= INAUGURATION DAY, "A Graphic Account of the Prep. arations For the Event, A Big Parade, With Unlimited Dec» orations and Fireworks, A Washington special to the New York Commercial Advertiser gives the following vivid account of what may be expected at Harrison and Morton's inauguration on March 4: The arrangements for the coming inaugu- ration, now nearly completed, have required the constant attention of Chairman Britton, an executive committee com of thirty- two of the leading citizens of the District of Columbia, twenty-one sub-commniittees— the aggregate membership of which is 1600 —and a corps of cierks continuously oe- cupled since last November with the letters and other communications received daily from all parts of the country. The expense of the inauguration will be at least £50,000, Some of the biggest bills which the commit- toa will have tosettle are, 10,00) for decorat- ing and illuminating the great ball of the pension building, in which the inaugural bail will be held; 8.500 for the music for that occasion: $0 for the supper; $7000 for en graving and pristing the inaugural souvenir, F000 for miscellaneous prinung: £00 for fireworks and street illum nation; £100) for carriages: £1590 to be awarded to members of the various flambeau clubs participating in the prize drill, and £5000 tor clerk hire anc stationery. 1t is expected that the expenses of the ball will be. more than met by the sale of tickets for that event, There have been but tvs a stances in the past when the inaugural ball was not a source of revenue, The first was on the occasion of the insuguration of Presi- dent Polk in 1845, when the tickets were laced at $10, and the second the inaugural Il given in honor of Fresident Grant in 1873, when the tickets sold for $20 each. In the latter case the committees was oblignl to make up a deficit of §:0,000, It is said that President Harrison and Vice-President Mor - ton will be the, only persons present at the next maugural ball who will not have paid | - i ! | Brandenburg, Ky., for tho murder of Bene- | $5 tor a ticket. Perhaps the greatest feature of inaugura- tion day will be the parade. There will be nearly 50,000 men in line. Thus far tha largest representation of militia promises to be from Pennsylvania. Someof the civie organizations will bring with them 150 men and others 1000. The number from New | York State will be more than 560. Penn- wplvania will probably send tne next largest civic delegation, and New Jersey will rank third, Governor Beaver, the Grand Marshal of | the parade, bas decided to divide the line into six divisions as follows: First Division, United | States troops and the National Guard of the District of Columbia, numbering about five | hundred men: Second Division, 5000 Penn- sylvania troops, under the command of ex- | Governor Hartranft; Third Division, the | remaining military organizations, represent- ed by 10,000 men; Fourth Division, veterans | of the Grand Army and their sons, mar- by General William Warner, of Mis- souri. the Commander-in-Chief of the Order, | and Fifth and Sixth Divisions, civic organi- zations. i ‘General Harrison end Vice-President-elect | Morton will stop at the Arlington, within sight of the White House. If President Cleve- land follows the precedent which has been established, be will send his carriage for | General Harrison, and escort him from the | White House to the Capitol. The journey | from the Executive Mansion to the Capitol is the first ceremony of the day. General Har- rison will be accompanied in this journey by his old regiment, the Seventieth Indiana. | two companies of cavalry, two batteries of | artillery and two companies of militia of the District of Columbia. After the oath of office has been administered on the steps of the Capitol, President Harrison will be driven back to the White House, occupying a place in the directly behind the | grand marshal and his staff, and will thus be able to reach the stand erected for him in front of the Executive Mansion in | time to review the entire parade The com- | mittee on street decorations reports that the | Stores and houses along the entire line of | Santen 30 be elaborately and elegantly | events of the evening will be the in- ball, the display of fireworks and the | drill of flambeau clubs. The ball will | in the vast hall of the new pension | In the decorationsthe American ailing feature. Silk | gilt and silver be used The fronts three galleries which completely the ball, ana above the other, w Jota, stars, shields and crescents, The first story | will be fourteen feet above the base of the | foun filled in with evergreens and f= ers, making a delightful grotto or retreat for | On the next, or second floor, | will be an orchestra of 100 performers dnd on the third floor, fourteen feet above them sis full marine band. Twenty calcium ligh to be placed in the gallary and 000 fre along the sides of | Wright, of Massachusetts, to be Commis f posible, besides a large number slightly in | bave died and the distress is spreading. | wounded, piso a dozen policernen. | juring three. ball, and will, without doubt, be the grandest musical combination ever heard fu Washington, There will ve seven concert pieces, Oho Tor $han were Fendared acludin, grand fantasia “ OS TanRDAUsS selections ical programme mises and most A I lay of flreworks ever sesn in this country. It will begin at 7.45 o'clock with a Presiden- tial salute of aerial marrons, exploding at a height of 800 feet. An hour and a half later the exhibition will closs with a simultaneous discharge of 5500 rockets, the largest flight of rockets ever fired in the United States, Fire portraits of Washingten, Lincoln, Harrison and Morton and representations of the Capitol and White House are to be given, Altogether ten tons of material will be burned. fore the dis- play Pennsylvania avenue will be illuminated Reith aurelian fires, ignited simultaneously by electricity, LATER NEWS, Ax unsuccessful attempt was made to de stroy a big New York city brewery with dynamite. The explosion was terrific and damaged the houses for a hundred yards around, Several persons were hurt. Tag Pacific Guano Company of Boston bas assigned, with liabilities of $1,000,000, ALLEN 8B, Gookin, head cashier of the ele vated railroad companies, in New York city, is short in his accounts and has fled. The defalcation will be made good by his bonds men, Tax losses by the recent tie-up of stroet railways in New York city are estimated as follows: Car companies, $117,000; strikers, $50,400; retail trade, $1,600,000; theatres, $0000; saloons, $50,000, Total, $1,707,000, ! | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Hexny DIECKMANN, a prominent member | of the Merchants' Exchange of St. Louis, has gone to Canada, leaving a shortage of $30, | DO, Janes Ross, colored, bas been hanged at | dict Rhodes, an old farmer, Tug “protocols” (official minutes) of the | conference on Samoan affairs, beld in Wash- | ington in 1857, together with additional cor | respondence on the subject, have been laid before Congress by the President. Tux President has nominated Carroll D, sioner of Labor. A vauixe and epidemic of typhus fever prevail in Doboka, Hungary. Ten persons | Ths | slamity is attributed to a failure of the | potato crop. Couvxt Torstot bas tendered his resigna- | tion as Russian Minister of the Interior, and | it has been accepted by the Czar, HEAVY gales bave been raging on the | i English and Irish coasta A building fell | near Bolton, crushing a number of cottages | and killing six persons. At Pembroke a | ferryboat capsized and nine persons were drowned. Tex THOUSAND of the unemployed laboring glass rioted in Rome, Italy. The mob looted | banks and shops, smashed windows and street | lamps and attempted to build barricades to | protect themselves against the troops, In the fight that followed scores of the rioters were The mili- tary were finally successful in dispersing the @aob, A TERRIFIC snow storm prevailed through out Scotland, accompanied by high wind, and extremely low temperature The tele graph wires were prostrated. Tue bark Theodore Behrend has been | wrecked at Texel, England. Ten persons | were drowned, including the Captain and his | family. Tux Standard Oil Company's glue factory | at Constable Hook, N, J., was totally de- stroyed by fire. Loss, $500,000, Tue steamer Haytien Republic, which was | the bone of contention in our recent em’ broglio with Hayti, bas arrived at Boston, Wryern & Sox's large wholesale drug store and several fine residences were de- stroyed by fire in Philadelphia, causing a | Joss of about $000, One fireman was | Rilled Uxirep States detectives succeeded in | eapturing a gang of eleven counterfeiters at Branchton, Penn. A large quantity of bogus coin was found. A CENTRIFUGAL machine used by the New | York Tartar Works in drying acids burst in Gowanus, Brooklyn, killing two men and in- Ax attempt was made to blow up a tene- | went house in New York city in which 100 people were sleeping. Evwano J. Purrrs, United States Minis | ter to the Court of Bt. James, has arrived in | New York. Tae Legislatures of ten Western States have resolved to investigate the dressed beef “combine.” Turxze men were killed in the mine of the American Mining and Belting Company at Leadville, Col, Haywoon Hasoy, colored, who shot a young white man named Charles Stewart, was lynched by a mob at Shreveport, La. Ture Chio and Western Coal and Irom Company, of Columbus, Ohio, has failed. The company was capitalized for $8,000,000 in bonds and $5,000,000 in stock, J. Borpravx and his four children, rang- ing from six to fourteen years old, died from eating poisoned cubbage at Shelton, Washington Territory. Mus, CLevELAND bold a largely attended reception at the White House, Jonx A. P. Epgesron has been dismissed from the position as one of the Civil Service’ Commissioners by President Clovelntd, © | lis, Md, the Thurlow steel | suicide, | and thirty-two years old | was continued, | tintions will be removed from Washington | A Easarn and Middle States, DAM LEFEVRE, a prominent farmer West Lam A Ae was found suffocated at his own lime kiln. He had fallen asleep while attending to the fires. JAY Cowpeny, a faith-cure doctor of Hartford, delivered a lecture on mental science in West Haven, Conn. Just after saying: “A Christian scientist can defy death,” ho foll dead. BevEnRe weather was reports} in Northern New York and New England, the mercury standing at thirty to forty degrees below Zoro, Nixg barns have been burned in suc- cession recently in York County, Penn., by incendiary fires Wiire James Reagan and John Me- Cormick, arm-in-arm, snd so Intoxicated that they could scarcely stand, were crossing the ravroad at Poorman's Crouting, Cot Joy were struck by a train and tantly A 116 cave-in Is taking Jace in the coal mines of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, at Carbondale, Penn, WiLLias SorrweLL, an engineer, pinned in the wreck of his engine at Somerville, Mass, was killed by an joe train that ran into it, Prestpext Creveraxp and bis wife visited New York a fow days since to make arrangements for their permanent residence in the Metropolis after March 4, Two miners were killed by an explosion of gas in the Penn shaft at Pittston, Penn. Tue strike of Brooklyn street car em- ployes has ended, the men agreeing to return to work as individuals. The company on its part promised to pay the old wages CHRISTIAN THER, sixty-two years of age, was instantly killed in New York city by an elevator, which struck the back of his head and severed it from his body, Wesrenx and Northern New York were | by a snow storm that entirely sus od travel in many localities Cavzn M. Tavrcorr, dry goods merchant, | of Hartford, Coun. bas failed. Liabilities | $200,000, Warren J. Gimsox, a well-known insur | on nt, committed suicide at Buffalo, | Y., in a Turkish bath, an N, i eral Marin, who has resigned. South and West, GexeErarl Harrison bas completed his ine augural address, Hig wind blew down the Max Meyer brick building at Omaha, Neb, which was | recently gutted by fire. Two buildings on the east side were wrecked. Six persons lost their lives and seven escaped, more or less in- Jured, AT Hastings, Neb., the central school was | almost totally wrecked, four persons being 80 severely injured that recovery was lm Jured, One of the scholars was killed outs right while another was Injured fatally. | The teacher, Miss Aldrich, was fatally in- jured, ! Tux six-year-old son of Jacob Kroll, of Terre Haute, Ind., died a few days ago from | the effects of hydrophobia Coroxxr Jouxs 8 Mossy ealled upon President-elect Harrison by invitation to discuss the Southern question, Mus Hanmsox, the wife of the President- elect, and ber daughter, Mra. McKee, after spending a week in New York devoted to shopping, bave returned to Indianapolis Prestoext-erecy Hannisox has leased the “Spencer Cottage” at Deer Park, Md, for a summer residence, and his family ex- pect to take possession about June 1. A stout earthquake shock was felt at Charleston, 8. CC. The vibration was of brief