of Farm [Products Through. the United States. ithe weather crop bnlletin is- ther an in the southern on two ago, the northen portion ic reports Fine New Eng- Forage yield, corn being cus Weather favorable for corn harvest and for planting. orn Jidla. below average; * "injure bli Si jtton opening rapidly; pota cane ot for rain; rice Cotten benefitted by check in dy 3 harvesting slowly. oy much’ damaged; cotton lowly; increasing complaint of 8, caterpillars and rust. n prospicts. good except in Lotton shedding; rust and boll the crop. Co tton opening; some shed- 8 from cool weather. v—Corn burning up; early tobac- fruit pr ospects unfavorable. tures gel stock improving; in wlands; 2 e wheat idly. EE and rye ni northern por- a—Most of the early- “planted corn m isinih Light Crops; tobacco, fair anger; restwo weeks of dry, sunshiny ncreased acreag of wheat being amage from frosts. Kota—~Killing frost this morn- akota—Stacking practically com- ‘plowing good. rn ay two weeks more 11 be safe from frosts; large acre- eat being sown. Too dry in localities for. plo-w ok ise nerally well forward. me wheat sown in the & beginning to open; farmers hering corn and preparing for Woather very favorable for C Frosts have injured all fender other crops doing fairly well, ; ctops'secuire ‘against frost. na—Lemon and range crops good orfion; corn ¢ ght in cen- ; rain needed; 49.04 Benefitted by ‘in southern portions; cattle Favorable weather for threshing md gathering fruit; grain yield good: and fruit notso abundant as ‘in hes, pears ana ther pe ished and grapes and raisins p picking neatly d gone; crop light ously estimated i pre LEOTRIC GAR RUNS AWAY People Killed a: and Seven Badly uals an electric motor ‘with trail was descending a steep incline, e brakes failed to work, and the car d the grade at a terrific rate. Mrs. ine, H 8. : Kronneckor, J: r n, Mrs. A. H. Jones, Charles Boy- er Hoffinan and Rudolph Hart- Afflicted me four years— blotches’ all over my bedy, swelling in my neck, and in less than a ‘year had lost 40 1bs, 1 ‘was induced "by H. L. Tabbs, our druggist, to try Hood's SBarsapa- ; ARG: ‘the blotehes n The Bt Waterpraof Coat in the _ WORLD! asaddle, Bes fh Re. Ton Lr aE 1 ex-Goy. James N. Ashiey for congress. 1 August 4. The informations were all made “hopeful than they haye been at apy time thisiweek. Mrs. Harrison, however, is still ground too | ; President Cannon, of the Morman chureh, | was nominated by the Morman Republican . to his home at Elkins. | gave $2,000.to the latter. A Maine legisiatare will have j 11 Thé deadlock in the ) Republican'convention was br seventy-third bzllot by the no New York fruit importers will contribute free lemons to cholera patients. +The Spanish. government yuaantine against Ni ew. York. Je Works, at Ste ubenviile, 0. signedthe Amal- gamated scale, The mill will resume. at Junction Ton ‘Works also also start work. connestion with the trouble at Duquesne on by Secretary P.T.F; Lovejoy before Alder man McMaster, The men were arrested at various times, and most of them have been admitted to bail. At Loon Lake, Saturday. Mrs. Harrison’ 8 physicians went to the Harrison cottage to make an examination of the patient. They ‘are exceedingly gratified at the slight im- provement shown in Mrs. Harrison's illness since the critical period of Tuesday and Wednesday. = ‘While they will not give any great encouragement to the. President and his family, itis evident that they are more in the critical stage and a change for the worse might come with surprising sudden- Ress. The Third Alabama district Demberats nave Fenominated Congressman Oates. Frank J. Caunon, son of ex- Delegate and Territorial Convention’ for * Delegate to Congress. Colonel Silas A. Dames was nominated for Congress inthe Lleventh Kentucky Congressional district. LiBoR RerusEs 10 Parapr.—The Trade 8 and Labor Assembly at Chicago, by a vote of 119 to 40, declined the invitation of the World's Fair Directors to take part in the parade during the dedication exercises next month. Several hot speeches were made for and against the: acceptance of the in vitat:on. It was finally declined on the ground that workingmen could not indorse the Fair as long as its gates are closed on Sunday. : The Valley mill of the Stewart Iron Co., at Sharon, Pa. started in all ‘departments and runs double turn. The scale y was. sign- ed on Friday. A G. A. R, excursion train on the Lehigh Valley. Railroad collided with a switeh en- gine at Fairview, Pa. In ineer Andcsw Brown and. Baggagemaster George. uncer: line will die, None of ers wore . boiler ex- 3, Que, near Toronto, The dead: Michal Dupus, Yoha Ewing, Joseph Papineau, Isaiah Chauvin, Jerome Chauvin. Peter Daust Maise, Oulette; John Tah! is fa! tally scalded. i An explesion of a coal oil stove at Mis. souri Valley, fa., started a fire which burned Mrs. Eckenbaugh’s house and her four children, During a sham bombardment of Fort Mc Henry, near Baltimore, Md., by the govern- adelphia, Dolphin and Vesuvius, a fifteen-inch gun on the aft star- board deck of the Philadelphia exploded, killing two gunners. -The house of Mr. Craven, at Ashbourne, near Philadelphia, was burned by the upset ting of a coal oil lamp, and his two children and sérvant girl were burned to death. After Secretary of War Elkins delivered his speech at Davis, W. Va.;, on Friday night he was taken ill and compelled: to geo At Mt. Holly, N, J., Lizzie Peak, dazed 22 years, was murdered by Wesley Warner, with whom she had been living in Brook: lyn for three years. Warner is arrested and is in jail. Dr. J. H. Hazzard, of Allegheny, Pa, made his mortality report for last week. It shows there savas a decrease in the death rate of three over the preceeding week. This is is said to be due to the present cleanliness of the city. THe reports shows there were 61 deaths, Thirty brigands attacked the residence of the parish priest Zedda,] Sardinia, and stoi, all the money and valuables they could find- The priest and a servant were badly wound: ed, A villager who came to their assis. “tance was shot dead. Dispatches from Guatemala assert that foreign money, that of the Dnited States excepted, is to be barred out of the republic. At New York during the past week Cor nelius Vanderbuilt has given $10,000 to the Columbus Day fund, and pledges himself to raise $40, 000 more. He also gave $10,000 t0 the cholera fund: ‘John Jacob Astor People living in the neighborhood burned the pest house near Nashville, Tenn, for fear it would be used in case of cholera. ‘The following Congressiohal nominations were made Saturday: Eleventh Texas dis- trict Republicans, Calvin G. Brue Nebraska district Democrats, J udge George Ww. Doans; Sixth Tennessee district Demo- crats, Joseph KE. Washington; cousin district: Democrats, Owe ‘The Republicans in the. n ‘Deapite the Cholera, Busine Trade says: is lower than if ever has been o ficial 848 State election have been received by the Sec- retary of State. ‘The vote on Governor is as follows: ~~ Fishback, Democrat, Whipple, Republican, 33,644; Cérannaham, People's, 31,177. Fishback's majority over 5 both, 25,294 plarality, 56,471. HEAVIEST TRADE ENOWN. : in ali Lines'is Booming. 5 ‘RB. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Revie a of Cholera has landed and the. business of New York goes on exactly as if it had not.” Cars are as crowded with tas- sengers and streets as Badly block- ed with ecartloads ' of merchandise as they = were one week or year ago, which 'nieans “that ‘the heaviest trade ever known at this season is now in progress. Thesame is trye'of other cities al- most without exception, ‘and’ the outlook for fall trade is at all points regarded as ex-. ceedingly good, But many people are afraid that all other people will be afraid and con- sequently speculative markets decline. The ._ | "selling of stock has!been quite. heavy, ‘and ‘the:deeline in prices has averaged ‘about $2 per share for alt the active list. Money is in ample supply : and the demand from the interior is less tnan usual af this season, but Harge aniotints are held out of the loan mar- | kets'by people who are looking for excep- tional opportunities to buy cheaply. There has been much talk about pesti- lence as an excuse for low prices of bread- stuffs and cotton, but the fact is that the Fea aifon stocks prought over from last ear a y low prices. Receipts of wheat at tlie ly low Western ports in four days of | this ‘week have been 5,316,833 bushels, while he Aulantic exports ‘have been only. 065,435 bushels, and it is not i range that t 778c wheat New York except in two days in 1884, urn, has de- clined 4c in sympathy, but if is alco the fact that Western advices'regarding the growin crop are favorable. Oats have fallen de an lard is a shade weaker. In cotton there has ‘been heavy selling. “Oil has declitied 3c, but coffee is #c stronger. ! At Boston trade in dry Soon is unusually large for September, and the market for print cloths is almost bare, while cotton gonds are sold far ahead of Jroduction, and in bleach ‘goods | some advance appears, the p price has declined fc. - Woolen mills are well supplied with orders, and the: distribution is remarkably full. Boot and shoe shops are crowded with orders, and leather is active. At Philadelphia trade in dry goods is the most satisfactory in many years, and the carpet manufacturers - are busy. Western and Southern buyers are liberal in their purcnases, and in dress goods, especially, an increased trade is expected; wool is 1h fair demand, tobacco improves, and trade in chemicals is active, ‘especially in disinfectants, In Pittsburg the iron trade i improves with increased demand, though Bessemer pig is weaker. Window g ass works are resumin but the Monnpsliela coal miners are “still idle, because of ‘a difference in wages. Trade in Cleveland is good: in most lines’ and fair in dry goods, crockery and drugs, with iron in better = demand and money active, Retail trade at. Cincinnati is quiet, but the Western lumber trade shows an in- crease of 20 per cent. over last year. At Detroit orders for freight cars exteed capaei- ty of works for months to come, more gram" ‘and ore moved than. ia previous years. and trade prospects ave favorable, = At Chicago business increases and. no thing adyerse appears, though some decreasa is seen in receipts of “wheat, Ve, ‘barley, cheese, dressed beef and 50 percent. in lard and wool, compared with last year, while in Hour, corn, oats, cured meats,” butter, cattle and hogs considerable’ increase appears. ‘sion, and O'Donnell was sent to jail.’ The business failures during the last seyen days number for the United States 154; Canada, 28; total, 182, as compared with 179 last week, 176 the week previous to. the last and 239 for the’ corresponding Wook ‘of last year. Hugh O Donnell Again in Jail. Friday afternoon, a quarter of an hour after the time had expired ‘when Attorney John F. Cox had promised fo have Hugh O'Donnell and Hugh Ross dt Alderman MecMaster’s office, Pittsburg; to answer the second charge of murder preferred ‘against them by Secretary Lovejoy, of the Carnegie company, O'Donnell made his appearance | on Grant street, walking in the direction of the Alderman’s office to give himself up. He was sighted by Constable Mills, and placed under arrest. = ‘O.Donnell was some- what chagrined. He was taken to Alderman McMaster's office, where he waived a hear: ing. He was then taken to. the = Criminal «Court room, where = his case was to have been heard. O'Donnell’s tardiness bad up- set the plans. promised to take up the balance of the ses- Itis said O'Donnell has been taking things easy in his home at Homestead, and has been seen on the streets several tines after night- fall during the past 10 days. A Homestead officer gays he can put his band on Hugh Ross without going out of the borough. The People’s Party Ticket. Nomination papers, signed by = 10,000 members of the Peoples Party of Pennsyl vania, were filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth at Harrisburg on Friday, asking that the candidates of the organjza- tion be printed on the official ballot. State Chairman Thompson and L. F. Amburst and C. A. Burrows, chairmen of the party in Westmoreland: and Allegheny counties respectively, filed the papers. 4 tb eo Bix Li ves Lest by a Shipwreck. Three survivors of the wreck of the Bris ish bark Hope reached Halifax, N.S. The Hone capsized in a gale off Cape Race, and ‘the balance of her crew was drowned. The ‘survivors clung four days to planks before being rescued by the Schooner Amelia which brought them into port. The Tost ure: Captain David ‘Jenkins, Mate David Griffith, Cook Richard Edwards and Sea man Humpbrey Jones and Robert Hugh and a boy named S8ames E.Okwilheli. Weaver and Field Accept. Generals Weaver and Field, the People’s party candidates for President and. Vice President, made public a joint letter of ac. ceptance, They see a menace to the public weal in both old parties, and say that the. success of their party alone will prevent the overthrow of the nation. - Six Miners Xitod, A | Four miners were killed by an explosion of gas in the Nottingham Jaine at Bly mouth, Pa. : : 90,115; CAPTAIN ord a suficient feason for exceeding. | The case then being = tried WILL WE GET THERE v Great interest enters in the question, “Will Captain An irews, the Sapolio Colum- bus, reach Palos in his little boat?’ [ast week we told of his start, and how pluckily “he wrofg by an incoming sailer- which passed him many bundrel miles from store. Now we can add to'that Teport tha followiag news item just as it was publishad in the Commer cial Advertiser, of New York: SPOKE THE SAPOLIO. ANDREWS. MAKING HIS WAY HUELVA AXD PALOS. LONDON, Aug. 19 (Dalzisl's Special News). ~Advices received to-iay from Corunna state that the steamer Vera Cruz, which ar- rived there on’ Aug. 1I, from Havana, re- ported thaton Aug. 5 she fell in with a small boat: named Sapolio, manned by Captain William A. Andrews. 1n answer to questions of the Captain ot the Vera Cruz Andrews said hs had sailed from Atlantic City, N. J., with the intention and hope of arriving at Huelva and Palos de Moguer, on the Rio Tinto, by next October, in time for the occasion of the pub- lic festivals in connection with the Columbus centenary. The Captain of the ‘Vern Cruz offered Androws any provisions he required, but the latter replied he did not want any, and only desired to be reported. It will be recollected that it was from Palos that Columbus sailed in 1492 when he set out on his Qiscovery of America, ‘The above report was later confirmed by cables from Madrid, one of which sail: The Captain of the Vera Cruz describes | Captain Andrews as hale and hearty. ’ Cap. tain Andrews, he says, resented a question as to whether he wished to be taken aboard the steamer, declaring that he was certain that be could reach Huelva without assist= auce in time for the October fetes. He asked only one favor—that the Captain of the Vera Cruz should hand a lelter to the American Consul at the first Spanish port be entered. Captain Andrews then tied his letter to a piece of scrap iron and threw it aboard the Vera Cruz, and after mutual farewells and wishes for a prosperous voyage the two vessels parted. On the following day, August 6th, the | “Bapolio” fell in with the German ship f*Adolf,” Captain A. Schespsma, who writes that on that date he supplied Captain An- drews with ‘‘fresh water, fresh bread, eggs, and claret; also with a lantern and a length of line, captain and boat being all right.” We give it just as written, showing that our German friend can be as. liberal with his . letters as with the frash bread, avhich must have proved 50 grateful to the daring lone. © voyager who carries no fire; and on whom | the. baker does not call in the morning, = * - » The New York Herald, in an editorial are ‘ticle on August 20th, rather unjustly com- mented on Captain Andrews’ trip, It said; The cable disparch published yesterday giving news of the intrepid Captain Ander son, of dory fame, has given SHcouragement, if not assurance, to his friends. “i % * There can be no scientific valusin voyages of this sort and no results can come from them that are of much interest to tho gen- eral public, save the proof that a sixteen foot boat may in exczedingly calm weather cross tbe Atlantic, © * Were Captain Anderson to prove by his attempt that a transatlantic voyage ‘was infinitely more pleusant and rapid in a small boat than in an ocean palace, then the community might be grateful. Most interest now centres in ‘the possibility of his finishing his trip alive. = od % * * Just how Captain Andrews (not Ander: son, as the Herald has it) could select sixty days of ‘exceedingly calm weather” re- mains for the Herald weather makers to show. If this Voyage draws out such an ex. traordinary contribution to marine science, it will almost equal the discovery of gravi- tation. But thera are other things to be claimed in behalf of tho venture, some of which are well stated in the following letter written in reply to this criticism, Editor N. Y. Herarp: Admitting that Capt. Andrews’ voyage may not benefit sciencs, add that he may not convigoe travelors that a small boat is superior to an ocean palace, I would c¢on- tend that every passenger in an Ocean Gray- hound should sleep easier in his comfortable “berth when he koows that the great sea has been successfully crossed in a cockleshell; and may not many lives be saved by this plain object lesson, showing that a wooden boat is unsinkable? ‘Oa lake, and river, and bay, hundreds go down’ aanually who loss presence of mind because they fail to re- alize this simple fact, And is there not a lesson to be learned in courage, in endur- ance and good seamanhip? Does mot any man who successfully controls the elements add to man's confidence and benefit the whole community? Visitors ‘to the World's Tair, ab Chicago, will eagerly seek ott this American Colum: bus or “me Prue Taste Principle Of the plants wsed in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs, bas a perma~ aently beneficial effect on the human sy: stem, while the cheap vegetable extracts andi min- eral solutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well informed, you will nse the true remedy only. Manutac. tured by the California Fig Syrup Co. They have “potato socials’ in Kansas. The name may be from the fact that young folks go there to pare.—Texas Siftings. 8K, Coburn A Claire Scott, writes: “1 find Hall's Care Gore a valuable remedy.” Druggista sell it : When a httle man is hopelessly in love it greatly increases his sighs. —Texas Siftings. A Distinguished Physioian. Every one has heard of Dr. Hoxsie’s Certain Fray Tnis great remedy was used by rr Hoxste i himself for twenty years among th: Ds notable 1amiis tn Bua oe, N. Y. with ome S50 for Congestive Colds, Pneun- monia, Soup and Bronchitis, = by drug- ee Ho, Manuiactured by So P. Hoxsie, as oN A new i superintendent ought to be able to pave his way into the good graces of his fellow citizens.—Texas Siftings. Mupicavscicncelias achieved ttri in the production of Beecham’, s Bills whi Hohon 25 cents at hox replace a ieliote chest. If afflicted with soreeyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp- son's Eye-wator. Lraggists: sell at 2ic per bottle. Du I iy RONIeS pays for no iin on = package with avery purchase. : BRKILME RS Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, i . pain in jointsor back, brick et in urine, frequent calls, irritation, intlamation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder, Aiserdered Liver, ro Jigotion. gout, billious-headache, SO AMD EE cures kidney difficulbios, ANE oy trouble, bright’s disease, Impure Blood, Serofuls, malaria, gen'l weakness ordeiity. al sutee Hse com Sontents of One le Bottled 3 fot hen At Dragzgists, Soc, iy $1.00 Size, ' ®Invalids’ Guide to Health”free- Consultation free, Di. KILvMeR & Co.. BINGHAMTON. N. Ya - MERCURIAL Mr. J. C. Jones, of Fulton ,Ark., saysof S £8 “About ten years ago I cor J. tracted a severe case of blood ‘poison. Leading physicians prescribed medicine after medicine, which I fook without any relief. I also tried mercu: ‘rial and potash remedies, with unsuc ~ RHEUMATISM cesstal results, bnt which brought on ar attack of mercurizl rreumatism that made my life one of agony. After suf ering four years I gave up all remedic: commenced using 8. 8. 8. After taking soveral bottles, I was entirely cured and able to resume work. : the greatest medicine for blood poisoning to-day or the market.” Treatise on: Blood and. Skin Diseases mailed free, BWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, G “August Flower” I have been troubled with dyspep- ‘sia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble—J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. Onebottle of August Flower cured me. It was "positively worth one hundred dollars to me—]J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, : It is the best seller I ever handled—C. Rugh, Druggist, rE. Pa. @ PAR Joho ODS a eat” soni foe igost of PENSTON and BQ Barr EON Nin RANA D. Oy EASY & Rest Lo pais $1.00, 1) tains RHEUMATI SM Inmbago, Headache, Toothae! 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