The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, July 13, 1892, Image 2
~ TELIGMP2IC TICKS. J
Interesting Dispatches Abont
important Late Eveiits.
President Harrison Recalls Lieun
n
tenant uorup from r raneeActing
on information received from Mr.
Coo.iiigp, the United States Minister at
Paris, the Secretary of War issued from
Washington an or ^er relieving Captain
Borup, of the Ordnance Department, from
further duty at the United States Legation
at Paris, nnd directing him to report to the
War Department for further order.--. This
act 0:1 was taken at the instance of thti
Preneh Government. Secretary Elkins and
Acting Secretary Wharton bad a confer
?nce on the subject at tne War Department
and the Frencn Minister subsequently visited
Mr. Wharton at the State Department.
'1 he allegations upon which the demand
for Captain Borup's recall are based in brief
are to the effect that he has participated in
a piot to secure possession of drawings of certain
French coast defenses which have heretofore
been kept in the secret archives of the
Ministry of Marine.
According to the reports from Faris, it appears
that a clerk named Greuier, an etn
ployo of the Government in the office of the
Keeper General of National Archives, has
implicated Borup in a confession made concerning
the sale of plans and specifications of
the defenses reierred to to the Governments
of Germany and Italy.
The Government officials do not believe
that Captain Borup is guilty of the charges
against him, and his recall is said to be due
altogether to the request of the French Government
and iu the interests of harmony.
Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge, the American
Minister to France, has informed M. Ribot,
Minister of Foreign Affairs, that Cantain
Borup admits having paid for secret official
documents, r.ut declares that in doing this
be only followed the example of all military
attaches.
Cr.ptain B^rup has apparently lost his
h*ad and has giveu several contradictory
versions of the affair in interviews he has
im with newspaper reporters.
A French detective iu citizen's clothes sat
Tor several days on a bench in the Avenue
Marceau watching the house of Captain
Borup and the doors of the American
Legation.
Killed in Open Court.
' Wax Cierget, a prisoner, was shot and
killed in Judgte Martine's Court in New
York City at 11:40 o'clock, a. M., a few days
ago. The shot was fired by Edward Devm?,
a brother of the girl for whose ruin
the dead man had just been arraigned and
plead guilty at the bar. Only one shot was
fired, the thirty-two caliber bullet passing
through Cler get's heart. It was the most
draoiatio scene ever witnessed in a New
York courtroom.
Cierget was only eighteen years old.
The Judge had announced that Cierget was
remanded for sentence until the following
Friday, and the young man, between two
policemen, had started back to the prison*
?ra' pen, passing within five feet of Ed.
Devins.
Suddenly Devins arose, drawing a pistol
from his pocket. He leaned forward, plac*
ing the muzzle of the weapon within three
inches of Clerget's heart, and fired. Tho
acviie that lollowed simply beggars descriptica.
JBefore Devins could fire again, as he evidently
intended to do, he was overpowered
by Court Officers McLaughlin and Collier,
the latter wresting the smoking pistol from
his 1 and.
When the room was cleared the body of i
Cierget was picked up and laid down bebind
the benches. He was gasping faintly
but not bleeding much. Four minutes after
&he shot was fired be was dead.
JJevins is twenty-iive years oia. ms
father and mother are both dead, and h? has
naturally felt as a father toward the
ounger sisters, Katie and Sarah. He is a
feeble-minded young man, lame and half
paralyzed. His sister, Sarah, is also a small,
laine,deformed girl of less than fifteen years.
8he, too, was of feeble mind.
Took Strychnine To^elhei.
Gilbert Palmer, of Jamestown, Ohio, about
twenty-one years old, procured a horse and
bvggy at a livery stable, as he said, to go to
Port William, about four miles north. He
was last feeu at the above-nam?d place
about 10 o'clock, in company with Mary
Concklin, aged sixteen, the daughter of a
widow living in Port W illiam. Miss Concklin's
mother strenuously objected" to fcer association
with Palmer.
t Next morning Palmer and Miss Concklin
were discovered on the roadside, both dfa 1.
They had tak*n the robes out of the buggy
-and spread them down on the ground, and
placed the buggy cushion on them tor a head
rest. Near them was two glasses and two
'papers that contained strychnine. A note
"Was found, written on one of the labels,reading
aa follows: "Bury us as close together
as possible. Good-by."
Will Manage the Campaign.
* The Republican National Committee met
at Washington, and William J. Campbell,
ef Illinois, was elected Chairman.
' '1 he others elected were: Vice-Chairman,
"3LH.De Young, of California; Secretary,
^Thomas H. Carter, of Montana: Treasurer,
iCornelius N. dliss, of New York; Sergeant!?t-Arm?,
Colonel H. L. Swords, of Iowa.
' The members of committee met in the
Arlington parlors at 11:15, and wer& called
to order by Chairman Clarkson. Hbll call
by Secretary De Young showed an attendance
of all but three members?an unusual
proportion.
Under a rule adopted bv the National Republican
Convention an Executive Committee
consisting of nine members will be selected
of which the Chairman, Vice-Chairman,
Secretary and Treasury ot the National
Committee v-ill be members exofficio.
Departure of Peary's Reliet.
The steamer Miranda left the foot of
Congress street, Brooklyn, N. Y.,
? fftm * {*>/*/% honnfr an KaopH
ivn uaj J oiuucj uur iiij, va wu*v?
the members of the exoedition organired
by the Academy of Naturnal Sciences of
Philadelphia to search for the Greenland exploring
party under the command of Lieut.
Robert E. Peary. The steamer will proceed
to St. John's, where the party will be transferred
to the sealing steamer Kit?, which is
scheduled to leave for the camping grounds
-of the Peary party at McCormick Bay.
The relief party consists of Angelo Heilprin,
Commander^ Henry G. Bryant, first
mate; N. W. Stoke?, sketching artist; William
G. Meeban, botanist; C. E. Hit?, taxidermist;
Dr. Jackson M. Mills, surgeon; Albert
VV. Varse and Samuel J. Entrekin.
Provisions were taken aboard to list until
the party reaches McCormick Bay.
Cloudburst in Pennsylvania,
A terrific storm passed ovsr Eastern
Pennsylvania, and in many sections it assume
I the proportions of a cloudburst.
In Heading tne streets were flooded, several
houses were struck by h?htnin?, am ?
number of persons were more or less hurt.
In Chester County the storm was the
worst in twenty years. Homes in all parts
of the county were unroofed, many were
struck by ligbtnins: and at least a score
of head of live stock were killed. At
Crum Lynne a car on a train on the
P., VV. and VV. was struck by lightainz while
in motion. Bacgaj;e Master William L?wis,
of Chester, was r^n lere l unconscious. A
newsboy, the only other occupant of tdecp.r.
was knocked down. Frorn messages rv
Ceived from all over the eastern pirt of tno
State it looked as though tha damage to
crops would be immense.
Lynched lor Wife Mur.lir.
~V7UL Bates, a thirty-year-old farnmr, ot
J5edtord County, Tennessee, was lvneho I oy
kis neighbors in the Court-House yard at
SheJbyvilIe. The charge against him was
wife-murder, an 1 that he was guilty there
was but little doubt.
Mrs. Bates was beaten to death with a
fence rail while gathering vegetables for
dinner. The alleged discovery of the crime
was made by Bates, wheu he went to the
house tor dinner, and he started the report
(hat his wife had been outraged and murdered.
Her skull had been crushei and her face
horribly mutilated. Unfortunately for
Bates there appeared before the C kroner's
jury a neiehbor woman who swore th3t she
bad seen Bates beating hi3 wife and heard 1
her screaming.
Chicago Suburbs Flooded.
A break in the .Eighty-seventh street dyke,
Chicago, flooded the suburban villages of
Grand Crossing and Dauphin. It is said
that the dyke was cut by four unknown
men. Boats were brought from South
Chicago. Pullman and neishboring towns to
transport goods and people, and ail busin?ss
was transacte i in second stories.
In Grand Crossing the damage will be
very large. It is thought that the cutting
of the dyke was instigated by certain real
estate dealers. The flood reached Burnside
and Fordham and Is said to have covered an
area of five square miles. At least one
thousand houses ware flooded.
Killed Her Child.
Conversing with some friends in her hou56
at Phillipsb urg, N. J, Mr.?. John Skillrnan
raised a small Flobert rifle which she held
on her lan. The rifle was discharged, and
Leonora Laird, aged eleven, Mrs. Skillman's
daughter by her first husband, fell to the
floor exclaiming:
"Oh, mamma, you hav? killed me I"
The bullet pierced Leonora's heart.
Mrs. Skilhnan seized the child in her arms
and ran with her to a physician's office.
When she learned that her daughter was
dead she was almost crazy with grief. It is
feared that her reason is dethroned.
Santa Maria Launched.
The caravel Santa Maria, which is a reproduction
of Columbus's vessel, was successfully
launched at Cadiz, Spain, in the
presence of 10,000 spectators.
The American Consul and the mate of the
bark Yamokden were the only Americans
present
THE TEXAS LAUNCHED.
First of the Battle Ships ot the New
American Navy.
Twelve thousand persons faced the rain
storm and stood ankle deep in mul to witness
the launching of the battle ship Texas,
at Norfolk, Va. The Navy Yard gates were
thrown open at 9:39 o'clock, and
the throng that had baen gathing
for an hour was admitted. At 10 o'clock
all work was stopped in the yard. At 10:20
o'clock Miss Madge Williams, who
had come all the way from the Lone
' Star State to christen the vessel,
was escorted to the launching stand
\y Lieutenant Hillary P. Jones.
On the stand were General Meredith, Chief
of the Bureau of Printing and Engraving;
Lieutenant W. S. Cowles, Pay Director
Luca, Pay Director Eldridge, Commodore
A. W. Weaver, the Commander and other
officers of the Brazilian man-of-war, Almirante
Borroso, which is now in port.
As the Texas started, slowlv at first, to
glide into the water, Miss Williams's voice
rang out: "I christen thee Texas." Then
came the hurrahs and yells, the salutes of
steam whistles, and the tunes of the band.
The ship shot with great rapidity into the
water. She was swung around with lines,
and tugs towed her to the dock next to the
Raleigh, which was launched recently.
The battle ship Texas is the first armorclad
battleship ever put into the water by
the United State?. It has taken six years to
construct her. She is double turreted, with
a length between perpendiculars or vj\) reet,
an extreme breadth of sixty-four feet one
inch and a molded depth of thirty-nine feet
eight inches. Her mean draught of water
will be twenty-two feet six inches
while with 500 tons of coal aboard she
will be able to steam seventeen knots per
hour. The vessel is buiit of steel throughout,
with a double bottom so arranged that
the compartment may be used for water
ballast. The principal armament consists
of two twenty-six inch and six six-inch
breechloading rifles, the secondary battery
comprising twelve six-pounder and four onepounder
rapid-fire guns, four Hotchkiss revolving
cannon and two Gatlings. Her
armor is a foot thick. The vessel will be
lighted throughout by electricity and will
ctrry four powerful search lights, two of
which will be for boat use. She is designed
for a flagship and to carry a complement of
368 officers and men.
THE NATIONAL GAME.
Chicago is handicapped by its outfield.
t? i
jrrj&FjrjtK is again v/a^vaui \jk wuo uuuiaTutd
Club.
The New York Club has released Bassett,
Murphy and Fields.
"Buck " E wing's arm is no better and the
Captain's catching days are over.
Duffy, of Chicago, leals the League in
stolen bases, with thirty-three to his credit.
Connor, of Philadelphia, had scored ten
home runs when the season was only b*lf
over.
It is a remarkable fact that Boston has
lost but one game this season to a lefthanded
pitcher.
Crank's recent pitching success ha9 reinstated
him in the good graces of the New
York "rooters."
Abbey, the crack pitcher of the University
of Vermont team, has accepted terms
with Washington.
Robinson's record of seven hits in one
name, off the St. Louis pitchers, is the record
of the season.
Milliqan* has made the longest hit ever
seen or. the Washington grounds by driving
the bail to the centre field fence.
Clabkson, of Boston, has accomplished the
feat of striking out Milligan, Donovan and
Richardson, or the Wasblngtons, in one
urning.
Richardson's work at Washington's
second base and short stop this season en
itle him to be called the leading inflelder in
the profession.
And so Galvin. late of Pittsburg, returns
to St. Louis after an absence of seventeen
years. With him to help out Gleason the
team is expected to do better work in the
second series.
'1 he work of the Boston players with the
bat continues, with two or three exceptions,
to be on the down graie. The batting of
most of the players has been very weak and
disapj>oinung.
The New Yorks are mourning because
Tay.or, who was droppe.1, has turned out
to be a "i>h?tio.n" jn the Eastern League
and is pitctiing oetter ball thin any twirler
the New Yorkers r.*tain?d.
RECORD OF THE LEAGUE CLUBS.
i*or; Per
Clubs. Won. Lost, ct.' CluOs. Won. Lost. ot.
Boston 45 18 .714'Washing'n29 33 .463
Brooklyn...39 23 .629'hicazo. ..:7 31 .4M
Philad'lp'a.38 '-3 .6:3 New York27 35 .435
C incinnati.34 26 .567 j .St. Louis.25 35 .417
Cleveland ..31 26 .55'Jj Louisville.25 33 .397
Pittsburg..30 31 .46>|3alti:uore.i0 46 .25i
DISASTROUS WRECK.
A Fatal Railway Collision Near
iiarnsiuurj;, renn,
The most disastrous wreck that has ever
occurred in Harrisburg, Penn., took place
a few mornings a;o at 12:33 o'clock at Dock
street. The second section of the Western
Express ran into the first section, completely
telescoping two cars.
Among the killed were Richard Adams
and wife, a furniture man of Harrisburg; an
unknown man from Altooua, and a man
from New York. A lady on the train, who
was uninjured, lost her infant child.
Five dead bodies were taken to the Morgue
at the Pennsylvania Railroad station. The
number of injured was placed at forty. It
rained hard, which greatly retarded the
work of rescue.
Robert Pitcairn and Mr. Westinghouse
and family, of Pittsburg, vs^re on the ill*
fated train, but escaped injury. Thirteen
bodies had been recovered on the day after
the tragedy, including that of the infant
mentioned.
The large marble slab whiea was recentlj
found iu the Potomac, and which was supposed
to be the original stone sent by the
Pooe in 1833 to be placed in the Washington
Monument, has been stolen. When tli;
stono was found and the divers had heard of
its history, they decided that it might prove
of some value, and accordingly they placed
it in an old shanty in whica was stored their
materials. Some one entered the shanty and
carried oil the relic.
TSk amount of money for placing the
powerful electric search light on the top of
Mount Washington has been subscribed.
The light will be the highest and strongest
in the world, and will be seen from Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont,
New York and Canada.
FOR VICE-PRESIDENT.
Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois,
Nominated at Chicago.
Closing Scenes of the Democratio
National Convention.
ADLAI K. STEVENSON.
The National Democratic Convention, at
Chicago,completed its ticket by nominating
Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois, to be the
Vice-Presidential candidate of the party,
and then adjourned sine die.
The delegates were slow in gathering, and
at 2 o'clock, the hour to which the convention
adjourned, after its all-night session,
at which Cleveland was nominated for t'ie
Presidency, not over 100 of them were in
their seats.
At 2:55 Chairman Wilson pounded the
table with his zinc gavel and called the convention
to order. Most of the delegates
were in their seats, and the galleries were
quite well filled. The Chairman introduced
the Rev. Alfred Green, of Cedar Rapids,
Iowa, who delivered the invocation.
Immediately after the prayer the Chairman
announced that the next order of business
was the naming of candidates for the
nomination for Vice-President.
The following four candidates were placed
in nomination for the Vice-Presidencvi
Isaac Pusey Gray, of Indiana; Adlai E.
Stevenson, of Illinois; John L. Mitchell, of
Wisconsin; Allan B. Morse, of Michigan,
Then the Chairman ordered tha roll to be
called upon four candidates. Everything
went alon? smoothly and without excitemont
,mfii Iowa was reached, when it was
announced that Governor Boies's State
would cast her twenty-six votes for Colonel
Henry Watterson, of Kentuckv.
Montana cast five votes for feourke Cockran.
The sixth vote from Montana went to
Judge Limbert Tree, of Chicago.
New York turned the tide for General
Stevenson by casting her solid seventy-two
votes for him, thus putting him forty-two
ahead of Gray, but Pennsylvania evened
matters by giving her sixty-four votes to the
Indianian. As the contest became closer
and closer, the cheering became general and
the excitement increased.
At the request of Colonel "Watterson, Iowa
withdrew her twenty-six votes from him and
Brave them to General Stevenson. The last
Territory on the roster had been called at
4:50, and the tally stool Stevenson 402, Gray
343, with Morse and Mitchell dividing the
rest between them.
Instantly it was known that Stevenson
was in the lead, changes were bagun at once.
Montana started the business. Nebraska,
Nevada, Oregon and Ohio followed. Then
pandemonium seized the delegations, and
the leaders from practically all the States
jumped upon chairs and shouted for recognition.
At precisely 5 p.k. Wisconsin announced
her abandonment of Mitchell, her candidate,
and gave her whole vote to Stevenson. Then
Mr. Cole, of Ohio, moved that the nomination
of Stevenson for the Vice-Presidency be
made by acclamation. Mr. Hensell, of Pennsylvania,
seconded it. Chairman Wilson put
the motion and it was carried in most vociferous
unison.
While General Collins was speaking on a
resolution in regard to the National Com
mittee, one of the ropes which held the Dig
electric lights in place over the center
of the auditorium broke and let a
lamp down on the heads of the
New York delegates. The globes were
broken and streams of white electricity shot
out from the carbon points. Ia a twinkling
every one in the building was making tracks
for the exits. It seems as if there were no
possible way out of a panic, which
must have resulted in the loss of
perhaps hundreds of lives. Fortunately,
however, a cool head remained on
its shoulders, and with braced muscles a
cordon of brave men surrounded the panicstricken
crowd.
The police and the sergeants-at-arras rallied
at once in the cause of order. Men and
women were seized and with no gentle hand
were planted in their seats and held there.
At length the panic wa3 reduced and the
convention proceeded with its business.
Mr. Hensel, of Pennsylvania, moved that
the resolution of General Collins ba referred
to the next National Committee with an affirmative
recommendation and with powe*
to act, and it was carried.
After the usual resolutions of thanks were
adopted the convention adjourned sine di?
Sketch of His Career.
Adlai A. 8tevensoo, the Democratic nominee
for Vice-President, is a resident of
Bloomington, 111. He was born in Christian
^ ? ? OiMhor 23 1B85. and
UOUOb/, DL7UbUW?j{ vvwww. ,
received hi8 preliminary education in the
common schools of his native county. Later
he entered Center College at Danville, and
when he waa sixteen years old removed
with bis father's family to Bloomington,
111., where he studied law and was admitted
to the bar. In 1859 he settled at Matamora,
Woodford County, 111., and engaged in
the practice of his profession. Here here
mained for ten years, during whica time he
was a Master in Chancery of the Circuit
Court for four years and District Attorney
for a like period. In 1561 he wa<? named a3
the Presidential elector for the district. At
the expiration of his term of office as District
Attorney for Woodford County, in
1869. he returned to Bloomington and formed
a law partnership with J. S. Ewing, which
still exists.
Mr. Stevenson was nominated for Confress
by the Democrats of the Bloomington
istrict in 1674. The district had been safely
Republican by an almost invariable majority
of 3000. His opponent was General
McNulta. Mr. Stevenson was successful.
His majority in the district exceeded 1200L
He was in Congress during the exciting
scenes incident to the Tilden-Hayes contest
in 1876. His party renominated him for
Congress a second time. In this contest he
was defeated, but in 187S, having been nominated
for the third time, he was again
inoi-aoainot hia mnioritv in the Hi a.
C1CUWCU, tuv? WW-.-Q ? n 4 ? - trict
to 2000.
He was a delegate to the Democratic Natianal
Convention of 1894 in Chicago, and
after the election of Cleveland as President
of the United States, was appointad First
Assistant Postmaster-General.
Mr. Stevenson married a daughter of the
Rev. Lewis W Green, President of the
Centre College in Danville, Ky., in December,
1865. He has three children, one son
and two daughters, all of whom are living.
General Stevenson enjoys the honor of
having founded the first post of the Grand
Army of the Republic.
THE ENGINEER WAS DKtJtfK
Fatal Explosion in a New Orleans
Ice Factory.
A boiler exploded in the factory of the
Pftncumflrc' Iao Pnmnnnr at Npw Orlanils
La., partly wrecking and setting fire to tha
building, killing Albert Coleman, whose
head was blown off, an 1 fatally wounding
Frank Smith, William Scully, Morris G.
Smith, Andre .v Johnson, Richard M. Brady,
Edward Williams, Mrs. Comeaux, Mrs. John
.Hilbert and her five-year-old son.
The explosion was caused by the carelessness
of a drunken engineer.
In clearing away the ruins the dead bcdy
of Assistant City Attorney Frank B. Lee
was found. He hart visited the factory on
business, and was supposed to havo left befcr?
the explosion occurred.
WOKLD'S FAIE NOTES.
Sooth Bctrmah and the East I ndies inten
i to have a worthy exhibit at the Exposition.
Japan has applied for space in the World's
Fair Mines and Mining building for a mineral
exhibit.
A collective exhibit at the World's Fair
by the various college fraternities in the
United States is well assured.
The Indian exhibit at the World's Fair
will include representatives of every tribe
from the extreme north to Terra del Fuego.
A solid gold briclc, weighing 500 pounds
and worth 4150,000, will be exhibited in the
Mines and Mining building at the World's
Fair, by a Helena (Montana) mine owner.
The Ohio State Archaeological and Historical
Snciafcw will .crnihi* at the World's
Fair, among many other interesting articles,
a collection of specimen* of old colonial and
State bank money.
The chair in which Thomas Jefferson sat
while writing the Declaration of Independence
is now owned by the Philosophical
Society, Philadelphia. It is reported that
this interesting relic will be exhibited at
the World's Fair.
A Schooner is now being fitted out at
Halifax to go to the arctic regions to get ten
or twelve Esquimo families, fifty or sixty
persons in all, for exhibition at the World's
Fair. Dogs, fishing implements, utensils,
and everytning necessary to show Esquimo
life, will also be procured.
Three World's Fair Commissioners from
France are now in Chicago, to erect and
decorate the building whicn will be the
headquarters of France at the Fair, and to
complete arrangements for installing the
French exhibit. They say that France will
have an exhibit unrivaled by that of any
other Nation.
The World's Fair grounds and buildings,
now nearing completion, are so renowned
as a most beautiful and interesting spectacle
that not only do from 500'J to ri,0(K) people
a day, at a cost of twenty-five cents apiece,
inspect them, but the great majority of
travelers who pass through Chicago davote
n Hav or mora to the SaiUd purpose.
Mrs. Potter Palmer, President of the
Board of Lady Managers, who has recently
returned from a European tour, reports
tbat tne women of Europe, particularJy of
Great Britain, France, liermany and Belgium,
are deeply interested in tne World's
Fair, and are wording hard to make tne
woman's branch of it a splendid success.
Ax exhibit of bells will be made at the
World's Fair by a large manufacturing concern
in this country, and the firm is planniag
to display it in a reproduction of the
'lzir KoIokoI (king of bells), the famous
broken bell of Moscow, wnicti is twentytwo
feet in diameter and twenty-ono teet
three inches high, weighs 443,772 pounds,
aud is used as a chapel.
Ii is probable that a number of genuine
Astrakhan sheep, the finest specimens living,
will be exhibited at the World's Fair, a
dozen of tnem have recently arrived in this
country irom Persia, having been purhw
TTnirp/l states Minister
iJea.e lor Secretary Kusk.of the Department
of Agriculture, who intends to try the experiment
o? raising the species in this country.
Those who have been charged with the
preparation of the Turkish exhibit are making
very extensive preparations to have it of
superior merit and interest. They will charter
a large ship to transport the exhibit.
They will bring over 401) native Turks arrayed
in their National costumes. They will
reproduce at Chicago a street in Constantinople
with all its peculiar crookedness and
narrowness and its interesting bazars and
restaurants. The bazars will tie filled with
salAble articles OH -uritish manufacture.
PROHIBITION CONVENTION.
Proceedings ot the National Assem
blage at Cincinnati.
The Prohibition National Convention met
in the Music Hall at Cincinnati, Ohio. At
10 o'clock every delegation was in its placj.
Chairman Dickie, of the National Committer.
called the convention to order and intro
duced the Rav. J. G. Evans, of Illinois,
who led in prayer. The Rev. Dr. Lockwood,
pastor of the First Baptist Church, delivered
the address of welcome, and was cordially
received. The recommendation of the National
Committee of John P. St. John for
Temporary Chairman made the hall ring witb
cheers. At the conclusion of his speech on
taking the chair the convention adjourned.
It reassembled at 4 p. m., when the Committee
on Permanent Organization reported
the names of Colonel Eli Ritter, of Indianapolis,
for Permanent Chairman and the
Rev. Sam Small for Secretary.
The committee reported a recommendation
that the vote3 cast should only represent the
delegates in actual attendance, and that the
votes of delegates who had not come to Cin
cinnati should not be announced by the
Chairman of State delegations.
On behalf of the Minority Committee Sam
Small submitted a minority report, authorizing
the casting of the full vote of each
delegation. For nearly two hours the convention
debated the question.
Groo, of New York, moved to substitute
the minority report tor the majority. At
times the uproar was deafening, and Chairman
St. John almost splintered bis desk and
lost bis voice in an effort to secure even a
semblance of order.
Finally* after the previous questions had
bean ordered by 200 delegates and tha Chair
had been unable to decide which side had
the best of it on a viva voce vote, a call of
the roll was ordered and thb amendment
was defeated by 721 to
359. The mrjori'.y report was then
adopted amid prolonged cheering.
At twenty minutes to 7 the convention
took a recess until 8 o'clock. In the
evening Eli F. Ritter, of Indianapolis, was
presented as permauent presiding officer.
He made a long address. At 10:15 o'clock
the convention idjouived until 9:3) next
dav.
THE LABOR WORLD.
The women compositors of Boston, Mas,,
have been organized.
Indianapolis, Ind.. has eight carpenters'
anions with about 1400 members.
KUSSrA is ricn in coai ana iron, ana ire
mines for the want of labor remain undeveloped.
The extreme heat is having a fatal effect
on Hungarians working at the Pennsylvania
coke ovens.
About GOO Japanese miners recently left
Kobj for Mexico, where they will be employed
in copper mines.
Nine years ago there were only eleven
Stats labor bureaus in this country, and
now there are twenty-eight.
There were more strikes and demands
for higher wage* in May among the silk
workers than in the entire year of 18J1.
Delegates from fourteen labor organi?
rar.ions in Boston, Mass., recently formed a
new Amalgamated Building Trades Ooun- (
cil.
The telegraph operators in Spain havs
struct, an l communication with the provinces
is suspended. The wires are oein*
worked by the military. <
El ct <icians report a more urgent de^
man.] for appliances than ever before
known, and ail of the well satisfied wor.:s
ire crowded with coutracts.
The co-operative factory established by
tin Cigar-.Makers' Union of Hamburg, '
Jennany, employed about I'M people last i ;
year, an i tu? surplus wis 5-1"-.tO.
At axt.c City (N. J.) waiter* are pro- ;
posin; to estibiis'i a grade i tip system
ranging iroai a ten-cent tip at a two-dollar
hotel to titty ciiitiat a swell house. i
It is i-tated that the average wages paid
murliiuists in sliipyar i? is about $10; only '
very t'?w men in Sew York shipyards have
ev?.*r received more tnau $15 per week.
At Pittsburg. P.mn., the demanl for '
finis ied iron is good, th? prospect of wage 1
stlmuiatin?, the workers demand- '
mg last year's scale and the manufacturers '
a ivouctjon.
The guards, or brakemen, on English rail- j
way* ivceive, on coiimsncing, eighty-seven '
Lvuts per day, and after a time get a dollar. ]
The drivers, or engineers, get $1.13, and get ,
1,1 to Si .'25. ,
Gi.aso w, Scotland, ha9 an industrial
home waere women who have come out of ]
prison xet a home provided for them and {
wuere they are employed in lauudrj work, j
"or whiul; taey receive payment
THE NEWS EPITOMIZED.
Ewtern and Middle States.
Having won their suit against New York
parties who offered a forty yeara old reprint
of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary as
Sremium for subscribers to a paper, G-. & C.
[erriam Co. are pushing other suits of a
like nature?a Kansas concern being one of
the latest. They will prosecute in every case
where misleading announcements are made,
and claim they are talcing such action in
justice alike to themselves and the public.
An incipient tornado passed through the
Long Branch section of New Jersey and
did considerable damage The rain fell in
torrents, and the high wind that accompanied
it swept away nearly everything in
its path. Most of the destruction was done
along the coast, where the wind blew
furiously.
Rf.THr.FHKW. Penn. celebrated the 150th
anniversary of its founding by Count Zinz*
endorf. Thirty tablets and monuments were
unveiled.
The number of deaths resulting from the
wreck on the Pennsylvania near Harrisburg,
Penn., was twelve. The signalman who
caused the accident confessed and was taken
into custody. He permitted the secon 1 section
of the Western Express to enter the
block before the first had cleared it.
Corporal Fink, of the Ninth Regiment,
New York City, was drowned in the Hudson
on cbe way to Peekskill State Camp.
The pilot of the Tolchester, from which he
fell, refused to stop, and it was fifteen minj
utes before a boat was lowered away.
Three Italians who were walking on tho
Central tracks near Herkimer, N. x., were
struck by a passenger train and instantly
killed, all three being bady mangled. A
fourth was fatally hurt
News comes from Amasbury, Mass., that
the poet Whittier will write the opening
ode for the World's Fair at Chicago.
A milk train ran into a wildcat engine
near Phillipsburg, N. Y., and James Scott
and Frank Cassidy, firemen, were killed.
Vnorinoar n'Noil nnrl Rrntoman Hawiev
were badly hurt.
The First National Bank of Grafton,
Mass., which came to grief under the management
of President Chester T. Linlev, has
been turned over by National Bank Examiner
Getchell to the newly elected Board of
Directors. The bank has been reopened.
A shall strip of territory between Mount
Holly, N. J? and Burlington was visited by
a cloudburst, doing much damage to the
crops. Joseph Leman, a farm laborer, was
instantly killed by lightning.
Br order of the Board of Directors the
Goshen {N. Y.) National Bank, pending: an
examination of the books, securities and accounts
by the Bank Examiner, has been
closed.
Thirteen of the Jersey Citv (N. J.) ballot
box stuffers were sent to State Prison and
seven to iho Penitentiary.
Henry Weld Fcxler, the only brother
of Chief Justice Fuller, of the United States
Supreme Court, died at the home of his son,
in New Rocaelle, N. Y.. a few days ago, at
the age of sixty-one. Mr. Fuller was bora
in Augusta, Me.
A violent storm damaged many buildings
in Williamsport, Penn.
South and West.
Disastrous floods have occurred in Illinois.
Lennt James and Willie Wooley, of Milford
Center, Ohio, about twelve years old,
have been arrested for drowning (J-eorge A.
Macdonald, six years old. They enticed the
little boy to a pool and stood him on his
head in the mud at the bottom and left him.
The Alabama State Convention of the
People's party adopted the St. Louis platform
and selected a full delegation to the
Omaha Convention. The convention declined
to put out a State ticket. The Virginia
State Convention of the People's party
elected delegates to the Omaha Convention.
William B. Smith, the richest man in
South Carolina, died at Charleston, aged
seventy-seven. He was engaged in the cotton
business. Nearly all his fife his faculty
for making lucky investments and turning
over money was extraordinary. His estate
is estimated to be worth from two and onehalf
to three million dollars.
Jacob Harvey, who murdered Mrs. Maggie
Lehman at Dayton, Ohio, was executed
in the penitentiary annex at Columbus at
12:27 in the morning. Clinton E. Dixon, a
United States cavalryman, the murderer
of Corporal William Carter, was hanged in
a stockade just outside of the Douglas
County Jail at Omaha, Neb. The execution
was conducted Dy united states juarsuai
Slaughter. The trap was sprung by means
of electricity.
Heavy rain flooded basements throughout
Chicago, HI., for the third time within
a week. The loss to goods stored in basements
in the business districts was estimated
at <150,000.
Edwin J. Ryan, the special messenger of
the United States Express running between
New York and Washington, who absconded
with <30,000, was captured at Denver, Col.
The stolen money was recovered.
County Treasurer Fuller, of Paris,
Ark., deposited between four and five thousand
dollars in a large trunk in his hous-a.
While he and his wife were away the trunk
was taJcen from the house, broken open and
the money stolen, A few years ago th<
County Treasurer was robbed of $11,000.
Dr. A. B. Rose, aged seventy, one of th?
most prominent business men of Charleston,
8. C., committed suicide by blowing out
his brains.
United States Bank Examiner Georoi
A. Stone closed the First National Bank of
Erie, Kan. The heaviest loser is Meosho
County, the taxes for June having just been
deposited to the amount of 0,000 oi
130,000.
Robert Barbek, aged thirty-two, beathij
brother John to death at Cedarville, Ohio,
during a trifling quarrel, by striking him .
repeatedly in the face with his list.
itoberc naa oeen anuKiir<. duuu ??
was a cripple, and for thirty years had
almost been unable to leave bis chair.
The joint Democratic caucus at Baton
Rouge, La., decided to postpone the election
of the United States Senator to the session
of 1894, but will ballot daily to the closa of
the present session.
Russell Wells, aged twenty, son of Pro>
fessor S. C. Weils, ot Roanoke College, and
Armistead Watson, aged eighteen, son of A.
C. Watson, of Marl in. Texa*, were killed by
lightning at Salem, Va.
John E. Thornton was hanged in the
United States Jail at Fort Smith, Ark., for
the murder of his daughter Laura in a fit
of drunkenness. Henry Block, colored, the
murderer of Georga Smith, was hanged in
the courtyard at Pine Bluff, Arlc.
The Indiana Republican Convention at
Fort Wayue placed Governor Chase at the
head of their State ticiet.
Tom Lillard, colore'), was dragged from
the jail at Wocdoury, Tmn , an ! strung up
to a limb by an armed mob of 200 men.
Lillard Jay ia r.iit for Miss .McKnight, a
highly respect.d young woman, and outraged
her.
A ctclon'K at Fort Yates, South Dakota,
killed four Sioux Indians and wounded several
others.
The building and stock of the Schwabacber
Brothers at Seattle, Washington,
were destroyed by fire. Loss, $400,000.
Rev. Shelby Hardy and two daujhters
vore killed by lightning near Ridgeville,
Tenu.
Washiaeton.
Senator Aixejt, of "Washington, has r?.
:eived trom the Secretary of the Treasury
i gold medal to be transmitted to Mrs.
Hartha White, of Washington, for rescuing
;hree shipwrecked sailors of the British ship
ceruuttie.
Adjutant-General Kelli.v has been
retired. Major Lewis C. Overman, of tfta
Engineer Corps, recently tried by court
martial, has resigned.
A Census Bureau bulletin shows that
there are 53,372,703 native and 9.249,547 foreign
born people in this country. As to
color, 54,983,890 are white and 7,638,3'50 are
colored, Chinese, Japanese, or civilized Indians
The President made the following nomllations:
Surveyor General?Amos P. Shaw,
'or Washington. Register of Land Office?
Richard D. Mobley, at Montrose, CoL Receiver
of Public Moneys?Edward H. Smith,
it Montrose, Col.
The President's message, replying to the
esolution of inquiry as to reciprocity negoJiations
with Mexico and other countries,
tias been laid before the Senate.
V.
Brigadies-General McCooz, commanding
the Department of Arizona, baa been
summoned to Washington to confer with
the authorities regarding military affairs in
that department.
Extensions of the fr?9 list for American
goods imported into Cuba and Port Rico
were announced in a proclamation by the
President.
The President has set aside a tract of land
containing 28,880 acres on the Kiowa and
Comanche Indian reservations, Oklahoma,
as a wood reservation for the military posfat
Fort Sill.
Foreign.
Desperate fighting was reported In Matto
Grosso, Brazii, and over 1000 men were said
to have been killed.
Senor Don Manuel Antonio Matta,
Mtniifrar nf Pnpalffn Affiiri whrt
came near embroiling his country with the
United States, died at Santiago of apoplexy.
Hereafter all telegraphing in Spain will
be done by military operators.
A hurricane throughout Northern Germany
caused an immense amount of damage.
While Gladstone was (3riving to address
a meeting at Chester, England, a woman
threw a hard piece of gingerbread which
struck Gladstone on the nose, bruising it
and causing it to bleed. He suffered from
an inflamed eye. consequent on the assault
and was confined to the house for some time.
The harvest prospects in ten of the Russian
provinces are almost hopeless.
Cholera threatens to spread like wildfire
in Central Asia. A total of 164 cases of
Chopra has been reported at Baku during
one week, with seventy deaths from the
disease.
Grenier, the clerk in the French Navy
Department, who was arrested, charged with
conveying documents relative to the
French defeases to Germany and Italy,
declares that Captain Henry D.
Borup, of the Ordnance Department of the
United States Army, who is in the military
attache of the American Legation at Paris,
bought plans of the defenses and communi?ted
them to Germany and Italy.
There is an epidemic of smallpox in the
City of Mexico anl vicinity, ani a number
Df deaths have occurred.
The British Parliament was dissolved; the
Queen's speech was read in both houses.
There is almost a panic in Irish securities,
including railway and bank stocks,
owing to the fear that Home Rule will gain
the day in the coming election.
LATER NEW?,
Commencement exercise were held at
Yale, Harvard and Amherst Colleges.
Mrs. Susan Sewell, tweaty-two years
of age. threw her nine-months-old babe out
of a four story window at Boston, Mass.,
and then jumped from the window herself.
Both were killed.
Professor Theodcre W. Dwight, for
many years head of the Columbia College
Law Schoo', died suddenly at his summer
home, Clinton, N. Y. He was born in Cat
skill, N. Yn on July 13, 1922.
The fire-cracker mill of the Hazirdvilla
Powder Company's works at Hazardville,
Conn., was demolished by an explosion, and
Dennis Bailey, the only workman in the
building at the time, was instantly killed.
The Grand Jury of Orange County, which
lias been considering the Port Jervis (N. Y.)
lynchinz case, completed its duty. Three
indictments wera found. One against President
0. 3. Howell for criminal neglect of
his official duties.
While workmen were engaged in build
ing an addition to a large building at Lynchburg,
Va., the wall gave way and buried a
number of people under the debris. J. H.
} C. Winston, owner of the building, and two
colored men were killed and seven colored
men badly hurt.
Bankruptcy has at last reached the
World's Columbian Commission at Chicago,
111. Every cent of the appropriation has
been exhausted.
8. D. Morrow, Mr?. Lesser and Miss
Lesser were killed in a railroad wrack at
Althernier, Ark., and a dozen people were
injured.
Three colored men, who assaulted white
women near Colmes Neill, Texas, while on
their way to Woodville Jail were met by a
party of masked men and shot and killed.
The President has directed Major-General
Schofield to perform the duties of Secretary
of War during the illness or temporary
abs?nce of Secretary of War Elkins, whenever,
during such illness or absence, the
Assistant Secretary of War is also absent.
Mb. Lacet, Controller of the Currency,
has severed his official connection with the
Treasury Department and will go almost
immediately to Chicago to assume his new
duties as President of the Bankers' National
Bank of that city.
The President approved the joint resolution
directing the President to proclaim a
general holiday commemorating the fbur
hundredth anniversary of the discovery of
America on the 21st day of October, 1892.
Thk supposed intention of the (Jerman
Government to prosecute Prince Bismarck
for his recent utterances caused a sensation
throughout the Empire.
Heavy storms have prevailed in England,
doing great damage to crops.
At the Crystal Palace, London, England,
Captain Dale, the well known aeronaut, in
vited anv who desired to accompany him
in his voyage in the air. Several volunteered
and the balloon started. Suddenly the balloon
burst with a noise like the discharge o 1
a huge cannon. The aeronaut fell to tho
ground dead, and three of the passenger*
were fatally injured.
UNDER A LANDSLIDE.
Thirty Persons Killed or Injured
in an Italian Village.
A terrible accident, causal 07 a landslip,
occurred ht Monte Sasso, Italy, on the lir,?
of the Bologna and Florence Railway. This
railway runs through the Appennines and
is one of the most boldly constructed lines
in Italy.
A large area of land on the mountain side
slid on the houses below, completely buryiDg
them. Some of the people managed to
escape, but thirty persons, killed or injured,
were taken from beneath the debris.
The railway is covered with earth
and rock to a great depth, and all
traffic is consequently suspended.
Ttiis line is peculiarly liable to interruptions
from landslides. In 1351 the village of
Vigo, one of the stations on the road, was
completely destroyed by earth sliding down
trooi Mounte Vigese.
TERRIBLE CLOUDBURST.
Chickasaw County, Iowa, Laiil Waste
and Many Farmers Ruined.
Complete reports of the cloudburst that
laid waste Chickasaw County, Iowa, have
been received. At Fredericksburg two persons
were killed and a dozen injured, soma
fatally. At Sumner five persons were killed
niitricht. The destruction to nronertv and
growing crops will exceed $3Jl),000.* The
homes of twenty-eight farmers were completely
destroyed ana as many more were
partially wrecked. Throughout the path of
the storm the destruction of cropc was
complete. Many of the farmers are insured
and the balance have decided to ask
for assistance.
The bronze statue of Red Jacket, the renowned
Seneca Chief, has been unveiled in
Foreet Lawn Cemetery, Buffalo. N. Y.
"' -t
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Prince Bisharck says be will never agmfn
take office.
Kino Oscar, of Sweden, is one of the
losers in the Panama Canal scheme.
Gounod, the composer, has twelve unfinished
operas lying in his desk awaiting his
finishing touches.
Henry M. Stanley, the African explorer,
as a candidate for a seat in Parliament will
be an interesting character in English politics.
Elaine Goodale, the New England
poetess, who was married to Dr. Eastman,
an Indian, has presented her husband with
a baby.
Dr. John Tyndal, the eminent scientist,
uegaa 1115 career iu ictu <u ou ??uvauv v? (
the staff of the British Ordinance Survey at
15 a week.
Tinnysow, the poet, allows nothing to interfere
with the luxury of smoking, or which
he is extremely fond. His pipe is rarely
away from his lips.
It is officially announced that the Ciir of
Russia has invite 1 the Austrian Emperor to
r hunting with him in the autumn. This
taken as an indication of peace.
The household of ex-President Hayes at
Fremont, Ohio, is presided over by his only
daughter, Miss Fanny Hayes. The two
younger sons of General Hayes also live at
home.
Governor Boees, of Iowa, is a widower
but he has two sons who are practiciag law,
at Waterloo, and a married daughter, Mr*
I J. W. Carson, who resides at Mount VernoD,
Iowa.
Sioxoa GiOLrrn, the new Italian Prima
Minister, prides himself uDon despising the
mandates of fashion, and wear3 at all timet
an old-fashioned rusty black frock coat toat
reaches nearly to his ankles, to the great
satisfaction of the political caricaturists and
cartoonists.
The Wanamakers have four hones?the
residence in Washington, one in Philadelphia,
a cottage at Capa May Point, called
the Lilemyn cottage, from toe names of the
two daughters, and Lindenhur3t, a very fine
residence and estate, about fifteen miles
from Philadelphia.
There has been a curious dispute among
the biographers regarding the age of Grover
Cleveland. By some cf the campaign historians
he is said to be fifty-seven years old,
while others make him fully five yeara
younger. Mr. Cleveland himself, in answer
to numerous inquiries sent him some time
ago. is reported to have given his ag# ai
fifty-five.
-ramhe documents have been found In tha
military archives at Madrid, Spain, which
go to prove that Columbus was born at a
place called Saona, near Genoa, Italy. Them
documents confer a title of nobility on Co*
lumbua and his son. /
" THE MARKETS
Late "Wholesale Prices ot Country
Produce Quoted In New York.
27 beans and peas.
Beans?Marrow, 1891, choice. f210 @|2 12$^
Mtxliiifri ISftl rhnica ? Oi 1 SO
Pea, 1S91. choice........ 180 @ ?
White kidney, 1891,choice 2 85 @2 50
Red kidney, 1891, choice. 2 80 @240
Yellow eye, 189L, choice. ? @ 175
Lima, CaL, per bush.... 170 @175
Foreign, medium, 1S91.. 170 @ 175
Green peas, 189 L, per bush.... 160 @ 1 65
1891, bass.'. 155 @ ? ' ;
1891, Scotch 1 60 @ 165
BTTTTJEB.
Creamery?St., & Penn, extras ? @ 2L
St. & Peon., firsts. 19%@ 20
Western, firsts 19 @ 20
Western, seconds 17%@
Western, thirds 16 @ 17
State dairy?half tubs, and
pails, extras. ? @20
Half tubs and paUs, lsts, 18 @ 19
Half tubs and pails, 3ds. 16%@ 17%
Welsh tubs, extras 19 @ ?
Welsh tuba, lata 17%@ 18%
Welsh tubs, 2ds 16%@ 17
Western?Im. creamery, 1st*. 17 @ 18
1m. creamery, 2ds 15 @ 16
Im. creamery, 3ds 13 @ 14 i
Factory, firsts. 14%@ ?
Factory, seconds 13%@ 14
Factory and dairy, thirds... ? ? & 13
CHEESE.
State factory?Full cream,
larjresiza white, fancy.. 85f@ Sfi
Full cream,colored, fancy 8%^ 9
Full cream eood to prime 8K38 8%
Part skimsj' choice. <J
Part skims,good to prime 5
Part skims, common 4
Full skims..., ^
EGGS.
State and Penn?Fresh 16 @ ?
Western ? Fresh, fancy....,
Fresh, fair to prime. 15 @ ttjf
FRUITS AND BEKRIE3?FRESH.
Apples?Southern, red, crate 1 50 @ 2 25
Grapes?Western N. Y., Catawba,
5lb basket..... ? @ ?
Western N. Y., Coucord. ? @ ?
Strawberries, Jersey, par qt. ? @ ?
Western, N. Y., qt 5 @ 11
Up-River, per qt 5 @ 12
Cherries, large,blacs, lb..... 10 @ 12
Large, red and white.... 8 @ 10
Small and poor 4 (g 0
Huckleberries, N. J., p<?r box 1 00 @ 1 25
Blackberries, Md., per qt 7 (t$ 10
Gooseberrries, prime green.qt. 6 @ 7
Raspberries, red,Jersey, pint. 5 @ 10
HOPS.
State?1891, choice, per lb... 24 @ 25
1891, prime 23 @
1891, common to good... 19 @ 22
1890, common to choice.. 14 @ 19
Old odds 7 | II)
LIVE POULTRY.
Fowls?Jersey, State, Jfenn.. 12 @ ? IM
f- Western, per lb ..A ? @ 12 |H
Spring Chickens, large, lb... 21 ? 24 w
Small to medium^ 16 <gl 18
Roosters, young & old, per lb 7 @ 7)f
Turkeys, per lb 10 (32 12 /
Ducks?n!j., N. Y., Penn., /
per pair..... o5 @ au M
Southern, per pair 6'J @ -65
Geese, Western, per pair.... 125 <gj 1 37
Southern, per pair 112 @ 125 M
Pigeons, per pair 3'J @ 43 DB
DRESSED POULTRY?FRESH KILLED. N^E
Turkeys?Selected hens, lb. 15 @ ? BH
Mixed weights 14 (g 15 .
Young toms,tair to prima 13 (? 14 S^H
Old toms 13 & 14 Hfl
Chickens?Pbila., broilers... 25 @ 30
L. L.broilers ? & ?
Fowls?St. and Fena.. per lb 11 @ 12
Western, per lb 11 @ 11% fljl
Ducks?Western, per lb...a 10 (& 13
Eastern,., per lb 21 (? 22
Spring. L. I. per lb 21 @ 22
Gees^?Spring Eastern, per lb 23 @ 23
Sauabs?Dark, per doz,,,... 2 00 @ ? n
Light, per doz 3 00 @ 3 25
POTATOES AND VEGETABLE3k Oj|
Potatoes?Southern, seconds 25 (gl 60
XI ?_n. uKl 1 nil /? 1 fi
X1U11UID, UU1?? ? 1 w \UJ A. IV i^^B9
State, old, p4?t>bl ....... 30 @ 75 9H
L. I., in bulk, per bbL.. ? @ ?
Cabbage, L. I. per lUO 2 00 @ 2 50
Norfolk, per barrel 25 @ 50 HN
Onions?Bermuda, per crate. 115 @ 120 8H
Isew Orleans, per bbl.... ? @ 2 25 BB
Egyptian, 112 lb sac^-, 1 75 @ 225 M
Squash?Southern, marro?r, KH
per barrel, 75 @ 100 H
Southern, yellow 75 @125 BB
L. I., yellow, barrel..1 00 @15!) HQ
L. I., white, barrel 1 00 @ 1 25 Hh
Lettuce, Southern, per bbl.. ? @ ? R9H
Tomatoes, J'la. carrier crate. 1 25 @ 1 50
Asparagus,N.J.,doz. bunches 1 00 @ 1 50
Peas. S. Jersey, V bbl. basket 50 @100 SH|
Long Island, per bag.... 75 @100 Hi
String beans, Norfolk, wax, MB
>2 bbl crate 50 @ 1 00 |^Q
Norfolk., green 40 @ 1 00
Cucumbers, Savannah, crate 30 @ 40 ^^8
LIVE STOCK. ^
Beeves, City dressed 6 @ 7% Hti|
Milch Cows, com. to good...20 00 @40 00
Calves, City dressed 7 @
Sheep, per 100 lbs 3 25 @ 4 35 EEh
LamO.-, per lb. 5}^<g 7${
Ho^s?Lave, per 100 lbs 5 50 @ 5 70 HQ
Dressed 7 (th 8 D1
GRAIX, ETC*, 9BH
Flour?City Mill Extra 4 25 @ 4 55 HlX
Pateuts 4 (50 <i$ 4 85 Bb|
Wheat?No. 2 Red 81ft jg 92% BH
Rye?State 83 ($ 87
Barley?Two-rowed State... ? @ ? HBH
Corn?Ungraded Mixed 53 @ 66 ||H|
0at3_>o. i White 42 @ 4'i^H
Mixed Western.. 37 @ 40
Hay?(jood to Choice 75 (g 80 KBa
Straw?Long Rye 60 <g) 65 BKfl
Lard?City Steam ? @ 6.25o jj^HH
I