— a" o————————————— — A ————-— COLUMBIAN CELEBRATION, America’s Discovery Fitly Ob. served in New York City. A Descrintion of the Land and | Water Parades and Pageants, COLUMBUS MONUMENT, The sixdays celebration in New York City in honor of the four hundredth versary of the New World passed off anni with all the eclat and brilliancy that the Com mittee of One Hundred who had speat a full year in preparation therefor could desire. There were military, naval and school pa rades, fireworks displays, banquets, art ex- hibitions, singing festivals, speechmaking and sufficient other things in the way of cel- ebrating to keep every New Yorker and the 800,000 visitors to the city busy from begin- ning to end, It was the longest holiday that New York has ever known, and the sum of £1 000 0 was expended t5 make it thoroughly enjoy able, of which amount the city contributed £100,000, the State $50,000, the World's Fair Commissioners §10,000, while the remainder was made up by private subscriptions aad the sale of seats from which to view the } rages. I'he city was a mass of bunting, an artis. tic combination of colors such as no sun ever shown down on before, From the top of the tallest office building to the cellar, and from the top window of the topmost story of the tallest tenement down to the lowly peanut stand, patriotism, such as could be displayed by bunting, ran wild. The Mayor asked the people to show their patriotism by flying the Stars and Stripes during the celebration. The people more than responded to bis appeal. Nearly every building along the route of the land pa- rades, from the Bowling Green to Central Fark, was gayly decked in flags, shields banners, bunting and National emblems. Naturally Columbus and everthing that appertains to the discovery were features of the decorations—Columbus’s bust, pictures of the landing, the numbers 1402 and 1592 the orange and red-bordered Spanish flag, the red, white and green Italian flag, and the American flag. Broadway, uptown and downtown, Wall street, Filth avenue and Third and Sixth, Fourteenth street and Twenty<third were long vistas of red, white and blues waving flags of all Nations, banners and bunting and streamers of every hue. Fublic buildings, like the Postofflos and City Hall, were radiant in the National ¢rlors, and on many of them, as upon the fronts of hotels and great business houses were mammoth pictures, gracefully draped with flags, giving scenes from Columbus's life, and engravings or colored lithographs presenting the familiar features of the great mariner were everywhere, The great retail stores uptown were fairly coversd with bright colors, There seemed to be a great deal of rivalry among them as to which should have the most brilliant sad artistic display. Downtown all sorts of business houses were beautified more or less, and the resi- dent streets also showed liberal displays, The fever for decorating extmded even to the people of the tenement districts, and in nearly every house some patriotic inmate expended a fow cents, If no more, in putting a flag or a two or a few yards of bunting at the window of his little flat, The Sandford White arbor, through which the paraders passed in Fifth avenue at Twentiots street, was a beautiful copy of the white marble original n Spain, It was 100 feet long, forcy-two high and had a forty. foot span, Its six white pillars, trimmed with evergreen, and its roof, laced with green vines, made a beautiful effect, The arch was double, having a cross passage at Twenty-second street, Among the notable display» along the If,.s of the parade those at the National Hewd- uarters of the respective politival parties should be mentioned. pe The Manhattan, the Now York, Union League and Democratic Clubs decorate! their bouses elegantly, The decoration dis. play culminated at Fifth avenue snd Fifty. vighth in the Herts Arch, a graceful, stately piece of work in imitation of granite, Sacred melody, Lrilliant eulogies and d devotion ln all the synago jus of the city ushered in the opening day of the great Columbus celebration, Foe He- brew Babbath was given over almost en. tirely to the festive cocasion of the week, All the places of worship were decorated in a most patriotic way, Festoons of bunting in the Nationa! colors nearly concealed the pulpits, galleries and entrances to the syna- gokues, Potted plants and masses of cus wers perfumed the alr, The services con. sisted of song and sermons, with the dis- covery of Amerioa and Columbus ns the dnding topios In many of the synagogues the children sang, and In some the services closed with the nging of Handel's Halleujah etorus, In B Iya the syna- were also filled with eelebrants, marble and lo churches, as befits a cele bration of the voyage of Columbus under taken with the Pope's and with the patronage of the “most Catholic” sow ervigns of Bpain, mass was sung with sumptws. ous ceremony, At Trinity, among the t churches, the communion office wie Be. day was ushered in by the tolling of bells at sunrise on all the churches in town, The chimes on Trinity Church snd Grace wore rung early and late, There were elaborates special Columbian services at night in scores of churches, The soenic celebration began on the third day of the festivities with the sohosl and college parade at ten o'clock in the morn. ing. Over 50,000 pupils took part and the line of march was thronged by vast crowds of delighted spectators, The school children had been drilling in the armories and in the uptown streets for a week or two, and their alignment was almost perfect and their marching was the admiration of everybody. They marched from Fifth avenues and Piftv-seventh street down the avenues to Seventeenth street, thence to Fourth ave nue, to Fourteenth street, to Fifth avenae, to Washington Square, to Waverly Place, to Fourth street, where they disbanded, The pupils, each carrying an American flag, were arranged in twenty regiments, cone taining 202 companies of fifty each. The public-school division, 10,100 strong was commanded by John D., Robinson, Prin- cipal of Grammar School No, M4. Follow- ing this was the division of Roman Catholic achools and colleges, containing 550) pupils and led by General James R. OO Bsirne. Major Franklin Bartlett followad with the coilege division, about 800 strong, while scores of private schools brought up the rear, The most striking feature along the line of march was the huge American flag on the stand at the Reservoir, Fifth avenue and Forty-second street, composed of sixteen hundred school girls costumed in red, white and blue, and so arranged that they formed a perfect representation of the Stars and Stripes. On the stand at the east side of Union Square were sixteen hundred girls from Catholic schools, similarly arranged, Each group of girls sang patriotic airs as the parade passed, On another stand at Union Square three bundred children from the Children's Society waved small American flags as the column moved hy, The 350 Indian boys from the Carlisle (Penn,) Industrial Institute were taken to Ellis Island, where breakfast was served. They then were taken by ferryboat to the foot of West Tenth street, whence they marche | to their position in the line. They received great applause all along the line of march. In the evening 8. G, Pratt's cantata, “The Triumph of Columbus,” was sung bya large chorus in the Carnegie Music Hall, Begin. ning at 8:3) at night there was a brilliant fireworks display, costing over $409, on Brooklyn Bridge, Niagara Falls in fire was represented, There ware HX feet of fire falling a distance of 180 feet from the road- way of the Bridge to the river. Tha tops of the towers were {lluminated with huge prismatic lights, In all were fifteen displays and each was by great flashes ored light from yistling rocket other devices known only to a manufacture of fireworks. The two hours lisplay opene and closed with the discharge of 10) giant shells in groups of from twelve to twenty. The river was throunged with all craft, crowded with delighted spectators, There were no decorations on the Wash. ington Arch, but six powerfu! ssarch lights, furnished by the Edison Electric Company, were arranged about its base, and their rays were thrown upon the beautiful structure, and this, night after night, produced a heautiful effect, which was novel as well On the fourth day of the Columbian ob. servances New Yorkers and their vast sum ber of guests saw the greatest naval parade that ever occurred in America, Over two hundred vessels were in line, inecluling American, French, Spanish snd Italian men-ofewar, The parade formed in Gravesend Bay and the Narrows at 12.280 p.m. The © was up the bay and North River to and around a buoy above Grant's Tomb and return The director was Nicholson Kane of the New York Yacht Club, He sailsd at the bead of the column on the United States torpedo boat Cushing, and following him on the Philadelpbia came Com modore Heory Erven and sta fl with the Committee of One Hundred. Then followed the United States steamships Miantonomoh, Atlanta, Dolphin and Ves uvius. Next in line were the French flag ship Aratheuse, and the French man-of-war Hussard, the Spanish cruiser [nfanta Ysabel, and the Italian cruiser Bagsan, fol- lowed by the naval militia of the State of New York, ‘The others in the parade were fifteen mu- nicipal vessels, sevenieen steam vachts and 102 merchant vessels, divided in eight di visions, One of the sights in this parade was a series of gigantic floats, upon which were shown scenes illustrative of the remarkable advance in shipbuilding since Columbus dis covered America. In addition to the fleet in the parade there were a number of free excursion steamboats for the benefit of the women and children of the tenements The war ships proceeded in three columns with the foreign vessels in the middle, They rendexvoused in the lower bay, and as they passed "wp through the Narrows they were saluted by the forts The other vessels fell in after the head of the column had passed. Thence the column passed up the North River to a point oppo site Grant's Tomb, where the warships came to anchor and the rest of the fleet returned down the river in double column on the 09 posite sides from which they passed up, The parade attracted thousands of persons to every available place on and overlooking the Lay where it could be seen sorts of Aree In the evening, at seven o'clock, the parade ot the Roman Catholic societies took place, | It was over the same route as the school parade of the day before, and was reviewal at the Cathedral by Archbishop Corrigan, As soon as night had fairly set in there was a grand illumination of dwellings, hotels, clubbouses, public buildings and business places, Prizes were awarded for the most effective displays, three for the best arrangement of lights—gold, silver and bronze medals, in order of merit—and three for decorations, The parade consisted of 25.000 Roman Catholics in line under command of Father Keefe and Victor Dowling, Home of the | organizations in line were the Society of the Holy Name, M00 strong: Catholic Benevo. lent Legion, 6000; Young Men's Catholic Society, 8600; Catholic Knights of America, 200° Catholic Mutual Benefit Society, 1500, and St, Vincent de Paul, 5000, The German singing societies of New York and other cities gave a mammoth en. teriainment that evening at the Seventh Regiment Armory. The choruses aggre gated 5000 voives, and the entertainment was a lengthy one, The city's display of fireworks from the Brooklyn Bridge occurred at 10:30 p.m, It was one of the grandest features of the os. «bration, It comprised grand iluminations from the towers, consisting of Chiness suns each six feet in circumference and of suf ficient brillisncy to be seen for a distance of twenty-five miles, showed the Amer. joan and Italian colors. Aerial bonquets were fired and the “Falls of Niagara,” that cre ated such a sensation the night before, was repanted fifth was the most prominent day of the entire celebration, It had been made a legal holiday, and was generally observed, wore salutes by the First Battery, under Captain Louis Wendel, at daylight, church hells were rung, and flags hoisted at the Hattery pole on the old fort in Central Park, The military parade which ocourred on this day wasn gigantio affair and nomibly the largest of its kind ever hold, General Martin T, MoMahon was the Grand Marshal, The line of march was from the Battery Ww, Broadway to Fourth street, ashington Square to Fifth avenue, thenoe to Fourteenth street, to Fourth Ald | | floats, titles of | been die States Army regular, incluling a regiment of cavalry, were in line, General Schofield and his staff partici. ted, The column was in ten divisions, The first was the Brigade of the United Btates Army, under Colonel L. IL. Langdon: the second was the United States Naval Brigade; the third the National Guard, First Brigade, General Fitzgerald; Second, General McLeer; the Third Division included New Jersey, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Washington military organizations, Governor Pattison and Governor Russell and their staffs and the Connecticut troops, The Fourth Division was composed of 7000 veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic, Colonel D. 8, Brown, Marshal; the letter carriers formed the Fifth Divi sion: the New York Fire Department, the Sixth: the old Volunteer Fire Department, the Seventh; the Italian military organiza. tions, the Eighth, the German uniformed societies, the Ninth, and a host of unclassi- fied Independent uniformed organizations, the Tenth Division, The parade took nearly six hours to pass a given point, At4 p.m. Mayor Grant un- veiled the monument of Columbus erected by the New York City Italians at Eighth avenue and Fifty-ninth street. He was assisted by the Italian Minister, Baron Fava, Consul-General Riva, Carlo Barsotti, and the officers of the Glovanni Bausan, The statue is of marble and bronze from drawings by Rossel. The base reliefs at the base of the column are symbolical of the | Genius of Geography. But the grandest of all the parades was the night pageant. which moved from the | Battery in the evening and followed exactly the same line of march as the mill tary parade in the morning. It was beyond doubt the most magnificent i night spectacle ever seen in this country, Fhere here were sixteen beautifully arranged an army of bloycliste, 5000 Hed Men in costume, six military bands and a score of civic bands, The the floats were as follows: “Fame,” “Prehistoric Americans,” *'Toltec Sun Worshipers,” “Homage to Columbus,” “The Santa Maria” “Liberty,” “The Capi- tol,” “The Press," “Poetry and Romance.” “Music.” “Science” “Wealth and Com- merce.” "Supremacy of American Women,” “The United Oceans” *Columbia—Car of State, ar of Electra” The floats cost £24 000 Th women, 400 men and 68) horses employed in the pageant, One hundred men were stationed at various points aloug the route WwW announ ’ " are wore JX WASHINGTON ARCH the coming of the pageant by exploding red fire fifteen minutes before the head of the procession was due, On this night there was alen a modest ox hibition of fireworks in tas City Hal! Park Madison and Union Bquares and Ros Bquare. The balance of the fuad | from the two exhibitions on the Brook] Bridge on previous nights being expende in this way The aim of the commitiss was 10 make the night pageant a gem of color and glare and this was accomplished to the satisfaction of all bebolders, The banquet held in the Lenox Lyosun on the night of the sixth day brought the celebration to a close. Over four hundred men of National prominence in Statecraft, the Bar, the Church, the Exchange and every walk in life were present as the guests of the Committee of Arrangements, and there were many speeches by many noted men, a —————— - NEWSY GLEANINGS, Tur coffee crop is large COTION TOP prospects are po Dn HT in Southern Russia is br Fouger fires have been raging in wln MANY are Mex ion Tur Mafia is Chicago Drovaent and locusts are de Argentine wen, Minne lying daily of starvation in sid to migaated t ing damage in GREAT prairie fires have been rags North Dakota CHOLERA Mots have take Pesth, Hungary CHOLERA continues on throughout Europe THERE are over 1300 factories in ope about Moscow, Russia, ration Tug cholera death record in Russia now foots up “00 00) victims Tux Idaho Test Oath clared unconstitutional! Law has been 4 THE new rallway betwasen Jaffa and Jery salen is now open to regular tra™ A REMARKABLY rich lode of silver ha versed at Orarval, in Finland ARU TENANT MACDANALD' € nam» has bee fropped from Canada’s militia rolls for ad vomey of annexation Tie last of the cholera infeste! immi grants have been discharged from guaran tine in New York Harbor Tux United States Treasury Dapartment has shipped $10.00 0% in small notes Souta | and West to ald in moving crops Tax Government will take measures to | hasten the work on the srmor for cruisers in the Carnegie mills at Homestead, Penn. Teng is a movement on foot in Coloradn to have United States troops stationad at points in that State to protect the game, Proresson Prosemxo, of ths Harvard branch otservatory at Arequipyr, Argentina, : | * CONDITION OF CROPS Monthly Report of the Statis- tician of Agriculture. The Average Yield of Wheat, Corn, Oats and Potatoes, The October returns of the United States Agricultural Department give the State averages of yield of wheat at from six to twenty-two bushels, and the average at thirteen bushels. The averages of the prin. cipal wheat-growing States are as follows: New York, 14.3; Pennsylvania, 14.4: Texas 12.8; Oho, 18.2; Michigan, 14.7; Indiana, 14 Hlinois, 14.7: Wisconsin, 11.5; Minuesota, 11.7; Towa, 11.5; Missouri, 12.1; Kansas 17: Nebraska, 18.5; South Dakots, 12.5: North Dakota, 12.2: Washington, 18.4: Oregon, 5.7: California, 12.8 The general condition of corn is 79.8 against 70.6 for last month. The absence of frost bas been favorable to the ripening of the Inte and immature areas The | temperature of the last week In September was especially benefleial, | During the past ten years there were three | ~~1883, 1887 and 1500—which reported worse | condition in October, and made a yield of twenty to twenty-two bushels per acre, | The range of yields of ten years has been | from twenty to twenty-seven bushels. The | present condition indicates a yield below the | average The average yield of oats is 24.3 bushels, The last report of condition was the lowest in ten years that of 1800 excepted, the aver age being 64.4 against 74.0 this year. The average of the estimated Ntate yields of rye is 12.7 bushels, : The condition of potatoes has declined dur ing the past month from 74.8 to 67.7. Low condition is geueral in the Eastern, Middle, Central and Western States, It is highest in the Rocky Mountain region and in the South, where the crop was gathers! early in the La aa) The condition of buckwheat has sinos the last report from 89 to in New York and #0 in Penosylvania The condition a kas improved 3 or 4 points, now averaging 5 The statistician of the Department of Agriculture reports 4 reduction of 8 4 points in the general percentage of ocon- lition of cotter rom 5.85 in Beg ($4) jeclined it is 88 if tobe THE LABOR WORLD. Wonkens a : AFTER ten blowers have in wheat-flelds in India re Tux have union jemanded a tea-hour Dover » Tox mule spinners up in ; ¥ for a fifty wlight-hour week are “gl g fx streel railways the hours {} m thirteen to 0ftesn and a ba show reluosd in 20 Oryicial WALES Weary Any Lorn | wilh toe statistics that in towns In jes on his pl ing agri LOSRERRY provi faily and all the tural pavers Mex going to trade w situation Tue Chioag Otexiond In ras from $2.50 to 83 per THERE are about 800 women emp i ie the postal telegraph service of Londos about twenty Sve per cent MERIT 8 ne oS WALES « AY TrovsaxDs of building trade are out of emplov: where bull pil whrk men nent in b ¢ almost « enon, Audria ug g Tae National German Typographi non t ¥ has twentvdw HOR t liferent parts of the with it aff intry Tue Supreme Court of Rhode handed down a decisi stitutionality of the Weekly Payment in that State os GunMax artificial flower makers wi $15 a oronth a short time azo now $10 por month, Their wages have been ree duced all around Island wm affirming the miy get AxNa Pawirik, a factory girl, of Crerno witz, Austria, has been sentesced to six weeks imprisonment for trying to organiz a union of her trade STATIETION given out by the Bureau of Labor Statistician show that the daily w agen of coal miners in Illinois have increased dur ing the year 15.6 per cent Ax Employers’ Union has been formed in South Australis. Ite constitution says that the oliject of the organization is “to protect employers against the ever growing opposi- tion shown by employes.” NOTICES were postal at the Crescent Steel Works, Pittsburg. Penn. announ ing » re duction of ten per cent. in the wages paid to the employes, The company employs about NK) men and makes all the finer grades of steel, UP A TRAIN. HELD Robbers Go Through an Express Car on the Missouri Pacifio, Unwarned by the fate of the Dalton band | of desperados only a week before, two men held up a Missouri Pacific train near Caney, a small town near Coffey ville, Kan. a few nights since, shot Express Messenger J. N. Maxwell through the arm, broke open the express safe and secured all the money in the car. As the regular express money ex- cept what was destined for way stations had been transferred at Conway Springs, the booty was of little value Just as the train drew up at Caney at 10 { o'clock in the night two masked men heavily armed with rifles and revolvers, climbed on | the locomotive tender from the front cf the says that he has discovered forty small lakes | in Mars, He also confirms Professor Hol den's observations on the Hmits sured altitudes of the planet. AT the Food Exposition in Madison Square Garden, New York City, a lot of large vege tables were shown, Among the collection were cornstalks seventeen feet high, peppers | on the eet and two feet and a hall Jong, growin vine, and white plamed celery two a half Jong. a I ccc FOUR DEAD, Passengers on & Kansas City Cable Car Killed, Four persons lost their lives in a cable var accident at the intersection of the Santa Fo tracks and the cable car tracks at the Fifternth street station, Kansas City, Mo. A freight train ran into the p oar of the cable train and four of the eight persons on the grip car were killed, the others ssoaping injury. The dead are: William Barbe, gripman, Cynthia Revie, E lward MoKin- and Jefferson Becrist, Karte Lugssax, vy t, mot a horris DRAG HD sof Was recs th recast Kin, " rom og yd it in and mea | combination oy 4 and express car and covered Engineer Eggleston and his fireman with their rifles The locomotive men were orderal to pull | slowly to the switch, wheres all was dark. | poss and where there was little danger of molestation. This was done, At the woistling post the outlaws ordere | the engineer to stop and made the fireman | uncouple the express car from the rest of the train. Al this was done #0 quistly that no | one in the coaches « is distarosd, The engineer was then ordered to pull ahead with the axpress oar and obeyed, for the rifles held close to his _baed look ih siemsantly dangerous, nen a deep ou It a mile further on bad been reached the ine was halted, xpress Messenger J. N. Maxwell, who had witnessed the uncoupling, had, in the meantime, blown out his lights, barred and barricaded the doors and made ready for resistance, The order to open up the oar elicited no respotiss, and the robbers began firing into the sides of the car with their Winchesters, Matwell answered the shots with his re volver for a few minutes, but finally re ceived a bullet in bis bt arm, which dis First | various cities in © THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle States, Tue Rhode Idland Democratic State Cone vention was called to order nt Providence. A platforin was adopted indorsing Cleves land and Btevenson, and the utterances of the National platform and the Cleveland letter of acceptance. Presidential Electors were chosen and the convention then ad- Journed Puitaverriia celebrated the Columbian anniversary with parades and banquets Tue New York Court of Appeals, by a vote of five to two, upheld the constitution - ality of the Apportionment act of 1892, A BILL in equity was flled at Philadelphia, Penn, , against the Order of Toatl, a seven year benefit order, asking for a receiver, Quo warranto proceedings were also begun ut Harrisburg, and a preliminary injunction was granted to prevent the officers of the order from exercising any function, Caanrves Laun, of Oxford, Mass, oighty years old, committed suicide by hanging in bis barn. Despondency was the cause, Tue Gate City Guard, of Atlanta, arrived at Poughkeepsie, N. YY, from York City. The soldiers were met at the depot by the Davy Crockett Hook and Lad- der ( company, whos guests they were. They wers given a roval welcome Ga. New Partick Neany, who the day before had been sentenced to four years’ limprisonment in the Fastern Penitentiary by Judge Besley at Honesdale, Penp., for altempting to mur- der Thomas Finnerty, was next morning found dead in the Wayne County Jail hav- ing banged himself during the night. Tne citizens of Westchester County, New York, serenaded James G Haine at the country home of Whitelaw eid, Republi can candidate for Vice-President, Bpeeche Harrison were made by Mr, ister Egan and Chauncey M in support of Blaine, Mit Depew, South and West, [( Md TATU: BOT a speech Flalt AN unprecedented storm prevailed nication Ly teleg interrupted the et ilored man Walter G2 Palmyra Tue o murdered day near GOVERNOR lamati has beens nas capital of will be launch Ermoesmics and fevers are prevalent ali along y smaller tributaries ff the Ok ng v long drought the death rats § Po | ana THE town been burned 600 people ware made Tux Grand Jur ans, has ind iron Ha Hesny liver the Fair gressman |} (sr Washington, " 4° smi A waist " pled aker. Tue annus ry art McCook, comman Aripona partment lian depr Presipest Hane iatory despatche number of Sox well as iroe parts of Lhe ti th th indradth undares ana Amer by spatches & propriate repli Tog Chief of Treasury Dipartmen counterfeit #5 wiiver circulat the > Mm in Choa g | has the new bs and tier ( Treasur check | beker BRCRETANY United States recognize the § if fully estab Foreign, CEREMONY n O00 of place in Ma I, Melbourna Axornenr Eaglish military n warred, this time at P CROLERA is sproa wostera Russia rismouth ling throughout South Tix etriking miners at Carmaus, Francs, tore down the Prefect's decree, which the Mayor bai refuse! to post, fursidding pub. lo meetings: a large force of troops was present to keep the peace Trree miners were killad and several in. Jured by the caving in of part of the Bel pres mines in the Department of Rhone, rmooce Ix the English be vester Division ol G.oucstershire servative candidate delete] the ian by a majority of three CROLYRA is raging 1 an alarming ex tent at Fanciow, China n for the Ciren the Con Gladston - esol CONVICTS IN GEORGIA. m———— Kopt in Seventeen Camps in Various Parts of the State, Colonel George H. Jones, principal keeper of the penitentiary, bas completad his report to Governor Northen, On October | there were 1040 convicts in the penitentiary, 245 more than there wera two years ago. Sixty three men who escape! are still at large. There have been 107 deaths, many of them by violence or accident, Ninety per cent. of the inmates of the pruitentiary are onlored, Two fifths of them are under twenty-one years of age, and, sin. gular to say, just about one-hall are chureh members. Something over one hundre! are Methodists and over five hundred are Bap tits, Thirty-seven in every hundred oan road and write, and only four ln every hun- dred oan read, but not write. Bight por cont, of The convicts have served one or more terns before The prisoners are distribute | in seventeen camper. There are four cameos in Dade are ing Chattahoochee Brick Company jote, James M. Smith has 203 employed on farms and at mwmilis, T. T. Law has 242 working H. Maddox bas all the women-fiity dx in number-~smpioyel on his farm at Eivert smwmille, and W, i They Had Committed Double —— ————— FOUR MEN LYNCHED, Mur. der and Other Crimes, A mob of infuriated citizens stormed the jail at Monroeville, Ala, and took there. from Burrell Jones and his son, Moses, with two accomplices, who were charged with murdering Richard T. Johnson and his daughter, Miss Jennie, and burning the bodies at their residence at Davis Ferry, on the Alabama River, The officers learned that a mob had organized in the neighborhood of Peach Tree and were coming tw the jail for the purpose of burning the colored men at the stake, The prisoners were all taken from the jail and an attempt made to spirit them away, but the officials ran into asother mob, who took the four prisoners, and alter hangin them to a tree filled their bodies with bul lets, Barrell Jones made a full confession while in jail, and said that the four men went to Johnson's for the purpose of robbery, and the old man discovered them, whereupon he was murdered with an axe, The daughter. Mis Jennie, came to the rescus of her father, After assaulting her they murdered her. The houses was then set on fire to hide all traces of the crime, been TROOP3 LEAVE The Town Lett to the Sheriff Alter 05 Days of Military Protection OMESTEAD + The military prote given t Homestead, Pent days came to an end a few Al gathered to wi militia. but there was no demo " wt the entire popula tienes the OCOCKE every Ye was removed and the mer THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices Produce ed Yo Quot Creamery St, &1 SL & Penn, firsts. ... Western, firsts . ods thirds . hall tubs, oh exirns . ubs and pails ubs and pails, 240s Western sen Western, Niats an _m Ww eslorn in In. Cresmary m. creamery, 3s Western Factory firsts W. Factory, se W._ Factory and {res nas GRAY, Sas CHEESY Rtate factory ~¥Fual ream bite, fancy Btate and Pen: Western— Fresh, fancy Frest FRUITS 5 @ iG FRESH prime AND BERRIES Apples Red sori Green Sweet varieties ¥ Pears, Bartlett, per keg Beckel, per bid, | . Common cooking, per bhi Grapes, up river, Del 5b Up river, Niagara 3 It Up river, Concord, 5 I} Peaches, Jersey extra basket. Poor to {aw Plume, up river, per crate Niate, | basket Cranberries, Cane Cod OT is ) 1b HOPS State 1802, fair to chow IS9, prime 1891, common Old odds, LIVE POL to good LTRY Fowis Jersey, State, Penn Western, per ib “es Spring Chickens, local, 1, ., Southern per Ib Roosters, old, per Ib, Turkeys, ver ib Ducks—~N. J N.Y per pair ‘“ Southern, per pair Geese, Western, per pak Southera, ror pair Pigeons, per pair DRESSED POULTRY FRESH KILLED, Turkeys—Young, ver Ib... Old mixed weights Toms, fair to prime. .... Chickens Phila. per ib, ... L. LL brollers.... . Fowls—8t and Penn, per Ib Western, per ib, Ducks Western, per Ib... Eastern, I - Bpring, i pr ib... I Gemse-— Spring Hastern per 1b Bquabw a par dos -— hgh, per dor. ..... VEGETARLES Potatoss—Stata, per bbl Jersey, prime, per bbl Jersey, inferior, per bbl, 11 1. i. in hag pag. hi. A A Cabbage, 1. I, per 100... Onions — Eastern, yellow, bbl 4 pr =e - ou - von ° £8 BaEg| | E8 e8ietgaabinandnss 88agsass wea uww - Tomato, per be Lima beans, thir 10 prima, hag i Fagg ervey, per bbl, nay Pion Va, per boi, South Jersey, por bbl. Celery, near by, doz. banca GRAIN, BTC, Flour ~City Mil Extra. .... 4 Patents sann cnnn sens Wheat No. 8 Red. ooviiiie RyeState,....occoniaiinnn Bariey—Tworowed State. Corn—U Mized. .... Oats~No. 2 White... oc... Miged Western... ..... Cholos REEL a Et 4 2 pregve) FT SEEESH| | BELE f388aanmans LIVE KTOCK. Beever, Aresssd SERA ap fk ad 20 00 AA LEE 2 per 100 Tom Loom LE] | Tn EEE EEE por 100 Th, vee 8 . bhi hho hohe hd :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers