LORER PEARY SAFE ‘HE REMAINS IN GREENLAND + TO COMPLETE HIS WORK, "T'he Thrilling Narrative of [1s Advens tures in the Arctic Reglon-— A Peary Baby Added to the Party The Lieutenant to Go Northward Next Year With Two Comrades, i A dispateh from 8t, Johns, Newfoundland, Pays: The steam whaler Falcon arrived With eleven members of the Peary Arctlo ex Pedition, including Mra. Peary and hor year old daughter and nurse, and also the mem- bers of the auxiliary expedition except Dr, ©Ohlin, the Swedish naturalist, who took pas- gage on a Danish ship salling direst from Godbhavn to Copenhagen, . The auxiliary ) had sailed north last Jaly to relieve he original parts, who had been (n the Arce Rie regions since last summer, LIEUTENANT PEARY, The story of ing, The first i(necident of birth of Mrs, Peary's baby, on Sep! 12. 1898, a month after the Falcon year The i Marie Ahnigito came home During the expedition is ver { nota March 6 last the id to t north On men, Lieutenant Peary, Et Dr. Vine Clarke, dogs, met with { weather from the time of After a week Dr. Vincent up that he had to return, reached their worst the equinoctial gales 20. The party was then in eamp about fifty miles from Anniversary Lodge, in atempo- rary house at the head of Bowdoin Bay. The thermometer dropped to fifty-five and sixty degrees below zero, and remained so for about two days, while a gale blowing about fifty miles an hour buffeted the party, ’ dson and Lee were both badly frost. fiton, 484 Astrup, the Norwegian, Liecuten- MRS. PEARY. ant Peary's chief dep hardship, The dogs | ed in great bers and froze {ato solid ks After the storm was le party returned to Anniversary Lodge, where they left three sick men, together with plent of supplies to form a basis of operations, Then the four healthy ones, Lis Peary, Entrekin, Clarke and Baldwin, started again and continued onward ) " Bu: the dogs still leit were unat gledges and provis 80 weakened by ¢ cupled in trave it impose time to ace Lieutenant Peary decided to abandon the attempt to er and and returned to headquarters, which were reached on April nlence, gave in ever the wi itenant for Ones jusntiy as (ireen The party was absent forty-five days and only got 130 miles away. It started with ninety-two dogs and returned with only twenty-six, after having abandonsd all the sledges on the way, It covered only a quarter of the distance necessary and never made more than twenty miles in any day. The members of the party assert that their experience in the equinoctial gales was worse than that of any previous Aretie ex plorers. All had very narrow escapes from being frozen to death, Davidson was sick for four months alter his experience, En- trekin had both his feet badly frost-bitten, After the party regained health other ex- lorations in the neighborhood were organ d. Astrup made a survey of the unex rt of the const of Melville Bay and charted 150 milesof it, He had a native crew of five mento asip him, Lieutenant Peary and his wife made a sledge gaune) to Olrike Bay, 100 miles dis tant. Eairekin and Dr. Vincent started to try to reach Kane's winter quarters at Lit. tieton Island, but the lee broke up, ecmpel- ling them to return, The auxiliary expedition, which safled from here on July 7 on board the steamer Faloon, met with a great deal of the steamer was seriously her operations, She had extreme difficulty in making her way through the ice floes asad only sighted Bowdoln Day on July 23, Then an foo pack thirty-five miles wide prevented come munieation with the shores until August 11, and the stearier only anchored in Faloon Harbor on August 20, Bhe found all the Peary party in good health and spirits ana glad of the opportunity to return home, While going north the Faleon searched Carey Islands, Caps Faraday and Clarence Head, but found no traces of the long miss. ing Swedlsh explorers Bjorlding nad Kal stonius, who sailed from hers in June, 1802, in the little schooner Ripple. Their death 18 now regarded as certain, The Fal- eon secured some relies on Carey Islands and buried a skeleton supposed to be that of a daflor, Lirutenent Peary Aecided to remain an- other yaar in the North and fry to cross Greenland next year, Loo and Hensen to remain with him, After the combined parties had snanged in ns hunt preparatinos for departure were