AARC ABA Slt DC " Prussia has only 1062 citizens whose annual income exceeds $25,000 and 12, 821 whose income exceeds 85000, - . - A New Yorker who has just returned from a trip through Holland says that he did not see un single beggar during his stay in that country of frugal and indus- trious people. It is estimated that at least $50,000,. | 000 of the Government's paper money supposed to be in circulation has been lost or destroyed. By the sinking of one vessel off the Atlantic coast some years ago $1,000,000 in greenbacks was lost. Ong third of the students in Europe, it is said, die prematurely. from the ef- fect of bad ' habits ‘acquired at one-third die prematurely from fects of close eonfigement at studies, and the other third Europe. college, the ef- their govern The young ladies who reside upon 1 | Foundry street, Detroit, have petitioned | the city council for a change in its name, declaring that the young gentlemen who call upon them ‘wickedly, maliciously, and against the peace of the State of Michigan” refer Alley.” A writer in the St. Louis Glode-Demo- | with the ascending buildings, asserts the erat, speaking about the western part of Australia, says: cumb very easily to the diseases of the white man. Lung troubles are particu. larly fatal with them. The black man comes into a white settlement, wears the clothes of a white man, gets restless, goes back to the bush, throws off his cloths, catches a cold and dies. I be- lieve Australia is as good a place as ever for a young man to make mosey." “The aborigines suc- The statistics of floriculture furnished by the Census Bureau are of a very in- teresting character. There are, it ap- pears, 5000 establishments throughout the country engaged in raising flowers and plants; $40,000,000 is invested in the Industry, and nearly 20,000 persons are employed in it. the census year were valued at $26 000. 000, and among the products were 50,- 000,000 roses. eal and the msthetic side,” comments the Philadephia Record, ‘the extent of this industry is gratifying. The passion for flowers is one of the most delicate senti- ments in human nature, and its subtile and refining influence is a factor in moral growth and elevation.” The products during ‘‘Both from the practi. The immigration from Europe to the ports of Boston and Philadelphia, as well as to the port of New York, has been anusually heavy thus far this year; and at these ports as at this port a large pro- portionof the immigrants are Italians, Blavs, and Russian Hebrews. There is sews, also, of the arrival «f many immi- grants at several cities ‘4 the Southern tea-board. “We trust,” comments a New York paper, ‘‘that the inspection of Reerage passengers atl all our ports will be made as thorough as it now here. If the immugration laws bad been en- forced at New Orleans in past times, the Mafiaites and other foreign criminals who are now there would not have been al lowed to land, aad the city would have been saved from their misdeeds.” is One of the most unique attractions of the Chicago Exposition will be a bazar of all nations, which isto be located at the intersection of Midway plaisance with Jackson Park. tory has granted space for the bazar, and set apart eight acres for it. In this area is expected to be crowded stores of every uation on the globe, and all of them will be allowed to sell trophies and relics of the Exposition. be in charge of these stores, in every case. A company in Japau has sent ina request to be allowed to build a Japanese village, with picturesque streets, and to people it with 500 Japs. Similar pro- The Exposition Direc. Native merchants will positions have been received from Cairo | and several oriental countries, and the grounds and buildings committee puzzied to find space for them all. The phrase ‘‘great property” to.day bas a very different meaning, declares the New York Press, from that which attended it years ago. Before the late war men who could honestly say they were worth $100,000 over and above their liabilities were regarded as **well ofl.” Men who owned property fairly valued ut $250,000 were rich. A mil lionaire was an individual rarely encoun. tered. To-day all this is changed. A man with a siog'~ \aillion is not “in it." The marvelous spec ations which at. tended the progress \C the civil war brought to the front a chim of deslers never before known in tha country or any other. Their operations were truly wide horizoned and embr ced everything from shoddy to steel, from flour to shoe leather, from cheese to powder. Eur. ~ mous fortunes were made by the favored | 1,000,000 in to it as *‘Pig Iron After a time, suggests the Chicago | Herald, sheep may be useful only for mutton, Wool, the chemists say, can be made more cheaply from wood fibre than it can he grown on sheep. A permanent horse exhibition in con- nection with a hospital for the treatment of sick and wounded Lorses is to be es. tablished in Berlin, A school for the training of coachmen and stablemen is to be carried on as a part of the exhi- bition. President Bonney, of the World's Con- gress Auxilliary, says that the indica. | tions are that the proposed congresses on education, temperance, religion, agricul. ture, labor and other great subjects, will be so large that great difficulty will be experienced in providing large enough assembly rooms, A United States Treasury official, speaking of the embarrassment the dime pockot savings banks are causing the Treasury Department, is quoted as say- ing that it is estimated that there are dimes hidden away in these pocket banks to-day, and there ap- pears to be no way to draw upon this re. serve until the bank is glutted to its full capacity. It is getting to be a craze. There is one thing that has kept pace New York Tribune. time to reach the eleventh story of a new It takes you less structure nowadays than it took to reach the third floor a few When modern years ago. you step into an elevator in a building, you feel as if you were flashed You hear the monotonous through space. are no sooner in the ear than you ‘‘plath,” or “tenth,” or ‘‘cleventh™ of the elevator boy, You find yourself over 8 great city hardly realizing h u got 80 th IW YO inconvenience of Ook having an at there ; office in mid-air is reduced ol to aj scarcely worth considering. Says the Boston Herald: believe in the heredity of crime will find People who some interesting evidence on their side in the history of a Charles Ford who was banged recently tor murder in Illinois. His father was hanged for the same crime before him, and his brother likewise. His mother's brother is now doing time for train et Sing Sing (N. Y.) Prison wrecking, and his sister has ran a thieves’ paradise in New York for several years. Bhe was chased out of Chicago, and her second husband is in the Indiana State Penitentiary. There are numerous other relatives in the same line of business, but perhaps this record will do. The New York Maul and Erprew is of the opinion that very few people have any idea of the manner in which the de- velopment of the commerce on our great lakes keeps pace with the extention of The Census Bureau issued a second trunk line railroads, have transportation, which places the number bulletin on lake of vessels engaged on the lakes at 2784, 924.472, a net tonnage of 780,119, and estimated carry- with a gross tonnage of capacity of 1,254,721 tons and a com- mercial valuation of $48,809,750. This is a marvelous showing, not only for the lake traffic, but for the develcpment of the reyion beyond the lakes which has stimulated the luke commerce. — The Louisville Courier-Journal says: The proper way in which to consider the size of a city is to include all the people in a given radius who are directly dependent upon it for support, whether they may live in a different country or State. The application of this test causes considerable shifting about of places among our cities, and results in some surprises, It gives to New York that great lead in population which her com- mercial and financial importance and metropolitan character warrant, While on the face of the census returns New York has 1,513,000 and Chicago 1,099, - 000, the difference does not seem great, yet when New York takes all her sa- burbs and outlying towns, -_ places in | which people can sleep but live in New is | York, she expands into a mighty volume, | comparing well with that of London. By taking a section of country around New York Day about fifty miles square, one obtains a population of 3,021,578, all of whom are virtually citizens of the metropolis. By assigning to them areas similar to those given to ew York, the chief centres of population are in order as follows: Population Philadelphia. ....ovcoiiirrninss soon 1,402,000 CRICREO..uiviavrionessnerssnssrsse sd 300,000 PIOSMEE. so uissueonianssssesnsasss OTLON0 Be, RAN, .00nunsicrtisssnesnvecssse 429 000 CAnohammthc ones sss ssiasees ERE eannn 500,000 Ll TR RR See CR 5%, 000 Cleveland Buffalo Minneapolis Han PARBIBO.. ..oiniiserinsaessss 55,000 HER el, Sn LR 80,000 a TIT) ER ET AAA EE EE rE LE EE + PI LARA EE REE EES EAA LL EE LT TT a SE 280,000 A LE ET TE | fadled, the Magailanes and began firing, wo that the | | ships were | Ating claws at FIERCE SEA FIGHT. Terrific Naval Battie in the Harbor of Valparaiso, Chili. Over 100 Killed in a Conflict Lasting an Hour, Advices received from Chili describe a naval battle as having occurred in the har bor of Valparaiso on the night of April 258, four days after the naval engagement in Chanaral Bay, when the insurgent cruiser Magallaries was attacked by the Government torpedo cruisers Aldea, Condell and Lynch. In that fight the Magallanes succosded af ter a flerce battld in driving off the thres tor- pedo boats, and they retired to Valparaiso, The Magallanes, after receiving ammunition from the msurgent supply ship, decided to steam direct to Valparaiso andi attack the three Government vessels before they could be repaired . The Magallanes, under the cover of dark- ness, steamed up alongside the Aldea in Val paraiso Harbor and fired a broadside which completely riddled the torpedo boat, dis. mounted nearly all of her rapid-firing guns and killed and wounded fully half her crew. Thea the Magallanes steamed quickly for the Lynch, but the crew of the iatter were nlart, They returned the insargent's fire, and attempted to launch a torpedo, but The Condell had steamed outside rebels were subjected to the fire of both Government ships, and forty of tham were killed and wounded fact was discovered the two G wernment pouring broadsides into each other. The trick was not discovered until the Mazallenes had steamed across the stern of the Condell and bad poured in a broadside which nearly destroyed the latter In the meantime the forts could not fire for fear of hitting the Government ships When the Magallanes began to steam out of the harbor the forts opened their fire, but only shell struck the rebel eruise rr. and that tore a big hole in her deck and dis mounted her pivot gun coaded to Caldera Uver one hundred men were Kilied in the engagement, fully one-half of wh on board the Magallanes The Condell had to run on the besch to prevent sMnking, while the Aldea was so badly damaged that It will require a Ume oO repair her The Lynch was not wasly hurt ’ foreign the time of the ongagMmnen PROMINENT PEOPLE, Warr WHITMAN is seventy-two. Tux King of Belgtur land ue She then pro were ong or War vessel in 2 will soon visit Eng BECRETARY Braise is a great lover of mus Hexny M. SrawLey trail ture in Aus Ex-Vaesioesry Haves health is in very poor NGRESSMAN JEunY runs a 50 acre farm SINPSOx, of Kansas wns L America as soon as * greatest real estate tkn's raonal off ats realiss| Saves Lay My a W Argyvie's vy ran geet A lLJAantassire otto A Jaane lag hte oRanec A and wealthy, LEVELAYD, a« reforms, [or nearly $LOO the Astor Yor, in has IY) made fa via ae by the « Ea was aimed Last he wo Anyhow be Ws coming 1 thi A mars IMUNCIAGS La Ye « Bis quality Yiiinael, as as wi popone T'mosmas i» tas great orchestra no loager young, bat hs is stilt rect aod alert His Sar nas beams ir « Ot Dis tap Is as SOrinZy as tat o younger man Mrs Asxxa C Fast is the third wonas who bas bem admitte | to the bar in Boston Sbe Lagan the sta ly aw in 1958 Her husband ales practic s tae sams profesdon, and they will wor to zeta »a fa IT has bean flaally settled that althrazh the Du of Fife's dan zhter 1s {0 the rect line to the throne she will aevarthsl sss straggie through life with only th» meagre title of Lady Alexandra Daf, Etiny Tromsox, the Boston electrician, who is regarde | as Edison's formidable rival, is a slender young man with clearcut feat ures, a small brows mustache anal wavy brown hair, He is a bright talker, a good listensr and is very popular anoag the sie tricians of the East o—. NEWSY GLEANINGS. OUR navy has a paver boat, Ee CHic ano has 1000 Arabinase PORTUGAL owes 8300 000, 000, Russia is financially a wreck. Fioum consumption is decreasing Fine this year has cost $50,000 00, Tux world's debt, $150.00, 000. 00, Brazen wants Russian immigrs nte Turax are 30,000 oslored voters in Ohl, GRoRGIa crops have Deen damaged by hail A sew Japaness ordiser fs to be built in | Ban Francisco Foresr fires have done an unusual amount | of harm this year, Corwonss ars doing mach damage to corn | and potatos in central lowa. PARNELL ls nocused by the National Press of Dublin of misappiying certain funds As is pry) the case most of the grade Fale this year will study law, BISMARCK is said to be quietly Jromoting a revival of the anti-Semitic feel ng in Ger. | many Tux Pope has just concluded a definite Tue Italian Government is endeavorin | 0 check the tide of Immigration from Italy to the United Statm Tue Metropolitan Massun of Art in Now York Ci | United States | Watervliet Arsenal, West Troy, N. Y., and | shipped to the Bundy Hook (N Y.) prov THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Eastern and Middle States WALTER Prieven of Williamsport, N. J., and Willard BR, Smith of Hallsville, N. Y., froshmoen at Rutgers College, wore drowne while bathing in the canal at New Bruns wick, N. J. THE suretios of State Treasurer Boyer, of Pennsylvania, have plassd upon deposit in several banks $12500) to make gon the losses sustained by the State fu tas Dalama- ter and Jamison failures, BrSSON Joux Lossing, the hist winn, diel suddenly at his homes in Chestaut i iga, N. Y. The cause of death was valvular diseases of the heart. He was bora in Besk an, Datchess County, N. Y., on Febraary 12, 1818. Tue Buprems Court of Conneticut de. cided that the ballots marked “Zor” in the last fall's sloction wera illegal, thus sustaining the Democratic position, CAPTAIN WiLLiam Crank, Supsrinten- | dent of the Life Having Station of Erie, Penn., was drownsd in the surf. BRCRETARY Foster had a lougz and im- | portant conference with the lea ling bankers | of New York City, Tae City Councils of Phila lelphia offered a reward of 8500) for the appreiasusion of | the fugitive President Marsh, of the Kay- | stone Bank, and passe! a resslution asking President Harrison to investizate tue bank's affairs Tux first twelve-lnch steel gun made in the has been completed at the ng ground for testing, This is the lar est steel gun ever bulitin this country, In the Cambridge (Mass) Court thirty students of Harvard College were fined 805 | each for having liquors stored in the room I'he Magallanes, then, under cover of the | | smoke, becan to move astern, and before the of the Alpha Delta Phi Club, of which they are members. The members comprise some of the most respectable young men at Har vard, whose families are social and financial powers, Tux dwelling of Bamuel P. Myers, a prom inent farmer of Summit Township, near M ersdale, Penn, was burned, and two oii dren, Clara and Missouri, aged pine and twelve years, respectively, wore i Mive, roast South and West, A orRowD of colored gambisrs from | Rouge, La. invaded Groen Bay, Fiant Point, Coupes Parish, for ths purposs o! 1 bing the laborers at die A dispute and one of the laborers was shot [oe ors orgnaized and lynchsd thre: of bless Max General Assembly of the Prestiyteri Church at Detroit, Mich, Miss Bessie Prexey yrs only child of Suprems Ars Jus Pinney, of Wisson 3. Was Milwaukee by jumping from a tached tO a runaway team the g adjourn fwanty lanliy «i MAZE a 1 Portiand, East Port locided by a large majority to unite un Mie city government by taking io the two suburts. Portland thus adds about 25,000 people to her popula ton AT a spacial slectio land and Albina Oregon le [WO men who ware fighting a fire rm; room of the Patton Paper Mills ploton, Wis, were stnothersd to death in at A» Five men ware killed and threes wounds | by an explosion of the boller in & saw at Badford, Ind A TWO story frame hous in Chicago, | fell down and killed throes men The & ood on colar posts and the men hat gO in under it to escape the boat of the alt noon and to drink bese Tue President appoloted Bdwarl JP Thompson postmaster at In Hanapolis, Ind, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William Wallace Tae Conne Hall Mcoiastor Nashville, Tenn., failed with $404,000, THIRTY young mien have been arreste | Waldo, Wie on the charge of having « the death of fourtesn-year-oid Fret wood by forcing him $ drink walsky throwing him into a mili pad mu ompany. of BE liabilities of at Aten § Kap aul Crances Sueragad snd Chris Paret were hanged at Fremont, Neb, They murdered Carios PF, Pulsifer in order to secure $20 Tux Huntiegburg (Ind) Bank close! its doors. The losses were caused by the cashier permitting depositors to overdraw their ac counts Phase overdrafts will probaldy az grogate bet ween £30 000 and $40.00 W. C. Bowes, editor of the Cotulla Led ger, was killed at Dieley Station, Texas: by Alfred Allee, a stock man, whom be hal oalled a murderer and a thief in his news paper Washington, Hpcagrany Fosrea aanruses! that th 5% per cant. brads would by releanst Sap te aber 4 and that their extaasion wall bs hor mafter conaderal Fux Saal trial of the new Unite] Stats orgies Newark took placs, ani the vessel proved to be vary satislaetory, Shs was run 10) miles out to asa ia a heavy sma and bad wether, Hor machin worsed wall and she proved 20 be a vary steady vows Ix the case of Robert Sigel, son of General Franz Sigel, convicte! in New York of for gery and senteacel March 21, 18%), to six yoary' imprison at, the President has di recta! that a pardoa lesa at the expiration of two years an! nine maths of actasl in prisoament ASSISTANT SeCasTARY NErrierox's plan for restricting pauper immigration has besa approved by the President and embodied in a circular which was sent to all the steamship companies bringing immigrants into this country, Witiax D. Owex, of sport, Ind, was appointed by the Prasident to the new office of Superintendent of [mmigration, Tur Becretary of the Troasury called up. on a number of national bank depositors to transfer the Bab-Treasury $3,000,000 of the blic moneys held by them. Toe surplus the Treasury is about £5000 0% Mes, Hammon, wife of the President, and Mrs. Dimi k, have returned to Waeh- ington from New York woers they mw Mre. Rassoll H. Harrison and Mrs, MoKee sall for Earope ORoEns have been issaad by the Treasury Department to seize all whisky found on board waalers in the North Pacific. Thus will prohibition be suforosd in Alaska Mus. Evizanern T. Hannmoy, widow of the President's brother, Archibald J. Marri son, Lisutenant-Colonel of the Twenty seventh Indiana Volunteers, has just re ceived $5320.08 in settiement of a pension Forelgn, AT Savona, Italy, a mo" attem gape. It in foare that rebellion is imi BUusricton having been by ightaing at Vienna, Austria, two chil. dren were ki | | lied and many psopls were | badly injured, Nancisse LAROCQUE was hangs! at L'Orvigoal, Canada, for the murder of Mary and Eliza Me toulgle last October, Tas girls wors aged fourtess atid twalve respeciively and were waylaid by Laro que while on | thelr way home from schoo Foun bull fighters in the principal bull | rings of Spain have been killed five have | been seriously woundsd an | ons disable for | were celebrated with life during the past wess, The fuserals reat pomp. Taoss present included many Govern neat oMoinls, and comrades of the dead men, Tre Itata incident is practically at an end. A prize crew from the United States cruises | Charleston went aboard the long sought for | eraft at Iquique, Chill, and took formal pos session of her, AX immense granite block, which way | being holsted to its place in the walls of the | now Parliament buildings | containing ten workmen, all in Buoda-Pssth, Hungary, fell and carried with it a scaffold of whom were | killed Tue census of London, Bagland, shows a | population of 4,211,008. The outer ring has | 8 population of 1.422274 | Tracy has just nn —— III... ooo THE LABOR WORLD, BAN Francisco has Chinese coopers, Bouemia miners average $132 a'year, BRooxLyN grocers are building a hall, Macuisisrs will form a National Union ORear BriTiax has 58 000 women trade unionists, Union furniture shops are New York Rocuesren, N. c.othing factory, These are 65.0% York and Brookiyn Paris waiters want shave off their whiskers increasing in Y., bas a cooperative BAWIinZ gris In New to be permitted to low a miners mean to bours and pay every two INDIAN AY working gu ing Fue number Col., has be down on TWO Japanese maui Kawai and OO. Ma) I's it { Jorn rave free pres Gential Lour CARNOTY Guring his } the rai in Fran when It is ' uied his Secretary what it would have cost if Mr rates, and this nis han distributed among the poorest said of raliway mer AN official how an invalid wordingman Gays in the year from the 87 the old age and invalid insurs mT 8 area flour paid for at fod su over { fy ih Waekly in Uerinany annually EIS 55 after INSECTS BLOCK A TRAIN, They Gave Forth a Sound Like Ex. ploding Torpedoes As the fire limestone quarries ne train golog to the large Brighton ight Corners, N. Y., approached an electric light that hung over a deep out a dark, moving mam, ex sixty fect along the observed. The engineer hesitated =a but mot being of an investigating tum mind de- termined to plow through the obstruction As the wheels rolled over the mass a loud, erackling sound, like the sucosssive explo sions of toy torpedoes, came from beneath the engine. The progres of the engine be oame slower and soon the driving wheels began to slip upon the rails and the train came Ina stop An examination revealed the presence of swarms of a peculiar insect which bore a resemblances to the electric light bug so weil known mn these parts, though the multi. tudinogs possessor: of the track were some what larger, the outer shell of the back bein about the size and shape of half a shangh eggshell. It was this turtle like armor that ave forth the crackling sound. The shell fs lack and partakes of the nature of stone. An examination of the quarry showed small holes bored tn the sides which were apparent. Iy the habitation of some insect, and the kind found upon the track are believed to be a species of lithodome or rock boring mollusk, Thoss who claim to know see in thee: the shadow of a coming hot summer and a precursor of the arrival of the dreaded electric bug. To secure the shipment of the stone it was necessary to lot the loaded train from the quarry above come down the track with a momentum suflicient to plow & thoroughfare, - om — ITATA SURRENDERED. Becretary Tracy Informed — Disposi tion to be Made of the Vessel tending about track, was moment, of The lata arrived at lquique, Chili, from Tocapille, amd hae been deliverad over to the American warships now there. She venders to them all the arms she took on board off San Diego. Ca These consist of S000 rifles The United States cruiser Charleston ar rived there on the day of the surrender. A dispateh from Washington says: Secretary worived information of the arrival of the ltata at Tooapiila, While nothing definite can be learned as to the sure render of the Itata, the demeancr of Secre tary Tracy indicates thet he is satisfied with sar | the situation. There can be little douit that the Navy Department has receiv od some assurance of the surrender of the [tata but the officials there will not say so. Stil, It can be stated that Admiral MeCann is ox ad tovsend the tata back 10 the United tates, probably under convoy of one of his cruisers, as soon as she can coal and pre. | SWEPT BY L CICLONE, High Winds Play Havoe in the West, Loss of Life and Property in Bouth Dakota. Over one half the United States was sim. ultaneously soused in water on a recent night, says a dispatch from Chicago, 11,, and the edge of the great spot of wet was made ragged with a eyclone, The condition of telegraph wires north, south, east and west from Chicago showed a state of affairs seldom, if ever, equalled, Boaking rains were in Progress, sooo. panied with driving winds to New York on the one side, to New Orleans on the other, stretching beyond Bt. Paul and Minseapolis to the north and in the west for an indefinite distance, Milwaukee, Wis, reported the worst elec. trical disturbance on record, making tele graph and telephone communes tion Mx pose sible, except at brief intervals Further northwest in the Dakotas many towns were cut off, and a cyclone ravaged the country about Watertown, South Dakota A dispatch from Watertown says: A small, dark, funnelshape! cloud #tiddenly appeared in the south during the afternoon about 3:30 and soon developed into =» ri cane, It appeared close to the ground and in its whirling motion psople saw that it was the dreaded tornado, and the roar which sccompanied it was wke a buge fire mapping and cra King in its onward CORN, rm er Bom It struck the city on the extreme eastern Umit, where the b iidings were scattered, and the whole city Wonight @ thankful that it came no closer Six barns were demolished I be path of the storm was only about 190 fest w and it was remarded as strange that u single within the oily lHmits Horses were Hfted i ured Lhe r to the w Bouse WHY grounda, milo sent sprawiis taken up bodily and hurl miles northeast of Watertown and three barn 1 The debris trom sprea 1 8long is line At Waverly, OORd sheds of the roller Chaudier enrth were the storm a for twelve OF HE , and Yinas, ¢ street 1 of that a over BL 14 aie Gamage 10 wires os were Dlown aoro ontpned 8 0 MY e Travel Teley Bone 1» FRIWAY racks and and a great HYing in the suburbs ts traffic in bt the electri bours. Many shade sone tLe dar outskirts of the There was sn energ noinpats, Ohl re by a str fines was suspended Lroes were one to building age * Tore H 139 toler 3 1h wit bar ‘4 tustrt t the steeple weple, The « bu Was 1 } heavy winGstorm with rain visited Line 0 1, doing great dmmage to property and frail and shade trees A walterspout burst near the little village of Fairmount, Kan. Fortunately no lives " 1. but many houses were flooded and wy Pacifl out for 1 A n ‘ cks wore washed FIGHT Attack G. A IN A CEMETERY. n One Killed, Two Fatally Army Post wer Ky. agnng of fifty boodlums raided the cemets Veterans Hur Roughs While the Grand R. F. Whitlergili graves at Whiteville veterans of the rating about They jon attacked the speaker stand, which they upset and They then tore up the flowers graves and drove every one from the come tery Later they renewad the attack, and tw: veterans, named Morgan and Martell, were severely cut. A regular battle followed, Hundreds joined in the mele Knives, stones and clubs were the weapons ussd The citiaens turned out to help the soldiers, The fight lasted ball an bour, and was a bloody affair Burrell and John Tavior and Dave Smith, toughs, were fatally cat the former having since died. More than twenty-five persons were wounded At last the desperadoes fled, pursued by an angry mob The attack was simply the act of a drunken mob wiv wanted to fight and got it Airaggea temad fy "FIVE DEAD, A Boller Explosion Sends Scalding Water and Iron Flying A terrible accident, resulting in the death of five men and the wounding of eight oth. ers, all dangerously, oocurred in J. 1. Jor : dan's saw mill, near Bowling Green, Va The men were at work near the engine room when the boiler burst, and they were onught in a shower of missiles and sealdin water, several of them being buried out of ht in the rains, be uninjured rushed to the resus. Mad. | foal aid was immslistely summoned, asd | Were so serious that all may die. everything done to relieve the injuries of those taken out alive, The killed are: Will fam Neeof, Lawrence Hayes, William Jamon, John Fry teolored), Wesley Catlett Seven other colored men and one white man were rescued alive, but their injuries The cau of the explosion, which completely wrecked the mill building, was not cellaitely ascer- tained, MARINES KILLED, Fatal Accidents on Board the Crate ers Yorktown and Concord. A steam-pipe aboard the United States erulser Yorktown burst while the crew was | practicing target fire, killing two men out a 1 right and severaly woun ling several others, : i i ni f : i : i i # H i : 3 i i i LE § |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers