-' f v A. N. 3HTCHi:LL, Editor ami Jlusiiicss Jlanapcr. Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. KSTHMSIIi:i issr,. imc it; i : i i-:it vi'-VK: Si. no ir ,viv.vn E DENTON, C, FKI DA V, OCTOBER Id, l89:j. i0. 128. o - ERMAN ARMER I w. m. BOASD, Attorney at Law EDENTON, N. C. emCK ON KING STREET, TWO POOR WEST OK MAIN. Jfactloe In Itte Snperlr Court of Chc-wen M fcflolniiif eowntle, and la the fc"u'eie Court i Itfc !glL lCo!)tlM pronptlj made. Dlw C. P. BOGERT, Burgeon & Mechanical DENTIST 9 EOENTOr?, IV. C. fatibnts vinnn wiikn p.noffjtSTKE WOODARD HOUSE, EDENTON, N. C. JT. L. ROGERSON, Prp. This old tad AUbltihed hotol MU offers Irtfc !. accommodation to thn traveling public. TERMS REASONABLE. Sample rom for traTellng s&laamen, nd C9n TTnces fornlahed when deeired. iFr nnfe t all trinB tad tesmer. First elsn Bar atucued. The Bout imported Had Domestic liquor aJwuj- on haad. CL O. Li".:r.. r. A. LlNDE C. G. UNDER & BRO., CJoni mlK-tIon Moralist ntrs mitl "WTioleHtil-o Drulci'H In FRESH FISH Game and Terrapin 30, 31, 40 & 41 Dock St. Wharf, IIIJlA.lIiIIHIA. - rA Consignments Solicited Na Agents. DO JOB NEATLY AflD PROMPTLY Fisberman and Farmer Pablishing Company, EVERY MAN m M DOCTOR Io J. Hamilton vt r, A. M.M.P. This is a nnl lu.ili Hunk for the HcitsoltolO. tcieluiis as it i 'ps tho 'iitly-ilit mi;iiistn'i! SymptorCS of liifteretlt lllscilse, tie l';isp niiil Means df i'rt -v.'i.tlni mi'li lbe,is.-s. the i!nple-t Ki'tiit'dies which will al b'vinte or i'lii'e. ."'.is I hos, Profusely Illustrated. The licmk is written in plain 'vr ily English, ami is free from the technical terms which ren.ler most pis-tor books .-,i vfillifless 1 v the !;iT!tT)l Ifty of remlcr. Tlii IttioU is iii- feiltliol fit Ik fkt Kliplicli lit flu- h'miiilv. Mill i-. .-o wcriln f.s to be rem I il v nii'lei-st, o. by it 1 1 ON l.Y (it) n. POT I" V I l. stas-e stumps Taken. Not only .loos tu's Hook cu min so much Inforni.-itioii Kda fivp to Ilseae. li'll Very Vo'ier- IV k'vc n foiniiN te Analysis or everything perfKitiiiii: io i'.ui-i. ship. Marriage ami the ITu'l'ie tion an;l Itearlm; of Healthy Families, together wltli Valnalit'-! keeipes ami Prescription-;. K.x llanntionsof potanical I'raeltee, Correct useof M itinary lleris,c ( O.Mfl.KTF Ixukx. IKXIh ITU. III)K. 1 'I I Leouu r! Si., . V . ( tty ill! CAVSK is K r- I' I AND EFFtXT. IF r OWN VOU WANT 173 A "X THEIR Til EM rol X TV AY fTen If you mpiely keep them cs .- diversion. In or tlr to bBurth Fowls Jmltciourly, you must knoir onethln(5 about tiiem. To nifct his w tnt v e are ttlllni? a book giving the exper,cp 'p i ft,,! w 5 ft n prnettcaJ poultry rather fortUfiiJ wCi l"w-enty-ttve J'Por. It was written )) a man who put all his mind, anrl time, and n-ouey f tuakluic a s-uc-reas of Chicken raisinit notnsu pastime, l ilt as a, busintwt and if you w ill profit hy his twenty-flvo rcara' work, you can save im.uy Chkks j-unually, ,-w. MM ill : ?3 1 111 y ii u ) I1 lprj " Raiting Chicken." and Tnak rour Fowli earn uollars for yon. The point Is, that yon mut he al! to detect trouble in the Toultry Yard as soon m it ;ijie; rs, and fcnoT jiow to remedy It. '1 his tn.'ok will tench you. it tel'.a how to dete.-t aud cure li.-eae; to feed for eggs and also for) attenlntr: w hich fowls to nave for liretd np purposes; anil evi-rythliijj. indeed, you alien d know ou ibis siiiijei t t-i make it profitable. Snt po-tpsi 1 f"r tivpiity tlve ceiiti in ic. o 2c gtaju; Book Publishing House, 13-3 lj'---' .st.. N. v. c;-. v. KEY. )!!. TALLAGE. DAY SEIIMOX. Subject: "The Gardent of the Sca' Tkxt : ' Tht irpf:)s cere icrappp'l a'w.l my hsci'W- Jonah ii., 5. "The Botany of the Bible ; or. Go. I Amon? !hf? Fiowers," ia a fascinating fubject. I hoM in. my han 1 a hook which I brought from l'alcBtin". lwun'l in oliv? wool, an'l tWthio it are prsicd flowers Wnitfh Lave jtot oulj rotaine'i their color, hut Hiif aroia. Flow :r? from B"thleh.nij flowers from JerusT l.m, flowr, Trom rrethsemnn''. flowers from Mount of Olives, flowers from Bethany, flow ers from R'lo.irn, flowers from the volley of Je Ii's'iHphat, re l nn mons nn wili mipao r.'te, hiittpriips. daisies, eyclarnehsj eamo rr ::. bluebells, ferns, mrcR, ?msss and a 1r3it!l of flora that keep mo fascinste-1 by he hcu.', U)id every time 1 open it it is a new revelation. It is the New Testament of tha f "his. But my text lvtl:-; us into another realm of the bot.inirai kingdom. irnvinjr spoken to you in a eourso of ser mons about "fiol Every wh'-ri'"- jn "The Astronomy of tho Bible ; or, Go i Among the hiars;' '-The Ornithology of the BiMe t or, God Among tho Birds "Thn Ichthyology ofthoBthle; or, Oc 1 Among the Fishes;" "TheMineralof?y of the Bil.le ;or. God Amoiii? the Amethysts ;" "Tho Conchology of tho Bible; or, Go 1 Among the Shells;" "Tho (Jhronrilogy of the Bible ; or, Go I Among the Gonturies" I speik now to you about "The Botany of tho RiMe ; or. Go 1 in the Gardens of the He.'.." Although I purposely take this morning for consideration the least Observed nnd least appreciated of all the het.niiicil pro duets of the world. v?l Shall llnd the con templation Very absorbing. In all eVif theological semimries where wo m-ike ministers there ought to be professors to give lessons in natural history. Physical fe'ienci ought to be tnughl side by side with revelation. It i. the same God who inspires the page of the nittiral world the page of the .Scriptural world. Wrh'i a i shening up it would be to 'irr"" '-''rfion3 t. press into them even a f r;1 '&ho i T of fe-jlitiie.m sea we.' l ! W'oifL' .' "'" fewer "ermnns nw and inJy hln,., , "K'1 riinu w. would let a 'ifehefc ' ,l !'rw flv. or a hen brood (nrsorvifie a,Prvst'"1' "of salt flash out thev " " V ;'(!la,,tic's f religion. The trouble i3til!i. iVLXHy of our fneo-!ogie,-il seminaries men Who tt-.o so lry them f lv s they never i-ouid get people td come and hear them preach are now tryiog to t' fieh young men iiow to preach, and trie student is put between two great p reuses of dogmatic theology and squpe?ed Until there is no life left in him. GiV'i tho poor victim nt least ono lewort. on the botinyof theBilde. That waft an awful plilnge that the recreant prophet Jonah made when, dropped Over tho gnu wales of the Mediterranean ship; he sank many fathoms down into a tempestuous sea. Bth before and nfterthe iihJhstor of thedesp swallowed him. he Was ent.ingled in seaweed. The jungles Of tho deep threw their cordaga of vegetation aroun d him. Some of this sea weed was anchored to the bottom of the watery abysm, and some of it was ailoit an l h.wafiowe'1 bv the great se t monster, so that, while the prophet was at the bottom "f tho deep after he was horribly imprisoned he could ex d.iim nttd did exdaim in the words of my text-, ''The weeds were wrappjd about tny head." Jo inah wts the first to r.Jor.1 that there nre growths upon the botto u of the as well as upon laud. The H---,t jiietiiro I ever otvn 1 was a handful of sja weeds rf'S?el dtl a p ige, n i t Called the:it !;the shorn locks of Nepluue-' Tliese products of tho deep, Whether brown or green or yellow or pur ple or red or intershot of many colors, arj most fascinating. They are distributed all over the depths an I from Arctic to Antarctic. That God thinks well of them I conclude fn )ii the fact that he his made 6000 species of them. Sometime thcs.j water plants an 40) or 70!) feet long, and they cabld the sea. One specimen has a growth of 1500 feet. On the northwest shore of our c-nintry is a seaweed with leaves thirty or forty feet long, amid Which fhe sea otter makes his home, rcstinghimself ou the buoyancy of tho leaf and stem. The thickest jungles of the trop ics are not more full of vegetation than the depths of the sea. Thera nni forests ddwn there and vast prairies all abloom, and Crd 1 walks there as he walked in the GmMert of E len "in the cool of the day.''' Oh, what eutrati"ement, this subaqueous world! Oh, the Go 1 given wonders of the seaweed ! Its birthplace is a palaie of crystal, The cradle that rocks it is the storm. Its grave is asar cophagus of beryl and sapphire. There is no night down there. There are creatures of God on tho bottom of the sea so constructed that, strewn all uloug. they make a firmament besprent with etars, constellations and galaxies of impos ing lust r. The se i fe it her is a lamplighter. The gymnotus is an electrician, and he is surcharged with electricity and makes tho deep bright with tho lightning of the sea. The gorgonia flashes like jewels. There are tea anemones ablaze with light. There ars the starfish mid th" moon'lsh. so called b eausethey so powerfully suggest stellar and lunar illumination. Oh, these midnight lanterns of the ocean caverns ; these processions of flame over tho White floor of the deep ; these illuminations three miles down under the sea ; these gorgeously upholstered castles of the Al mighty in the underworld ! The author of the text felt the pull of tho hidden vegetation of tho Mediterranean, whether or not he ap preciated if 3 beauty, as he cried out, "Tho weeds wor? wrapped about my head." Let my subject cheer all those who had friends who have been buried at sea or in our graat American lakes. Which of us brought up on the Atlantic coast has not had kindred or frieryi thus sepulchered? We had the useless hoiTot5 of thinking that they were denied proper resting placo. We said: "Oh. it they had lived to come ashore and had then expired ! Vhat an alleviation of our trouble it would have been to put thorn m bom beautiful family plot, where we couM hav planted flowers and trees over thorn. Why, Go I did better for them than we could have done for them. They wore let down into beautiful gardens. Before they Hat reached tho bottom they had garlands about their brow. , , . , In more elaborate and adorned place than wo could hava afforded them they were put aw.iv for the laflt slumber. Hear it mothers nndfathers of sailor boys whose ship went down in our last August hurricane! There are no Greenwoods or Laurel Hills or Mount Auburn so beautiful on the lan 1 as there ara banked and terraced and scoopod and hung in the depths of the sea. The bodies of our foundered and sunken friends are girdled and caropie 1 and house- with sucn glories as attend no other Necropolis. Tuey were swamped In lifeboats, or they struck on Goodwin sanas onrai ' i, m-oeeioa mid were never hard of. or dis appeared with the City of Boston, or the illo de Havre, or tho Cvmbria or were run down in a fishing smack that put ou.t from New-fo'-.vlland. But dismiss your previous gloom about the horrors of ocean entombment. When Sebastopol was bodegu I in the Anglo-French war. Prince Mentehtkof, com manding tho Bussian navy, saw that tho only way to keep the EDglish out of the har bor was i sink all the Russian ships of war in tho i-ond stead, and so 100 vessels sank. When, after the war was over, our American engineer, Gowan. descended to the depths in a diving bell, it was an Impressive spec tacle. One hundred buried ships ! But it is that way nearly all across the Atlantic Ocean. Ships sunk not by command of admirals, but by the command of cyclones. But thev all had sublime burial, and the sur roundings amid which they sleep the last sleep are more Imposing than the Tai Maha', the mausoleum with walls incrustel with precious siones and built by the great mogul of India over his empress. Your departed ones were buried in the gardens of the se3, fenced off by hedges of coralline. The greatest obsequies ever known on the land were those of Meses, where no one but Go 1 was present. The sublime report of that entombment is in the book of Deuteronomy, which says that the Lord buried him. and of those who have gone down to slumber in the deep the same may be said. "The Lord buried the-.n."' As Christ was buried in a garden, so your shipwrecked frien is and those who could not survive till they reached port were put down arriid iridescence "In the midst df the garden there was a spulcher;" It has always beri a rr ?tery vVhat was the parttctAlM mode by whic'i George G. Cook man. thrt pulpit orator of the Methodist Churc'i aud the chaplaid of tho American Congress, left this lite after embtirking for England on the steamship President, March 11th. 18tL The ship never arrived in port. No one ever signaled ber, and on both sides of the eeean. Jt has for .fifty years been ques tioned tVhafc became of her. But (tits' I Lrlow about Cookman that whether it was iceberg or conflagration midsea or collision he had more garlands on his ocean tomb than if, ex piring on land, each of his million friends had put a bouquet on his casket. In the midst of the garden was his sepulcher. But thrt bring? rfe to totiee tb misnomer in this Jdnahitic expression of the text. The prophet not only made a mistake by trying to go td Tarshish when God tdld hini to go to Ninevah, but he made a mistake when he styled as weeds the3e growths that enwrapped him on the day ho sank. A weed Is some thing that is useless. It is something you throw ott from the garden. It is something that chokes the wheat. It 13 somethirtg to bo grubbed out from among the cdttdn. It is something Unsightly to the eye. It is an invader Of the vegetable or floral wdrld. But this growth that sprang up from tho depth of the Mediterranean or floated on its surface was among the most beautiful things that Go 1 ever makes, It was a water plant known as the red colored alga and do weed pt till. It. Monies from the loom of infinite beauty. It is planted by heavenly love. It is the star Of A sunken firmament. Il is a lamrl which the Lord kindled. It is a cord by which to bind whole sheaves of practical Suggestion: It is a pd3m all whose cantos are rung by Divine goorlness. Yet we all make tho mistake that Jonah made in regard to it and call it a weed. "Tho weeds were wrapped about my head." Ah; that is the trouble (in the land as on th3 sea. A'e (-all those weeds that are flowers. Pitched up dri the beach dt society are chil dren without home, without ojipdr'titnity for5 nnvthin? but sin, seominglv withdut (loi They are washed up helpless. They are called ragamuffins. They are spoken' of aS.the takings of the world. They are Waits; They are street arabs. They are flotsam and jet sam of the social sea. They are something to be left alone, or something t5 be tro 1 on, or something to give up to decay. Nothing but wiels. They are up tho rickety stairs of hat garret. The are down ill the1 cellar" Of that tenement hduse. They swelter id sum mers when they see not one blade of green grass, an l satver in winters that allow them not one warn! Coat Or shawl or slide; Such the city missionary found in one1 df bur city rookeries; and when the poor woman was asked if she S3nt. her children to school sue replied : "Nc, sir, I never did send 'em to school. I know it; they ought td learn; but I c.ouldn'tt I try td shamd hirh some times (it is my husband; sir); but hd drinks and then beats me loik at that briiisi oil my face and I tell him td see what is comin' td his children. There's Peggy goes sellin' fruit every night in those cellars id Water street, aud they're hell-?; sir. She's learnln' all sorts Of bad words there an 1 don't get back till 12 o'clock at night. If it wasn't for her earnin' a shillin' or two in them places. I should starve. Oh, I wish they was out of tho city. Yes, it is the truth. I would rather have all my children dead than oathe street, but I can't help it." Another one of those poor women foun 1 by a reformatory, association recite 1 her ctcty of Vaiit find woe add Idoked Up au 1 said, "I felt sd hard to lose the children when they died, but now I'm glad thy'r3 gone." Ask any one of a thousand such children on the str 3ets,"Where do you live?" and they will answer; "I don't live no where.' They will sleep to-nigbt in ash bar rels, Or under outdoor stairs. Or on the wharf, kicked and bruised and hungry. Who cares for them? Once in a while a city mis sionary, or a tract distributor, or a teacher of ragged schools will rescue one of thorn, but for most people they are only weeds. Yet Jonah did not more completely mis represent the re I alga about his head in the Mediterranean than most people misjudge these poor and forlorn and dying children of the "treeti They are not Weeds. Tbey are immortal flowers. Dovn in the deep sei ot wd- but flowers. When society anl tho church df God com3 to appreciate tlKdr eter nal value, there will be mora 0. L. Braces and moro Van Meters and more angels of mercy spending their fortunes and tl.eir lives in the rescue. Hear it. O ye philanthropic and Christian and merciful souls not weeds, but flowers. I abjure yod as the friends of all newsboys' lodging hoiises, df all industrial schools, of till homes for friendless girls, anl for th3 many reformatories and humane associa tions now on foot. How much they haveal re ly accomplished I Out of what wretch edness, into what good homes ! Of 21,000 of these picked up out of the streets and sent into country homes only tweleve children turned out badly. In the last thiity years a number that no man can number of tho vagrants have been lifted into respectability and usefulness and a Christian life. Many of them have homes of their own. Though ragged boys once and street giris, now at the hea l of prosperous families, honore I on earth and to be glorious in heaven. Some of them have been Govern ors of States. Some of them are ministers of the gospel. In all departments of life those who were thought to bo w eds have turned out to be flowers. One of those rescued lads from the streets of our cities wrote to another, s lying "I have heard you are studying for the ministry. So am I." My hearers, I implead you for the news boys of the streets, many of them the bright est child.a of the city, but with no chance. Do not step on their bare feet. Do not, when thev steal a ride, cut behind. When the paper is three cents, once in a while give them a five cent piece and tell them to keep the change. I like the ring of tho letter the newsboy sent back from Indiana, where he had been sent to a good home, to a New York newsboy's lodging house -. "Boys, we should show ourselves that we are no fools, that we can become as respectable as any of the countrymen, for Franklin and Webster and Clay ware poor boys once, and even George Law and Vanderbilt and Astor. And now, boyr, stand up and let them see you have got the real stun in you. Come out hero and make respectable and honorable men. so they can say. 'There, that boy was once a newsboy.' " My hearers, join the Christian philanthropists who are changing organ grinders and bootblacks and news boys and street arabs and cigar girls into those who shall be kings and queens unto God forever. It is high time that Jonah finds out that that which is about him is not weeds, but flowers. As I examine this red alga which wai aboit the recreant prophet down in the Mediterranean depths, when, in the words of my text, he cried out. "The weeds were wrapped abot'' ray ha1."' and I am led thereby to further examine this submarine world. I am compelled to exclaim. What a wonderful God we have! I am glad that, by itiving bell, and "Brooks deep sea sounding apparatus." nnd ever improving machinery, we aro permittel to wilkthi floor of tin ocean and report the wonders wrougat by the great God. Study these gardens of the sea. Easier anl easier shall the profound of tho ocean be come to us, and more an l more its opu'eno of color and plant unroll, especially as '"Vil leroy s submarine boat" has been construct ed, making it posible to navigate under the sea almost as well as on the surface of tho sea. and unless God in His mercy banishes war from the earth whole fleets of armed ships far dowA under the water move on to blow up the hrgosies that float the surface. May such submarine ships be used for layina open the wonders of God's workings in the grat deep and never for human devastation ! Oj, the marvels of the water world ! These so-called seaweeds are the pasture fields an 1 the forage of the innumerable animals of the deep. Not one species of them can bo spared from the economy of nature. Valleys and mountains and plants miles underneath the waves are all covered with flora nnd fauna. Sunken Alps nnd Apennines and Himalayas of Atlantis and Pacific oceans. A continent that once connected Europe and America, so th't in the ages past men came on foot across from where Eugland is to where wa now stand, all sunken and now covered with the growths of the sea as it once was coverel with growths of the land. England and Ireland once al! one piece of land, but now much of it so far sunken as to make a channel, and Ireland has become an island. The islands, for the most part, are only the foreheads of sunken continents. The sea conquering tho land all along the coasts and crumbling the hemispheres wider and wider become the subaqueous do minions. Tnank . Qo4 - that - skilled hj- drogr3her3 have .made u? mips an i o'aarts bf the riTat'i jri 1 laks an 1 seas add saowa lis sdmethfrig cf the wdrk dt the etern tl GoJ in the water world. Thank Gol that the great Virginian Lieu tenant Maury, lived to give U3 "The FLybical Geography of the Sea." aud that men 6f genid3 have gone forth to study the so-called weeds that wrapped about Jonah's head and have found them to be coronals of beauty, and when the tide receded these scientists have wad6i down and picked up divinely pictured leaves Of the ocean, tho naturalis's, Pike and Hooper and Walters ntberin; thein from tho beach of Lorfg Island bouii.t, and Dr. Blodgett preserving them from the shores of Key West, aud rrofesscrs' Emerson and Gray finding them along Bo?ton harbor, anl Professor Gibbs gathering them from Charlestc"tf ha!rbof, and for all the other triumphs of algology; or the science of sea weed. " . , . Why confine our3elve3 td theold arid hack neyed illustrations of the wonder working? of Gol, when there are at least five great seas full ot illustrations as yet not marshaled, every root and frond and cell and color and movement and habit of oceanic vegetation crying out ; ';Gol ! Odd ! He made us. He clothe 1 its. He adorned us; Hd was the God df diir ancestors clear back td the first sea growth, when Go' I divided the water3 which were above the firmament from the waters which were under the firmament and shall be the God of our descendants clear down to the day when the sea shall give up its deal. Wa have heard His command, and we have obeyed. 'Praisd tho Lord, dragons add all deeps.' " There is a great comfort that rol)3 over upon us from this study of the eo-calied sea weed, arid that is the demonstrated dbetririo of a particular providence. When I find that the" Lord provides in the so-called sea weed the pasturage for the thronged maritie world, so that not a tin or scale in all that oceanic aquarium suffers need. I conclude He will feed us, and if He suits the alga to the animal life of the deep Ho will provide the fool for. odr physical nnd spiritual needs. And if lie clothes the flowers Of the deep with richness df robe that looks bright as fallen rainbows by day; arid at night makes the underworld look i:s though the sea Were on Are, surely He will clothe you, "(J ye of little faith !" And what flll3 me with unspeakablo de light is that this God of depths and heights, of ocean and of continent, may, through Jesus Christ, tho divinely appointed means, be yours and mine, to help, to cheer, to parddri; td save; td imj1afadi?e. What matters who id earth or bell is against us if He s for us? Omnipotericd td defend Us, omnipres?nco to companion us arid infinite love to enfold and uplift and enrapture us. And when God does small things so well, seemingly taking as much care with tho coil of a seaweed as the outbranching of a Lebanon cedai1; and with the color of a veg etable growth wnich is hidden fathoms out Of sight as lie does With tho solferilld and purple of a summer sunset, We Will bo deter mined td do well all wo are called to do. though nd one see or appreciate US. Mighty God ! Hall id upon our admiration andholy approeiatiod more of tho wonders of this submarine world; My joy is that after wo are quit of all earthly hindrances We may come back to this world nnd explore what we cannot now fully investigate. If we shall have power to soar into the at mospheric without fatigue I think we shall have power to dive into the aqueous without peril, and that the pictured and tessellated sea floor Will be as accessible as now istothe traveler the floor of tho Alhambra, and all the gardens of tho deep will then swing open to us their gates as now to the tourist CuatsWorth opens on public days its cascades and statuary art ! conservatories for our en trance. "It doth not yet appear what we shall be." You cannot make md believe that Ijlhith spread out all f hnt garniture of ;he deep merely for the polyps and Crustacea :o look at. And if the unintelligent creatures of the Me literraneau and the Atlantic ocean He sur rounds with sueh beautiful grasses of the deep, what a heaven we may expect for our uplifted and rauso nod souls when wo are unc'iained of tho flesh aud risj to realms boatillc! Of tho flora of that "sei of glass mingled With Are," I have no power to apeak, but I shall always bo glad that, when the prophet of the text Hung over the gunwales of the Mediterranean ship, descended into ihe boiling sea, that which lie supposed to be weeds wruppe I about hi3 head wero not we? Is, but flowers. Aui am I not right in this glance at the botany of the Bible in adding to Luke's mint, iinisi and cumin, ard Matthew's tares, and John's vine, and Solomon's cluster of cam phire, an 1 Jeremiah's balm, and Job's bul r sh. and Isaiah's terebinth, and Hosea's thistle, anl Ezekiel's cedar, an l "the hyssop that springeth out of the wall." and the "ros ; of Sharon aud lily of the valley," anrl Ihe frankincense and myrrh and cassia which the astrologers brought to the man ger at least one stalk of the alaga of the Mediterranean. Kn 1 now I make the marine doxoiogy o"" David my peroration, for it was written about fortv or fllty miles from the place where the "scene cf the text ,was enacted : "The sea is ILs ami He made it, aud His hnds formed tho dry land. Oh, come, let us worship and bow down ; let us kneel be lorethe Lor l. our Maker. For He is our God. r.nd we are the people of Hi3 pasture." Amen. PK0MINE1TT PEOPLE. Now that Frederick L. Amesisdead. Mont gomery Sears, of Boston, is the richeft man in New England. Gladstone occupied his holiday at Black craig in his favorite pursuits of translating the odes of Horace into English. Tiif vouthlul appearance of Mr. Eckels, Comptroller of the Currency, has frequently caused him annoyance on his travels. W. H. Thipps, of Pittsburg, has announced his intention to present to that city for its publie park the urn exhibit at the Wortd3 Fair, for which ho recently gave S10,000. Mmk. Scalchi. the operatic singer, has a collection ot eleven parrots in her home, ct Turin, Italv. The parrots are accomplished birds and among them speak all the languages of modern Europe. Mas. Lelano Stanford's family a'lowance from Senator Stanford's estate was increased in San Francisco from $5000 to $10,000 per month on her representation that S5003 per month was inadequate. Thil ' ARMocn.the Chicago port; packer, whose fortune is estimated at ? 50. 000. 000. is described as a short-set. broad-built, prosperous-looking man. with a ruddy, open face, darkly side-whiskered. Richens Lac y Wootton, who died a few days ago at Trinidad. Col., was one of the last of the old-time froutiersmen. He was a comrade of Kit Carson, and had lived in the Itocky Mountains since 1S33. In San Francisco recently an operation was performed on Henry Irving s throat to re move a growth which had formed in the nasal passage. The operation was success ful, and Mr. Irving is now in tetter voice than he has been for years. Miss Annkslev Keseai.y is the young Irish-English woman who, w:th her sister, won admiration as a trained nurse during the cholera in Hamburg last year. She is in America now as the English judge of awards in hygiene at th World's Fair. Too Yr, the new Chinese Minister at Washington, has. it is understood, forbidden the members of the legation to accept social courtesies or hospitality from any American so long as the strained relations between the United States and China, due to the Geary law, continues to exist. Joseph Chamberlain, member of the British Pnrli.iment. began his collection of orchids sixteen years ago. He now has about 5000 plants of all kinds from all parts of the world. They fill thirteen of the eighteen glass houses ranged along the side of his house on the outskirts of Birmingham. Commander Whitixo. United States Navy, who arrived a few days ago at San Francisco from Honolulu, en route to t le World's Fair, will not marrv a penniless bride when he lead.t Miss. Ah Fong, his Chinese fiancee, to the altar. The young woman's f-.ther is probably the richest merchant in Havaii. an I it is believed that his daughter will have for a marriage portion a big sugar plantation and f 1.000.000 in hard cash. Miss Ah Fong's mother is of English-Hawaiian parentage, and the prospective bride has received a thorough English eduratiou. CYCLONE IN THE SOOTH. Its destructive path in Louisiana And Alabama, , The Stofrri Rgari lri New Ofleans,- Swept Down the River to the Giilf and Then ori tof M6"Mle Many Jives Lost Crops Kuined Not aii Orange Left on the Trees. A terrible storm struck th Gulf coast dis trict between New Oilcans; La., and Mobile, Ala., coming from the northeast, and raged there aH night and part of the next day, Sweeping to tho tenth from New Orleans ii long t he Hiie of he Mississippi Iii ver.t hrough ihe parish of Plaqtiemirte to" the Ciillf, The Morm was one of the wotrst which fcvef tisif td that prt of the country, and. art far ns could In learned on the day following, twenty-four or more persons were killed and probably thre times as many wounded, some df tfeom fataMy. The wind nt New Orleans reached a veloc ity of forty-eight miles (in hodf at 8 o'clock p. m.. when the nnemo'metef Of fhe Weather burHu was destroyed, and it constantly in creased in force until 2 h. m.. When its leloc ity was estimated at sixty miles an hour. The cnsh of sheds and buildings blown down, trees torn up and houses unrooted, Caused intense alarm, and most of the popu lation of the city remained up all night, ex pecting houses to be blown down. Among the1 buildings destroyed was the Saraparu street market, Wi.-ich crushed sev eral buildings in its fall. Th Eurdette Street Mission Church, the cotton yards of the Northeastern I'.ailroad, Coleman's boiler shop, the Pythian Hall, and a number Of other buildings were unroofed. The Revetment Levee on Lake Ponchar frain, whidi protects New Orleans from over flow on tho rear, was washed away, the Water sweeping over it fifteen feet or more. Many of the yacht 9 there were sunken or in jured; Thfl track of the Louisville and Nash ville was badly Washed for fifteen miles. Three deaths and Ofle person Wounded se verely if not fatally, is the mortality record in New Orleans. Below the city it Was far worse, especially in riaquemine. Here the wind reached a velocity of 100 to 125 miles an hour, sweeping -everything before it. The tnrisli seat of justice. I'ointe a la Haehe, a town Of 2000 people, was the worst sufferer. In that town not a single houe escaped in jury. The Court Houseand Catholic church, the principal buildings in the town, and tome twenty other buildings, Were destroyed, and the situation was so threatening that (he greater part of the people, fearing de struction in their buildings, camped out in the street all night in a heavy rsin. The air was filled with debris, and the wind blowing so fiercely that many of them had to anchor themselves against trees to prevent being blown away. Four grown people were killed in Pointe a la Hacho and several children. Among the killed were Mr?.; Leon la Tranche, wife of one of the leading merchants of the town, and Mrs. E. Levanders. wife of a well-known lawyer. Tho crop was ripe upon the trees and n'out to bo harvested. It Was completely de stroyed in the storm, with a loss of $300,000 or more on this one item. The crop in the oraoge farms of Bradish Johnson, the largest in the South, had been sold to a fruit dealer of New Orleans, Mr. Oteri, for 05,000. It is said that there is not an orange leit ou the trees, and it is the Pan call the way down the coast. Skiffs were sent out in the swamps about Lake I'uDtchartraiu, and forty persons were rescued. The sugar district escaped the worst of the blow. There was much damage to rice and sugar eaue. At Mobile, the storm reached its height about 1 o'clock p. in., when the wind had at tained a velocity of about seventy-five miles an hour. The rain fell in torrents tho entire nay, and at night the city was in darkness. There was not an electric light of any kind burning. The bay steamer Crescent City dragged her anchor seen miles and went ashore on the beach between Arlington and Monroe Tark. The Magnolia aud Cooley's warehouses were blown down and two unknown colored men drowned in the cotton yard. Magnifi cent oaks all over the city were laid low, and the earth was covered with green leaves whipped from the trees by the winds. Houses all over the city wero un roofed and fences blown down. The wind blew the water in from the Guli until the river reached Royal street, which is four blocks irom the river and at an eleva tion of about fifteen feet from mean river height. All the wholesale and a great part of the retail district of the city became four feet under water, and thousands of dollars' worth of goods have been damaged. Jjater Details. Later details from various paris impnrt tho information that the loss of life, to siy nothing of the destruction of property by the great storm is very great. From Bayou Cook, La., the great oyster field which leads to the Gulf, it was reported that tho settle ments of the fishermen had been completely demolished, and that the loss of life had reached the appalling figure of 230. At Simpere Mill, Tlnquemine parish, La., three persons were killed. At Bohemia, La., where there are a hundred people, not a house was left standing. At Port Eads there was one death. John Casey, a pilot, drowned in the storm. The colored church at Freetown was blown down, and several halls were unroofed. Tho big bridges at Bay St. Louis and Biloxi were badly weakened, and the Lake Catherine embankment is washed away. On the New Orleans river front a number of coal barges were sunk, aud the steamers Grace Pitt. Harrv Shannon and Jerome Hanlv were wrecked. A number of vessels were tora from thoir moorings by the storm carried down stream, and slightly injured. The damage bv the storm in New Orl;m will amount to 376,000. Outside of Ne Orion na tlm Hnm:itr will hp 9000.000. making the total losses something over a million and a quarter. As soon as daylight broke the storm abated and a special train was sent from Pointe a la Hache, which picked up the planters along the line and brought them to New Orleans. Ex-Governor Warmouth and James S. Wilkinson, a prominent lawyer, were among those who returned, and. from their reports, the little town is entirely oblit erated from the face of the earth. At Grand Isle much damage is reported. The new ocean hotel was blown down an 1 the island flooded. The jetties sustained considerable damage. Among the wrecked vessels are six schoon ers and forty bigger and other boats. All the cattle, horses, and mules, all the poultry below Pointe a la Hache were drowned Trie people lost all their household effects. Dr. Herbert, owner of the Bohemia plantation, reports the loss on his place alone at 15.000. The following losses of life are reported. : Tointe a la Hache, 4 ; Empire Mill, 3 ; Hingles, 2 ; Daisy Post Office. 5 ; Point Pleasant. j (colored men who sought refuge in a church, believing it a safe place, crushed bv its fall i ; Fort St. Philip. 1 ; Gaspar Smith, 1 : NiehoiM Post Office. 3 ; Fosterling. 4 ; Grand Bivou and Bayou Shute. 25 :St. James, 1 ; Piguoli-.. 1 ; Grand Prairie. 4 ; Pctash Store. 3 ; Haps-y Jack, 1 ; Port Ends, 1 ; F. Cosses 6. The damage done by the storm in Alabama will reach up into the millions. The steamer Crescent City was wrecked ou the bay. I the Gardner's district across the river fro-a Mobile dwelt twenty-three families, th! homes of whom could le seen from any eminence in the city. Only one of th.f home can now be seen standing. The home of Stephen Walter was swet away, and his entire fani:y, consisting ff himself, his wife Christiana, and his Diet?" Miss Carrie Wise, were drowned. At Grand Bay four churches were destroyed, while t Scranton five churches suffered a lik fate Houses have been scattered, crops ruin-.,f and desolation appears on every hand. 1 Two Thousand Drowned. A dispatch from Nw Orleans gives thse fuller particulars : Nearly 2000 killed ad 5.0C0,000 of property destroyed is the r mlt of the great Gulf storm :n Louisiana. More than half the population in the region over which the hurricane swept is dead. Everything is wrecked. Probably one house ia te i standing ant! thft nrviritio ttPTmij. without food. Most of tVm hnr. no ,.',., in., for they w,-.re flip whtl thei; l.o v.-ere crushed by the win,, nni ttlM W(v '"V ,5--n ' -f expeiitlor.., w-r,t donfrom..w orns to dwtnt.me f.vi among th -urvivrs Tho i..,.. u f from. It lakes an 1 fore the rc m traverse f,ll the wn(frr..v- find H'lll"- tliey r.rr ir'sj wept verv- . . . tniiiiry is ri.-.tr 1 r.,.,worii ot i-lan.S, I i;vou swamps, nod K riH br. We..K- i U IVIT rnf. In a.. . l r. i --Merit rne .imni.,f ..-,u 'nK on t orn si icS of (!, Mi;,.,,,; has been i.e. Vy. The r ,t,1 fi.er.. ,,'iVi lives. But th- v.filt wa ,n th jfl.,,ri(,r settlements, on thn (.,;f (11,t an , bayous leadiaa to it. The ,.,nltr tVre u mainly sea marsh, almost de.-tituf'nf tree The higher point is only seen fc-t above the sea lerc!. (ln,l the greater part is onlv three feet hi,. VThen. tl...r..f.,;.. i-e:u uie wave. Uji (lit,...;; f,,t over tne islands nu ridg.-: thing before them. i ne deaths are confine i t, parjsh.! riaquoinine and Jefferson, t.nd arc lc.rethaii one-fourth t-tfil white population. The senouMy wcu:;d--d arc f..w in numb, r The severity of the storm vm, nt-di bat it required a man of the flucst phvsiqu.i an i l i cr'c t condition of health to livetbrough it all Th" weak and injure ! were killed, and In the set tlements where the storm wa- worst nut n Single child survive.!. verv few women The survivor are the young men in the vigor Of manhood. There is none of them but h is a terrible Mory to tell, did every one of them vs badly bruised. Thev ecap(" 1 mainly on rafts or log, floating from twenty to fortv hours in the water with the wind at lie miles an hour. The death which are eoufirme 1 are : Chemio Caminada. 820 ; fishermen from the seltlemeiu at sea in their boats. 210; Bayou Challon. 10 ; Oyster Bayou. 2 : Bay ou Cook. c7 : fishing Hettlements around Bayru Cook. 43; Bird Island. 45 ; Simon Islanii, 10 i Koaen'o Island. 20 : Razor J! and, 5; St. Mnlo. 25 , Adams Bay. 200; fish ing camps around Daisy Postonb.,., 20; Grand Bayou. 20 ; Tropica! Bend, 10 Pass a l'Outre,40 ;Pointen la Hache, 4 ;Grand Prairie. 5 ; Barthcleinv. 5 ; Fort St. Philir.. r. : Uonit,.i Bay, 0: Shell Bea-h. 12: Grand Bank. 8: Grande Isle, 10 ; Buras, :): point Pleasant. Sixty-mile Point. 3 ; Devil's Flnt. 1 : Bolivar Point. 3; Happy Jack, 2: Nieholls p. ).. ft ; Fait tilings. 3 : l't. Cosses. 5 tSto-kfietlm, 1 ; Quaratitine, 2 : Eadport. 1 : Pearl River. 1 : near Foint Pleasant, 2 ; Bay St. Louis, 2 ; Back Bay. 1 ; lost on Weber, 20 ; lost in the bogs or at sea. 15 ; Bayou Luford, 110 ; Bayou Andre, 40 Bayou Dufnn, 10; Caian ig.-20 ; lugger General Vixie. 4. These towns and settlements extend along the Mississippi from Pointe a la Hache. forly five miles below New Orleans, to the (iulf in Bayou Baratara and to the oyster reefs be tween there and the mouth of "the Mississippi, also on the islands edretening from the Mis sissippi tothe mainland at Chemie Caminada. Bay St. Louis aud Pearl River are in Mis sissippi. The majority of tho residents in ihe places are whites and not morn than 100 nre colored. At Chemie Caminada I here was n largo Chinese colony engaged In preparing find exporting shrimp to China. St. Malo Was settled by Malays or Manilamen, all fish ermen. A majority of the population in the flshlngtowns arts Creoles, Italians, Spaniards Bti'l so-called Atistriaiis or Dalmatians. .V largo proportion of them were engaged in Hsliing and owned boats. At tlie time the storm visited Chemie Cam inada 120 fishing vessels were in the (iulf fishing. Not a word luis since been heard from them or their occupants. The loss of the crop of 1'laquemine Parish is estimated at twenty-five percent. The loss in oranges is seventy-five per cent. About twenty per cent, of the orange trees were killed or blown down. The oyster and fish ing fleet were almost completely destroyed and tho levees badly washed nl will have to be rebuilt. The shipping suffered severe ly, but principally the sinall 'r vessels. The entire Gulf coast of Mississippi and Louisiana west of the Alchafaiaya is strewn with wreckage. Of the railroads, the Louis ville and Nashville js the heavier sufferer, and the damage inflicted on it will run from $500,000 to 000,000. At Fort St. Philip the gn;is were dis mounted. Fort Livingston, in i;,iratari;. one of tho most lieavily -onst runted forts in the South, is completely de:-t roved. Nothing is left but the lighthoiis-'. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Kastrrn nnd "Middle 5eite. It 'Toiut.-i,,, ii, v" nt ,-, Trf-tA iV J. 1 Fair; ,rKTen, (..r.'ipi w..r. ,r-,.,,f. I n-.-rlv. a tight Mj. t...r!r , ., r f..j nIn.., v f'-.-t to the ground, nn i w s i, rt-l!y hurt. J' J.-,.b AsTor s v.i-ht Noum-Rhl stru -k r.H.f m the H,id-.n lover, Vw York, an 1 wa tvlfh I to pr -v-nf her sinking Soirrt. M. Ukym and K dl iid It. Cor,vit W'Te apHiur-t re-iv.-rs -f the Jury. r.e,k bn -M TtgiL-e Tru-t C . up aev bv Ju !g h c;'Tt", In il,,. United States t '.r.'tilt Curt, N-w Y.-fs City. lt liH'ilitl-. ,r- fs ivvi pDi' Snow M in fh N..w Luglnid an I Mi ldl Stat- s the ot) r tiighf. 'M-r TOM f-.. ,1 t, ftotofj.,. ,1-r- r who it s-rvtng a tif. -.-n mry coriri"-iieiit m th M.issn-h 1 risop. hn im t nu 'ther ir K t'.'Upt t' escape. The watle r j ,.,,!, i , ,..rtficr Maine. Three in. l,e of , 4.. It i. ,. i..o- .i in in" i.,i)i.-civ i.:ii ree-io., Tm: Lutheran Syu.vl at Belief,,., tc. p,-,,,, llHS depose i v. . Pivcr. of Ne .T, ..rr. tti.i th;r l oldest minister f th. nyn. I, who hm been Synod Treasurer for the past twenty y-ars. H was convicted at a churdi trial of rmliej-.-lin t. s n d s funds. At New York City, the jury in the cu- of Frank Ellison, charged with brutally beating Broker Henrique, brought in n v-r li.-t of f.s,Hult in the s",.,in 1 deefsw, jtn heeotid of. t-oy mer. tv" in i ij. e'-tts s,f,,t s-'v.l at. IHI. ro is pi "w ha of at . Me.. 1 bv .1. ence, which curries with it a penalty least tlv years' imprisonment. There was a Utxir riot in Auburn non-union hhoeniak'-rs Ndng ritt:i'k strikers. ( ATtlAKlr. HlTillIMM'. Wife Fitzgerald mi.! slter of Folic.. In LmghiiD. in N-w York Citv. si; the wife of Poll -ema i Jmrns Pvirall whom she charged with having supplanted b. r iM her husband's affections. The international cricket n ut -b at Phila delphia, l'enn., was won by t he bo me eleven, who defeated the Australians by Mity-cight runs. in .T. p.- -tor M.--t to death and West. ted of 're-on. arranging have been South Twei.te person convi prize fights in Portland, lined 1 1000 each. Swiiv Don mice, tho famous fighting Sheriff of Coconino County, Arizon a, shot li. G. Harris and Bob Dunhip, of herwise known as .ri-n Baker and Andy Di'iiond, noted liors- thieves, after a hard b.attl". The latter bad killed Syen men. Three jiersons were killed nnd seven wounded in a railway wreck nt Gulfp irt, luiss. Railrom" wrecks on the same dav in Ken tucky. Illinois, Missouri and Michigan re Milfed in the death of thro trainmen and In juries to a do;vm others. The Chicago Grand Jury indicted twelve men for conspiracy to defraud lire insur ance companies in various Westi-m Mates. William Bell has been released from prison at Birmingham. Ala., after being con victed and sentenced to death for a crime of which lie was innocent. He proved an alibi An open sloop wliieh pli 's 1 cf wen ( 'bar les ion. S. C. and James Island was capsize J in Ashley River and three persons out of a passenger list of seventeen WIT" drowned. Twelve new cases of yellow fever were re ported at Brunswick, Ga. Iktsh Day was enthusiastic ally celebrate! at the World' Fair. Lord Mayor .shanks, of Dublin, In land, was present. Geohok McFappkm was hair-.'' n"ar Moore s Cross Ro t !-. S. C. ciise.l of assaulting S-illy 1h!ios ye ir-old d-oi',-hter of f.ii ncr S. M-'Faddeti was taken be'ore woman, who identified hin. and hi', guilt. I by a m i'. H was a.-. ', the S tce C. Dubos". the oiing he conf ss-d A nihi'.ii i -train ran infothr c.a rs wir boili o.lde.l it at at I'.'lgemont, llhio. I hree trampi pinned in the wreck-ago and lit-Tany I to death by the escaping steam. NEWSY GLEANINGS. The business situation is much improved. Four inches of snow h;ivo fallen in the north of England. White Caps are again burning cotton gins In Northern Mississippi. Mexico will increase taxation to meet a loss of $10,000,000 in revnue. About 1.850,000 square miles of looking glasses are manulactur-d annually m Europe. The ustrian Government is adopting stern measures to keep down the 'li agitation in Prague. mob of 200 men man-lied to the Chinese qu'arter at La Grande, Oregon, and after looting their houses escorted them out of the town. Ten years ago a crow was a rare sight in Southern Oregon. Now the flocks are al most as large as in the old corn States of the East. It is proposed to construct a line of rail way from Bagdad to Constantinople, and thus unite the two capitals of Europe and Asiatic Turkey. The public improveni-nts of Knoxville, Tenn during the past yea- aggregate ..00. Joo Tn'value." As mud, as 250.000 a been spent in grading, paving, and repairing the streets. In view of the recent train robberies in the Wet ttie Canadian express companies have decided to arm their messengers with nflo. and the Michicau Central will supply its men w'th revolvers. . r, mon. l Vtrnrii'1 M!U'lie'Mr ivoi'o.i tiTorc-nn fiver whose head a rewan has been hanging for ten years, has been ,.r.i,in.,l. He has killed aoout fifteen per- k,i,, and was betrayed by one ot his own men. Philadelphia intends Io put a monument in honor of James A. Garfield in Fairmount Park The sum of $15,000 has already b.-eU raised to pav for the monument, and Augus tus St. Gaudens has been sted as its de sipner. The buying and shipping of peach-pils has grown to be quite an industry in North (a ro ll ua In Newton large quantities of the stones have been purchased this season. Hi average price paid has been thirty-five cents a bushel. The French Government has just created a postal service by camel express in the French Territories of Obock and the Somali eoast. In connection with this service a epe-ua pro visional stamp will be issue j. the value being one dollar. Lulu Beaupette. fourteen years old. com mitted suicide at Minneapolis. Minn b drowning. She was a f'Pil at the ll.a School, and her eyesight was growing poor. Bather than lose her eyesight she eaid sue would commit suiHde. The Danish project to build a great fort at ggerso. overlooking the great oeit. ln-at-iraeted the attention of the Prussian Vj ar closing of the FaJtic to large .ior. of lie-lit oraught being al ri"i - - - sound. the rult f a series of rabbit hunts in Ontario County, California, 'Vi'nrv have been slaughtered. Since the Count bounty of twenty cents on rabbit scalps wen. into effect there has l-een a great deal ol hunting. Some men have made as ouch a, S3 a dar. t Jm TO LASSONIAGAEA. Turbine Wheels ot'5000 Horse Power to IJe Placed in Position. ,t imrnis" tur.uue water j.nrtsj vi ii--- - wheels, with t ieir auxiliary which were built in Phila i-lp aoo.'.noQ each, for the pu-po' KU cf nrwn.-inilS TX "-." Of industrial purposes, wilt shortly in position. Eh wht is -xp ...,inn horse POWT. '-' v t " - - - man about foiiu I his w iv into White I! no. Ho nt ( cV dan I. H- n t':i! Pr'silentiil r pen. mi l trie i to Waslil ni;t on . A jMV;Kito'-s crank, a white t w -lit -eight years of ag th" lower region of tie was in search of Prosi'b threatened to SclZ-' Uli chair by fair niea treii r" a pisto'. Se. iiErAitv Hkuiieut has issue 1 a (fen.-r.il order complimenting thos- in the naval ser vice j,nd civilian - stationed at the port Royal Naval Station. South Carolina, for t h'-ir de votion to duty during the late hurricane. These Nw York "anti snapper' nomina tions have ben made by Hi" President .Gen eral Peter C. Doyle, of Buffalo, Collector of the port of Buffalo ; John .f. Iv-nti-dy. of Buffalo. Appraiser of Customs at Buffalo; Valentui" Fle.'kenstein, of Roche-ter. Col lector of Interna! R -veiiuc for the Twnb eighth District. CHAKiii-Kof brutality have been HI" ! at the War Department against t h" Unite ! St i' , troops present at the ooeningof t fie Chero-e.. Strip. Gknkhal Whkklkm. of Alabama, intr . dueed a bill in the Hons" paving the way for New York City to bold a World's l air in i:00. in commemoration of th" Twentieth CcntiiT "f Christianity. Sk.'-hetahy S-mitii has appointed Jom j.tni . Daniels, of North Carolina, to b- CI jet Clerk of the Interior Department. Rf i riEsK.NTvm e Hen-person intro lu ! in the Hons" a resolution providing for a Con jjressional investigation "f the American Sugar R-'initig Company of New Jersey. wild authority for the committee of investigation to report a bill instituting quo warranto pro ceedings against the company to annul Its existence. The Superintendent of the Ileal L'tfT Office report" that 7.320.03S pieces of mail inatter were handled in bis of. tcc. Of these 2I.017 contained alto eether tii.OtU in money. 30.4 contain-.! flraTTs'"'fc., "representing 'I mid .'HOi contained postal for 5lty. There wT" n't'T'd to own- r 17 520 letters containing -r2:.2il in inoir-;.. 2f.;sH containing drafts, i-t-., r-pre 2.15.24.' and .'jlvi contauiin for H'Jli. THE LABOR WORLD. Or nitron ' . e;p!oy i.on.,oro mn. i Bmrtx hn hundred yer .. h'mnVr. Ts.'TfN. Y. f luiulver ;nut rT an rx-I'-nitli'i i Mnt W.sfn farmers t""V p.t fr. I iVr D.av demonst rfi u. SfM i.'i!im w.mt dv work penernt! er,for.--1. it.-a I of pie.-., work. lvT"N p:f- 'aver will rrse-ufrt a ivll' nptnle for r-'-rni -tou. activity lu th'-tr t ecnt tieubh- P.i vi tv I ..(l.-r maVer buve df..rr'-t tn nine hour dev demand until t u.!n.-o4 h!l have In.prove ! I 'im ' t r i Col.) mm owner, an I nin-m have nettled tti.-lr troubU-a. u I loo) mta-r 1'ave r turned t work. Tn Workingmcn'n AM-mMy of Ntwerk. ru t at ..dwin v an I putllhe J t labor re.-or I f-f I'lt'ttilvts of ttie Leisln'tirw, At.mit tN. Y. Houecuttcr lnvn 1-t th- l'.vlerruioii of I-itr and nlltd th'u..et.j tlie Vt'm t'nlon of Nt.vtrxMiH"r. iNsTftti of laving off n."ti. Co.-n.. n-i I, the K-rent c.al operator of AH-ghanv, I'-nn., has decide! to employ all iau S ,eitw tlilr I time. It i expected that n '-cnTention or Nttienul gathering of all ttie working giri .-bibs vr'.ll bo held in Mis4'i 'htiett In th" pring of lc.M. Nrw Yokk artifcinl flower j.'lrN come-en at thirteen v nir. and reninln tmt fln v' ir at tills work. Th" average w.ige ts over fbi n we.-k. The mifiy n lvantag.i cnjove-l I v t!) Foutli over Sirw Fnglniid in cotton nim i facturing are tl., topic m.my dN-assl .n t In the latter r-'gl. ti. I'niom flint glass worker MU of ..-ptin cuily part of their wage during th" depresi tslon. the remainder to be pild when 1 tlMlies (ihall I'ave improved. At Worcester, Mass.. the railway co npnn has been found guilty in the courts of work ing men niorethau ten houri la twelve, del-pit" local ordinance. The elty of Port Angeb-s, Washington, u doing a great deal for the unenipl vi.. Streets iireb'ing gra b- l, n city !mI Is goimr up, an I a 5TK) foot bridge will no..n be c.n et ructed. Six f-icforles in Kokorno, Jn i.. deploying i.oo people, nave resuincu opera' I ms Tcrf long close-d'ivv n. The 1 iiancii I Piute Cum. pany. v lth ilant in that city nnd l.lwo.,.1, also started Ores, giv hikj work to 1 to I oper atives on half time. O ini.s employ. s in Ni'iT York hair work earn on nn uverage fs, while their expend iture on dress amounts to 2. ii , wok, nn Is the highest averag i among feeml" work ers. Their health is good, but th work I taxing to th" eyesight, and few can conttaip. iu the busin-iss nfter their forte th ar. Til i; smallest specimen or !e .rsefteli eve born in New York State is owned by C. B Basset t. It was iHirn at flic Spring lliil h..r.. farm. i. ear S allon, whi'di Is owned by Mr. p.assett. dim nntuial weigh thi.1v tti:. Pounds and is "nl two fe,.( jn helglit. The estimate.! output of canneries thm year at Port 'I'owiiend. VMlliig.on. ts ,Iim imu i-as.-s. I Ms L- i t w.-nly p r . .lit !. fas.. Ur. en last ear. THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prl.o of Country Produce luot-t in New York. 40 r.rxN-s axi rr v. Reiius -Marrow, IMH.1. choice Medium. Hli.'l. choi -e Pea, 1 clioice Bed kidney. is;a. cboc . White kidney. 1M!2. choice. Lima. Cal.. V l.O lb (ircen peas, lH'.t'2. V bush to 111 X. xtr.i 1 '.i- J so 2 M fn 2 H 2 nil I "in I '.Ml or Or (n (n 1 i,. 1 .15 not"- Creamery - State, tub State, pails, i-xi rns Western. Ilr-ts Western, Seconds Wester. thirds Stat" dairy half tubs en 1 pails, cxt r.a Half tubs and pall", t'r Half tubs and pads, ser-oi,,'. Welsh t ubs, extra'. Wel.h tubs, Orsts Welsh tubs, second Western Im. creimiTv. firsts W. Im. creamery, seconds W. Im. creamerv. third Western Fa-tory, tub-. Ilrsts W. Factory, seconds . W. Factory and dairy, thirls ( it t 1 1 r State Factory Full crenm, white, fancy Full crearn. colon"!, fancy. Full cream, large, ho)c. Part skims, choice Part ftkirns, fair to goo 1. Part Kklm, eomn.on. .. Full Hklms row .. State nnd l'enn Fr.-sb Western- Fresh, fau'-y Duck egs mni' an-ii iirimtrs- Apples Inferior, V bbl . . . . . fireen varieties. V bbl.. . Red varieties, fall. bbl . penr. Bartl'ft, ' bbl Other kinds, i' bbl Orap"-, I el. . V ft Coti'-ord. t' tti Niagara. VP. Peaches, Jersey. V b-isk t . . . Cranberries, Cape cd. V bbl llol . State ic.:i. t, Fs;i2. prim" H:i2, com non to good Old odda I.tvr. I'OCI.TKT. 2'1' ; 20 1 17 l't 1 17 In In Or In In In In' In' -' In- 25 27 2". VI 25 il 2 2' H l't' is 1-. lift ff - 10 'a' 10 (al H- , 1 In 7 , .'. (; f.'j '' ,- 4 2 In' -I VI 0, 2 5 2:t ( 2 ' j (., Y. KSII 1 00 fn I Ml I 'I f" I 'ft ' Ml in t Ml ;i O I in ! no 2 .'0 la I ' .'t in 5 IV 1 1 . n 2 '. ' fn 1 'f 1 IHI fn ') OO 21 0 r, JLL fa l, In (n 2 i 21 Hi 12 it - represent mg postal not.--. from Genoa, Brazil, return" I to th" f..r- liojera on board ; 111 p-rsot. -as" on th" voyage. rr Foreign. The mad steamship Carl" H. Italy, for Sanb mer p-rf with die 1 of th- dis- The Gov.-rn-n. n is gaming the r.mt ovr tli- r-volutionists m Argentina. The citv of D-'-terr .. Brazil, capitulated to r,.-.rf of xd-riiral Malio's r - The Argentine insurgents at B Kiirn.ii.)..ri'. to th- National for' At.t.EBMAN tiEOB'.K Rol'EKr Tvl.KB hil-i .e.-n elected L'T-I .M lV'T of Londofl. - Anarcii-t bomb fa-tory ha l-en un earthed bv th" police Ht p. ir--' iona, Spain. !-.. filial s.-tf P-rneTlt Of th" OU'-stP.IlS PI dispute between Fr.in- ma le. Th" King tn-aty witli Fr ire-e. J he t; .1 b ii Dragon, a h fe a resort of Rhine b killing i-T-.n-'. Il.iirlltl. Mki.pi renewed tn-nt "f Rio Jani'-n fai fa, fn f fa fn, I fl't. iario hav l-S. V steni, V lb fw Spring ciijekcim, local, V !b. . ftU'e Western, 'f It. "U.fm Roosters, old, ft Turkeys. V 'fi Duck. N. J.. N. V.. I'-nn., V pair W-t-rn. V pair ti Western, t- pair Pigeon, i- pair PiirssE.p I'OULTitT- rEfn Kii r rn Turkeys. V if, Chicken. Phlla. V lb Western, i' Hi Fowls St. and Wct, y IT, Ducks - Fair to fancy, V in i'.astern, V If' Spring. L. I . V tt. r, e.se Km stern. tJ ft S-pi-abs Dark i' do. White, V do. 7 10 :i 1 no H 1 1 u 12 15 1 VI 2 V) II in',, 10 11 vo r.'i 1 :t7 35 fn fn fa fn fn fn fn fn (a fa Sla n Ma'n ha been has sign's! th ' t'-l at Konig-wir- inrisf a. co!ia;C" I. V.B'.'Is. on IV to pass the ki'i'-'i in the tti" b.cijbiirl- I w-nty p.-rson-. were firing ' U NP-tneroy. in h- ,....,.-ral uprising in lirail. i1ang-r ". wh-re t tier" i- gn-.at .suffering on a s -an ity of provisions. OUfit of FIVE MURDERERS HANGED. Expiated Their Crimes I'poti a Single Scaffold In Georgia. eojored men .ne s-aff 'i l at At noon, a f-.y days ago. ' ban:'"-! tO? tVT Oil " 1 ' ' .... V.-rnou. Moti'go-.riery i.ouaiv, Mount ;r l inech;::i's-.n, fiia at a c"Jt r'f s-. of utilizing Niagara hail" lor lr pla -el etc 1 t t d"- Tcre of th:n rn ri"h rr.an. last Jiliy : the var-'ol 1 .'hi id an i' tii" lifth murder! a i,r,..l nparjion. It was the flrst tmng.r.g Moiitg "iiTj- Count;, 1'k.k) p -rsous surro'ia. I,.., I 1...!; erectetin a pUl-Il-' in" b l th -1 Max peteru, fourth kill' 1 a five- ol- in e war. A LoOt s -affoi !, which j'lH'-'l. The plant will Le, above the Falls. r. jtel 'j:ws tlistan.-e The row Wtvwn the World's Fa'r Com mission m:th" lioard of Lily Minigers ever the in" of unlimited fc ni-nile mela.'s and diplopias is n -t iikely to be '-Hlei ex cept ty joiiit resolution of C'onjrrwu, j vroKTl:LE. , I'otato-s State. V Is) p,s . ! .b rsey. V bbl i L. I. . In bulk. V bbl Cai t age. L. I . V lift . . : Oritons st. A W.-t.. V bbl Pastern, r"1. V 1 -' I j Eastern, wlofe, y bbl .... ' ( i-iniU-e, L. I., r l'fi . I . i 'i -. a t -en n . bag Squasti. iimrrow. ' bbl Hubbard, f bb!.. i Tome-toe, neiir by. '-rate 'I urr.'p-. Russia. V b' I Wfdfe. ' bt l . . C.-I. rv. L. I , i d -'. burc h. -Cauliflower, t l td OK41N, ETC. Flour Winter Patent Sj ring Patent Wheat. No. 2 ld Bye Stite Bar!" Two rowd Stale. .. Corn Olo1ir Oats - No. 2 White Mil-! Wesftrn Hay -Good to Choice Mraw - Long Ry- Swds Clover. V 10f Timothy. '. It0 Lard City St -n to i tvr si"( ii. j;.,.v.f. Ity dresi. 1 Mil- li Cow, com. to good Calve, Citv dresel She-p, V PX) tb Land. V IT. Hogs Live, y 100 tbs..., Dreed..., 1 r) 1 75 a 1 2 .1 ff) 1 ii 1 75 2 Vl 7 no 5 I 1 25 1 f) !; i n n pi 15 i 2 75 1 -7 'I i "'i 2 2 . I VI 1 I -7 I 2 i 1 oi I 0l I Ot 1 .v VI 1 111 i no 1 Ml it : iki : .VI K 20 .'0 In fa fn fn - in if. U 5 .V) '.t no t (XI 25 fKi 3 tl 3 W) 4 25 7! V .,5 iV ;o ! m 5 ft : .' 1 00 rtt .' 0 oo la 12 fa i 0i i 10" fw 7 40 10;