The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, December 07, 1893, Image 2

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    THE NEW TARIFF BILL
i
ENLARGING TEE FREE LIST.
To Take Effect March 1, Except in Wool-
en Goods.
een
The new tariff bill as given to the pabiic
reads as follows: On and alter the first day
of March, 1894, the following articles fortke
use of the United States are to be added to
the free list:
Bscon and hams, beef, mutton, pork and
meals of al} kinds, prepared or unpreserved,
not Specially provided tor in this act.
Baryta, all binding twine manufactured
wholly or in part from 1stle or Tampico
fiber, manila, sisal grass, or sann, of single
ply and measuring not exceeding 600 feet to
the pound.
Birds stuffed, not suitable for millinery
ornaments and bird skins prepared for
preservation , bat not further advanced in
manufacture.
Blue vitriol or sulphate of copper.
Bone char, sutiabiz for use in aecolorizing
sugar,
Coal.bituminous and shale, and coal slack
or culm coke, coal tar crude, and all prep-
aralions and products of coal tar, not colors
or dyes not specially provided for in this
act, oxide of cobalt.
Copper imported in the form of ores; old
copper, fit only for manufacture; clippings
from new copper and all composition metal
of which copper is 4 component material
of chief value not especially provided for in
this act, regulus of copper and black or
coarse copper and copper cement; copper in
plates, bars, ingots or pigs and other forms,
not manufactured, no. specially provided
for in this act; copperas or sulphate of
iron.
Cotton ties of iron or steel. cut to lengths,
punched, with or without buckles for bolt-
ng cotion.
iamonds, dust or bort, and jewels to be
used in the manufacture of ~ watches or
clocks.
Yolks of ezgs of birds fish, and insects.
Downs of all kinds crude, not s, ecially pro-
vided for in this act. :
¥resh fish, furs,
sublimated.
Iron ore, including manganiferous iron
ore, also the dross or residium from burnt
pyrites and sulphur ore, and pyrites or
sulpburet of iron in iis natural state.
Lard. Lemon juice, lime juice and sour
orange juice.
Mica and metallic mineral substances in a
rude state, and metals unwrought, not spe-
cially provided for in this act,
Ochre and ochrey earths, siennajand sien-
na earths; umber aud umber earths,
specially provided for in this act.
Cottonseed oil. Paintings, in oil or water
colors, ana statuary, not otherwise provided
for in this act.
Plows, tooth and disc;
ers; reapers, drills, and
tivators, threshing
ins.
Piush, black,
Quicksilver; salt,
Silk, partially manufactured from cocoons
or from waste silk, and not farther ad-
vanced or manufactured than carded or
combed silk. Soap, all not otherwise speci-
ally provided for in this act.
dulphate or soda or salt cake or nitre cake.
Sulphuric acid.
allow and wool grease.
undressed. Iodine re-
harrows, bharvest-
mowers; rakes, cul-
for making men’s Lats.
including that
known commercially as degras or brown
wool grease.
Straw. Burr stones, bound up into mill
stones; free stone, granite, sandstone, lime-
stone and other building or ornamental
stone, except marble, manufactured or
undressed not specially provided for in this
act.
All wearing apparel and other personal
effects shall be admitted free of duty with-
out regard to their value upon their iden-
tity being established under such rules and
regulations as the secretary of the treasury
may prescribe.
Timber, hewn and sawed, and timber us-
ed for spars and for building wharves;
* timber squared or sided; sawed board plank
deals, and other lumber; laths, picket and
palings; shingles, staves of wood of all
kiods; wood unmannfactured. Provided
that if any exportd-ty is laid upon the
above mentioned articles, or either of them
all said articles imported from said country
shall be subject to duty as now provided by
law. Chair cane or reeds wrouglit or man-
ufactured from rattans or reeds.
‘Woods, namely,cedar.lignum vitae, lance-
wood, ‘ebony, box, granadilla, mahogany,
rosewood, satinwood and all forms of cabi-
net woods, in the log, rough or hewn; bam-
bco and rattan, unmanufactured; briar root
or briar wood and similar wood unmanufac-
tured; bamboo, reed and sticks of partridge,
hair wood, pimento, orange, myrtle and
other wood, inthe rough or not further
manufactured than cutinto lengths,suitable
tor sticks for umbrellas, parasolg.sunshades
whipsor walking canes.
All wool of the sheep hair of the camel,
goat, alpaca and other like animalsand all
wool and hair on theskin;noils,yarn, waste,
card waste, burr wasteand flogs, including
all waste or rags co ysed wholly or in
part of wool. TR
All manufactures of iron and steel have
a tariff of 25 per cent advalorem, excepting
cast hollow ware, coated, glazed or tinred,
and chains of all kinds made of iron and
steel, 30 per cent ad valorem.
The bounty on sugar, which was to be so
promptiy repealed, 1s, instead, to be re-
pealed by easy graduations and will not
reach its conclusive effect until after the
ena ortne present century. The duty on
refined sugar is from % to } ofacenta
pound. Raw sugar remains free of tax.
The McKinley bounty is repealed progres-
sively—that is # each year—so that at the
end of eight years it is to cease entirely.
. COUGHLIN’S JURY FIXED.
A Reveiation That Will Probably Re-
quire an Entire New Venire.
Discovery of an alleged attempt to eor—
rupt the jury has brought the progress of
the Coughlin trial at Chicago to an abrupt
pause. Thestate's attorney was given in-
formation just before court opened that
certain jurors, whose names the officials
wound not divulge, are intimately connect-
ed with some of Coughlin’s friends; that
they were placed in the venire for the pur-
pose of gett ng them on the jury, and that
they were ‘ coached” how they were to an-—
=wer all que~tions put to them in order to
quaiify themselves as jurors. All their
replies as to their acquaintance with per-
scns interested in the case and their
knowledge of the previous trial are said to
be fulse. :
A dozen detectives were put to work in-
vestizating the allegations and affidavits
embodying the facts were hastily prepared
to be sworn to. itis said the entire jury
way le dismissed, as the only escape irom
the consequences of the alleged plot of
Coughlin’s friends. It is also said the de-
fense has used the jury Jist for six months
back in preparation for the trial. One jury-
man is alleged to have served on another
jury inside that time On his apg earauce at
ihe mal he changed the middle initial of
his name
Caught Playing Craps.
A squad of police made a descent on
Frank Bennett's crap game on Vine street
Cincinnati, and a number of men were ar-
rested, among them Harry Hill, the fugi-
Atlanta forger, who is wanted for forgeries
amounting to $22,000. Hill is known as the
“Society Forger’ and used the name of the
wite of President Porter, of the Merchants’
Bank of Atlanta, in his forgeries. He was
quietly released on £6,000 bond Friday anc
slipped away from the city. His victims
made vo effort to have him rearrested, and
.the Atlanta people have been notitied of his
eapture here.
| past week has grown better or worse.
not |
| ber
machines and cotton |
| ansurger ts
i
| off with its surplus, loans amounting
STATE OF TRADELESS CLEAR.
Uncertainty About Tariff Legislation
Causes Stagnation in Business and
Little Demand for Legitimate
Investment.
R.G. Dun & Co.’s weekly
Trade says:
It cannot be said that business during the
For
some days the gain in demand and in trans.
actions which bad been previously noticed,
evidently continued. But afterward tariff
“Review of
| uncertainties were thoughtto effect some
branches of business and whatever the
causes, the state of trade was less
Money was everywhere abundant with rates
comparatively low and the commercial de-
mand was remarkably small, while the de- |
mand for speculative uses appeared to
be increasing. When there are symp-
¢>ms of a transition state, ordinary indica-
tions based npon the course of business
dowu to a few days ago, are not as valuable
as usual, but on the whole such signs are,
however, less encouraging than they were
a week ago. Reports ot different branches
of trade and from different cities frequent-
ly mention the tariff’ uncertainties as a
cause of natural hesitancy, but it will take
some time to determine whether the gener-
al tendency toward improvement has been
checked or to what extent. The volume of
trade has been son ewhat increased and yet
not as much as was expected. The indus-
tries are waiting with visible uncertainty
regarding the outcome of tariff legislation.
1t is a question whether the werk ng force
employed is larger than it was a week ago.
The sales of wool are again larger than
for the same week last year, amounting to
6,619,800 pounds against 4,354,500 pounds last
vear, but part of the transactions are said
10 be speculative, being based on the the ry
that whatever may happen, later the neces-
sities of the country will compel a larger
consumption within the next few months.
‘The vast accumulation of idle money tends
to stimulate speculation, but it is not a
good sympton. It shows a remarkable
shrinkage in the volume of trade, ,and the
reports from all quarters makes it clear
that the demand for money is
light for the season.
for four weeks from New York amount to
$30,112,530 against $20,671,173,
the decrease in imports is
000,007 for the four weeks, so that the
excess of exports for the whole coun-
try must be large. No gold comes this way
and heavy shipments of silver are maae to
London. = Apparently this country is paying
in
many millions which were eflected
Europe to avert great disasters
| mer.
The failures during the past week num-
278 against 237 for thesame week of
last year and in Canada 48 against 33 last
year.
A BATTLE FOUGHT.
Rout Peixoto's Troops.
Heavy Losses on Both Sides.
The latest dispatch received from Rio de
Janeiro is as flows: The insurzentsin Rio
Grande do Sul uave been \ictorious in a
battle with the government forces near
Bage, Gen. Isido o of the goveinme 1t forces
was taken prisoner. Both sides suffered
heavy losses. The report that Curitiba had
been captured by the insurgents is denied.
