LATE TELEGRAPHIC JOTTINGS BOTH FROM HOI1B AND ABHOAD. What U Going On the World Over. Important Events Briefly Chronicled. Pfwanrlal b4 Ommrrrlal, Tht following a'e among, the failure : tron tcli (in Tuesday: The Kansa City Safe Iepoit Company; aet fi.Omi.uox), liabilities 1,700.0H the North C-alve-ston land ami Improvement Association, liabil ity loon.ntri; the Star Mill at Shelby villc. Ind, liabilitir T.. '", arts .V.0C; the ramp Creek Coul ( otnt nny. of Cleveland. 0., liabilities and assets each I O.CKH. Th banking hnifte of V. T. 'I horntnn ,v. Son. e.f Sbelbyville, ill,, liabilities .'i00,00l, assets nnknown. The Hercnle Iron Work Company, own n of the cold storage warehouse at the World's Fair that burned elown Monday, made an alignment. The assignment was aauMsl by the loss at the tire. The assets sre estimated at tino.ot-n against IJi'iO.oo) llahilitiei. The Are caused a Jos of I'JVJ, MO. The Terre Haute, Indiana, car work", one of the largest plants of the k.tid in the touutry, made a voluntary alignment without preference. The liabilities are Il91,0m with l4,r" contingent liabilities. The asset amount to twj.nuo. Over twO men are thrown out of work. The Iiank of Commerce, of Springfield, Mo., with a capital st- c k of IM'Atu mi l d fyosila of iT.W'O closed i'.i doors The Bank of tiarnct. Kaf.sa. closed It door call lung the ciunty treasurer for I A Oiio. The Hunk of New Cnl. Col., a private Institution, assigned. Liabilities IJT.MX); a. The hanker of llarril urg, Fa., in Inter- iewa on Wednesday, declared in lavor of the repeal of the Sherman nlver law. They aid the linnncial situation was already iiu proving and would grow better, (tint. I. nbur nnil Industrial. Both the iron and steel a;: scales were signed by .Tones .V l.aughlin. This i the largest luill In t'lttshurg. employing about 4, "Hi nn u. No tint" ha been fixed lor starting the woiL. t : t it is believed tl.ey will be put in operution early next week. Jones A I.aughiitis' action ,s takei. us un in dication that a viti'ai tory settlement "ill he reached at the e-otiferctne between the iron munufucnirt rs ami the Amalgamated Association ut the coiilercm e tube hell lieit Monduy. I Iih na.e calls for rrdm t:.Mi ranging f ! in .' to per ci,t , iiml was finally agreed to and signed. 1 l.e mw scule. however, dues tint serum. y decrease the iirmtip of the workmen. '1 tie lindld Bulling Mill Company, cf lindiay, O , also sip. i d the scn'e. ih:s company ha, a puddling, bar and guide m.ll. One hundred and lifly hc.lerniaker at the Ihgelow Iron Works, New Haven. Conn, quit work and decided they would not re am e until (he tuai.ngi-turtit secede to their demand Tor" a nine-fiour U..y. The I-akc Shore switihiuen's strike at Cleveland, O., ii over. Tha tueu relumed to work;k . , j- ... . J Jaru Hnii.i roaster workman of tha United (Jamil nt Workers' Association of America, who had been in the Monroe county N, Y., penitentiary form inntb, has been pardoned. Hughes was convicted lit eitortinn luiiiiry fiolu clothing liiunu (acturers of Kochester. The Pittsburg, Kan., mitiers have refu-ed the offer of the operators .f ."i cents a ton for mine run coal the year ruii-.d. The eviction of the men by the operators, It is feared, will bring trouble. The Henson mines of innirrietic or at the terminal of ti e Curthae and Adirondack railway, west of Tupper l ake. N. Y , have iloeel. 1'our hundred men ure IbroAti out of employment. The Charles I'arke r Company 'f Metiden, Conn . has shut down (or an inih linite p-r-lod. The llrm employs about l.iKfJ hands in the mannfactuie of latn. sciews. etc. . ... ( liuterii Aliees ruis There wire live new caes of chol era and four de.itlis from the i!.sene in Touh n on Wednesday. Ai.rxMi:i, K.rt Hichty-f.ve cas.-s of cholera are reported in the hospital here. Koily deaths I rum the d.sease hai'V occutred. VikJiNA Cholera has rcnppeaied in Mos cow, KiefT and Northeast lltmpary. In M(cow the outbreak ii serious. There have bi-en thirty-two r.ies and e even .lea'hs in the convict forwarding piison s me July 1. I.oM'on. A d:satch fr;un Alexandria. Ileypt. Mates tliat no cholera i reported anywhere in Mjiypt. The place wi.ere the K" 14IWS and 4" deaths uhu li weie re ortcd the other day were ui lor. a sn.iill town of Arabia 17-lrae.i, on tho ca-t si.'na of the (;ulf of Suez. IMatrri Arrtilenia anH I nrnttite At ( hautauiiu.i. N. V.. a trahi on ?.c N. Y. 1'. t O railroad struck a bu-jiy contain ins; Iiek Wlntfon! and l iai.k Ni ivhouse. both of I.aktwoo I N. Y Ivhii men were Instantly killed I nch leave- a 'aintly. At Charleston, S. ', Is i:ic M ti tiell and his entire family, consisting of live persons were poisoned. M tcheli atd his daughter Ada are dead and the otfiers intically ill. The vuiiius itied from ai-emcai poison. - - I rime u ml reiialilrs, .Near Cnfiey ville, Kan., t lie baek cf found Yulley, owned by C. M. ( omlon, ol ftawepi). Kan., was rohh ed at m on on Kri day by three nun who r.idv into town, and entering the haul; tied and gagged the toahier. JO. Wi'son. and leiurei' inwv hi ught, which amounted to ft'HO. The robbers made their etrape. - . Kallraatl News. On and after July 115 the hig Four will make rates to Chicago of one fare for the round trip from every point on its system. Tickete at this rate will be good every day and on any regular or spr ial passenger train. F.very competing line declares that it wilt meet the rates. This establishes the half rate business from the large Ksstern and Southern territory. tire FiBvii.i t, N. U. Nearly the whole town wa consumed for the third time within a year, F.iRhty families homeless. Tba jreoter portion of 1'urcell. Trias, a town of 2,000 inhabitants, was destroy J by Art, rer.al. President Cleveland lias enjoyed another quiet day at Cray Gables. The president baa nearly recovered from his attack of rheumatism. There has not been an r.flire seeker here since he arrived. TWELVE EXTRA SESSIONS Of C'oneress Will if av Been Convened j on the 7th of Next Month. The I,s.st I Wm Called in March, 1870. Tha I 1'irst Held in 1797. The last extra (issiuit of Congress was convened on March IS, H7fl, over 14 years ago. The one which will meet on August 7 will be the twelfth in the history of the Gov ernment. It is impossible to determino from the length of any of the previous ses sions what the duration of the one now lending will be. The day of extended ora tory is not pased by any means, and while the early polit cal fathers delighted to lengthen debutes and sometimes extended the sessions of Congress In order to indulge their passion, the present generation of statesmen is not much different. The mem bership of both bodies is greater thun evet before and thrre are more emulators of Clay and Webster to till the Congressional record. The first extra session of Congresa was convened under a proclamation of Jii dent John Adams on May . lT'.'T. the oc casion being the suspension of ditilumanc relations with France. Thomas JefTeison found it necessary to call Congress infetfier twice during his adminis'rHtion. The tir-t was called on October 17,lfcj on account of trouble over tha secession of lxiuisianit bv Spain to France. 1 Ins session did not ad journ until the following March. Trouble with (Irent Uritian nijiiired the catling to gi ther of ( ongress rgaiti by Jellerson on October it!, in..". l'reidentMnii-on was compelled to bring Congress together on November lit I, reut I'.ritiun s conduct again furnishing the cause, ihi session did not end until July ti. lxli. J roubles growing out of t'je War of IMlf reiiiired Mr. Madison to call another extra session on September W.1M4, this being the fifth since the or-an ration of the OoveritmctiL For more iliati a score of vears the regular sessions of Congress wersulhcienl in winch to transact all the pressing bus.hess ot the country. On September 4, K17. however. Congre-s met in i-xtraurdinnry session at the call of 1'resideot Vim liureii io devis some remedy for the serious londi.ion of the country's finances, which had lieen injured to il was claimed, by injudicious legislation dur.ng "Andy ' Jackson's administration. 'I he needed relief w as not found, for (in March 17, 1-41. I'resident William Henry llatrison issued a eail lor an extr.i session to convene on May 111 the thn ateniry coiidi tmn ot the linaiM es and reven x s (li'lu.uiii immediate re. icf. I'ri'siih nt llrrison died before niigrcss met. and the message tu that body was transmitted by Vice 1 ic-i-deiit I vier. in tin- Jlst ol AtU'iist, 1 ".!, 1'iesidetit 1'ierce called the eighth extra session tu t.rder to make appropriations for the army, a duly Congress ,a, neglected or ret used in reginur session, i'he ninth extra session was the ni'wi iiiip Ttanl in tho history cf the iiovernme'it. It was called ,y I'resident Lincoln on July 4, lrtol. and was made nec essary by the insurrection of the Southern States. President Hays found it necessary twice to convene Congress in extra session in ordt r to pass appropriation bills which bail failed in the regular sessions. The first was on October 13. Ie77, and the second on Match li, 1711. JULY CHOP HEl'OHTS. A Sl.iEht Jncr7asele.'oncVs. la the .Season's Troduce. The July returns to the statistician of the apartment of igriciilture at Washington, I). C makes the following averages of con ditions : The average condition of corn Is ft.'1.2, itainst M. 1 last J u'y. I he average in the principal States are: Ohio, UK, Indiana '.si; Illinois, Iowa, tis; Missouri, 1U; hutuas. Nehrassn. t'l. I'etas, h't. The coiniiiioii of w inter wheat Is 77.7, igauist 73.3 last month and W i in July, K'i TIih prim ipal state averages are: Sew York, m: I'unnsy lvanlii, in, Kentucky, ).'. Ohio. !M; Miclu -au. 7:1; Indiana. t".'t. Illi nois, in); Missouri, 77; Kansas, 4'i, California sf. Oregon, !Si. 'I lie cond.tion of spring wheat is 74.1, gainst tsi !l in July, 1 vi.'. Last month it was wi. 4 State uverages are: Minnesota, J77; Iowa. Nebraska, ti, South Dakota, mi; North I'anot.i. 7.1, and Washington M. 1'oiniition of all wheat July 1, Drj.l, was fii.li; on June 1 it was 78. Condition ol oats remains about the same s it stood last month, being M.8 against iii.ii June 1. This is the highest condition liiu-e lsvi. when it stood utiU.l. declining :o si (i in ls-, udvancing to S7.tl in 1VJI and ind dronping to 7J in ls'ij. in July, issii .he condition was us M, the same us the iire-ent month. '1 tie July returns show i.ight advance in the condition of rye from 'I. ii on June I to s,3 :t this month. Winter ye stands at M. uud spring rye at MI.U. The om h. tied average us staled ubovo beiug u. ondition of barley, like that of oats and 'ye. has changed but little during the nontli. The average is M.N. against M 3 on ;he 1st of June. The condition is'the result j a cold, backward spring, with drought in tome places and too nn.cli moisture in Mhere. '1 be acreage devoted to (Kitatoes .his year is l'H.l per cent, of that of last i-eur. Condition is a little higher than last fear, 'ihere are reports of injury from Col jrado tieetles, especially in the ventral wesu The tobacco acreage is returned at MM per ?ent of the area devoted to that crop last ear. Condition stands at IIH.u. The condi tion of clover stands ut M.li, of timothy bJ 1 snd of pusture tii.u RECORDS Of PENHIONEHS. Full Military and Medical History Required of Applicants Under the Disability Act ol June. 1890. Commissioner I.ochren, of the Tension lUireati at Washington, issued ail orde. di recting that hereafter in making culls upon the War and Navy Departments. or infor matioii regarding the service of upplicanti for pensions under the Disability act of June L'7, lsiM, a request shall be made for a full tuilitury and medical history of the sol Jirr. Hitherto these calls have asked only for the dates of the sohlier'e enlistment and discharge This new order is important, Iron the fact that it shows a purpose on the prt of the ieiision othcials to make a more searching inquiry than formerly into the causes of the applicant's disability, and as certain from ottirial sources whether it may not have resulted from his own vicious habits. This information is material, as under the act of June 17. 1K!H), such appli cants are specifically burred fro.u receiving pensions. Bouth Carolina's Liquor Law. A dispatch from Charleston, 8. C, fsyr The decision of Judge lludsou, declaring the state licjU.V dispensary law unconiti tutional, Is of no value, as the supreme touft has decided It valid statute. ss-MiK!rsoTA'a anti-scalpers law Is now in effect. Ticket brokers will contest its con stitutionality before the Supreme Court C0LUL1BIAH FAIR HEVSITEUS END OF 1HE SUNDAY FAIR, rm naicTons mtipr to locs: it ok thi SASHATH. The World's Fair is to be closed or Sttn dav after July 1. The admissions of last Sunday bavins: been donated for the relief of the families of the firemen who lot their lives In the cold storage house fire. Kut fot this fact tne Fair would nrobahlr have been chmed on last Sunday. The vote' of the local directors rescinding .is former action was overwhelmingly In favor of cloeinp.it stand ing 21 to 4. When the meeting of the Fair directors; was railed la'e Friday afternoon nn address advocating Sunday closing, signed by all the leadine ( hicago Clergymen, was read. The close of the address wis the signal for a eri of speeches, all of them in fsvor of closing the Fair. Vice I're-tdent I'eck, who presided in the absence of I'resident Higin hotham. then read a resolution, which was adopted, to the effect that it now appears by the Hctual admissions that the general public do-s not. by Its attendance, manifest a desire that the eiposilion should be kepi onen each day of the week, and that the number of laboring men and women whose services w ill he necessarily required to keep the exosition oien on Sunday, is dispro portio ate to th- number of visitors on said lny. It was resolved that all the rrolu lions so adopted by the body on Mav H). relating lo Suudnv opening, oe rescinded, tc lake effect after July 1. rAvotiANi.r MSANCMi eitowtxo. Auditor Ackermmi of the World s Fail ?reeiitd the financial statement of th exposition to the Hoard of Directors. Tin statement covers the entire period of tin Exposition up tu June). Tne receipts ol the fair from ticket sales, cobcessions ami other sources s ine July 1. has been ovel I.ishmmi. and a large reduction In I lie float ing debt has been made nine thst date. According lo the statement, the total pan receipts were J.IJl.tinO 7t, including IlifC'. 4i!i 31 received prior to May 1. The Iota: expenditures lo June .'(0 were JO.G10.KH) 40 Ol Ibis amount IH,4.Vl.lsi2 Ki is charged tc construction, i I is estimates, however, put the operating expenses for May at !(! s't 7, and receipts at t7lt .402 71. During Jum the estimated receipt were f l.lPm, .1JQ X and expenses lillitui 27. leaving a balance for theiwornonthsof 11,127.417 73. The ratii of receipts to expenses since July 1, while um given in detail, is said to show a verv ma li rial gain for the Exposition, both (n tin reduction of opt-ratingrxpeiisesand inireus d receipts. I' N P AY PI! 1V N O C R 0 W D. K.rrn iMr row nir rMtt us or nirnr:.'.! HlilMI N rlt.lU lo IM IIKSSK THE ATTI'MH The last open Sunday of the Expositioi did not show any improvement upon othei Sundays in point of attendance, nuc- niarlt ail passholders paid the entrance fee of at rents the fund lor the hrneht of the suffer ers from the warehouse lire wai Increusei in a subslanl'at wa;'. I he outward apH'arance of the Fair dl! tint differ in uny respect I mm that of last Sunday, save for the emblems of mourning on the engine houses and the Hag at half iiiast. Near.y all ol the display made bj foreign exhibitors in Manufactures building were dnid. w hile muny American exhib its were closed. Ile. I,. I'. Mercer of the new church temple, spoke at festival hall on thesuhjecl ' How Ilea. lest I hou.''' The attendance was Hot large, the w arm weather no doubt keep ing many away from the classical chore hall. At the close of his address the epeakei eulogized the memory of the dead men. and said the occurrence had brought to mind the fact that il was sometimes harder todie than to live. He knew their souls would rest in is(e after the terrible ordeal they hl passed through to reach the kingdom ol u raven. Till-V OIT IHO.000. The paid admissions to the World's Fall Sunday were 411,401. jt ia estimn'ed IJial the amount contributed to the relief fund by concessionaries from to-day's receipts will nmount to 3,0tMJ, which added to ihe pro ceeds from ticket sales will swell the fund by about 430,0.0. M SMI. or THE t'NKNOWM riHK VICTIMS. 'I he funeral of (lie eight unidentified vic tims of the old Storage lire took place Fri day uflcrnnou and was attended by several thousand opie. The bodies were interred in Oukwood cemetery, where a monument to tl.eir memory will beeiccttd. In the "Amerio.ui newspaper ravilioti" at t tie centennial exposition in 1871 every newspaper in the I'niled Sotes. excepting lour, was on tile and available for nny vis itor w ho might call for it. In this particular, ut least, '70 wus ahead of the World's fan i f !:.. w here ii"'iiiii of the kiud has been uiidertiiktn. CRUSHED BETWEEN CARS. Five Women and a JJaby Killed and Thirty Injured by a Wreck on the West Shore Railroal. The West Shore day express No. 1. was w recked in the West Shore freight yard at Newburgh, N. Y., with terrible results. When the train reached the switch which connects the main road with the West Shore friegbt yard, a mile south of the nation. the engine, picked up, it is supposed, a loose ob ject, which caused it to jump from a frog and leave the track. It ran upon the tie a distance equal to the length of the truiu and then ran into a lieight train standing in the yard. The crash wus terrific. The follow ing were killed: Mrs. Eliza Klonitn, of Highland Kails, N. Y.t a riaugh ler of iturt'ham Klberson, of Satauket, Long Island, uned 2 vears, her parents were both injured; Hose llcil iy of West I'ark; Mis. l'aulina Wright, ol Urooklyn; two uu women. About ."W were injured. The most serious were: C harles Wiiliains, of New Durham, lirt mun of the i-a-senger engine, expected to recover; rrwi. imuaiiu oi .ew I'urlium, engineer of freight tram, will orobabiv re cover: June J. Cooke, of latsknl. urobablv cover: June J. I 'ooke. of l atsk ablv fatal y: (i. C. Sistaire. (refuswl to give ad- dressi thought lo tie a commercial traveler, recovery iloubllui. REBELLION IN NICARAGUA. The People of Leon Ilevolt Against the New Oovernniaut. blam Threatens to Kink Ersnoh Oun-Coats. Another revolution bus been started in Nicaragua. The people of I.eon have rebell ed oguiiiM the government established when Sacait i wus overthrown. I'resident l'oti Salvador and (ien. Avde.. commander in chief of the army, are he'd prisoners by the revolutionists. They were taken while visiting in I.eon. The rebels have seized the military hsr racks and three steutuers e.i Managiu ilake. Troops have been sent to Leon to quell the uprising. The Siamese Government has notilid France that if any more of the latter' gun bouts attempt to cross the bur at the mouth of the Meitiau river thev will be sunk, and France will be held officially respous.bl tor beginning war upon S um. Three Helpless Children Burned. At Purant, Miss., three colored children were locked up in a house by their father and mother, who then went to church. During the absence of the parents tbe cabin was destroyed by fire and the children cremated. LATBB KIWI WAtra. STRAKCIAL AMD rOMMKRCIAU The Chicago Chemical National Bank bat resumed uusl neaa. Tbe 9400,000 assessment rcqired by the comptroller has been raised. The National Bank of Kansas City sus pended payment and la now in the bands of Comptroller of the Currency. The Comptroller of the Currency at Wash ington has authorized the First Nations! Iiank of Commerce of Frovo, Utah, and th Second National Bank of Ashland, Ky., to resume business. All these bank bav plenty of money, none of which was bor rowed, but obtained by the collection of amounts due on notes or supplies by the directors. WAtllOTOs. Comptroller Eckels says there has been steady Increase in the amount of national bank currency during the past three year ami that there I no occasion for bus ness alarm. The goM reserve is gradually getting bsck lo its full amount of 1100,000, a a result of the slight improvement In the financial sit uation. Saturday it was lD8.403,3vU, a tain of f Jl,tK7 over Friday. hrt lotor. A convention f the Evangelical Luther an Church of America was held in the Swedish Bethlehem Church of hrooklyn, N. Y. TJ shop Von Sceele delivered the principal address. According to the secre tary' report, the church has 173,000 mem bers, 740 congregations, 370 ordained minis ters, six colleges, three hospitals and one Theological Seminary. The convention is In celebration of the three hundredth an. nlversury of the adoption of the doctrine jf reformat-on by the Swedish people. - - -- rohKMIM. At 1'crlin the army bill passed the Beich stag Saturday, by a vote of 201 to ISA. After the pas-age of the measure the Iieichstsg adjoiirnel. On May .'!0 three gunboats escorting two merchant junks to Canton were attacked bv 'ion pirates and after a deerute tight, dur ing which sixty government sailors were killed, the pintle got away with the booty. M'tstrm, sropr.NT and rATti.iTtrs. Christopher and John Keppel, a;.-itl Ihan I 10, of Centra! Falls, were drow ned in I'ran terry l oi.d, North Attliboro, while bath- lll. John B ck. a.ed 41, nnd his ron Walter, aged 20, were Accidentally drow ned nt the north end of Hell Isle, Dttroit, yesterday. . - - we at urn. At l'ittsbnrgh, J'a.. the thermometer reg istered S!i degrees otlicially on Sunday. The majority of people thought the figures should be IJ0 degrees. On Saturday the olliciul temperature was Oi degrees, CAItTAt AMI LABOR. The long lockout of union lumber shovr r at Tons wan la, N. Y., is broken. H was unanimously decided by the workmen logo to work at once as individuals. rhiMM and ra.sjAt.Ttr. Lucia Siescish. of California, capitalist and retireJ miner, stmt and killed his wife and then committed suicide. Jealousy w the cuuse. Mtecti.iANr.oisH. At Pill t burg, Fa.. lawyers for Perop"ey and llealty asked Judge McClung to grant nn order to have (iallacher and Puvidson examined in the western penitentiary, but the Judge refused to do so until he had time 10 consider the mutter carefully. An ap plication will be made for a pardon for Dcmpsey and Heatty. BETTER TONE IN BU8INE88. The Easlngofthe Financial Stringency Aids Trade. Conservatism, How ever, Continues to Prevail In allDirections- R (i. Pun A .o.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: There is a romrw hut better tone in busj ne a because the money maike'.s are a little less stringent, but it cannot be said that ihere is any distinct improvement la every direction the usual conservatism pre vails, orders are relatively small, the vol ume of business is restricted, and people are awaiting policy rules. New York hanks have received some money from Ihe inter ior, but are not yet clear that it is best tore tire clearing house certificates, because they are said to be weak spots which may yet re rjtiire liberal extension of credits. Other cities have drawn less from New York be cause their business is restricted. Some gold baa come already from abroad, and mure is expected within the next week, but exports of products do not increase us much us has been expected. The extorts of product are light for two weeks at New Yortc. being only U.M2,tilO, sgamst lo !i7!.7.Vi last year In June ttie exports of liieudstuit. provision cotton, 011 and entile amounted to f . !i,7u3 hiili against t4.',7!J2.2oo lor the lame mouth Just year. specuintive markets have not been active during the past week, though wheat is lie higher, com ie higher and totton jc higher. With small tiansiiclions prices havu tended upwsrd us the momentary stringency bus relaxed. the treasury has not materially affected the t.iiancuil situation during the past week und has tal.i-n much le-s than ttie usual quantity ol silver, because but little was olk-red ut the maiket price. Ihe tallurcs during the past week were.'i.4 in the I'tnted States, against KB last year lor the lume wee. and in ( anadu 23 against .'.' last year. TIIU IH'slNKs HAKOMKTKK. Hank clearings totals for the week ending July lit, us Ulrgrupbcd to Jinmtrtr, are ss follows : New York 13hl,33H.3i7 P 11.2 Boston K'i,47h.i22 D 12.7 Chicago .. KVtiM), il.iii l) 4 I'hl'llilelptliu b-,727, 471) 1) 7 1 't. l.ouis 2l,175,!'-3 D 131 ftaltimote 14.7iw,273 D 13 I'lltahurg - 13,0 ii 111 p Hi 2 Sail Francisco ll.-lsooo D 41 f i iiiciiinati ll.mti,760 p is, 3 Cleveland 5,307,323 I) 3.3 Totals. V. 8 tT.OOOn,t;77 P 12 3 Inclusive ot New York 4..h32.110 I) 14. i 1 indicate increase, P decrease. Base Ball Record. The following table shows the standing of the diftereiil base ball clubs up to date : w. l. r'ct. w. i.. r'ct. f'blladel'a 43 22 .IXijSt. Louie.. 30 33 .402 Boston.... 42 23 .04(1 New York 2H .10 .44ii I'iltsburg. 3M 2H .37H Chicago. .. 20 30 .440 (level' nd. 33 26 .330 Baltimore 27 3d .421 Brooklyn. 33 20 .347.Wash'ii... 20 40 .301 C.nciu'ii.. 32 34 43'Louiv'le. 18 37 J27 KEYSTONE STATE CULLING A BRAKEMAN'8 AWFUL NIGHT. witb a Lta tcrorr nt Lint all Muht alo.to- ami THt TRACK. Wii KwsAsai, Charles Oruver, a Read ing railroad brakeman fell from bos car, waa rolled under the wheel end had one leg cut off. He wa not missed from the train. Cruerr crawled between the tracks and tried to signal passing trains but failed. The nearest house is six miles away and despairing of aid reaching him, be took hit shirt and made bandages with which to stop the flow of blood. He was found tin conscious at daylight next day and died aa hour later. TltX Mt.noNe TAY TH TAXSS. BtTHl.xiirM. The Council of Hellrrtown. t thrifty borough five miles from here, bar decided to levy no tux Ihi year. Ttie reve nue from saloons of which there in one fot tvery 3.1 voters, will pay the runnicg ex peuse of the borough government. PM t A HOI.SF.'S SOU, tYrsT NiwroM The sensational a'ory about children finding human tones in the country near here has been Investigated. The bones belonged to the skeleton of an old horse that d.ed some time last winter. am ttvrt rss am Ttit.t.rss i Air. Casossm-iic. a cw owned by John Ry an, a farmer neur here, ha given birth to calf which has no eye or tail. Fvery other way the creature is well developed and is ol lively disposition. rxTAi. fAi.i. ranm a ;riit,T tri r. 5rrnu Ho John Weyland, who lived near Ml . I'leasaut. fell liom a cherry tree and sustained Injuries from whic.i be died soon after. A North (inrrNsnriiu girl found a lot ot her mother's old love-let ters.and ptetetulii.g that they were of recent dale, and written to the daughter from rt young man her mother knew, read them to the mother. The latter was vry much disgusted indeed, and forbade her daughter having anything to do with a voun mun w ho w iuid write such sickening stuff. (In Friday John Klingrr.smith was I illed. I'hnip K I'ligensmith wa injured, and Robert Winlield wa paralyzed by llgh'ning w hich struck (he hou-e of John Chipper, at Fverson, where 'he three men were plaster ing. A Litti x V.sm:noton man has canary bird w Inch persists in eating her own eggs. He was tidd to tuit per rer on the t-ppi, io ( ure the bird of the liahit, tint she seemed to reiisb the eg, Letter thus seasoned. A Takantim . was found In a bunch of banana in a litusville fttnt store. It was hatching an egg. and when the egg was broken it was found to conia n about 2o0 weli-dvre'.oed young turahtuias. Ri nova is having an epidemic f some thing like tytdioid fever. probaKy due to the water. Two hundred end sixty xop are down sick, and a number of deaths have ticcurred. Or the 23 WO teachers in I'ennsylvaniii emly l'.3 are college graduates. More thun one huif never attended uti academy, sem inary or normal school. Tiir Pellefonte Furnace Company will bank its tires in a few days for a s us ten sion of 00 days because of the low pries and limited demand for iron. In Fenn township. Butler county, lives a man named Mar who ha a bur.se with three natural feet, but the fourth iv'abaped like a cow . Thomas Wilson, carpenter, fell off thi barn of A. T. I'olliard. near Kimersburg, a distance of forty feet and was killed. John SiwavrR, of Laurel ville, claims to hove hauled the largest load (1 hay ever known. Jt weighed b.Ol'tj pounds Baklow Nvr, aged 43. died at Monor.ga he a City, from blood poisoning, caused by a rusty iiuil penetrating his loot. Oris F. Lt-rz was probably futn'lv burned at a saw -mill camp, near New Castle, by tbe explosion of a bariel of oil. A I.ani astfii scientist has a while spider, on the back of which are the outlines of a skull in bluet. W. I'rhRY Yocno, of North Liberty, wa killed by a lint-burg and Western train at Harmony. Wn i.iam PiimriiT. while cradling grain near Holiidaytburg, Saturday, was killed by lightning A Jrttsrr cow in Liberty township, Tioga county, givus 3o pounds of mi k a duy. SroKTsMi-N in many parts of the state re Kirt that squirrels are not plentiful. CitALLtr RowvtN. aged 16. wus drowned in the Use opposite Stoneboro. Tnr season for woodcock was ushered in on the Fourth. Tht Jeanetle Daily Slur has suspended publication. JOHNSTOWN WONTUEFLAO. The Flood City's Beae Ball Talent Lands the State League Pmnant With Oauieu to Spure. The I'.rst season of the I'ennsy Ivania State League ended on Saturday with Johnstown the winner of the ennnnt. The season's record und the standing of the clubs st the finish follow : ( i w. i.. t ct, Johnstow n.. 40 17 .712 Kaslon 'M 21 ,2f I Altooua 37 2J .127 .leutown...3t 22 AM ! f t i lls. w. i I-, Harrisnurg .4 2 .402 York 23 33 . 31 Scrunton. ...' 3-t. Panville.... 3 4 .h.ij THE NEW POSTAL CAHh.cs Will Be All o' , Vnifotm Size, the La dies' Curd EeiDg Abolished. Lost muster lieneral Bisseil bus decided tc abolish the three sizes ol postal curds now in use. and to mh-unite one size for both single and reply cards. With that turpose in view the speciheutions which have been sent to prospective bidder for the contmcl of furnishing the postal cenice with cardt during the next four years call for single Lurds of the uniform s.zu of HJxJJ unties This is what is known us the internatioiia size, it being used generally by countriet comi-osing the Nationui l'oatal I'nion, '1 he double or teply curd now in u.e will be continued, with the zo, when foldel, reduced to that of the international curd. These two curds will ta-e the pluce of the s lull or ludie' card, the muiliutu un4 the (urge curd, und the large return curd A Light vvneut crop. Crop reorts within tbe last four dnyi f rem 2 b31 reliable gruin ilea ers and inillttt covering every section of the six principal winter wheat States, producing two-thudi of the total crop, ind cute that they will fur nish about 130,0U0,(Xu uushela ihi year, at against 230,000.000 bushe in Ohio bus the best und very favorable proieci It i th only one of the eix States wbicfc will nave as large a crop a a year 1140, PROMINENT EEQPj ri.M Yaw baa writte ovela. On an aeeraire, the letter rsJ Etnperor of Oermany number ! flAKCit MiNTra Tic, tha n. 1 I running turkey farm at TunJ, OovsaKon Flows, of New Y. 1 the beet amateur trap-ebooter , 1 UT A TA. ...... v. ... l4 " . s. '...ii 1 , mayor if Ind., is only twentv-two ve,," probably tho youngest mayor inn, Tb rrinceasve of Blam hav aa V.;lat-nlongltnni and SlrJ whieb will make Eulaila touriiitj T Army of the Botoma", Boon, elected Major-Uerjersi J suirs. 1 nitea etaiee Army, VttiJ Bav. W. H. FraNaR. Paatns the First I'nltarian ChnrcU n fl waa ninety-ore years old a few ,(, Is tbe oldest living graduate ot H.J versltv and la the only survivor oi 1 tf mil. 1 Bsator Shsrs4an hns movs I,. r1deinti", which ie on of the flo- Ington. It Is said to have Senator Sherman hna rointes . , VI...L! . . I . . S nieni'T in rsiiiiiikiou rein est large holdings there. Ir is reported thnt the King of J tends to alKlioatn In fnvor of twi Q.t4. sitil ,.l I --. in Viim .... I w ... ... inn, home on the Island of Corfu, n, Tnds It lmpnsltli to enpe wuk t nuaneiai uiniuuieies oi ureec Mis Emma Stcan.si, the Intj,.! etieontst. hna rhrse tirofeife i..'2 elera in the musical world. Tbtl Misses Uluejaeket, and they slU; 1 Ingahss. Of real Cherokee origit"J ene rienesi oi coiiper-comre,i j ol blaoK eye ana reiaet of li, Tn new Thltod States) M.r, for Eostern Wisconsin la a kiiursi properly bei ealle 1 Sir J. II. M. -X that he had been made n knigM o: j of St. Gregory the Great, receiving ( ealel with the Fope'e smtl. th, , ring, and signed by Cardinal L(s; .vl Th Ari'bbisbop of CitDtHrtun,! the most regular attendants at tin. the British House of Lord. Thn.?,' written rule of that body that lultrs-'f any matter relating to the elnir-t','1 - 1 . 1 .1! A . - I 1 k. I I.I . 'J nsstTU uiruet ui iiitv Areuuisiinp. jiji therefore considers It hi duty tot. J and he make it a rule to U u puuotually at 4 o vlo.-k. TEE LABOR W0BI1 Ft. I.ot ia has a huckster's uni- e, Boston hns a Hntirew or.rp'Tit.K Chicaoo has 14(K) union elouk ml tent. fANtniAN K. of L. want alien i-o;:- probihited. Twtntx-six labor union In SOs.tKMl member. Fur.Nrn lat-or unions hav- s. at . t tlio World's Fair. Tag Illinois Central hn .T-r-: ployes stock tn the railroad. Fall Hivkr (Mios. spiiiii-it sum ly the uniou during ldl le-s. , accident. Mi:MRKa of Pyrneuse (N. .) v b fined 5 for inarching In unv ;. which a nou-uulun band taki s p,-. Thk iiiiniber of oonvU-t lal on-m-ployed ill Ohio Is limited to five p-t the. free laborers iu the Slate euicu Industry. . Strli.t laborers' wages have .vrn bvthe eltv ituthorities of St. h-. from t1.40 to f 1.60 per day, vi,.. hours ware, redueed to eiirhf. A A Boston elothlng house (v bauds beeuuso they would nif v week'a wages with the.rnvJb'a s "makiug 7.15i wook amf $onu'iii:. It U said thnt In some section County. Pennsylvania farmers bar ferlug 1.73 pur day nnd bonr-liiu hands during hayinaklng and harv years bo the price of thi lubor more thun a dollar a duy. Thk scarcity of servant-girls It i large eitle of the) Dominion of ('. creating considerable comment. It that many of thesn have gone t where- they were allured by th" 'i that t'uey would lm glveu work It: b Tit r. grades and pay of elev.-i! si employes in New York City ar" a (iittenuin First year, 41.23a day c first year, 1 1.30 a day. Agents - F t tl. 75 n day i after tlio first year.. Agent and telegraph operator. tJ.i' tiuar.l First year, 1.50 a day is"-: 1. 75 a day ; third year, 91.75 a iIav veiir. 41.85 a day. Conductor-hf 2 a dav : second yoar. 9'i.20 a year and afterward. 42.30 it eav NEWSY GLEANING. A Loccsr plague tbroatens Alg r.i Caors are a failure in Western Kt The cholera is ravaging SIcoa, ir Cuoliba is raging in Boutheatt-T.. Gold bit begun tooomelufk (rco Hat is 940 a ton iu England, tlO uida, I'euu. Routb Carolixa's aev dlsp -nsirfs gone into enect. Thkhe wen, 52.099 Immigrant! the Fort of New York in June. The rice crop of the TJultu l Stat per oeot. greater than any provlouo: Tuebe lson'e more friotloa M' French Cuu.tdiaas and tbe Kun'li3 : adit. It I estimated that Butte, Motitu pro utoe iju,"ju,(hn) pound ot year. Kansai ha lni'rea.sl the tax.tMs i railroad property from 51,OoO,Ot)JOt uuu,uuu. Htatk money annortlomid to tb si'hnol of Miugouri thi year axo-t 77,175.26. Bl'HiNEs I dooreesed In Hawaii ti' the univertaiuty inspired by the l u ooveruinnuc. An Invanion of caterpillars mil' Deitranoe in Yoono. l-'raiiiie. and tl" have eaton up the pasture an! l-'t oare. Assistant ATroBNir GKNttatL Br has divlilwl that women "dietarr who mluistnred to soldier duruif U War ar entitled to pensions. Tb entire seyuior class, eoicprU- Sins ihmiiiUm .. ln.ll-.iu VnriiiilS:: u.u.uuv.., US 1UI.II.II. . 1 ' F Terra Haute, having refused lo yielJI"T tnands of th Trustoea and left tl" '1 there were no graduating exrJi'- Institution. Artuub C. Kkkves. a citizna ol tl - States, has beu authorlzo l tu est rejuttural, mining uud mauufa'ti"" 1 . I . - n d ..ilU"I iiuw ui ovisa iiusvisus, usnnnus . Ha oonuMsslou oovor ioO.OJJ H'M''1 Aeuantipee juilway, Ta Mexican Oovernmeut haiJ' duotiou ot from Ave to ten per cant- tularin of publio employee aud m"' army. Tbeue deduutlous, thn total of whioh will eioeed 1,000,000, art efTmtt la July aud will be iu foro W I December. A Cvelona's Daadlr Wort A trrriflc cyclone (truck Still1''1 mi Friday afternoon. Samuel r1 aud Wintleld A hex were killed i budding blown down. Mantr f' injured and some ar miuiiiff.