made on August 26, Mrs, Peary, her daugh- {| of his { answer to cheers from the ship | tor, Mrs, Cross, the nurse, and an Esquiman i girl attendant were taken aboard and the {| Faleon started southward, Mr. Peary decided to accompany the ship to Cape York to superintend shipping » meteorite which he had examined while on a sindge journey, and arriving at Cape York | on August 27 the fee of the eape was found ; intact, and thus all hope of ronching the meteorite, twenty miles distant, was dis- petlied, The Falcon carried Mr, Peary north to Patomik gincler, latitude soventy-#'x de roes fifteen minutes, where ho bode his wife and | daughter farewell and clambered down into his whaleboat, which, with his craw of Hens sen and five Esquimaux, was awaiting him, The Faloon fired a parting salute, sad Mr, Peary, erect and resolute, stood in the stern little boat and waved farewell in On August 28 the Falcon started for Godbavn, but a southwesterly gale drove her many miles from her course and prevented her from ar- riving until September 2, The Inst call was at Godthaab, and leaving there September 8 seven days brought the ship to Bt. Johns, The original party, except the leader, loft Boston, Muss, , on July 5, 1803, in the Falcon. At Portland, Me, Mr. and Mrs, Peary board. ed the craft, which then proceeded north- ward, Lieutenant Peary and his companions are well provisioned for a year and will be well looked after by the natives, These will form the reserve party when he starts next spring over interior lee, In Washington General Greely, comments ing on the news from Mr, Peary, says that the failure of the party to advance further made by the Canard liner Lucania, which has reduced the eastward passages from Now Youk to Queenstown by over two hours, A tenmivie hurricane passed over the southwest const of Spaln, wrecking many small vessels, The town of Gota was partly destroyed by the storm, Tux Presi-lent of Nicaragua has pardoned politioal prisoners, ame thoss thus re. lensed belng John Taylor, Clay Ingram and Americans connected with the squito uprising, yn ng THE NATIONAL GAME. Grasscock's retirement left a hole in Pitts. : won the series with Louisville averaged wost batts ners, Broxvrey, of Pitts was | y pitched bal rs in the Les are pit during the season 8 nineteen times, base stealing is held by Philadelphia a { the surprises o great game that Lachance, played at first Une base, Vax Havrrex is the only New Yorks who participated played by that team. It is roported that the Boston team ] have about three new faces next season, and two of them will be pitchers Ix the list of seventy-five League players having a batting average of 300 and the Boston Club has ten representatives, over Haxrox, of Baltimore, says he will have sxactly the same team next season, rein. forced by another pitcher and catcher, Maxxixo, the sole proprietor, manager, captain and second baseman of the Kansas ! City Club, will clenr $7000 on the season, QUICK-wiTTRED, active and rellable players Are required to exceute intricate combina- tion plays that are necessary in a winning team, Youxa, of Cleveland, holds the strike out record of the season, made at New York. Hea accomplished the feat by striking out ten of the New Yorks, Taz baseball players are taking the live. lest interest in the Professional Football League. Several players have signed and many more want to, Now is the time of year when young ball player will wander back to the old home with a high hat and came, and live all winter in hopes of big things next season, Kxrrxy, of the Baltimores, in one game made nine hits, with a total of fourteen, out of nine times at the bat—an rage of 1.000 It was the batting record of the season, the Ix view of the experience of the Baltimores season, Southern practice trips wil baby be all the rage next year, Hanlon a march on the whole League last ReRsTER (Mass.) man has invented a machine on the electric principle which, he says, will register balls and strikes correctly and confine the umpire’'s work to decwslons on the bases Tae pitching record ¢! the season shows that the lefi-handed twirlers have been handicapped more than the right-handery i¥ the pitching rules, Breltenstain, of St Louis, is the only notable exception. Taz first and second clubs in race play a series of seven games for the Temple cup. The players reasiove all the gate money, and It 1a estimated that this will amount to between $700 and £300 for cach man. IT was undoubtedly the increased pitehing distance that caused the batting to be as heavy as it has been this season. Boma of the suffering pitchers are siyly advooating the curtailing of the distances betwesn the ‘box” and the plate, It will not be done. Carcuer Doonur, of the Kansas City West ern League team, has broken the catohing record heretofore held by Zimmer, Up te August 28 he had esught 126 consecutive games and never missed an Inning of one of the games, He promises to finish the ssascp behind the bat, something no other ocatoher has done since the days of overhand pitoh. ing. the L ng Covower Joux M. WiLsox, superintendent of public bulldings and grounds, in his re wort for August severely hriver and other members of the Chisago baseball team for their feat accomplished on their late visit to Washington of dropping a ball from the top of the monument which Schriver enught, Colonel n injuring somebody RECORD OF THR LEAGOE Par Clube, Was wt, ot Baltimore 83 Sew York, Boston... . Philadel, Jrookiyo Neveland Cla'm, Wa 492 Pittaburs 00 S61 Chieago, , . 68 634 CUlnelanate 52 7 AT, Louls, 51 541 Wash'ng'n. 43 1 Lonisvilie 34 EE cm———— LIFE FLASHED OUT, Four Persons lustantly Killed by Thunderbolts The residence of Marshall Corey, a promi- nent farmer living near Owingeville, Ky., was struck by lightning. Corry, his wife, and daughter, aged cightesn, were instantly killed, Several others in the house were in jared, but, it is thought, not fatally, At Tuscaloosa, Als, John Robinson was instantly kilied Hgoutning, and Mack Bibby, his brother-in-law, was struck by the same bolt, and placed In a presstious con. di*fon, They were In separate wagons, and the horses were killed, { a8 they were, and ho consutes Catcher | Wilson says the | raotics is a “decourtesy™ and might result | THE APPLE CROP. ixpert’s Estimate of the for 1804. An expert fruit man, who for fifteen yoars has made inspection trips through New York State, Northern Ohio, Michigan, Missourl, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Canada, has just returned, and pronounced his opinion concerning the apple crop ot 1804, “The New England States," sald he, “will have a good average crop, and the outlook where I have been outside Is for nu large fold, New England States Is there a full crop, but An Yield every scotion in the States 1 visited, which | has supplied winter fruit heretofore, will supply quite largely this year, A close speotion shows this to be a season in which the frait is found well {aside the tree, quality of the frult is below the average, ex- cept in Missourd, Kansas, Nebraska Iowa, The aggregate supply will be in ex- cess of the fall of 1891, except as it may be | changed within the next tew weeks by the sloments, The crop in the New England States, New York and Michigan is fully equal to that of last year, In some sections apples have been injured by the severe drought, but late rains are bound to help them." sess —— A MURDERER SHOT. | Bix Rifle Balls in His Breast From the Guns of the Executioners, Enoch Davis, the wile murderer, died at 10.458. m., at Lehi Junction, Utah, rifle balls in his About with six breast, thirty off. | eers and reporters were present at the exe- cution, but no minister, At 10.40 he was placed In a chalr with » piank at the back, The penitenitiary ¢ pinned a prescription blank with a mark over his heart, Liquor was giver Davis and hie was strapped down, He tested, as he sald he wanted the sharps! ers out in plain sight instead of In the ten id he did not want to die “like an Indian At 10.43 the Mars take al: uy wl erled fire! Bix shots rang out and slightly, and at 10.45 gasped dootor sald it was only a Death was i Bree Davis ontrac rmetically instantane- 1 the paper, tw Hpisroadthe won Jane 5 HONORING FORT M'HENRY, Eighty Years Ago It Was Bombarded by the British, Part McHenry War w Sars ARO immortal ‘Star Spangiel by the fort's duefens parts waved Ol muskelry and a of 1 Gi NEW COUNTERFEIT BILLS, A Five Dollar Note and a Ten Dollar Silver Certificate, sored Rervieo 1 Btates Treasury Departme ilar iefters, announeing tw feit United States notes, one a bank note and the other a cou United States silver cortifioate, The National bank counterfeit is on the Fifth National Bank, of Cinclnaati, Ohi heek lstter A. series 1892, an " lated to deceive those who do not g nterfeit $10 ’ ¢ earefu oA ar SL instead of fins by detectel af a gi KILLED BY POKE BERRIES. Two Boys Dead and Mother of One Attempts Suleide, : While strolling in the woods near Milk ville, N, Klawoter and two come pani 3 other toeat | hey ate nearly y quarts o fruit Klawetar boy then dropped, doctor arrived The other boy swelled until he was three times his natural sige, He died in terrible agony. John Schwartz, the last of the un- fortunate trio, had by this time also been at. tacked, The doctors sald he could not live until morning. When his mother learned this she seized an axe and tried to kill here sell, Bhe injured hersell severely, . —- ——— — PREDICTS PROSPERITY. Comptroller Eckels Says There Are Good Times Ahead, started for unoconstious, An Kiaweter died before a became Comptroller of the Currency Eeokels has | left Washington for a trip through the West, “I think thet the country is entering upon an era of business prosperity,” kies halors his departure “The ads receive from the various banks In the { States tend to co» firm this view thing more were noaded to prove it the fact alone that none of the banks is reducing its elraulation would seem to show that they ex. pedt an increase Ih the volume of business, nited otherwise they would cut down thelr ¢ireula | tion In order to escape taxation as much as | possible, The country Is lik» a very sick man, and will recover slowly, but the convales- eenoe wil be nona the less ding and certain.” | rn sm — | A TERRIBLE FIRE. Two Hundred Bulldings Destroyed in Shun-King, China, Be<Chuen, China, has been visited by a con® flagration, which destroyed 2000 buildings, Over a hundred persons lost their lives, in yarious ware, as a resuit of the fire, Amone the dead Is the wife of the Gover nor of Bhun-King, who died from fright, The Governor's Youse was burnad and sev. oral temples ‘vers destroyed, The loss is es. timated at ten million tani, mms I—— EDITORS IN A DUEL. Both Principals Were Killed and » Spectator Fatally Wounded. J. IL. Goodman, editor of the People's Volee, and B. T. Armstrong, editor of the Btar, met in the main streot at Gatesville, Texas, and each opened fire on the other, Goodman was shot through the heart and disd instantly, Armstrong was shot in the Fyfe side and lived only a few minutes, J. Be A Pisanden, was struck in the back of the neck and fatally wounded a stray bullet, The duel grew out of the murder trial and the subsequent cone tempt proceedings that followed ir. In no particular seotion west of the | in. | The | and | and if any- | | Potatoes, Jersey, DEATH IN FLAMES, Six Lives Lost at a Fire in ton. Washing. An alarm at noou oalled the Washington Fire Department to Massachusetts avenue and K strost, where fire had been dicovered fn the mattress factory of Stumpth & Brothers. This wns soon goneral alarm, and In a short time all the engines in the city were at the scene, but so quickly did the flames spread that the employes on the fourth and fifth floors were obliged to fly to the roof and jump forthelr lives before the trucks ar- rived, Four men jumped, one of them, Jam= E. both legs and fatal internal Injuries, other three escaped with more or less severe injuries, but all will recover, Borapid and completes was the work of the flames, that in less than hall an hour from the time of their discovery the greater part of the four walls had fallen in, At 3 o'olook the work of searching for the bodies of those who were known to have been in the bullding and not azcountal for was gun, Bo far as could be lewrned the missing ones were Henry Fowler, Philip Ackerman, Robert Reltzel, William Tennyson, William Ashe, a boy, and an engineer, name un- known, The searchers found throes bodies, eloss together, about fifteen feet from the K stroct entrance, charred beyond hope of ree. ognition. At 5.30 o'clock the shore tound another body within a few feet of the engine on the ground floor, The fire, besides destroying the Stumph bullding, consumed the Woodralf building, a factory where all the Government flies are made. and the falling walls of these buildings crushed Hall & Cammack's furni- ture house, filled Banner's marble yard and injured the Homa Dispon- sary bullding, on the Massachusetts avenue a. On the K stroet Offenstein's horseshoesing establishment, an oyster house and a building occupied by a gospel mission and the Horse and Cattle Food Company were domolished. The loss will probably be about $85,000 followed by a brie s00N wOAnr pathile side, side, ——— Dunit season of pr yoasional welling in France and Eanglan Ameri- wi the largest share of the v3 the prosent ' ! 1 the \ secur re nx THE MARKETS, Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York. plus at the has bean $1.47 Creamery Penn. , © Western, extras Western. firsts ad Western, thirds to secon State ~Fxtra Firsts Beconds . “es Western Im. Creamery, firsts, Neconde Western Dairy Factory, Jane, firkins CHEESE, State— Fall cream, white, fancy Fall ereautn, good to prime, State Pactory-Part skims, holon Part skims, com, to prime Full skims ansh ans LOOR, Frosh Fancy ’ Frosh, t Druck eget th ¢ ORO OETES tate A J open Penn Westarn REANE ANT FEAR Lima, Cal, 18638, ireon pens bbls, ¥ FREIITE AD BERRIES Plums, $100 Prunes, ¥ basket Penches, # basket . Cranberries, Cape Cod, ¥ bh Muskmelons, ¥ bhi Apples, green, § bbl Pears, Bartlett, ® bbl, Grapes, Del, ¥ basket basket HAY ANT Good toecholen @ 10 Clover mixed, Straw Long rye... short rye LIYE POTLTRY Fowlsa. #8........... Spring chickens, # I Boosters, old, ¥b.... Turkeys, #0 Ducks, # pair Geese, # palr Pigeons, ¥ pair DRESSED POULTRY Turkeys, ¥ 1 N .o Chickens, Phila, brollers, | Western, ..... Jersey, Fowles, # Ib aid Pucks, ® 3h, ...o0ivnnnse Goma, ¥ Ih Bquatm, ¥ dor YROETABLEN ¥ bbi Sweets, # bbl, N Cabbage, ¥ 100 Onions Yellow, ¢ bol, Red, ¥ bb, The city of Shun-King, in the provinee of | Squash, marrow, ¥ bbl Tarntps, Russia, ¥ bbi.. Ege plant, ¥ bbl...... Celery, ¥ doz roots , String Deane, ¥ tag “hs Greon pons, ¥ bag. ......... Green corn, ¥100,...... Tomatoes, ¢# box Cocumbers, ¥ 100. Lima bemns, ¥ bag. ... Cauliflower, B bb... GRAIX, BTC Flour~Winter Patents, .... Spring Patents, .... «euvee Wheat, No. 2 Hed... oc.onie December ......... Cotn-No, 2.....v... Oata<No, 2 White...o..ou inn Amok onixed....ou0e000ies RYC-BUME0......00000 00000004 Barley Ungraded Western Tard Clty Steam ..........n LIYE STOCK, Booves, oity dressed... ...... Mileh Cows, com. to good. ... Calves, Sity, dread Ermer EEE EE 4 Country dressed LJ] Shee: % 100 |, JOO 200 ¥ 306 I. . counnsess. soo Rogps-=tdve, 3 100 Be. .ou.. 600 EE EE ™ v Vaughn, sustaining fractures of | The SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL LESSON SEPIreEMBER 30. For Review: Lesson of the Third Quarter — Golden Text: Mark §., 15 -Com- mentary, forsee 1,The Birth of Jorns (ake 1. 1-168), Golden Text, Luke il, 11, “Into you fs born this day in tha elity of David, a Baviour, which is Christ Lord." I'he rent est that ever occurred In this world up to that time-—-the inearnation of LY ud, the Creator of all things ime to pass when the the time had (Gal, iv.. 4). Thero is an appointed tims for avery event, and God in all things is never 100 soon nor 100 Inte The great things of God are nothing to the world lying in the wicked one, and #0 the great avent is made known not tothe i ty ones of earth either in church or sate, but to the humble shep. herds on the plains of Bethlehem (I Cor. |, the avent fullness of COM Thao 35). Golden Presentation in the Tem. Text, Luke the Gentiles and x, Israe! It is to the that the Lo rev 8 by the great and x locks to the poor and His word, ion and are ox 11 lghten onl mble at separate trom this to the righteous Lots wi to tha Abrahams whe (Muth fen Text, Math, | “They saw the young child with Mary, mother, 1d worshiped These wise men are anoth Hust eatior the unkpos heaven, a nal, . but simply Uy (Eph. wi, 17) ad taught us how to it like the man io First Dis fen Text, Messin LE) yd, w ingdom of dark and nashing o! there re, inthis I tried tO make a Well (John iv., 14, “Who ter that I shall give seeking Sav ir thisiost one by th a well which she might have within her and ever carry with her From the water with waleh she was familiar He loads her to the water of which she know not by eravincing hor of win and then reveals ing Himself to her, after which she Leone a bearer of this living water to others Lew ox XTIL «Christ « Peacelul Relen (Tea, xi, 1-9), Golden Text, Isa. xi., 9, “The earth shall be fall of the knowledge of the Lord, I'he time will surely come when the long rejected Jesus who was born in Bethle. hem, lived at Nazareth, was crucified on Cals vary and ross from the dead will come again to the air (cr His people and after the groat tribulation to the earth with His saints to sit on David's throne in Jerusalem and sxe cute Justice gad judgment jn all the earth, « Lesson Helper, erd, finds | and tells her I an A Bull-Fighter ona Bleyele, An extraordinary account of a bull fight, in which a eyelist played the most important rt, is related in a South American paper, hen the chulos with their red cloaks and darks had worked the bull into a state of in. deseribable lary the pleador, Senor Jose de Silva appeared upon the scene, mounted on a bleyele instead of a horse, afd proceeded to harass the anima’. Avoiding his anor, the brute charged him, Me barely had time to slip from the saddle when the Lull eaught up the machine on its horns, hurnng it into the ate, It fell on the animal's took, Tak ing advantage of the hesitation of the beast which cond net realize frome woenes the severe blow on its baok came, the mata dor jumped nimply forward and adminis tered the coup de grace, " I - Canada’s Deficit, There ts a defloit of nearly 82,000,000 in the revenues of Canada for the last fsoal your, Idaho has as woman horse desler. Black bengaline silks are the latest. New York buys more lace than any other city in the world. There is 87,000,000 invested in cor- set factories in this fair land, The size of 8 woman's shoe should be just half that of her glove. Anastomists say that the tongne of woman is smaller than that of man. Bristling bows of thin cordion plaited, are ses material, x in all col A photographer elaims he “taken” Sarah Bernhardt in different attitudes Fre leriek, of thirty pearls valued at §175,000, To Mrs a Was belones { 1 | The Dowager Empres (ie rmany, has sn chain Strauss hington lad the honor of ¢ farm in the w having argest ro eld He 1 n Bla popular advocates one of thi yenan suflrag« Great Britain, She 1s an Irish wo JUL AT. Extremely pretty costumes for girls are made with kilt pl sted skirts Che inches wide and are not erence 4 ITT ORS On the Go amended its rules to ado members to the insurance branch. The maguificent marble palace that Mrs. Vanderbilt erected at Newport KR 1. at acost ol more than $1,000, 000 mbles the White House at Wash- in its architectar an lis one of aria Gonzalez | inted by FP wid offi tment has ¢ la stir in nt there covered very fash lac ying te a made very © ou olds, giving a look to the figure is the , for which there hins a rage” in Paris, and which will prob. ably be one of the features of the com tone between and is rather the ‘“ “Glycine” name of been ing season. Jt is a bright blue and manve, startling at first sight Different obsefvers have commented upon the increase of women riders in England, who ride on the off side of their horses. The Eazlishwoman has been taken as a model in horsswoman- ship, end her departure in this re- spect will certainly have its influence, Mme. Pherore Langrans, an East Indian Indy, is attracting much mt. tention in London as a singer. She is a pupil of Sims Reeves, and her specialty is the performance of Per- sian melodies, So far as known she #s the first Indian woman to attain dis. tinction as a public singer. “People lift their eyebrows,” says William Morris, the Eaglish poet, “over women mastering the higher mathematios; why, it is infinitely more difficult to learn the details of good housekeeping. Anybody ean learn mathemstios, but it takes a lot of skill to manage a house well.” Mrs, Humphrey Ward, ia refasing an invitation to Jinner from a elub of “woman writers,” said she coun demned sex distinction in literature, She did not wish to see sex em- phasized in literature, but rather sho desired to see “the meutrality 0” the pen-—the sexlessnoss of intelligence.” The Baroness Bardette-Coutts pos. posses, among other honors, the free- dom of the city of London aud she oan also lay © to being a haber. dsher, » tarner and a coach and harness maker, the freedom of the guilds controlling all theso trades huave tog been conferred upon her,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers