Newspapers / Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, … / Aug. 17, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
--'7 - - it 1 -A A II. MITCHELL, Editor ami Business 3Ianager Located in the Finest Fish, Truck and Farming Section in North Carolina. ESTAHLISHEl) Ism;. E DENTON, N. C, FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1894. SUBSCRIPTION PRIGE 1 jl.j'i ii Not I'uid in Advuucc NO. 47l 7 ISHERMAN AND ARMER. V-'S if it IS M , ir-;- r W. Itfi. BOND, Attorney at Law EDENTON, N. C. cmcx on king ftkket. two dook WEST OK MAIN. fructlce In be Snfrcrir Court of Ct;wra 4 tAlotnlng eonntiea, and Is tUe S"vreme Court M Raalth. tv(.'oUtlat promptly made. DE. C. P. BGGERT, Surgeon & Mechanical FATIKNTa VI-ITi:tj WIIF.N Rf:crjR3TK' WOODARD HOUSE, EDENTON, N. C. J. L. ROGEItSON, Prp. Thli eld aid established hotel till offer Irak. ela accommodations to the travelliif public TERMS REASONABLE. Sample roam for traveling ealoioien, aad eav ranees tarnished when derlred. laKrte Hank at all trains and steamers. First r!a Bar attacaed. 'ibe Beat Imported raid Uomeatlc hiqe-ors always oa hand. -rxsa HEATLY AUD PROMPTLY Fisherman and Farmer Pablishing Company. EVERY HIS OWN OQOTGR UyJ. Hamilton A vi rs, A M .. 31.1). A This is ;i inii-t x . 1 1 1 1 .- I Poole f(,r tin- Household, icaeliiim as it fT U"CM OM! ..I I'.."'' . . . -, . i i r , . , Sy nipl iiim of 1 1 ft it-1 t I ".senses, the Causes and Means of l'ie veutlnu siieli Pi-rases, and tho Klnic-t Itei lies whteli v ill al leviate or ern e. 5'JS a-;es, Profusely Illustrated. Tlie hook is written in lni.i every-day Kie'Iish, Met is pee from t hi? teeliniral ti-nns wiiicli render iniisi Portor Pooks so valueless to tl.e iiener.ilitv of readers. This llmik i- in tended lolieol rmrc in ll l llllilM, i'le I Is so wonie.l lis to le readily understood ly all U.VLV tiUclH. rOSTi'All. Nut only does this Hook eon- JJcv. taiti so iiiueli Information Pcla tive to Pisease, I.ut very proper ly Klves a Coniiilete Analysis of t-verylhliit? iertainiiiK to t'ourt slilp, .Marriage ami tlio I'ro'ine- -dF- tlon anl Keariiit; ol Healthy 'U ramilli's.toK'etlier w llii v ailiulne Heeites aii'i 1'reserij'tions, Kx liiiiat ions of liotanieal l'r:ietieet Correct use of irilmary llerl'S.jtc I omi i kti: Imikx. hook i" i it. no i si;, 1 J 1 l.i'uuaru rst.t . I ity cause AVP ifFl l'T. IF YOU T II K I R T II E JI V A Y BTen If you merely keep t lit m as a diversion. Inor rlfr to liaiulle- Fowls jii.lieiously, you must know aomettiiiig about fieni. To meet Jiis vvmit we are of a prartirnl iHHiitry raiser forlWniJ atwCi twenty five 3 ears. It was written by umun whojmt all Ills mind, nut time, ami money to mukini: s .sue ress of Clilekeu raising not 3sa jiasiiine. tut s a businessand If Jen will jrottt by bis tweuly-rlvo years' work, you cau sa-. e muuy Chicks anuuajly. ,1'HlHi !,' mm " c. ' hx.j Cli ickenr and make rotr 1-owls earn uollar for yon. The Milnt Is. that you i:m-t t cai'Ie to tleteet trouble in the l'oultry Yard as soou as it rs, ;,n t know how to remedy it. 1 his book will team you. It tells how to deteet nnd cure disease; to feed for PKs aud also for tattetiim.-; whieli fowls to save for l.reedinn pun eses; and everyt'iim;, iniierd. you sliould know- on tins su'.vtect to make it lavliialde. Sent I'ostpai 1 for twenty-live eeuts in ic w So. Uuui s. Book Publishing House, V 133 I-eonauu br.. N'. Y. City. ere Waat to learn an about a enaf Bwto Pick Otrta odOae? Kdow baoerfec- Uoaa aad so Guard aaliut rrndf Detect Disease aad Effaot a Core when tame la POMlble? Tell the ua trw Teeth r What to call. the Different Part of toa aaunai ? v ' to Shoe a Horaa Properly r AU tiU a otiier Viobl Information ctn be obtained bJ a.Une our lOO-PAUB ILLUSTRATED 1IORHR BOOK, milok we will forward, peat tao n receipt ,toaiyva cat to iame. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. tanrd St- Naw York Olt dentist 6 m YOU .1 'AY REV. DR. TALMAGE. TIIK BROOKLYN DIVIXK'.S .SUN DAY SKK.MON. Subject: "Tho TraRc ly of Iress." Text- "Whos'i a:orninc; U-t it not lctb.it ut witr 1 .florninj.' of plaiting 1!'" tiair an l tho weiring of poM or of puitiD' on of ap TKirol. but lot it ho the hidJeu mau of the Lfart.' I IVt.-r iii.. 3, 4. That wn should all b fiad is prov?l l.y tho opouinj,' of tho tir-t wardrobe: in par idiso, tvitti its apparel of dark frreen. Tn.it w; should all, as f;ir as our ni'vtns allow u-. In) Loautifully nnd "raei-fdlly .ipptr';,od Is proved l.y t ho fact that Go 1 nwr toado a wavo but Hi? glided it with folJfii feiiril.Hams, or a tree hut lie trarlandod it with blossoms, or a sky hut He studded it with stars, or lowed c-ven the smoke of a furnace. toaf"u 1 hut Ho oolinnrj'id nnl turretr-d and do:nd nn'I soroilod it info outlines of lndweriba.blu Knifefulness. When I seo this njiplo or chards of the spring and tlio parautry of the autumnal forests, I eomo to the oonelu Bion that, if nature does ever join the ohureb, while she may he a Qinker in the silence of 1it worship, she never will he a Quaker in the stylo ot her dress. Why the notches of a fern leaf or the stamen of a water lily? Why, when the day departs, does it let tho folding doors of heaven stay open S' loug When it might go in so qniekly? One summer morning I saw an army of a million spo-irs, eaeh one adorned with a diamond of the lirst water I mean the grass, with tho dew on it. When the prodigal camo home, his father not only j'Ut n coat on his haek, hut jewelry on his hand. Christ wore a board. Paul, tho bachelor npostle, not afflicted with any sentimentality, admirodtho arrangement of n woman's hair when he said in his epistle, "If a woman nave long hair, It is a glory unto her." There will bo n fashion in heaven ns on parth, hut It will ho a different kind of fashion. It will decide the color of the dress, and the population of that country, by a beautiful law. will wear white. I say these things as a background to inv sermon to show you that I have no prim, precise, prudish or cast iron theories on the subject of human apparel. Hut the goddess of fashion has set up her throno in this world, nnd at the sound of tho timbrels we are all expected to fall down and worship. Tho Old and Now Testament of her Bible aro tho fashion plates. Her ultars smoke with tho sacrifice of tho bodies, minds and souls of 10,000 victims. In her temple four people etnnd In the organ loft, nnd from them there comes down a cold drizzlo of music, freezing on tho ears of her worshipers. This goddess of fashion has become ft rival of the Lord of heaven and oarth, and it is high time that we unlimbered our batteries against this idolatry. When I come to count tho victims of fashion, I And as many masculine as feminine. Men make an easy tirade against woman, as though sho were the chief worshiper at this idolatrous Bhrine. and no doubt some men in the more conspicuous part of the pew have already cast glances at the more retired part of the pew, their look a prophecy of generous dis tribution. My sermon shall he as appropriate for one end of tho pew as forthe other. Men are as much the idolators of fashion aswomen, hut they sacriflco on a different part of the altar, With men tho fashion goes to cigars and clubrooms and yachting parties nnd wine suppers. In the United States t hi) men chew up and smoke $100, 000.000 worth of tobacco every year. That is their fashion. In London not long ago a man died who started in life with $750,000. but ho ate it all up in gluttonies, sending his agents to all parts of tne earth for some rare delicacy for the palate, sometimes one plate of food costing him $300 or ? 400. He ato up his whole fortune and had only a guinea left. With that he bought a woodcock and had it dressod in the very best style, ate it, gave two hours for digestion, then walked out on Westminster bridge and threw himself into the Thames and died, doing on a large scale what you and I have often seen done on a small scale. But men do not abstain from millinery nnd elaboration of skirt through any superiority of humility. It is only because such appendages would bo a blockade to business. What would sashes and trains three and a half yards long do in a stock market if And yet men are the dis ciples of fashion just as much as women. Home of them wear boots so tight they can hardly walk in the paths of righteousness. And there are men who buy expensive suits of clothes and never pay lor them, and who go through tho streets in great stripes of color liko animated checkerboards. I say thes.) things because I want to show you that I am impartial in my discourse, and that both sexes, in tho language of the surro gate's office, shall "share and share alike." As God may help mo. I shall show you what are the destroying and deathful influences of inordinate fashion. The tlrst banelul influenco I notice i3 in fraud, illimitable and ghastly. Do you know that Arnold of the revolution proposed to sell his country in order to get money to support his wife's wardrobe? I declare here belore God and this people that the effort to keep up expensive establishments in this country :3 sending more business men to temporal perdition than all other causes combined. What was it that sent Gilman to the penitentiary and Philadelphia Morton to the watering of stock, and the life insurance presidents to perjured statements about their assets, and has completely upset our American linances? What was it that over threw the United States secretary tit Wash ington, the crash of whose fall shook the continentr" But why should I go to these fa mous defaultings to show what men will do in order to keep up great homo style and ex pensive wardrobe when you and I know scores of men who are put to their wits' end nnd are lashed from January to December in the attempt V Our politicians niay theor ize until the expiration of their terms of of Ilee as to tho best way of improving our monetary condition in 1 his country. It will be of uo use, and things will be no better uDtil we can iearn to put on our heads and baeks and feet and hands no more than wo can pay for. There are clerks in stores and banks on limited salaries who, in the vain attempt to keep the wardrobe of their family as showy as other folks wardrobes, aro dying of mull's and diamonds and shawls and high 'hats, and they have nothing left except what they give to cigars nnd wine suppers, and they die be fore their time, andthoy will expect us min isters to preach about thorn as though they were the victims of early p.ety, and after a high class funeral, with silver handles at tho side of .the cofliu of extraordinary bright ness, It will be found out that tho under taker is cheated out of hii legitimate ex penses. Do not send to n.o to preach the funeral sermon of a man who dies like that. I will blurt out tho whole truth and tell that ho was strangled to death by his wife's rib bons. Our countries aro dressed to death. You are not surprised to find that the put ting up one public building in New York cost millions ot dollars more than it ought to have cost when you Ilnd that the man who gave out the contracts paid more thau $5000 for his daughter's wedding dress. Oushmeres of a thousand dollars each aro not rare on Broadway. It is estimate 1 that there are 10,000 women in these two cities who have expended on their personal array $4000 a year. What are men to do in order to keep up euch home wardrobes? Steal? That is the only respectable thing they can do ! During tho last fifteen years there have ho(u in numerable flno businesses shipwrecked on the wardrobe. Tho temptution comes iu this way : A man thinks more of bis faoiily thau of all tho world outside, and if they spend the evening in describing to him the superior wardrobe of tho family across the street that theycannot bear the sight of tho man is thrown on his gallantry and on his pride of family, and without translating his feelings into plain language he goes into ex tortion and Issuing false stock and skillful penmanship in writing somebody else's name at the foot of a promissory note, and they all go down together the husban 1 h the prison, the wife to the sewing machine, the children to be taken care of by those who were called poor relations. Oh, for some new Shakespeare to arise and write the tragedy of human clothes ! Wiilyou forgive me if I say in tersest ehape possible that some of the men have to forge and to perjure and to swindle to pay for their wives' dresses. I will say it whether you forgive me or not 1 Again, Inordinate fashion is the foe of all Christian almsgiYing. Men and women put bo much in personal display that they oiteu have nothing for God and the cause of suf fering humanity. A Christian man cracking his Palais Royal glove across the back by shutting up his hand to hidethe cent he put3 into the poorbox. A Christian woman, at the story of the Hottentots, crying copious tears into a $25 handkerchief and then giv ing a two cent piece to the collection, thrust ing i. under bills so people will not know but it was a $10 goldpieee. One hundred dol lars for incense to fashion ; two cents for God. God gives us ninet;-- centsout of every dollar. The other ten cento by commmd of His Bible belong to Him. Is not Go 1 liberal according to His tithing system laid down in the Old Testament? Is not Go I liberal in giving us ninety ceuts out of a dollar when He takes but ten? We do not like that. Wo want to have ninety-nine cents for ourselves and one for God. Now, I would a great deal rather steal ten cents from you than from God. I think ono reason why a great many pooplo do not get along in worldly accumulation faster is be cause they do not o'jservo this divine rule. God says, "Well, if that man i3 not satisfied with ninety cents of a dollar, then I will take the whole dollar, aud I wdl give it to the man or woman who is honest with Me." The greatest obstacle to charity in the Chris tian church to-lay is tho fact that men ex pend so much money on their table, and wo men so much on their dress, they have got nothing left for the work of Go 1 and the world's betterment. If. my first settlement at Belleville, N. J., tho cause of missions was being presented one Sabbath, and a plti for the charity of the people was being made, when an old Christian mau iu tho audience lost his balance and said right out in the midst of the sermon, "Mr. Talmagc, how aro we to give liberally to those grau 1 aud glori ous causes when our families dress as they do?" I did not answer that question. It was tho only time in my life when I hal nothing to say. Again, inordinate fashion is distraction to public worship. You know very well there nro a good many peoplo who como to church just as they go to tho races to see who will como out first. What a flutter it makes iu church when some wouvm with extraordi nary display of fashion comes in ! "What a love of a bonnet !"' says oue. 'What a por fect fright !" says 500. For the most merci less critics in the world aro fashion critics. Men and women with souls to ho save t pass ing tho hour in wondering whero that man got his cravat or what store that woman patroniz s. In many of our churches tho preliminary exercises aro taken up with tho discussiou of wardrobes. It is pitiable. Is it not won derful that tho Lord does not strike the meeting houses with lightning? Whal dis traction of public worship ! Dying men and and women, whoso bodies aro soon to bo turned into dust, yet before three worlds strutting liko peacocks, tho awful question of the soul's destiny submerged by the ques tion of navy bluo velvet and long fan train skirt, long enoug to drag up tho church aisle, tho husaand s store, oruce, stiop, fac tory, fortune and tho admiration of half tho people in the building! Men and women come late to church to show their clothes. People sitting down in a pew or taking up a hymnbook, ail absorbed at tho same time in personal array, to sing : Rise, my soul, and stretflhthy wings; Thy better portion trace. Rise from transitory thlui?s Toward heaven, thy native place. I adopt the Episcopalian prayer and say, "Good Lord, deliver us !" Insatiate fashion also belittles the intel lect. Our minds are enlarged or they dwin dle just in proportion to tho importance of tho subject on which we constantly dwell. Can you imagine anything more dwarfing to the human intellect than tho study of fash ion? I see men on the street who, judging from their elaboration, must have taken two hours to arrange their apparel. After a few years of that kind of absorption, which ono of McAllister's magnifying glasses will bo powerful enough to make the man's charaa ter visible? They all land in idiocy. I have seen men at the summer watering places, through fashion, the mere wreck of what they once were. Sallow of cheek. Meagre of limb. Hollow at the chest. Show ing no animation save in rushing across a room, to pick up a lady's fan. Simpering along the corridors tho same compliments they simperod twenty years ago. A New York lawyer at United States Hotel, Sara toga, within our hearing, rushed across a room to say to a sensible woman, "You aro as sweet as peaches '." The fools of fashion are myriad. Fashion not only destroys tho body, but it makes idiotic tho intelloct. Yet, my friends, I have given vou only tho milder phase of this evil. It shuts a great multitude out of heaven. The first peal of thunder that shook Sinai declared, "Thou shalt have no other God before Me," and you will have to chooso between tho go Idess ot fashion and Iho Christian God. Thero aro a great many seats in heaven, and they aro all easy seats, but not one seat for tho dovoteo of fashion. Heaven is for meek and quiet spirits. Heaven is for those who think more of their souls than of their bo lies. Heaven is for those who have more joy in Christian charity thau in dry goods religion. Why, if you, with your idolatry of fashion, should somehow get into heaven, you would be for putting a French roof on the "house of many mansions." Give up this idolatry of fashion or give up heaven. What would you do standing beside tho Countess of Huntington, whose joy it was to build chapels for tho poor, or with that Christian woman of Boston who fed 1500 children of tho street at Faneuil Hall on New Year's day, giving out as a sort of doxology at tho end of tho meeting a pair of shoes to each one of them, or those Dorcases of modern society who have consecrated their noodles to the Lord, and who will got eternal reward for every stitch they take? Oh, men and women, givo up the idolatry of fashion ! The rivalries and the competi tions of such a life aro u stupendous wretch edness. You will always find some ono with brighter arrav and with more palatial resi dence, nnd with lavender kid gloves that make a tighter fit. And if you buy t!iir3 thing andwonrit you will wish you ha I bought something else and worn it. And the frets of such a life will bring tho crow's tec? to your temples before they are due, and when you come to die you will have a miserable time. I have seen men and women of fash ion die, and I never saw one of them die well. The trappings off, there they lay on the tumbled pillow, and there wero just two things that bothered them a wasted life an I a coming eternity. I could not pacify them, for their body, mind and soul had been ex hausted In the worship of fashion, and they could not appreciate the gospel. When I knelt by their bedside, they wero mumbling out their regrets and saying : "O God ! O God !" Their garments hung up in the wardrobe, never again to be seen by them. Without any exception, so far as my mem ory serves me, they died without hopo an I went into eternity unprepared. The most ghastly deathbeds on earth are theone where aman dies of delirium tremens and the other where a woman dies after hav ing sacrificed all her faculties of body, mind and soul in the worship of fashiou. My friends, we must appear in j l lgment to an swer for what we have worn on our bodies as well as for what repent encos wo hava exer cised with ou souls. On that day I seo coming iu Beau Brum mel of the last century, without his cloak, like which all England got a cloak, and with out his cane, like which all England got a cane, without his snuffbox, like which all England got a snuffbox he, the fop of the ages, particular about everything bui ms morals, and Aaron Burr without tho letters that down to old ago he showed in pri lo to prove his early wicked gallantries, an I Ab salom without hi3 hair, aud Marchioness Pompadour without her titles, and Mrs. Arnold, the belle of Wall street, when that was the center of fashiou, without her frip peries of vesture. And in great haggardness they shall g3 away into eternal expatriation, while among the queens of heavenly society will be fouud Vasnti, who wore the modest veil before the palatial bacchanalians, and Handah, who annually made a little coat for Samuel at the temple, and Grandmother Lois, the ances tress of Timothy, who imitated her virtue, and Mary, who gave Jesus Christ to the world, and many of you, tho wives and mothers and sisters and daughters of the present Christian church, who, through great tribulation, are entering into the kingdom ot God. Christ announced who would make up the royal family of heaven when He said, Whosoever doeth the will of God, the same is My brother, My sister. My mother." AT HOME AND ABROAD. LATE DOMESTIC AND FOR EIGN TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. A Mob In Qnebec, Canada, Attacks Three Protestant Mission Houses Kansas Farmers In !rcat Dis tress Murderers Hauled A Fatal Bee Stlnjr. A French Baptist mission has recently been established In Quebec, Canada, with Its headquarters in a building on Bridge sfret-t, not far from its intersection with St. Joseph street. The Lelecteur, a French newspaper, con tained a reference to this mission and er roneously styled it the Salvation Army. That night a mob estimated at 5000 persons gathered round tho place and began throw ing stones at it. The attack was a fierce one, and windows and doors soon yielded to tho shower of stones. The missionaries were without any means of defence and wero held prisoners until after some time a force of policemen eair.o along and cleared tho crowd away some what. The mob left tho Baptist mission and went up to tho building at tho corner ef Georgo nnd Richelieu streets, which is now occu pied by tho French Episcopal mission. This place, too, was battered by stones, the win dows being destroyed. Before the time that the police camo up tho rioters had moved on lotho Salvation Army barracks on Palais Hill. Another broadside of stones was firo l and the property of the army sustained consid erable damage. The girls who occupied tiio place were obliged to flee. Tho polico again arrived too lato to make any arrests, and hearing that the gang had again made for the Grande LIgue Mission Houso on Bridge straet, they started in cabs for that place, where they arrived just in time to prevent a second riot. The streets were cloared as thoroughly as possible and tho missionaries wero then es corted to their homo by tho police. A simi lar disturbance led to serious results a few years ago. Local papers say that if the po lice aro unable to cope with tho rioters and to preserve tho peaco and protect all law-abiding citizens in worshiping accord ing to the dictates of their own consciences, they should say so at once, and the military will bo called out to do it for them. Impoverished Kansas Farmers. T. C. Henry, of tho Colorado Land and Emigration Company, has just returnod from Central and Western Kansas. To a press representative he said : "Many counties in the western third of the Stato of Kansas havo already lost four fliths of their population, and in some, county organization cannot be maintained. The condition of tho people is nppaiing iu many districts. I saw hundreds of teams going eastward with loads of household goods thrown hastily into hay wagons. "The condition as compared with former droughts in Kansa3 is without a parallel. Heretofore the farmers havo boon able to procure loans on their farms to make up tho shortage in crops, but now they havo no equities left, and if they had, the loan com panies will not let out a dollar on Kansas property. "There is no new corn, no vegetables, little stock, horses are worth nothing, and In the central counties, where there is a little wheat crop wheat is worth but thirty two cents a bushel. Tho people aro literally Impoverished and the business mon are in doubt, the same as the farmers. "Up to three weeks ago there were tho finest prospects for a good corn crop. It was almost made and farmers obtained credit on the strength of it. Three days of hot winds burned it up, and now they havo no possible chance to pay." Killed His Brother. George Richardson, a prominent farmer of New Diggings, Wis., was waylaid and murdered while riding home from Galena, III., by his brother Mark. Thero had been ill feeling between tho brothers for years and they wore engaged in a dispute about their father's estate. Mark's grain yard was fired by an incendiary, and ho blamed his brother. Mark left home to moot his brother on tho road and shot him dead when he approached. The murderer then went to Beltou, surren dered himself and was taken to Darlington Jail. Cholera Spreading In Russia. In the six days immediately preceding August 4tb, thero wero 4313 fresh cass of cholera, and 240 deaths in St. Petersburg, Russia. In thesis days preceding Juiy 2HtU there wero 15!) fresh cases of cholera and eighty-three deaths in Warsaw. For the De partment of Warsaw tho reports for the same period record 394 fresh cases and 213 deaths. All these llgures cover only the reported cases. Two Murderers Hanged. Harry F. Johnson was executod in the jail yard at Allentown, Penn. Tho crime for which he was hanged was tho mur ier of his own child. Bertie May, aged four years, on July 25, 1893. The drop fell at 10.24. His neck was not broken and death resulted from strangulation in lla minutes. Henry Manfred, whoshotand killed George Ochs, tho husband of Mrs. Oehs, during a Bcuffle, was hanged at Pottsville, Penn. Coxeyites Hold Up a Train. A freight train on the West Jersey Rail road was hold up at Mays Landing, N. J.. by a band of twenty-livo Coxeyites. The "hoboes" stubbornly fought the train crew, but wero finally subdued. Threo of them were arrested. Recorder Gouldey lined them $25 each ,and imposed u sentence of thirty days in jail. Tho Coxeyites were en route to Atlantic City in charge of Carl Brown. Family Burned to Death. The farm house of S. O. Ostenson, of the town of Dover, about eight miles north of Willmar, Minn., was burned to the ground at 2 o'clock a. m. Mr. Ostenson and four children lost their lives in the flames. Mrs. Ostenson narrowly escaped cremation, but is crazed over tho awful event. Reveals a Counterfeiter. Lightning struck tho house of Mrs. Fran ces E. Cowles at Liberal, Mo. When neigh bors rushed in to help save the goods they stumbled upon a counterfeiter's outfit and a pile of bogus silver half dollars. Mrs. Cowlcs's son was arrested, charged with being the owner of tho spurious coin, and was bound over in the sum of $1000 to await trial. A Brmble Bee Kills a Man. William Beam, a farmer, near Grand Rapids, Ohio, was instantly killed by a bum ble bee stinging him on the temple. Ho was on top of a wheat stack pitching wheat to the threshing machine when ho camo upoua bumble bee's nest and ran his fork into it. rieasure Seekers Drowned. William Lockhart, aged sixteen, n of ex-Alderman Lockhart, and two young daughters of WTilliam Simmons, of Fall River, Mass., were drowned while boating in Assonet River. Two Children Burned to Death. The dwellings of Georgo Johnson, near Lodi, South Dakota, was burned with two children. The supposed cause of tho iiro was the explosion ot a gasoline stove. The highways leading eastward through Nebraska and Kansas aro already thronge 1 withdisheartenei settlers, who have aban doned their homes and are hurrying toward 3 Iowa nnd Missouri for relief from th? almost unbearable heiat. A similar sctnj lias not been witnessed sinco 1873. when the hot Winds almost depopulated Western Kansas. Mobk than 3000 Confederate veterans met at the base of the Confederate monument at Augusta, G.t., a few nights ago and passe 1 resolutions indorsing the speech of Senator Gordon in support of the President using Federal troops to suppress the strike riots. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Kastern and Middle States. rrs-ELii 1. Hott. said to le tho leader of a gang of counterfeiters of Treasury note?, was arrested in New York City by Govern ment agents. Dr. Judsov B. Andrews. Superinton lent of the State Hospital for the Insano at Buf falo, is dead. Alexander NEwnrROEB. a jeweler, at No. 1317 Broadway, New York City, was mur derously assaulted in his store by aman who gave his name as Edward Williams. His ob ject was robbery. Dceino a severe storm at Oswego, N. Y., a young lad named Eugeno Clark, age 1 fif teen years, w is fri'hteuol to death by the thunder an 1 lightning. Iv New York City, Joseph B. Hunt, a deco rative paintercrazed by il!ues-i. shot au I killed his wiio and then put a bullet into his qwn brain. Cab No. S3 of tho Brooklyn Bridge, con taining sciveral passengers, jumpod fle track and fell over upon tho northern driveway. It was bally wrecked, but no ono was in jured. JonN Dosohce was drowned while trying io swim across tho East River, in an effort to escape from Black well's Island, New York City. The grand stand on the Philadelphia base hall grounds wa3 burned, the flames spread ing to adjacent property and causing par ticularly heavy damage to tho stables of tha Omnibus Company General. South and West. General Andbew Jackson's grave, at tho Hermitage, near Nashville, Tenn., was found partly opened, as if would-bo robbers of his dust had been frightened off in tho night. Ben jamin F. Tufts, Chief Postal Clerk of the Rock Island Road, a trusted man, was arrested at Chicago by Inspector Stuart, charged with robbing the rmils. His steal ings, it is said, amount to $10,000. Three hundred men went to work in tho Pullman cars'aops, Pullman, 111. At Elkhom. W. Va., Andorsoa nolliday, a white man shot at Bob Calloway and misse l him. hut tho bullet passed through the head of Wesly Cobb, killing him lustantlv. Hol liday was arrested, but a mob ot 300 armed colored men took him IntD the woo Is and hanged him to a tree, and then riddled his body with bullets. An election was held In Tennossoe for five Justices of the Supromo Court, Judges of tho Criminal, Chancery and Circuit Courts, and all county officials, as well as members of tho county courts. Tho voto polled was generally light. It was thought on th3 morning aftor the election that the Demo cratic ticket had received 15,000 majority. Fire which started in Huston Miles A Weeks's lumber yard, nt Detroit, Mich., caused a loss of more than $50,000 and tho death of ono firemen and tho serious injury of five others. Eugene McCarthy, pipeman of Engine Company 19, was killed. The United States revenue cutter Michi gan, which struck a rock on tho Canadian side of Lake Erie, near Bar Point, was re leased by the assistance of a tug and lighters. The business portion of Lake View, Mich,, was burned. Loss, $130,000. Scores of spectators wero injured in . panic caused by a lir8 at tho Chicago League ball grounds, where a game was in progress. It put 10,000 people in panic , almost caugh 3000 and caused 500 to get tangled up in a barbed-wire fence. American Railway Union officials, feeling that violence lost them the strike, caused tho arrest of W. P. Hail for leading a mob at Chicago. Tho Chicago and Eastern Illinois is removing its shops from Brazil, In 1., bocauso of tho city's sympathy with the strikers. Frost was reported in a number of places in Brown County, Ohio. Ono farmer de clares that ho wrote his name iu tho frost on a board fence. The like of this has not been reported for years. Ex-Governor Blair dio 1 at his residence in Jackson, Mich. Austin Blair, tho war Governor of Michigan, was born in New York in 1313, anl went to Michigan in 1841. John, aged thirteen, an 1 Charles Moore, aged eighteen, brothers, wero drowned iu the Ohio River at Toronto, Ohio, while skiff riding. Democrats carried Alabama against tho Republican-Populist fusiou and elected William C. Oates Governor. It was esti mate I on the morning after tho electionthat tho majority forthe Democratic State ticket was over 11,00J. Tho Legislature is also Democratic. Washington. The President nominated Commodoro Erben to be a rear-admiral. Minister Guzman, of Nicaragua, was pre sented to tho President as tho accredited Minister of Salvador. By order of Attorney-General Olnoy tho groat suit against tho Southern Pacific Rail way Company was dismissed. The President appointod Minister to Chile James D. Porter, Judge of tho Middle and Eastern District of Tennessee, Vice Ex-Post-master-General Key, resigned. This leaves a vacancy in tho Chilean mission. Judge Porter was Assistant Secretary of State dur ing Cleveland's first term. Stringent provisions to prevent the im migration of Anarchists into the United States were agreed to by tho Senate in tho hill to restrict immigration which passed that boJy. A cat; rs of the Democrats of tho National House of Representatives was called oa tha larilL Foreign. The trial of Santo Cascrio, tho murderer f President Carnot, was commenced at Lyons, France. The Newfoundland Legislature was Dpened ; the Government has a majority of five over tho Whitewayites. There were thirteen deaths from cholera In tho Netherlands and flvo in various parts 3f Germany. The members of tho Wellmau Arctic ex pedition, reported to be lost, wero aliva an! well on June 17. A pleasure-boat, laden with excursion ists from Barmouth, capsized on the Mud .1aoh River. Wales. Ten of tho passengers were drowi-ed. Dr. Cornelius IIerz, tho Panama lobbyist, has been sentenced in Paris to five years in prison. Unconfirmed dispatches from Shanghai stated that another engagement had been reported off the Korean coast, in which three Chinese warships were captured by tho Japanese. The rebellion in Peru is spreading. Fight ing has been renewed on tho Mosquito Res ervation. General Caceres has taken his seat as President of Peru. The Vigilant led tho Brii.mnla over the whole course of fi'ly miles at Co wes, Eng land, whining a groat victory. The Nicaraguaus are in possession of Blue flelds again. Grand Duchess Xenia, daughter of tho Cz ir of Russia, was married to Grand Duke Alexander Mich.allovith in the Imperial Palace at Peterhof. ; In Switzerland, EUe Large, a French Abbe, fell from a precipice on Mount Salva tor, near Lugano, and was killed. A clergy man named Davidson and his daughter, ascending St. Luc on mules, were sruprised by a fall of rock, and the daughter was killed. The Vigilant defeated the Britannia and ,Satanita in a race around the Isle of Wight, (England. The suit arising out of the theft of valu able paintings from the stu lio of Professor L.'inbach. in Muuicb, Bavaria, has leeome so interesting that an admission fee is charged lor reserved seats at the trial. Two of too accused, ono of them a nephew of the artist, have committed suicide. a twenty-four hour bicycle race at Heme Hill, England, Shorland covered 4tkl miles 900 yards, beating tha world's record. Charles Barthel, ot Detroit, rode a twenty-five mile bicycle race la 1.05.58, breaking the world's record. CASERI0 TO DIE. Carnot's Assassin Sentenced to the Guillotine. SANTO CASEUIO Santo Caserio, who rssassiuated President Caruot, of Franco, ori the evening of Fri day, Juno 24, was found guilty at Lyons and sentenced to death by the guillotine. Tho Court gave these quostioDS to the jury : "Did tho prisoner, Santo Caserio, assas sinate President Carnot, and was tho crime pireruoditated?" Tho jury retired at 12.05 o'clock and wore absent just thirteen minutes. They returnod to court and presented an aillrmativeauswor to loth quostlous. Caserio, who had been in the meanti-iio removed from tho court room, was brought back and tho jury's declaration was read to him by M. Vidor. the Registrar. At the announcement of tho verdict the supercilious grin which Caserio has worn most of the time during tho trial disappeared liko magic, uud his faci blanched. Attorney-General Folchior demanded tho im mediate imposition of the death penalty. Thero was silunee for a moment, and then Judgo Breuiilae pronounced tho sentence, that tho prisoner bo put to death by tho guillotine. As tho sound of tho Judge's voice ceased Caserio puliod himself together for a moment ho was almost limp and in a feeble voice exclaimed : "Vivo la revolu tion !" Two gendarmes seized tho condemned as sassin, and as they hurried him out of tho room on the way to his cell he did not for get to shout, in a voice somewhat stronger than his last utterance, tho meaningless words employed by all Auarchists convicted of capital crimes: "Courage, comrades; vivo l'auarchie !" With a view of bringing the enso boforo the Court of Cassation on appeal, M. De breuil demanded that the records of tho court mention Judgo Breulllac's charge to the jury at the opening of the session, and to this demand tho Court assented with re servation. PROMINENT PEOPLE. The German Emperor is composing an opera. Gladstone has declined the latest invita tion to visit the United States. Representative Hitt, of Illinois, began public lifo as a correspondent. President Casimir-Perier, despite his name and his enormous fortune, belongs to no club. The Pope, among his many accomplish ments, can speak English, Gorman un I French fluently. Rev. Dr. Thomas Hanlon has now been the leader ot the Bible class at Ocean Grove, N. J., for seventeen years. Queen Victoria is tho only European sovereign who has a grandson in tho direct line of succession to the throne. General A. J. Pleasanton, originator of the blue glass theory, died at his homo lu Philadelphia, aged eighty-six years. The "Golden Gould," as tho English now term the son of the famous American finan cier, has given a groat boon to yachting. It is the boast of tho Khan of Kholat that since ho. has boen on the throne he has killo 1 3000 men and women. This is an average of one every live days all the year round. It is said that William Waldorf Astor, ol London, is losing $G000 a week on bis Ga zette and Budget, and that he has already lost about $250,000 on tho Pall Mall Maga zine. Ex-President Harrison received $25,000 for a four hour argument in tho district court of Indianapolis tho other day on be half of the owners of a street railway fran chise. William Waldorf Astor, who has become a British subject, has been nominated for Justice of tho Peace of Middlesex County, England. It is said that this is a step to a baronetcy. Of the Governors of forty-four States as J six Territories only threo aro bachelors. Four havo been married twice and throe have entered the matrimonial state threo times or more. The little sou of the young Duchess of York is to bear, it is said, the titloof his preat-great-grandfather, the Duke of Knt. Queen Victoria's desire to rovlveher father's title is well known. John Fiske, who has recently completed a school history of tho United States, has been made a LL.D. by Harvard University. "America's groatost historian" is what the Chicago papers call him. As a lecturer General Lew Wallace is fast taking the place that Schuyler Colfax had in the Western heart. His manner his hearty, his voice deep and sonorous and his diction pleasing and easily understandable. George Du Maurier, who, after being known for so many years as un artist and caricaturist, iias suddenly acquired new dis tinction as a writer, is now sixty years old. He was educated in France, but his career has been essentially English. Senator Ransom, of North Carolina, has made but one speech during his fifteen years of service in the Senate. Boforo ho was sent to Washington he had tho reputa tion in his owu State of being a flno orator. He gave up being eloquent on account of u tendency to heart disease. STATE CONVENTIONS. The Tickets Nominated in Various Commonwealths. These conventions for the nomination of tickets were hold simultaneously In various States : At Casper, tho Wyoming Republican Con vention nominated the following candidates for State offloers : Governor, W. A. Rich ards ; Congressman. F. W. Mondell ; Secre tary of State, C. W. Burdtck ; Auditor, W. O. Owen; Treasurer, Henry G. Hay; Su premo Judge, Charles N. Potter ; Superin tendent, Miss Estello Reel. Tho platform declared In favor of free silver anl protec tion. At Boise, tho Idaho Populists nominite 1 for Congress, James Gunn, of Boise ; for Gov ernor, K. J. W. Ballentine, of Beih-vue. Tho convention declared against fusion with tho Democrats, and favored woman huff rag1. At Atlanta, tb". Georgia Stato Convention of Democrats met and nominated W. Y. At kinson for Governor. The platform indorsed the Income tax and State banks. Tho iu jdorsement of Cleveland's administration was Qualified. EARTHQUAKE IN SICILY. ire.it Less of Life and Immense Damage to Properl y. A dispatch iro:u Rome says that a terrific earthquake shock occurred iu Sicily. Many people were killed, an I innuendo damage was 'lone to property. The earthquake centred in the rr.'-vince of Catania. The towns of Fieri. Aci and Pisiro were destroyed, an ! great daT.age was d"?io in Zr'.)ati, Penni.si and Ziffarana. Fifty persons were killed iu these towns, anl so JD S were sewrely injured. Hun lrals of villagers flei from their homes into the open country, abandoning everything. Tne Government officials sent supplies and surgeons to the distressed districts. LATER NEWS. FakxebJoun Michael, of Silver Crook, N. Y., fell from his sieat on a harvester un 1 was literally chopped to pieces by tho knives. He was discovered by one ol his tnnx: daughters. A parino attempt was made to hold up a Lake Shore express at Kessler, Ind., where a similar attempt succeeded a yo;,- ano. Detutt ouEBirr Wilson's confession in volves prominent county officials, Including a Sheriff, in Colorado In tho tnrring and feathering of Attorney-General Tarsn y. Draught threatens tho Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska coi n crop. Corn jumped seven cents in ten minutes on th-3 Chicago Board of Trade amid great excitement. Corn is worth moro thau wheat. TrtE Houso Judiciary Committee voted ngaiuat tho bill to admit Japanese to citizen ship. Democratic Representatives met in caucus and decided to leave the tariff conferees free to continne their efforts to reach nn agree ment with the Senate. Francis H. Usuihwik., Unite 1 States Consul at Leith, Scotlaud, aul a well-known uuthor, died. The town of Slowe, Vt.. celebrated iis hun Iredth amii wrsary. An oratiou w.is delivered by ex-(hveruor Hence. Tin: Scott Stamp and Coin Comptnv. New York Citv. hav.ng boon ro'ilxvl of ft" n $25,000 to 5il.0)0 in foreign stamps, dis cover and arrest oue of tho thieves. Of the crew of forty ?i of a New li Kor 1 (Mass.') whaler, wrc -ke.l of Atuska, nine were drowned, six die 1 of expo-uire, liiioen drifted aw.ty in a bo t and sixteen survived after resorting to cannibalism. Cashier Henry A. Gardner, of the sec ond National Btnk of Altoou-i. Penn., has gone with $20.00 ) of the bank's money au I and a woman not his wife. Ai.iiF.iiT M. Toid', of K'llamnzo . was unanimously no.uiu.ite I for Governor by the Michigan Prohibition State Convention. The North Caro'.ini Dom'j'ratieStateCin ventioa met :it Hulefgh. E. A. Dotighteu was made Permanent Chairman. Chief Jus tice James K. Sheppard an 1 Ass-i:ite Jus tices Walter Clark, James C. MacRae an 1 Armisted Burwell au 1 State Treasurer M D. Tate were nominated by acclamation to su : ceod themselves. Gr.Assnoi'rr.nr. aro destroying tho corn crop in Tennessee. PiusH'EM' ('lkvm.ani) directed Secretary of State Groshaiu to scud a forma! note lo Minister Willis approving his coiuse in re cogniz'ug tho republic of Hawaii. The Senate in executive session reject ol the following post mast its nominate. I by tho President . Jonas Sh lys, at Oswego, N. Y. Treadwell 15. Kel'mm. at Babylon, N. Y. Thomas II. Minion, at Ilerkim "i N. V. ; George I'. Van Dam. at Thomkinsville, N. Y. The Eastern and Western forces of topog raphers of tho Unite I SI ttes Geological Sur vey have been i-ousoli lated for couveuicu : e of administration. A hom it expSoledin the Hebrew quarter of the cily ol Corfu. Greece, killing seven persons and doing considerable damage to property. It is said that the efforts ol R'issia an 1 Eugl-uil t bring about paoo between China an I Japan havo tailed. FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. The Senate. lOoTii Day. -The Sugar Investigating Committee reported. Mr. Chandler's resolution oilliiig for tho investigation of the Columbia Coal Company as affecting the tariff schedule was discussed. lf7Tii Day. The New Mexico an 1 Arizona Statehood bills weie report'!. The Gen eral Deficiency bill was passed. The River and Harbor bill, reported from tho con forces, was agreed to. KWth Day. The Senate pr.ssed the bill to tax hank notes. Private p vision bills were passed, to the number of thirty-seven, and there were several other unhi porlaiit hills also passed, one of thent making the city of Ocala, Fla., a port of entry. lll'JTir Day. There was a long discussion over Mr. Chandler's resolution f inquiry Into the historv of the Dominion Coal Com pany of Nova Soot la. The Ariti-Anarhist bill was passe I anl sent to conference. Tho conference report on the River and Har bor bill was resubmitted and agreed to. 170th Day. Tiw nsieration of the In. dian Appropriation bill was complete I anl various unimportant bills were passed. 171s Day. -The Senate held a thro;, hours' session, in which a number r'f minor hills were passed. Tho conference report ou tho Indian Appropriation bill was agree 1 to. Tits House. 100th Day. The House adopted the ma. fority resolutions of the Co nmitteo on Elec tions, unseating Mr. Funston (R-puhlle in), of Kansas, and giving tho title, to the seat to II. L. Moore (Demo -rat). The voto stool lie, to H7. Unimportan routine busbies .onsumed tho remainder of tho day. 101 sr Day. Only routine busines.3 was transacted. ll2i Day. The conference report of the Indian Appropriation hill was discussed. The Riv rand Harbor hill was recalled from conference for correction. Mr. Johnson presented the memorial of the Central Labor Union of Cleveland. Ohio, praying for tho impeachment of United States District Judge Ricks, of Ohio, and It was referred to tho Judiciary Committee. 193i Day. Only business of minor im portance was transacted. 194th Day. Several bills appropriating money for public buildings were pass- I. Senator Hill's Anti-Anarchist bill was non soncurrod in. TWO BROTHERS HANGED. A Double Legal Kxecutlou ut Can ton, Miss. A double hanging took place at daylight at Canton, Miss. Tho two Scott broth"r-, colored, were hanged in the jail yard at 5 o'clock. The crime for which thesT two men wero executed was ono of unusual atrocity. In October, 1893, they were bound over by a justice of tliep-ace to await tho action of the Grand Jury upon tho charge of burglary. Norman Hopson was the principal witness against them. Shortly afterwards they en ticed Kopson into a swamp, choke I him to death, weighted his body down with Irons nnd threw it into the river. Three mentis later some colored women, while lisLing, found the body. MURDER AND SUICIDE. Jealous Jenkins Shot Three Women, 'I hen Killed Himself. In a fit of jealousy, Wid Jenkins, baggage master at Chiriton, Iowa, shot Mrs. Ebzi Murphy, his landlady, and her two daughters and then committed suicide. He was enamored of Julia, tho younger daughter, an 1 jealous of tho attentions paid her by another mau. In words with her mother he became enraged. Ho shot her, hunted up his sweetheart, killed her In stantly, fatally shot her sister Johanna, who was with her. then shot himself. Mr. Murphy aul Johanna were fatally injured. MOROCCO'S NEW SULTAN. Muley Abdul -Ai It I Said to be u Pro gressive Youns Muii. It U welt for Morocco, and for forolguer mho have dealings with that country, th.it Muley Ahdu'.-Ar.!. was permitted to os-ond the throne m i h vacant by th re'ent death Df Sultan Muley H i-s.in. Tho remains i f ihe bite Sultan wer hurt! with ureal pomp 4ii I ivri'ni'Hiv, mi 1 immediately n'ter th In-ler-.neut Abdul-V.'.'. wn proclaim" 1 Sultan at tho chief mos.pie and the imperial urn nrHla raise! over him. But wuthr li would slay under the umbrella or l puihd out Into! ho glum of the hot M-von-o mm, was tor some ti:n an unittlod qtptlou. AMttl-A has a brother, named Muley M li inimc.l, w'th more y.iro ! his cn-dit hut muc! l -ss discretion ; and t tlrnt Muley M ) hanunel kb-hc I vigorously against the ac cession of his younger brother, who hT iw !.-ien for-tho honor and appoint"! : beret vt by tho Sultan as-wa. tho luiucute 1 Ml l.V.t AHlin.-AZU. .. .i it Ii.,. 1.,l.,u M . , n ,11 n. t. U.ttll OPIiev mis in. j.ii . i-eised his protesting aul submitted to tho teased his protesting au l sai.miue.i io im inevitable, alt I other prctend-M to the t.ic ress,,, having also been disposed of, tho new Su tan is in full enjoyment of lilsthtouo ii , . I .1 i I ,..r, t II Isit eS I HE Uoveril!iieiit ot i iiilario, l ana I i, lias riven away nearly iso.oo ) n. -res of Ian I in bounties to the fathers of families of iw.-lvn living children. Paul Belauger, f Itlver du Loup, hasthirty-slx and thinks heshoiild havo 300 acres instead of 10J, tho regulation bounty. THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale I'rirrs of Country I'roiluci' (.noted in New ork. IJ vii. s vi' i;r m. M irkef (airly act iv durin I'i- i- isf w ''-. Un lor a go o I denim 1. The :n t i m pre-. receive 1 ;t Iho var.eii i,. 1 1 k - r I ill 't i - t ioi i i 'or plat Ton n su rp'u j wis 1 1 . 1 l"-r ' oi f I I quart". Ihe l'. a in pri an 'l '. I Ii iv, u ; I ii raised to , . .. i qu irt. Receipts oT the Week, Hut 1 milk, gals- J.'ii,-. ,M Condense I mill:, g.il ., . . I". 1 ' ' Cream, gal;j 7e.i 7 lit' i i i i;. Creamery I'enn.. extras . - .5 Western, evt r as - -' ' Western, firsts. Western, t birds to sc on Is -- ' State -'Mr i ' 21 Firsts I '" Seeoli Is ( I'''' j Western I m. Creamery, Or Is . l'i fn ! S i Is . . . . II 1 Western I'.i'-t r . Iro, i. e- Iris . . . i Seconds to firsts 1-5 ' I ' t Thirds ( M Summer m il: . ( Rolls, fres'i '" i nr. i vr. State Full. ream. whit'-. fancy S , .', Full cream, good to prime. h(m h State Factory - Part hUiii-, choice ;," Part skims, c,,m. to prime. "I i t' Full skims -- '"' F.'UlS. Stale .V. Penn I'res'i - ' l" Nearby -Fanev '"' Western -Fresh, best - ( II Duck eggs - South h West . '! ( loose eggs - LEANS A'i IT. AS. Beans Marrow. I'IH. choice. ( y- i Medium, lH'.r.t. choice - n .' U'l Pea, 1S!l.t. choice In ' lied kidney. lS'.l:l. choice . 2 ! White Kidney, IS'.CI. choice 2 11 in :: Clack turtle soan. I'm. ... I :n ' ': Lima, Cab. Jx'.IH. V l!. 2 '' fu : Green peas. hi. Is. V bush 1 "7 m I II runts and liEKittF.-; - v. -sa. I;lnekberries( J Ts"y, V qf. . ' ' H Plums, V qt 7 Watermelons, each n ' Peaches. V I ,-sit 7" In I .' ' Huckleberries'. Jersey, r1 ! fn- I' Muskme.,tis, v b' l 7 j in t Raspberries, i' p;i,t - (" Appley, V hhl 7'l In J I', Penrs. V bbl 1 '" Iii Crapes. I ie. . i' Ii,. . x in l' Currant.-, t- qt - HOI'S. Btntels-fj't. choice, ' lb W to II H!i:l. coin'i otl (o l.'o i l " In ' Pacille Const, ehojc, ..... - In II Common to prime. 7 to l Old od'l3 - 1 "' ' It AY A Nl STRAW. Hay Good to choice ' IO'HIi K"' "" ;' Clover mixed .'' '"' ,; 1 Straw Long rye ' 1 '" Short rye ' ' LIVE l-OL'I.ri:V. Fowls. V th r"' Spring chickens. V Ih ID It Roosters, old. ' !' -. ' Turkeys, f' lb 7 'J Ducks. Y pair " f" 7" Geese, V pair I'D 1 ' I'igeous, V pair . '.0 UO pressed pon.rur. Turkey". V tb 7 ih D Chickens, l'hila, broilers 17 in 11 Western, 12 In 1 Jersey, r' lb Fowl.-, y th (" ' Ducks, y ;h 7 '" 1 Geese, y II; I I , 1 1 Squabs, V doz I 2"j fn 2 0) VEOKTAIIM'.'I. PctatoM", Jer-.y, y bbl I ') to 17". S veets. y 2 '. to . ! I Cabbage, y 1 J 4 D ) In I I Onions-Yellow, V bid I ' to I ' !:"!, y bbi i od to i ' Squash, marrow. V bbl . . T to i Turnip. Russia, t bbl to - i Egg plant, ypt-l 2 DO ' 2 ' j Celery, r" doz roots ID On ., ) String beans, r basket 1V' to j u Green poa's, y im,, . . Vi lm 1 7 Green corn, V 100 4) to I .' Tomatoes. Jersey, V box... . 31 to 1 'Jl Cucumber, V 10J ' to i t inIN. ETC. Flour Winter Patents ', DO to :i 2', Spring Patents 'i -) fw ii ') Wheat. No. 'I Rod to May to Corn No. '2 t',j to tvi Oars No 2 White si tto r, Track mixed ;f to 4i Rye State -- ia Barley Ungraded Western. . -to Lard City gluatn to 7 LIVE STOCE. Beeves, city dressed B 06 Vt Milch Cows, corn, to good HO Calve, city d rested ii to 'J Courtry d reused fj'u a Kbeop, y 100 lbs 'I (12; :to .1 7' Lamb. V 100 lbs . 2 70 'to 5 Ut Hogs--Live, V 100 lbs 5 ID to j h". Dialed 1 to Muley Abdul-Ar.-. although very young, 's vry energetic, well odueatd. an eice! ent hors Miian and fearh ss hunter, while hU Ider brother is a ftinat'csl Mussulman, and b tesls :tl! r.urop un t.nd Chrr-tlan. II" H ino'.vu as the One-eyed Dee ipltalor." froui tils love (or or h-riiig siimm ;rv executions, in I was lot iiierlv Kh ilir of M irr akesli. but was depo-ed .in I imprison 1 by Ins father, uwing to his ferocity mid lusiibor linat lou. 1
Fisherman & Farmer (Edenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 17, 1894, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75