COLLISION IN THE NIGHT. DROWNED IN BED. Oreat Disaster to an Italian Steamer in the Gulf of Genoa. The Itallnn steamers Ortlgla rind Matla T. collided oil IsU Pel Pinto, at the entrance of the Oulf ol Genoa Sunday. The latter iiink and 1 IS people were drowned. The Mnrln V. wan bound from Saple to I. Data. There was a erew ol 17, and the pass enger numbered 173. She called at (lenon en route to her destination. Hhe was enter ing the (iult ot (lenoa at 1:30 o'clock Sunday morning, when the met the Ortltla, outbound. Tbey noticed each other only when collisi on cm Inevitable. The bow ol the Ortlvin crashed Into the starboard aide ot the Mnna r.. penetrating (1.x yards and rip,j iDj up the Maria 1'. like match wood. The water rush ed In through the bole and the Maria P. sank In three mluutf. Hie majority ot the pass engers were asleep at the time ol the accident, and bad no time to escape niter the alarm was given. They were engulfed with the vessel. The Ortlgla remained on the spot until 4 o'clock in order to pick up the survivors, hhe rescued fourteen ol the crew anil twenty eight ol the passeuges ot the Maria P. Other steamers have beeu dispatched to the scene ol the disaster and are now search ing tor lurther survivors. The Ortlgla' bow was smashed lor a space ol twelve leet along the water line. There is some comment upon the Inet that brought to mind by the disaster that the Ortlgla once collided on the same spot with the French steamer Onole Joseph. At the conclusion of the sitting of the chamber at Home the minister of Marine an nounced the news olthe disaster In the midst ol a profound sensation, adding that an olll cer, a seaman, a stoker, and 141 passengers ol the Miirisl'. bad perished. The Ortlgla had twenty-five passengers on board. The Marin l' s. captain was named Ferrara, The chamber baa ordered an in quiry into the disaster. The sky was overcast at the time of the ac cident and there was little sea. Iloth cap tains were asleep and Third Officer ltevello was on watch on the Ortlgla and Second Ofllcer D' Angelo was on Wat .'h on the Maria P. The Ortlgla was going nt tne rate ol eleven mile an hour and the Maria I'. at the rate of eight miles, Doth vessels saw the lights ol the other and contiuaed on their proper roads until the mistake was made, it Is not established by whom, which brought the Maria P. broadside towards the Omnia. Third Ofllcer ltevello of the Ortlgla (aw the dnngor and ordered the engines reversed. But the order came too late. The Ortlgla struck the Maria J?., making an enormous gap In her side. All the boat os the Ortlgla were lowered. and the orews rescued all tbey could ot the -survivor. The latter, lor the most part, re main In such a state ol terror since the res cue that they are unable to give a single de tail ot the disaster. Capt. Ferrara. who was saved, said that be was sleeping in hi cabin, when he was awak ened by cries and shouts and a great noise. He rushed upon deck and saw Ihe Ortlgla backing on, wnne nis own snip was sinking. Seeing that all was lost, he Jumped into the sea, where be was picked up by the Ortlgla' boat. A passenger named Balena. a leweler. waa on board with bis wife and three young child ren. He (aid that he bad not turned In' when the collision occurred. He seized two of the children and bis wife caught up the third and they ran upon deck and Jumped Into the ea. The children weighed him down, and he ood ank after a bard struggle. w. hen be came to the surface, hi children bad disap peared. HI wile bad managed to cling to a piece of wreckage till the Ortlgla' boat lav ed bar. They lost everything. Second ofll cer I)' Angelo of the Maria P., who was on watch at that ship when she was struck be Ortlgla, was arowuea. Among the saved is a child 8 years old, who Is the only survivor of a family of seven who went down with the Ill-fated ship. Two ol the Marls r a, seamen were Injured. REFUNDING THE INCOME TAX. It Would Hay Yielded a Revenue of Porty-Flve Million. The Internal Iievenue Bureau has pratlo ally completed the work of recording and scheduling the returns received under the In come tax act, and very soon will be ready to begin the work of refunding the amount paid before the law was declared unconstitutional. Application for relund are coming la very (lowly. from the returns made, It Is believed that fully one-half of the number of persons sub ject to the tax made no return whatever, and this proportion I believed to be even greater in respect oi me amount ol tne tax Involved. The aggregate ol the return made repiatent about 415,000,000 of tax, and bence about t30,200,000 it Is oaloulated, would bave been collected II all who were subjeot to the tax 4ad sent In rut urns. HER NAME IS MARION. Oh Anxiety About ths President' Bafcr 1 Ended. Marlon, French rendition of the musioal name Mary, ha been decided upon by Pres ident and Mrs. Cleveland a the name for the baby born to them about two week ago. The fact was offlslaUy announced by Private Secretary Tburber. When It became known that the name Marion bad been seleoted the people ol lJuzzard bay at onoe Inquired lor whom the ohlld waa named. To this there could be obtained no other answer than that the name was suggested by that of the beau tiful spot on the shores of Buzzard Bay, in whicn the president and hi wile passed sev eral months previous to their seleotlon of Clray liable as tbealu of their summer home Marlon, Ma. Cropo Will He Enormous. OfOelal of the Pennsylvania line west of Pittsburg are receiving very encouraging re port from the condition of crop In Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Trainmaster Landers, of the Indianapolis & Vinaennes, says the corn crop along that division will be the heaviest ever known. Aloug the lines throughout Illinois, and particularly along the newly acquired Toledo, Peoria i. Western, all kind ol crop will be unusually heavy. Tba wheal crop will soon commence to move east, and already there are inquiries about oars. Henry Eaatbound Traffic The eastbound tralHo on the Pennsylvania lines la very heavy. All the .Panhandle trough trains are now hauling from five to even Pullman ear. Train Ho. 6 cum Into Pittsburg on bunday evening in two sections, with a total ol U oar. No. UO continue lo haul extra ileeper to accommodate the in crease of travel The limited Ho. Si, ou the Ft. Wayne, 1 also a heavy train, and all other through train out ol Chicago are haul ing extra car. Tallow Jaok la Spreading. Tlie surgeon-general of the Marine ho pital service, is iulormed there were 20 new cases ol yellow fever In Havana the week ending July 11, and 8 deaths. Thi Is a alight Increase. For the week ending July there were SI6 death irom yellow fever In Santiago, Caba, and for the week ending July . 9 death from thi disease at Vera Crux. Mx. The President has Issued an order placing employes ot all pension ageuolet under olvil service rule, V- TELEGRAPHIC TICKS The Indlnna bituminous miners bare re jected the M-cent wale. The New Philadelphia wire nail company for ttO.OOO. The purchasers take possession October 1. The mill cost tW.OOO In ISfltf. James L. Travers, a negro, was hanged In Washington city for the murder ot Lena Cross, November 19 last. rnper manufacturer of tho country are trying to form a combine a tn meeting In Chicago. The deal Involves 30,Cu),000. Two men were killed, two fatally Injured and three seriously hurt by the caving In of a sewer trench opposite Newark, N. J. In a rallrond collision near Peoria, 111., Miss Martha Wright, of Eureim, 111., was In stantly killed and half a docen persons badly hurt. At the annual meeting ot the National Plate Glass Jobbers' association, held In New Vork.lt was decided to adopt a new price list to go Into effect on August 1. The ran-American Congress of Religion and Education was opened In Toronto. Can ada, Monday, with 6,000 delegate In attend ance. The attendance is not near up to the expectations. The wage being paid to harvest band In Btark Co., O., are lower this year than they bsve ever been since 161. The average I 1 per day and thi rale ha been agreed upon at many conferences between farmer. The manufacturers whose plants are Ident ified with the Btrawboard Manufacturing company, which Include every factory In the eastern part of the United States, held a meeting in tne Monongnhela bouse, Pittsburg The meeting was to discus trade condition and fix price tor the ensuing year. Mr. Worthlngton C. Ford, Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, gives a brief, but highly Interesting analysis of our exports for June. The balance of trade ha been In our favot or ome time. The value of export for the fiscal year Just closed exceed the Import by over 1100.000,000. STAMBULOFF DEAD The Ex-Premier Succumbed to Hi Wound. Ex-Premier Stambuloff, who was assinat- ed In the street of Sofia, Monday, died at 8:30 Thursday morning, from hi terrlbls wound. Stefan Klcolof Stambuloff, who for years held a power in Bulgaria superior to that of the relaning nrlnce himself, was a compara tively young man. He waa but 42 years old. A more eventful lite than bis would be difficult to conceive, He we born at Tirnova in 1863, and wo destined by his parents lor an ecclesiastical career. He was sent to the great seminary at Odessa for the study of theology. There was more war than peace In the air at that time, and vastly mora amomon tnan piety In the nature of the young man. The up rising In Bosnia Herzegovnla t'irnlshed him an opportunity for the exercise of a military Instinct, and the character of the conflicts which subsequently developed his genius for chemlag. During the Russo-Turkfsh war of 1877-'78 his service was drawn in the service of ltus la. Hlnce then hi genius was more suc cessfully directed against llussian aggression tnan tnat oi any man in xurope. .RIDER HAGGARD STONED. English Voter Do Not Take Kindly to Four-Horae-Drag Method. 3L .Rider Haggard, the author, who is landing In the Conservative Interost for East Norfolk, made bis election tour In a four-horse drag, and was roughly treated, mud and stones being thrown iu some cases. Near Landbam, oneol the party, Miss Mart- cup, naa ner neaa cut witn n Hying missile. At Htalbam the party was obliged to take refuge In a hotel, which was besieged. The police were dispatched to the rescue. From North Walsham, Norwich aud Yarmouth, the situation ol the party increased in gravity and at midnight the mounted police wero summoned. Explorer -Henry M. Stanley ha succeeded In making hi way to Parliament In spite of personal unpopularity and the many objeo- uani-ie.ni canaiaacy wxngiana. BLACK FLAGS VICT0R0US. The Japanese Bad to Retreat After Stiff Battle. A dispatch from Hong Kong say that re ports of serious fighting between the Jape- aness and Black Flag In Formosa have been received irom Amoy. The fighting took place 60 mile outh ot Talpeb. The Black Flag were In almost over whelming .numbers and fought with the ut most bravery aud stubbornness, and only the shells Irom the heavy guns of the Japanese saved the latter from dire disaster. As It waa. the Japanese were compelled to retreat to ths northwest. The Black Flags, accord ing to the report, are now advancing upon Teckham, CO miles west of Tokoham, where renewed lighting Is Imminent WITH BURNING MATCHES. . masked Bobber Torture aa Aged Couple to Secure Money. Tuesday four masked men went to the bouse of John Mlblln, living a few mile from Ashland, O., and on being refused ad mittance, battered down the door with a fenoe rulL The men then bound and gagged Miblln and his wife and on failing to find the amount of money tbey believed to be lo the bouse tbey tortured the couple, holding burning mntobes to their feet and baud. The robbers secured rl3 all the money In the house. Ulblin and bis wife, who are both very old and almost blind, did not suoceed lo releas ing themselves until 9 o'alook next morning. There Is no clew to the identity of the rob bers. To Protect Missionaries. Ex-Representative Timothy Campbell, of New York, called at the slate department to day and had a conference with Aotlug Sec retary McAdee respecting the HI treatment ol oortain American missionaries In Ecuador duriug the progress of the recent revolution in that eouutry. The victims are Benedictine slater. After hearing this (tutemeut Aotlug Becre. tary Adee promised to cable Itninedlatly to United Htatea Uiulster Tillman at Quito, in structing him to seeure governmental pro tection lor the remainder of tho little band and see that they are not further persecuted, it is probable that, aa soon as the case cau be put in proper form, our government will be asked to prefer a demand lor reparation up on Iks Ecuadorian government lor this out ruga Standing of the League Clubs. W. L. P.C. I W fpn Baltimore. ..4I K7 .607 , Philadelphia H7 tw .6:16 Clevelaud.....) ' Pittsburg 4 U0 Buatou Be kit 6110 Brooklyn m Wi -'M .SHU New ioi-k... oJ HI Waahlligluu. H 3'J Mt, Louis ft 4 Louisville U 60 .61,7 .boy .644 .-. .at l .8' II .too Clnulnuatl., ..41 a Chicago . .4U so DESTRUCTIVE HURRICANES. AN OHIO CYCLONE. It Sweeps Through Lima and flndlny and Does Great Damage. A terrific cyclone (wept through Flndlny and the adjoining Country about 4 o'clock Fridny alternoon doing great damage. The storm came from the northwest and was en tirely unhernlded. It lasted hot over five minutes, but swept everything before it In that time. One of the spire of the First M. F.. Church wns blown down. The hose tower ol the city fire department was torn to pieces and the building wresked. hhade trees were torn up by their root and hurled across the streets, while signs of all Kinds were aaatiea through tne expensive plate glass window ol the stores. A number of express and milk wagons were overturned and torn t pieces. In the oil fields, west, north and east of the city, an Immense amount of damage was done. Derricks, tanks and rigs were blown to pieces and thousands of dollar worth of property destroyed. Ihe miner school build ing had It root torn off, a did the factory of the Globe chimney work. A special from Lima says: A nnrricane f massed over tho northern part ot this county ate this afternoon, doing great damage in the country. The wind was accompanied by nail. Telegraph and telephone connections between Lima and Kludlay are all down. AN 10WA CLOUDBURST. Wrecks Trains and Drives Out Families In Their Night Clothes. Four and one-half Inches of water from a cloudburst north ot Iowa City, Thursday night, caused great damage to crops. Five hundred feet ot the Burlington, Cedar Rnpids and Northern Railroad track were washed out llalston creek went out ot Its banks and carried off bridges, sidewalk and fences. Several families in their night clothes waded out of their houses In four feet of water. The Rocky Mountain flyer from the West, on the Bock Island Railroad, wns ditched three blocks west ol Iowa river. T he fireman bad a leg broken and the passenger were ondiysnaaen up. inerniis are wasueu out between Iowa City and Downey. SOVEREIGN'S NEW BOYCOTT. The Knights Not Likely to Refuss Natl' onal Bank Notes, General Master Workman Sovereign I out with an order to Knlgbt of Labor demand ing that they boycott all national bank note. The declaration I addressed to the K. ot L. Farmers' Alliauce and kindred bodies, and bold that "The national banks are respon sible for the destruction of the greenbacks, and payment of the bonds In coin, the fund ing acts, the demonetization ol silver, and all corrupt lluaoclal legislation In this country for the past 30 years. They bave boycotted and discriminated against every kind of money that promised relief to the debtor class and prosperity to the Industrial class. 1 uey are boy cotters ot the most cruel kind. A boycott of this kind will agitate the money question and test the sincerity ot soma doubtful free silver advocate. This boycott will precipitate ths great con flict, with the people on the one side and the bank ou the other, and the Issue will be as sbarplv drawn as In the struggle of Andrew Jackson with the old United mate Bank tW year ago. It will lorce a plutocrat press and a foreign money power to reveal the bidden band of American politics, and establish an Impassible barrier between tbe tolling masses ot America and the Shylock and pensioned lords ol the world. And it an attempt Is made to force national bank notes upon the public through such channel as tbey are by law made legal tender, we will establish a re demption bureau, aud, through existing law, lorce tbe secretary ol the treasury to unload the locked-up greenback for tbe benellt ol tbe people. "On aud aftor September 1, 1895. lot every Knight of Labor and every peraou whose love ol justice is above the sordid interests ot the tyrants, refuse to accept national bank notes In payment ol any debt or obligation not made necersary by the limited lugul tender qualities ol the notes." A DAY OF BAD DISASTERS, Two Men Killed and Eighteen Persona Injured At a Cincinnati Fire. Two men were killed and 18 injured by a Ore which occurred In Cincinnati Wednesday. The dead are: Captain Michael W. Healy, Are company 29; Thomas W. Wisbcy, pipe man, Company 8. sou ot late Fire Chief Lew Wisbev. Lieutenant F. B. Newman, Com pany 29. Is dangerously Injured. At 2 p. m. an alarm was turned in from box IS. A big fire had start-id In the five story hay and feed warehouse of J. H. Her mesch ft Co., at Water and Walnut streets. It spread so as to threaten the entire square bounded by Walnut, Water, Vine and Front streets, and a general alarm soon called out the entire department. Tbe square Is almost all in ashes, and tbe flame at time come very near reaching building across tbe treat, It Is believed tbe Ore originated from a match or cigar stump thrown carelessly nesr ths hay. Tbe warehouse went up Hue an explosion. It Is believed ths firs originated from stables, but their large warehouse stood Ore proof. The adjoining commission and tobac co company warehouses, however, went like pile ol kindling, causing such a conflagra tion a to threaten tbe north end ol the sus pension bridge. George O. Brown had 8,090 bag ot peanut In bis eommission house. Tbey burned like oil, and soon wiped out the building and stock, taking with it tbe large sli-story tobacco warehouse of L. Seaman ft Co., which wo full of leaf tobacco. All tbe streams of water had no effect on the tire in these warehouses, and the firemen exerted themselves to save other buildings. The dense smoke from the burning piles of tobao oo prevented the Bremen Irom seeing their danger. Fatal Bridge Wrsok. Tba local freight on tbe Souta Fo fell through tbe bridge at Monumeut, Col,, bury ing beneath tbe wreck Mrs. Albert Cooper aud a number of the tinuta Fe bridge gang, who were rebuilding tbe bridge. The num ber of killed 1 unknown, a 20 cars are piled promiscuously on top ol the victims. Engineer and Fireman Killed. A heavily-loaded northbound freight train on the Western New York and Pennsylvania railroad was descending a steep grade when tbe big mogul euglne jumped the track and toppled over the embankment with 10 oar piled on top ol It. Engineer Stout and Fire inau Martin were killed. HIGHWAYMEN IN OREGON. Two Maaked Men Hold Up a Stag In Broad Daylight. Ths Wllbolt Spring ituge was beld up by highwaymen at Howard Hills, a few miles from Oregon City, Ore , shortly before noon Monday. Henry Mattoon, tbe driver, and one putaeuger, a Portland man, were rubbed ol their money, about 60. Both the robbers were evidently working men, aud had their face covered wltu musks. The incoming (tag bud passed but lllteeu iniuute beiure, but it bad three puseugr, two ol whom had tern out bunting, and carried thoir guns lo plain view, i'uJs probably pre vi'uicd double robbery, BAPTIST YOUNG PEOPLE. Opening of the International Convention of ths Union, The fifth international convention ot ths Baptist Young People's Vnlon of America commenced In Baltimore, Fridny, In tbe big lent erected for the meetings, which was decorated In colors ot the union, red, while, end blue and yellow, and nmerotis lings President John II. Chapmnn, of Chicago, cnlled the convention to order at 10 a. in. The choir ol 600 voices sang several hymns. I'.ugetie Levering made an address ol welcome, on belinil ol the Baptists ol Maryland, aud Mayor l.atroue welcomed tne delegate to Baltimore. Dr. Wharton also made an ad dress ot welcome. The response on behnlt of the board ol managers ol the International union and dele gates wns made by Her. L. M. F. llatues, ol Iroy, N. Y. The aunual report ot the Board ot Mana gers was presented by Rev. Frnuk L. Wll kins, 1), 1)., general secretary, Addresse were made by Iter. O. 8. C. Wallace, ol Tor onto, on "Culture for Service," aud by Rev. Roland I). Ornnt, I ).!., ol Portland, Ore., on "The Juuior Society, tbe Hope ot the Move ment Tbe report ol flcneral Treasurer Frank Moody, showed receipts and disbursement lor the year 57,(I10( asset ol the union, t24,105i liabilities 24,230 delicti, trJ5, against a deficit ol a year ago ot t9,3 12. Committees were appointed and adjournment made until alternoon. At the alternoon session there wns an ad dress by Rev. F. L. Anderson, and then an open parliament was held, conducted by Rev. E, E. Cntvert, ot New York. The theme wo "Syatematlo and Proportionate Giving" What Is Your Society Doing to Promote It? Pennsylvania, Massacbussets, Maine, Michi gan, Connecticut, Illinois, Nebraska, Indi ana, Kentucky, Iowa, West Virginia, Mis souri, Ohio, Virginia and New Jersey, told ot their method tor raising money for tb cause of Christ. Rev. Johnson Myers, D, P., lormerly ol Cincinnati, now ot Chicago, made an address on the '-The Bible method ot Winning Souls." Rev. Page Wllburn, ol Baltimore, brought to the young people' union tbe greetings ol tbe l.pwonli league convention, recently beld nt Cnattnnooga. Another open parliament wai then held, conducted by Rev. H. A. Northrop, D. 1)., ot Fort Wayne, lnd, Tbe subject was: 'What Ho Your Society Done to Promote a Revival In tbe Cbnreb V ' Churches all ovei tbe country reported their methods ot making conversions. At the evening meeting presentation was made ol Christian culture banners lor Junior work. The banner lor sacred literature course was won by the Austin association, ol Illlnolsi that for bible readers' course by tbe Jackson association, of Michigan. Tbe Canton society, ot Ohio, won the conquest missionary course banner. Four addresses on Baptist union were mede, and the rest of the evening was devoted to the Christina culture course. DIDN'T LAST LONG. Formosan Rebel. ion Was ths Shortest- Lived on Record. The State Department at Washington has received from Minister Denby, at Peking, a dispatch dated June 13, concerning tbe late Uepublle ot Formosa. He gives ths transla tion ot the original declaration ot Independ ence ot Formosa, and says that tbe "re- fiubllo" will go Into history as the most short Ived government that ever existed. The Japanese have already taken Healing, which Is only IS miles Irom tho capital, Tarpelfu, and order there will toon be re stored. .x-tovernor lang was inaugurat ed on the Sloth of May. and he and bis cabi net bave already left tbe Island, and Minis ter Denby says It I questionable whether tbe people are at all concerned at the change ot tbe government ot the Island and tbnt tbe movement for Independence waa organlxed by tbe officials. "There wore 50,000 Chinese troop In For mosa." says Mr. Denby. "Tbey are all arm ed, but will not light. Many ol these brave are now In Amoy lighting foreigner. Tbe fort at Keeling wore, a I usually ths case with Chinese lorts, Indefensible lo tbe rear though they were very strong on ths sea side, ana were provided wltu Armstrong, Krupp and machine guns." Tbe Formosan declaration recites that the Japanese have alronted China by annexing Formosa that the people are resolved to die belore they will serve the enemy and have determined in Couucll to convert Formosa Into a republican statu. It is stated that fre quent coulerences have been held with for eign powers, who hold that tbe people of Formosa must establish their Indopendence oeiore tne powers win assist tuein. DOUBLE HANGING. William Freeman and John Ooode Dis on the Oallowa. John Ooode and William Freeman, tbe colored murderers, wore banged in tbe jail at Qreensburg, r., Thursday morning. The dual execution was tbe first caDltal Dunlsh ment inflicted in the county for 20 year and consequently brought great crowd to town. Tbe execution wussueoeesful In every oeiaii. ai iu o clock tno spiritual advisers, Revs. Meek aud Funk, who for the past month bavo labored diligently with the un fortunate men, concluded their work. For tbe past two days Ooode, who had previous ly scoffed at religion, became reconciled and spent the most ol hi time In prayer. Tbe crime for which William Freeman gave up bi life was the cold blooded murder ol uertrude smith, alias Timbilake, who lived with him tor several years as his wife, al though they were never married. Tbe crime for which John Ooode was exe cuted was the murder uuder slight prov acatiou ot Mack Slaughter, colored, at Morewood, on October 21, 1801, during a quarrel over a game or craps, in whlub the former was engaged. Oood shooting Sluurrht- er iu tbe left side, the bullet severing tbe pulmonary artery In Its oourse and causing ucaiu ia a lew minuiea. THE BRITISH LANDSIIDE. Tories Now Cla m a Majority of About 175 In the New House. Tbe result of ths English elections Is as follow, a far as returns bave been received. Conservative, 258; Unionists, 47; total, 80S, Liberal, 73; McCartbyites, 67; Parnellites, 6; Labor, 2; total, 138. It Is estimated that the Conservative maturity lo tbe next House ol Coniuibn will number from 150 to 175. The Liberal received the new of auotbei erlous defeat, when It was announced that John Morley, who was Chief Secretary for Ireland under the Rosebery Qovernmtnt, had beeu defeated at Newoaslle-ou-Tyue, where both tbe Conservative candidate were suc cessful. Tbe defeat of Mr. Morley bus caused great sensation throughout Orcat Britain. MONEY PLENTY IN CHICAGO- But It Can't Bs Borrowsdon ths Strsngth of a Transitory Boom. Within lbs last two months thers lis been vast Improvement In general business In Chicago, and everybody Is full of hope for Ihe future. Suburban lots, which have been a drug oo the market and not salable at any price, nave now come to tbe front again, and real estate dealers report fair returns for tba excursions and auction (ales. For building there is any quantity of money seeking lu vestmeut, but the security must be very good. Lender will not acvept Inflated valuations as Itiey once would. A peculiar feature of ths situation now Is that almost no mouey can be obtuiued by mortgaging leasehold. KEYSTONE STATE CULLINGS AFTER 33 YEARS Unlontown Ve'eran, Wounded at Oalnes Mills, Finds the Bullet. Hughes Fisher, an ' I soldier of I'nlon town, extracted a bu ., -: from hi leg Tues day night which ha- oeetl In him for 83 rears, Fisber was w lid id In the battle ot 3atues Milts m 13Gi, t . thigh being sliattor Id. He w.n ta'ten pnoner by thi Confede rates and kpt a rn ith without medical trentrnent. Wuen hi- r - u-hed the t'nlou lines gain the bone had itt and the surgeons oubl do nothing wi n it. A succession ol ibcesses tormed duriug tbe long year tbe Juliet was Iu his 11 Ml and Fisher lias hsd tin-e r innlnr sorer. He now hopes that the sroun I will heal up and that he may regain :be u e of his leg which has been crippled. Fisher is so rejoiced over the event that be- Is ttolng about tne stre t displaying the bullet xnicn is partly oru.ja irom siriKinj tne none. COVKTKnFEITr.RS CAr-Tt'KED. United Htnte ofllct-rs cniitu el rt cang ol ounterlelters m Union City. They wre lame and Thomas M oney iiu l James Mc Neruev who have be a operating a mint lot lome time. James M.tlouey was shot Iu ths boulder by an olllcer iiuriug bis Might. A 8-year-old boy of Ja nes Herrlder. ot Clif ton Mills, near Unlontown, was Irlglitlully tore by a mnu dog. i he auiiLnl lit the boy on tli face, almost tearing oil tun loner jaw. 1 was not known at tbe time tutu the dog wu- mad, but later it began Iu act so strangnlj that Dr. Nedro was sumn,,.ued and made nr. examination. He said the Jog was mad auu ordered that It be kllle i Tho lumlly an greatly worrlod over tbe nl! nr. Herbert Lambert wns bro;i ;ht to the hospl tal at Willlamsport, sufferlu .- from a wouuu received while out ea I'ping with a party o; ireinds, I redericx iihuu,. i end been ot watch, and was pntrolllng .he vamp, whet Ihe trigger ol hi gun caugli. in the tent anc the gun waa .discharged, L-.mbert receiving Ihe contents In the lace. He is thought to U seriously Injured, A bad wreck occurred on Ihe Trenton cut oft branch of tba l'euusylv..ula railroad, short distance below Norristo wn, by a dram bead pulling out. Sixteen freight vnr wen wrecked, ilreman hlstiiiger, ol llarrlsburg was Instantly kll ed. Conductor Samun Steele, also ol llarrisburg, had both legi fractured and received scalp wounds. 11 li condition 1 critical. It ha Just been announced tbat the Phila delphia company, which is opening anew coal mine at Hosting, will erect 1,1)00 cokt ovens. It I proposed lo equip the mine with electric light and machinery driven by electrto power. Mary, tbe 8-year-old daughter of James Taylor, and granddaughter ot Oen. John P. Taylor, was trampled to death by a savage bull at her home near Meedaville. sbetustuln (d Iraetures ol tbe skull, Jaw, left thigh and chest aud died in an hour. Postmaster C. R. Dray, of Lowvllle, was discharged by the United States commissioner St Erie Irom the accusation ol tampering with the mails, it httviug beeu shown tnat the prosecution was brought for malicious pur pose. Two men who gave their namet a James O'Neil, ol Willlamsport, and Edward llanua bnn ol Altoone, were arrested at Belleloute on Saturday and Identilled us tbe robbers ol tbe Roland postofllce. The home ot Mary Church, an aged spins ter, In Stewart township, Fayette county, was robbed ot a large sum of money, whlcli she bad bid in the chimney, one wis auseui at tbe time, Five horse perished In the destruction by of Ed Swill's livery barn at Fraukllu. A dwelling adlolulng was badly damaged Lose, t2,0U0, Swift waa perhaps lalully burned trying to savs nis norse. Tbe company building the new tube work It New Castle na increased us capital sioca Irom HOU.UOO to 15u,00J aud has elected John Stevenson prvsioeut. A young son of J. H. Null, a contractor ol Uouungaueia, ncciueuiuiiy suot unuien in :be arm with a revolver. Amputation will be ueceasary. Thomas McKean gave (50,000 to the Unl verity ot Pennsylvania in response to tns sppeal made by l'rovost Harrison foi 15,000,000. A government Inspector hss found tbe postotlice at Portage, Cambrli County, In a Ulsorgauizeu conuuiou uuu -c-pua.ujuivi Bmltu short (300. Smith 1 in custody. A license vat granted at Oreonsburg fol tbe marriage ot Susan Steele, a white girl ol Uraddock, aged 14, to William Abercromble, a negro. Carnenter Tbcrnton. ot Clearfield coun'y, was fatally Injured by a fall of 40 feet wbils working on the Pittsburg Memorial borne at Ebensburg. The voter of Bedford gave a large majori ty at tbe election against the proposition to Issue f 25,000 IU Bonos to improve lue waiui uppiy. The nost office nt Woodale has been discon tinued, and tbe mall for tbat place will here after be tent to Scottdale. Fox & Curtli, wholesale (hoe dealer at Al- toooa, failed on Saturday alter Judgment! for (15,000 bad beeu euterod against them. The Washington school dlreotors have de cided to issue (55,000 bonds of different de nominations at 4i per cent Interest. John McOrogan, a hauler In ths mine 1 1 Lalsenring, was killed by a fall ot slate, U was 111 year old. Silo Haley' clothing bouse at Mononga. hela City, was closed by the (belrlll at thi suit ol the Psople bauk and hi wife, J. A. Engle waa beld for court at Johns town. In (1,000 bail ou a charge ot oouuler feting, Mrs. Catherine Turks, (10 years old, w.t killed by a train, at Moravia, Lawrenci county. NO WHISKY FOR AYEAR. Kentucky Distillers Decide to Closs Down on ths Manufacture. At a meeting of tbe board ot manager ot Ihe Kentucky Distillers' Association, held at tbe Oalt home, Louisville, the following reso. lutions were unanimously adopted: Resolved, That It I tbe sense of the board of managers of the Kentucky Distillers' asso ciation, that It I essential to the welfare of the wholesale liquor dealers, as well as tbe distillers, that no whisky be manufactured In Keutuaky during tbe season July 1. lo'Jj, to July 1, lHOtt, aud that we pledge ourselves to use our best efforts to accomplish the re mit. Splendid Crop Prospeots. Tbe Gould party, accompanied by General Manager Doddridge, of the Missouri I'aoiflo, who have lust traversed tba Hue of that syst em throughout tbe wast, are iu Knmut City. Speakiug of Ihe condition of the crops, Mr. Doddridge suldi "I have an Intliuam ecquaiutnuae with thi southwestern country lor many year, aud I have never kuowu such good orop prospect." Thomas Jenkins has been arrested In In. dlauupou for peddling liquor on bi bloyole. MIDSUMMER DULLNESS Welcomed After a Ruaklng Season as Amply Proving That. R. O. Dun A Co' weekly review tnyt Tb week's new I not entirely encouraging, but I all tbe more natural decause there areslgns of midsummer dullnes. Wheat prospect are not quite so good as last week, but still there are lower prices, as corn and cotton have been lowered. The export ot golJ and the less favorable Treasury return tor July are not unexpected anJ menu nothlag a to coining business. There is a perceptible decrease In the ds mnud for most manufactured products, and 'he actual distribution to consumers nntur tlly lessens In mid-summer. Much of the recent buying wns to anticipate a rise In prices, and such purchases tail off when prices have risen. There nre still numerous advances In wage, but strike grow mors numerous and Important. In part, because business was tinoounlly large in the llrst ball ot July, a quiet ton meets reasonable expectations. The heavy bank lallnre at Montreal does not affect finan ce bere and la passing there with less dis turbance than was feared. Gold export for the middle et July, when crops are begin nlng to move, II not meant to affect stocks, can at nil events have only a speculative In Ouence. Wheat has declined 2o for September, corn t l-2c and cotton 1-Hc for spot. Order have so accumulated In Iron pro ducts Hint some works lorego the nsual sum mer rest, and Eastern furnace soon to begin blast will add about 5,1)00 tons weekly to the production. A few quotation bave ad vancedgray forge and Eastern bar while Bessemer pig Is a shade weaker nt Pittsburg: but the averages ol all price Is 1 per cent higher lor the week and 28.3 per oeut higher than February 1. The strike ot several thousand miners In the Marquette region may bave Important cousequeuces. producers of non-llessemer ore have sold largely for the future at prices so low Hint they cannot add to the cost of production, and other mines In tbe northwest may be nftected. Mluor metals are stronger, with (ales ot 4,000,000 pounds copper up to 11 ceut for lake and tin very Ilroi In spue of a large vis ible supply. Woo! advanced In the first halt of July an average of 1 cent for 104 quotations of do mestic by Conte Rrotbers, of Philadelphia, and I now 7 per cent better than a year ago. Sale naturally lessen, Manufacturers do not support lbs advance and are buying only for Immediate needs, but holders who have taken tor weeks past several time the quan- iiry coosumeu, nre sun. Cotton mills continue to enjoy a large bus iness and several have advanced wage tbi week, but some strikes of considerable Im portance are threatened or In progress. The weaker tone tor material does not as yet affect the price ot good. Failures for the week have been 250 In the United Slates, against 230 last year aud 39 la Canada, against 44 last year. The Pewablc Mining Company. Iron Mount ain, Mlcb., ha announced a 10 per cent In crease ot wages. Rains bavs assured good Nebraska crop. MAHKET8. riTTKrtl'lto. (Till wnoi.xaAt.i rairxs ahb oivkm rklow.i drain, fr lour and 1 lad. WHEAT ISu 1 red No. a red T6 75 e 6T 54 IH IK ltt Hi HO 13 l4 4 a 4 i! 4 M 4 UO 8 5 a no m uo 17 r in mi XI oo IS Ul 10 50 17 (O 15 50 5 OO 110 CDHN No. a- yellow ear, .......... Mixed ear No. X yellow shelled H OA'iS-No. 1 white No. while Kxtra Nu 8 wbite Light mixed RVh No 1 No. western FLOI K Winter patents biruda. Fancy Spring patents Fancy straight winter M rtralghlXXl bakers' Clear v inter Rye flour a IJAY No. 1 tlruolby No. II Mixed clover, Na 1 Looao tlinotby, from wagons... FKKil No. 1 YWilteMd., ton No. a White Middlings Rrown .Middlings Hran, bulk 6THAW V heat Oat W Ml W si tl 10 ' 14 Ml 4 15 4 1 4 15 a w -a 75 IH Ml 17 UU it no IU 00 in 50 IN (JO 16 IU 11 to 4 50 5 50 Dairy Produvts BUTTER Klglu C reamery . lit) a Fancy Creamery i? Ill Fancy louutry ItolL 11 li Low grade and cooKihg 5 0 CHKkhK Ohio, new 7 1 New York, new Vi u Wisconsin Bwiiw. la IS Llm burger, newinake. 10 11 Fruit and Vegetables. APPLES l 3 U OO UKANS Hand-picked, per bu..,.. M K so Lima, lb 5 1-a 5W PO'l A I Or Fiue,.ln car. bhl g CO H HI ' From store, bu 1 50 CAHHAGh-Uouie grown, bid... 1 00 1 50 UMlB l elluw, Ou 1 tb 1 80 Poultry, Klo. Live Chickens, V pair ',0 a 5 Live liucks. V pair 50 Mi Dressed Lhlcaeus, V lb. ., 18 a) Live 'turkeys, V lb 11 V4 UUN Pa. aud Ohio, tresa ia In IKATIIhKft- axtra llveueeae.yin 55 u Nu 1 fcx. Live oeeee, p in 40 45 Country, large packed 35 40 Miscellaneous. SEEDS Clover eg lb t 40 a 50 '1 luiotby, prune - a Ml 8 OO blue Orass 1 40 1 60 RAUB Country mixed. M 1 HONEY bite Clover . 14 In Vuckwneat ia ID MAl'LK eVItUH, new .. 10 Ml C1DLU Country, sweet, bbi...... 4 60 5 0U T ALLOW 4 CIC1MMATI. FLOt'R ST5A4BO WllhA'l-.No. alma. oo 70 RYE .Sal! 5i COHN Mixed -W OA 1 8 W 80 fcl.OS . 10 11 bl 1 I LK Ohio creamery 15 10 PtllJLADtlU'xi IA. FLOUR 8 toijl ;5 V.lihA'1 o. a Ited 07 wt COILS No. a .Mixed 4.1 111 OA IB No, a v.lille. H Hi b I '1 1 Lit Creamery, extra 1 Loos I a. Oraia 14 KiiW YORK. FLOCR rateuta 3 75 4 15 VtiihAi' No. xlted ia 14 K h Blale.. 50 "7 COIt.N .No. .. 47 4 OA Is VtUlte Wesleru fc" M hll IEK Creamery Li IV LUOfci elate and feuu 14 LIVE STOCK. CIXTKAL STOCK YaIUM, JUT LUXMTT, Pa, CATTUI, Prime. 1.400 to l.ftOO lbs 5 40 A 5 50 Uood, l,oo to 1,400 I os 6iu hit, Uood butcnera, l.auo to LUUOlba... 4 SU 6 10 'lldy, l.iaoto l.iautti 4 5 4 75 Fail light aleers. WW to lUUO lbs.... S 50 75 Common, tuu to vuors a 50 S 4U nous, Pblladelpblas 6 46 5 55 beat Yorkera and mixed.- 6 40 5 50 Comuiou to lair Yorker 6 imj 6 35 tHXXK Kxtra. t to 105 lbs t.uod. 5 to w lbs rail, 76 to 66 ins. Coiiimou 8 40 a 50 II 10 i it, 1 V5 a 40 60 i ;a a 50 5 no bpi nig Lambs.. tbUHgo, C attle Common to extra steers aii-Uuf-iO; hloikers aud leaders. ' V5t I isl i'iKl aud bulla, l.r;t!.75; eulves, (1050 Hogs ueavy, i.t.fi,,d.. rommou to cnutca Ullli'd, 4 M5.10; ihuli-e auorled, HA Wi5. 45; llklll, 'i.lHs 4-1.45; pigs, HM hht'UJJ Iu U-iior to choice, '4MH(ji410; luiubs, t-'i.o.ito.j.Mi t'luiiiiiiatl lloga select shipper uoue buulu'is Si."ai;ui lair lo good packers ni to.Vt. lair to light Hi. -Viu... in; coiiiuiliii and lullirlisl !x L,r U l altle good hlpperi.44.MoV.U good u-i'holi-e 44--t-Mi'5.1kj fair to medium -5to W .a ; comiuou .5i'iu::,-:6. LHiubs extrat'hi: good to cnuuo S I UU5.WI; cuuuuouto lair a. 50 UiujO.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers