THE NEWS, A revolution has broken out in Nicaragua and the insurgents have taken Grenada, —— E. L. Blakeslee, one of the ablest and most prominent criminal lawyers in Northern Pennsylvania, died suddenly of heart disease at his home in Montrose, —— George C. Mil- ler shot his wife and killed himself in Rocks Springs. Wyo.-——George Behrens, an Ohio farmer, cut Amanda Miller to pieces and killed himself. The Prince Edward schooners, Eddy and Ripley Ropes are given up for lost with all on board. The Eddy sailed from Pictou, April 15, and the Ripley Ropes sailed just before the big gale of April 26th, and have never been heard since, They should have reached their destination the day after sailing. Captain Monroe Irving, well-known all over the Eastern provinces in connection with the iceboat ser vice between Prince Edward Islands the mainland, and three drowned at Bell's Point, the swamping of their victims were Captain Irving's named Myers and McDonald- William Winants Thowas died in Elizabeth, N. J. where he was born in 1816, He was a grand- son of Col. Edward Thomas, of the Essex Regiment, of the New Jersey Revolu- | tionary army, He was a graduate of Colum- bia College, and in 1840 was appraiser of the | port of New York. He was the osly surviving delegate to the national convertion that nominated Wm. Henry Harrison. | A mob of farmers took James Collins, a horse thief, from the deputy marshal at Sher- | man, Ky., and lynched him. ——A big strike | of cabinet makers is threatened in Cinecin- pati, ——Albert Maxwell, the well-known hotel man and proprietor of the Griswold i House, died at the Russell House in Detroit | of heart failure. His was fifty-eight | years. During his lifetime Mr. Maxwell had | opened various hotels throughout try. — for executive clemency on Carlyle Harris, —— The National Normal Uni- | versity of Lebanon, Ohio, has made signment to George A, Burr, timated at from £75,000 to assets nominally about the same, lage of Bailey, twenty-five of Grand Rapids, Mieh,, alm destroyed by fire, An overturned the store of G. Hirschberg started thet and the fire spread rapidly to the neighbo ing buildings, The stores of Lindley & Co, and A. W, Fenton and the residence of J. W, i Bunker were totally destroyed sever: | others damaged. The loss about $20,000. Ex-United States J. W, Patterson dropped dead in Hanover, N. H. The Reading Railroad receivers decided | on a temporary restriction in the output of | coal at the company’s mines, Henry Dowl- | ing, wife and child were suffocated by gas | in their home in Chicago. well was hanged at Jonesboro, Ark., for the murder of Tab Freeman.-——Wm. Burke, a dissolute fellow, gave himself up to the au- thorities of Boekford, Ill., with the ment that he had murdered his mother. The | woman's body was found in her Wm. BE Williams, editor of the Manchester Critic, assaulted A. 8. Steinbauer, edi tor of the Allegheny f Alle- gheny, Pa, inflicting injuries, —Rittreil's Hotel, at Kittreil's Springs, N, C., was destroyed by fire, Loss $60,000. — An attempt was made to burn the Oak Street A. M. E. Church at Petersburg, Va, | ~The Navajo Indians had returned to the reservation when the troops reached the San Luis Valley to A mass of earth and stone fell in Pittsburg upon two mother and her children were badly in jur weeThe town of Cisco, Texas, was destroye by a cyclone and over a score killed and a hundred or Twenty thousand Ohio coal miners threaten to strike, although the chief officers of union oppose it,——The Marshall Chemical Manufacturing Company, of Kansas City, made an assignment. The assets are $30,000, liabilities $100,000, —— Alexander Cooper, | one of the founders and president of Cooper's | Hospital in Camden, N. J., dropped dead | from heart disease, : Affairs in connection with the Bioux City | failures partake very much of the color of | Near Mitchell, Ind., asaw- | mill boiler exploded, fatally wounding Fran- | ¢is Baker and seriously wounding three others, The bailer was torn to atoms, throw. ing lumber for several rods, ——The Central Ohio Insurance Company, of Toledo, O., went into the hands of a receiver, Edward Chittenden being appointed. The liabilities are $100,000 in excess of the assets, The | first box of California cherries for 1893 was | shipped from Sacramento to the Duke of Veragua, care of the managers of the Cali- forcia exhibit at the World's Fair. in Harney Bros." shoe shop, at Lynn, Mass, a pair of kid button shoes were made complete and packed in a carton in fifteen minutes and forty-five seconds. The best previoug record was twenty-four minutes, The shoes will be exhibited at the World's Fair, Jacquez Biceco, the Austrian forger, who stole $80,000 from his countrymen, was ar. seated in Cincinnati, The Grant Lottridge Company's brewery, #t Hamilton, Ontario, was entirely gutted by fire. A large quantity of stock was damaged ana the machinery rendered useless. The total Joss Is about $60,000; fully covered by gusarance. Stonemasons in Easton, Pa, went on strike{because they were asked to work Sen hours, receiving extra pay. Mrs, Anna Maria Young, aged ninety-nine yoars, and tho oldest widow drawing a Revolutionary war pension, Gied in Easton, Pa. The electric powerhouse in Loulsviile, Ky., was burned. The loss will aggregate $300,000, with good insurnees Falling walls were sup. Fosed to have crushed a number of persons, but it proved to be a mistake, The Erie Canal has been opened and a grain blockade at Buffalo wrested. ——C, G. Care, of Battle Creek, Mich., inventor and patentee of the advanced thresher, died at the Almas Sanitar- jum, where he was receiving treatment for paralysis, ——8ix bandits held up passengers on the Missourl, Cansas and Texas south Sound pusngn: Hata ang robbed thew © ¢ OF and were Travers, by The other | son and men | others Cape boat. First | age the coun 1 ~-Governor Flower refused the appeal | made behalf of an as | Liabilities es. £100,000, and the The vil | northwest “© miles Wis totally | lamp in ¢ § and will amount to Senat hurch Charles Cald- state. home, News { serious protect the settlers, from a biufl tenement houses, of peo} more injured, —- | the INDIANS GO 0 WAR. A Battle With Cowboys in Which Eight Are Lilled. 250 Navajos Start on a Marauding Tour in Colorado. A despatch from Denver, Col, says: The long-threatened war of the Navajo Indians against the settlers of the country in the vi. einity of their lands has come at last, and with it the death of eight settlers, The startling news was received by Adjut, ant-General Kennedy in a telegram from Lieutenant Plummer, Indian agent of the Navojos, Eight white men had been mur- dered by the Indians, who are now at war with settlers, Lieutenant Plummer said. He declared that the situation is a very critical one and asked that the troops be called out io prevent further bloodshed, Lieutenant Plummer stated that the peo- ple below Durango are in a wild state of ex- the Indians should continue their warfare In his message the lieu battles have been along the valley, tenant states that two fought already. In the first battle five settlers wera killed, while at another encounter three more men lost their lives, The Adjutant-general for- warded the information to the War Depart- ment at Washington, and it is not unhkely that orders will be issued from that source putting in the fleld the troops now quartered at Fort Logan. Adjutant-General Kennedy was inclined to regard the situation with a good deal of con- cern, although expreasing the belief that the trouble would not extend very far North, There are 250 bucks who are raising the dis- turbance, “They are all said he, ‘with the best repeating have ample supplies for a long war. They are a bad lot and revel in plunder and mur- der. There has been {li-fecling among then for a long time and it has at last come toa head. “The present conflict was precipitated by the resistance of the whites to the depreda- tions of & band of warriors who raided the stock of the cattiemen, “They drove off a large herd of cattle, which they took to the mountains. This so incensed the stockmen that they organized a large posse of cowboys and went to recover the cattle. The Indians fled on the approach of the cowboys at first, and the cattiemen, after they had secured their cattle, started to return to their ranches, : y had proceeded Lut a very short dis- tance, however, when they wera attacked from the flank as they were passing through a sort of shallow eanyon by the entire band A desperate encounter followed, in owboys were killed and, it Is be- lieved, sa number of Indians. The red men, had the advantage snd the cattiemen, were finally repulsed. The Indians then started on a marsuding expedition across the coun- try.” 2 i The reservation of the Navajos is a large one, covering & 12,000 square miles inthe northwestern part of New Mexico and North- eastern Arizona and extends up to the south- ern line of Colorado. On this there are thousands of Indians, who are liable to go on the warpath, The band of 250 started from the reserva tion over in Arizona, crossed the line into New Mexico, golog to the San Juan river, They captured Tom Whyte's trading post mission at Hog Back. The homes other settlers are surrounded by Indians, who are threatening to kill and burn, Governor Thornton, of New Mexico, tele. graphed the War Department from Santa Fe asking that “military aid be sent immediate. I¥ to help suppress Navajos' outbreak in San Juan country. The lives of all our people are in immediate aanger.” The War Department has telegraphed Gen. ern] Cook, Department of Arizona, to send troups immediately to thescens of trouble. CABLE SPARKS, mounted and equipped,” rifles and oO Tur Belgian Senate has approved the Nys sx plan to establish universal sullrage, Tug bitter feeling between Irish ists and unionists is reported 10 be ing in intensity. Tuinreex persons were crushed in Naples vy » panic the sitar of & courch, Tre beach works at Epimal, Froaee, have been destroyed by fire, the damage amouuts ag to 2,000,000 francs, Tue conference of unionist leaders de cided that no attack should be made on the bome-rule bill In committee, Riorixe was renewed (o the streets of Bel fast. Many arrests have been made. More troops have beens ordered 10 the scone, Tux annual exhibition of the British Royal Academy is characterized by an unusually large number of paintings of high merit, Owixa to the illness of Lord James Hane nen, one of the British members of the Bers ing sea tribunal of arbitration, the tribusal has adjourned for one week, Errors were made to amend the home rule bill by providing that the military should be withdrawn from lreland before tue Irish Parliament should be established, Tax Norwegian Storthing will postpone a vote on the ov] Hist and aqjourn as a mark of defiance to King Owucar lor refusing separ ate consular representalion to Norway. Tux Reichstag committee on the budget has approved the credit for the purpose of elevatung the German jegation at Washing. ton Lo the rank of an embassy, and an addi tional grant for the German representation at the Chicago World's Fair, Tae Hon. J. C. New, the retiring American coasul-general in London, will sail for the United ritates on the 3d of June, The United States consuls in Great Britain will present to him an liuminated address and the asso ciation of foreign consuls will give him a bandguet, A sE¥sATION was caused in England by a report that an attempt had been made to murder Mr. Gladstone as he walked through Ht. James Park at midnight. A man who was acting strangely in tront of Mr. Glad- stone's house shot at the policeman who ar- rested him. On the man's person was found a note-book containing ravings against Irish home rule and hinting at murdering the pre. APPRECIATES THE STAMPS, An Eccentric Farmer in Indiana Papers His Parlor With Them. Joaathan Staunhope is a wealthy farmer of the section known as the Blue Lick Hills, in Wayne county, Ind. He is 84 years old, a widower and very eceentrie, Recently he went to Richmond and pre. sented his caeck for $3,800 to Postmaster Jenkinson, be given in ex national increas to death resulting rom & fre on i 555. Wora was sent to his Kanuas City and you tn Richmond from carrying out PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS, Epitome of News Gleaned from Various Parts of the Btate. Couxnry, city and borough school diree- tors throughout the State met to elect school superintendents, Tux place of the skilled workmen who struck in one of the Carnegie mills at Home- stead were filled by the ex-union men who struck Inst summer, Tue Delaware conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, in session at Chester, adjourned after appointments had bean announced, Two cases of spotted fever were discovered Brisror Covxcir passed ordinances giving two trolley companies right of way through diet of $86,513.86 to the Commonwealth in recover the tax on loans for the year 1890, at Readicg took steps toward the formation of the Behuylkill BAXITARIANS In session health of the Valley. Tue statistics of dgar manufacture country, Povicemex Loeivel and Thomas, of Nau- The prose- eutor is Harry Vivian, a brother of the dead man. The policemen a few days ago arrested Vivian, who was drunk, and in taking him to the station house used their clubs vigorously, cutting his head open and otherwise injuring him, It is claimed that the attack was a grudge mn- against Vivian, bail for trial, A canter has received for a been new connect Chester and Media with Rockdale, Glen Riddle the towns of the Chester Creek Valley, way of avenue and terminates at Sixth street, and The route enters Chester by Edgmont Wire a party of little girls were playing of water daughter DOAr a stream in Stroudsburg, a of Frank Lightner the rapid current Her cries attracted James Wallace five-year-old fell in and was swept by down the stream, Pasten, an employee of lumber yard, who rescued the child, Tue large foros of svivania Bteel Works is being gradually re- the employees at the Penn- duced, wherever a man can be spared he is dropped from the roll, It is sald at jeast 200 will be dropped. Brrresexrarives of the road labor organizations met leading rail all in convention at Tamaqua to discuss labor matters, Goversor Parrisox approved the bill oon. stituting Lawrence County a separate judi cial district, ¢ Tux result of the Republican primary elecs { ex~ tions in Chester County was in favor « Senator Harlan's candidacy | urer. Reroax churches at York, Bethichem, and other towns celebinnted the 100th anniversary wr State Treas the first synod of the Church, Waite Nat leading a vie an Hertsteln of P fous horse by s haltar strap the #4 ut fiw WH, Was animal was frightened and attempted to Hertstein tried hold strap became looped on his left thumb, which run away to on and the member war wholly torn the fire oint from of the hand. Daxixr. Sroppann, Charles Hubb, Harry Jenner and Samuel Given, boys aged about 15 years, and claiming Philadelphia as their home, were arrested at Catawissa and placed in jail. They ba into and Kn destroyed machinery in Kelter's flour mill at Bupert, United pension examiner, fell dead at house in Harrisburg. He and came from Boston, lasporrn GErcaELL, a States iis boarding was 53 Heo loaves a wile, He years old Getohell was reared by James OG. Blaine, had been in good heat ih. WASHINGTON CELEBRATION, Commemorating the 104th Anniversary of the Inauguration. The 104th anniversary of the Insuguration of George Washington as President of the United States, was celebrated in New York in a more elaborate manner than similar celebrations have been in recent years, Une der the command of Captain John G, Nor. man the following military and civie organ. izations assembled in front of the sub treas. ury and formed in this order: Old Wash. ington Continental Guards, representing American foroes ; Highland Guards, repro. senting the Scotch troops ; Guards de Latay- ette, representing the French troops ; Veter. an Zouaves, representing the Hessians ; dis. mounted cavalry, repregenting the Washing. ton Light Infantry ; four posts of the Grand Army--Camp A. 8. Williams, Sons of Veter. ans ; Jefferson Pioneer Corps, St. George's Battalion, Royal Block Receptory, L. 0. A of A., and Court Harrison, A. O, F. of A, The procession formed and moved in the same order as did the organizations 104 years ago. The military bodies appeared in uniform, and the members of the civil organizations wore white gloves and red, white and blue ribbons in the lapel of the coat. They marched up Broadway, thenos to Vesev street and t rough the side entrance of St, Paul's into the church. The chair used by Washington had been loaned for the ocon. sion B. Southwick, and stood upon the altar decorated with the national flag, Rev, W. N. Geer preached the sermon, and was assisted in the special service by Rev, Morgan Dix, SMOKELESS POWDER TESTS. I They Were Satisfactory, and the Ex- plosive May Be Adopted. General Flagler, chief of ordinance of the War Department, has been Informed that the West Point foundry has completed five of the eleven Sdnch guns under contract and are now at work on the pivots of the remaining six, which are to be deliversd commencing DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES Ho—— Ricoanp Vaunvie and Issac Monroe, stills men at a refinery at Lima, Ohio, were fatally burned by the bowing out of a still, Tur recent frost in Mississippl has either killed or greatly injured the cotton, There is time to replant, but in many sections there 8 no seed, By the capsizing of a small boat, Julius Falk and Martin Arclt, young men of Cleve land, Ohio, were drowned. A companion was rescued, Tux victims of the accident on the Bare flocks Railroad, near Somerset, Pa, , numbers od five, Three persons are thought to have been fatally injured, A BOAT containing three boys, name Balb- win, wus carried over a dam in the Raritan river, near Bound Brook, New Jersey, and iwo of the lnds were drowned, Mancaner Tosias, aged 71 years, was instantly killed, near older, aged 31 years, was caught between two ratlroad cars and squeezed to death, Marruew Hamuers and Joseph Opoliski, while at work on the tracks of toe Volladel- Heading HRaliroad, near Bound Brook, New Jersey, were struck by a train By the premature explosion of dynamite in Tyler & mel'urk's colliery, near Pottsville, Penusyivania, John Jone: had an arm blown off, and, it is Yoared, sustained fatal injuries, William Frantz and Wesley Frantz were also dangerously injured, Tux First Regiment Armory st Chicago wus destroyed vy fire and Harry Johnson and Walter Williams, colored janitors, were burned to death. H. W, Latham and Chris, Wiggins, colored walters, were probatuy fatally burned, The loss to property is §215,- Lou, A rantiTiox wall in a building, st Cinclonstl, collapsed, carrying 14 workmen into the cellar, a distance of 40 feet. John Hull, was killed, snd Frank Weinewuth, Ed. Welnewuth, A. Behumast and Elijah Johpson were fatally injured, Three other men were seriously injured, At Providence, Rhode Island, Edward Me- Elroy, an insane man, entersd a seeping apartment of His home and, with a razor, cut tae throats of his mother, his brother, aged 10 years, and Mss Healy, a cousin, the mania was finally overpowered, alter a bard struggle, by Poueeman O Hourke, who was badly cut in the neck with the razor. It is believed that Mrs. McElroy will die, but the others will recover, ent — sce IN THE STORM'S PATH. new electric light — uch Buffering Following cn the Tor- nado at Cisco Texas. The only residence out of 400 which es at The houses destzoved caught fire and a score of burned rease the Ceath list eaped injury during the terrific tornado Cisco was that of City Marshal Epplen. people are believed to have been to death, This will in to about fifty, The sireets are so full of detiris foot are traces as to pro vent the passage of For mi wreckage. The stock of groceries available did not fullice to give even a soanty breakfast 10 the suffering people. Trains from Weatherford and other adjoining pisces, laden with sap- plies, arrived during the day. Many and wounded ones are resting in improvised tents, but by far the greater portion are out in the open Air wilh nothing to shelter them m the cutting wind that bas followed the storm. Individ. tal estimates of lowses are now impossile, except 10 say that in nearly every Instance it is total, many not even saving enough cloth. ing to protect themselves from the inclement wo Many of the 200 or more injured will die, A freight train walting at the depot for « ders was hurled completely from tracks and totally wrecked, The engine, weighing over twenty Wins in ietely turned The brakeman was instantly killed and the conductor died since from his Junies, even passenger, of ies around there the homeless fve it niber, Feo the tons, over, rn — MURDERED 248 MEN. An Awful Btory of Crime Told by a Texas Woman- Butcher, 5 A despateh from Denison, Texas, says An been made to Luttrell, application for pardon has Governor Hogg by Charles to bang May 17 for murder, It is developed that Luttrell startling statement in regard to butchery of women here last spring that will probably secure him a pardon tion of sentence to life imprisonment It is aileged that Luttrell confessed that sinoe 1878 James Brown, John Carlisle and their friends had killed 248 men in order to them murder who is had the (errible or commutsa- in In 1878 Brown killed a stableman. John Carlisle was induced to kill another man, named Sparks, and Tom Shannon, their lat- est victim, was an ders, There were many other eve-witnesses, and Brown and Carlisle being wealthy, started in confession fs but a glimpse of the awful reality of the unparaliel porios of crimes Luttrell would not give the names of the victime, but claims, if afforded protection, he — w— 55. 5.5 GREATLOSS OF LIFE. with Pilgrims, Burned. The destruction is reported of the British The Khiva safled from Bombay oa April 12, ear- bound as pilgrims to Mecca. The pilgrims were so numerous that they crowded the ves. sel, taking up all available room, It ie learned that the Khiva was burned off Ras (Cape) Marbet, on the const of Arabia, Of the great number on board 900 are said to have boon saved, the others periching in the sen or the Aames which consumed the vessel, The details of the event are yet lacking, DEATH IN A STORM. Four People Wers Killed and Buildings Were Destroyed. A destructive wind and rain storm passed through the Lowndes Counties, Oa., and four lives are reported as lost. A mother and two childres are among ie dead, A house oocupled by W. Lightsey and fam. fly was swept off the sarth, and barns and buildings in the neighborhood were com- pletely demolished. Lightsey was killed, A | ber leg broken by a tree falling on her, 3 i | | { { i { AROUND THE HOUSE, ar am——— Beat carpets on the wrong side first, Ruly vinegar, whitewash spots with strong Rub your hands with salt and lemon juice to remove stains, Rub soft grease over tar and then wash in warm soda water, The tiny red ant is one of the worst of all household pests, und its extermination is exceedingly difficult if not impossible. Pouring kerosene oil into the cracks which they infest will drive them away for awhile, but they will soon return, They may be kept out of sugar buckets by making 8 broad chalk mark around them about half way up. The insects cannot crawl over the chalk. It is a good thing to put a saucer of grease by the and the When the saucer Eg FeasC hold them. is Those ants at least will pot return to make trouble. This operation, re peated every day, will lessen the amount of the plagues, although even this will Will Good Roads Pay ? Mr. Stephen Favill, of Madison, Wis. , says: “But 1 not all theory. But the practical demonstration has been worked England, France, Germany, and European countries have solved this problem to their entire satisfaction, and some parts of our own country have tried this matter far enough to prove that as a business venture one of the best for the There has been no general taking bold of this matter in i eal (0 intries, the States have laws allowing counties to bond and borrow money to build My time will aliow me to give on one or two of the many good results that from good roads. In U . J.. the road improvement fe hold of the people, and they expended $350, - their roads, and best qualified to increased valuation of tt times than man it 3 it is very farmers, this country as in Euro- bus some of roads iy have come nion County, N. 1 wp grivt ver got macadamizing of the in the testimony know is their lands would pay the cost, Just owning 123 acres that he valued at $65 La acre and d not find a buver at that, had, since the advent of good refuse $200 an acre for the whole tract I do not claim ths Ld mild be ad anced in pricy but onfident that the i f those that more six GHEE Case of un Con als roaas, land w that mate, 100 reuse of our farming that } sil vent f ores] i the advent of go roads i Very much would iAnGs in our Slate woul than pay all thir having used 6t ANY season oO est of building them the con road that could be the 10 SAY venience and luxury of . * yoeald A Cuban Mattress, A woman who has beon 1 the {ar South has a her experiences in | bye 4 very poor ope ‘0 An wi { curious tale Havana there,” Amen best hotel arrived we found that the ! with s mattress on the bed was bein for some members of the meyer family. As they had not arn however, the proprieter cons should served oUCups it matiress Was a poor « i one that i wold have a In Havana one may rot bx Tue first as will “My disturbed by Been beneath me whicl i id not under stand, and which a « Ory did not reveal. In investigmtion the morning, however, hed more thor and found a Lin the matt f Jittle d wper a lively ¥ went vga ly UR si ress, and on exploring a rat mother with a | rest of young ones, “Horrified. 1 called maid, an to indicated my d A1%- the Ha inting he bed govery ‘ ‘Ves' she sald, unmoved, ‘it is ze rat.’ ‘1 should think #0,’ said I, ‘but what will you do?’ “ «(bh,’ answered the stolid will sew them in again I" "—| New Times, Cuban, ‘1 York Algrettes as Ornaments, The aigrette is a tuft of graceful thin feathers taken from a kind of heron ealled egret; and not only are these poor tnrds killed expresely to furnish orna ments for ladies’ bonpets and hair, but they are killed at the time when they ought especially to be proteoted-— | namely, during the breeding season. | They build their nests close together, and the feather-hunters look for these breeding-places. The best time to at- tack them is when the young birds are fully fledged but not yet able tofly; for at that time the solicitude of the parent birds is greatest, and, forgetful of their own danger, they are most readily made victims. They hover in a crowd over the heads of their despoilers, their bold- ness making it as easy as possible to shoot them down; and when the slaughter is finished and the few hand- fuls of coveted feathers plucked put, the yor birds are left in a heap to fester in the sun in sight of meir orphaned young, that cry for food and are not fed.-~[Ani- mal World. A ————— Patron Saint of Upholsterers, It may not be generally known, even t# biblical students, that St, Paul is ac- counted the poiion saint of upholsterers, Such is the fact in Eogland. His ere. dentials are probgbly supplied by Acts 18: 3: “He came joto Aquila Pris- villa at Corinth, and because he was of the same craft, he abode with them and wrought, for by their occu they were tentmakers.” The festival of the apostle of the Gentiles occurs on Jan- uary 26, and it is professionally com- motored bY the upholsterers of a d Hee in & dhe crening. a craft uation of harness and noati is estimated at The annual sndd in C $9,000, Tae Union Pacific iru workers’ strike wa ® declared off, Tug strike of the fants Fe mechanics, at Topeka, was declare | off, One-half of the loked-out clothing cutters in New York city returned to work. The other half will be given employment in a few days, tick deposits of tin are reported to have been discovered i, the State of Guanjusto, Mexico, by a prospector for & Philadeiphise syndicate, Ir is believed taat all the coal miners in Ohio will strike on May ist for an increase of five cents per ton, which the operators have refused to give, Tur machinists road shops atl the company re eral foreman, Tuy strike on the AtehBon, Topeks and Bauts Fe road is causing something like = “tie up” at Kansas City. All eattie ship. ments have been refused. A similar state of affairs is reported at Wichita and other points on the line, Another gang of me chanics arrived in Topeka from Philadelphia, 10 take the places of the striking shopoen, and at Topeka the strike is practically Lroken, Tur negotiations at Toledo for the seitie. ment of the differences between the Aun Are vor Rallroad and the locomotive engineers have fallen through, the men being unable to meet the company s terme, ‘that none the present engineers should be discharged without cause, and that the old men must file applications and accept positions as they may become vacant. in the Cotton Bell Bail. er, Texas, struck becsuse sod to discharge the gen- of -— rns Issn. FATAL LAND3LIDE. Buried Under Tons of Earth in Pittsburg. A large quantity of carth and stone became A Family loosened from the bluff known as Boyd's Hill, which towers one hundred and twenty-five {eet above Becond avenue, and crashed down and upon two tegement-houses io the rear « Nos, 251 ; , . Kelly a te and 258 Second avenue, Bolom coni hauler, his wife and children, ranging in age from three mo to per, and they were buried « fifteen vears, had just finished their mupletely. detail of jg Mrs. Kelly, with was found standing UR, The baby was but slightly injured, The mother was liter- ally dug out of the debris and sent to tho hospital in a critical condition. Saul Kelly and the two boys wete next removed, and, although badly bruised, may possibly re- cover, Fanny, a four-year-old girl, was pinned t« the floor by the hot stove and bor- ribly crushed. She died soon after, James Hodbern's family of eight, in the adjoining building, were absent from home and escape ary Their houses is also a complete wreck, The recent heavy rains had jowsened the stone on the side of the bial The firemen and a } of pol were quickly ot the ber baty in her arms upright and unconscl residing EALTIMORE, GRAIN, ETC FILOUR—EBalto, Best Pat 8 4 56 High Grade Extra...... WHEAT No. 2 Red..... CORN-—-No. 2 White...... ellow ........ ar Yellow per bri OATS —8outhern & Penn. Western White. ........ Mized .... RYE~Ra, 2 . HAY Choice Timothy... Good to Prime STRAW Rye incar ide... 11 Wheat Blocks Oat Blocks. ..... CAXNED GOODS TOMATOES -8tnd No. 88 No. 2... . PEAS-—Standards Seconds. . .. CORN-—Dry Pack Moist. ... @8 488 4 410 8 CITY STEERS City Cows . Bouthern No. 2.....0044 % POTATORE & VEGETABLES, POTATOES —Burbanks..$8 75 @# Va Yellow......conceie 410 XB. osnsacssssisssine. BH OMIONS....coveeccorsnsas 10) PROVISIONS, | HOGB PRODUCTS «hide $ Cloar ribwides........... Bacon sides. ...cocovness Meme Pork, per bar..... LARD—Crude......ccoeee PUTTER. {| BUTTER~Fige Crmy....$ Boll..scssseesnssnsnanss CHERSE, | CHEESE—N.Y. Factory.$ I RY fiom... Bhim Cheese, .. cv covvs BOGS. EGOB-Btate....covvvuve.B POULTRY. CHICKENS Hens. ......8 Ducks, per B...coocaven TOBACCO, TOBACCO-~Md. Infer's$ 150 FABRE +censen sens <neane 3200 LIVE STOCK. Beeves......8 535 4:0 50 Te FURS AND SKINS, MUBKRAT ooo civnneinsel Raccoon ERAN FRE RAR SuRE @ 0 108{ 12 15% 20 Hoy i1 i Te ig 12 15 u3 4 = 3) 31 1 @ 1 7 1G 1854 i Bo @ BEEF Best Goud 10 ake Sas nnes Fair BHR. casssnircisiisnise Hogs FERRER ERAN RTE SEER ER ER Eva FREER EE RIA Ran Ee CIRBE ns cv crmpnins suum sn simon vases 8 8 W RENT * vob R Rena Teun RN-No. C0 Ett hth UA T8.-No, Bessie a Aa aavee erin Seah 8 a. CHEESE-~State........c cu es ——— PHILADELPHIA Me — OS a $a, SEaBe sana
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers