———————————i THE NEWS Joseph Wallwitz was hung fn Trenton, N, J., for the murder of Deputy Prison-keeper James P. Lippincott, in the state prison, Wallwitz serving a seven-years' sentence for horse-stealing at the time, ——The jury of Fayette county, W.Va,, convicted Chas, Bays of being implicated in the murder of Ike Rud. ford, last November, and fixed his sentence at life imprisonment, Wash Adkins, who fired the shot, will be hanged. —TLe board of trustees of Shurtliff College (Baptist), of Alton, fil, one of the oldest institutions of learning in the work, elected Rov, Austin K, Deblols, of Bt, Martins, New Brunswick, president of that institution, Mr. Deblois is only twenty-five years of age, —— Wilmore, a small town in Kentucky, was badly damaged by a cyclone, and at least a dozen people were injured, one of them fatally, The Holi ness Camp-meoting was struck, and tent and cottaga destroyed, —— Adjutant Gen. eral Tarsney, in a sharp letter to Judge Campbell, of Colorado Bprings, Col, clined to appear belore the grand jury there and testily in regard to the tarring feathering to which he was subjected in that city. ——A young woman giving her name ns Lizzie Christine is under arrest in Sedalia, Mo.. for horse-stealing. When arrested bad in her possession a horse and buggy and an extra set of harness, which were stolen from John Rice, of Webb City, every de- and she Republicans of North Dakota have nomin- ated for governor Roger Allin, ——The ters in East Liverpool, O., by an almost animous vote declared the strike off, tween fifty-five and sixty indictments were found by the United States Distriet Court in St. Paul.-———A number of men applied at the Pullman works for reinstatement, . The federal troops moved out of Chicago, Resolutions demanding ¢ vestigation of Hon of the United States Circuit adopted by the Central Labor meeting in Cleveland, 0. ——Thomas hart, of Middietown, N. Y,, and his family of four ate skberries which had Livy vines, They pot- Un- -Be- congressionnl in- were at its Gielsel- Court, Union some bia boca picked among pols are all iil, basing apparently been poisoned, ~The bottom of a e¢ at the Homestead Steel Works of Carnegie & Co,, blew out, molten metal in every direc Yoo danger mverter scattering 3.300 pounds tion. Four w men who were in the pit were terribly burned, two of them school teache Pa, by who gave him a mate in mi fatally, James Sullivan, a r. Was pois ned Shamokin, ong friend, Th drink of in r his life. mas McCaffery sorrosive subli stake for whiskey, Sullivan CRO unc in ten compound, He miners were ki eident at the shal Ryan, breast, but not seric iv. by = he bad arrested, and wounded ano / At Lake Argo, Col, a was killed by lightning. At Colorado Spring made blind by lightning, —— At Topeka, Kan, Judge Foster of the Federal Court, appointed Waldo H. Howard, of Kansas City, and W, 8S. Hi of Boston, receivers of the Com- monwealth Loan and Trust Company, of Kansas City, Kan. The company went into voluntary liquidation about three years ago. The army worm is doing much damage about =iarshfield, Wisconsin. A sextuple photo- graph telescope will shortly be placed in the observatory of Yale University, —Thomas H. Gorman, editor of the Ottawa Free Press, died at Ot of heart trouble, He was thirty-eight years old and had achieved con- siderable reputation as a writer for American magazines, —TH government is investigating the ways of obtaicing and dis- tributing vaccine from the government farm, There have so far occurred at Montreal three deaths, under terrible suffering, from bad waccine, —— At Louisville Mrs, killed her father, beating her mother, —— Forest fires near Egg Harbor, NX. J., have caused much damage, wsThe corner-stone of an Odd Fellows’ hall was laid at Albany. —— Whitecaps have been operating in Brown county, Ind.-——At Co- lumbus, O., the Court of Common Pleas re. fused to appoint a receiver for the Fraternal Mystic Circle, holding that the order is sol- vent, Citizens of Knightsville, Ind, , gave a farewell banquet to the four strikers con, wieted of assisting in the stoning to death of Engineer Barr,—=The Columbus, Hoeking Valley and Toledo strike and the strike at the National Tube Works at been declared off, The Arkansas Construction Company build- ers and promoters of the Kansas City, Pitts. pscious, and was totally paralze : minutes after he drank the poisonou eannot ree Three nd two inj} War, ired in an ae Mar- led Williamstown . ny colliery, of Eastpoir at, Ga, was shot negro whom fivan shot the negro dead boy gs a boy was nman, awn, 1¢ Canadian ing in Kansas City to increases the capital stock of the company from $1,000,000 to #5 - 500,000. The purpose is to extend the line Ply with the receiver's order to pay up all de ficiencies by or before July 185, or forfeit all claims or dividends, the members of Cam- bridge, Mass, branch, No, 34, Iron Hall, will lose about $60,000, -— Marion Howard, eol- ored, who was io jail in Scottsville, Ky., on the charge of rapo, was taken ont by a mob and lynched, The cooperage mills of Es rex, Kent and Lamblon, Ont, shut down throwing twelve hundred men out of employ- ment, General depression in busiacss is the cause, Itis expected operations will also eeaso in Ohlo, Indiana and Michigan, and that twenty-three thousand employes will have to be laid off. ——Lizzie Ozler shot Richard Leye, hor Indian lover, at the Penn. sylvanis Baliroad shops in Pavonia, N. J, see Forest fires aro causing much destruc. tion in the neight orhood of Hinckley, Minn A HORSE KILLS A BABY. Mes. Miller Roturnsd Homs to Find the Animal Onawing Her Little One, Mra, Trueman Miller, who lives two miles south of Huntington, Va., while pleking ber. ries left her little eight months’ old babe ly. dng under the shade of a tres, On return she found a horse gnawing the little one, and its head was almost mangled to pieces. The poor mother is overcomes with griel and g her mind, © the novelist, is sala to have been the first woman who wrote for the daily newspapers. 8inoe her first novel ap. peared, forty-six yours ago, she has written over fiity volumes. Bhe fs also very clever a smbevidesy 0d dwigniug v8 wood. : SCENE OF HORROR. Frightful Explosion on a Chicago Boulevard, COMBUSTION OF A CAISSON. Death, Mutilation, and Mortal Injury Wrought In a Moment.~-Bodles Flying High In the Alr.-Detalls of the Catastrophe. A calsson, of Battery F, Becond Artillery, United States army, exploded with terrifio force shortly after one o'clock at Grand and Oakwood boulevards, Chicago, Two artil- lerymen Gnd one trooper were instantly killed, nea” resis ‘vy a score of other parsons troops, jured. some of them fatally. The troops left Brighton Park for a long march around the city to exercise the horses, They were in command of Troop F, Th'rd Cavairy, and Troop F, Third Cavalry, forty men; Tate, forty toon of Battery F, Becond Artillery, guns, Lieutenant Gayle, twenty-three Troop B, Seventh Cavalry, Capt, The men marched in of consisted men; pla- Varnum, this order, nd boulevard was Then aust crossing Oakwood a terrifle niposod literally The men on the Donovan CRISSON, to be and Doyle, were to pleces, and others were thrown selon f the through Four of the horses drawing and horribly ¢ others were blown fiity ws on the boulevard Quine Spaces. Lae UT The culsson of it large wa to atoms, not § and being was bio rr than a man’s b The boulevard looked like a battled) t Thaore of explosi the first reg was a quick series ort, aud shrapnel trees of reed the surrounding bu every window and ple for blo the ks around, The wall dwellings showed the missiles, Unexpiodec of the caisson lay strewn With the explosion came among the troops, and for and o:nicors seemed pu this was added the fright of the ywerioss the surrounding houses, who ran oy Lg from their dwellings only to be sickened by the sight in the street, A still alarm of fire had partment turnsd in, came the sto been fore the two dead artillerymen could be found, One of them, nd gnition, but sup; to be Doyle, bad been blown over a board It was some little time bef osed reco and was foun a vacant lot Lebind it, Oue leg and an The other maa, suppossd to be had been 0 feet y the ri arm were gone, thrown about ght, Donovan, ire tracks, J d near wher Great damage was wrought by the explo- sion to the neighboring Windows in me of the surrounding blown out, and the dams park property in the neighborhood of the ac- cident is estimated at about £10,000. The house of E. C, Huhling was damaged to the t of about €1,000, most of the wind: being completely demolished, One of shells struck the roof of the bouse and Gaylor was foun ® he was struck, property. mt 4% extent wa the part of it away, Another shell struck between one of the say windows and the hall of Mr, Huhiling's house, and st in this position of 3%i8 Grand boulevard, directly opposite where the accident red, and sustained a loss of about 81.000, A large plece of « the gun-curriage was carried through his sitting. and carried away a large % which stood in the window, The house attorney for the Grand Trunk railroad, suffered a loss of about #1.- 000, having every window in the house shot the front window the homes of Maurice G. wek Hyes OCC Ure t ol sie of the wheels of Samuel Foster, of At and woodwork around tho rooms, The house of F. H. Howe, at 8081 Grand Boulevard, was one of the buildings mostly damaged. His loss is estimated at §2.000. The house of A, dam. aged about £1,500. One of the iron shells struck the balcony rail and lodged there, All the windows were blown out and the glass senttered around the rooms, together with pieces of the gun-carringe and surrounding trees, Ss sans AI eins sit LIGHTNING HITS A BOAT. ————— Nineteen Men and a Oirl Shocked, Several of Them Fatally, In the midst of a severe thunder storm the is laid up for repairs in the dry dock, at Ak glors, opposite New Orleans. Nineteen men were at work on the boat and all were knocked insensible, When the rescuing party went on board they found Peter Thompson dead quite black and blue and evidently killed instantly, The other men were lying around him insensible and apparantly dead. They recovered, how- ever, after some tims, William Owens, who was struck in the back of the head was men- tally injured. © He was completely insane when he recovered from the shook and raved incessantly, Bartha Alpoints, a litle girl, who happened to be on the boat was struck by a plece of fron unloosensd Ly the lightoing and will die, Richard Hontll, another workman, was fatally fnjured. The other sisteen mon were seriously but it is not thought tatally shooked. The ruin was very sovere and the principal streets of Algiers wore some two feet under water, II 5 550305. Aku Caawostn, She Sestetary ot State ol Georgia, J fopuleety know as He “Plow boy of Pigeon FIFTY. THIRD CONGRESS FENATE. 176m Day, Two more apprepriation bills, | the Legislature, Executive and Judicial and the District of Columbia, were disposed of by the United States Senate. The Agri- cultural Appropriation bill was also consid ered, and was on the point of being passed, but there were several individual amends ments left to be considered, The Anti- -option biil, which has been on the Vice President's table since it came from the House several weeks ago, was referred to the Committee on | Agricultural and Forestry. The conference | report on the Military Academy Appropri- ation bill was agreed to, 17711 Day. — A surprise was sprung upon the United States Senate which blocked the hitherto rapid progress on the appropriation bills and almost prevented the immediate passage of the Agrieunltural Appropriation bill, The bill seemed on the eve of being passed, when Mr Hunsbrough offered an amendment appropriating 1,07 000 for the destruction of the Russian esctus or this It was immediately laid before the Senate, ! when the Agricultural bill was again taken up. A point of order made against it was decided in the negative by a vote of the Senate 26 to 22. The amend ment consumed | the remainder of the day and led to consid- isslon, It was finally adopted by a vote of 27 to 24. Beveral unimportant bills were passed early in the day. 17818 Day. The Indian Appropriation bill | was under discussion in the Benate, without final action, The only important appropria- was for | 218.750 for the Bt, Joseph's Indian Industrial | School, in Wisconsin, Bills were passed au. | thorizing Rear Admiral John G, Walker, Surgeon General J. Rufus Tryon and Com mander C, H, Davis to accept medals or dee. bill was [RAs 4 to allow the Metropolitan Street Rail way mpany of Washington, D, C., to ae its motive power from horses to poeu- matic or underground power. The confer. ence report on the Naval Approjriation bill was agroed to, 179rn Dav. In the Renate received from the House that body insisted on nsked for a hoes asked ta MALERLe WAS ing that greement, and Mr. Voor. inid before | wi that a 3 Mane its fferenos, this measure sh he nen had bad not nud th further to have after whi full and free con! Houss cont endr forens had insiste 1 Appropriation b ken up an Tha » rt « 5% " n the Diploms AP UOn DE was anpous bad; that the Senate con The Indian i passed, ngreed 1801 Dax Tie Senate proces proper are of a peculiar ure, in th the Jb a8 carried 3 De save a br and a qu dings nie MOCrals, r Sherman 176m Day mprenuntit vey Uy av te of 12 sed and 1 on the Was SREY md a quorum failad fina Han ise of Representatives voluntary bankrapiey bill to #1, and devoted the re- nalnder of the day to business reported from the Judiciary Commi Oaly two bills, however, ware diag ( one (Oo create an additional circuit judge for the eighth judico. edreuit and the er making United on railre oy rorporations, for the purpose rindi tio ftizens of Ae states thr ch they poss or into which they go 178s Day. ~The Ho ! naideration of hills on Military regulate How wind of, tht ugh use devoted the day reported from Affaire. Bills t in the army nagers of transfor and maintain 1 in case of emergency: nl. G n the Beutenant, and some mittae ste to tow of inma any bran a as a first thers, In the Houses, a rk done on the A special order was bro ! n the Commities im jebate on the motion to disagree to the Sen. demands to two hours, and wis 80 vorded as to prevent specific instructions on SUZAr or any other tin lar s hed: ile, {%0re Day. ~The Ho » of Representatives was able to transact on iness in a short bill 8 were passed with time, Hall a- ut opposition or debate in the hour devoted the ( report Tariff bill aght iting wes in in the 178m Day nade on the wie teponon {ales on a sin a i bis domes to the Committee on Judiciary, One was the bili by Mr. W, A Stone, of Pennsyivania, provi fing for consular inspection of immi- granis snd that every immigrant entering the United States’ must exhibit a cortificate | of fitness signed by the consul of the port from which he sailed. EE ———— EER THE NEXT NEW DOLLAR BILL | ——— A Protty Design is Promised by the Treasury De- partmnet. Claude M. Johnson, Chief of the Bureau of Engraving, received from Secretary Carlisle, his approval for a now design for the #1 sii. vor certificate, which will come into use noxt year, The details of the work were done by Will H. Lowe and the engraving of the plates will be done by Charles Bchiest, now engraving the World's Fair Diploma, The design rep- resents history instructing youth. History is represented by a female figure in a reclin- ing position with her right arm around a youth and the jet extended forward pointing towards the City of Washington in the back. ground. The open pages of a book on the other end of the note contains the Consti- tution of the United States, The border consists of wreaths all around the note, in each of which Is 4 name promi. nent in American history as a statesman, aus thor, inventor, soldier or sailor, sm III oss COVERED WITH MOLTEN METAL. —————— Four Mon HMorribly Burned at Homestead Pa, Two Will Die The bottom of a converter at the Homes stead Stecl Worka of Carnegie & Co, blew out, scattering 8,800 pounds of molten modal in every direction, ¢ Four workmen who were in the pit were tarribly burned, two of them fatally. Their names ure: Potor Nelson, burned all over the will die, bolts Timothy Diamond, terribly turned about hand and breast; will die, Michasi Holleran, dangerously. burned, ONLY FRAGMENTS FOUND. Bight Miners Blown to Atoms by Giant Powder in Pennsylvania. A despatch from Hazleton, Pa,, says: An other mine disaster occurred at Btocktion No, 8, which in detalls Is the most shocking which ever took place in the Lehigh coal fields, Two hundred sticks of glant powder exploded in the midst of 8 gang of miners, in- tact to recognize them, vietims are: Andrew Charles Jabol, aged 22, 23. single; An. aged 20, single: John John Motefeski, aged 44, married, and John Drizzon, aged 206, The names of the O'Donnell, aged 25 aged 88, married; J single; John Koshleda, aged Horeavite, married; ohn Primbone, married; tuo harness engaged shu- men standing The drivers went into thestables 5, And is was while thos that the explosiou took place. Charles gort says be saw about a dozen O'Donnell ent before the explosion took place, about recelving the powder a The hurled about promiscucusly, The men wore paralyzed with fright, and, fearing an explosion of gas had taken place and a collapse of the entire mine was about they simply waited for death, It was in this position they were from No, 2, found by some miners who hastens the dem biotic 8. As soon as lights ed to the a terrible sight me Ware seen lzed drivers hastes shaft, { their gars There Btrewn over the twisted and torn timbers flesh and bones The the and limbs of the infle miners, men were 100 sic) { the dead, Rescuing parties were « bonded by Superintende Or ps The onoe of miners descended work of recovering the bodies was at Fragments iis up and but it was 2 flesh were anes he ralls and ties while everywhere wero n and ip and it what inf the distrasts nate r were Loe of the rel intives It Was Arrange 4] of the ¢ sir several hom aight be Hh box to § » fake them As anch box 1 ywer, and “8 1 tod 2 or % 6% swf © ap; ORTON y wa sar AL went up from th muititude Women tore their bair and pay rent the air. agonizing wail wailing. of Bg The officials did in shrieks « ns ba everything possible to but auld uilie vary A ———— CABLE SPARKS the alarmist ramc ope = A pxxiaL of ing the health of the P pontiffs physiciar. Tux cruiser Chicago WE CORO rSe made by the was run into by a tank steamer in Avtwerp hart ani damaged to the extent of $12,000, A coxreaexce of foreign has been held in Se representatives ul in effort to the dispute between China and Japan, an seftle AvnrrioNat earthquake shoo Eastern estimated that pearly two hundred persons were killed, Twaxry Ashing boats, were out dure ing Spain, are missing, lost, Taw principal socialist objociion to French aati-anarchis is the provigion for summary trial of anarchists by a judge, Eve Recrree the Peasant,” ks were felt in Turkey, and it is which a recent storm near Bilbos, and many lives are probably feguislions ess latest book “My Brother, has been seized by the ount of authorities on ace its anarchistic ten- dengivs, Tir British minister to Mexico, the Hon. P. Lepoer Trench, has been promoted to be envoy extraordinary and plenipotentiary at Tokio, Japan. Presivesy Casosn-Peama visited the United States ambassador, the Hon, James B. Eustis, in Paris and remained half an hour at the embassy, Ma Josern Prorrzen bas given to the city of Paris a bronge group portraying the founders of American independence, Wash. ington and Lafayette, A rience fire vaged among the free-harbor docks In Hamburg, Immense stores of to bacco and coffees. were destroyed, The loss will amount to £375,000, Tur French Chamber of Deputies by a vote of 8369 to 80 has passed a resolution inviting the government to introduce at aa early day ita proposal in rega®d to taxation revenue, Coteus Is steadily spreadiag in Austrian Galicia and in the provinces directly South, Twenty new oases, eleven of which have proved fatal, have been Feparted within the Inst three days, i Tug Palace 4’ Bio Theatre, “recently opened in Brussels, was destroyed Ly fire just alter tho conclusion of the performance, The fire spread to adjoining validings, and the total Tons is estimated at 1,000,000 franes, The American bark . ary 8 Ames, bound from Samarang. Java, for Delagoa bay, Bouth Africa, has been abandoned at sea in 6 sinking condition, Part ol the crew were saved aad landed near Capo Town, mans ss con sso. REPUBLIC OF HAWAII Munford B. Bele, First Prosidest of the Rew Gove ernmnt, Declarsd July #th Advices received by steamer from Hono, lula show that a Republic was proclaimed in he Hawaiian Laity gis 4 4 Basford B ‘ roa the fest PENNSYLVANIA ITEM3 Oleans! from Various Pass Ypitome of News of ihe Bate The annual grove meeting of the Chester Heights Association was opened with lev, Charles Boswell in charge, The first of the three days set apart by the State Chautauqua for the entertainment of public school teachers proved a successful venture, Two men were fatally and four others ser. fously wounded in a fight in a Wilkes-Barre saloon, By the bursting of a converter in the Home. stead Bteel Works two workmen were burned to death and two others are likely to die John Minn, who was arrested in New York ing £40) from a fellow countryman, was held for court trial at Hazleton, partof the money being found in a cavity in his boot heels, Win, Burrs, a farmer of Liberty, wasalmost eut to pieces by falling on the knives of a mowing machine, The Bureau of Industrial Statistics has pre, pared a report on the subject of apprentices Oil, their homes to GYR ran away from to Two i Nanticoke troops, Preparations are foot strike wi mills at Pittsburg to recogni Chisago fight the to go for & general fore a on in the ire is of the Amalgamated Association, Calg | dies will be Umstead, of Contesville, arrested nros men ipposed to gang of thi part of the A fast a herb of cows near Long be ringleaders of a vis who have been working that county. nsyivanis, raninto lhe freight on the Pen Bun Junction, train was wrecked, but no one was killed, 1 he autho t will lead t { the ritios at Hazleton elaim to have of a Btotz, a clue ti y the arrest man a i « murder of John The Btoeeit anmed Whit the pi biown up A dynamite > £ A : : Brian Beranton su] ¥ ¢ 1 residence of a iored man ¢, who recently left home to take ace of a siriker at Punxsutawney, was by dyonmite { hen artridge vy size Hoaly, ol The plilars own away, the were pe and a8 hole was Had windows rushed in Mr. Henly he wou dead to the side of the dwellin e front i He ascr been sleeps 1 have been killed ibes the { fear of suet sorge Shaw, 1 that he ster, In his frig wW, un hen he awoke on the Le 1 i ily out fhe ry wind idewnlk aud ruse, Eight on » fist of Stale and T. Clay, of of Muhlenberg College, anty fairs, Philadelphia, and Dr. lectured to Chautaunguans on ancient Medical So IBVestigalt Ettinger the State bjects, #us The bama County has Hoty appointed un committee t feasible methods of capital punishment other than hanging. of Media, rs Whe (ae per, jmp wed a fine were recent. on the Chester boer bottle iy discharged by Judge Clayton nsisting of A fishing party o Lafayette Bawk, J. PP. Wetherill, Henry Tittle and J. W, being killed while driviag to At long pine party were riding to the Charles Wetherill, Kresge narrowly eos Deep Lake, Pond us large troe started to fall just as the Hawk was thrown vik Tittle uneonscious, past, ently ground, rendered partly suo jast in time to save their lives by the tree and of the Wagon was struck the rest the The wagor and seeded in jumping from the tree, , aged 25, em- Le and Cassidy, a laborer West End Rolling Miils, while at work made mi iss-step Edward at the banon, a tank filled with water heated to the boiling point. His body from the waist falling tank. Heclor his skin Centralia is a town without a tax the Town Council the Board have combined their efforts to sec one wants and Ire is no induce it is believed that 10 per cent. before a collector In the sent, will bave the bore meantime ugh the tained, officials are in a quandary, mw TS THE FRUIT CROP. What toe Outlook Is This Year—A Bad Apple Bean. 4 Only a meagro crop of apples for this sea- gon is predicted by the July report of the statistician of the department of Agriculture, This shows that the average condition of ap ples in the whole country is 47.6 per cont, In a few localities New England, New York, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Kansas, the mountain and Pacific States-~the conditions still point to a crop ranging from fair to good but in most of these the fruit is now dropping badly and a farther reduction of the peroent- ages will doubtless be shown by the next re- turns, A few states follow these with the Sn ——— dioations go to show, while the remainder of them States of large production, bave such low percentages as to leave no doubt of the failure of the crop within their respective boundaries, The poach erop is even in worse sondition, for the average for the whole country is but 24.3 per cent. The outlook, however, for peaches is no worse than it was a month ago, In tho States east of the Rookies, where any chanos for a crop remained, the conditions have boon sustained, This fact, considering the intervention of the June drop, is some what reassuring, oven though, at the most, this can mean but half a crop in New Jersey, and a little more than that in Michigan, The supply deawn from Connecticut Is small, but in the time of searcity fs important, The condition in that stato is comparatively high. THE CENSUS WORK Has Besn Dons During the Fiscal Year. Beport of What The operations of the Census Office for the | fiscal yenrending June 80 are reviewed in detail in the annual report of Buperintendens { Carrell D, Wright. The total disbursements | on secount of the eleventh census to and in | eluding June 80, 1894, smounted to £10,365 ~ 577. This was expended under different ap- i propriations as follows: Expenses, sleventh {| Farms, homer and mortgage | 287,074; and printing, engraving and bin £003,400, sation at the end of the expected that this number { during this month, #o that the sleted ready for the printer under Bmall appicpiia- necessary ai the $5,475,149, §1.- ang Census, siatistics, The total foree receiving com pete year was 672 It is be reduc” ORNslsS Work wii can be cor © pres tions, however, opening of ( Bi ASDrOT Ew al » RPT OL ‘ will be ongress in December for print. the final results, and for proofreaders sud re. ing and binding continuing a fores of visers, The census volumes is pages of the this, 19.446 prepared, total number of 22.200. have printed Of printed pages of copy been and the rest will Le finished duriog the next few months and under svallable tions, BRppropria- In accordance with the aet approved April 21, 1804, been prepared, containing, the results so far reached, A previous act ealied for a digest which Col i Wright cor and he recommends that Congress next Decem- substi the census has only an abstract of however, of the Consus, raed aciders une DECOSBRTY, provide in some defic ber for dropping the digest and {ition of the abwtract, extend. iency bill ftuting for it a second ¢ ing its size to 500 pages, coninining nll essen tial totals and comparing thom with the tenth Census totals, ows: “In ao cordance with an ress 1 took charge of the Census Office, October 6, 1883 of the eleventh fad iti sat by June 30, 1584, copy The report concludes as fol act of Cong flor examining the census, | reported th f ih, "mE Of 3 Lae han Cie 4 JOT Ba 08 Vi Jor parts of three reports relaling to ine statistics and farms and Aan, vila This work bas been carried oh al lated at the time, The in in a appropriations Ar as il was gry emg balance of the reports can be copy under very short time, now avaiial the eleventh census the plan originally Judd down by my predecessor that it sb arely A pr t binding of of tics bas been adher WLEUS, should be made for the perma: schedules t » the eustom the past, for whicl proper time nake the requisite III 5 uy La. or Indiana, is ar of the Hoosier Bilate, Guoariras, Supreme Court repor- ealled the silverdongued He holds ¢ office that General Harrison resigaed to the fleid at the outbreak of the Wu the Rebellion, the MARKETS. PALTINORE GRAIN, ETC. FLOUR-Balto. Best Pat.$ High Grade Extra. ..... WHEAT-N~ 2 Red.... IRN Ne, 2 White OATS-8outhern & Pena. Western White. ........ RYE-No. 2 HAY Choice Timothy... Good to Prime. ....cu... BTRAW-—Rye in car ids. Wheat Blocks. ....uonus Ont Blocks. es. xossonnses CANNED GOODS. TOMATOES Stnd. No. 4.8 @s ae6m PE AS—Standards. ‘ Secon . CORN Dry Pack i Moist........ RIDES, CITY BTEERS.....cccut 8 City Cows...oouue Southern No. 2 POTATOES & VEGETABLES, POTATOES-—Burbanks..8 75 ONIONS, . KE EE EE cemu an senna sann i ® Ry @3 PROVIRIONS, HOGS PRODUCTS-shids$ Clear ribsides.... Hamas. . Asner stan esas. Mess Pork, per bar. cu. LARD-Crude......cocnne Best refined. .covuvvnnnne PUTTER. BUTTER—Fine Crmy....$ Under fine. y @s EE BO cians cnnnsssinsnnse CHERSE, CHEESE-N.Y. Faner...$ NY. fate....ooconnisee SKI Cheese. ......oe0ee EGGS, EGO8-—State.....o.uuee.B North Caroling. ....c..u. POULTRY. | CHICKENS—Hens.......$ Ducks, per B...ccccovne TOBAOCO, TOBACCO-M4., Infer's.$ 150 @s In Sound COMMON. Levee... S00 MiddHDZ. « von oovsvnnns B00 FRUOF «coneesrisenscuseee 1000 LIVE STOCK. BEEF.—Bost Booves......$ 435 Good t0 Fair......csee. 875 4 1860 300 52 b FURS AND SKINS, MUSKRAT..............3 Reocoon SREB IB IRENE REE. ed Rox....00veveeesiee EE NnY@s 10 in 12 iv 1H @ 5 10 Hw @8 450 NABER R sa R EE Rae Hogs @® - oo wr —~ FeRa aera nen ink, FARSI sERRRN TERE. Ligligs - ggREse KEW YORL —— FLOUR ~Southern.......8 8 in WHEAT No, 8 Red Bed RY E—Wostorn SoEN-Xe A BUT Werecreecorernt BOGE-State. on. «o.com CHEESE—State........ccn atta a ae
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers