sermon may not be helpful
alike to all if it be a Christian sermon
preached by a Christian man, there will 1x3
help for every one somewhere. We go into
an apothecary store. We see others being
waited on. We do not complain because we
do not immediately get the medicine. We
know our turn will come after awhile. And
so, while all parts of a sermon may not be
appropriate to our case, if we watt prayer
fully before the sermon is through we shall
have the divine prescription. I say to these
young men who come here Sabbath by Sab
bath, and who are going to preach the gos
pelthese theological students I say to
them, we want in our sermons not more
metaphysics, nor more imagination, nor
more logic, nor more profundiry.
What we want in our sermons and Chris
tian exhortations is more sympathy. When
Father Taylor preached in the Sailors' Bethel
at Boston, the jack tar3 felt that they had
help for tneir duties among the ratlines an I
the forecastles. When Richard Weaver
preached to the operatives in Oldham, Eng
land, all the workingmen felt they had more
grace for the spindles. When Dr. South
preached to kings aud princes and princesses
all the mighty men who heard him felt prep
aration for their hiifh station.
Again I remark that sanctuary help ought
to come through the prayers ot all the peo
ple. The door of the eternal storehouse is
hung on one hinge i gold hinge, the iiingc
of pr.iyer -and wuen the whole audience lay
hold ol that door, if must come op-n. Th"r i
are here many people spending their first
Sabbath after so raegn.vtt iereavj:nut. W.tj.
will your prayer do for them? How will it
help the tomb in that man's henrt? Hero
are people who have not been in church be
fore for ten years. What will your prayer
do for them by rolling over their soul holy
memories?
Here are people in crises of awful temp
tation. They are on the verge of despair or
wild blundering or theft or suicide. What
will your prayer do for them this morning
in the way of giving them strength to resist?
Will you be chiefly anxious about the fit of
the glove that you put to your forehead
while you prayed? Will you be chiefly
critical of the rhetoric of the pastor's
petition? No. No. A thousand people will
fee), "That prayer is for me," and at every
step of the prayer chains ought to drop off,
and temples of sin ought to crush into dust,
and jubilees of deliverance ought to brandish
their trumpets. Iu most of our churches we
have three prayers the opening prayer,
what is called the "long prayer," and the
closing prayer.
There are many people who spend the first
prayer in arranging their apparel after en
trance, and spend the second prayer the
"long prayer" in wishing it were through,
and spend the last prayer in preparing to
start for home. The most insignificant part
of every religious service is the sermon. The
more important parts are the Scriptural les
son and the prayer. The sermon is only a
man talking to a man. The Scripture lesson
is God talking to man. Prayer is man talk
ing to God. Oh. if we understood the grand
eur and the pathos of this exercise of prayer,
instead of being a dull exercise, we would
imagine that the room was full of divine and
angelic appearances.
But. my friends, th? old style of church
will not do the work. We might as well now
try to take all the passengers from New York
to Buffalo by stage coach, or all the passen
gers from Albany to Buffalo by canaltoat, or
to do all the battling of the world with bow
and arrow, as with the old style of church to
meet the exigencies of this day. Unless the
church in our day will adapt itself to the
time it will become extinct. The people read
ing newspapers and books all the week, in
alert, picturesque and resounding style, will
have no patience with Sabbath humdrum.
We have no objections to bands and sur
plieeandaU th? parajernali.x QL cLerical
life, but these things make no impression
make no more impression on the great
masses of the people than the ordinary busi
ness suit that you wear in Wall street. A
tailor cannot make a minister. Some of the
poorest preachers wear the best clothes, and
many a backwoodsman has dismounted from
the saddlebags and in his linen duster
preached a sermou that shook earth and
heaven with its Christian eloquence. No nf w
gospel, only the old gospel in a way suited
to the time. No new church, but a church
to be the asylum, the inspiration, the prac
tical sympathy and the eternal heip of tho
people.
But while half of the doors of. the church
are to beset open toward this world the other
half of the doors of the church must bo Bet
open toward the next. You and I tarry here
onlv a brief space. We want somebody to
teach us how to get out of this life at the
ri ht time and in the right way. Some
fall out of life, some g j stumbling out of Jife,
some go groaning o-:t of life, some go curs
ing out of life. We want to go singing, ris
iug, rejoicing, triumphing. We want half
the doors of the church set in that direc
tion. Wewant half the prayers that way,
half the sermons that way. We want to
know how to eet ashore from the tumult of
this world into tho land of everlasting peace.
V'e do not want to stand doubting and sUiv-
ti-;nc when wo co awav from this world. We
want our anticipations aroused to the high
est nltch.
We want to have the exhilaration of a dy-
inif nhilrl in Kn?land. the father telling me
tho story. When he said to her, "Is the path
narrow?" she answered ; "The path is nar
row. Tt is so narrow that I cannot walk arm
in arm with Christ, so Jesus goes ahead and
lie savs. 'Marv. follow.'" Through these
church gates set heavenward how many of
vonr friends and mine have cone? The last
time they were out of the house they came
to church. The earthly pilgrimage ended at
the pillar of public worship, and then they
marched out to a bigger aud brighter assem
blage. Some of them were so old they could
not walk without a cane or two crutches.
Now they have eternal juvenesoence. Or
MHBit mil itnanBi it
luey vfaroso wun
cent as the maternal hand euldedthem. Now
they bound witn inj hilarities ceiestiai.
The last time We saw them tney - wero
wasted with malarial or pulmonic disorder,
but now they have- no fatigue and no diffi
culty of respiration in the pure air oi neayeu.
How I wonder when you and I will cross
over! Some of you havo had about onouj h
of the thumping and flailing of this lite. A
draft from the fountains of heaven would do
VOU good. complete release, jju ..c.
Htand very well. If you got on the otuer
side and had permission to come back, you
would not come.- Though you were invited
to come back and join your Jriends on earth,
you would sav, "No, let me tarry here until
they come. 1 shall not risk going back. If
a man reaches heaven, he had better stay
there."
Oh, I join hands with you this morning in
that uplifted splendor !
When the shor? la woa at la t.
Who will count the billows past?
In Frevbourg, Switzerland, there is the
tmnt of a tree 400 rears old. That tree was
planted to commemorate an event About
ten miles from the city tho Swiss conquered
the Burirundians. ana a young man wante 1
1o take the tidings to the city. He took a tree
branch and ran with such speed the ten miles
that when he reached the city waving th
tree branch he had onlvstrength to cry "Vi
torv !" and dropped dead. The tree branch
that he carried was planted, and it grew to
be a great tree, twenty feet in circumference,
and the remains of it are there to this da3.
Mv hearer, when you have fought your last
battle with sin and death and hell, and they
have leen routed in the conflict, it will be a
i - ii t a
joy wortny ot ceieorauon. iou win ny to
the city and cry "Victory 1" find drop at the
feet of the Great King. men trie paun
branch of the earthly race will bj planted, to
become the outreaching tree of everlasting
rejoicing.
When Khali these eyes Thy heaven-built walla
And pearly gates bere-li:
Thy bulwarks with sa vat ion tronj
And streets of shining gold?
DROWNED IN LAKE ERIE
WRECK OF THE PR0PELLEK
DEAN RICHMOND.
She Kan on a Kecf In Lake Krl, Near
Dunkirk, In the .Storm, and Went
to Pieces Her Cargo aud the
Bodies of Her Crew Washed
Ashore.
The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western
line propeller Dean Richmond was lost some
time during the night between Dunkirk, N.
Y., and Erie, Tenn., with all on board, com
prising a crew of eighteen. She was loaded
with flour and grain and bound from Toledo
for Buffalo. There is no living wilness of
the disaster, and the manner ot it could only
be surmised from the wreckage and the
bodies that came ashore.
The Richmond put into Erie at 5 o'clock
p. m. to coal up, and departed shortly after
ward for her destination.
Next morning the shore from Dunkirk to
Van Bureu, a distance of foar miles, wjis
strewn with thousands of sacks of flour,
pieces of ship's furnilure, etc.
About 9 o'clock a. m. a body came ashore a
mile west of Dunkirk, and by papers on the
body it was identified as that of Albert G.
Dodge, of Fayette, Ohio, a sailor on the
Richmond.
In the afternoon two more bodies came
ashore. There was nothing ou them by
which they could be identified, but mani
festly they were sailors.
To each of the three bo lies w is fastened a
life-preserver, ami as the' were only partially
dressed, it is presumed that the disaster
came without warning and that they leaped
from their beds only to find death in the
raging waters.
All the bodies were terribly bruise 1 by
striking against the rocks, and it is believed
that death was the result of exposure and
pounding against the rocks, as they did not
boar the appearance of having been drowned.
The Richmond's after part cane ashore a
few miles from Dunkirk in the afternoon. It
is badly broken up.
From all that can be deduced from the appearance-
of the wreckage and the bodies the
propeller must have become unmanageable
and gone on the rocky shore, where the tre
mendous sea that was running quickly
pounded her to pieces. The sailors may have
been suddenly left struggling in tho waves by
the collapse of the vessel or they may have
had time to embark in tho small boats, but
Jr. either event the end could not have been
long delayed.
The flour which was consigned to Boston
parties is being gathered up by the beach
dwellers.
A dispatch from Buffalo, N. Y., says: The
bodies of five of the victims of tho Dean Rich
mond disaster have come ashore at Van Burcn
Point, forty miles from this city, near Dun
kirk. The shore of the lake is strewn with
wreckage and merchandise, and the waves
hourly yield up further evidence of the Rich
mond's fate.
A report from Erie, Tenn., states that the
Dean Richmond's yawl has been found near
where the first two bodies were picked up.
There can be no doubt that all on board
perished. Tho coast is full of rocks
and tho waves ran twenty feet
high all night. Tho Dean Richmond was a
thirteen-hundred-ton vessel, owned at Port
Huron, and valued at $70,000. She was built
in 1860 and rebuilt in 18SW. The vast amount
of wreckage indicates that she went to pieces
late in the night.
FIFI Y-THIRD CONGRESS.
PRISONERS ABANDONED.
A Night of Terror In tho Baltimore
(Md.) Jail.
Fire started in tho electric light plant of
the Brush Company, at Baltimore, Md..
about 10 o'clock p. m. It was caused by the
crossing of electric wires. Soon the exten
sive plant was in flames, and no effort could
save it from complete ruin. Suddenly tho
cry went up that tho city jail and tho
Maryland penitentiary building, front
ing ou Madison street, half a block
away, were afire. The sparks found their
way down the ventilating 'shafts of tho south
wing of the city jail, a big stone structure.
In tho jail hundreds of prisoners wero con
fined, whilo across n yard the Maryland
penitentiary had locked in its cells (300 con
victs. Instantly thero was an uproar among the
prisoners in the jail. Smoke was filling tho
corridors, and the guards, satisfied that the
flames would soon be extinguished, examined
tho locks to see that no prisoner could escape
and then went out in the air. Fear turned
into mad panic as tho smoke thickened, and
theconnedmen shrieked, cursed, and prayed
as the thin tongues of flame crept along the
sills into the windows of thoir cells. They
beat their heads and tore their clothes in an
agony of terror. One poor fellow was later
on carried out with a fractured skull.
Meantime the guards, carrying tho keys
which would have liberated the men from
the horrible smoke and fire trap, had real
ized that the danger was great. They at
tempted to return to tho upper tiers of the
south wing and liberate their charges, but
were driven back by the impenetrable
imoke. Tho firemen, urged on by tho
shrieks of the tortutod a3 well as by
the cheers of the multitude belo'w, staggers-1
through the corridors, smashing lock after
lock and releasing the occupants of the
cells.
Many of the prisoners were found uncon
scious, others in their mail haste to escap j
jumped from the upper tiers to the floor be
low. Charles Dunn, colored, was fatally
injured in this way and died next morning.
It was more than two Hours alter ttie jail
took firo before tho last unconscious vic
tim was carried out. The patrol wagons
and ambulances conveyed thirty of the
more seriously injured to the near-by hos
pitals. The other prisoners were treated
35 "tn tne norm wing ot me jau
the penitentiary. Seven-
or removed to
Iv-eigbt women wero in another wing of the
. j . . . ,. . i . i .1 i ., i.
(ill. ureal excitement prevaueu mere, um
Matron Bishop gathered the females in the
lower hall and quieted their fears.
Tho fire was confined to tho south wiug of
the jnil, which was gutted from roof to cellar,
The loss ia estimated at $ 55,003.
MACMAH0N IS DEAD.
The
The Senate.
E-tTTi Dat. The debate on th Repeal bill
was continued. Mr. Stewart holding the floor
nearly the entire day. A night session was
hel 1 during which the filibustering was con
t nued.
55th Dav. Several important anend-
ments to the rules were offered. Mr.
Jones, of Nevada, spoke all day against re
pea'. Mith Day. The morning hour was de
voted to a discussion of proposed amend
ments to the rules, after which the silver de
bate was resumed.
57th Dat. The whole day was devoted to
discussion of the proposed amendment to the
ru'c.s.
.:Sth Dav. The whole day was spent ia
debate of the rules, during which Mr. ilor
gan again attacked Mr. Hill.
After Lonx Years
Albert Jones, a farmer liviu niir Gran l
view, Texas, was wouudeJ in the leg at tho
battle of Chiekamauga nearly thirty years
ago. The wound has given him no iucou
venience until within the last twelve months,
and a few days ago it was fouu I u-.-ess try to
amputate the limb. The bullet w w found
imbedded in the bone.
The House.
&3d Day. The bill for the protection ot
rt-est reservations was discussed. Trie
r.mendment to the Chinese Exclusion act was
debated.
54th Day. Debate on the Met rear bill to
amend the Chinese Exclusion act occupied
most of the session.
55th Day.- Debate on the bill to amend
the Chinese Exclusion act was continued by
lssrs- Maguire. i)uthwaite, Everett, Her
man. Sibley, Mahon, Williams and Helborn.
5(iTH Day. The MeCreary bill, extending
frr six months the time in which Chinese resi
dents may register under the Geary law, was
passed. -The Cox bill. lor tne Detter con
trol of National banks, was taken up, and.
without disposing of the measure, the House
adjourned.
57th Day. A bill dispensing with prooroi
loyalty in the cases of persons who beforethe ' r-
war were entitled to pensions and to bounty f-ffiSVr fflrS' NY Airs
i..r,,io .n.ni,ip,.t.ltnhMr. Burrows as far : wrs. cnaries htarr, tinura.jN. i . , .Mrs.
as the pension clause was concerned.
Thereupon Mr. Oates, who had charge of
the measure, withdrew me pension clause,
and the bill was passed. -Then came up
the proposition for the better control of Na
tional banks, and after a brief exchange of
views between its supporters and opponents,
it was agreed to without a division. The
remainder of the day was consumed in the
consideration, of the Public Printing bill.
5Sth Day. The bill amending the Revised
Statutes relating to clerk's fees, semi-annual
returns of fees by district attorneys, mar
shals, aud clerks, commissioners' tees, and
to offenders against tho United States, was
passed. The New York and New Jersey
Bridge bill was passed The House then
resumed the consideration of the Printing
bill, but without disposing of it .adjourned.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Queen Victoria, is a skilful knitter, and
works at it indefatigably.
Ford Maddox Brown, the English painter,
died a few days since in London at the ago
of seventy-two years. I
- Seven eusdeed live larks constitute the
queer present lately sent by the King ofi
Italy to the German Emperor.
Senator Wolcott, of Colorado, has tho
reputation of being the gourmet par excel
lence of Congress, and his tip3 are so gener
ous that the waiters grow rich on them.
The late Arthur Elder Nelson is said to
feave made about '12,000 a year writing dirmj
and half-dimo novels, and he didn't waste
any of it on pistols and bowio knives to go
hunting bears and Indians.
The Queen of England has npproved the
appointment of tho Earl of Elgin as Viceroy
of India. The new Viceroy is the eldest son
of the eighth Earl of Elgin, who was ap
pointed Governor-General of India in Jan
uary, 1362, and who died in office November,
18C3.
The youngest judge in this country is said
to be Henry W. Scott, Associate Justice ofi
the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. He is
twenty-eight years old. At the age of twenty
two ho was Register of the land office at
Earned, Kan. He lias written several legal
works.
Dennis Flynn, Delegate in Congress from
Oklahoma, has staked claims in half a dozen
-States, practiced law in Iowa, edited a paper
in Kansas, acted as rostmaster at (jrutnrie
and narrowly escaped getting shot several
times during the whoopful, early days of the
Territory.
Robert Louis Stevenson is said to bo a
most laborious writer. He rewrites his
manuscript to such an extent that at the end
of tho day scarcely one of the original sen
tences remains unchanged. Occasionally ho
spends three weeks on a single chapter and
then throws it away.
The Duke of York must be acquiring a
considerable library, for it is said that he is
preserving all the newspaper references
touching on any part of his life. Now, of
course, he has added those about his bride.
The volumes are handsomely bound, and
have solid gold clasps, which display the
Duke's initials beautifully engraved.
Six members of the United States Senate
have passed the seventieth year of their age.
Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, heads tho list with
his eighty-three years. Next comes Mr.
Palmer, of Illinois, who is seventy-six. Mr.
Harris, of Tennessee, is seventy-five ; Mr.
Pugh, of Alabama, is seventy-three, and Mr.
Sherman, of Ohio, and Mr. Hunton, of Vir
ginia, aro each seventy years old.
HE TIED FARRAGUT.
KILLED IN A WRECK.
Terrible Rear end Collision at .lack
pon, Mich.
The aecon I s tion of th Oswego -ial
on the IM iWar.. end Lackawanna r iIlit ,
the rear end of the head s...-t ior 10J vnr is
from the station at Jn-ks n, Mi -h., at ;i V)
o'clock a few morning ago. The cars w. ro
piled in a mass upon the tracks and th en
gine of the second train smashed up.
The trains wer day coach excursion p--eials.
The first s"ciion ha i stopped to 'let
the passenger- take t n akfast. It had beu
Btan llng nt the stntion twenty-six minutes
when the second section came crushing into
it. The signal semaphore wns up all right
but the engineer says tlint his air brakes
would not work and he was powerless to
avoid tue accident.
The cars were terribly smashed, two of
them being thrown across the track. on
car was driven completely through another
and others were kno:ke 1 upside down. Sev
eral hundred persons were aboard the two
trains, and they were wedged in jn nil Mi ls
of shapes. Within twenty minutes after th'
accident occurred six bvid bo lies h-i 1 b"cu
taken out Of the wreck.
Some of the cars were nd badly enough
wrecked to kill any of the people "on board
them, but it is miraculous, considering the
shape the cars were left in. that any es -aped
without some more or less serious injurv.
Following is a corrected list of kilU-ian l
injured : Maggie M.-Masters. Penn Yan. N.
Y. ; Mrs. I. N. Bard!ey. Canton, P.-un. ;
Miss Harriet Breece, pine City, N. Y. ;
Susie Headley, Warrior Run. iVtin. ;
James Woodbury, Bath, N. Y. ;
baby of Mrs. Harrington ; Mrs. Lloyd Woo 1
bury, Bath, daughter-in-law of James Wood
bury; Mrs. J. 11. Keeder, Hatntnondspurt
N. V. .
nn.t
jj.iFitH.is, Aimonu, i engineer n.iien
! died that afternoon.
Tho first section of the excursion train .vas
called the "Oswego" and the Inst section th
"Webb" special. F. J. Reid, condu' tnr of
j the Oswego special, has sent this despatch t j
j the officers of the road in Detroit
" was stopyig at Ja.'kson for tireak f ist
! and had just started when the 'Webb' spe-
cial going west struck tny train in the rear
; part and broke three coaches, i. cannot as
certain how many were injure-;. My train
was protected in the Ja-kson yard by the
semaphore."
Engineer William Whalen, who live 1 at
Jackson, was running the hist section. He
Baid before be died :
"I saw the signal in the yard co keep back,
and had my engine in hand, as 1 thought,
but when 1 came down near the train, which
was still, my air brake would not work, and
I rau into tho coaches. The failure of the
air made it impossible to stop. I never ha 1
such an experience before."
One of the mo.-t horrible sights in eonne -tion
with the accident was a woman carrying
a head by the hair around through t he crowd,
moaning and weeping and apparently rav
ing maniac. She was taken care of byt!it
police and the head which she carried wut
taken to police headquarters.
TWENTY-FOUR LIVES LOST.
Dc station Canted ty Hurtins
Waterspout in Mexico. j
l.nrst ng w.it-rpout in th Territory j
of Tepti-. M-ic.., .Mind fc-reiti of utt '
u!i rev.r l ha -ienlis. Tw-ut.. -f.jur i
j -us,,us .uj La-jwu t-j h.ivj ln j
dr I. On :nu who -4s c tnght by th" ,
fb.' I ia h:s ci'-iu swm until the w-ii-t
r -a -h-M th- ro'. ii th.-n b;ir-t a h i '
through th l.y oi hi dr ihu;.in t ei-tj,, i.
Tny t-j v:i oi Sintt Iu-, ia til" Mat" of
t'n ', w,i-i iti'in I it- I an I ti" Town il i.l
and miny Cher teul tin - wru swp: sw.v.
TUcro w-T Mtuil.ir di iier in otner t,ju,.
Great French Marshal Passes
Quietly Away.
Marshal MacMahon diod at 10 o'clock a. m.
at Chateau La Foret, on the Loire, in France.
He was able to partake of food until the day of
his death, but during the night his strength
gradually declined, and he grew weaker
and weaker .until the end came peace
fully at the hour mentioned. The family of
the deceased soldier, including the Duchess
of Magenta, his wife, his three sons and his
daughter, Countess Piennes, were present at
his death.
Mario Edmund Tatrico Maurice Mac
Mahon was born at Sully, June 13. 1803.
Ho was descended from an Iri3h family,
which followed the Stuarts io France in
1691. Ho was educated at St. Cyr. and
after graduating took part in the Alger
ian campaign. In 1?10 ho was made
a Major on aceount of distinguished
services, and at ihebeginningof the Crimean
war was made a General. Here he also dis
tinguished himself, his storming of the Mala
koll being an achievement renowned in his
tory. During the Franco-Italian war in 1S50
he was created Duke of Magenta because of
the decisive defeat he .administer sd to the
Austrlans in the battle of that name. It was
shortly after this that he was made a Mar
shal of France. In 1864 Marshal Macilahoa
was appointed Governor of Algeria,
and rendered important services in
that capacity. He commanded the
whole French army in the Franco-Prussian
war, but that brief campaign ended
disastrously for his country. He lost two
important battles and. finally sufferel a
crushing defeat at Sedan, where he was se
verely wounded. Marshal MacMahou was
elected President of the French Republic iu
1873, but resigned in 17U. Since they, bis
life has been, spent io retirement.
A Celebrated Seaman Commits Sufi..
fide at the Mare Island Yard.
John Neil, a seaman in the United Stat
Navy, serving ou board the receiving si
Independence, Mare Island (Cal.) Na
Yard, committed suicide by shooting him
in the head. The deceased was reprimand t i
for having overstayed his leave of abse
and was punishsd by restriction to the s
lor a penoJ of sixty days.
As soon as Neil received his punishn
ne was seen to go Delow into the shAr.
rnnm vt- h.ir.i V. ... . r ! -. .
- - . . . x in, ua IUUUU WLCr Willi EX . I
let wound in bis right temple. Tho deceas'
was a man of unusual distinction, havind r
ceivet medal honors from Congress 1 fi
nraverj ana meritorious conduct. t
Neil enlisted in the navv in 1861. sari-.
with Fa rra gut at Mobile Bay. and Iashedih
Aumirai in tne rigging ot the Hartford,
he stood by his side throughout the flgfeti
j - - - - - " " - a - . 4 in ill i j . ! ar ,
in the navy, and was one of the survivor v
t ue ni-iaiea irenton, which went down )
Apia harbor, and received 'general mastkJ11
for bravery in rescuing shipmates front tl?"
Vandalia. which was also wrecked inMh;
same gale. He was a native of Ireland. jigeC
sixty-two and a member of the Grand Arm!
of the Republic and tho regular Army(an
Navy Union. . 11
COLUMBUS DAY.
STEAMER W000KEN LOST.
Foundered In Lake Kiie and Thir
teen of Her Crew Orowned.
Tho steamer Woeokcn. from Cleveland,
foundered in ten fathoms of water just above
Long Point, on the northern coat of Lake
Erie, in the bite storm, carrying down with
her all but three of her crew. The list of
those drowned is as follows :
Albert Meswiiid, Captain, Marine City;
Mrs. Sarah Meswald. bis sister; Captain
John Mitchell, Cleveland; Captain David
Jones, first mate, Cleveland ; Matt hew Has
ler, second engineer, .Marine City,
Michael Hiukleiaaii, chief enciiiner, Cleve
land; Charles Minard. tewatd. Marine
City ;IIen;-y Branch, watchman. Marine city ,
John llinkleman, fireman. Marine City;
George Smith, fireman. Marine City; Ed
inuud Eldredge. watchman, Marine City,
Mike Kenny, deck hand. Marine City ; Will
iam Ea'hl. 'wheelman. Marine City.
The Wocoken was bound from Ashtabula,
Ohio, to Dulutb. Minn., with a cargo of
coal. She made her way to F.ne
with safety. There she picked u; ln-r
consort, the Joseph I'aig". an I pro
ceeded up the the lake. The vessel had pro
ceeded well out into til" lake before she was
struck by the storm. She faced t lie trale and
prepared for the battle for lib". Alter she
had been swept fore and aft by the tremen
dous eeaj and had been almost dismantled
Captain Meswald saw that further eli'oi. to
combat the storm were u-eles-.. His boat
was being rapidly torn topiecis, and the
only hope was to seek the protection of Long
Toint.
The Paige weathered the gale niiieh better
than the steamer, and having the ud vantage
of position ro le westward before the storm
and found safety behind Long Point with all
her canvas gone. The Wocoken whk not so
fortunate.
As the boat became waterlogged, and it be
came evident that it was a question "f but a
few minutes until she must go down, the
Stronger men began to jump overboard with
the faint hope of being cast ashore without
being beaten to death on the rocks t hat
abound in that locality. But the most skil
ful swimmers were hurled out of sight of "tie
another by thetremendotis waves that lashed
the sinking hull.
They went down in quick svn
three who escaped were Tan
$75,000 FOR HIS LEGS.
A Hig Verdict Agairot the Michigan
Central for h Hoy's Injuries.
The heaviest verdict for pep.ivil damage j
ever given at Detroit, Mi -h., w.n r-turncl!
In th' Wnyne County C'o'irt ntralnst th j
Michigan Central Raiir-M-1 Corupmy. H
was for iTc.ooo in favor f William I.u -ktin.
seven years !d. who ha i both legs cut off :
by a Michigan Central train a year ago last j
April. Th" boy's foot bev:iui caught in the j
guardrail, and before he could extrlcat
self the train l acked d mn upon him.
parents live in Detroit.
hirii-llH
KILLED BY APACHES.
A l'osl master and Two Other Men
Murdered.
Fears for the safety of George Waterbury,
Special Post office Inspector in Atl.on i, han
ben ullayed by the arrival of b:s report.
At Monitor post office, in an isolated part uf
Ari.ona, he found the b iv ef A. S. P -Mer,
PoM master, about seventy live yards from
his canin. with the ho iy of a coiura
named Foster and that of a young Mexican.
All wer killed by Apache Indian-, whom
Putter had ordered off placer grounds of
which he was custodian.
The indications point to-day to on" of the
largest crops of sugar c ine ever harvested
by t lie planters of Louisiana. The jild of
cugar last year, iu roun I numbers, bad been
set down bv a cons.-rvativ" and well in
formed sugar d-aler as 450.O0n.iMW pounds.
The name nut hority, from the present out
look, says that the yield this year may con
fidently be expected (- reach the very hand
some total ot 550,(100.0110 pounds. dins
would be an increase in yield of a full 100.
000,000 pounds over the crop harvested last
year. The yield in fa.-t may be said to be
ih" greatest which L''iisin:i:i has ever produced.
THE Prri'lfs IN TUT conN.
When th mist in pearlv i-dumm
Ulc o'er the hilltops gr,i.
And thr dews -d ial dnwnuig
In tho grrve- melt ns.n,
Th.-n th still ut (? -tv.d -picn
s-'-ed ht first r- thro' th ri -re,
1,.-, tte-y kiss tt." -Ic.-py fnc.
'.f the t ,p; ies .n Mi" oi l.
O'er th- H'-eii" tb- re talis a tb-i '.
Ail th twittering song-birds ti!' ;
. th" lark, hi- far flight tnsin.-,
dr-les townrllh" distant hi!',
T'p and up war I. II i-s 1 1 . i .r.ph.m
Earth -bred w-u. -' r. L"a -n l-rv.
Till a s ng sf-V.s I -wn tro u ' - t b m I
O'er the pe. 1,1 f '" T..
Slowly com.", the hus'i of u -ai'ic .
Not a leaf w. on lh tr
Not a b w -drop on the gr.i- ,
Not th" rhtp.-r n I r ,
Glows th sun n s-vrchiu.- inrv ,
On-' v -e but'. f fly f'r:
Panting, fa!!- in -l in,- v - i : ' 1
(in th- i . -i -1 J in
Soft a rev" n- rustling1 '
Sightngtl-ro' the Ur. t l
.-ttr- th" gr.ip- - in liiMg.n.- -
( n th" nndd rin ; in
Sinks the sun in ...n'i i gl ,r .
Di." 111" d 'I- lllgbt t bore
on" wee tr pee.. tltr'i;l
t the p In th-
- Man 1 I K.-n !n--k . in 1!
iirMou or tiii: ivv
A short liist..r .d t'iuu
dollar tc -i-iip and n t br. .
Mint -girl. WV.-diingt-.o. i n
A .'.ulliir inn s-iMHg- I'lin'i i
mutely turn ""it t" !'' "rth t
i-M Kti.ckllig. I'.iistoli II. I al l.
The t.-mtnt ho spend- a!l In--
in 11 tent lintwtall Iik- can-, t.
..V. I- the rent. I '.il (Valo 'oii'o-!
There was a r.au in --'it !' "
And he wop-Iron-
lb- k-pt bl to,gi". lie -' .i.j. - I In
ill-
iU-
Hit
I '1 i
nd also shut h
It is the man witli n'.i.ttl ' . 1" 1
credit 111 a bnllk tlint u-ipillv tt'f - b :
est to stir ll) n panic a-bm I
Slur.
Tli" highest f mil !' nine- t. tl ,t(e
nt lb. i.res.-nt tmi is In n-k n
In- can clinii
A p .oil 1.
The alK Hlg deb- a',.- ,1
In le- rciiiHrktil'lv lout l-.o'ii
a sti ikin;; M'I" '""
( 'mirier.
A g.inil
l'niie mill
Tin- .
year is
carloa1
sent to
l-.ble.
sion. The
hardv and ex
perienced seamen and skilful swimmers, who
succeeded in keeping themselves well out
from the dangerous coast until the storm
abated and they were able to make a land
ing The Wcoken was owned by John Mit
chell, of Cleveland, and was valued at 1 50,
000.
Italians and Spaniards Join In CJelt,
bratlng at the Fair. f ,
Italians and Spaniards joined bands 0
celebrate at the Fair in honor of ChristOj;
Columbus, the discoverer of the new w-rl,
A j"jl . I. J 1 1 Ji jl ?
Alter a paraae mrouga lue aown o Kwsi't
of Chicago the Italian and Spanish sod: f
and lair officials came to tho grounds
boat and rail. The Commissioners from
two countries extended a welcome to tt
visiting societies on the Casino Fieri
which all fell iu lin j and marched aroma
Grand Bisin to the staff statue of Colon
which, stands at the east entrance of tfe; AJ
ministration Building. Brief speeches ,
made by Director General Davis, Ma- f J
Ungaro. the Italian Commissioner Gl rj'1
Sicnor Dupuy do Lome, the Spanish .jd.o. '
ter ; Mayor Harrison, an 1 others. Thoc ,J
was then decorated with wreaths of laa; j
rEoFESsoR 1'ASTErB is report ea to tK t
very rapidly, although his energy in tar.. l1
the wily comma bacillus tc its lair kno-. s'0
abatement. He still suffers from a stro.,,J
naralvsis which he sustained twentv-fl
been nearly useless since then. His r
is hesitating, his motion difficult, but & '8.
his feebltnei-5 of body bis mind is as t? trte
as ever. Professor Pasteur ib now a
j ears old. i V'
To
th-
.f th- New York itiey.tr. I thU
largc-t e- r rai-"l, a' . .ill -Ol)
s. A quantity of the grip-- vi!l b"
England. Th'- industry is y.-ry pr.Cit-
THE MARKETS.
:(' liolcsule I'rli-es of oiinfr
IVodocc Oimtcd in Ncv. York.
3H lull - M
plll-
I IU
I'd" -I
-. Mid
have
I" Id
I lis
(bit
I'lll'ill Ii it-1'
1 !!- N ASP I FAS.
Beans - Marrow. is;:i. . hoic -vj no
Medium. I. choice. . .
Pea. 1S!':t, cho;ee
Red kidn- . 1 t. choice
White kidtiev . l-i-i". -hoi.
biniii. 'a!., i' t.u lbs
Green peas, 1 !:. V bu-h . .
! I'T I I II.
1 !i.r.
J I '. '.
2 mi
t t.'i
f,r SI
M 2 (IU
(a'
in
Or
'
70
10
-. tllb-,
tr.--..
i ru
and
Crenmerv - '-tat.
State. 'p-pU. .
Western, lir-ts
Western, seconds
Western. thirds
State dairv h. '.. tubs
pails, extras
If. f., tubs and pails, firsts
II. t..tu'ns and pail:-', seconds
Welsh t ubs. et ra-
W.-lsh tul-s. firsts
Welsh t Ubs, seconds ...
Western Int. creamery, first -W.
I;n. creamery, se.on.i
W. im. eream.-ry. thirds.
Western Factory, t ul s. firsts.
W. Factory, seconds
W. factor. van ! dairy, thirds
i ii k Ksr.
ry Full
y
.0 Or
Co
('I
Or
I IV
, 'ii'
Ui
J'' Oi'
I'.l Or
In
l't Oi
r,r
'.'I
1 1 1 ft n
t latch
(loir 11 oa tin:'
I., ilg. r
I'lM-lld "W.'P. T.'liiln. . '"',
you've stitl del t'- -Ii-'-''. bat .!
iik- lx-st ." ToiuhM " i;.
tcr ' b-euil.
"Will, Anna. Ipo- V"'i
ri si- I' if my Im 1 1 y-t ' " '
but now I i-iiiiii'd tin l th
l'licgi tide lllu.-t t.-r.
(('m rictis " Wit i w it- it
tlie sop-.' ' rin I ' itltrl in
,.us -"Ailiim, in nil pi "
was tin' ' i d man. I I'
ll-' went b. gc, ., !
p IS
tl.
lilt
t but
. I
' Im-
-.iii-I llf
M . . i n 1 1 1
III!.. "
I 1 I I
W .it.
! i
I ii i
lb
.-i i-. i ,
I in ! I Inn : -I I' ,
Tin -a I result w t . Illll-' '-I-
Than ban 1- an I f""t m l -'i '
,i i, in 'I . -1
a Pi i' Ii i
i 1 1 ' i M
17
(ll
l'l'
IS'
H
cream.
Augii-t fan -
large, .-hoic
choice
fair to good .
common . . . .
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
Thf.re are 23,000 bliud people in England
and Wales.
Great Bbitais makes over 130,000 bicy
cles a year.
A womax has been nominated lor Coroner
in Leavenworth, Kan.
New churches built in America last year
numbered nearly 10,000.
A fink of 103 is the penalty for sending
a falsi firo alarm in London.
There is a premium offered on the Colum
bian postage stamps in Europe.
Washington- hop crop this year is one of
the largest aud finest ever known.
Boston' baa more electric trolley cars run
ning in its streets than any othei city in tho
world.
Tfe Tiou"S of the leading millionaire-?
of New York are mostly guarded by sc ret
police.
Brookltn's population, according to the
censu-s of the Bureau of Vital Statistics, is
1.000.0O0.
Tue expenses of carrying on the city irov
ernment of New York next year will bo
?36.000,000.
The wheat yield of Kansas is 2i.WAM
bushels, an increase of 5.000,000 over tho
September estimates.
Patrick Collins, who brutally murdered
his wife, was arrested while praying in a
San Francisco church.
Miss Ollte Cline. one of the "routrh
riders"' who got a lot in Perry, Cherokee.
Strip, has sold her claim for 800.
Chin is about to establish a postal system,
beginning with tho seaports. It is hoped
that within ten years it will bo extended
throughout the empire.
A dispatch from Clyde. Scotland, says that
John Jamison, owner of the yacht Ivrnn,
will build a j-acht and challenge for the
America's Cup next year.
The project of holding a National Expo
sition in the City of Mexico this winter,
using the exhibits sent by Mexico to Chi
cago, has been abandoned.
Extebim etT8 with the Importation of
fruit from Cape Colony have proved so suc
cessful that Londoners expect soon to get
not only apples but peaches and mangoes
from Africa.
At the present time there are seventy-oni!
public buildings in course oi construction in
the United States, and the plans for forty
nine new ones, for which appropriations
have been made, are being prepared in the
Treasury Department.
State F.-i-t.
Sept. fain-
F ill cream.
Full cream.
Part skims.
Part skims.
Part sk ims.
Full skims
FOOS.
State and Penn -Fr'-sh
Western --Fresh, fancy
Din-k eggs
riit irs ami rF.nt'.i
Appl' s Inferior, r bbl . . .
Gr."ui varieties. V bbl.. .
lied iri. ties. fall. V bb
Pears. Kartlcft. ' bbl
Hher kinds. ",' 1,1.1 ,
Grapes, Del.. V basket . .
iticord . V I a.-ket
Niagara. V lb
Punches. Jersey. ' basket
Cranberries, Cip. Cod. ;'
Ilnl-S.
11.
State Kid. V- lb
s:ii, prime
is:i'. com non To fair
Old old--
1 IVE I'OPl.TliV.
Fowl? -Jersey. State. Penn..
Western, "r' lh
Spring chickens, lo.-al, V .
Western, "r- tb
Boosters, old. V H
Turkeys. V lb
Ducks - N. J.. N. Y.. Penn.,
V pair .
Western, V pair .
Geese, Western. V pale
Pigeons. t pair
PHKMSKP I'Ot'LTnT- KREH
Turkeys. ' rb
Chickens, Phila. V ft'
Western, V lb
Fowls St. Mid Wet. V lb ..
Duck? Fair to fan'.y, V In...
Eastern, t' lb
Sprinu". L. f.. r' H
Geese Eastern. V lb
rquabs - Dark V do.
White, r" do'-
VfI r-.TABI.EA.
Potatoes Staf". "f tt""
.1. r-'-v. V bbl
L I ."in bulk. V bbl
Cabbage. L. I .V P"
Onions t. .V Wc-t.. hhl
Eastern, red. V bbl
Ka-tern. white. V bbl ....
J I .', Jersey, yellow, r1 bbl
Cuc'.iud -r-. L.'I y I'"
Lima be.-ms. V- bag
Squash. uiarr-w. r1 bbl
Hubbard. V bbl
Tomatoes, nearby. V crate
Turnip-. Bu in. f bbl
Wt IP-. bbl
Cel. rv I L. r'doz. Imn'-hi-
( aulifb-'.y r. r' bbl
potatoes. S". Jersey ..
l'ar-it'i- bbl
I.KII, ET''.
Flour- -Winter Patents
Spring Patents
Wheat. No. 2 P."!
P.y. State
Barley rngrad" 1 Wfern
I'orn -No. 2
Oats -No. 2 White
Mixed Western
Hay Good to Choice
Straw Long Rye. .
Seel--Clover. V 100
Timothy. V V -
Lard City Stc.i:n
i.tvr STOCK.
jv-eves. City dresse i
Milch Cows, eo-n. to good. ..
Calv CltV dr.-s-s;d
sh-ep, y PMl lb-
La ."i i s. V ITj
Log Live, y W) ft s
L fjssed
II Jn - ;
II (n II':'
-t(a IU7. j
7: .' ' .
:, oi i, . ;
4 (n ."l
in - i
, :. y .
'Si Or Si :
Or - !
i
I'llKHU. !
1 CO Oi 1 .VI :
:. 2"i Oi -J 7 ". I
2 ro tn : -j.: '
on or "o
:t cu in l (mi !
II Or 17 i
M d, S ' j
1 1 . Oi -
4'l In 1 00
3 (HI In 7, ."i'l ,
Y Or ',
21 Or 'i
is Oi l' j
C, rn, 12
i
H Oi H : '
H Or s: I
V-Or S ' !
7 (a H i
(n) r, !
1 (q V)
55 (a SO
50 (a) 65
, 1 (K) (h) 1 Vt
i' ra) 35
Ut KIM. KP.
H fr Id
I) Or 1 7
H o, :
'J fn)
In
i:, Or 1,
1C
O,
1 7.". la 2 d'l
2 75 Oi .; 00
J 25 (a 1 75
1 50 O, I s7
2 0O (a l 2 5
2 0') Oi t 50
1 Ti In 1 i i
frO In 1 Ci
2 50 ii -i 25
r.i) in 1 75
fa.
fa
--, fa I (i'l
1 25 fa 1 VI
n fa '
75 fn 1 do
O, (I'l
1 OH fn 1 25
I (HI Oi 2 00
1 :M In 2 7 .
1 VI -
, .1 ." fa 3 75
:t ' fn, 10
fn ;',
.VI Oi 55
ri fa 7
(a 47
:j5 fa 'V' i
H-I.' 'a ':
5 .- ' Oh '
:r) fa '" '
; H) fa ;i '"
4 00 fa 5 ("
f, 'J i
7
'.5 (Ml fa 50 '
x fa 12
J -7 . di 4 :a
7 'fa i
i; 75 f " ''
t fa 1".
The irip- In nt ' " "
Ii. s in its i-.-iinii b r t im
i ra lia-te vn'i c in so in
lite - for Ktlol Iter li
Star.
In the s. trcli for 1'n W
Ti . liln oil.- "let. el l ' III -t
ili-t.-cl IV II s nil'' "f t ll'
I b-teclillg i- M IT. -Ill '"I
t iiii'-s. - Kail iiimi A to' i i '
I h.-y didn't " w i' ' 1 '
ii 1 t ! i
V..sll
l't'1 V
hit i.
I III I tl
I II ' I ". I
To pre-"iit wit 't a i
For they w-rc a't ud Ii
oft Iu- t hill ' he'.l -
"Life I- a song. '
and In- told Up- ti -iitli
reflection that n m ci
i-X ist i-li'-i- lis i .1 iliox I- "I
soup- j io j iii t ii r lull' s g.
ingt on SI io .
' ' I Willi l'lli'1 I " e' '
1 1n s ind out of on ,
Ml'. N'o.'lle," ll Ml
it leitisi- "Your hvdi
a little I tliink y'
I'liilii-l' 1 1 li i It-for. I.
"A p-nny for y. ir tti-.u .'M
' I u I '-nd'-r t on.-- In -ai ' ,
'I'ti'-n she told that vi-l-.a-W'er"
fi-. tt ut .' tlirouh Ii
'l:lc.
-t t :i
-1 . 1 in
nil ',
me- -i
ii.
ut bib
. i ' ir .
d I- -gin i
., it i ii
i - -. iit--i
(I'l SOtll
I : 1 1 ii i- ii
in I V . Ill ik
t i l i'l' I V
1 1 1 1 II
ot io r
llll tl
,!'
I'll!
I " '
t t , I-
. it t nil b. r (' t i k
.-I,.. nil tie line
.. MIL I I If'll. II'''
lit tl.-.ol
I
iii pu
lp
. (in-
Ii'. :
..,-(-b'-a
!
. Int.
r
iii-
bri-b I
!,. put in .i
a -i ii ip
All Hp- .1 liim I'"-'
Lied ui i lie regi-1 1 r V J
alone was missing. Nt I
I... luted Hii'ifiiranof II
old gentleman of K-v.iitv. "i, '.ii- r
time," said the regifdiar, ".-o:u' a l"t
earlier." S'mntagisVditt. "
"Well. Aunt IJa-lp 1," "i'l the young
l t.lv in th - travelling suit,
... . r II-'.
to lii-l yon a b.ir.- lai . n
in tin- train, m '
liny.
von 're.
StlHll
"If
going
said tin; guard ' "l 'ti it 1 1 1 n I " lh' '
to rii, uliead. ) "you 11 lut' " '"
preltV sltol t. " Til I'.l'
luiilali.e lorm-. iu Hin.r.
in-,
i.k'
. i
t
Tb' li h-tv
ittt'htloli to th: -5i
oddltp-s l.trc-. )i''
tlow. r know ii n-i t ii
lo. , " 1 s -1 cull' I I-petal-
li'tv ii -s'-rp -- -Urk-e,,,,re.
lm-- an
tip- inmt'i nat p -n can r
forti; of an ntit. l-'j"
ctr' tched nii'l If
f.
n an j ' ' I "' '" ' '"
v ,,'f ,.,:.tine ii
t lj I Ir i 1 1 1 mi
" i ii n n i n -' "i'
c iu- i' u lilt-.
,r w. II b b'o I.
I lots in w, ii ' -' ' '
a lll t r,f' t bo
vitli It- lllll'i - " it
I tlir.i .m b k'-i- .
.. r. .. i.f. i,. io.
s.-eUIIIlgl 1 1 i J " 'i- "-
"carp-nt'ire plant" ot"- -"'l - !'- ii" 1
:........-.. f. ru, on tin- in-tii- aii I ii
iiiii.'iii.- i
. I....- b,.- it .. it lined io t b" ri
slpvllfil,' of tie i aw- Iii'- I
trp-ntioip d -tirio-it v le-ur- n r -n. it r.
.11 r .
executed Dh.-IP-Ks ol I 'I
I .-ti
We
I I
V llingto'l. and In.-, on tut' ''
been ii'tni"! "Artlnir tin l ln-N'"
Alunllf tin: "P'lil'l-i ill'' ilnltativ f
is .-nt ir In iliff-rt nt iu linrct r. !
... 1.. .... .d in the -liupe if .'l' tl-
.-iiii".'- -
it- If. S'.riP- are -xH"t e-Pintt rf M
bees. l.tltterHpi-, m. III-. tc . 1
others take upon t i'-ru - I '. - tin
..f worms ftn l l..-ctl'-. Nit-iralpt
li. v.- that in tfi- lir-i' in-tan
iPiturt 's trap t lur.- otlp r 1 -,
.....I l.lltteHii.'K. 1ml tin- CitV
. . .i .i : I ..ri
Iltl-t I..-CIP- oli-lll'l-, -
xact count, roiti ls "I i
nt.
r in
it ttre
It I .
mot Ii
.'. tb
I-
I
lizard- an-l huge spi.l. rr, tb
attempt t jdHiii.
puld'P
St. .
do
; i -i
I