HUNDREDS PERISH AT SEA & ENOW-LADEN HUHHICANE BwaiBS) Ships, Sweep Docks and Harms Ralls and Wires. It It estimated that 200 livet bave bran lost dnrine, (the ya!e which twent ovei the British const Sunday and Monday and in addition, the crews of several boats art still missing, gome Idea of the force of the tale can be gathered frtm the fart that two heavy railroad ensdnet were blown off the track near Inverness, blocking all traffic ortb, and necessitating tbe dispatch of two wrecking trains to clear the track, The wreckage trains hae not since bf en heard from to It is supposed that the work baa been Impeded by a fall of snow. Reports from Hnrve and Calais say the storm along the Normandy roast is the worst one experienced in the lal '0 years. Wrecks are reported fronj every point along tht coast. Innumerable small crafts have vanished from the waters along the coast. Vesselt were draxged from their moorings and sunk with all on board. More than 3uo lersona were drowned at Calais and In the mmeiliate neighborhood. Fifty bodies have been recovered. The channel steamer. Foam, which left Dover for Calais had the greatest dilllcnlty n entering Calais harbor. Her otlicera xunledil) wrecks, principally fishing boats n the 13-mile interval between (iravelii.es and Calais. They found the east pier bead at Calais hnrbnr swept away. More thnn BD feet of the pier had been swe t away. The harhor looked at if it hsUl been shnken by an earthquake. The Hritish steamer Hnmpshlre went town off tiurnard'a Head on the Cornish mast. Twenty-three men were lost. So far definite reports have been received of the loss of 20 steamers and suiting vessels along the Hrttith const, with a los of about 7A men. Travelers. liMiing smacks and mall craft of other aorta have been re torted by the score as missing from every important point on the coat. The people of! the Orkney Islands, off the north oat of Scotland, have suffered terribly. Many houses were nnroofed. walls and barns lev eled and haystacks blown out to sen. 1 he steamship Killarney which arrived at Cork reports that she found the National line stenmship Helvetia making signal of heiress about 10 miles from Milford. The Killarney stool by the Helvetia for rive hours, and then, as the fury of the storm waa increasing, was obliged to leave. A tug finally towed the Helvetia into Milford Haven. 130 deaths have been reported in Havre, France. The losses of the fishing fleet will doubtless raise the number to 20J or more. CATHOLIC SEMINARY BUBNED Two Children Suffocated and a Kumbei of Others Injured. The Edge wood Female Seminary, Madi son, Wis., was destroyed by fire. Two chil dren were suffocated and several others in tired. The dead are: Majorie Rice, Stevens Tolnt, Wis ; Mag gie Stack, t4 Forty-fifth street, Chicago. The following were overcome with smoke: Frances Hnnneburg, of Chicago; Kate 6weeney, of Michigan. One of the sisters, name un' niwn, The three latter will recover. The fire started in the upperstory of the main build ing, where the girl students, some 50 in number, were sleeping. The halls were soon tilled with smoke and the Catholic aisters who conduct the seminary, had the greatest difficulty in get. ing the girla out when little Mnrjorie Rlcr and Mnguie Stack aged 7 and 6 years respectively, were reach ed their bodies were lifeless, the little onei Laving been suffocated. A new slnicture and several other build ings were destroyed. The loss is ITV"), nearly fully insured. TheDoruinican Sisters :ere given the seminary buildings and rrouiitls seme ytais ago ty tx-tiov. C. C Washburn. SUCCESSFULLY TESTED. Initial Trial of Electricity on Canal Boati Entirely Satisfactory. Electrical propulsion of commercial bnah on canuls is a demonstrated success. Muli and steam power are doomed. The new powe. was tested at Brighton, four miles distan Jro-n Rochester, N. V., on the Erie Canal. The old steamship Frank Hawley, fittec with an electrical motor by the Westing house company, taking power from the trolley wire overhead, started off without bitch or hindrance when Mr. Hawley, tht promoter, of the scheme, pulled the lever. The electric current was tsken from tht treet railway, about 600 volts power Tbe trolley poles are similar to those on tht electric railway cars, but with a lateral binge, allowing for a deflection of the boat six feet either way. They are only tempo rarity used. Later it i intended to use a trolley running over the top of the wirt with a wire drop from the trolley to the boat and thence connecting with the motor. Tht boat sped faster than the law allows, six miles an hour, without hitch or break. Ev ery difficulty encountered in canal naviga tion was successfully overcome. fiPE LEHIGH ROAD TIED UP. Taactically all tbe Main Line Employes Strike. All the employes of the Lehigh Valley railroad system are on a strike, because Pres ident Wilbur refused to treat with a com mittee of the Brotherhoods and consen.ad only to bear grievances of 'the men as indi viduals. Tbe road is practically tied up. Only mail trains are allowed to run, the tuatle'beiiig carried on all kinda of mixed trains. Tlie officials or the company are doing everything in their power to provide for the running of through passenger trains 1 although their success bus been indifferent. Crews who had not received the order to strike before taking out tbeir trains almost invariably proceeded to the end of tbe run, in compliance wiib the law of 1877. which makes it a misdemeauur to abandon a train nu the toad. TEE GREAT STRIKE ENDED. Tbe English Miners to Resume Work at tbe Old Wages. Tbe confrcence between the Mine Ownert Association and delegates from the Miners' Federation, waa held at tbe Foreign Ofilct London, under tbe chairmanship of Lore Rosenberg, and It was agreed that the min ers should resume-work at the old ' wages. They will work for these until February When a conciliation board will be formed. Tbe news that work would be returnee was received with demonstrations of urea lov in a the min nu centers of the Mid lands. The leaders of the strikers read tht riisDtches a out! in the streets and the wait ina crowd of strikers cheered themselve. Loans. Church bells rana in all t. mln ina towns and ihaiikagiviug set vices held It the dissenters chapels. Tna National Tobacco Company Is try- ina (0 bave tbe charter of tbe Aaaerioao Tobacco Company (the clgaret trust) revok ed in New Jersey. - LATER HEWS, riars. The entire business portion of Brooklyn, Dane county, Wisconsin, waa destroyed by Are. Lots (73,000; small Insurance. mines sun rrAt.Tits. lames Newton Hilf was found guilty of murder In the tirst degree for the killing of Mis. Ri ta Rotzler at Allegheny, l's., last Match. riArm. am) OMirnrtAU The Wisconsin Marine end Fire Insurance Jompaiiy Hank, better known as tbe Mit hcll bank, will resume. Ita creditors will eieive dollar fur do lar. The bank starti a-iih I.VXi.fX'O capital. ' rontioaj, fifty-two miners, entombed by a fire ina mine at Coal Ridge, l.i.gluinl, were all t.itely rescued. The Russian minister of ngricullnre, In his estimate of the probable grain crop; ligurcs nn Increase of Ift.US4.noo tchttverts f rye above the aver.ige. An increase is prtdivltd in all other grains.. misi rt i-AXiova. The Vavyoit m'saion at Cleveland has begun feeding the poor. Ninety-twit men and thien women were given soup, meat and bread the tint day, Vtiited Slates troops have been sent to the Mexican border to g.iard the interests of Am tlcaii citizens, although 'the recent Mexican nuthtiak la attributed to a lot of bandits w ho will lice when soldiers Bp- broach. CAUOHTBY ELECTRICITY. Novel and Sucoesst-il Method of Land ing Three Burg. era. Three burglars, trnpped by electricity and the camera bave confessed to robbing the store of Foster, Stevens A Co., Grand Rap Ids, Mvh hardware merchants. For tome time the firm has been a loser by persi tent till tapping, and all other devices fail ing, two electricians arranged a camera fo cused on the cash drawer, and an electric connection waa made with the Kdion com panv s plant loopernteit. A burular-alani device was fitted in the cash drawer, so the' when the till was opened the electric c n- nection was made and the shutter of ilia camera opened exposed the lens, at lie same Instant setting on a calcium flu-h liicht. As soon at the flash liuht fuse burn ed out it broke the circuit and the camera lent closed automatically, with the iihuu- grapha of the till tappers imprinted on t lie) instantaneous plate The three young nun In tbe crowd were startled with the flic liaht. but as no demonstration follow. they finished the Job in peace. T suspects were arrested and when v fronted by the photograph tliev broke ra. and have made full confessions. 'I h it names are Lew is Stonehurner ami Clin I -a and Henry Snyder. Thev all live there. IN A LONDON JAIL. Floyd and Echelt:. tbe MinneapoliaJBank Thieves. Frank Floyd and Philip M. Bchelg, who were arrested Wednesdsy at Southampton. Eng., on the arrival there of tbe Iteamet Baale from New York, were arrained in the Bow street extradition court and re manded for a week. Schieg is charged with stealing 190,000 It cash and a lot of valuable Jewelry from tht vault of the bank of Minneapolis, Minn. last September. Frank Floyd and his broth er Ix3ii. the latter of whom it now nndei arrest In New York.are charged with aiding and abetting Scheig in the theft. Scheig wa paying teller of tbe bank. KILLED BY A STEP SON. The Boy Couldn't Stand Seeing a Little 8tster elapped. Monroe Wvatt, a wealth farmer of Flor ence station, near raducah,Kvdied Wednes day from the effects of a blow dealt him by bis step-son, Fred Hughes, Saturday night. Wyatt had slapped one of his little daughters when Hughes interfered striking bint several blows on the bead with a fire shovel. Hughes escaped and hao not yet been captured. Entire Ttwn For Bale. The remarkable spectacle of sheriff selling an entire city for debtwat pretented when Kanawha City, W. Va., or rathet 2,0110 lots in Kanawha City wat sold. Kane wha City is the ambitious name of a new town that was founded several years ago to rival Charleston. Several hundred thou sand dollars were sunk in it by Investors and lots sold at high premiums. Tbe boom collapsed and most of tbe city wat told for taxes. Wants a Little Fresh Air. frank 1'. Scearce, the awell Lexington, Ky., forger sawed himself out of Jail and is now at liberty. Sees ret wat a prominent society and butiness man until a shorttirae rgo, when it was discovered that be had been guilty of swindling to the extent of .W.fXKi. Scearce left the following note to Jailor Wilkerson: "Dear I'ncle Billy 1 will return on Jan nary i. lettis). the day set for my trial. I'o not bother about me. .1 will keen mv word NEWSY GLEANINGS, flza akt has 100,000 tramps. Tax living graduates of rrinoeton number 5H7. Florida oranges will be very plentiful this year. Tramps take possession ol California traina. Thkbi are over 1000 Chinese Masons in Cbioago. At Renttle, Wash., a Chinese firm will erect a four story block. Tax indebtedness of Spokane, Wash., li plaoed at 380 to eaob family. Oeobob Shaw, a prospector, waa found frown to death at Tellurlde. Col. Thk number of cattle killed at Eansai City, Mo., aiuce January 1 is 786.S7IH The town of Tekoa, Wash., has adopted tbe ball-and-chain remedy for tramps. Up to date, in New York, this baa been thi worst theatrioal season for many years. Bbowk UxivsasiTT has an enrollment ol 607 atudents and a faculty of eixty-Qve. More than 1500 tramps eromed tbe Cali fornia Hue going south from Oregon during October. Oabbett Ethebtoe, a Missouri miner, re sent ly sent out a lump of coal weighing 31441 pounds. A mokbteb gat well baa been found near. FIndlay, Ohio, that breaks tbe world's reo ord with 50,000 ftsst a day. Bixtjoa Ashing is prohibited In the State of Washington betwee 4 p. as. oaSaturdaye and toe same hour on Sunday. Q a Attn Rarioa. Web.," to offered free efctv telephones and lbs public the ear viae at $M t year, It a franchise shall be (rented a now euapeoy. - '.. KEYSTONE STATE CULLINGS, THE flit! HON MIXES. kKOt'XMIKO THE rAMOl't amiibacite col .traits. l'orrsvii Lr The work of reopening the abandoned coal operations on Thiirnn tract was began Tuesday by the Red Ash Coal Company, which Is composed of Pcranton and Wllketbarre capitalists, at the bead of which It Senator Morgan B. Williams. It is exactly forty-six years since the machin ery was removed and the work abandoned after fire bad burned its way frnm the sur face to the bottom of the 0 JO foot slot., which caved In. The first loaded car was hoisted from the slope, which Is down sixty feet. Thousands of tons of the best quality of coal remain In the mine, which wat only partially worked. By fully developing the operations the company expects to have one of the largest producing collieries In the lower anthracite coal field. A TRAtTER's MYSTRRIOl'S DKlTn. I.inoNtr.it For some years psst David Beeper, 70 years of age and a great trapper hat lived alone nt a wild snot In the moun tains four miles from Llgonler. He wat found dead in bis cabin Wednesday and there are enough mysterious featmes to warrant a thorough investigation. Thean. nouncement of his dtnth will be bad news to a multitude of sportsmen in western Pennsylvania. I1EI.0 VP THE WHOLE PAMtl.V. Hi'smMtiBos Three maskd robbers en tered the residence of John Horning of Horningsford. Mifflin enmity, and after breaking all tbe doors held up Mr. Horning and his family at the points of their revol vers and compelled him to open tip hit safe tnd give up 1100 In cash. The thieves then prepared themselves tome supper and after Mulshing their meat gathered up the futility tilver and decamped ti iiiFM.c or oi.AKir.ttt, Harrisiiuro Secretary Edge of the state board of agriculture was informed that sev eral fresh cases of glanders has broken out imong horses in Wllketbarre. Thirteen horses In that city affected wltb the diteate were recently killed and cremated In tbe hope of flopping its spread. IRON ORE fOL'KD REAR LEBANON. Lebanok Iron ore, said to assay CO per :ent of Iron per ton; was discovered Jon the large tract of land of William C. Freeman, in South Lebanon township, three miles tast of tbe famous Cornwall ore bills. Joseph Gamowa v. a farmer of near Fay ette City, was thrown from his buggy in a runaway. His feet caught In tbe gearing and hit body wot dragged for two miles and bruited into a Jelly. He wat 80 years old. Wii.t.tAM Hai'Mit and Allen Stephenson, g'asablowera. fought with knives at Belle vernon, as a result of a drunken quarrel, lloth sutler from a dozen or more bad wounds. I bey will likely die. Martha Cummikc.s, a young women liv ing near Huntington, went to the World's Fair five weeks sgo. The last heard of her was two weeks' ago and it is feared she has met with foul ploy. The fish commlttion at Harrlsbnrg line given totice that next month 5.000 rainbow trout fry, all hatched a year ago will be sent to Ohio 1'y le to stock tbe Youghiogheny. At New Caatle, a 6-year-old daughter of James W. Clark wat probably fatally burn ed by her clothing catching fire, while sbi was burning a pile ot runoiin. l.t'THER Jones, of Pcranton. while suf fering: from a stroke of apoplexy fell igatntt a re ore picket and sustained injur ies Irom wlych he died. Mrs. Roiikrt Cook, of Br nil ford, shot her eif twice In the breaat with a revolver, be cause her husband came home intoxicated. She will probably die. Two votine- men. both well dressed, sun- posed to be from Newark, N. J were in ttantly killed by the l'acillc express near Altoona on minaay. New Castle merchants will not slve un employed workmen reductions in prices lor goods and the mlllmen may start a general ttore. Masked men beld nn Isaao Stickles, a peddler, not far from tireensburg, knocked him senseless and rubbed hkm of two silver watches. Vxioktowk. The Lelth works of the H. C. Frick Coke Company fired 'J0O ovens. This plunt has been idle since May for re pairs. The diphtheria epidemic at Mabonlng lown Is increasing to an alarming extent. The schools bave been c used on account of tu The Irwin plate glass company has sul fi cient orders ahead to keep ita plant run ning tor three months. ATflreentburg John Hamilton was sen tenced to seven years in the penitentiary ful horse stealing. TJi.vssks BANOERof Mrander's Mil's Butler county.ctokcd to death on corned beej Friduy. Frak Covmi.EY. 13 vearold, was klllec by an Erie railroad traiu near Ureenxille. Stmikiko Wilkeabarre weavers are going to work at reduced wagee. Broken. Llttlo N'adce was In trouble She came crying Into the house, bur lit tle apr-.in gathered up lit ono hand, us If to preserve some most precloui relic. "I've li'oke my smellin'-tiottlo:" she gobbed, l.ftliiK tear-wet, implor ing eyes to my faca "Your MDellintf-bottlc!" 1 re peated. "I didn't know jou had one. Where are the plects'r" She hold open her apron, and what do you think lay, there' The scat tered petal of a rose! This was her to-UKd "smelllntt-bottle," and while she was union it It had fallen apart . jne ranting High Shoultler. The fashion for high shoulder, wltb ill its smartness, is rapidly passing swav and the over-fashtonalilo gui pure lace is being supplanted by point d'Alencon as a decoration for gowns. The new lace Is of a lovely yellow tone, its net clear and rather broadly meshed ami scattered with conven tional designs in a series of stitches that look ilka the patient grouping it a myriad millet seeds, Thebb are always some rare bar gains at tbe meat market. talve loo Slews. PREPARING TO LYNCH HIM TBOOPB CALLED OUT To Prevent the Lynching of a BruteWhc Assaulted and Murdered a Young Women. Miss Tlirdle linngh, aged 20 years, Iht only daughter of C C. Kaugh, a wealthy farmer of near Alliance, O.. was assaulted ind murdered by Curt Davidson a farm band, who then attempted suicide by cut ting hit tbroat with a razor, I'angh and his wife were away from borne. Davidson soarded with the family. No one wltness td the crime, but Irom the apiearance of Ihe kitchen It seems that Miss Itangh bad waited until her two brother and David inn had gone to bed and then covered the Hreandwas ta-lug off her thoee when Davidson returned and ttruck her on the bead with a piece of Iron The fellow then ricked her uu and carried her to tbe barn, 110 yards, where after assaulting her be cut brr throat from ear to ear. The crime waa not discovered until morn ing, when Miss Haugh'a brother found her mutilated remains, nearly stripped of cloth ing, lying on the barn floor. About tht mine hour a farmer living half a mile from the Kaugh home discovered Davidson lying on a pile of straw in his barn yard with his throut cut. He Is about 40 years old, un married and has worsed for Itaugh for several years. The phvslclant tay David son may recover, hut if he doet 'he will prohutuy be Ivnched as the town it In a frenzy of excitement. The threatening assembly of men nt ap- fiarently designated points In the city dur ng the evening convincedthelocal authori ties that .MurdererDavidson was in imminent inuger ot rope or bullet. The Mayor wired -heril K rider to come at once Irom Canton The sheriff arrived shortly after 1(1 o'clock. The guard on Davidson was re-enforced, but In lesa than an hour the situation became in threatening that Comnany K ol the Eight Keglment of Ohio's 'National Uuard was ordered out. As midnight approached the situation be :aine to threatening that the city snllior itles beld a conference with the sheriff and ather county ofttcers. It was llnallv decid ed to send bim tothe county Jail at New Llbson. Orders were given secretly and at midnight a city ambulance was brought up to tbe rear entrance of the bouse where the murderer was under guard. Davidson waa quickly transferred to the ambulance, but before the start was made 300 men appear ed at the starting point. Kn route to the Italian the mob was reinforced by -IK) ex cited citizens, and there was an nnbroken llorra of groans and maledictions from lbs riursiirers. Tbe ambulance had been urneil and reached the station tjnst as the train pulled in. There was a rush for the helpless figure when It was dragged out, but the guard closed around it and the militia kept the mob at bay. Tbe instant David son was dumped into the car tbe train pulled on". Tbe sheriff acted none too soon In taking the murderer out of the city. Eighty resolute men had pledged each other to take the wretch from the Khaw house and. hang him between 1 and 2 o'clock. Tbe details had been arrangrd and the rote roenred. The sianal waa to be the shutting off of tbe ar: lights in the streets at 1J..10. i wenty of the men were in a hall mid were preparing disguises that were to render identification less easy in case of resistance by the oltlcers, when one of the men doing picket duty at the house where Davidson was held report ed the intent on of the sheriff to spirit tbe prisoner away. Hixteen of the twenty men favored stormins tbe Sbaw bouse and an ticipating the otlicera. THE LABOR WOBLD. Fame has sixty labor papers. Bricrlatees hnve 311 unions. Loxdo has 9500 union printers. ' All Fall River mills are running. Fall River. Mass., has ROOD weavers. Tbe Chickasaw Nation needs cotton pick ers. Cioarmarers have (504,000 in their treason-. Racravexto, Cat., has worklngmen'epolltl enl oluba. Bread riots bave occurred among Wiscon sin miners. QriEitxsLAJD bas aliteen labor members ol tbe Assembly. Thousands of unemployed men from Col orado are going to Texas. Gervasy prohibits tbe employment ol union men on Government works. A store saw placed In tbe quarries at nut land, Vt., does the work ot about 100 men. Firrt per cent, of the workfngmen and women of Fenuaylvanlo are out of employ ment. The Salvation Army at Han Francisco save dinners to over 1D50 people on oue day re cently. Machinery in a Plttaburg steel works en ables 2000 men to do tbe work formerly done by 6000. A Bostos editor baa been appointed State Inspector ot boilers, stationary engines and engineers. Riots have been precipitated at Los An geles, Cab. In tbe work of exterminating Chinese garden workers. A Pittsritro iron worker, after hunting work for two months, was sent to the peni tentiary at Syracuse, N. Y., as a trdtnp. The Htutn Convention of Railroad Tele graphers at Byraouse, N. V., declared against strike. The union emhraoes eighty-live per cent, of the craft In New York State, Bobtok coal handlers have asked nnion men not to reeeive ooal or wood after S p. ro. Teamsters are now working fourteen hours a day, and they get from $9 to til a week. Tbe occupation employs 1600 men. Ble-geat Southern Exhibition Yet Held. Tbe opening of the third annual Augusta Exposition In connection with the Georgia State Fair took place Wednesday, .'i0,00J people being present The exhibits are typical of the Industry of tbe Southern States, and in its trope the exhibition sur passes anything yet held in the South. Twenty-live Elates and eight foreign coun tries are represented. Burned Alive in a Wreck. A pa-sengtr irain on the East Alabama railroad jumped the truck on a curve and rolled do n a 10 toot embankment. The wjeck lot.k lire from the uveiiuriilna of Hit stoves ami a pimic followed alining I ho terror im ken pn.iw.feiH. 1 human Dn -er. ol Luiayetre. was unlit under a seat ami luitiieil tu a crip. 'Ihe cu-e of Ihe derailment la not known. The smoker and one tonili were burned. Driter was creinned heture the eyes of the other pas sengers who were puerlett to save biu- Tbrao Boys and a Gun, Will's the three sons of John Burgraff, of near Marion, 8. D aged 6, 11, aud 13 years, were busking corn, tbe eldest picked up a gun for the pui pose of scaring the other two. and In the attempt to shoot over tbeir beads blew tbe head off one and fatally wounded the other. Louis Jackso.m, aged eO, of New York, bas been sued for breach of ) remise , by Rosa Ulautdorf, a widow, fihu wants 126.000. ROBBED IN THE DAYLIGHT they got 120,000. Cbicago'a Big Rockery the Bcsne of s Wondsriully Bold Bobbery. J. O. Drake, treasurer of the Indiana Illinois Iowa railway.wat assaulted In hit office in the Rookery building, Chicago ane robbed of many thousand dollar! which lit bad parked In a valise preparatory togolti out npon tbe road to puy employes. A trail carrier In passing Mr. Drake s nfflct heard groans within and upon enterit found 1 he official lying upon the ft 001 bruised aud In a semi-conscious condi tion. "I've been robbed bv two men." tsld Mr. Drake leehly, and ihe on safe, over turned valise and scattered pairs confirm ed histtstenient. Big welts on hU head bore evidence of savage blows. He had but little to aay, but the sum or 0.000 was mentioned as mtssinc ond It was stun un derstood tbat tbe robters had made away with that amount. The assault occurred about 7 o'clock a.m., when there were Tew people In the ruilld Ing. No one about the place remembers of having seen a suspicious character and dense mvstery snrroiitids the allair which Is one of the boldest robberies that has oc curred in Chicago for venra. Mr. Drake mine down early In the morn ing to secure no nev tu puv off aloiut the line. He look 2u.(Kmi from lliesalr.lntei d lug to leave on the train. He wus fol lowed intothe olllce by two ordinary look ing, smooth fnced men ami ttruck down and the I'.tl.UHj taken, lie was struck on each temple and his bead bears the murks of the blows. He could give no very accurate descrip tion of the roliOers, but Indicated that they heavy men and wore lurge ulsters. While Mr, Drake lay semi coiiM-iuiis on the Hoor the robbers unlocked his valise and scoopen Ihe pay envelopes into Hie lerce pockets of their ulsters. Occurring as it did in the Itook ery.one of the largest and be-i known ollloe builiiings of Cliiiniro, situated in the heart sf the business district, the robbory caused Intense excitement. IliHness was almost it a ttandstill in the neighborhood during Ihe day. It but been the cintom of the, treasurer to ay the eiuploves ol the road In :hecks. Had the custom ' been continued li e startling robbery would not have been Ittempted In all prohablity, but within t le past week the officials decided to pay lu surrencv. MARKETS. riTrsBtiRa. THE WHOLESALE PRICES ARE GIVEN BELOW. oiuirt, ri.orR Artu rr.Ep. WHEAT No. 1 Red I flfl f 07 No. 2 Red 04 65 CORN No. 2 Yellow ear... 45 40 High Mixed ear 42 43 No. 2 Yellow shelled 45 4tJ Hhelled Mixed 44 45 OATH No. 1 White 35j 80 No. 2 White 341 85 No. 3 White m 84 Mixed 82 83 RYE No. 1 Ml 67 No. 2 Western, New 53 64 FI.OUK Fancy winter patf 4 00 4 'US Fancy Hpring patents 4 25 4 60 Fancy Straight winter.... 3 60 8 75 XXXHakere 8 00 8 25 live Flour 8 2-5 8 50 Buckwheat flour. 2 3 HAY Baled No. 1 Tim'y.. 13 00 13 60 Muled No. 2 Timothy 11 00 12 00 Mixed Clover 11 00 12 00 Timothy from country... 18 00 20 00 FF.F.D No. 1 W'li Mil V T 1H .50 1(1 00 No. 2 White Middlings 17 00 17 50 Brown MiddliiiKt 15 00 10 50 Bran, bulk 15 00 15 50 STRAW Wheat M 7 01 Oats 70i 7 50 ItAiKV l-komii'iA, BUTTER Elgin Creumery i'9 83 Fancy Creamery 2" 2 Fancy country roll 20 23 Low grude k cooking.,.. 10 15 LHF.EHE Ohio, new Hi 12 New York, new 12J ll Wisconsin Hwiaa 1-ij 15 I.imliurger (New mak... l.'l II ERI IT AMI VrilKTAIIt.ES. Am.ES-Fitncy, V bhl... 3 25 3 f0 Fair to choice, f bhl.... 1 60 2 75 GltAI'KS.( oncord.o iny b'sk 11 Deluware, posy basket... 10 12 Catawba, mny basket.... 10 12 Niagara, ony basket 1U 12 BEANH- N Y & M(new)BeantVhbl 1 00 2 0) Lima Ileum Sj 4 POTATO KH Fancy bn 65 70 Kweet, per bbl 2 00 8 (0 CAHHAtiE per hundred.. 3 00 4 00 0NIONH Yellow(jlobeibu 55 J Mixed Country 40 50 Spanish, per crate 100 125 ri UNH'W purple topi 40 -Ml 1-otl.lKV ETC Live chickens tt pr. . 50 65 05 i.tve i'iicki ft pr.... 4J LlveOeeseV pr 1 ( 1 25 Live Turkeys fib Hi H 10 12 14 24 Dressed ch H kens v ID,.,. Dressed ducks V It Dressed turkeys t lb.,... RUGS Pa At Ohio fresh.... FEATHERS K.xtru live Geese V lb No 1 Extra live geese Jr lb Mixed H 10 12 23 65 4S 25 fiO 60 35 MUTKLLANIOVa. TA LLOW Country, V lb . 4 6 II v 3EED8 Clover Timothy prime Blue grass RAGS Country mixed ... rIOXEY White clover.... 0 25 6 50 1 75 1 85 1 40 1 70 k U 15 17 . Ill 12 Buckwheat... Al l KrtVUIll MAIi.E SYRUP, new crop. 50 1 00 ?l PEK count rv'sweetei bol 0 00 6 60 CI.NCIISKATI. FLOUR WHEAT No. 2 Red 12 773(3 60 58 69 62 RYE No. 2 XRN Mixed DATS Kuus aUTTKK..... Hill AtlELflllAT n.ouR WHEAT No. 2. Rett XRN No. 2, Mixed )ATS No. 2, White 3L"1TER Creamery Extra. UG I'a., Firsts NEW YORK. ff-OUR Patents tV HEAT No Ued tYE V'e-tern XlRN No. 2 MIS Mixed Western HITTER Creamery LGGS Mute aud J Vint 61, 8(1 81 19 1!) 80) 31J It's 80 (1 fi0Q$3 75 113 46 34 i3 25 4tiJ 34, 27 20 200 4 CO 05i OH 6 62 45 45J 30 i 17 it 24 20 J.IVX-MtH-K RKKUIT. EAST LIBS-MTV, l'ITTSUt'R'4 STOCK YARUA. l'er 100 lbs. CATTLE. 4 'rime Pteers. iooU butcher 4 nito 3 75 to 3 30 to 2 00 to 6 40 4 Ml 8 H4 3 25 6 60 'om mini Hullsuml dry cows k'eal Calves 'rali cows, per head SIIEKP. frlmeOSto 100-Bi sheep.... looil mixed ."oiniuon 70 to 76 lb sheep... .'bone Lambs 4 00 to 20 0U to 45 0J 8 20 to S 80 2 70 to 8 00 1 00 to 1 60 3 00 to 4 00 It oat. (elected 6 10 to 6 15 'rime Yorkers 0 00 ti 6 JO ieavy , 5 75 to Mil loughs. 4 SO b 6 26 The Dairy. Butter statistics are surprising;. The census returned show the eoor. M nous ctresrste of 600,000 tons, or t,Z0O,0M00 pounds, manufactured in tbe United States In 180; and the lusotlty bat probably increased ilnce. How much of all this was tleoniarffarlne, ao'.d under the name it butter, It Is now getting a little, late In tbe day to Inquire. But tbe the returns are professedly all of gen uine butter, and this may be tbe fact. It Is said that the 1800 product In this country would require 1,000 freight trains of 30 cars each, and eaob carrying SOtons, to transport it. Iowa seems to be the largest butter producer her return, three year ago, being a hundred million pounds (100,000,009), worth 821,000.000. Illi nois stood next, wltb 95,000,000 vorth 820.000,000. Wisconsin's pro duct was 45,000,000 pounds, worth 89,000,000, and Minnesota's nearly att great hers being worth 88,000,000, while Bllt blgan's waa worth 87,600, 000. In 1885 the RS-teiaed value of cows was 8700,000,000 or more than the capital of all the national banks, at that time. Inciodible as It may seem, It appears that the annual , dairy butter product of the United States eicecds In value that of all of the lumber, wheat and Iron com bined. That, at any rute, is tho statement of a statistician who pub lishes the results of his Bgurlng. Other dairy statistics, milk, cream, and cheese, also make a bin sliowimx. Curious Occupations of Hindoos. Census blank recently distributed ) by tbe Engltih Government In India for the purpose of ascertaining the size of the population have Just been returned to the home olllce, and " among them aro at curlooa docu ments as were ever collected In a sim ilar undertaking. Under the hoatl of "profession, occupation, etc.," a num ber of Hindoos admit candidly they are "professional dobtors,"' "constant borrowers," or ' men of secret re sources," Others have put them selves on record as thieves, village thieves, and brigands. Pome of more modest aspirations call themselves ; tavern keepers, visitors of taverns, traveling story tellers, mendicant?, pensions on their sons-in-law, or sim ilar Idlers. One Hindoo says that "he cannot work because be Is u fool" Others confess to a more seri ous occupation, such as "expounder of oracles, " "eye examiner," 'norce rer," "storm prophet' "tamtam player," "doctor of Greek medicine." Another says that he conduct a mar riare bureau for young domestics; a second declares that "be I making a' business of marrylns oft his daugh ters for money," which latter Is un doubtedly a very lucratlvo field. One profession which seems to be very re munerative is that of "hiring out u a professional court witness," and It followed by several nindoos Sk Louis Post-Dispatch. Hatch's Universal Couirh Pjrup will curs that cough aurjirialn-ly quick. cents. The unclaimed funds n the Engl at Jourts amount to 3r;l,2,!,410 Beechem1 fltls are better than mineral na. ten. bwx ha uiv uuol tiers. ueuts a box. There are (KIO varitiea of cotton HOOD'S Sarsaparilla CURES Lung and Kidnsy Trouble, Dsieia. sail rheum, an aitack of ahinirloH and a severe cotntb compelled nietogiveui work a a mason anil after five years nf suffer Ini nearly look away my life. Then 1 took Hood's Hh ran purl 1 1 a, which efTeeletl a cure The nelchliora think It very atranae to see un at work again. I. la the i-treniilh given tne It) Hood's Sarsaparilla which enables me tu do It." Isaao Ahkh Vienna, N. J. Get only Hood'a sarsuimrilla lleae'a I'lIU are thebe-t f.i-j--ll. ner fills a aist 6 saeliun, curs lieaitwctie. ftceius Irsabus rn v y -j SHIL0HS CURE. Cures CcuEhs. Hoarseness, Sore TUruat, Ciuuu. Whooping Lough and Asthma. For C'muA ticmii has no nvl t tiaa cured thousands whue all others failed ; will cure you il taken In l.aic. Sold ty LiruLTcists on a guarantee. For Lams fcatk or Chei.ueSHlT.OII'S i'LASTER. s: cut. CATARRH REMEDY. Ti.w i , -.. , rt, v This remedv la s-tiaran- teeO to cure f iu. PHr-eptnta. iuieutor tree. "fl OTHER'S FRIEND" . la a scientifically prepared Liniment; and barmlcHa; every Ingredient in of recognized value and iu constant unt Ly the medical profesbion. It short ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminibbea Danger to lift of Mother and Child. Book "To Mothers" mailed free, con taining valuable information and voluntary testimonial. Bent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt Ot priue, CI M pal bwllie. ISACFIELD REGUUTU CO., Attirt, 6x bolu bv all drueattu sClirTeV; OHILOH'5