duration. W. F. Bravrey, son of ex-Judge Bradley of lows, shot and killed his wife and then himself at Chicago, Bradley and his wife | were reporters on a morning paper. Warsaw, lil, is afMicted with black measles. Over 30 cases have boon reported and thirteen deaths Public schools bave been closed and public meetings of all kinds prohibited. Tux Chicago police officials, Inspector Bonfield and Captain Schaack, who were charged by the Times with corruption, have | been indefinitely suspended by Mayor Roche, A rennin blizzard raged for two days in the Northwest, it being especially severe | in Michigan, W. W. Bussey, teller of the Eagle snd | | Phoenix Bank of Columbus, Ga, has ab seconded with about $65,000, Ono’ treasury is said to be rapidly be coming bankrupt, the deficit now amounting | to $1,100,000, Lianr earthquake shocks were re ported | ‘ from Los Aageles and San Bernardino, Cal, AT the naval proving grounds at Annapo- un Was experi mented with and it stood Government | toast, i Russert B Hanusox, son of General | Harrioon, has purchased the Helena (Mon- | tana) Record. : Coroset J. BE. WALLER, private secretary of Governor lee, of Virginia, was found | | dead in bis office with a bullet wound near his loft ear. Jt was an undoubted case of He was a man of fine appearance | Ix the joint assembly of the West Virginia Legislature the Republicans offered a protest | | against the Democratic plan of procedure in | | notallowing the vote for Governor to be read, | and immediately arces and left the hall, thus breaking the quorum Notwithstanding this the work of voting for United States Washington. Junoe Wintian M, Mesnick, of the Su- preme Court of the District of Columbia, re- | | cently died at his residence, in Washington, | of gastric complaint, in his seventieth year. Tux House resolution making an appro- | Jriation of S00K ta be paid to the heirs of | ‘aptain James B. Eads, has been passed by | the Senata, i BrCRETARY BAYARD has consented to a resumption of the conference with Germany ing the Samoan affairs which was last year. The scene of the nego- | to Berlin. Tur Secretary of the Navy and Mm Whitney entertained the President and Mrs. Cleveland, with members of the Cabinet and others, at a dinner. Governor Hill, of New York, and Speaker Carlisle were among the guests, i | Government, | lated | marck, but was released on his promise 10 re- | side abroad, at Washi next autumn, The other who have signified their intention to be revresented at the Conference are: Braz), Chili, Denmark, France, Germany, Hawaii, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, Spain, Bwoden and Norway, and Uruguay. Foreign. A COLLISION occurred in the English Channel between the Steamship Killochan and the ship Nereld. Foth were sunk and twenty-four persons drowned, Tae bark Largobay collided off Beachy~ head, England, with an unknown steamer, which sank in eight minutes. Over one Jundral lives were supposed to have been ost, ANOTHER of the Austrian Crown Prince Rudolf's says that the Baroness Marie Vetsorn and the Prince committed suicide together at Meyerling, TR 1 %0.s of Heligeland were drowned in the Bea during a heavy storm, Ex US crowds viewed the body of Prince Rudolph of Austria as it lay in State, Bome of the Vienna doctors discredit the theory of suicide, and believe that the Crown Prince was ass: ing ted, Varuxcey KE. Foriegn, of Hamil Canada, has made an assignment. Liabili- ties about 81,000,000, HEAVY gales are from the coasts of Great Britain, with shipwreck and loss of life, There bas been a heavy fall of snow in Berlin, accompanied by a thunder storm. In the mountain districts heavy and continuous fuiua have fallen and further floods were MANDALAY, Burmah, has recently been visited by two immense fires, In the first the flames destroyed 632 houses, a bazaar, and a Buddhist monastery. In the second, 500 houses were burned. th fires were of accidental origin. Tug French Chamber of Deputies has con- firmed the election of General Cluseret as member for the Var, It was charged that | ko was an American citi and Lo fore neligible to hold office + or (ww L.ench A snow stony interfered with the Mon- treal (Canada) carnival somewhat. | from Bix women have been murdered and muti- | in Managua, Nicaragua, after the | ghastly method of the Whitechapel fiend. GRNERAL SALAMANCA has been appointed | Captain-General of Cuba in place of Gen. Canmyar Levocmowsk:, formerly Pri | mate of Poland and Archbishop of Posen, is | dead. He was imprisoned by Prince Bis Count WinLiax BisManck has been ap- | pointed President of the rrovince of Han- over. A SINGULAR FATALITY. — A Bar of Soap Wakes a Slumbering Geyser—~Four Chinamen Killed News has been received at Cheyenne, Wy- omiong, of a most singular fatality by which four Chinsmen Jost their lives, They were in Canyon City, near the Yellowstone Park, | and Yi Bing had established a wash bouss in a tent directly over a boiling spring. He had bot water constantly, and was doing a good business in the new mining town Wednesday he and three other Mongolian who came from adjoining camps, celelrated their Chinese New Year. They carried fire. crackers, and made offerings to Joss by get ting drunk, Yi Sing bad been cautioned about the boiling spring and told that it might be a slumbering goysor, For this reason his wash. ingtubs were put on the other side of the tent so that soap might not disturb the quiet of the boiling waters. No one knows just how Yi Bing's bar of laundry soap got over turned into the boiling spring. It is more than probable that some mischievous miner emptied the soap in the slumbering gevser, That night there was a sudden spouting of boiling water, a tent fying through the sir, and some plercing yells. The miners rushed up and found the geyser pouring water toa boight of over a hundred feet The bodies of four Chinamen, scalded to death, were found later at some distance from the scene The gevser rpouted for three hours and then subsided. NEWSY GLEANINGS. ALL is quiet at Samoa, Tur Rio Grande is rising Ormoox's debt is but $20,411.64, TrotveLE is threatened at Panama, THERE are 400 Poles in New York ArrLes continue at very low prio, i Tue Pope's health is causing alarm. New Youx contains 83,000 Italians, Tux British troops have left Suakin, a IOAN war is raging among the job» 1 | | na are 430 voters on Block Island, | A | Tovmsrs on the River Nilo are now taxed. MoxTREAL is to spend $4,000,000 on ber harbor, i GRORGIA is at war against the “Fertilizer | Trost." i InrorTED tobacco now finds a ready sale in Japan, i The talian budget shows a deficit of nearly | £40, 000,000 Onur of the English cavalry is with- | out horses, ] Trains in Cape Town, Africa, have elec | tric lighting. Tux tower ¢f the Montreal jos palace is | 120 feet high, ] Warse Covxry, Penn, is overrun by white rabbits, Parisians have voted £500,000 to decorate their city ball. Tux Masonic fraternity in New York State numbers 70,004, Tur Weather Bureau is to remain in the Departmen ] War 1 t Exotaxd bought 600,000 barrels of Ameri. can apples last year, CIxoIxNATI has just dedicated a §700,000 Chamber of Commerce, Tue only part of the country that has bad a hard winter is Alaska, Tur commission of the New York city Postmaster expires in April. Tux study of the Russian language Is being developed inthe English army. Tux new issue in Paris of the Panama Canal shares is a complete futlures ind Last 100 persons were kil 000 injured on the railroads in Virginia, Tux presont of corn is below what it costs to put it in the farmers’ cribs, Tux Vanderbilts have got absolute control of the Bouth Penusy! Railroad | forming two deep, | foctly transparent, { the outside blended in a delightful | with the inside transparancy Royal Scots. MONTREAL'S ICE PALACE. A Gay Army Storms the Frozen Monarch’s Citadel. The Carnival of Winter Sports in Canada’s Capital, A dispatch from Montreal, Canada, says: The thousands of people who arrived in Montreal early this week have been joined by thousands more, who came to witness the magnificent spectacle promised in the storm. {ng of the foe castle, A good sized blizzard struck the town just about the same time, Into the fourteen hours intervening between 10 o'clock in the mornmg and mid- night spectacular events that would have done credit to a p week's Umoe met the delighted eye of the visitors, The storm during the cariler part nmme covering a | carnival committee was forced to close the | toboggan slides for the day. The horse trotting on the jc was also | the rinks, pstponed on aecount of eptn of the snow, The ever, were scones of unusual and at two o'clock in the afternoon the OW activity, | mangled. The Castiilinns had found reat | seemed the main shaft, 7 snowshoers started their races at the park. | The Governor-General of Canada, Lord Stanley, of Preston, and Lady Stanley were | among the 4000 people who witnessed this | that three whites had | killed. The sport. The snow was soft and drifting, so t no attempts at record breaking were made, It was not till evening, however, that the real sport of the jay visitors had finished their su supper instead of dinner in the evening the streets began to fill and then until 9 o'clock every street and avenue within half rs--they eat began. As soon as the | foree to claim their rights ontreal at 6 in | | “Mexican Monte mile of Dominion Square, where the ice pal- | nes is located, grew more and more crowded. | Bhort] warded by the sight of the advancing war torches, from Mount Royal. Eighteen snow- | shoe clubs participated in the march, and, later on, in the attack. The formation of march was in single file on a serpentine path, The march down mountain to the palace, amid blazing torches and sn incessant fire of skyrockets, was a magnificent scene The palace itself was brilliantly fllumi- | nated with bright lights of all colors, and | as the various clubs marched around the palace a ringlet of skyrockets, which encircled the top of the tower, shot upward, flluminating the clouded sky in a manner that would have made Old Bol hide bis face in shame, even on his brightest day. No sooner had this died away than an equally magnificent disp'ay arose from the four smalier towers, and then the attack began It was a spectacle that can't be described. | For one hour Homan candles, skyrockets and | every other description of pyrotechuios il- luminated the sky in a circle thousands of feet in circumference Thousands of eyes were riveted on the scene, and murmurs of edmiration were audible from thousands of de ighted spectators after 8 o'clock the throngs were ro | | riors, with their bright and vari-colored | the | | age £3 more a week than they de TREASURE SEEKERS SLAIN, Eight Mexicans Murdered at the Mouth of a Gold Mine, A dispatch from Cheyenne, Wyoming, says: A party of eight Mexicans, trading overland, reached this city six weeks ago. They were richly dressed, splendidly out fitted and bore overs evidence of being aristocrats, Don igusl Martinez the leader, and gave ovasive when mission. come to look up a g Spaniards 200 years ago, it money freely and gembied heavily. hens the party left for the north they were fob lowed by a pair of curious cowboys “Mexican Monte,” a local character, de- clared the travelers had informed him they were going for the mysterious hidden gold and were guided by a chart that had on in Don Martinez's family for centuries, The rty were almost forgotten until George Keller returned from the north two of the day wasof such magnitude that the | purchase supplies for horse traders. He says that while chasing some horses the horse bunters could not resist the temptation to look for the sbandoned lodex They were successful, stumbling upon what came upon the bodies of the eight Mexicans rightly mine, but Americans were in of it. They claimed ownership, and a band to band struggle ensued. Enives and six. shooters were used, and the indications were bodies had been eaten by wolves, The fight took place on a high canyon was enraged over the af fair and says the Mexicans will come in THE LABOR WORLD. MinERs are now idle two-thirds the time, PIrrspURG sends lamp-chimneys to China Taznx are twenty-two State Labor Jureaus, THEY say the “Q" strike cost the company $3,500,000, Brrerren, Labor candidate for President, got 150,000 votes, New ExGLaxD'S cotton-spinning industry is phenomenally prosperous, I» Wisconsin the average wage of skilled mechanics is $641.11 per year, Tne manufacture of terra cotta goods has just now begun at Springfield, Mass, Tux New York Confectioners’ Union has 108 members and owns §2°50 in cash, Toe workmen in the glass works Charlerol, Belgium, have gone on strike at Kew Yong has now but 450 labor unions agaiost more than G00 this time last year, Wousex in San Francisco earn on an aver- in Boston, A New Yorx Court bas decided that a strike is no excuse for not fulfilling a con tract A crxsus of the compositors of the United Kingdom shows that they number about 60,000, At times the castle, which appeared per | from different colored lights within, looked as though it was ons | molten mass ready to fall and the trans parancies reflected by the falling rockets on manoer of the Windsor Hotel, which the ios palace, were crowded with : and every piace of business and every resi. dence in sight was lined with sager eyes fearful lost they should lose a single feature’ of the grand spectacle IXDUSTRIAL training is found to be the essential basis in the education of the Indians, Tue English naval engineers are putting | forth claims for increased pay and a more The windows | faces | rapid promotion. CANADIAN mariners, in convention at Toronto, declared that the lake trade does | mot pay any more Hetwaln 1500 and 200) snowshoers partici | pated in the march and the attack. Ther wore all dressed in white uniforms with red and bloe stripes and tunes of the same de signs. This alone presented an appearance well worth seeing. is continued complaint abroad stokers for Turex about the limited supply of warine machinery. Tug average waskly earnings of women in Atlanta, Ga, are set down at 8405 In | Richunond, Va, they are $195 Tue New York Central Railroad is trying the patent pillar clocks which indicate the | Jength of time between trains The grand carnival drive was the feature | | of the day An effigy of President Cleveland was one of the attractions of the parade. He had the seat of honor in the car of the Roval Scow’ Saowshos Club, and wore for the oocasion Tae Schuylkill (Penn. ) coal miners are in | danger of starvation from the stoppage of the full dress uniform of an officer of the — ——— 5555s. | THE PARNELL COMMISSION, | Sensational Evidence ofa Man Once | a Prominent Fenian. The most sensational testimony yet od. duced before the Parnell Commision in Lon- Beach, better known as Major Le Caron, who has been conpected with Fenian organ. {zations since 19505 and is said to have been in the colleries because of the mild winter, Ov the 11,000 people arrested in New York city during the quarter ending January 1, pearly one-half were without occupation, Taz window glass trade of Europs is in a bad way. Six of the largest firms in it have gone into bankruptcy in the last hall year. Tux coal production of this country for 158% is placed at 120,000,000 tons Divide this among 250,000 miners and the average woald be 430 tons each, Tux incorporated companies of Birming- ham, Ala, representing mainly manufac | turing, mining and land companies, have an | aggregate capital stock of over §35,000,000, don has been given by Dr. Thomas Philip | Tux daily wages paid to James G. Blaine, | Jr., during his apprenticeship at the machine | shops of the Maine Central Railroad amount | to eighty cents. This isa the rate of ten the pay of the British and Canadian Gov- | ernments for a number of years be attended meetings of the U He said | hood, or Clan-na-Gael, in America, at which | Messrs. Parnell and Dillon were present. The witness was informed Ly Patrick Egan that Mr. Parnell wanted to join the organization, fulness La Caron said he afterward had two inter views with Parnell: the first in the house of A. M. Ballivan at Clapham, sud the second fn the lobby of the House of Common. “Doo tor,” said the Jrish lender, “I have ong ng Leagué “the patple. might contribute in dnd views ude i 4 an cago Convention and other of American Irish, as trathfal, which {! it pro nken Indians Tear a rw Wife Limb From Limn i i ail il cents an hour for every working hour, Miss Mant Peary, a sewing girl of Bristol, Me., bas patented a chair for the use of employes in sewing factories. The chair has an ad ustable back and is designed to | make stooping shoulders and spinal troubles | Joss prev t but feared his accession might impair its use- | | Tux Journeymen Darbers’ National Union came into existence September 5, 1987, and bas eight locals and over 2600 members. The mitiation fee is 82, the dues 40 cents a month, At first the hours of labor were 100 per week, but are now reduced to 56. Wages were §# per week, but are now $13. Ix Michigan last year It cost twenty-sty cents to produce and warkt a bushel of oats and nineteen cents to produce and market bushel of corn THE MARKELS, Feo SaE2R¥E0 etd BEE LEE “wu cw pees 2 “din pagee ESEYLCESSr.828388 Whest-No. 2 Red..... whe ah alee ved ER Rh, She JE - - ve ele & PR ‘ Rye, Lees . 13% 0. 1.. Long Pe 4 . 248 vy & A 3 oni” TI Reps--Btate and Peaneeser® =. : BUFFALY, TEs EE é 583 er
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers