i ———— — CHILE APOLOGIZES The President Sends Another Message to Congress. Offensive Remarks Used Toward This Country Withdrawn, President Harrison's first message to Con- gress on the Chilean imbroglio was speedily followed by another, transmitting additions diplomatic correspondence between the two countries. The second message is as fol lows: “To Tae SENATE AND House or Rerre SENTATIVES: I transmit herewith addition- al correspondence between this Government and the Government of Chile, consisting of a note of Mr, Montt, the Chilean Ministerat this capital, to Mr. Blaine, dated January 23 a reply of Mr. Blaine thereto of date | January 27, and a despatch from Mr, Egan, our Minister at Santiago, transmitting the response of Mr, Pereira, the Chilean Min- ister of Foreign Affairs, to the note of Mr ine of January 21, which was received me on the S0th instant. The note of Mr, ontt to Mr, Blaine, though dated January 28, was not delivered at the State Depart- ment until after twelve o'clock meridian of the 25th, and was not transiated and its re ©eipt notified to me until later in the after noon of that day. “Ihe response of Mr, Pereira to our note of 12 withdraws, with acceptable expressions of regret, the offensive note of Mr. Matta of the 11th ult, and also the request for the ree call of Mr. Egan. The treatment of the in- cident of the assault upon the sailors of the Baltimore is so conciliatory and friendly that | am of the opinion that there is a good prospect that the difference grow Sl that serious affair can now be Justed upon terms satisfactory to this . ernment by the usual methods, and without special powers from Congress, “This turn in the affairs is very gre to me, as | am sure it will beto the Congr and to our people. The general support the efforts of the Executive to enfor th Just right of the nation in this matter h given an instructive and useful lustrati of the unity and patriotism of our peop “Should it be necessary, I will again municate with Congress upon the subject BENJAMIN HARRISON, “WASHINGT January 28 1802 Chile's Answer to Our Ultimatum. Chile's 2st Sant received at State fagton at 9 A. Mm, Januar written and signed by Mr. | Minister of Foreign Without any intentio cussion as to the communication, the answer s vernment ur witimatam ago, Jan Depax tr Was Affairs opening a dis. by the the re f Ct tates nt of the United States ontinue to regard the in dent of October as an attack caused by | tile feeling toward the uniform of the navy of the United States Continuing the an Swear say= ‘That unfortunate occurrence took on a sudden, in a district where the sail of vessels lying in the bay of Valparaiso a in the habit of asserubling, without distine tion of nationality “From the nature « 8 incideat it would be impossible to prove that there was no doubt as to the special cause which served as its origin o¢ pretext; but the writer oan as. sert that that cause was not a hostile feeling toward the uniform of the United States because the people of Chile have a'ways es. teemed and respected that uniform ever since the time when it saw it figuring $0 hone orably in the ranks of the soldiers and sails ors who, in glorious struggle gave it indend- ence and established th “The undersigned admits that the rence of October 16 was of greater shan those which usually occur district between the sailors whic it, and the fact of knowing that two deatns have resulted from it among t sixteen wounded men of the Baltimore has sufficed to give it an extraordinary character, an induce the Government of Chile to hasten to adopt the mes necessary to and punish the ity parties, and to offer due : mild be ground fo doing, such reparation as might be dus Mr. Pereira regrets the delay in the pending fnvestigation, but declares it inevitabi on Ac { the judicial laws a reput repubil in the freq rent he 1¢ ito liscover in res gu if there sh TY want of the Regards it as his duty to déciare once more that the Government of Chile laments the occurrence of ('ctober 16, and by way of showing the sincerity of his feeling and the confidence which he has in the justice of his cause, declares his willingness not t5 await the cision of the examining judge, and pr to the United States Government that the ease be submitted to the consideration of the United States Supreme Court to the end that that high tribunal, with and impartiality, may determin appeal, whether there is any groun aration, and in what shape it made, The writer of the answer recalls that Chile offered on December 0 submit any misunderstanding to arbitration, and that Minister Montt telegraphed that he and Blaine had agreed to arbitration of any dif. ference that should supervene after the verdict of the judge of Valparais Concerning the Matta note, the writer says that absolutely withdraws the offensive expressions used, which were em Jpoged through an error in jodgment, and trusts that this frank aad explicit declaration will earry to the mind of Mr Harrison and his (Fovern ment that the people of nile, far from entertaining a feeling of hostility, have the lively desire to maintain unaltera- bly the good and cordial relations which up to the present time exist between the countries, a declaration which is made with. out reservation, in opder that It may re esive such publicity as the United Government may des suitable he YOORER ita the fact Chile Ralative to Minister Egan, Chile will take | no positive step without the accord of the | United States M. Pereira concludes the reply with the assurance that he has therein sot forth every. thing that can States: that Chile cherishes ths conviction that the relations with should be sincerely and cordially maintained under the shelter of that mutual respect and that good understanding which are based upon the just and equitable appreciation of | the facts, and on the appreciation to be given | made on | to the scontaneous declarations wither side — THE LABOR WORLD. Hot.LAND has 10,000 diamond workers, LAROR bureaus are in twenty-eight Desven, Col., has : y . PR oy a Builders’ and Labor PITTsnuna's street amicably adjusted. Tux English Governme tis steel plants in India 8 ay A woe for aged tailors is talked srnational Union of Tallors, iy recent wtrike in Routhern Francs cost L000 in lost wages, though it laste —— days, » -y A THE coal industry furnishes em ment Bo 200,000 persons, to whom $110,500 000 In pid 1a wages Trene vq 20.000 women in the United of Great Britain who earn thelr living by nursin Bix ge girls struck against the in. starching machines into N.Y. Inundrios,” " Tur Lancashire (KE ve mow in thelr union between $1,000 ar 4500 miners. The union Rher mind dn oar sirike has been of by the | bas been declared not { throats of seven men in two | | pears States | fully satisfy the United | the United States | THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Eowtern and Middle States. Thx faneral of Asso ciate Justios Joseph P. Bradley, of the United Btates Supreme Court, was held at the North Reformed Church, in Newark, N. J,, after which he was buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Justice Maxxing M, Kxarp, of the New Jersey Supreme Court, was stricken by death in the Circuit Court in Jersey City. He had just delivered a very sarnest and Impressive charge to the Grand Jury when, apparently or i warning, he fell back in his chair helpless. He was born in Bergen County, N, J., in 1523, THE great sale of trotters from the Palo Alto Farm of Benator Leland Stanford, of California, was held in the American Institute Building, New York City. Baby McKee, | the two-year-old brother to the great Arion, 2:10), was sold to F. P, Olcott for $25,000, Forty-nine head were disposed of for a total of $58, U25, an average of $1200.85 each. THE residence of Addison Hindman, Callery Junction, Penn., was destroyed by fire, and Mrs, Hindman and her young child perished in the flames. ished himself by an heroio ys from drowning, injured Penn, distin rescue of six TweNTY miners ware Penn. Five men were killed by the explosion of | | a locomotive boiler at St. Clair, Penn Axprew Borsgssex, who killed Emma Anderson becaus she refured to marry him, | was hanged in the jail at Litchfield, Conn Gerri Hexey A, Banxvy, Fort War. | den of New York City, and one of the most prominent war veterans in New York State, died suddenly of influenza. He was born at Janesville, Onondago County, N. Y ., in Hep tember, 1532, Hexny G. “Jack the Slasher.” guilty of cutting the New York City, as Dowd wa Down, he was insane at the time. sent | to the State Insane Asylum for Criminals at Auburn South and West, Aric Mrroueni, the nineteen-ye daughter of a wealthy retired umped from a carriage at Memphis seized Freda Ward, her friend, and kill | wer throat Fine destroyed the House Block at Columbus, Ohio, £300, (0x Motropolitan Opera 4 LAOS OVer Fraxx | wile, wion ind f George endaliville ind, and Mari n of Mr, Myers wher of Mrs, Myers were Lee Ginsox, a colored man of ay was taken out of jal Ky. by a mob, and banged for mur AN offi lispatch from San Antonio Texas, says that Garza, the bandit, has aped from the Lower » Grande frontier, t he is now in the country between and the Picas River, with from well armed and mounted Mex “ial eS $4 ii USER, who committed suicide at l'exas, is reported to the Nihilist, who assas General, Michael de vember 15 Ht NEAR Pineville, Ky i] Davis. members of the Parton faction, wer killed by Turner and his me Raix began falling and Northern Arizona since February 15, 1891 De Ning llowski, Russian in Paris on No sinus sinated Seliverstof! ,**Bot Jones an ~~ throughout Central it is the first rain TnoMas Tromrsox, colored, was hange at Chestertown, Kent County, Md, f murder of William Adams also oo Ibe banging was the first in the « ty wr the weed Tae doors af Ovirichs, fepositors are ale has als BY a premature blast : Coal Mines, Fayette County, W were killed and wounded, all colored laborers { the Fall River South Dakota mostly ht 4 sit bank at Gl after a rut rers. The de lose] its doors men five were Washington, { the tun sanson’'s loves at w of Congress and The floral decorations ware slaborate Tae second he "hite House ary was held. the Bxecutive Mansion and beautifu in hon that Whitelaw Reid, United Frances, would resign his t United States to re THE report States Minister to post and return to the sume journalistic work has been confirmed by the State Department, Washington Sexon Moxrr, Chilean Minister at Wasi ington, received a dispatch from the Chilean Minister of Foreign Affairs yielding to tae lernands of President Harrison. and express ing regret for the Valparaiso outrage, SECRETARY TRACY has recovered from | recent indisposition and returned Wo his ties at the Navy Department, A CONBRRVATIVE estimate placsd the penss incurred in the Navy Department Chilean war preparation at $1,500,000, big item of expense was the telegraph bi Phe rate ia §1 95 a word, Miss Crana Banrow, President American branch of the Red Cross Society issued from Washington an appeal to the American people for §75 to pay the ex of shipping four « argoes of food from New York to Libeau, onthe Balti for the starving peasants of Hossa HE Democratic members of the Ways and Means Committes adopted Chairman Springer's pa” y of attacking the tariff by separate bil F 23 El] i ® CoMmissioxen or Prxstoss Ravs ap- before the House Appropriation Lommittes and recommended that $146,054, . X¥) be appropriated for pensions (or the fiscal year of 1840, Foreign, Tue Chilean Government bas just pur chased the new highepesd, 9000.ton cruiser now being bullt at roastrong's shipyar Newcastle, England : AT Yodoye Domari, Japan, a fire destroye | over 200 buildings. At Shizgows, fire dee stroyed 1500 buildings, including two shrines, a temple, a school, post and telegraph office, and two large inne, Tweove streets were re- duosd to ashe THe rebels wero defeated at Ushulin, Calne, with a los of 100, including the false Prine, and at Yet Pa Shao, with a loss of 400, The rebels at Bakou killed the Homan Catholic priest and all native Chris tins they could find, Troors fired upon riotous strikers at the copper mins at Bilbao, Spain, but were foroed to retreat, Tux thirty third birthday of Kalser Wil heim of Germany was osletratod in erin by a banquet atiended by the King of Haxony, the King of W urtemiberg, the Grand Duke of Hesse and other royal gos, The Lanquet was followed by a gala operatic performance. The whole city, even to the remote suburbs, was (lHlaminated, Fraxce bas concluded commercial ar ragements with all the powers axoept Spain, Eran is undergoing a double ordeal. Her troops are ppl by Bilboa strikers and Bisenvan Anarchists. The riotous demonstra tions at Bilboa were quelled by firmness. Tux public accounts of Canada for the last fisenl year have been fssund, that the revenne on seeount | into consideration that | coo wd up aboard ship for over five months at | ————————— se w————— —————— FOUGHT OVER ‘AGAIN. The Memorable Battle Between Our Sailors and the Chileans. The Main Incidents of the Brutal Attack Rehearsed, The following is a condenssl ace unt, taken from the Now York Herald, of the battle in the streets of Valparaiso between the sailors of the United States warship Bal- thinore and the Chilean mob: It will be remembered that on the after- noon of October 16th Captain Schley, taking his men "had beet without liberty, gave shore seamen and petty offlosrs, structions to keep sober. On the morning of October 17th the Herald 1 in leave to with special " | exclusively gave » WOR a cham . Porack Orricer STRAUSS, of Philadelphia, | 0. usively gave to the world the startling news that our saflors had been sot upon by a bloodthirsty mob in the streets of Valpar | aiso, beaten, stabbed and viciously maltreated and two | killed by a dynamite explosion at Hazleton, | until two of them had been done to death and a number of others more or less perately wounded As was told at that time in the Harald our men were absolutely without othe r means ol defence than those furnished them by ture, and were helpless in the hands of powering numbers Only one Chilean was hurt in the affray and his injuries were not fatal 4 Two distinet inv stigation of the affray wore undertaken almost immediately aboard the Baltimore by a Board of Inquiry instituted by Captain Behle other in the Chilean Foster The testimony adduced bef theses tw tribunals, while widely in many respects, added to rather than st bstracted from the dramatic the which came so near embrofling the United Btates and Chile in a} and costly blood v he men landed from the Baltimore des Overs one y, and by Judge the ours if Crimes Hiffering interest in war, be Passen de la Intni the alternoon “liberty mo the money oh up the plaza From here ti an hour bef a soldiers, is } of expressed on the part w authorities that 10t used in protecting While many warnin the Baltimore's sailor investigation sh that trouble was in store for them, it was not until nearly ck that the fight really began, § due « ur men gr had ax Captain Se loys Vw § Boatswain's Mate Riggin and Apprentics | Talbot were near the True Dive sloon at Callies, Banto Domingo and Matr zt, when aotardin » Talbot's story, a Chilean saflos spat in his face and was promptly down, f Then the mob attacked the two Amer cans. They fled down the Plazs de Whee! wright, and on Calle del Coderans near Calle del Marquez, boarded a street oar in order to escape the mob They were made to leave the car and were Again attacked Talbot made his escape and Riggin struzgied slong up Calle de Marquez until Calle de Arsenal, where be was Seaman Johnson Assisted by the latter they made up Calle Arsenal a few font where Riggin was shot, it Johnson, by the police or soldiers Riggins body was taken to the rug store at Plaza Echaurren and Calle de la Matris In the meantime there had bean, accord ing to the testimony, a general assault the Amsrican sailors Seaman Turnbull was altace! beaten and stabbed while on the Plaza Echaorren and ran into a place on Calle de Ban Martin and the plaza to escape from the mob, but was driven out. He was taken w a drug store ad joinit that to which Riggins was taken Seaman Hamilton was attacked on Calle de Marquez, near Calle de Blanco, and was picked up from the gutter only a few feet away Seaman Davidson was the victim of a Yicious assault at the same place where Riggin was shot, and about the same time knocked found by their way the pia aleged Ly ia ie | He ran down Calle de Marquez, pursued by a section of the mob, to the water front and thenoe to the Mole. The mob was close be hind him, and as no boatman would take him to his ship he ran into the water ad Joining the Mole, where he was made a target for a shower of stones He stood this as long as posible and then made for the shore again, He succes led in fighting his way through the crowd, up the Plaza pA In Intendencia a few yards to the Prat monutent, and fell fainting in the door of a store at the Plaza and Calle de Blanco, He was found here unconscious by a French naval officer and carried to a dry goods store across the street. and thenoe was taken in charge by a policeman when he had regained consciousness Me police at the station on the Mole. it is claimed, afforded him no protection, and here, too, while the station was only a couple of hundred yards from the centre of that section of the conflict, it was many minutes before they tried to quell the disturbance, claims Captain Schley While these stirring scenes wera being on. acted In the “"Maintop” in another section of the city at the Callies de la Esmeralda and de In Concepcion, nearly half a mile away, other Amerionn sailors were being attacked, It is this which led Captain Schley to the conclusion that the attacks were preconcert od and part of a general plan which had been well arrang It was at this paca, near the Hotel de Colon, where SBallor Carson was attacked and beaten, and on the opposite side of the stroot is the cigar store where he sought refuge and was advissd to change his uni form and put on citizens’ clothes, which he did, and was not further molested, The police and soldiers after considerable time succeeded in dispersing the mob and making some arrests, most of the ar rested $eing American sailors, Although there was a police station at the Mole, only three hundre! yards from the troubled districts, the prisoners were taken, it is alleged by Captain Schley and denied by the Chilean authorities, noder elr- cumstances of aggravate! bratatity, to the slice station and court in the Plaza de Mlotoria, at the other end of the city and nearly a mile away. from MURDER'IN A 8CHOOL-ROOM, Four Papils Attack the Teacher and Kill Her Young Detender, John Stephenson, Bart Smith and Will Iam and Charles Spurlock, schoolboys, whose ages range from twelve (0 seventeen yoars, are in Kenton (Ohio) jail, charge! with mur der, Their teacher, Mim McLaughlin, cor rected them for some misdemeanor in school, whereupon they attaciod and beat her, Frank, the twelve-year-old tsacher's brother interfered, and the boys turned on him and beat him into bilit infling in fire from which he died a fow was also fatally injured, allray ! been given to | Mx | be resched | | | | | } the Plenipotentiary, nothwithstan ling indis- | note that was | or initiated by which | | by en So A—— ——————————— ———— a N———— MATTA'S OFFFENSIVE NOTE Full Text of the Chilean Minister's Insulting Missive, One of the gravest issues in the contro versy between the United States and hile has been the Matta note to Chilean Ministers abroad. This was sent by Matta, at that time Foreign Minister to Chile, to the Chil- oan Minister at Washington with the sanc- tion of the President of Chile, was read in tho Chilean Senate, and pu lished in all the Chilean papers. Its text in full 1s as fol tion of the report of lows: “Having read the B the Becretary of the Navy and of the mos sage of the President of the United States, I think proper to inform you that the state ments on which both report and INENSALe Are based are erroneous or deliberately incor- rect, With respect to the persons to whom an asylum bas been pads) they have never | been threatened with cruel treatment, nor | has it been sought to remove them from the legation, nor has their surrender been asked for, Never has the house or the person of | crotions and deliberate provocations boen subjected to any offense, as is proved by the eleven notes of September, October and No- vomber “With respect to the seamen of the Balti. more, there 8, moreover, no exactness or sincerity in what is sald at Washington, The occurrences Look place in a bad neighbor. hood of the city, the Maintop of Valparaiso, aud among people who are not models of discretion and temperance. When the po. lice and other foros i and calmed the tumult, there were interfere already several hun. dred people there and it was ten squares or mors from the place where it had begun, “Mr, Egan sent, on the 26th of October, a Aggressive in purpose and virulent in language, as is soon LY the © py and the note written in reply on the 27th, “Oa the 15th the prell ninary examination had already bean commenced: it had been delayed owing to the non-appearance of the officers of the Baltimore and owing to undue pretentions and refusals of Mr. Egan hia self. No provocation has ever been acoesp thix department ne of tude, while it has ever and prudence, has 1 siveness, nor will it ever tion, whatever may Washington by those w ustifying their cor orr The telegrams, bave bson truth, in DeaOUs Viow lattors notes niain what has the conooss whole [tata case, the taro, and L ment that the N attacked in various lo deliberately rect “As yet conclude Ow many the g doubt have the © His the on wt} rh ino the had was that he murderer parties of the and all other n You will publish a translation of United States. Deny in the mea thing that does not agree with these ments, being assured of their exact we are of the right, the dignity, final success of Cl thstand piriguess winoh j§ oo i ' 1 = Ww a and the threats w gine from »o ures.) es will mie every wim te ne tl the hs ani Le ing rp OKLAHOMA'S GOVERNOR. The Record of Judge Abratam Jef: ferson Seay, | ontey is eighty sey ARKANAM J. BEAY Judge Abraham J the newly ap. GOVERNOR Seay, pointed Governor of Oklah aca, was born in Amberst County, 148.2 When old parents moved to Osage County, Missouri and there he grew up on a farm. His carly eduoation was very limited, and when ve reached the age of twenty.one he could sonrcely more than read and write, He started out with a determination to win, however, and surely he has succeded Working by the day he earned sufficient money to pay his way through the Steele ville (Mo) Academy, and then studied law in the same town, paying his way by his own exertions, fe was admitted to the bar three days before the firing on Fort Sumter, and, though most of his pe ple sided with the Confederacy, he soon enlisted in the Union army and marched away for four years of hard work and fight ing. He entered as a private, but in August, 1504, he was mustered out a Colonel of the Thirtyeecond Infantry, Missouri Volun teers, He then began the practios of law, and in the course of the was ny Als torney, Circuit Attorney and Circuit Judge, sitting on the bench in the latter capacity twelve years, All the time he was an active Republican, on the stump in every cam Fo and twice ran for Congress against shard Bland, the great sliver champion, In May, 18K, he was appointed Associate Justion of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, nod filled that position until appointed Gow ervor of Qklahogaa by President Harrison THEY SALUTED HIM, But He Had to Shoot Two of Them to Insure Respect The men of one of the artillery reg. fments at Vilna, Russia, have lately dis played a mutinous spirit, and a few days ago they refused to salute an officer, wheres deliberately shot two of the non toes ofosrs of the ins bordinate wae about to fire nt a third tis men comphed with the regulations m—. anction of wheat for 1801, tural Departinent bushels per acre, Virginia, November 2% he was three years his THE average at Washington, was 10g | train came 10 a st | revolvers, while the | fortune that is reck ——————— — —————— DESPERATE TRAIN ROBBERS. Locked in a Box Car, They Fight Their Pursuers. A Battle With Winchesters on a Moving 'I'rain, The crow and passe ) d passengers bound Missouri Pacific of the south train had a thrilling trip through Missouri a few night ago, ‘rain was “beld up” twice, once by a lynch. n i he ing party that was escorting Murderer Rots ert Hepler from Mo., to Lamar . ' Mo., where they hanged him, snd a second time by train robbers, who robbed press car and its inmates ; Ibe iain had hardly Nassau June tion, where the lynching party took poss pession of it, when a danger signal induced the engineer to When the two masked no Nevada, 1 €X left slow up again andstii eX Dress is orders thelr with twelve rifled taking entered the hands, the OCCU png and ip covered traveled miles to Lamar, i hie ro the Pr of the #5 from Baggageman Huy from Express M ing souri Pacific, wh car Lo escape ann i ers in the roar oar CX pres er iF WES OOn JHE oO hy : MH 1H wi of keeping th Dwers " Kein rainmen ssenger Hoye Agent Barde » had g YALE Ly Lhe Yassenger I'he IT emt ™ 3 Mapes and i the OCAr was surr calied upon with shots from retart en at bat He — : $ oi y of the a | 4 | the fire in Dame as (4 His frien wi was Killed Francs, who ney { Jud rhe how Was hoir t an + bequeathed him pro of whi is a wealthy sallles, M at ENT PEOPLE. £100 000. PROMIN x Hins wid to worth n years old 10 be 80 flne a Greek (*1 i be famous for that sar that ne Taz youthful Emperor of twelve years old and an inv smoker, ADSTOXE Is sad shy he would al Annam terate nN omy garetie Tie Russian Ceac's income about £315 . Xi a day, Queen Victoria's 8630) and Pres Jent Harrison's $147 ie Govenson Brows, of Maryland, j= not himself a very rich man, bat his wife has a pel at $1000 000, Tug Duchess of Teck and Princess May are probably the most generally popuiar of the member of the Britisn royal family Sexaron Giasox, of Maryland, is six foot tall, with broad shoulders, He has brown hair and a brown mustache, with a gray goatee Tue oldest living graduate sid to be Andrew Parker, whose home is in Flewill iam, N. H_ the town in which he was boro He is over 100 years old, M.H. DeYousa, the California editor, started his first newspaper in Ban Francisco in 1865 on a capital of $2, and that loaned him by a more prosperous soguaintanos, Trosas Hanoy, the novelist, began his oareer as an architect in English Dorchester, and bas first publishe work was an sssay on the use of oharad brick and terra cotta in dwelling houses THe present which Mrs. Marshall 0, Rob rts, of New York, gave to ber husband, Colonel Ralph Vivian, on her wedding day was a lovely insurance policy on ber own life for 100,00) The Nigam of Hyderabad, Iandia, who rules over what is probably the last strong. hold of feudalism in the world, is the most extravagant of earthly potentates. He is said to spend $10,000 00) a year, Dr. Bxtax, the late Egyptian Khadive's yeician, Is a Christian, and nated rom the Medical Department of the Unie versity of New York, He entered the medi eal branch of the military service of the Khedive a few years ago, Ture Queen of Holland, who is only ten yoars of age, has a little farm near the on which everything has been n and cultivated by herself, In a small draws ’ | | | the 1 NEWSY GLEANINGS, Ouvun railroads cover 171,000 miles, Tur broomeorn crop is a short one, BALVADOR ix in a bad way financially, Tux tarpon is biting in South Florida, Tene are about 1000 Greeks in New York, CHicAGo's pew library building is to cost $1,750,000 Micmioax turned out 5,940,000 barrels of salt Inst your. Cuicaao, 11, snowfall in years nas just had the heaviest Corp weather Bouth set back the early in the vogelabis cr P AN elevated railroad is to be bu Janeiro, Brazil, soon A merronite flecked with gold has been picked up in California, ONLY citizens who can read and writs are | allowed to vote in Bolivia. NEARLY 5000 new books were published in nited Slates last year Tue Baltimore an of track to its L343 1 Ohio added | isd HAE Yeur THE MARKETS, oft Quoted in New Late Wholesale Produce Prices Country York [ x 0 H A FEA Beans—Marrov Wil ce. Modium, 1% Fea, 184 5. Y ite Kiar Hed ki isc Mey Jersey, © t Rose and Hebron, by t other Kix bull pot tatove, Jersey Connecticut nge County Orange County Eastern, vellow, Eastert Squasb-L. L. 1, Hubbard red re Ye Je while per marrow, b per bbl Turnips, Canada, per bbl Celery String beans, Fla, Mich. per dog. roots Long Island and Jersey dopen bunches per orate Lettuce, Southern, per bbl | Tomatoes, Fia., per bush craw LIVE STOCK 0 a) @e oe ve 400 @ 8 L000 & 470 4 hk LR 1] Calves, common to prime 26 Bheep, . EE GRAY, ET Flour—City Mill Extra, Oats Mixed Western . Hay =-43god ta Lhaten. «sees ss Btraw.. FE. svnnnnnns Lard--City Steam crrsiranes FURS AXD SKINS, Kawtorn & Novthwwelorn | ~ 1 8) : 06.402 06.450 sana. Rowthern # Rowthwostera, Red 10X, 400 suns HrRREn a SESRnEess3e
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers