TRAIN ROBBERS KILLED. —————— i" ss—— HUNTED DOWN IN THE ROCK- IES IN A SNOW STORM. Blackfoot Scouts Which Held Pacific Train Robbers and Tralled the Gang Up the Northern to a Hut-Threo an Indian Killed Two Bandits Captured.! Three train robbers and one m Indian posse were killed in a pit which took place in 8 blinding snow near Two Medicine Creek, on the of the Rocky Mountains, not far east slope from Kallis apeil, Montana, Their names were Charlies Jones. ulias Charles Kincaid, John Shipman and Ben Hall, alins Ben Mattooks, robbers, and Henry Schiber of the Indian police, Several other members of the posse were wounded. The robbers were members of the of four which held up the Northern pussen Rer train near ntans, on August 25 hey were traced from Livingstone by two Blackfoot who lly ran them to ground near Two Medicine ; } scouts returned to Kalispell and n United States Marshall Jackson, who out on the trail with a posseofa i Blackfoot Indian police. Where the ro camp was struck at Two Medicine within a mile of the road, From signs about the is believed that the gang intend ! up a Great Northern train e men, or he Northern Pacific ape from Livingstone ¢, which had been Blems & Co, ralire Mazshal Jackson res snow storm had set in The cabin was Jackson approact and ordered ti Iswer dows of the Henry S pang Pacif] Livingstone, M scouts, LR Creat was ¢ RESOURCES OF ALASKA. Int/ resting Facets From a Census Agent's Report, EE — UNITED STATES RAILROADS, Inter-State Commeree Commission Report for the Year, wiatisticral repo tha Inter. Btate Commeree Commission has Just been sabmitted for the year epded June 30 18 I'he total railway mileage of the country was 2 miles, being an increase miles, the smallest during inoreasse f 1a wf 3160 ber of years | number raliways was 521.415, crease of of emp the ser. being an in- 17.130 over the previous year. The capitalization of the 16.397 miles covered by the report was #10,226.748, 134. The total number of passengers carried by the rallways during the year was 560,058,211. The gross earnings from operation of rallways were #1.171, 407.343. The operating expenses were $780 097.998, Ibe number of railway employes killed was 2554, being less than the number killed during the previous year. The number of employes injured, however, was In exooss of the numiver injured during the previous year being 23.67, The number of passengers kilisd was largely In excess of the number Killed duriag the previous year, being 37% in 1892 as again. 293 in 1801, while the num ber of paasstitees injured was 3227 in 1892, 0s against 3977 in 1801. RUSSIAN SOLDIERS KILLED. “Terrible Disaster at a Barracks In Central Russia, The Newsky infantry barracks at Roslavi, proviace of Smolensk, was burned a few nights ago, The fire was discovered shortly after 10 o'clock by a non-commissionsd of fleer. He gave the alarm, but before all the men could be roused the fames had spread brough most of the building, About 400 men ran out in thelr night plothes, Of the sixty who were driven to the oof and obliged to jump for their Ives, ven were killed and were Injored so orely that they will Twenty-three n and five non-commissioned oMears worn vies in the eroquet tournament in Norwich, in, He is only seventeen years old. He from New Jersey, LATER NEWS, Tue Archduke Franz Ferdinand, hefr pros | sumptive to the throne of Austria, arrived at New York Tur New York Democratic State Convene tion at Saratoga named a ticket headed by Isane H, Maynard, for Judge of the Court of Appeals, and Cord Meyer, Jr., for Secretary I of State, « by E | Tomatoes, near by, ¥ crate Turnips, Rossis, ¥ bbl | Calery. L. L, | Cauliflower, ¥ bhi | Flour--Wint2: Patents. ...... !| Wheat, No, 2 Red.......... | Bye<Stabe. ..... 000000000 | Corn~Ontober........... | Oats—No, 2 White. ........ Tux Bepublican State Convention at Syra- cuse, N, Y,, nominated a State ticket, ward C, T headod Bartlett, of New York, for Judge of the Court of John State, App als, and Captain Palmer, of Albany, for Becrotary of hans ord from Europe to New York, beating the Paris's time by fifty. nine minutes, Tor Cunard Line wmer Lucania made a new western re She went over the passage In five days, thirteen hours and twenty-five minutes, s Christian A Was opensd In Chi onsal, ion at Peking 1 at Madrid, Spe te Presiden suls ". A. Deans Italy ; Marshall Hang muda ; W BE France Hall, nt Montevide THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York. BEANE AND PEA i palr SEED POULTRY — re ~ ' - Chickens, Phila, ¥ Western, ¥ 00 Fowls St, and West, ¥ Ducks Fair to faneay, Eastern, ¥ Ib Spring. L. L.#Wm. Eastern, #1, Squats Dark ¥ dos White, ¥ doz ‘ uni [3 00de YRORTABRLEA, Potatoes State, ¥ 180 Na Jersey, ¥ bhi cis L. L, in bulk, ¥ bhi Cabbage, L. 1.9 100 Onlons St, & Wont Eastern, red, # bb Eastern, white, ¥ bhi Cucumbers, 1. 1, ¥ 100 Lima beans, ¥ bag Squash, marrow, ¥ bbl Hubbard, ¥ bbl ¢ bol KBEIB geagednevas White, ¥ bbI.... wv ¥ doz. bunches —- ta > 88 8 GRAIN, ®TO, > Spring Patents, ,... srnnan Barley Two-rowed State, ol ve ad Mixed Wostorn............ Hay Good to Cholon Btraw--Long Rys. ....... Seeds Clover, ®.00........ Timothy, ¥ 100, ......... . Land Olly Stew, .........., LIVE STOOK, Akg fg oe Jows, com, ta good. .., Hive, EY rasnd........ y LJ | J 8 ¥ Ho Live, Viv ®e....... 4 ' AAA EL EE EE EE EEE Raan SE3FERs I 3 Ee aa EERE) 2 x a 822 (race ITS DESTRUCTIVE PATH IN LOUISIANA AND ALABAMA, CYCLONE IN THE SOUTH The Storm Began in New Orleans, | Swept Down the River to the Gulf | and Then to Mobile Many | Lives Lost Crops Ruined —Not an | Orange Left on the Trees. on A terrible storm struck the Gulf trict between New Orleans, La., and Mobile, Ala, coming there all night part of the Ewoeping to the south const a. from the northeast, and raged nnd next New along the line of the Misslissippl River through the parish of Plaquemine to the Gulf, The | storm wus one of the worst which ever visit ed that part of the country, and, as far as could be learned on the day following, twenty-four or morse reons were killed and probably three times y wounded. s of them fatally The wind at New Orleans reached a veloe. ity of forty-eight miles an ho ' Pp. Im. when anemometer o bureau was and ¢ day, from Orleans | ne ALL tha dentro creased in for ty was estimated ¢ The crash of wn, trees torn causa] Intense lation of the « pecting he Am royed was the 1she t been damaged. Later Details. drowned in the at Freotown + halls wers usr Ihe big bri Mioxl we badly Catherine nhbankment is washed away On the New Orieaps river front a mrges were sunk, and the Pitt, Harry Shannon and Hanly wore wrecked, A number of wore torn from their moorings hy the stor carried down stream, and slightly injured The damages by the storm in New Orleans will amount to $376.000, Outside of New Orlegns the damage will be 8500 000, making the total losses something over a million and a quarter As soon as daylight broke the storm Abated and a special train was sent from Pointe a la Hache, which pleked up th) vianters along the line and brought thas Kew Orleans, Ex-Governor Warmouth and James 8, Wilkinson, a prominent lawyer, were among those who returned, and, from their reports, the little town is entirely obilit erated from the face of the earth, Al Grand Isle much damage fs reported The new ocean hotel was blown down and the fe'and flooded, The jetties sustained considerable damage, Among the wrecked vessels are six sehoon ers and forty bigger and other boats, All the gattle, horses, and mules, all the poultry below Pointe a Ia Hache were drowned The wopie lost all their bousshold effects. Dr, Rerbert, owner of the Bohemia plantation, rts the loss on his place alone st $15,000, he following lossos of life are sted Pointe a ia Hache, 4 ; Empire Mill, 3 ; Hinglos, 2: Dalay Post Office, 5; Point Pleasant, 2 (eo men who sought refuge Ina churoh, believing it a safe place, crushed by its fall) Fort Bt, flip, 1; Gas Smith, 1; Nicholls Post Office, 3; Fost , 4; Grand Bayou and Bayou Shuts, 25 (Bt, James, 1; Plgnolis, 11 Grand Prairie, 4 ; Potash Store, 8 ; Hapsey dock, 1; Port Eads, 1 ( F, Qosses &, The damage done by the storm 1a Alabama will reach up into the millions, The steamer Crescent City was wrecked on the bay, In the Onrdner's district seross the river from Mobile dwelt ro number of ron rT Jer voseela ore from any Only one of thew { over which Two Thousand Drowned, A dispatoh from Now Orleans gives thess fuller particulars: Nearly 2000 killed « and 85,000,000 of property destroyed ts the pee sult of the great Gulf storm in Louisiana, More than half the population in the region the hurricans swept is dead, Everything Is wreoked, tion is left in a destitute situation. without food, ng, Most of them have no elothe ir they were asleep when thelr houses were crushed by the wind and the waves, More than a dozen reliof xpeditions went down from New Orleans to distribute smong the survivors he known list is hlready above 1800, and the devastated country is heard 8 network of lslands, bayvous, swamps, and it will be weeks bef Hef bouts ean traverse all the waterwny discover the full « The death only wrt of stent of the d 8s of the parish Si0y 47 4b A2En 4 en oi DO DLs ISI pp, bas boon heavy, record 123 But the great loss was in the interop on the Gulf and the ending to it Th MON ars ul I int is Ben and three feet high, plied the waves 1 over the isin thing bwlores th The deaths a Plagqu ine a one. t} fi there Is sortie Day ous muinigy nts, const, PA level, PROMINENT PEOPLE. fn Dawes I Mass rae f leotures at D srost ing ® voars | tr hist sister presides ov t Row, PP. M. Hitehooek. of (lens Valls N.Y, vighty-weven yours old, preached on a nday ti the Fifth Avenue Met Troy, a sermon in rhyme X has preached for fifty feren recent § Charred Hit I'rov ( Tune has inst died Herr Wendt, in Pomeranian part in the frendom against Napoleon, and had eyes shot ont, Herr Wendt bore his » to the day of his death with fortitude ani resignation Mas Mista~hin at K year A his 100th he took war Fraxcrs RB. Lennaxn, of Ohlo, has been on the examiners’ corps in the civil engineering department of the Patent OM st Washington for about ten vears, Railways are her specialty, and she has the annual task of passing upon about A000 sileged in ventions, of which a dosen may perhaps be peaeticable Paver Breasmance, socording to a o spondamt Who recently visited him, is still oroot and vigorous looking, His head is bald at the top and fringed with hair, which in now nearly white, His voles is somewhat husky and his breath short. but the face, as it is raised in some snphatio sentences, shows FP | dogeedness, determination and iron will Kino Lrorors, of Belgiom, is always look. | Ing out for the main shance and speculates heavily, It Is hinted that if the tras inward. ness of the Panama specu istion on the Parke bourse Is brought to lght, His Majesty will figure as one of the shies! manipulators. He ia not at all popular with his subjects, and is sot down as a cold-blooded, ‘nsincers maa \, hy world, who cares for nobody but him- A marovs wife of Perpignan, Franos, soaked her dress with petroleum, looked the houses door and then called her husband to hor. Just as he approached she lit a matoh and set her clothes on fire, Then, seiviog for husbasd in hor arms, she hold him till they were both anvelopsd in Aames, Tae woman died and the man is crazy and likely to dis, —-— po Leapixo lumbevmen of the Northwest bave cixanieed an insurance eof arn pu Fu yond a oat, fry anos, uver « number of other States. wn Probably one house | In ten ds standing and the surviving popula- | They are | food | (GOVERNMENT FINANCES, — . | THE TREASURY'S MONTHLY PUBLIC DEBT STATEMENT, An Unfavorable Showing of Fiscal Operations for September The Nation's Liabilities Inereased by the Trifle of $1.0 Government Receipts and Expenditures The monthly public debt statement statement of Government re eipls an penditures, presents an unfavorable st wing of Government fiscal operations during the ast month Pha snbdia Aste 4, ber increased about 81.000 000, the g war lower rom wil sources, pared 6 Year ag fell off £21.500 000. and with wo, wosipts, however, last me £1.00 000 onth of more than dur oraal rovenue interes Re Tw saring det ash in am die y the Hn wale ALL the collieries of the Palladelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company at Shenan- jonah, Penn. , have resumed operations ander rders to work six days each week lor two notiths, the miners t w paid at the rate of five per cent, above the §21.50 basis STaTistios show that the entire agriculture oi the world furnishes employment (0 290,000 000 men and represents an invested capital $224.000,000, 000, The annual product Is worth $20,000 000 0600 It is estimated : over | that the civilised Nations pay annually for food #15.700,000,000 A Fame shop girl ordinarily begins at a salary of from $5 to #8 4 month Besides she invariably bas a commission on her sales, varying from one half to one per cent. according to her success, Many receive us bigh as $30 a month in ssiary and make much mote in commissions Tux Government of Portugal has ap. ropristed suficient funds to establish bor exchanges, under the control of | organized labor, in the larger cities and in. dustrial centres of that country. B02 exe changes are under the supervision of the Department for Commerce and Industries, Lawson bureaus which were expected to solve the problem of the unsmployed in London have proved a disheartening falinre, of work of any kind registered, and only three employers lied for help § #0 that after threw months’ work the bureaus found employment for only two men. Tux shut-down of the Youngstown (Ohio) rolling mills sihos Jaly 1, the longest perio | Of Wdlenoss in the history of the tron business in the Mahoning Valley, is onusing much distremy, Fally 10,000 men ars idle, and the nners, having had no lnoome for throes .oonths, are, with their families, su). fering for the actay) plrmries of lif. Sorenton and Duluth wend 1, barrels of flour in A tion for September, was 588,950 At one office some 800 applicants in searck | FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. The Senate, 430 Dav. Mr. Cameron presented a petle tion signed by Wharton Parker. of Philadel phia, snd many business firms of that ey, nxking Sensors to Iegisinte so as 16 [Irenerve the protective charaster of the tariff an 1 the Integrity of silver as 5 mon Mew Harris and Agninst the Ing o sever: metal Ewa liom s latter 1 ale Morgan iver repeal bill nite 1 the ran altack on tl urchase Bepesl bi ana Mr, Camden addres Pefer nlso cont , and when journed — TO LASSO NIAGARA. Turbine Wheels ¢f 5000 Horse I: to Be Placed Position wer in above the Falis —— The Cat Came Back John Paine of El iott cat which £ It bit her the othe caucus was held to devise of killing. It was decided that the cat should be drowned. Mrs Paine procured a sack, and in placing the atl in the bag it bit her the secund time. On the way to the river she concluded tought to be shot. She met a young man who had a revolver, and he fired three shots ati. The cat jumped into some hrest on the river bank when last shot was fired. Mrs Paine returned home. thinking it was dead Another trouble confronted her. She noticed that her hard was swelling, and when a physician was called in he said she was suffering from blood poisoning While she was talking the cat came back. The cat is still living, and as vet it has not been decided what its she tried to day, ant some lan he | fate will be. | — *SoLED out.” he murmured to hime | self, as the father of his best girl | gave him a lift at 2 o'clock in the morning. ~ Burlington Press . c— - SOME persons of weak understanding are so sensible of that woaknoms ns to be able to make good use of it. ~ Rooke foucauld. WHAT is life? It is not to walk about and draw fresh air or upon the sun; It is 10 bo free. ison, A Wan - weaTHER VERSION, *Drink to me with thine ice. *~-Boston Transcr! be :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers