V mwmn mmmmwmmmmmmmmm., ,n -rn , - .., AND ARMER .A A H. 31ITCHKLL, Editor and Jiusincss Manager Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. ESTABLISH:.) lssc,. niimnninrinu nnm' i f When Taid in Advance; EDENTON, N. C, FKIDAY, JUNE 15. 1894. NO. 4G3. ilUdiUnir lUll rnlbt 1.0i it Not laid in Advance. f 1 3 I 1 w. m. BOND, Attorney at Law EDENTON, N. C OmCX ON UNO 8TRKET TWO DOOR WEST OK MAIN. . r-factlce In t&e Roperler Courts cf f'hrwtB ssst (joining eoantles, ic4 In t&e sireme Conrt at Iri. olhctions prompt! j mAde. DR. C. P. BOGERT, Burgeon & Mechanical DENTIST. 5 EOKNTOK, IV. C. FATIENT9 VIITKD WFIKN KEQUBSTE2 WOODARD HOUSE, EDENTON, N. C. J. L. ROGERSON, Prp. Thli old sad etbltsbed hotel 11111 often Irs ls scromnio "Aliens to the traveling public TERMS REASONABLE. Kimoie roam for trsrellne salesmen, and eoa rrncei farii.ihe'l when desired. iwFrw iiHoti at all trains and steamers. F.rgr r a" Bar atlacbed. The But Imported fx ' Iiomes'.lc Liquors ainaji oa hand. NEATLY AHD PROMPTLY BT Til Fisherman and Farmer Publishing Company, tVEBY Ml! HiS i: .! . Hamilton Avers, A. M., M.l. i ;i mil VjiluaMt! IJimiIc f. r I'diimCioKI. tendiing as it ,1 ,-, t-a-.ily-iii-.i iiicuishe.l 1 1 1 i r : 1 1 -i or tlinerent D.. senses, if,.- faiiM-. unit Minus of 1'ri--urli l)i rusts, ami Hits i- ; I I Icim-. lli .s which will al- l.o Mb- i I'lirt-. :.- i -a -.-.. ITofusety lllustrate.l. I in' i:,,i'i is written in plata i ivii-.lav Kim'lisli, and is frae ii '!i i h -;,"-hi' ii-"1 terms, whlci. r. ii. i- r rin -l i'nctiir lionks !- . t.i the generality of i .. : r. This ISook is in- ii nileil lii hi' ill M'l'viro iii Mi.- 1 aiiiily, i.inl is mi wiinleit i.- i" 1.. i i :i nly understood i.y all OS I. V lilt rln. 1'OSTl'All). i'l'M.'i 'e Stamps Taken. Net i.nly dues t.'iis INmk con l.ua -..i mueli iiifurtnatiiiu Kela He to l).M'.w, but very .rojKT l ;iM-i a I'oiiiiilete Analysis r '.i-ryUiing pertaining to t'ourt i!.ii, -Marriage anil the I'ruiiue ti "ii and Hearing nf Hea:ihy I ainillt-s, together with Valualilo k.-i-ipi-s and l'resi'r:ittons. Kx 1 l.inatiimsof U i t . i '. 1 1 -: 1 1 Practice, Ci.i reet nsenl irdmary Herbs, jco I 'lIMIM.KTK lM'KX. HOOK PI It. HO! sr., 1 .' 1 l.cuiiard St., .. V. City and r.vrr.cT. YOU WANT WANT -l- A T THEIR V A WAY THE ereii if you merely keep tliem ns a diversion. In or der to tiatid! Fowls Judiciously, you must know anmeth'.iiK a'xittt t:uni. Tonnes his wut we are selling a tn.i.k Kivmz the experience OC of a jiraef test jmultr raiser forVnij a,wVa twenty five years. It was written by amr.n who put a'l his min.l, an 1 time, and jroney to niakiPft a suc ress of (."hii'keu raising notnsa pastime, tut as a business and if y'U will prot l y his twenty-tivo yaxs' whirls, you can save many Chicks anntiiily, It! v.,:i mm-, 1 " Raising CJihkenr." snd mnk your iwls earn uoiiars for yon. The j... mt is, that you inu.-t be a''le to detect troutile in Hie l'ouiiiy Var l as soon as it aj, -e: r.-., r.p.d knovr Low to reined v it. i Lis book will teach you. it tells how io detect and cure di-ense; to feed for ecs :.iiil ais i tor fattening; which fowls to save tor breed n purroses; and everything, indeed, you sin u d kii. .w on this subject to make it profitable. bent poMjjaid lor twenty-five cents hi .c o- 'Jc Uiu; s Book Publishing House, 13-5 Uu.mkd ST.. .". Y. City. ere It Is ! Want to !ani an about a ro t How to rick. Out a 9od Oaa ? Know lmperfec-( 'lai aa4 ao Guard acaisjt trandf Detect DLaea.se aal KffectaCoro when tame is poaalble? 1 rll th c b aeTdeth! What ta rail tha ni.TMnt P.t. .r .h. VtJtEJ? V - to Shoe a Horse Properly t AU tai d other Va'oabla lnrrm.Hi r, ni....,,... w. readinc our 100-PAOK ILLV8TKATED ! 1 1. USE BOOK. wak wo will forward, past I iaa.nB receipt of oal, oocva la stamos. j BOOK PUB. HOUSE. ' OWN DOCTOR a OWN REV. DTi. TADIAGE. TIIK KROOKIA'X DIVINE'S SUN DAY SEK.MON. Suliject: 4C3Iartj-rs of the Needle." Trxr : "It is easier for camel to po trirouLrh. tho eyo of a n-.-e lie. Matthew xix., 2 t. V,'fn t(!f-r this "eye or the npeilie" be the Bmall 'ate at the shin of the M tr.ite at the f-ntrane.; of the wall of thenneient eity, asi' penerally interprete !, or the eye of a"nen.lle f-ueli as is now Inn !1 1 in sewiu? a ..rment I iio not say. Ia eilher eass it wouM he h li'ht thinijfora came! to iro through tho eye ofa nci' lie. Jint th'-reare whole caravans o! futiyuca tin 1 har Nhifis i;oin through the t-j-( of the sewintr woman's neille. Very on a'o tlia nee lie was buiy. It was consit'ored fioiioni'iln for women to toil In o!h n tint. AiexaibU'r the Great stool in hisjialacii showing garments ni:.le I.y own mother. The (!n-st tapestries at liayeiu were made I.y the Queen of William the Con queror. Augustus, the K:niicro woul I not wear tiny garments exempt tlione that wern fashionwl I.y some nutmh-r of his royal fatnilj-. S j let tho toihy: tv.-rvff'jorj he re eriect".'. The great est Massing that eoul I have liap peiieil to our l!r.-t parents w is luting turns I out of K I en after tliy I;H dune wroni'. A lam and hve, in their p irVct state, might hn:i got along without work or ou!v s-u.-h .light emiiloyinent as a perfect gar leu, with no wee Is in it, denvtn !e I. Hut as soon as they had sinned thu best thin ; for them was to h.- turned o;it where they would have to work. AVe know what a withering thing it is for a man to he vh nothing to do. (lo j.l old Ashiiel Creen.at fourscore years, when ask:- 1 why he kept on working," sai 1, "1 do so to keep out of mischief." We s 'e that a man who has a large amount of money to st irt with has no ehane. (f t Ii thous-in 1 pros perous and honorable men that you know, t-DD had to work vigorously at tiio lieg'nning.' Dut I am now to tell you that inlustryis just as important for a wom tn's safety and happiness. The most unhappy women in our communities to- lay are thos who havs no engagements to eal! them up in the morn ing ; who, onee h tviug ris :i and hreakfast'-! !, loimgi through the dud forenoon in s!ip;. rs (loivn at the in;.'! an 1 wit'i disiinv.'lcl hair, reading the last nove', an 1 who. having dragged through a wn-tc.e I forenoon ail I taken their it fternomi sleep, an 1 having spent .lit hour and a half at their toiiet, rick up t heir cardi-iis and go out to m c iils, and who pass th"ir evenings wilting for ? o nc'.io iy to come in an 1 hr tk up the mo notony. Ara'iclla S:u irt never was impris on'' I in so dark a dungeon as that. There no happiness in au idle woman It may he wdli han I, it may l e with brain, it may be with foot, but work she must or lie wretched forever. Tiie little gir's of our families must he started with that ida. Tho curse of our Am rican so-doty is that our young women are taught that the first, sc ond, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, tenth, fiftieth, thousan Uh thing in tiieir life is to get somebody to take care of them. In stead of that the first lesson should be how, under God, they may take c.i re of themselves. The simple fact is that a majority ofthetn do have to take care of them-elvs, au I that, too, after having, through the false notions of their parents, wasted the years in which they ought to have learned how successfully to maintain tnemselves. We now and her.3 declare the inhumanity, cruelty and outrage of that father an 1 mother who pass their daughters into womaulioo 1, having given them no facility for earning their livelihood. Mine, de Staid said, "It is not these writings i that lam pi did of, but the fact that I have ! facility in ten occupations, .my one of which I could make a livelihoo 1." You say you have a fortune to leave tnem. O man and woman, have you not learnel that, like vultures, like hawks, like eagles, riches have wings and fly away? Though you should be succ essful in leaving a com petency behind you, the trickery ofexicu- ! tors may swamp it in a night, or some, el Its or deacons of our churches may get up a fictitious company an I in lu;o your orphan? j to put their money into it, and if it be lost prove to them that it w is eternally decree 1 that that was the way they were to lose it. and that it went in the most oi tho lox an I heavenly style. Oh, t lie damnable schemes that professel Christians will engage in until Go Tputs Mis fingers into the collar of the hypocrite's rooo and rips it clear down the bottom! You j have no right, because you are well off. to conclude that your children are going to lu as well off. A man died, leaving a large fortune. His son fell dea l in a l'hiladelphia grogshop. His old comrades came in and said as they bent over his corpse, "What is the matter with you, Uoggsey?" The surgeon standing over himsti I : "Hush up ! He's dea 1 !" "Ah, he is deal!" they siid. "Come, boys, let us go and take a drink iu memory ot poor Boggscy !" Have you nothing better than money to leave your children? If you have not, but sen 1 your daughters into the world with empty brain and uuskilie I hand, you are guilty of assa.i.sinasion, hoaiicide, regicide, infanticide. There are women toiling in our cities for $3 an I t per week who were tho daughters of merchant princes. These suf fering ones now would be gla l to have the crumbs that once full from their fathers' table. That woruout, broken shoe that she wears is the lineal descendant of the 12 gaiters in which Ii t mother walkel, au 1 that torn and faded calico had an cestry of magnificent brocade that swept Bro.i.lw.iy clean without any ex pense to the street commissioners. Though you live in an elegant residence an 1 fare sumptuously every day, let yoard iugh ters feci it is a disgrace tc them not to know how to work. I denounce the idea, preva lent in society, that, though our young wo men may embroider slippers and crochet and make mats for lamps, to stand on with out disgrace, the i le.i of doing anything for n livelihood is dishonor i'l". It is a s'.w iio for a young woman, belouging to a larg ) family, to be inefficient wn m the father toils his life away for her support. It is a shame for a daughter to b idle while her mother toils at the was!itu . It is as houorablo to sweep house, m ike be Is or trim hats as it is to twist a watch chain. As far as 1 can understand, the line of re spectability lies between that which is us ;ful and that which is useless. If worn -n do that which is of no value, their work is honora ble. If they do praetie il work, it is dishon orable. That our youtig women may escape the censure of doing dishonorable work I shall patticu'.ar"7.. You may kuit a tidy for the back o! ';m arm chair, but by no means make the men y wis- rcwith to buy the chair. You may, with eel:. -ate brush, beautify a mantel ornament, but die rather than earn enough to buy a mar-do mantel. You may learn artistic; tr.uic until vou can sip.iail Italian, but never sing "Ortouville" or Old Hundred." IJ nothing practical if you Would ia the eyes of r.-.lae 1 society preserve your respectability. I scout these llnieal notions. It dl you no woman, any more than man, has a rigid to occupy a pfieo ia this world unless :: pays a rent for it. In the course of a it otime you consume whole harvests au 1 drove?, of cattle, and every day yon live 1 rent he fort y hogsheads of goo.l pur.- air. Ym! must L-y s ene kind ot useful liess p iy fur ail ittis. O.if r.i 'e w is the last tiling create,; the birds an i fishes on the fourth day, the cattle and liv, ir is on the fifth day and man on tin sixth 'lay. If geol ogists are rigat. the eirth was a million of years in the possession of the insects, beasts ain I bir is be ore our race came upon it. In one sense we were innovators. Tae cattle, the lizards and tho hawks hal pre-emption rigid. The question is not wiiat we are to do with the lizir is an I summer iusects, but what the lizards and summer insects are to do with us. If we want a place in this worl 1, we must earn it. Tno p irtri lge makes its own nest before it occupies it. The lark by it3 morn ing song earns its breakfast before it eats it. 'i tie l?ib!e gives an inti n itiou that t ie lirsc duty of an idler is to starve w'.i n it s ays if hit "will not work neither shall he eat." Idleness ruins the health, aul very soon nature says : "Th:s man has refuse! to pay his rent. Out with him !" Society is to be reconstructed on the sub ject of woman's toil. A vast majority of thos who would have woman industrious shut her up to a few kinds oE work. My judgment in this matter is that a woman has a right to do anything she can do well. There should be no department of merchandise, mechan ism, art or science barred against her. If Miss Hosmen has genim for scaipturc, give her a chisel. If Kosa Bonheur has a fond ness fcr delineating Bnimals, let her make "The Horse Fair." If Miss Mitchell will stu ly astronomy, let her mount the starry lad !er. If Lydi.t will be a merchant, let her sell purple. If Lucretia Mott will preach the Gospel, let her thrill with her womanly elo quence the Quaker meeting house. It is said that if a woman is given such op portunities she will occupy places that might be taken by men. I say if she have more skill and adapt edness tor any position than a man has let her have it. She has a3 much right to her bread, to her apparel and to her home as men have. JJut ft is said that her nature is so delicate that she is unfitted for exhausting toil. I ask in the name of all past history what toll on earth is more severe, exhausting and tre mendous than that toil of the needle to which forages she has been subjected? The battering ram, the sword, the carbine, the battleax, have male no such havoc as the needle. I would that these living sepulchres in which women have for ages been br.rie I might be opened, and that some resurrection trumpet might bring up these living corpses to the fresh air and sunlight. Go with mc, and I wiil show you a woman who by hardest toil supports her children, her drunken hu3band, her old father and mother, pays her house rent, always has wholesome food on the table, an I wheu she can get some neighbor on the Sahbath to come in and take care of her family appears in church with hat an 1 cloak that are far from indicating tiie toil to which she issab jecte 1. Such a woman as that has body and soul enough to lit her for any position. She could stand beside the majority of your salesmen and dispose of more goo Is. She ;ould go into your wheelwright shop- anl beat one-half of your workmen at making carriages. We talk about Toman as though we had resigned to her all tha light work, snd ourselves had shoul lere I the heavier. But the day of ju lgment, which will rave.il the sufferings of the stake anl inquisition, will marshal before the throne of Go i anl the hierareiis of heaven the martyrs of wash tub and needle. Now. I say, if there bo any preference in occupation, let woman have it. Go 1 knows her trials tire the severest. By her acuter sensitiveness to misfortune, by her hour of anguish. I demand that no one hedge up her pithw iy to a livelihoo 1. Oh, the meanness, the despicability of men who begrudge a woman the right to work anywhere in any honorable calling ! I go still further and say that women should have equal compensation with men. By what principle of justice is it that women in many of our cities get only two-thirds as mu -h pay as men. and in many cases only half? Here is the gigantic injustice ?liat work equally well if not better done worn.au receives lar less; compens it ion than man. Start with the national government. For a long while women clerks in Washington got SitOO for doing that for which men received SI SO 3. To thousin Is of young woneninour cities to-lay there is only this alternative starva tion or dishonor. Many of the largest mer cantile establishments of our cities are ac cessory to these abominations, and from their large establishments there are scores of souls being pitched olT into death, anl their employers know it ! Is there a God? Will there be a judgment? I tell you, if Go 1 rises up to redress woman's wrongs, many of our large establishments will be swallowed up quicker than a South American earthquake ever took dowu aoity. God will catch tliese oppressors between the two millstoues of His wrath and grind them to powder ! I hear from all this land the wail of wo manhood. Man has nothing to answer to that wail but flatteries, IT says she is an angel. She is not. She knows she is not. She is a human being, who gets hungry when she has no food and cold when she has no Are. Give her no more flatteries. Give her justice ! There aro about o0;003 sewing girls in New York and Brooklyn. ' Across the darkness of this night I hear their death groans. It is not such a cry as comes from those who are suddenly hurled out of life, but a slow, grinding, horrible wasting away. Gather them beforo you and look into their faces, pinched, ghastly, hunger struck ! Look at their fingers, needle pricke I and bloo I tipped ! See that premature stoop in the shoulders ! Hear that dry, hacking, merci less cough ! At a large meeting of these women, held in a hall in Philadelphia, grand speeches were delivered, but a needle-woman took the stand, threw aside her fa led shawl, and with her shriveled arin hurled a very thunder bolt of eloquence, speaking out the horrors of her own experience. Stand at the corner oi a street in Now York in the very early morning as the wo men go to their work. Many of them had no breakfast except the crumbs that were left over from the night before or a crust they chew on their way through the streets. Here they come the work ing girls of the city! Tnese engaged in beadwork, these in flower making, in millin ery, enameling, cigar making, bookbinding, labeling, feather picking, print coloring, paper box making, but, most overworked of all and least compensated, the sewing women. Why do they not take the eity car3 on their way up? They cannot afford the five cents. If, concluding to deny herself something else, she gets into the car, give her seat. You want to see how Latimer and Itidley appeared in the fire. Look at that woman and behold a more horrible martyr dom a hotter fire, a more agonizing death. One Sabbath night, in the vestibulo of my church, after service a woman fell in con vulsion?. The doctor said she neelod medi cine not so much as something to eat. As she began to revive, iu her delirium she said gaspingly : "Eight cents ! Eight cents ! Eight cents ! I wish I could get it done ! I am so tired ! I wish I coul 1 get some sleep, but I must get it done ! Eight cents ! Eight cents !" Wefounl afterward that she was making garments at eight cents apiece, an i that she could make but three of thom in a day. Hear it ! Three times eight are twenty-four. Hear it, men an 1 women who have comfortable homes ! Some of tho worst villains of the city are the employers of these women. They beat them down to the last penny and try to cheat them out of that. The woman must deposit $1 or 2 beforo she gets the gar ments to work on. Wnon the work is done, it is sharply inspected, the most insignifi cant flaws picked out and the wages refused, and sometimes the -1 deposited not given back. Tho Women's Protective Union re ports a case where one of these poor souls, tinting a place where she couli get more wages, resolved to change employers and went to get her pay for work done. The employer says. "I hear you are going to leave me?" "Yes," she said, "and I have come to get what you owe me." He made no answer. She sai 1, "Are you not going to pay me? ' "Yes," he said, "I will pay you," and he kicked her downstairs. How are these evils to be eradicated? What have you to answer, you who sell coats an I have shoes made and contract for the southern and western markets? What help is there, what panacea, what redemp tion? Some saj-, "'Give women the ballot.'' What effect sucii ballot might have on other questions I am not here to disccuss, but what would be the effect of female suffrage upon woman's wages? I do not believe that woman will ever get justice by woman's ballot. Indeed, women oppress women as much as men do. Do not women, as much as men. be it down lo the lo west iigure the wo nan who sews for them? Are not women as sharp as men on washerwomen and milliners an I mantui makers? If a woman asks f 1 for her work, does not her female employer ask if she will not take ninety cents? You say, "Only ten cents difference." But that is sometimes the difference between heaven and hell. Women often have less commis eration for women than men. If a woman steps aside from the path of virtue, man may forgivs woman never ! Woman will never get justice done her from woman's ballot. Never will she get it from man's ballot. How, then? God will rise up for her. God has more resources than we know o The flaming sword that hung at Eden's gate when woman was driven out will cleave with its terrible edsre her oppressors. But there is something for our women to do. Let our young people prepare to excel in spheres of work, and they will bo able after awhiie to get larger wages. If it be shown that a woman can in a stcre sell rrora goods in a year than a man, she will soon be able not only to ask but to demini more wages, and to demand them successfully. Unskilled an I incompetent labor must take what is given. Skilled and competent labor will eventually make its owa standar I. Ad mitting that the law of sufpl3'anl demand regulates these things, I contend that the demand for skillel labor is very great anl the supply very small. Start with the idea that work is honorable and that you can do some one thing better than aryone else. Resolve that. God help ing, you will take care of yourself. If you are after a while called into another relation, you will all the better be qualified for it by your spirit of self-reliance, or if you are called to stay as you are you can be happy and s-df-supporting. Poets are fou l of talking about man as aa oak an l woman the vine that climbs it, but I have seen many a tree fall that not only went dowu itself, but took all the vines with it. I can tell you of something stronger than an oak for an ivy to climb on, and that is the throne of the great Jehovah. Single, or affianced, that woman is stroug who leans on God and does her best. The needle may break, the factory band may slip, the wages may fail, but over every goo I woman's heal there are spread the two great, gentle, stu pendous wings of the Almighty. Manj- of you will go single handed through life, and you will have to choose between two characters. Young woman, I am sure you will turn your back upon the useless, giggling, painted nonentity which society ignoininious:y acknowle lges to be a woman and ask Go I to make you a humble, active, earnest Christian. What will become oT this go lless disciple of fashion? What an insult to her sex ! Her manner3 aro an outrage upon decency. She is more thoughtful of the attitude she strikes upon the carpet than how she will look in the judgment, more worried about her freckles than her sins, more interested in her bonnet strings than in her redemp tion. Her apparel is the pootest part of a Christian woman, however magniliceutly dressed, and no one has so much right to dress well as a Christian. Not so with the god hss disciple of fashion. Take her robes, and you take everything. Death will come down on her some day, an I rub the bistre off her eyeli Is, aul the rouge off her clucks, and with two rough, bony hands scatter spangles an I glass beads and ring-! and ribbons an I lace an 1 brooches an i buckles and sashes and frisettes and golden clasps. Tiie dying actress whose life had been vicious sai 1 : "The scene closes. Draw the curtain." Generally the tragedy comes first and the farce afterward, but in her life it was first the farce of a useless lite and then the tragedy of a wretchel eternity. Compare the life and death of such a one with that of some Christian aunt that was once a blessing to your household. I do not know thr.t she was ever offered a hand in marriage. She lived single, that untram meled she might be everybody s blessing. Whenever the sick were to be visited or the poor to be provided with bread, she went with a blessing. She could pray or sing "Koek oE Ages" for any sick pauper who asked her. As she got older there were days when she was a little sharp, but for tho most part auntie was a sunbeam just the one for Christmas eve. She knew better than any one else how to fix things. Her every prayer, as God heard it, was full of everybody who hal trouble. The brightest things in all the house droppel from lier lingers. She had peculiar notions, but the grandest notion she ever had was to make you happy. She dressed well auntie always dressed well but her highest adorn ment was that of a meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight of GoJ, is of great price. When she died, 3-ou all gathered lovingly about her, anl us you carried her out to rest the Sunday-school class almost covered the coffin with japonicas, anl the poor people stoo l at the end of the alley, with their aprons to their eyes, sobbing bitterly, anl tiie man of the world said, with Solomon, "Her price was above rubies," and Jesus, as unto the maiden in Judaai, commanded, "J say unto thee, arise !" One of Ilerrmann's Great Tricks. People Lave repeatedly asked ma which of my tricks have pleased me the most and which I take most delight in performing. Naturally the effort that brings the greatest success is regarded by a man his best. I consider the trick of restoring the shattered mirror as my most famous one. This I had the honor of perform ing before the Czar of Russia upon an invitation to give an exhibion at his court. It was done unexpectedly to the spec tators, and was not down on tho regu lar bill. "While playirjg billiards with the attaches of the court after the performance, the Czar being pres ent in the saloon, I shot a ball with all my strength against a plate glass mirror extending from floor to ceiling. It was shivered into fifty pieces. Consternation was depicted on every countenance; and none more plainly than my own. While the Czar courteously waived my apology, considering the destruc tion of the mirror a? trifling, and order ed the game to proceed, I could easily see that my awkwardness made a dis agreeable impression. With the Czar's permission I exam ined the mirror to estimate the damage done and the possibility of repairing it. While so engaged one of the suite playfully challenged me to exercise my art and make the mirror whole again, never dreaming that his challenge waa the very cue I wanted, and not con sidering tho acceptance of it as pos sible. I hesitated an instant and then ordered the mirror to be covered with a cloth, entirely concealing it from view. On the removal of the cloth, after ten minutes, the mirror was found with out a flaw, and as perfect as before the damage ! I will leave it to my readers' imagination to decide how this trick was done. Ral)b i's-Foot Philosophy. Some men are balloonists by pro fession; others by inflation. Debt is the devil, and independence' is paradise. I would rather one woman trusted me than that I should gain many friends. Life is a chance in the lottery of death; your chance is sure, but whether it is a blank or not depends largely on yourself. When the snow fell he wished to mow my lawn; when ihi sunlight made my grass grow, he was a snow shoveler by proression; by genius, he was a t. amp. The first blae-bird is the one we notice most. The dandelions are the spun gold oi spring-time. A hundred petty virtues are not worth one genuine heart-touch. Open defeat is better than under handed victory. Arkansaw Traveler. A Strange Phenomenon. Great excitement has been create! at New man, III., over tho appearance ot smoke issuing from the ground on Thomas Shaw's farai, three miies west of th eitj. Oa ap proaching tho spot where it seems to come forth no smoke is to hi seen. Several noted scientists have visitel the spot and eiaim tha supposed smoke to be natural gas. Tnera is an area of about twenty acres from which, the smoke seems to be issuing, anl great numbers of peop'.e visit the plaje daily anl wonder at the scene. "World's Fair Kindling Wood. Kin iling wool will be cheap in Chicago next winter. It is estimated that the wreck ing of the World's Fair biddings will iurnish at least 75.000 loads. FIVE WAIFS POISONED. THEY ATE SLAG EOOT AND DIED IN GKEAT AGONY. Fifteen Inmates of the Catholic Home Near Tarry torou, N. Y., Struggled for Possession of the Deadly firowth Ten of Them Survive After Violent Convulsions. By the unfortunate eating of a poisonous root, which they thought was sweet flag root, five littie bovs in the Roman Catholic Sisters' House of Mercy, about a mile back of Tarrytown, N. Y.. were killed and half a dozen more were male critically ill. The names of the dead are : Richard Powers and John Donnelly, twelve years old, and James Forrestal, John Callahan and Thomas Pasmore, ten vears old. These boys were in a company of fifteen or twenty who went out for play in tho fields. While watching some laborers dig ging a trench for draining purposes, young Donnelly saw what he suppose i was some sweet flag root and told the other boys of it. They till began eating of it and enjoyed t heir feast. A couple of hours later all the boys wno had eaten of the root were taken ill with violent pains about the heart. This wholesale illness greatly alarmed the Sisters iu charge, and they sent in haste to the vil age for all the doctors they could And. The physicians saw at once that tho boys must have swallowed some kind of poison, and antidotes were given without delay. Some of the boys were affected in a much gre er degree than the others by the poison, and tho doctors devoted their greatest ener gies to saving these. Tho boys, according to tho physicians, could not have swallowed the poison long before the antidotes were administered. One of the physicians, after examiningthe matter vomited by the boys, said that he thought the3 must have eaten a vegetable known as slag root. The doctors remained at the Home all night, working to save the lives oi ! iie boys. The live boys fatally poisoned died within a short time of each other. The other boys were soon out of danger. One of the lads said the finding of the root was accidental. As soon as the finder tasted it he shout h! : "Here's something fine, boys flag roc- " Then they all male a rush for it, and tho fact that there as not sufficient to go around is the only reason why all were not killed. Those wbo died ate greedily of it. It was not more than an hour after the finding of the first root when tho boys who had eaten the most of the roots became very sick. The Sisters at once began to give what simple remedies they could think of to re lieve the boys, but soon saw that it would be necessary to send for the physicians. Coroner Apgar, of Peekskill. was notified of the death of t he boys, and at once impanelled a jury in order to hold an inquest. Hi directed that an autopsy be made upon the boiy of each of the boys. Tiie autopsy showed that they died from paralysis of tho heart. Powers, Donneliy, and Pasmore were orphans. Tne fathers ot Callahan and Forrestal live in New York. The Mother Superior directed that the boys be buried at the expense of the institution. One of the doctors who examined the root thought it was a species of "slag" root. THE NATIONAL GAME. Boston released Catcher Merritt. Meek in is New York's star pitcher. Pittsbtjbo has ihe baseball fever very badly. HcTCHrssos Is leading the Chicago Club In batting. Doyle is hitting the ball harder than any Other New York player. St. Lotus has gone wild over Breiten Btein's work as a pitcher. The Philadelphias have had harder luck than any other team on account on rain. In his first fifteen games Turner, of the Philadelphias, had a batting per centage of .456. Baltimobe is entitled to the first triplo play made in an 1894 League championship game. Ward, of the New Yorks, has struck out but once this season. Last year he fanned but three times. The accident to Pitcher Weyhing, of the Philadelphias, is likely to keep him off the field for some time. Shortstop Geobqe Sxith, of the Clncin natis, has played in fourteen consecutive games without an error. The Bostons have but one really reliable Eitcher, Nichols. Lovett has done well, but e is pitching in great luck. With half a dozen of the Chicagos stand ing over six feet in their stockings, it is a misnomer to call them the "colts." Hoy has made a hit with Cincinnati. The newspapers declare that the deaf mute is the only outfielder who plays his position prop erly. Bostojtian'S have never C9ased to regret the-release, two years ago, of Outfielder Brodie, who is doing such splendid work for Baltimore. The Chicago Club has tried fifteen men at second base in two years. Each of these men cost a3 an experiment from $400 to $500. The grand loss ia this respect alone is $7500. Muixane, of Baltimore, is distinguishing himself. He was the first pitcher in the League this season to hold a team down to one hit and also holds the strike-out record of the season to date eight. The ablest strategic pitcher in the Leaguo this season is pitching the game of his life this season, and that player is John Clark son, of Cleveland. The "cyclone" class of pitchers are nowhere in comparison. In fielding, up to date, Zimmer lead3 the League catchers, Tucker the first basemen, Bonner the second basemen, Nash the third basemen, George Smith the short stops, Kelly the left fielders, O'Connor the centre fielders and Dugan the right fielders. Or the seventy-four pitchers in the League twelve are left-handed, nine made their debut in the big League this season, thir teen during last season, and only eleven were in the major organization before 1890. The stars of the old association number four teen. Bad throws are very costly on the new Cincinnati grounds. If a ball gets by the first Daseman there is nothing to stop it in side of 100 feet, and even then chances must be taken of its caroming off on an angle. Base-runners can take two or throe bases in tueh cases. The work of Baltimore's young pitchw, Brown, is the surprise of the year. He is a green boy taken off the lots around Balti more, without even any experience with a first-class amateur club, much less with a semi-professional or minor League team. He knows very little about baseball, but he has a steel-ribbed left arm. Anson's team may not be very high In the race, but his own personal triumph is over whelming, say3 Sporting Life. He has de monstrated that without him at first base his club is like a ship in a storm at sea without a rudder. It fflll probably be a long time before the Chicago papers set up another howl for him to "get out of the game." asojjt) or ras lsu jucldbi. Per Clubs. Won. kou. ct.l Cltl!)i Wot. t.n Baltimore. 21 9 .700;3t. Louis. .18 18 Per . "t. .501 .486 .375 .303 .291 .250 Pltt3burg..24 12 Clevelanl.21 11 .6671 Sew York.17 18 .656;Cineinnatl.l2 20 PhlladeL . .20 12 -.625 Boston 22 14 .611 Brooklyn.. 19 15 .559 Louisville. 10 23 Otxicago...l0 24 Wasa'ng'n. 9 27 Senator Patton, of Michigan, is a broad shouldered, well-built, athletic man, with a line face and a handsome mustache. Like Senator Dubois, to whom he bears a resem bl&noe, he has a swarthy complexion. These two Yale met, together with Senators Wol cott and Higgins, who are also graduates of the college, have formed a little society which will hold monthly reunions. At Maiden, 7lo., tne city marshal blows a horn at 9 o'clock p. m. to warn the young people on the street to retire to their homes. LATER NEWS. Two children of John Long were burned to death in a fire at Duke Centre. Tenn. Hesuy B. Cleavks, of Portland, was re nominated for Governor at tho Maine Re publican State Convention held at Lewiston. Steikeus ia Indiana burned bridges and tried to blow up a trainload of troops ; there were reports of fighting at Farmersburg, Indiana ; two regiinerts started from Balti more to the Cumberland ;)al regions ; an agreement was reached between the Colorado miners and the operators. The drought in Nebraska and Arkansas was broken, Kansas millers report gloomy crop prospects. Th House Elections Committee decided the contested cdectiou case of Watson vs. Black from the Tenth Georgia District, in favor of Mr. Black, the c-ontestee. The President sent tho following nomina tions to the Senate : To be Consuls for tho United States, Alexander C. Price, of Iowa, nt Matanzas, Cuba, : Perry Bart hoi, of Mis souri, at Plauen, Germany; William J. Bal bird, of New York, at Hull, England. Attokney-Genkuau Olney filol, in the be half of the United States, a claim against the estate of the late Senator Stanford, for the sum of $15,000,000. The Italian Ministry has resigned ; there was ii personal encounter between two Depu ties while the B idget was under jcussion. Fkank Bbadfobp, a prisoner confined in the Albany County Jail on a charge of in toxication, leaped, with suicidal intent, from the highest or fourth corridor to the stone floor below. Ho died two hours later at the City Hospital. Bradford comes from a highly respectable family in Bennington, Vt., and was a well known elocutionist and a prominent Mason. The late Genera! George G. Bradford was his brother. West Point cadets gave a brilliant exhibi tion of gunnery. They made a bull's-eye shot with a sea-coast battery piece and a 450-pound shell. Fibk completely burned out the Largest re tail dry goods store in Woonsoeket, 1!. I. It was owned by A. J. St. Ouge. The Unity brick block was also badly damaged. Loss 45,000. Governor Richards has forbidden the proposed sun dance of the Cree Indians at Great Falls, Montnba. Five Chinamen were killed by an explosion of gasoline In a laundry at Portland, Oregon. Ohio Republicans met in State Convention at Columbus and declared for a sneedy restoration of silver as a money metal. The ticket nominated was : Secretary of State, Samuel M. Taylor, Champaign County Judge of Supreme Court, John A. Shauek, Dayton; School Commissioner, Oseir T. Corson, Guernsey CYunty; member Board of Public Works, Charles E. Groc -, Circle ville. Mrs. Cleveland, accompanied by her two children, a nurse and a maid, left Washing ton in a special car on the Pennsylvania Railroad, for Gray Gables, Mass., to spend the summer there. Senators Vilas, Smith, Gallinger, Black burn and Patton have been appointed a com mittee to receive petitions and give hear ings on the existing industrial distress. Gutierrez has been proclaimed President of Salvador after an exciting day anil night in La Libertad, during part of which time American forces were in charge of tb.3 town. The Brazilian insurgents have been de feated by tho Government troops in Santa Catharina and Rio Grande do Sul. The golden jubilee of the Young Men's Christian Associations was celebrated in Lon don. KILLED THEIR CHILDREN, Then Carl Seeger and His Wife Took Their Own Lives. Carl Seeger, his wife and their four chil dren were all found dead ia thoir homo at Berlin, Germany. Seeger was a master painter, and at one time was well-to-do, but has been unable to collect money due him for work and became despondent. Mrs. Seeger was greatly cast down by her husband's financial embarrass ment, and, judging from the evidence in the hands of the police, the couple determined to kill their four children, nineteen, thirteen, ten and seven years old, and then commit suicide. Procuring some cyanide of potassium the parents placed the poison in tho food of the two older children, from the effects of which they died in a short time, though the eldest son apparently made a desperate struggle before death relieved him of his agony. The other two children, one a girl, were, for some unexplained reason, hanged by their parents. After killing the children it is supposed that Seeger gave some of the poison to his wife, and immediately after she swallowed it placed a rope about her neck and strangle 1 her. Then Seeger made preparations for killing himself. Taking the ropo with which he had strangled his wife, be placed the end with the noose arouDd his neck, facteued thi other end to a door-knob, and, with the aid of a chair, passed the middle of the rope over the top of the door. Wheu he had done this he kicked the chair from, under him and strangled. MILLIONS SWEPT AWAY. Many Lives Lost In the Fraser River Flood. Four million dollars will hardly cover tho loss by the Frast-r River flood in British Columbia. The waters continued rising, and a3 the warm weather continues melt ing the snow in the mountains then was no immediate jrospect of re lief. One prominent railway offlual think3 the loss oT life will reach 100. Bridges, trestles, tunnels an I tracking along tie Canadian Pacific bav gone. From Prevelstoke to the sea. 3i0 idles, the railway is new a watery waste. Tno last point above Vancouver which can now be reached is Ruby Creek, eighty- two miles distant. Thence all is water. Masqul Mission, CaiHiwack, Hat zte and Langley Prairies, aud the towns of Harrison, Centreville, Langley, Chilli wack and :"is3ion are all under water, and not a farm builiing is left standing. Fully ten thousand cattle hav perished. Telegraph and rilroal services are completely demoralize!. One raft was found witn tha bt lies of a man and woman and threo children etrapped to it, and seven bodies were found floating singly. OPERATION UPON WILLIAM. Small Tumor Removed From tho German Kaiser's Left Cheek. The semi-official Reicbsanzoijrer publishes a notice signed by Professors Bergman, Lentholl and Schlange, saying: "At the New Palace, Potsdam, Germany, by the Em peror's direction, the undersigned removed a small encysted tumor from lit left cheek. The operation was performed without an anaesthetic and in a few minutes." THE NATIONAL FINANCES THE CURRENT MONTHLY PUB LIC DEBT STATEMENT. A Net Increase in the PuMIe DelN Less Cash on Hand, of $0,O.-!-. 030.5H A Net Loss of $22, OOO, OOO In C.old (ireat Falling Oil in the Revenue. The debt statement shows a net ln"rw of the publi c debt, Ies e.nh in the Unite I States Treasury, during May, of tC,633. 030.58. The lnterst-be.iring dht increase I ?1C0, the non-interest -bearing d!t de creased $:'n,879.5t and th eaVi in the Treasury decn.n-l 7.2 43, ilO.n-t. The balance of the sv'r.al clas.s o debt at the. close of buslue. Mav 31, were Interest-bearing debt, fd.Ti.Oll.StO ; debt on which interest has enamel since maturity. Cl.V.'.SM ; debt hrvirin no interest, $3S0, 016.330; total. $l,016.9lft..V.O. The certificates and Treasury notes off-iet by an equal amount of cash in the Treasury outstanding at the end of th month wer $621.12.445, an increase of $1.1S.6V. To tal cash in the Treasury, 7S3.2H3,264.77 ; gold reserve. $78,693,267 : net cash balance, 639.161.06S. 85. During tho month there, w is a decrease in gold coin and bars of $22,124, 641, the total at the close being tl4..m;7, 816. Of silver there win an increase of $76.190. Of the Purplus there. w.i in the national bank depositories $16,933,421, against $16,849,719 at the end of the prevloui month. During the month of May the Treasury pnstiiined iv net loss in gold for export pur poses of $22,000,000. The movement still continues, nearly wiping out all of the gold received by the bond Issue of last January. Whi'e tho Treasury is losing gold by expert, it is c'so losing it in Boston. Philadelphia mil New York by withdrawals in ordinary busi ness transactions. The gold is finding its way into the banks. In most of the cities of the West the Treasury is daily gain ing gold in exchange for legal tender, one day receiving $400,000 in St. LouU for United States notes delivered in New York to the bank's credit. Gold received for cus toms dues at New York during May amount ed to only 2.3 percent., against twenty-eight per cent, six months .ago. The falling off of or linary revenues i- causing more uneasiness In Treasury crelcs than the decline of the gold reserve. The re ceipts for the eleven mont hs of the current fiscal year are $s l.dOfl.OeO less than for the eleven months of the previous lis mI year. A saving of $13,000,000 in ex penditures over the corresponding perio 1 of 1892-3 brings di-wn the differ ence in round figures to $72,000,000, be ing the excess of expenditures ovr r ipts for the eleven months of this year The greatest fading off is shown in customs, which have declined $66. 000. 000. Internal revenue also fell off 1 4,000,000. The great est r 'trenchmeut of expen littires is shown in pensions, a saving of $17, 030. 000 having been effected in this item. Civil and mis cellaneous expenditures show a decrease of $4,090,000. The stated Treasury balance is $117,010, f.00;ou January 1 it was $99,0)0,003. O.a January 1, however, the Treasury was ie. dueed to a working currency balance of only $9,000,000, the rest being sold and now the Treasury has a working currency balance ot $42,000,000. The Treasury situation, there fore, is considered more favorable now, even with less gold than it held in January, than at the beginning of the calendar year, as it i currency balance is four times greater thai it was then. NEWSY GLEANINGS. Russia has 350 paupers. Cholera is raging in Uu --ii in Po'anl. The Guion Line han gone out of business. Yale won at the iutercolleginte athletic games. Wakefield, Must, celebrate 1 Its 259th birthday. England -7H1 act a? moliator between Brazil and Portugal. Mobe than 7,000.03) bales of cotton have already been inarKete 1. The steerage rate from New York to Liv erpool has been roduce i to $12.50. Electrocution is being agitated iu Penn sylvania as a substitute for hanging, There are 107.273 widows in Massachusetts and about 102,000 unmarried women. The manufactured pro luct of Gre it Britain amounts to about $1,100,033,0 )3 a year. Scarcity of silver coin anl limited bank discounts are causing distress m Peru. American locomotives have been a loptel as the standard for Japanese railroads. Mercury will Vie the evening star during June and Venus will be the morning star. The German Banking Association hal de clared in favoi' of the single gol 1 st m l iriL Canada is grow ing now because Ameri cans catch whales an 1 porpois s in Ha lson's Bay. Enoland has been r.sked to agroe to a con ference with G-f.uauy over Samoa, and will probably accept. The new Chicago mus ru r. is to be called the Field-Columbian, io honor Marshall Field, who gave it $1,001,000. The Bank of England has begun to invest it3 surplus cash anl ii expected to throv about $15,000,090 oa the market. There are, ace ir ling to the latest regis tration, 4,895.112 voters in England and Wales, 625.C.2S in S:otland, and 737,951 ia Ireland. Seventeen varieties of G -rman song birds have been suocesfjlly acclimated in Ore gon. They winter iu M- xio and Central America. Foua impouulel hordes of the caus type were sold at Spokau', .ivi., the other day at an average p "0 of two dollars and six cents. Investigation show.? tha farmers of the Northwest have abandoned wheat as their only crop. Tne decrease this year will bo twenty-live per cent. John Van 1mmi:n. who basbeen iu the Ohio Penitentiary since 1Ss5 for murder, will soon be released. Tiie man he was convicted oi killing has been foun 1 in In liana. The prospective crop oi .a peach orchard at Inglcsi lc, eastern so ore o' .Maryland, w.-w Bold three years ago or $70. Last year, with the bume nu:ute.r o: trees, it sold for t25. BOTH BOYS DROWNED. A Nine-Year-Old Lad Tries In Vain to Rescue a Younger Rrother. A nine-year-old hero was drowned at Lan caster, Peuu., and with him his little brother, whom he strove helplessly to recue. Tae children were Willie anl Jirnmbi Ktojk, sons of Frederick Stock. Together they went to bathe iu the Con'-stogt Creek, about 6 o'clock p. m. Neither of the lads could swim, so they kept close to the shore, pad dling about in glee. Soon Jimmie, the young, er, ventured out a little and quickly got beyond his depth. He shrieked for help. Willie went bravely to the rescue. He seize 1 h dd of Jimmy, and then the boys struggled to get back to shallow water. "Hold fast to me, Jimmy. I'll save yoo , wo 11 te all right," gasped the older lad, while the water was nearly rising over them. It was no use, and in a few minutes the two, locked in each other s embrace, went down before the gaze of several young compan ions who were watching them from the shore. The bodies were recovered. one otrne Tormer students in tne Harvard annex has been chosen dean of Btrnar l College, the annex of Columbia, her place being practically that of President. Sue is oddly named Miss James Smith. She is only thirty, and will control nineteen pro fessors, all of whom but one are men, who are instructors in the college, and the 10d young women whom they Instruct. Mobe acres have been planted in potatoes this season than e ver V-efore in Aroostook, tha banner potato county of Maine. PROMINENT PEOPLE. PitrvF.ii, the Inventor of th t.vl prr which Iwvir hi- nam, has male tlO, POO.OOfl out of the invention. Govr.uxoB At.TiU'.i.n, of Illinoi, 1 said to be afflicted Willi n d:"as- of the npine, an 1 it is not expected t tint h wilt live his term out. Mr. AoNrs Irwi is to lwm th dvn of liidclifT College, n the H.irvar 1 annex U now called. Mrs. Irwin U about sixty years old. Oxi.T three of the 1'aitcd Stat Senator are of foreign birth. WaUti wiv trn In Ireland l'.ts -o iu Kn'i.tnd an I McMillan iu Canada. I.oitn Uosrr. try's dairy farm in Bucking hamshire, Knglatid. comprise 1 400 acres, on which v kixpH lid dairy cows, HiK) cuttlo and li)) shHp. Ar the royal wedding in Coburg, Qu x-n Victoria sp.ike nothing but irnan. n mat ter w i.it the nation iltty of the p tsou she was talking to was. Sknatoh Joir.s, of Ark.a sin, is the nlght ing lie of Congress, lb' ' ' member of i church choir and liH b.t. s l are the feat ure of t he HiTVieos. Kino HrMnmr, of Italy, will soon under go an operation for cancer of the throat. It i- s.-ii-t that hi cc.se is timil ir to that of the late Kmperor Frederick, of Germany. B. 1. llrr iiiNoN. "Old Hutch," who I now a s nail operator on t he ( 'hicig ll iir l of Trade, lost $,nO 1,0 0 in spccul ittotn dur ing the past live years. Miss ia H a million alto banker. Kmi'kiuiii Willi m 1 honorary colonel dn rhief of twnty-sev mi r v'imeuts belonging to various countries of F.urope. 11 Im to have a complete and distinct uniform outsit for every regiment. When Governor N'otthen, of Georgia, re tires from the executive chair he will become Chancellor of the I'niversity of Georgia, lie Is by profession a te ichor, an I is recognized us an educator of marked a'dlitj. Flll llKUICK MacMoSMKS, the designer "f the famous foiu taui at I he VNnrld'n I'air. has taken a contra -t for irlOO.tHiil to eirvetwi groups lor the soldier' monument at In dianapolis. He has four years to OhhIi them. Sin Patiik'K Sn.i iviv, of Shi0i.iv eUn Mich., who was knight-I Iy the Km; nl Sweden for writing a book on " l unnp-t a .1 Universal Article of lH.-f," has just I i ' n out a patent lor a bicycle made lroiu.oin t-uk inilp. Fivk war ships w -re sol I out of l h s.-rvl ' by t he Brit Kh Alniriity a b- v week u .', being null! for furi'r-.- eeiplo m.-tit. On i Wis it woodon battle slop I. .nit Mty ye ns ag. . Th ree i if t he i it let s w -i - nl v-. b-n kIhi-s, an 1 one was an iron tr ship. NkM'IIKP, Missillli, 'i-'lH II'!' M.'l'i Ii p. ims. '.-.sen a W' .rst ed 1 1 1 i 1 1 'i' ii 1 1 , t - ' ' . Iior has Tea or V. .ua- a -in meii of a paper 1 1 : i i 1 W an lr .a or I b. dust ry. THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale I'rlies of Country Produce Otioled in New Yorh. 23 MILK A Nil I'lll-IM. Under a goo I deman 1 trade was g.m t-iIU' active during the past W'-. I'p lo June, the ruling price for platform hi phi- w n $1.17 per can of 40 ipi irt. uu I the . -: ange price 2c. per quart. On June ) the exchange tirlce was lowered to !,. p-r quirl. mak ing 'he surplus ut the platform tl.7 "T can. Receipts Of the week, (lull milk, gals Condensed milk, gals. .. . Cream, gals Ilt'T I I II. l.lb.'J.n r.vi i 1.I.9C0 Creamery l'enn. , extras .$ I'm1 17 Western, extras -- ' 17 Western, firsts 1 l'1 Western thirds to Heeonds 13 fi I"' State-Kx'ra -- '"' Firsts 10 Seconds . - - f" 1 Western Im. Creami-ry, Ilrts. l'l'c ll'j Seconds 11 Western Factory, fresh, ex tras r- M t S.-onds to firsts 10 0i 1 I Thirds '' '';,J Hummer make - - "' Ilolls, fresh rm r.sK. State rullereum, white, fancy 0 ri :i'4 F ill cream, goo I to prim-. xyi s) State Factory Part skim, choice - - Part skim, com. to prime. 4 1 Full skims - "! : KITH. 8tate A I'cnn Fresh 12;.;n 13 Jersey -Fancy.... 13 ' 11 Western -fresh, best II.1 i"" li Duck eggs South Ac West... -- Coos eggs M br.ANS AVI- 1T.AM. Bcrms Marrow. 19 !. choice. 2 70 (n 2 7.1 (iv 1 ',(') Or 2 0 I Oi 2 I OI 2 39 2 0') 0, 2 10 Me bum, 18.)3. choice Pea. 193, choice lied kidnev, 1893. choice. . White Kidney, 1H93, choice Black turtle soup. 1 .93 Lima, Cab, 193, V 60 lbs Treeri peas.bbls, V bush 1 9", 2 10 2 '20 1 9". 2 0". 1 07'e 1 10 FRUITS AND IlKIUUKS l lir.sll. A pp!"", i' bbl Strawberries. qt .. .. Watermelons, I'l l. . e t Cherries, D d., V 1'-. . . Poaches, V carrier. . . . i 0 I 4 25 4 1 V) Oi, 6 0) Oi) 12 (n :t" ov 12 o,) 3 0') HOPS. .State 1893, ehoio, V lb 1H93. common to goo 1 1 f;. Pacific Coast, choice 10 Com noti to prime l' Old old 1 HAT avi nri;w. K, 15 17 15 Ill) On Ou Hay Goo 1 to choice V 10 ) th Clover mixel Straw Long rye Short rye LIVE I'OULTKV. Fowls. "r3 fb Spring chickens. "H lb Itooxfers, old, 'i' In Turkeys, t tb Ducks, V pair Geese, V pair Pigeons, V pair DKKSsr.n roui.THT. Turkeys, V lb Chickens, i'hila, broilers Western, Jersey, V lb.. Fowls, ? tb. Ducks, S lb Geeie. 5 It, ,'i'r fa) 85 55 Oi, 65 .VI Oi 65 40 fa, 15 9 Or !)'; '22 (a, 23 o .v; 5 Oi, H 40 Oi, 70 75 r, 1 12 2.5 fv 4 ) 5 0, 7 23 fa ::5 25 o ;) On H Oi 10 Or, 12 - - (n Squabs, V do 1-Vl 'n 3 'i ) TF.OKTAfif.r.H. Potatoes Southern, V bbl .. '! .VI 0: Ot in Or O, Oi Or Or Or 5 3 ' 1 - , 2 1 I Scotch, V h ick.. . . Cabbr.ge, S ivaim i'i. 1 (i i 2 t 2 ".o 5 I 3 HI 2 5 ) 1 0 '0 5 1 :o l u l 01 1 i; ) Onions U rum la, crit-:.. Re 1, V bbl S-prish, Southern, d .-rit :.. L'.M'M, lo i1, t' iM Be Is, V V)i l.un SWe'-t p it itOes Asp ira rus. - ' 1". Spina -h. i' bbl S'.r.ng bean-., V tct--c t ... ... Green peas, '.' b.a-k -t Rbuourh, ".' l l'i buii mes. . . . Tomatoes, Fit., '" irri t.. . Cucumbers, V crate ; lit, etc. FlourWinter Patent Spring 1'utents What, No. 2 Re 1 May Corn -No. 2 Oats--No. 2 White Track mixed Rye State Barley Ungrade I Western. See is -Clover. V 103 Timothy, V 100 Lard City Steam LIVE STOCK. Beeves, city dress-) 1 Milch Cows, com. to good. .. Calves, city dressed Count ry dressed Sheep, V 103 lbs Lambs, V 100 ms Hogs Live, V 100 lbs Dresiol 1 'I t :, .,' i i i 1 7 . I t 1 5 I i ; i 5) i 7 , 1 51 3 25 J 7-5 Oi Oi Oi, 15 0. 65 Or 0i 4 1 ' ; a, 5.X 10 fu. Ov -Ov Ov 67 fa 10 03 tai J 09 I ai 6 63 8 09 4 50 0' G; ; n) - Ov 6 5! 3 0) 5 00 5 00 1' fv IV la) fw fa! 7v; 0) 33 35 8