oh, ; f ¥ ¥ b g i I wRESRE EE — snp en xprrteney # emmy SEs ARTHUR SUED FOR $30,000 THE ANN ARBOR RAILROAD ia Wants Some Recompense for His Inter- ference. A Temporary Injunction Granted Against Arthur and Sargent to Restrain Them From Ordering a Boycott. ee The powers of the United States Court have again been called into exercise in the troubles between the Ann Arbor railway and its striking employes. At Detroit,Judge Taft, on the application of H. W. Ashley, manager of the Ann Arbor read, granted a temporary injunction restraining Chiefs Ar- thur and Sargent from ordering a general strike of railway employes, or in any way inciting a boycott against the Ann Arbor. This order was served Friday night at To- Jedo on the Brotherhood leaders and creat ed no small surprise among the strikers. It is made returnable on March 27, when Messrs Arthur and Sargent will be obliged 10 appear before the Federal Court in To edo to show cause why they should rot be restrained. A second surprise was sprung upon Chief Arthur when he was served with the papers in a suit filed by the Ann Arbor Company, whereby it seeks to recover in a sum of $30- 000 damages, alleged to have been sustained by certain alieged acts of Mr. Arthur. When asked what he had to say Mr. Arthur said be proposed to obey the laws. The commercial feature of the strike is unchanged. Freight was offered by the Ann Arbor to the Pennsylvania and Wheeling and Lake Erieroads, the former taking 65 cars without any objection on the part of any of its employes. The Wheeling®and Lake Erie has not yet moved any of its con- signment and it is reported that the engi- neers on that road will refuse to handle it. I THE TOLEDO STRIKE OFF. The Boycott Ordered Lifted and the Men Told to Go Back to Work. The boycott ordered placed on the Toledo, AnnArbor sndNorth Michigan road has been declared fully off and Chiefs Arthur and Sargent, of the Brotherhood of Engineers and Fireman, have issued orders to the strikers to resume work. Several meet- ings of engineers were held Sunday after- noon, at which the situation was thorough- ly discussed, including the orders issued by Judge Ricks on Saturday. It was rumored at one time that the engineers on the Wabash would go out inside of 48 bours in sympathy with the Ann Arbor men, but that it now thought to be idle talk. General Manager Ashley says that the road recognizes the obligations it is under to the men who remained faithful and pro- poses that they shall profit by it. Saturday afternoon K. D. Potter, Jr. general attorney for the Lake Shore Rail- road Company.appeared before Judge Ricks in the United States Circuit Court and made application for a writ of attachment, citing the appearance of three firemen and four engineers who refused to handle Anu Arbor cars, to show cause why they should not be prosecuted for contempt of the previous order of the court, A writ was issued and iater the men were arrested. In connection with the resignation of sev- eral Lake Shore engineers, Judge Ricks holds that while the law does not oblige ihem to work for any company they may not see fit to, it requires that when they de- cide to relinquish such employment they shall do it £0 48 not to bring about any dam- age to their employers. The Pennsylvania engineers have had a confierence with their officials, and agreed 10 stand by the decisions of the courts, and not uphold the Brotherhood against the laws ol the country. Late Saturaay evening Judge Ricks grant- ed an injunction, restraining all the employ- es of the Wheeling vend Lake Erie railroad from refusing to handle Ann Harbor freight and from obeying any order that may be is- sued by the Brotherhood. A dispatch from New York says: Such Jocal leaders as were in town were hardly ready to express any leeling but surprise over Judge Ricks’ order to Chief Arthur, to annul the rule of the Brotherhood of loco- move Engineers, which réquires the mem- vers to refuse to handle the cars of boycot- ted roads. The arrest of five engineers for quitting work rather than handle such cars amazed them. But, on reflection, it seemed to occur to most of them that this result of arding the railroad business as ‘‘affected with a public interest, was a step toward the complete State control of railroads, which most of them nave been advocat- ing. SCHNEIDER EXECUTED. The Murderer of His Wife and Brother! in Law Expiates His Crime, The execution of Howard Jefford Schneider, for killing bis wife and brother- in-law, took place in the District jail at Washington, D. C., Friday morning. Presi- dent Cleveland positively refusing to inter- fere. When all hopes were gone Schneider at once quit playing insane. There were no unusual scene at the execution. Schneider broke down and appeared very penitent. The crime for which Howard Schneider was executed was one of the most terriblein the criminal history of this District. He had for some time persistently and cruelly abus: ed his wife, and she had sought and obtain: ed the protection of her father. Schneider endeavored to induce her to return to him and to leave the city for the West. ‘This was refused, and, meeting her on the street one Sunday evening as she was re- turning from church accompanied by her brother. he accosted her with a renewal of his demands. The wife still resisted, and hie at once fired five shots from a revolver, killing instantly the brother and fatally wotinding the women. — - ao TARE LOST NARBONIC. She Had 14 Cattlemen and a Crew of Over 50 Men on Board. It is thirty-six dayssince the White Star freight steamship Naronic left Liverpool with 14 cattlemen and a crew of over fifiy enon board, end during that time she has not been sighted by any vessel, nor has any trace of her been seen. The hope of the agents has dwindled day by day, until they are now almost willing to give the vessel up. They can offer no encouragement to the owners of her cargo, for so far no en- couraging theory has been advanced that basn't been exploded. Should the Naronic never be heard of again. she will be the first steamship having duplicate engines and twin screws that has been lost. The accident to the City of Paris about a year ago near the Irish coast showed that the duplicate sys- fem was not a sure preventive of disable: ment, but the water-tight compartments kept ber afloat until she reached port. The theory was advanced to-day that the Na- sonic might have been in collision with the Allan line ship Sarnia, which is "six days overdue at Halifax. ‘The White Star agents think this impossible, They deny indig- nantly a statement thatthe Naronic had a number of steerage passengers on board and that the freight vessels of their and other lines often carry them contrary to law, strikers back. They now LATER NEWS WAIFS, LEGISLATIVE. The Missouri house passed the senate hill to prevent bribery and corruption in elections. It is similar in mary respects to the New York law, limiting tae campaign expenses of candidates, requiring them to furnish iteniized statements under oath of the amount expended or proinised during the campaign. The promises of money or a position on the part of a candidate to any voter is made bribery. It is believed the Governor will sign the bill. A bill providing for the - organization of railway terminal companies was passed by the Tennessee Legislature. Under its pro- visions the Louisville and Nashville and Chattanooga and St. Louis railroad will build a joint passenger and freight depot at Ashville, Tenn. to cost $2 503.00). SU, FIRES, Toledo— Wheeler Opera House. The loss on the opera house is $80,000; insurance, $35,000. Other losses will make a total of about $135,000. ; Oswego, N. Y.—Kenyon and Jones blocks four stories high. Loss estimated at £75,000. Boston—The to'al loss sustained by 130in surance companies by last Friday's confla- gration foots up $2,691,450. Included in this sum is £750,000, an estimate of water dam- sges, divided among 100 companies, and the figure is based on all expected salvage. The total insurance carried on property and stocks burned or damaged exceeds §4,200,- CRIMES AND PENALTIES. At Columbus, O., Dan Stephens, a well- known local pugilist, was shot and nstantly killed by Charles Gutches, a bartender, for- merly of Circleville, O. There was no eye- witnesses, aud the murder is supposed to have been the result of a fued. John Burnett, sheriff of Campbell county’ Tenn., was shot and instantly killed on a passenger train leaving Jellico. Deputy Sher- iff John Dail was also shot and may die. The latter arrested a man named White, but he was rescued by Jerry and John Smith notorious characters, Sheriff Rutherford of Anderson county, Tenn., was kilied in a fight at Careyville Saturday night. He made an arrest when friends of the prisoner tried to re: lease him. The residence of Henry Bodeker of Free- port, Iil.. was burned. He and his wife were found burned almost beyond identifi- cation. Bodeker, who was a coal dealer, has been collecting considerable money lately. It is supposed that burglars entered the house, were surprised, killed both occu- pants and then fired the house to conceal the double murder. Saturday afternoon, Wm. Unger, a pri vate in the Seventeenth Infantry at Fort Russell, Wyo., was shot and killed by George Jones, a prisoner under his charge. An hour later Jones was shot and killed by Sergeant Myers and Private Robinson while resisting arrest. gl WASHINGTON. Secretary Carlisle has taken a stand on the labor question that is in sharp contrast with the policy which has been pursued here- tofore. The president of one of the leading organizations sent word to him that be would like to have a hearing before an appointment was made in New York, which would have to do with immigration. The Secretary replied that he did not propose to consult any organization or association whatever in making his appointments; that if they or their representatives had any- thing to say or any recommendation to make, they could file them in writing or they could see him as individuals. He pro- posed to meet everyone coming to see him as American individuals. The Citizens’ National Bank, of McKees- port, Pa., capital £100,000, hasbeen authoriz ed to begin business. The treasury department is receiving offers of gold for small notes in such num- bers that it cannot accept them all. It accepted on Saturday, an additional offer of $1,000,000 from Chicago. It is thought that in a few days the free gold in the treasury will aggregate between $6,000,000 and $7,000,000. A gain of $9,000,000 in gold was made at New York Saturday. No gold was taken for export. ——p FOREIGN. On the Scotch island of Great Cumsb ray; keeper Wallace, of the lighthouse, started in a small boat with his four children for the town. His boat capsized and they were ail drowned, 3 Fire in a pastry cook's shop in Saint Sebastian, Madrid, caused a keg of spirits to explode and spread the fire to the adjoining houses which were densely tenanted. Fif tene persons jumped from the windows. ten of them were killed and three received mortal injures. Twenty-one persons are known to have perished, and several others whose fate is unknown are believed to have been burned or crushed in the ruins. peer DISASTERS, ACCIDENTS AND FATALITIES Joseph Bartelino and John Nicoli were instantly killed by an explosion of dyna- mite at Scarsdale, near White Plains, N. Y. At Eau Claire, Mich., the 10-vear-old-son of Farmer Justus Zell fell down a 50-foot well and was killed. ae FINANCIAL. Thursday night by an order from the ooard of directors, the Sheridan Mendota silver mines at Telluride, Col., employing about 350 men, were closed down. The mines will remain closed until silver ad- vances sufficiently to make them pay. ea CAPITAL AND LABOR. A number of men will be displaced in the Carnegie Homestead, Pa., mills by the ~perating of tables by electricity. Seventy-five miners struck for an increase of wages at the Wheeling steel work's mines Benwood, W. Va. It will lay the plant off and throw 1,000 men out of work. The Big Four’s yard switchmen's strike, at Springfield, O.,is on again, 39 switch- men baving struck this morning. The men claim that the road does not come up to the agreement made two weeks ago to take the demand that Yard Master Carney be discharged and they be paid for working overtime, and all the men be reinstated CROPE. People who have just returned from western Kansas report the gronind parched snd wheat drying up. In one of the coun- ties last year producing the greatest wheat crop, the present indications are that not a bushel will be grown. ——teem M. JULES FERRY DEAD. 1A Noted Frenchman Brought to the End of an Honorable Career. Profound Regret Throughout France, M, Jules Francois Camille Ferry, President of the French Senate, was seized with spasms early Friday morning and despite every effort made by physicians to relieve him, he died in great agony. His death was caused by heart disease, and the affec- lion of that organ was due to the effects of M. JULES FERRY. a bullet striking a rib near the base of the heart at the time he was attacked by Aubertin in 1887. The news of M. Ferry's death astounded the city. No other event since Gambetta's death has made such a deep impressions Only three evenings ago he was at the opera and on Thursday he presided over the Sen. ate. The general feeling is that although his election to the Presidency was contrary to the wishes of M. Carnot and M. Ribot, his death is a serious loss to the Government. President Ferry was born April 5, 1832, and was admitted to the bar in 1854, He was one of the active cpponents of the Em- rire and was one of the convicted in the amous political trial of the ‘Thirteen’ in 1854. 1: 1869 he was elected to the Corps Legisiature from the Sixth conscription of the Seine. He took his seat among the members of the Left. He voted agains' the declaration of war with Prussia.and at the revolution of September, 1870, he was pro- claimed a member of the Government of the National Defence. When the communal insurrection broke out in October, 1870, Fer- ry risked his life to suppress it. He disp'ay- ed great courage and energy in resisting the insurgents of January 22, 1871. After the siege and entry of the troops into Paris. M. Thiers nominated Ferry Perfect of the Seine but owing to the powerful hostile criticism Ferry resigned 10 davs later. Subsequently it was reported that M. Ferry would be sent as Minister to Washington, but the appoint- ment was never officially announced, and Ferry was sent as Minister to Athens. He resigned that appointment alter one * year. After the resignation of Marshal MacMahon as President in 1878, M. Ferry was appoint- ed by President Grevy Minister of Public Instruction and Fine Arts. In 1887 he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Presiden- cy of the Republic, and in December of the same year he narrowly escaped assassina- tion by a mad man named Aubertin. In December, 1890, M. Ferry was eleclted Sena- tor. The Panama Canal scandal, which broke down so.many puplic men, caused many to turn their eye again toward M. Ferry, who was unsmirched by the devel- opments, and upon the retirement of M Leroyer from the Presidency of the Senate last month, M. Ferry was elected President on February 24. : —— el] Ppt et BIGGEST GUN ON EARTH, After a Stormy Passage It Arrives at Baltimore. After a tempestuous vogage across the North Atlantic from Hamburg, with the second co nsignment of the Krupp exhibit for the world's fair, the British steamship Lougueil arrived off Sparrows Point near Baltimore on Saturday. The chief article is the big 124-ton cannon. The steamer encountered stormy weather aimost all the way across. When it was Jeari.ed the first of the week tbat the steamer was overdue fears were expressed that the colossal can- non had gotten loose in the hold of the ship and had caused her loss, The caliber of the gun is the largest in the world, 19% inches. The projectiles fired from it weigh 2,600 pounds, and are four feet lonz. About seven hundred pounds of powder are used at a single shot, and the projectile 1s huried with such terrific force that it will go through a plate of steel 23 uches thick at a distance of nine miles. leita A BAY STATE 1DEA. An Extraordinary Liquor Bill Before the Massachusetts Legislature. An extraordinary liquor bill is now before the’ Massachusetts Legislature. It is en- dorsed by the Rev. Everett Hale, Mrs. Mary A. Livermore and others. It proposes to place tbe sale of liquor entirely in the hands of the State: The bill provides for the appoint- ment of a commission of three men. The chairman shall be designated the State li- quor manager. Thetowns shall yote yes or no as to whether liquor shall be sold there, and there shall be no license law. When a town votes to have liquor sold the commission shall provide for the sale by es- tablishing agencie<, not to exceed one for every 1,000 inhabitants. All shall be at prices established by the commission, and the price shall be only high enough to re- pay the State for its outlay. no profit being permitted to accrue from the sales over and above the ex.enses. Special efforts shall be made to prevent sales to persons of confirm- ed habits of intoxication, and only pure tiquors shall be sold. A COUNTY SNOWED UNDER. Travel Only Possible in Ulster, N. Y., by the Aid of Snow Shoes. Supervisor Jones, of the town of Haden- burg. Ulster county, N. Y., says the snow in the woods in that town is from 6 to 8 feet deep. Residents who are compelled to go out of doors go about on snow shoes, and many voters went in that way to town meeting last week, There has teen no church or Sunday school in that town in several months. In places the snow drifts are as high as the barns, and the furmers borrow hay to feed their cattle from neighbors a mile away car- rying it on their backs homme while they travel on gnow shoes, i arose and said: FIFTH ON THE SEA. That Will Be Our Power When Our New Navy is Afloat Ex-Secretary Tracy Speaks Highly of His Successor Who, in Turn, Compliments Mr. Tracy. Ex-Secretary Tracy's return {0 private life was formally celebrated by the Hamil- ton club of Brooklyn, by a banquet. By a bappy coincidence the new Secretary of the Navy Hilary A. Herbert, was enabled to be present, and the banquet incidentally be- came a glorification of the new navy, and gave the club, which is not a political or- ganization a chance to express it apprecia- tion of both the outgoing and incoming ad- ministrations, Ex-Secretary Tracy, in re- sponse to the cheers that greeted his name. in part said: That marked progress has been made in the reconstruction of the navy during the last administration ig, | believe, admitted by all. 1shall not on this occasion enter into the details of that progress. In my first annual report, in December, 1889, I stated that when all the ships which had been au- thorized up to that time should have been completed, the United States would still rank as the 12th naval power, and that we gwere absolutely at the mercy of States having less than one-third of our population, one-thiri- jeth of our wealth and one hundredth of oar area. But such is not the condition of the United States to-day. When the ships how in course of construction are completed we will rank as the firth naval power, surpass- ed only by England, France, Russia and Italy. We shall have passed both Span and Germany,and can once more take rank among the naval powers of the world. I am aware that th's is the first public announce- ment of our superiority to Germany, but the statement is nade not unadvi-edly, but after careful comparison of the two navies, ship by ship. For 50 years the management of the navy vards has been a scandal and disgrace to the country. They are filled with men em- ployed without reference to their fitness for the work they are set to do, Worthless men having political influence would be retained while efficient men without it would be dis- charged. On September 1, 1891, the connec- tion heretofore existing between the navy and politics was severed, and since then ployment has been dependent entirely upcn the needs of the service and the skill and efticiency of the person to be employed. ‘Tailors are no longer employed as riveters, upon iron ships, nor are shoemakers set to build steam engines. Any man can now go into a navy vard and offer his services and if he is needed he will be subjected to tris], and if found skillful will be retained, and if not he will be discharged. His re- tention or discharge depends entirely upon his personal fitness and not at all upon his polit:cal opinions, Secretary of the Navy Herbert followea, and, after complimenting his predecessor on his administration, said: | It is perhaps not the time for me to map out a programme, bng one thing I can say, no personal ambition shall tempt me to make changes for the sake of change. Ex- pressing my own opinion, I think we ought to carry on our programme of providing for at each session of Congress one or more new vessels for the navy, so as to keep up a reg- ular, methodical increase—not toa view to forming such navies ds those of France and England—we do not need such expensive organizations—but we do need a navy first- class in all its appointments. TREMONT TEMPLE BURNED. A Historic Place in Boston Destroyed a Third Time. The Largest Bap- tist Church in the Coun- try Wiped Out. Tire broke out about 7 o'clock Sunday morning 'in Tremont Temple, on Tremont street, opposite the Tremont House, Boston, Mass., and before noon the entire structure was gutted, entailing a loss roughly esti- mated of $375,000. Fireman Patrick Dunn of engine 26 had a leg broken, and another man, name unknown, is reported to have been seriously injured. ‘The Parker House was damaged to the extent of about £50,020 by water. It stood adjoining the temple. Beside the Union temple Church, the Rev. Dr. George C. Lorimer, pastor, the fol- jowing were among the concerns occupying offices in the Temple building: Blish School of Oratory, American Baptist Missionary Mission, Home Mission Society, the busi- nessand editorials departments of The Watchman and the Baptist Social Union, offices of Womai's Voice and Loyal Women of America. Tremont Temple has been one of the most conspicuous public buildings of Boston for nearly a generation back. Originally the structure was widely known as the Tremont Theater. Since 1863 it has been celebrated all over the country as the largest Baptist church in New England, if not in America, and the headquarters of that denomination. The purpose of taking it for religious pur- poses was stated in tbe original appeal for purchase money, to found a free church in oston, where ‘‘all persons, whether rich or poor, without distinction of color or condi- tion might worship.” Tha price paid for the place was $55,000.to which §125,000 was added for furnishing and remodeling. On the night of March 31 1852, the temple was burned and John Hall, a citizen, was killed, and George Estes, a fireman of Engine No. 7, Charlestown, had his back broken and died shortly afterward. I'he loss was $178,355; insurance, $45,244, A new building on the old site was completed in December, 1853, at a cost of £126,000. On August 14, 1879, the building was de- styoyed again by fire, but was promptly re- built, and reopened on October 17, 1880, at a cost of more ihan $230.000. The auditorium was one of the largest in the country, being 122 feet in length, 72 in width and 66 feet in heighth. ‘The seating capacity was equal to an audience of 2,000 people, NINE MINERS KILLED. Bad Accident in an Indian Territory Coal Pit b Nine men were killed and eight probably fatally injured by an explosion at Alderson {1 Mine No. 1 of the Choctaw Coal Com: pany, near Mcilester, I, T. The disaster was caused by a ‘windy shot” fired by one of the victims. There were only 18 men in the mine at the time, all of whom were fir- ing shots. The dead who have been taken from the mine are: John McFadden, John E. Scan lon, W. E. Warren, Earnest Matthews, War- ren Love, Jules Triorori, The mine 1s on the line of the Choctaw railroad and was opened in May, 1889. —— meee DIED IN Tuk HARNESS A Temperance Advocate Gets Cut ofa Bick Bed to 8peak and Dies. 3 The annual meeting of the Kast Cam- bridge Woman’s Christian Temperance Un- ion at Boston, Mass., was abruptly inter rupted by the sudden death of the Rev. William Grabam, who was introduced to speak on **The Temperance Outlook.”” He ‘‘1 came here out of a sick bed to show the side am on.” The sent- ence was bardly spoken when he fell buck dead. a Paid For Violets With Her Life. At Dublin, Ga., Kate Parker, 12 years old, died from a raitlesnake’s bite received while picking violets. WINTER-WHEAT PROSPECTS. ee 8 di : } az . Beports from Numerous SBtates Indicate i & es were raiding the ranches an a Fair Conditions. The Farmer's Review of Chicago says: Re- ports from the principal wheat-growing states in the West show that the crop is at that stage when not mnch can be told by appearances, but a few weeks will show the tiue situation, In Illinois the appearances are decidedly against a full crop, but it is probable thst a few weeks will improve the outlook. At the present in many fields the tops of the wheat plants have been killed, but the roots seem to be all right. Judging by present appear- ances, almost half of the repor:s indicate a condition 20 per cent.below an average; one- fifth of the reports indicate a full average and the rest are decidedly poor. In Indiana the general condition is re- ported as fair, which means a little below an average. In Ohio the present condition is much ahead of that in Illinois and Indiana. More than half of the correspondents re- port the outlook as good and that the crop appears to have come through the winter in fine shape. : In Michigan the condition is similar to that in Ohio, half of tl.e counties reporting the outlook as good. In a few localities it is believed that the wheat has heen greatly injured. but there is no certainty of this as theic- still remains. In other localities the snow is rapidly disappearing and wheat looks quite as well agit did last fall. In a few counties it is small from the effect of the iv and drouth. On low ground some wheat is known to have been smothered out by ice. In Kentucky the general condition is fair. it liu been damaged in some counties by freezing and thawing and has been lifted out of the ground. but is again taking root and promises a fair crop. In Missouri the condition is hardly fair. Only one-fourth report the condition as a full average. Some correspondents report the wheat frozen out in places and that the fields witl have to be plowed up. In some of the fields the crop cannot be over one- half the average, Generally speaking the early sown fields are good. Late sown fields are of doubtful condition, In Kansas and Nebraska the condition is fair to good. The plant in some counties is starting to grow and has a good color at the roots. In Iowa the condition is nearly an aver- age. 41 Wisconsin the snow came 2arly and kept the plant covered all winter, In some places where thesnow has melted the condi- tion appears to be fair. THE SENATE SPECIAL SESSION. Moxpsy.—The Senate reconvened to-day and discussed for nearly an hour; the reso- lution offered lust week by Mr. Manderson, Republican, of Nebraska, intended to limit the acticn of the Senate in the present extraordinary session to ‘executive matters or to legisgtion not requiring co-operation on the part of the House. Objections was made and the question finally went over without any decision, It will come up for action at the next meeting of the Senate on Wednesday. No nominctions were received from the President and the seaate adjourn- ed till Wednesday. WroNespav.—The President to-day sent a batch of nominations to the senate, among them being these: William McAdoo of New Jersey, assistant secretary of the navy; Ed- ward B. Whitney of New York, assistant attorney general. The vice president introduced resolutions of the Massachusetis legislature favoring the annexation of the Hawaiian islands Mr. Sherman suggested that they should have been presented in &xecutive session. They were laid on the table. After an executive session Mr. Gorman's resolution naming the committees of the senate was agreed to. The senate adjourned until to-morrow. r. McAdoo was a member of the Forty- eighth and Forty-ninth congresses. Heisan Irishman by birth and not yet 40 years of age. In the house be trained with the pro- tection wing of the Democracy. Edward B. Whitney was an active member of the anti- snapper organization. He was one of the protesting delegates sent by the anti-snap- pers to Chicago. TrurepaY—The Senate was in session but 10 minutes to-day. The only items of business transacted were the presentation of various memorials from the Legislature of North Dakota and the reference of a resolu. tion for the appointment of a clerk to the Committee on National banks, at $1,440 per aunum. Then Mr. Gorman, Democrat, of Maryland, moved an adjournment, and the Senate, at 12:10, adjourned - till Monday noon. Flour in the Northwest. The Northw'estern Mi!l-r of Minneapolis says: The mills were able to run much more steadily last week and their output showed an increase of about 25,000 barrels. The total out put for the week was 159,995 barrels, averaging 26,666 barrels daily against 135,110 barrels the week before, 156,- 615 barrels for the corresponding time in 1892, and 125,200 barrels in 1891. A larger capacity is in operation this week and the manufacturers will doubtless show another gain, If there has been any change in the flour trade it has been for the worse. Mil- lers pretty generally characterize the present situation as one of the most unsatisfactory they ever experienced. Buyers, both at home and abroad, lack confidence in prices. and they are loth to trade except for imme- diate disposition or to take advantage of some offer manifestly below the market. For the past week the prices were still further shaded, the orders taken being con- siderly short of the output. MONEY COST HER LIFE. A Servant Girl Burned to Death in Philadelphia. From a fire in an open grate in the sitting room of the residence of Jamas W. Wood at 42)3 Walnut street, I’hiladelphia, was partially destroy- ed. Rose Gallagher, a servant, was burned to death and the adjoining property of Miss Elizabeth W. Morris at 4204 Walnut street was badly damaged. The loss is about 20,- 0.0. Rose Gallagher and another servant had escaped, but the former, remembering that she had left all her savinss in her bureau drawer, re-entered the house to se- cure her money. She never returned, and when the fire was extinguished the firemen found the charred body of the girl lying on the floor before the open drawer of the | bureau. i en HELD UP IN THEE CITY HALL. A Bold Daylight Robbery in Chicago’s Most Public Building. H. G. Fox, collector for the First National Bank, was held up and robbed of $1,200 on one of the stairways of the City Hall at Chi- cago He had just received $300 from the City Treasurer and $900 from the County Treas- urer, and was descending the dark stairway to the main Hoor when, at the turn of the staircase, a man threw his arms about his neck and choked him almost to insensibil- ity. The fellow then seized the two pack- ges and escaped, et im Something Like Old Slave Times. George Winn, a vagrant negro, was sold on the block at Fayette, Mo., under the va- grant law. His services for six months ' was bought for $20. | Fashion, and Household De . An Apache Teriure. In the summer of 1882, when tha, baciendas of southern Arizona, said Thad R. Morris, I was a private ir Company, K, stationed at Whipple Barracks. The Indians had caueed the department ceaseless trouble, We were kept on the' march continually, but for two months we failed to get close enough to them to' become engaged in a fight, One morn-; ing, while we were camped at the base of the Chirscon Mountains, a courier came to the camp bringing the information: that a band of about 200 renegade bucks’ had attacked a small emigrant train about ten miles away and bad killed the entire party. We were soon ia our sad- dles and were riding rapidly towards the - scene. The Gay was almost insufferably hot. The sky was not obscured by a single cloud and the sun beat down with excruciating fierceness upon the weary goldiers. When arrived upon the scene of tbe massacre, we found the bodies ly— ing about on the burning sands Rorribly mutilated. We had made but a short stop and had mounted our horses to give chase to the redskins, when I heard faint groans. It was some time before we could locate the piace whence the agon- izing sound came. Finally we found it. The Indians had skinned one of the dead horses and had sewed up a man (whose pame was E. R. Tarieton from Ohio) tightly in the green hide. His body was doubled up and the hide was closely tied around him. We released him as quickly, as we could, and applied restoratives’ that soon brought him fo himeelf. But when he gazed around at his murdered family, he drew a knile trom his pocket, and before any one could stop him cub his throat. Tying a man up in a green hide was a new mode of torture to the soldiers. They had never seen it before. But I ‘have since learned that in the early days of that Territory it was not infrequently applied by the Chericans as well as the Apaches.—S8t, Louis Globe-Democrat. DREAD CERTAINTIES FORETOLD. What Climave. Neglect and Want of the | Proper Medicine Will Do. ‘There are some things which are as sure as fate and can be relied on to occur to at least one-half of the human family unless means are taken to prevent: First, the climate of winter is sure to bring colds; second, colds, not promptly cured,are sure to cause catarrh; third, catarrh, im- properly treated, is sure to make life short and miserable. Catarrh spares no organ or function of the body. It is capable of destroying sight, taste, smell, hearing, digesiion, secretion, assimildtion and excretion. It pervades every part of the human body—head, throat, stomach, bowels, bronchial tubes, lungs, liver, kidneys, bladder, and sexual organs. Catarrh is the cause of at least oue half of the ills to which the human family is sub- ject, Isthere no way to escape from it? There is. Pe-ru-na never fails to cure a cold. Pe-ru-na never fails to cure catarrh in the first stage. Pe ru-na cures catarrh in the second stage in nine cases out of ten. Pe-ru- na cures catarrh in its last and worst stages in the majority of cases, and never fails to benefit every case, however bad. Pe. ru-na also cures la grippe, coughs and consump- tion in the first stages with unfailing cer- tainty. : A book on the cure of throat and lung diseases and catarrh in all stages and vari- eties sent free to any address by The Pe-ru- na Drug Manufacturing Company of Col= umbus, Ohio. Jews Are on Top Now. Pharaoh, who drove the Jews out of Egypt, 1300 B. C., was not aware that a Jew would be the premier of Egypt 1893 A. D. The Jewish Riaz ; Pasha is now the primc minister of Egypt's ruler, even as Joseph, the son of Jacob, was the pricie minister of another of Egypt's rulers. Trom the seat of his power, Riaz benoids the pyramids which his ancestors helped to build for the mummies of the Pharaohs. The fellahcen of Egypt are under the Jewish pasha, as the Jewish bricklayers were once cnder Pharaoh. , Best of All To cleanse the system in a gentle and truly bevneficial manner, when the Springtime comes, use the true and perfect remedy,Syrup of Figs. One bottle will answer for all the family and costs only 50 cents; the large size $1. Try it and be pleased. Manufactured by the Califor nia Fig Syrup Co. only. In the Alaska mines potatoes sell for 50 cents each and tobacco for #16 a plug, Thera 1s more catarrh in this section of th country than all other diseases put ie and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors ronounced it a local disease, and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it fn- curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure. manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upoix the blood ax d mucous surfaces of the system. 100 for any case it fails to cure. Togas ao lestimenials 1 Address . . J. CHENEY 0. To. o EF" Sold by Druggists, i5c. Yo $0.0 The largest Canadian fish hatchery is al Selkirk. lt hasa capacity of 15,000,000. We eat too much and take too litt] - exercise. This is the fault of our ye aden zation: J ix Flanned that Garfield lea, a simple herb reme N J ‘ox Se um 283, 1g ps Nature to overcome _ A Cincinnati stamp collectors’ just organized has 18 members. society CouGHS AND HOARSENESS,.—The irritation which induces conrhing relieved by use of * Brown's Bronchial Troehes.’” Sold only in boxes Uncle Sam's boys have $30,000,000 J Sam's boys of c: ital invested in Hawaii. ae cap A Complete Newspaper For One A Co > Cent. The Pittshurgh Chronicle-Telegraph 15 mt by all News Agents and delivered by Carriers everywhere, tor One Cent a copy or Nix Cents a week. It containi daily, thé news of the world, receiving as it does, the reports of both the Associated Press and the United Press, Ng other paper which sells for One Cent rensives both of these reports. Its Sporting, Finarroine 1 partments tar ctqualed. Order it from your Morea agate bs If afMicted with sore eyes use Dr 1s « £ B 2 Dr, Isaac’ ton’s Eye-water. Druggistssell at Tomb. EN EE rw itis A pres crea pon. and usec The qua iy wor thre Fol pin.