The government jorts at Rio de Janeiro
continue to cannonade the insurgent war-
ship. The transport Madeira has been set
on fire by the expiosion of a shell from the
forts,and the Aquidaban,the most powerful
vessel of the insurgent fleet, has been seri-
ously damaged.
‘The insurgent admiral, Gama, states the
Joss of the monitor Javary is not impor ant.
He says that the addition of the Taman-
dare with ten 6 inch and two 5 inch quick
firing guns and a heavy complement of
machine and Hotchkiss guns, will more
than compensate for the loss.
‘I'he artillery fire of the forts continues.
The fire from the shore upon Ft, Villignan-
on continued. The losson both sides is
small. The insurgent general, Irar, is re-
ported to be eighty miles south of Saolaulo
The government bas ordered the national
guard in the state of Sao Paulo 10 proceed
south to meet the insurgents. ‘The jnational
guard refused to comply with the order and
the government will therefore send 1,200
men from Rio de Janeiro against the
enemy.
Aumiral Gama will assume command of
the insurgent fleet in the harbor on Thurs
day, when Admiral Mello will leave with
the Aquidaban. Admiral Gama states
positively that he will not bombard the
city unless the city ifires upon his
ships.
I thousand men, felly equipped, are
wailing Desterro, ready to march against
the government forces. Political arrests
continue in Rio and 1,500 persons are now
in pr son. Two Biazilians hase beenarrest-
ed vn board the mail steamer ‘lemar.
President Peixoto has become alie ated
from the sympathy of all decent people,and
s.ands atone with his army. Many persons
join the insurgents daily. The states of
Bahiaand Para favor the insurgents. The
island of Cobras is strongly fortitied with a
garrison of 300 insurgent sailors.
LATER.— + he insurgent admiral, Mello,
has finally succeeded 1n forcing a passage
ast the forts guarding the entrance of the
ay of Rio Janeiro, and that bis flagship,
the Aquidaban, is now on jthe high seas.
The passage was not eflected antil some
desperate fighting had beengdone.
The entrance 18 guarded by Fort Sao Joao
and a water battery on the strip of land ex-
tending nortbea t from the Sugar Loaf,
Fort Lage, Fort Santa Cruz and Fort Pico.
When the ship,wasseen approaching the
forts a heavy fire was directea against her.
She replied briskly and the fight was kept
up until she ran past the fort; and was out
of range. It was seen that some of the
shots trom the forts took effect and it is be-
lieved that the Aquidaban sustained con-
siderable damage. The government forces,
particularly the troops manning the water
battery, suffered severely. It is conjectur-
ed at Rio Janeiro that the Aquidaban will
effect repairs as radidly as possible at sea
and then cruise in the vicinity of Cape 5 |
an
oque to intercept the Nictheroy
America, President Peixoto’snew ships.
GLOOMY VIEW
Of the Knights’ Future Taken by Mine
Worker John McBride.
A decidedly gloomy view of the future of
the Knights of Labor is taken by John Mc-
Bride, President of the United Mine Work-
ers of America. McBride was a recognized
leader of the Powdely forces, but says the
Hayas faction had so organized the ‘body
that all they could do was to oppose and
expose as the Hayes crowd had the vote
every time.
“I anticipate the complete dissolution of
the Knights of Labor. The official reports
to the assembly showed a nomical member-
ship of but 70,000 and of 1hese but 40,000 are
paid up. When you remember that most
of these have stuck because Terry Powder-
ly was in the lead, it isnot hard to see that
they will rapidly drop off now that he has
been turned down. The order owns propery
worth about $60 000. Maybei1t will bring
balf that at forced sale. [ suppose the
assets will all be absorbed in the payment
of the outstanding obligations and in
salaries.
Sm —— i
Death of Emin’s Son.
A dispatch from Boma Tsports the death
of Dr. Emin’s young son, who was detained
by the Arabs after the murder of |
explorer and was rescued by the Belgian
troops near Nyangwe, in the Congo State.
The boy's motner was Emin's native mis- |
tress.
clear: |
unusually |
The domestic exports |
while |
over $£10,- |
to |
last sumi- |
McBride said to a reporter:
the |
| STUDENTS SUSPENDED |
l For Raiding Restaurants and Stealing |
| Everything in Sight. |
| Eight of the most popular Amherst stu- |
| lents have been suspended for looting
| restaurants aud disorderly conduct on their |
| return from Hanover, where they had been |
iothbe Dartmouth- Amherst football game.
On Saturday, November 11, 350 Amherst
|
students were returning from Hanover, N.
|H.. to Amherst on a special. The train
stopped at various stations for refreshments
and the restaurant keepers seized the oppor-
| tunity to charge exorbitant prices for their
| food.
| The boys concinded that it was much
| cheaper to take what they wanted tban to
pay the high prices charged, so they began
helping themselves. The stone once started
kept on rolling, and as they went on their
journey they took more from each new
place. “At Greenfield they cleaned out the
| restaurant, rood, dishes and ali. One young
man was so enterprising as to steal a bottle
of soda and after he had drank the soda he
carried back the bottle and got a nickel
tor it.
Some others thought that it would be
smart to carry home a baggage truck. so at
one of the small stations where they stop ed
for water a hand truck was taken alongand
was highly valued as a trophy. The au-
thorities objected to the extent of theftsand
reported the matter to the Amherst faculty
with the above result.
S———— bn v——
ADJOURNED TO FIGHT FIRE.
Pastorsi Lead Their Congregations to
Prevent a Conflagration of Cotton.
A spark {from a passing locomotive set fire
,to some cotton in a big warehouse yard at
Livingston, Ala. Almostin a moment sev-
eral scores of bales caught fire. There was
| ‘more than 1,000 bales in the yard, and the
,watchman could do nothing alone. On an
impulse he rushed toa church near by
where services were being held. The watch-
iman jumped up on a pew and called out,
louder than the preacher or the music:
|: “The cotton yard is burning; come and
| ‘help me fightthe fire.”
The minister threw off his ceat and called
to his congregation to follow him. ‘They
were soon in the midst of the burning cot-
ton and men. women and children were
fighting the fire. The news soon reached
the other church and it adjourned in like
| manner and mingled in the battle with the
fiery element. After two hours’ fight all
but 60 bales were extinguished and removed
trom danger, Sixty were entirely destroy-
ed.
LAUDANUM AND MUSH.
The Dose 2a UtahWoman Gave Her Uncle
in Order to Secure $2,000.
At Salt Lake Mrs. Emma Van Patten has
been arrested on the charge of murdering
Soren Neilson, a wealthy banker of Fn'-
riam City. The 20th of last October
son suddenly and mysteriously died and a
post mortem examination revealed the
presence of rough on rats and laudanum in
‘his stomach. Mrs. Van Patten, who is a
neice of Neilson, was visiting her uncle at
the time. Investigation has elicited the
fact that Mrs. Van Patten bad the evening
before Neilson’s death purchased a vial ot
landanum. Mush and milk, which was
served the same evening and of which Neil-
son partoo:, proved fatal when administer-
ed toseveral fowls It was learned that
2.000 which Neilson had in his room the
evening before his death had disappeared
next day.
erat wart aes nel
AN ARMY OF SPIES.
State Liquor Business in South Carolina
Makes a Poor Showing.
The experiment of State control of the
iiquor tratlic has been in operation in South
Cerolina for four months and the report of
the State Treasurer has just been completed
An analysis shows that the State dispensary
has cost $134 473 and that it has paid back
$100,332, leaving a deficit of $34,161. lt is
Jso shown that the county dispensers owe
the State Treasury $85,000, which includes
all the stock on hand in county dispen-
saries.
No statement is given of how much the
State owes for liquor, but after all due al-
lowances. the State appears to be $40,00)
ehead on the four months’operations, which
means a profit of $120,000 a year. But this
profit on the books isa very difterent thing
from a clean net cash profit, and the indica-
tions are that the returns from the dispen-
sary at the end of the year will never be
felt by the people in lessening the tax rate.
ae
Hot Fighting in Mexico.
Persons who Lave just arrived at El Paso,
Tex., from Chihauhau confirm reports of a |
severe battle between the Federal troops
and the insurgents. Last Thursday morn-
ing a number of officers were brought in
from the West to the army hospital. It was
reported that they were ill of dysentary.but
it is positively known that they had been
shot in battle. Where it was fought is not
known. Neither can it be learn d ho v many
officers were broughtin. The reports of
continued movement of Federal troops to
the west and northwest fom Chihuahua
have also been confirmed.
His Watch Is Missing.
The Rev. William Johnson, one of the |
best known colored preachers of Decatur, |
Ga., is in jail. Thos. Echols, a financial |
pillar of the church, notified Mr. Johnson |
that one his children was sick unto death |
and requested prayer. The ‘prayer was at |
the child's bedside. Mr. Johuson asked the |
father to pray also. When the men arose
from their knees Mr. Echols tound that his
watch was gone, He studied over the mat-
ter and after the preacher had gone decided
to have him arrested. The congregation
stands by the pastor and insist that Echols
is an agent of the devil.
|
|
ee |
|
|
For Charity’s Sake.
General Russell A. Alger, of Detroit, has
been id Cleveland several days in consulta-
tion, it is said, with some of the heaviest
stockholders in the Michigan iron mines
He istrying to induce them to resume
operations, so that the starving miners may
find employment. General Alger says that
if the men can be given work only a part of
the time the State of Michigan will appro:
priate money to help them through the
winter,
—_———
Ore Mine On Fire. :
The timbering on the third evel of the Ve-
wabicmine Iron Mountain, Mich,, caught
fire and 356 men were torced to the surface.
The mine has been hermetically sealed in an
attempt to smother the flames and it is im-
possible to estimate the damage. The Pe-
wabic is the cnly mine working here and
unless the fire is soon smothered it means a
hard blow tothe miners
_— eet———
THis season's orange crop in Florida is
much above the average in quantity, being
estimated at 5,000,000 boxes, and is much
earlier than usual. While during the whole
of last season some 58,000 boxes were shipped:
through Savannah to New York City, more
than 83,000 boxes have already been shipped
there this year. Unusually large shipments
have also been made to Europe, where’
Florida oranges are now beginning to com-
| pete successtully with Mediterranean fruit.
———
THE cholera in Kussia is less virulent. The
official statistics show that from May to Sep-
| tember, 1892, there were throughout the Em.
pire 433,643 cases of the disease and 215,157
deaths, and from January to November, 1898,
76.167 cases and 30,284 deaths.
| crib to a place of safety.
| $20,000 to the
| $10,000 to each of five nieces aud the bal-
| ance of his fortune of nearly ha fa million
| is to be divided among his
dissertation on the subject.
| particularly on the fact that these
A 3 YEAR OLD HERO,
PortstowN—Three year old John Wang-
er, son of George F. Wanger, and nephew
| of Congressman Wanger,is a little hero. His
| home is in North Covertry township, Ches-
ter county. - While his mother was absent
the kitchen was set on fire was set on fire
by an explosien of the stove.
Little John’s |
|
{
|
|
|
| infant brother lay cooing in a cradle near |
the stove, but before the flames reached it |
plucky John dragged the babe out of his
cared harm, although it will cost $500 to re-
pair the house.
MADE WHOLE BY FAITH.
John Y. Spayd of Reading had the sight
of one eye destroyed six months ago by hot
metal. He is a believer in the faith cure
and has praved incessantly to heaven that
his sight be restored. Sunday night, in the
church which he attends, he suddenly cried,
“Thank God,’ and announced that he was
able to see, His sightis now as good as
ever. Five hundred people were witne:ses
to the case.
COL. TYSON PARALYZED.
Col. A. Harvey Tyson, ex-engineer of the
State Foresty Commission and ex-member
of Gov. Patterson’s staff, who is in prison
at Reading awaiting trial for defrauding
Secretary of the Commonwealth Harrity
and other prominent officials, is paralyzed
and unable to walk without crutches. His
speech is also affected and his appearance
in court for trial is doubtful.
——
A CHANCE FOR FAIR SOUVENIRS.
The furniture in the Pennsylvania state
building is being packed and shipped to
Harrisburg, where it will be sold at auction
December 12. The commissioners think
| they can realize a better orice for the furni-
| ture among the people of their own state,
who will want to secure a souvenir because
it was in useduring the Exposition.
ie
FELL ON A RED HOT STOVE.
At Beaver Falls a little daughter of Ed-
ward Griffin while playing in an upstairs
room fell through a ventilator and alighted
on a red hot stove. Before she could be
rescued she was terribly burned, perhaps
fatally.
Tur will of the late George Sheldon has
heen filed for probate at Erie. It gives
amot hospital conditionally,
nephews and
nieces, having no children of his own.
Ax execution for §25000 was issued
against the Harrisburg Boiler Manufactur-
ing Co. of Hanisburg by Edward Bailey,
trustee for certain stockholders. President
Disbrou says the creditors will be paid in
full.
NEwToN GERRAD, of Somerset county, was
thrown under a heavily loaded wagon at
Addison and instantly killed. . He attempt-
ed to draw the lock when the bar broke and
threw him under the wheel.
At Bedford, Marion Cessna, son of the
Hon. John Cessna, committed suicide on
‘'hursday. He had been in poor health,
and until recently an inveterate cigarette
smoker.
Awmoxa pensions granted in Pennsylvania
are: Daniel L. Platt, Birney, Braaford
county; Jane Williams, Jobnstown,Cambria
county; Melville 8. Stone, Pittsburg, an in-
crease.
CrarLE8 F. Kinnear, of Warren, serving
a five year and nine months’ penitentiary
sentence for embezzlement, beginning in
June, 1890, was pardoned by Governor Pat-
tison.
AT Uniontown a 6 vear old daughter of
Edward Butler was burned to beath by her
clothes catching fire from a stove in her
father’s store. She was dead when discov-
ered.
JouN McEvoy, who was shot while rob-
bing George H. Cutter & Bros. hardware
store at Meadville is dead. The corner’s
jury justified the shooting.
Peter FANNON, a well known young man
of Hollidaysburg, was struck by a train near
there Saturday night. He froze to death
alongside the track.
Jupce WickHaM has decided at Beaver
that running street cars on Sunday is a
violation of the Sunday observance law of
1812.
At Johnstown, Michael Dujeck. adjudg-
ed insane and placed in the city prison, was
found dead in hts cell.
- - —
ORACULAR FOR IHE LAST 1I1ME.
How a Lecture on the Sharpness of Train
Newsboys Was Made Valueless.
There is one man in New York who
has learned not to display his knowl.
edge of human nature to an unsym-
pathetic world. How he was cured
was recently told by him to the Tri-
bune. He was traveling with his
| wite, and the talk drifted into a dis-
cussion of the sharpness of train
newsboys. What followed is thus re-
lated. ‘*As 1 told you before, I used
to think that my knowledge of hu-
man nature was very deep. Well, I
let myself loose on this cccasion and
gave my wife the benefit of quite a
I dwelt
newsboys become exceedingly good
judges of characver, and that they
depended upon this faculty to a large
| extent to make a living in their line
of business. 1 went so far as to as-
sert, that they could even tell, by
studying a man’s face, pretty nearly
what his tastes were in the matter
of the bonks which he liked to read.
This is where I got too wise. Soon
after making this assertion 1 was sit-
ting in the seat next in front of that
occupied by my wife, when the boy
came along with an armful of books.
He stopped when he reached my seat,
looked at me critically for a few sec-
onds, then pulled out a book from the
bottom of the pile which he carried
in his arms, and, leaning over con-
fidentially, said in a tone which un-
fortunately was loud enough for my
wife to hear plainly: ‘This book has
been suppressed.’ My wife was sud-
denly intensely interested in aa ex-
ceedingly ordinary landscape when I
looked around at her, but I could see
from the amused expression about
the corners of her mouth that she
had taken in the situation. You
may be sure she laughed when the
boy was gone, and everytime I try to
grow oracular with her she only has
to refer mysteriously to this incident,
when I, of course, am compelled to
| close up as tightly as a clam.”
| £2,328 on thestrength of a new city directory.
Both children es- |
| of Awards of the World's Fair to Washing-
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
CHicaco has a deficit of $1,300,0 00.
TeE unclaimed funds in the English courts
amount to £339,252,410.
GOVERNMENT telegraph operators in Italy
have gone out on strike.
A GoverNMEXT medical school has been
established at Washington.
TWENTY-FIVE TEOUSAND horses are used in
the carrying trade of London.
A PHILADELPHIA tailor is making ar over-
coat for a customer which is to cost $800.
Tacoma, Wash., claims a population of
It has been decided to remove the Bureau
ton.
_ THE Spanish convicts at Melilla have dis-
tinguished themselves in fighting the Rif-
fians,
Miss BALLIE MCALISTER, colored, weight
695 pounds, died a few days ago, at Leba-
non, Ky.
Tae Shaker community at Shirely, Mass.,
has just celebrated the one hundredth anni-
versary of its establishment.
TrE German Government will establish an
entrenched camp near Malmedy, which is
held to be a menace to Balgium,
ONLY forty-three out of 150 candidates for
admission to West Point Military Academy
were successful at the last entrance exami-
nations.
ADMIRAL SEYMOUR says that $100,000.000
ought to be expended in buiding up the
British navy, the condition of which he says
18 serious.
Tue Grand Jury at Greenville, 8. C., has
80 far throwr out every indictment under
the new dispensary law, although some of
the cases were very strongly supported by
evidence.
A BATTERY muleteer at Rawul Pindi, India,
“ran amuck’ and murdered no fewer than
battery.
he received.
TaeE Department of the State at Washing.
ton is advised by its representative in Korea
that owing to bad crops the export of grain
from that country has been prohibited by
royal decree.
RarHAEL ORTEGA, says a Mexican paper,
ten years ago sold eight or ten mules, with
which he did express business, and went in-
to coffee farming. This year his crop is
worth $175,000
Wirriam C. RexrFrow, the Governor o
Oklahoma, in his annual report to the Secre
tary of the Interior, estimates the popula
tion of the Territory proper at 151,304, and
that of the Cherokee Strip as 100,000, mak:
{ng a total of 251,304.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
THE WHOLESALE PRICES ARE GIVEN BELOW,
GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED.
WHEAT—No.1 Red....... 65 @ $ 66
No.2 Red .,..........ci.: g 63 64
TJORN—No. 2 Yellow ear... 45 46
High Mixed ear......... . 42 43
No. 2 Yellow Shelled...... 44 45
Shelled Mixed..... iene 42 43
DATS—No. 1 White.. vs 35% 36
No.2 White........ .e 34% 35
No. 3 White... .. 33 34
Mixed.....:.. ene 32 33
RYE—No. 1 ....... Fiaieee 56 57
No. 2 Western, New..... . 53 54
FLOUR—Fancy winter pat 4 00 4 25
Fancy Spring patents..... 415 4 40
Pency Straight winter.... 3 40 3 50
XXX Bakers.........:... 800 32
RyePFlour........ cesee... 325 3 5C
Buckwheat Hour.......... 23 8
HAY—Baled No. 1 Tim’y.. 13 00 13 50
Baled No. 2 Timothy..... 1150 1200
Mixed Clover............. 10.30. 11 00
Timothy from country... 16 00 18 00
FEED—No.1 WhMd® T 1750 18 00
No. 2 White Middlings...., 17 00 17 50
Brown Middlings........ 1500 16 50
Bran. bulkk......... 1500 1530
TRAW — Wheat..... eee 800 650
ats...... Pe lee 7 00 7 50
DAIRY PRODUCTS.
BUTTER—EIlgin Creamery 29 S
Fancy Creamery....... .r 25 27
Fancy country roll....... 20 M3
Low grade & cooking.... 10 15
CHEESE—-OLio, new....... 113 113
New York, new... . 12 12%
‘Wisconsin Swiss. ..... : ee 15 153
Limburger (New make)... 13% 14
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES.
APPLES—Fancy, § bbl... 375 400
Fair to choice, # bbl.... 130 350
5RAPES-Concord,pony b’sk 9 11
Delaware, pony basket... 10 12
Catawba, pony basket.... i2 13
Niagara, pony basket..... 10 12
BEANS—
NY & M(new)Beans@bbl 1 90 209
lima Beans,. .c.oc.cvesin 3} 4
POTATOES—
Fancy @ bu..ceeevecec..oe 60 65
Sweet, per bbl « 200 3 00
JABBAGE—per hundred.. 3 00 4 00
JINIONS—YellowGlobe# bu 55 60
Mixed Country......... : 40 50
Sa per crate....... - 100: 110
TURNIPS—purple tops..... 40 50
POULTRY ETC.
Live chickens § pr....... 45 50
Live Ducks § pr...... nd 40 50
Live Geese @ pr........ .-. 100 125
Live Turkeys @#b...... ve 6 7
Dressed chickens @ 1b.... 9 10
Dressed ducks $..... .. 10 12
Dressed turkeys @ H..... 10 12
©GGS—Pa & Ohio fresh. ... 21 25
FEATHERS—
Extra live Geese # b..... 55 60
No 1 Extra live geese@h 48 50
Mixed... ........ ......i.0 29 35
MISCELLANIOUS,
TALLOW—Country, 1b... 4]
City ..........c..0ch Leeene 5
SEEDS—-Clover...........-.. 625 6 50
Timothy prime........ 175 185
Blue grass.............. 1490 170
RAGS—Country mixed.... 3 11
dONEY—White clover.... 15 17
Buekwhesat......,....... . 10 12
MAPLE SYRUP, new crop. 50 100
CIDER—countrv sweet bbl 6 00 6 50
CINCINNATI.
FLOUR. ..., i... . $2 75@$3 50
WHEAT—No. 2 Red... 60 680
50 501
39 39]
31 31
nan 20 21
19 30
FLOUR— $1 90@$3 75
WHEAT—No. 2. Red.. 64% 65
CORN—No. 2, Mixed...... - 46 46)
JATS—No. 2, White....... . 343 35
BUTTER—Creamery Extra. 23 29
EGGS—Pa.. Firsts.......... 25 26
NEW YORK.
FILOUR—Patents.......... =v 200 60
WHEAT-—-No_2Red........ 67 67}
RYE—Western....... ciradnn 51 52
CORN—No. 2........... rene 45 45
OATS—Mixed Western..... 35 Ls
BUTTER—Creamery.....,.. 7 2°27
EGGS—State and Penn 25 27
LIVE-STOCK REPORT.
EAST LIBERTY, PITTSBURG STOCK YARDS.
Per 100 Ibs.
CATTLE.
Prime Steers..... = aes «+3 465t0 525
Good butcher .. ee 41 20t0 455
Common... 0... J 340to 3 Y0
Bullsand dry cows..... 200to 3 26
Veal Calves........... 550to 65
Fresh cows, per | 20 00to 45 €
SHEEP,
Prime 95 to 100-B sheep....$ 3 25t0 3 50
Good mixed................ . 26010 8 00
Common70to75 1b sheep... 1 00to 2 00
Choice Lambs.............. 300to 4 25
HOGS.
Selected...................... . 570to 580
Prime Yorkers...... ...... . D65to 575
Heavy .........ce...... esse 5 80to 5 00
Roughs.... ........... vsaee' 45010 5 2
eight of his comrades belonging to the same |
A ninth man died from the wounds |
THE HIGHEST AWARD,
Royal Baking Powder has all the
Honors—In Strength and Value 20
per cent. above its Nearest Com
petitor.
The Royal Baking Powder has the
enviable record of having received the
highest award for articles of its class
—greatest strength, purest ingre-
dients, most perfectly combined—
wherever exhibited in competion with.
others. In the exhibitions of former
years, at the Centennial, a! Paris,’
Vienna and at the various State and
Industrial fairs, where it has been ex-
hibited, judges have invariably award-
ed the Royal Baking Powder the high-
est honors.
At the recent World’s Fair the ex-
amination for the baking powder,
awards were directed by the chief
chemist of the Agricultural Depart-
ment at Washington. The chief chem-
ist’s official report of the tests of the
baking powders, which was made for
the specific purpose of ascertaining
which was the best, shows the leavan-
ing strength of the Royal to be 160
cubic inches of carbonic gas per ounce
of powder. Of the cream of tartar
baking powders exhibited, the next
highest in strength tested contained
but 133 cubic inches of leavening gas.
The other powders gave an average of
111. The Royal, therefore, was found
of twenty per cent. greater leavening
strength than its nearest competitor,
and forty-four per cent. above the
average oi all the other tests. Its
superiority in other respects, however,
in the quality of the food it makes as
to fineness, delicacy- and whblesome-
ness, could not be measured by fig-
ures.
It is these high qualities, known and
appreciated by the women of the coun-
try for so many years, that have
caused the sales of the Royal Baking
Powder, as shown by statistics, to ex-
ceed the sale of all other baking pow-
ders combined. .
ee
ExXGLAND has no monopoly of
“grand old men.” Good and great
Marshal Canrobert, kneeling in the
Chapel of the Invalides, when his
fellow veteran MacMahon was brought
home to his last rest under the same
roof with Napoleon, furnished a
splendid example of endurance amid
the world’s rough usage. Canrobert
is eight-four, and the last of the
French Marshals. He has seen his
fellow campaigners in Algeria and
those by whom he fought side by
side at Magenta and Solferino depart
one by one; yet he lingers, as if un-
willing to surrender the baton which
represents such historic memories.
. How’s This}
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case uf Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
¥. J.CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che-~
ney for t.he last 15 years, and believe him per-
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga-
tion made by their firm.
West & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
io.
WALDING, RINVAN & MarviN, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Ha'l's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Price, Thc. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
ForLowiNng the well-known “you
press the button” advertisement of a
kodak firm, an Idaho undertaker
came out with this awful head-line:
“You kick the bucket and we do the
rest.”
Moose are quite plentiful in Maine this
season.
Usk Brown's BroncHiAL TRrRocHES for
Coughs, Colds and all other Throat Troubles.
ou Presminently the best.” — Rev. Henry Ward
Beecher.
A Missouri girl has a foot 15% inches
long.
A wonderful stomach corrector -Becoha
Pills. Beecuam’s—no others. 25 cents a box. :
_ A Maine man recently ate 30 raw eggs in
five minutes,
Hatch’s Universal Cough Syrup costs no
more than others and benefits more,
Hood's» Cures
Mamie Adams
She Was Blind
With scrofula in the eyes—could barely distin-
guish between daylight and darkness. I took
her to numerous expertsand hospitalsand gave
up in despair. A friend advised me to give
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and marvelous to relate, it has completely re.
stored her sight and given her perfect health.”
CHAS. A. ADAMS, St. Albans, Vt,
iri mi mp LL ip
Hood’s Pills cure sick headache, biliou.ness
snd all liver ills. 25 cents p:r box.
PNvas
A remedy which
if used by Wives
about to experience
the painful ordeal
attendant upon
Child-birth, proves
an infallible speci-
fic for,and obviates
7 the tortures ofcon-
finement, lessening
the dangersthereof
to both mother and
child. Sold by all
druggists, Sentby
express on receipt
of price, $1.50 per
bottle, charges pre-
> 4 paid,
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, Ga.
a
TR,
a
WO
PLEASA
Fi
In the
York wh
a shampc
shampoo
the tres:
8heet-iro
the wig
the table
back, let
spout, tu
fashion 7
twenty
or curl a
World.
An o
people c
good or |
the curt
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to look u
be daint;
cided on
they live
house by
The hou
the one |
cause of
fidently
cause it
proved
York Wi
FAS
The c
relation
quite a
who for
coats la
even the
much be
every ye
nize th
typical ;
the fash
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every se
are to a
former &
effective
not too]
may be
addition
much m
impossi]
where o
cerned.
to deal
and the:
New Yo
LO ¥
Some
dusky S
whom |
sent hi
message
filled th
It now 1
report t
in glow:
virtues
portrait
pointin
diploms
take he:
thus sec
the eve
ship of
with tk
suggest
commu
Office a
pet dau
of 10,0(
her mc
the off
reporte
ignored
whose +
It is
woman
influenc
Severin
makes {
good n
odds a
newspa
journal
and al
rolls o
gracefu
make f:
Neithe:
amount
She do
cone {1
and hs
women
where |
their 1
And of
* directl,
income
readily
“writing
the wo
her pe:
woman
deed. —
TX
InL
speak |
the sec
town t
Ladies
friend:
forswo
days nn
Lad,
and th
fled fr