THE NEWS. Greenwood C, Prav, of Guilford, a young man of twenty-eight years, shot and killed i his wife, then shot himself at Shirley, in | Denver. ‘Lhe coupie separated four woeks | ago on acconnt of family troubles, Pray's people live in Blanchard, His mother has been insane for years, small children { survive, one an infant. | ray is still living. i D. J. Fallis, a well-to-do Cincinnati bus. | fness man, was taken off the Bradford train | in a half insensible condition and died in the | Erie Depot, in Jumesiown, N. Y , in a few minutes, Erie train, from the track in Jamestown. N. Y. gine, two baggage and two express cars worn demolished. Nons of the passengers wers : injured. Fireman Smith, of Greenville, was goalded, and Engineer Willlams and Ex- pressman Bouser, both of Salamanca, were hurt. Abraham Morton, a wealthy farmer | residing near Baileys Corner, in Wall ship, N. J., has brouzht suit Coniver, of the Monmouth court, | against Howard Remsen, of Sea Plain, N. J., fn the sum of £15000 for the loss of he daughter's services of | the late Judge Remsen, who was one of the Two No. 3, was thrown | The en- | fOWI- { before Judge | county Remsen is the son associate judges, A runaway locomotive ran into an express train on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, killing two people.—Paul Cook and Alexander Watson, two switchmen in the employ of the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad, were killed at Memphis, Tenn. They were riding on the footboard | of an engine when the rails spread, and the engine, jumping the track, buried its front deep into an embankment, Both men were caught beneath the engine and crushed into the earth. ——Sergeant O'Leary was shot and mortally wounded by Private Roberts, in Spokane, Washington.——Two hundred and fifty employes at the Standard Oil ieflnery at Whiting, Ind., struck, ——Collector Logan finished the examination of five hundred Chinese brought to Portland, Ore |, from Vie. toria, by the steamer Danube. One hundred and eighty-two were refused permission to jand. These will probably apply to the courts for writs of habeas ecorpus.——Fire destroyed the Schlep wagon and carriags factory, Levee and Carr streets, St. Louis Damage to stock, $50,000; to machinery, $25,000 ; to building, $15,000 ; total, £90,000 Fully insured. Satione Martella was electro. | cuted in Dannemorra, N. Y., for murdering Glovanni Parella, ——8ix robbers armed with Winchesters, entered the People’s Dank at Little Rock, Ark., and compelled tne cashier ! to hand over 10,000. An alarm was given, and a number of citizens attacked the thieves as they were leaving the bank, shooting and woundin : two of them. Several of the citi gens were also wounded, President F. T. Day, of the Plankinton Bank, Milwaukee, made an assigament, The farniture factories in Cincinnati closed down because of thr atened labor troubles, and five thousand thrown out of work. — John B. Cleveland was appointed permanent receiver of the Augusta and Knox- ville and Por: Royal and Carolina Raliroads, -Chiecago courts postponed ao tion on the World's Fair Sunday closing case, Two men were killed and two wounded in a fight | at a primary election in Pineville, Ky. Captain C, D. Cox, of the Omaha fire depart- ment, was killed, and several firemen fatally erushed by falling walls at a fire caused by lightning. The Board of Control of the World's Fair sanctionad the change in the awards system the demands of the foreign Four persons were burnel to death in afire in a New York tene- ment, ——Robert J. Hoerner, of Pennsylvania, who was with his brother Edward when the later shot and killed green-goods man, George Phillips, In Brooklyn May 13th last, was dis- ¢ta-ged from cus ody. ——Edward Hoerner is now under indictment of murder in the first degree, As Christian Nelson and John McKay, of Shelburne, N. 8, were pro turning frem North East Harbor in a boat lcaded with salt, a squall struck them, and the boat was eapsized. Both were drowned Nelson had a wife and six children. : The southtound passenger train on the | Iron Mountain Road jumped the track near | Mill Spring, Mo., and about a doen pessen- gers were injured, —Two trains collided near Red Cut, Mo., entailing a loss of $80, 000. The property of C. A. Welsebaeh, a clothing and shoe merchant, in ®hicago, was | scized by the sheriff. Execution was made on judgments aggregatin ; { 26,000, confessed in the Circuit Court, —Jerry Laughlin and Thomas Kneebone, two convicts in the branch | state prison in Marquette, Mick, escaped by | scaling the wall, There was no guard on | the wall, as the convicts were in side. Laagh- | lin and Kneebone were taken out in charge | of a keeper to bring in the convicts’ suppers, | men were Western and the Fair was again opea Sunday. tneet exhibitors They ran, got over the walls, and were out | of sight in the brush in two minutes John C, Mining, town treasurer of Fort Jen- nings, Ohio, has disappeared with 65.000 cash, and an additional shortage of $10,000 has been discovered. He left his fmily, who profess not to know his whereabouts, The office of the Hustlers local option paper in Lattiesburg, Ky., was blown up by dyna. mite — «The westbound limited on the Penn sylvania Road due at Lima, Ohio, st 6:14 A. M., stopped on a sliding at Van Wert to take on a dining-car. An eastbound freight, com- ing around the curve, ran into the observa. tion car, smashing it considerably and de- railing a number of freight cars, —The pas- sengers were greatly alarmed, but no one was injured. The completion of the tireat Northern Rall road was made the occasion for a great cele bration tn St. Pau’, Minn. The National Prison Association met at the Exposition grounds, Chicago, and General Brinkerhof paid a beautiful tribute to the memory of ex- President Hayes, ~The thirty-third annual eonvention of the United States Brewers’ As sociation opened in Chicago —Wm, G. Grey, aged twenty-eight years, and Miss Dora Votzey were found dead In a room in a lodg- fng-house in Grand Rapids, Mich, , both shot through the head, In the World's Tem. perance Congress, in Chicago, a paper by Archbishop Ireland on total abstinence was road, The New Albany Banking Company of New Albany, Iand., has suspended, The Interpational Navigation Company was ineor- porated at Trenton, N. J. The capital stock 18 15,000,000. The incorporators are Clemant A. Griscom, Wm. Henry Rarnes, A. J. Cos satt, Henry Houston and John D. Potts, all of Philadelphia ; Bonamin Browster, of Now and ex-Senstor Wm. J. Sewell, of Ford Theatre, Washington. 22 KILLED AND 50 WOUNDED. The Condemned Structure Used as a Pension Office Adjunct Collapses Without Warning---Financial Relief for the Widows and Or- phans---Cleveland's Check, hun- divis- At 9 o'clook Friday morning the five dred clotks of the record and pension fet fth f the surgron-geperal of the the old street, fon of the ofMee Unite | States Army, Ford's Theatre gquartersd Wh Tenth usual, while buil ing, on went to work at thelr desks aq workmen down in the basement a number of engaced io making excavation for an plas t. of the structure, and w thout u moments warning, jyst as the nn electric-lighting wore undermining the foundations Suddenly work of the day was getting under headway in the r the strengthening columns woms above, one of the supports of the bullding was disturbed just enough to weaken it 80 as in to let the enormous welght of the iron girders fall and brick-arched floors above It in a mass to the eeliar, In the ple of debris that filled ali the lower if the building lay one-third of the men tal been at work at their desks a few enis before. Twen'y-two of them are dead and fifty lie ihe as firm as ever, but inside everything was a writhing on beds of pal stood apparently walls of the building Great iron girders were complete wreck. twisted and broken as though they had been reads, and over all lay gros and mortar, whil® here and there a bliseding human form could bus mower veered dust, and in many cases with the face so filled the alr + BiaTDOEL with fragment and 0 ortar as to be Here and 4 over the ruins te heard the groans of the men who were lying in the agony of death, imprisoned by the weights on to p of them, There was no de’ay in the work of rescu bodies ing t! ng the wounded and recoveriog Wi the ling bands of were at of the dead. volur hey soon he trained work Ambulances unded alternated with undertakers carrying the 6 al soldiers, CRrrying the we the wagons lead to the morgue while there was a oconstan Cars that The President was arrying away the were carried out of wad to the White House by one of the clerks, and he at event just ss be reached the entrance onoe interested | neal in relief measures, The news of the accident spread rapidly to of the city, and such scones of ex. ollowed as has not been withesind here since President Garflold was shot down by Guiteau. The scene of the accel wis quickly surrounded by a crowd that pressed hard upon the ropes stretched to keep the street clear. Mingied with the curious spectators relatives and friends of the clerks who been employed in the building. women frantic by the pouve were had There wore with griel and when a body would be brought from the building they would press forward, intent on seeing whether they could recognize the features of a husband, brother or father. In many in- rending scenes about them that they were gent home by the police in carriages that were kept waiting to carry off the more slightly wounded, There were several joyous meetings on the sidewalk opposite the building, when wives who feared their husbands were among the ruins found they had escaped salely or with only slight injuries The responsibiliry for the accident will be difficult to place, It is primarily, of course, the fault of Congress that suitable quarters are not provided for government employes ani that buildiags uvosuitable for such uses and suspected of being unsafe, like the pul ding whieh fell to-day, the government pr.oting offiee and the Winder Building, oe- cupied by the second auditor's office, are kept in use The work in the basement of the building does not seem to have beon under the dirpe. tion of any officer of the government with a knowledge architecture, Colonel Ains- wort chief of the records and pension division, had the building under his imme He is one of the most compe tent officials in the government service, and he has made the record and pension division the model of efficiency nnd excellent work in Wa hington. He is not nn architect however, but a surgeon in the army, and, though he had the work of exoavating under his personal supervision, and visite 1 it to see that nothing had been done to weaken the foundation of the Luild- ig he could not Le expected to have suffi cient knowledge of such matters to enaide ot work being done was of such a character as to make the building unsafe, The Work of Rescue, A genera fire alarm was turned in a fow minutes after the crash, and then all the am- bulances in the city were summoned. As quickly as possible the police and firemen formed a rescue brigade, and ready hands assisted them to take out the killed and wounded. In less than an hour about twen- ty-five people had been taken out, and every few minutes thereafter some still form would he borne on a stretcher from the building. and vehicles of every deseription were pressed into service for taking away the dead and injured. All the hospitals in the eity were utilized in caring for the injured and scores of physicians volunteered tooir serviees for this work, The commissioners of the Distriet of Co- lambin took { the Miiding and vicinity in person and ipa direct the po- Hew and the rescuers, Colonel Corbin, as. sistant ndjutant-general of the army, was sont by Major-General Behofie d to represent the War Department and to decide if it wore mn to eall out troops. Owing to excel. lent police regulations the rescuers were not hi their work the anxious crowds, and it was not long ro the debris bad been cleared away to such an extent that the work of rescues could be carried on with- out the military and naval authorities 100k prompt action, General Bohofleld or two troops of from Fort Meyer, across the river, companies of from the arsenal to tho scene of the the injured, The commandant at the navy- yard was ordered to render all assistance in his power, Ail toe earts and workmen that could be secured were pressed into service to clear away the debris, The workmen shoveled plaster, brick, documents and broken furni- ture into tho carts and each lond was taken away to a dumping ground near by, There wus much danger to the rescuing gangs, for the edges of the fallen floors hung threaten- ingly downward over the heads of the WOrkers, A number of clergymen utterly regardloss of their own safety entered the buliding and administered to the dying and injured, All creeds were represented, Cause of the Disaster. Ka fir the cause of the accident has not but an excava, been fully celermined by the offieinls, there soeoms to be no doubt that tion mada unler the front walls of the build- in brought about the eatastrophe, The building i+ a large one and is entirely wit out partitions. In order to a low as much space as possible for desk room and also to afford Het and ventilation to all parts of the floors, for thers are windows only at the front and rear of the bullding, the floors from top to bottom had oniy as supports iron e¢slumuns, which st snd about twelve fe t apart, At the bottom these columns rested upon piers of stone and brickwork, sii. ht for the wa ght (hey supported, but strong enougin under ordinary clreumstances to have sus tained the floors for all time to had noth ne occurred to weaken them, Across the tops of the columns at each floor fron gird-rs were laid, securely bolted to- getaer at the ends, Upon th ss girders rested the joists of both wood and iron upon waleh the floors were ladd,. With a view to making the building fire-proof, the floors were laid on arches of brickwork and cement, which extended from joist to joist From the description of the Lullding given it can be seen that in making the excavaiion the workmen were bound to eon no tact with the plers supporting the o on which the floors of the buliding rest 1 hey approached them 80 car iy ever, and when they were rea t added 2 underpinning to strengthen them io such a nner that the danger of their giving way #8 emed very remote, It is now apparent, however, that the were weakened and the wreek of the bul resulted directly from this cat th - d:uaster ocenrred there was indicate iis lke od except construction of the bu Colonel Ainswort { olonel Aine come HUN nn mu ih ding and pension division, «lay n ght afters sit +f ising sulll with the work. ondition and thoug ag satisinctory ing abs A — THE RUSIIAN TREATY. 1 ally Promulgated by Proclamation of the President, y extradition Offic treaty 0 Was i whi inal stages, bas at i861 bowen aimed, The rat foations were Kt, Petersburg nearly two ause wae linary p ecaution asion of the de 1 States, the trea anti a at was in the eRaary to ry careful on and the The realy and it was ne glish and m fweon the tra Work ws comps saw It for the frst time Ww Gresham carried 8 reting na'ned to lone was 10 make | proclamation, sad that was done, lamation simply recited the provis the treaty, with the announcement that it would go into effect on July 24th, It is contended in oMeial quarters that in epite of all that has sald about the treaty it is 8 milar in scope to all the extra. dition treaties negotiated by the United States in recent years, although in practice t nav be that the adminb tration of the ar tioles wiil have a different result, in view of the ossential difference between the judical syste the two countries, which in this cnse are supposed to be more than usually divergent, AR VE inti al This 1 the Presi. retary sted Tuesday dent GfL ew y Lhe Cabin be pro if been Hs Oo EE — A CAPTAIN IN A PICKLE. Ordered to Produce 350 Chinese Under Writs of Habeas Corpus. The State Department will probably not interfere in the case of the steamship Danube st Portland, Ore,, where the captain ap pealed to the British Legation for relief from an order of the court which requires him to bring 350 Chinese passengors the court to answer writs of habeas corpus. The captain was willing that the Chines should answer but he feared to assume the heavy re- sponsibility of preventing the escape of the Chivamen when they were once ashore, Julian Paune-fote, the British ambassador, was at the State Department, probably to state the case to Secretary Gresham, [tis believe | at the department that there will be n difficulty in complying technically with lore possib lity of the escape of the Chicese, This could be done if tue marshal served his writs and left a deputy on board in charge of the Chinese untiithe eourt pas od upon the cases, sisson ust CHOLERA IN TURKEY. East--Pecple Flee from the Pest. Reports from several cities of Asiatio Alovg the lower Tigris and the Bhat The panic has become sg great that few escape the infection, ity. Letters from Dassora City say that 70, 000 persons have fled from Bassora province alone, Sar— HELD UP A TRAIN. Knights of the Road Busy at Work Near East Bt. Louis. A Missiasippl and Ohfo train was held up of East 8t. Louis, haul of the express after beating the mes. Player's Club, in New York. ‘aralysis just Seven Weeks Ago. Mr. Edwin Booth, the actor, died at 1:48 : is apart- in Mr. Dooth had been unconscious for many H» had been un- | on | water, The | hisa and breathing, which subsisting bore heavily added to the difficulty of on It was apparent eurly Booth could not survive Tuesday the in patient called Mr. and Mrs, the other relatives into the they remained until the final scene, that that Mr. night, At 10 | charge of the Grossman and sick room The dissolution and end came so peaceliuily Wis Mr. Booth's present nesday, April 19, | Mr. MeGonigle, his Urother-in-law, who is superintendent of the Player's Clab, not having heard from Mr. Booth st 11 o'clock in the morning, opened the door of his sleeping apartment and found the tragedian lying lo bed, unconscious, Physicians vave it as their opinion that he had been stricken with paralysis during the night Mr. Booth re. gained consciousness the next day, and Lis condition Improved so that it was sald the simply vertigo, 0 which Mr Booth had been st The patient's ime provement continued gradually till about two weeks ago It was pre to take him to Narrazansett Pler, R 1, where hisson-in-law has a ¢ Last Saturday a change for the worst set in and Mr. Booth gradually sank until the end Mr. Joseph Jefle ron fled tosee his distinguished fellow actor on onday and remaineg shout J iloen minutes, I it Mr. oth re 3 Jefferson was outside the immediate admitted to the sick-room, liiness began on Wed- = seven weeks ago, when jeoet »osed tage, at his bedside g is doubtful i it Mr of OETA Yaior fy WHO Was CONGRESS IN SEPTEMBER. He Will an Exira Bession. President Cleveland Bays Call porve, cler that Goverament s other nat.ons § ing ther aed “it does not to detect the uapo * of this ity of enpit of us can indi t gion In mu bring snlering to land, “f think hat between now and fng of Congress much depends u action of those engaged indinancial opera tions and bus enterprises, Our vast national ressurces and credit are abundantly sufficient to them iu the utmost faith sud confidence. 11, in tead of being iright ened they are srvatis and if, stead of gloomily anticipating immediate dis sler they contribute hare hop: and steadiness,’ they wil a patriotic duly and at the thelr own ine terest. The } fees ahd co Mmnes study and reflection mmon ly appare:s at fear and nets will bf fess 5 #o Jasiily 8 in our veople, ’ a ————— FARGO'3 FIERCE FIRE. Threo Thousand People Homeless and Thee Million Lost. A despate h from Fargo. N. D., The sun rose Thursday moraing upon a city hail Toree thousand people AYE of which » in ashes wore mado homolesa by the great conflagra- tion, The sshoolhouses, churches and public buildings left standing were utilized as piaces of shelter fo* women and children, and it cannot of the hundreds driven out by the fla ves suffered for want of | shelter, The good women of thet wa turnad out in fii ane said ones, Helief trams with meat, flour and other provisions began to arrive, Mionea- | Duluth and Mile wankes an 1 other big cities will send liberal of tobi. ciothing is much toed end, All night the people were in a panic, as the flames sesmed not to diminish and the sky was Jit up by the great fire. The relief corps organized receive many reports of people who are missing, and without dou't it will | develop a number of lives have : een lost, ! The firemen might as wel have tought againt Niagara as to battle with the fames, which, dr.ven by a fierce south gale, swept through the city Jike a prairie lire, The statement 8 gion out that at a mest. | ing of ibenrance men they estimated the joss | of insured prop rity at . 2,400,000, and $500, 000 more on residences in the outskirts unin. | sured, Rates have been so high that Lut little | property is insured for over one-third of its | value, The feeling of confidence appentel much stronger as the day advanced, A num- ber of business men have already made ar- raugemenia 10 have gangs of mon commence clearing away the debris from the lots, and | have given architects orders to got out plaus for new buildings. RED PEPPER AND DIAMONDS, —— A Clever Thief Gets Away with a One Hundred Dollar Gem. Shortly after noon a well-dressed, heavy: pot stranger, B80 or 85 years of 8 feet 7 inches in height, walked into Cincinnatl, After selecting a $100 diamond threw red pepper in the proprietor's PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS, Epitome of News Gleaned from Various Parts of the Btats, There were only a few vetoes, Couvnser {or Charles Salyards, convicted at Carlisle of murder, asked for a new trial, Woaaax C, of killed on the Reading Rallroad CURTER, Onkdale, Evwanp BuixpLe was olected second lieu tenant of the Eighth Hegiment, N, G, P., to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of at Lieutenant Augustus Gehring, Wau, FF. Bussere, on painter and base ball § upon which he was working at Bwarthmore injured internaily. of Lancaster, nd A, C, Houek, of 8 of the State Blue Label League, and was seriously E. E. GuepsawaLT, was PAI ton, secretary organized in Reading Ly the cigarmakers of Pennsylvania, Tuomas Barvey, aged teenth street, Philads larceny jail, of South Thir- in, was convicted of dpa, and sentenced to He, In Carly,” robbed a Lower Marion store three HY pg with compnuny they were enroute to Chicago, ’ A Mannix Doony, of Chester, n man who i, visited 12 x Brey, has recently become office of brandishing a demento H and, cart whip, demanded a of 0, B. Dickinson, vacated the Alderman Thomas bilge for the the lawyer. The and left Dud searched [« ped for a policeman, visited the warrant arrest Judge iy In possession of Mr. Dickinson, terrified his wife by his residence and manner, but was then taken in or oal trade outlook of the Tue Mction anything but pron the anthracite region has Pottsville ben ising the past few weeks, Not only has Reading traffic fallen off, but the Ren he Penne suylkill Valiey ivision of #yivania Rallroad has been very dull Tre ir i Association, in session on wage committee of the Amalga- at Pittsburg, § 88 ry the fr 4 BoRie aud submitted It of Water Commis Bs Ti 1 nn o# Deparia pete DAs Veters ght brakema hie Pennsyly “dal #1, 500 wing year rt reasurer HE CX] exXanining #0 § TN i 5 IWeRGiLl, GBR B a shortage of $14,000 Tux Norristown Ins umber of iumatcs than ever iw Goverxor Parrsox signed the bill provid. tng for a Western P.nusylvania Home for Feeble Minded Children and also the Phila- delphia quarantine bill. He appointed East turn Besder Dairy and Food Commissioner asd Robert Watchorn Factory Inspector. A committes of Ohio ironmasters discussed the wage scale with the Wage Committee of the Amalgamated Association. and Glenoclden, Dela ware County, asked to be incorporsted. Jeopos Expricn, at Reading, sustained the master {a deciding in favor of the Dubsites fn the Rixth Street Evangelical Church case. A party of German coal mining experts are on a tour through the bard coal regions, comm ssioned by the German Emperor 9 study the system of mining in vogue. ss casncmassnn tA ———— FIGHT WITH ROBBERS. ¢ Asylum has 5 larger fore, YuapoN, Norwood eral Men Bhot. Little Rock, Ark., was thrown into the wildest excitoment by a band of six robbers rushing in, and with drawn Winchesters, robe at the point of their guns compelied the and two of their number stood guard at the toor and fired into the sirects at every man that showed his head. The citisens, how- Yoor, as soon as possible, gol what arms the could and began firing at the robbers, wound- ing two of them, Turee citizens were When the robbers jeft the bank they cowupelied some of the bank officials to ko before and behind them in order to protect them from the The sheriff, with posse, started in pursuit, THE MOLD BROKE. An Accident Postpones the Casting of the Nw Liberiy Bell, The essting of the Columbian Liberty Bell, which was to take place in Troy, N. Y., has been indefinitely postponed, owing to an The heavy onken beam Ly which the mold was suspended gave way. The heavy mass oT WORLDS FAR. A IS ASSIA as Compared With the First. - Many of the Finest Exhibits Covered With Canvas, There was no great outpouring of the wage- working class or any other class st the ex position Bunday., The oppressivebeat and & heavy storm of lightning, thunder and rain, rhich came in the middie of the afternoon, account in part for the decreased attend. ance, But, compared with the mighty multitudes of visitors last Sunday, tae second open Sug- day at the World's Fajr can hardly be called 8 success, The spacious with their broad verandas, the beer gardens io the for- eign village on the Plaisance and the res. taurants within the park proper were liber. ally patronized all day, not so much on as. count of the storm, for the sky was clear of even clouds until 2 o'clock and there was no necessity for the people to seek shelter. In fact, the storm was of short duration, al- though black clouds hung over the White City for the rest of the day, threatening at any time to give the padestrians a drenching, There was a bright spot on the bor.zon, which had the effect of bringing a falr-sized crowd out toward evening. cafes, Closed. buildings, which inst Buildings tate pudne Btate and Foreign The New England were closed to the Bunday, re- Pennsylvania, New York, Utah, Delaware, and Virginia joined in the Bunday- mained jockel, Missouri, North Maryland Dakota, closing movement, and it is now 10 be a por- manent matter with them if the gates of the fair remain open the next five months There is another feature of this Bunday fair which «al 8 forth complainings from the Many of the finest exhibits in the actures and other departmental build. # were hiddeu from the view of visitors because the exhibitors or thelr agents in charge did not propose to work seven days in the week. The coverings which pr at ni ht were po vid tors could see were big and showensos disfigured or iron sheeting, bave no right to re out ne § Srrangemants Das yet Heer Hort Lhe and al exhibits tiie 9Visl- tal berths with canvas, wood he exposition suthoritivs rs with and no ornaa the coveriz ermission of the exh MOVE t Bn nade fr unveil- ing on Bunday. Not even a flag was 10 Be seen on t vufld- New ith, rs were locked, the ings of Great Ii anada, Wales and India, a he do Visitors wers i v of the Ut woes § gros i i Bates povernt ped building and the small Machinery Hall was as silent Sunday ihe 4 nots, Lt as it was Ea ARS XP: 54,000 Visitors. wae provided the between Ma usic appropriate for Sunday ‘ in the early part of the day by Chicago band stationed in the pavilion Hull and iministrition bull afterwards in 6f the ut the 3 Lae it ehinery The Sousss ling. une the same part sudjenoes were i Iargy pearcity of seals aud The of ot ren The 54.304. The Award 1imbeced rinaily sano. tioned the modifies offered by the % & a or 1 cod dissatisfied ford award system nittee on award to the vibitors, The modificati tically an abandon. ment of the single ju plan an : a return to the jury in all cases where the ex. hibitors de Many of the foreign sommissione & were poesent at the meeling ofthe boa [ control and expressed »atis- faction with th ange and no of them will re-enter th « xhibit: Ke npetition, The action of France, bowever, in with- draw.ng her exhibits from compelition is believed to yeable, and It is also doubtful whether Gernmny will re-enter her display. WORK AND WORKERS, Two thousand brickmakers in Speing Walls, Mich, who have been on strike for 1 days past, returned to work at the old wages, Orviciars of the Central Railroad of New Jersey stated that the difflcuities between the employes and the compan y will be adjusted 3d the men will not strike, Firreex hundred men were deprived of employment by the closing down of all the branches except the puddling department of the Bethlehem Iron Company. A Sr. Lots despateh says that an amicable agreement bas xen reached in the difficulty existing for nearly four years between Lig. gett & Myers, tobacco manufacturers, and the Knights of Labor. Tar brewery employes of Pittsburg and Allegheny, Pa., struck because the Brewers Association would not acoede to the new sone, Later four of the leading brewers signed the scene and their employes returned to work. Taz furnaces of the RockhiliCoal and Iron Oost be irres were closad down indefinitely, owing to a of the local Intor union. About 300 men are Tux Barnum Colliery, swned by the Penne The colliery has been idie burned down, If has now cen rebuilt and will give employment to 500 miners, laborers Tux Diamond Plate Glass Company, of Kokoma, Ind., has indefinitely suspended Ite branch pinnt at Ellwood hae About 00 men are thrown out of work, An official of the company says it has more than $600,000 worth of glass on hand, “and the market is utterly demon A pesraten from Pottsville, Pa., says that miners’ wages for the last half of May and the first half of June show an av $2.80.7, making the basis of wages 3 per oent, below the $2.50 basis, which is 1 or i aI SL DEATH BY LIGHTNING. Three People Instanly Killed and One
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers