C. V. w Au8Bon, Busm&ss Manager; PrBLlSHED BY. lJoANOKi PCBLISniSQ Co. "FOR GOD. 'FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH. NO. 40. VOL. II. K PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1891. ' .. ' THE NEWSL - . : . . -- , ,. r" The First ArknosasValley Bank at Wichita, "Ks., closed ita doors. The assets are said to be sufficient to pay alIlaWlitjef.--The Iowa - Temperance Alliance'continues Ita war upon the . saloons, having secured '', injunctions against a number of the proprietors. The Pennsylvania, legislature has taken action toward ascertaining the causes of the recei t mining disasters. The Farmers Alliance of Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Tennessee has established an interitate co-operate busi ness committee. The Wabash Railroad Company has cut down clerical force and made a sweeping reduction in 'salaries : 6anford B. Whaland and Mrs. Little Hamp ton, both" of whom deserted ..families and eloped Iron? Uarrlsburg, Ky., were arrested at Vincennes, Ind. ' The' woman attempted nijeid.-A party returning along a moun tain road from a funeral near Shenandoah, Pa, were thrown from a carriage, and two children fatally injured. A mortgage of 512,000 has been placed on the Weldon.'Ill., farm, on which Jit George J. Schweinfurth f nd his disciples,- In Decatur, 111., William II. Crawford was convicted of the murder of Mrs. Line Matthias, and sentenced to death. The city poor house in Waterville, Me., was burned, and one of the (inmates perished in the flames.- The largest and richest vein Vf tin ore has been discovered near Durango, Mexico. -Constables made a descent upon a Chicago gambling house, but were beaten off. The Manufacturers' Mutual Insurance Company, of Chicago, has been placed in a receiver's hands.- Jennie Bartb, a maniac, was scalded fo death in the Kalamazoo Insane 'Asylum-while being given a bath.- -Owing ,to the shortage in the state treasury, there is no money to pay the Arkansas legislators. J. W," Toombs, "of Manitowac, Wis, com mitted suicide, v , Wm. Swisher was killed and John Kelley bmily burned in the ammonia plant of Tamm Bro,' glue works in St. Louis. JohnBoud, a Mitchell (Ind. negro, has been in bed 27 years. Though well, lie refuses to get np .be-' cause his mother sild the farm. A Barry (III.) binkeman killed, himself by running a. red-hot p tker through1 his body. Au epi demic of diphtheria is raging in Adair, Iowa, inv loiisoii ;atfU lire insurance com pany of C'bicHgo hai made an assignment. Three iicgroes confined in the town jail at Friar's Point, Miss., were burned to death. George Bradley, the first patient to be inocu lated with Koch's lymph in thiscottntry.djed in New Haven. The her steel cruiser Newark formally .went into commission nt Cramp's ship yard in Philadelphia'. --An ilrtmni - 1 - 1 1 . 4 nricniyu, as iimuu vy an uiianuwu uiuii lu murder Lena Marks near Utica. N.Y. The roiling; mills at Bradsboro', Pa-, have closed iown. Lewis Kurtz, a Jersey City school , boy, exploded a cartridge find was severely injured. A Grand Army post has been es tablished in Hamilton, Out- John Y. Rus tel, aged eighty-one. years, was suffjeated in s Imruing house in Petersburg, Va.- The World's Fair Association of Chicago will call lorr an additional subscription of S.'i.OOO.OOJ of ttock. The contract has been let.fur the construction of the Danville and East Ten nessee Eailr ad lrom Bristol to Danville.-1 The .New York and. New Jersey Terminal Railroad Company, projectors of the scheme to tunnel under the Hudson river, filed ar ticles of incorporation et Albany. John Tyson, a prominent St. Louis grain merchant, upended. Link Waggoner, a desperado, defied a mob who broke into the jajj at Clai borrfe, La ', to lynch him, and shot two of the men who wanted to kill him. . . Charles; Zeigler, u prominent resident of Adams county, Pa., died at the acre of fifty nine years. In a coll iVion on the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Bailroad an engineer and a fireman "was killed.- -The Wisconsin legislature has repealed the Bennett law. An explosion occurred in a New Castle, Col., mine, and seventy-five : miners narrowly escaped. -A large number of fishermen were adriit on the ice in Lake Huron, and it is . '1 . .. . . . - . . . tesreu a score'pr more'bf them have perished- Dr. V. C. Lancaster died at Kntixville, .Tenn.. of -blood TJoisonin'r. the result of nei- chnrles' large nail manufactory at Towanda, Pa., was iestrqyed by. .fire., Los $3."),0'J0; insurance $35,'0OOJ.- Ex-Fenian officers have buying cartridges in Kansas City for , .. Jther the Guatemalan government or i STirgents pt that country. -rlhree, brothers named Engmark havo been arrested in Chi cago lor robbing their employers of $10,000 worth of jewelry. The war ships Chicago, Dolphin and Yorktown will go to : New Orleans at the time of the Mardi Gras festivi ties. The steamship Newport encountered a terrific storm on her trip from New York to Colon, and suffered s-onie damage. -Engineer f Robert Brown whs killed in a collision near East Rochester, TZ..Y.-. - Judge II;' J. Ewing mortally wounded a. burglar who was going .. through bis house.- Tlte East Texa Fire Insurance Company, of Tyler, Tex., wen t into .rnltMifiir liniiirltj timi v-ThAmnRP. Wrifiil. side, of New Burnshle, III., committed suLir'e in the presence, o his fiancee. CnleV. Morrell, a well known journalist, died in Washington. Russell C. Canfield, of Lu ting, Mich., has confessed to the murder of ,NJlie.GriEu. bis adopted daughter. BITTEN BY A RATTLER. A lonng Knglloli Toniltt rtcaetvc III Bab.Blu in Florida. , Edward Bosunquet.onof a weal thy banker, of London, England, was bitten by a rattle-'1 MtnUe, near Dnytona, while Tiunting, and is beyond hope of- recovery.' The snake struek him on the inside of his left leg, above the ankle . Evelyn Walker, his companion, carried hinion his Mmulder to Daytona, meanwhile, IntlcHvoDiJg to suck the poison iiom the j wound.. i It nppears ihnt Mr. Walker had a sore on I hi lip and nlorhcd some of the poison. H" became pa-ually mralyred, but later he wai 2onsi4rt'-i out of dinger. Overwhelmed by Water in a Coal Mine at Jeanesville, Pa. A Hole Drilled Into u Overhead Mope "Which Hart Been Abandoned and Flooded Five Years Ago. 4 A Dispatch lrom Hazleton', Pn., says: Eighteen men entombed in watery graves marks the result of the mosit awful mine hor ror that has ever occurred in this region. Jeanesville, the ; pretty litttle mining village of J. C, Haydon & Co., two miles across the mountains from" Hazleton, is the scene of the disaster. ' v ,. , . , ,'. At 11 o'clock,' while Charles Boyle and Patrick Col of Leviston, were- engaged in drilling a hole in their chamber in the lower lift of No. 1 slope of J. C. Haydon & Co., at Jeane-ville.they broke into the old No. 8 slope that has been idle lor five years and bad been flooded to thejnouth with water. Win. Brislin, a driver, was driving at the bottom of the slope when he felt the wind coining and cried out, "Boys, run for your lives or we will all be drowned." In a mnment the force of water' came, and Brislin barely escaped with bis life. Besides him six others were saved. , The water rose rapidly, and before any at temptrconkl be made to rescue the rest of the workmen, flowed in, and in five minutes' time the s ope, which is 62 i feet deep, was filled to the mouth, and eighteen men had perished. The news ofthe disaster created the wildest excitement, and the mouth of the slope was soon thronged with people frantic in their efforts to obtain information ot the inmates ot the mines. When all the men who escaped reached the surface and it was known who" the lost were, the excitement increased, and in less than half au hour hundreds of men, women and children gathered aronnd the slope, and the terrible scenes of anguish that ensued cannot be depicted. Wives imploring piteously of the miners standing by, who only knew too well the fatal result, to save their husbands from the terrors of a watery grave. Little children crying for their papa who would never return; relatives, and friends ringing their hands in sorrow and distress and appealing to a merciful Providence. The weather, which was bitter cold, did not have any efiect toward diminishing the-trowd, and Messrs. J. C. Haydon & Co. soon had a large force of men at work, under Master Mechnnis Rude, placing pumps in position. One was got in working order in a very short time, and black and sulphurous water was being forced from the mouths of tne hugb column pipes at the entrance ot the slope. A large duplex Cameron pump was also in working order by 7 o'clockf, and every miuute takes 1,500 gallons from the slope where the men are entombed. The firm of Haydon & Co. -will pump the water out as rapidly as machinery placed in position can do the work. How long it will take is a question, since no definite idea of the volume of water can be ascertained. Some ot the miners say it will take four weeks before the bodies can be readied, others say twice as long, since all the water tnat had collected in the abandoned No, 8 slope wiU;run into this lift of No. 1 slope, and will, ot course, have to be pumped out. Mr. Brislin, one of the escaped miners at the bottom of the slope, said: "J was waiting at the bottom of the slope for a trip to come out. Suddenly I heard a loud noise, and J thought it was tiie trip coming out Then a frightful blast of wind came and knocked me down the gangway. . I cried out to James Griffith. Then the wind blew his iigtitout as suddenly as it did mine. I tried to run tor the siope, but stumbled and tell. Then John Boyle aud John Neems came running out. Neems's Jamj was 'burning, and through the. aid of Neeuife's light we got to the slope. The water came pouring after ua as we ran. We got to the slope and :theu the light went out.. We clambered up as fast as we could, and the water came rushing alter us, rising very quickly. In five minutes the water raised 08 yards to the mouth ot the slope, the pitch of which is 83 " The civil engineer in charge of the Jeanes ville mine was a man irom Pottsville, La Fevre Wotnelsdorf. Many theories are ad vanced ps to the cause of the disaster. Some charge it to neglect to notify the workmen of the dangerons proximity of the water. The slope in question where the accident occurred U a new one, which was sunk from the bottom .of a workod-out slope. The latter has been flooded for at least sixteen months, and only a few of the old miners knew ot the presence of the great body of water, and many a time had the remark been made that if the lower gang way workings were driven up too near a dreadtul accident would be the result. None of the workmen had any idea that the work ings were driven as near, to the water as they were. Imprisoned in a Flooded Mine. WhKesbarre, Pa. A cave-in occurred at 8 o'clock A. Al., in No. 3 s tope at Graud Tunnel, opposite the river from Nauticoke. Three men are shut in, and as the place is filled with water1 it is supposed they are drowned. They are Polanueia and names thus far unknown. . NINE CHILDREN CREMATED. ; Awful Remit ofthe Earning of a Moscow Orphan Asylum. A terrible fire occurred inan orphan asylum in Moscow. The building was burned to the ground, and most horrible scenes were witnessed ar the youthful inmates were being rescued. As it was nine children were' burned to death, and a number of others were to se riously injured that their lives are despaired of. - : . MARKETS. ' Baltisiob H! FlourCity Mills, extra. $5.00 $5.4J Wheat Southern Fultz,1.001.02. Corn Southern Whiter, 686ie., Yellow, j8fo,60c. Oats Southern and Pennsylvania jj8Si51ie. Rye--Maryland and Pennsylvania 8182c. Hay. -Maryland and Pennsylvania 10.2o$10.75. Straw Wheat, 7,0U$S.W). Butter Eastern Creamery, 2829c., near-by receipt ,1920c. ' Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream, 101Uc, Western, 89ic .Eggs 25 (S2Go. Tobaceo.Leaf Inferior, lSl-60, Good Common, 4$5.00, Middling, 6$8.00, Good to fine red, 9$ll.0rt. Fancy I2iil3.00. . New York Flour Southern Good to choice extra, 4.25$5.85. Wheat No. 1 White t04I05. Rye-State 5860c Corn South ern Yellow, 60ifi0Jc. Oats White, State 62J524e. Butter State, 2526c Cheese State, 79Io. Eggs 2828ic. . Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania fancy, 4.25$4.50. Wheat, Pennsylvania and Southern Red, .01J1.02, Rye-Pennsylvania, 5657cv- Corn Southern Yellow, 60 6(ic. Oat 60a60Jc. Butter State, 27 28c. Cheese New or k Factory, 1010Jc Eggs State, 2728a ' CATTLE. Baltimore Beef 4.50fa$l 75. Sheep S.50f4$-1.7fl. ffoflfs-w&50fi$$,l75. New YOBg Beef ti.i!0ffi;.?7.00. Sheep 4.00$.3.6U, Hogs 3.40 $ 1 .( X i. EASTLiatETV Beef 4.10f.;, s-i.70. Sheep FIFTY-FIRST C0NGRES3 ' Senate. 48rn DAY. There was a feeling of pro. found sadnes in the Senate this morning when the Senators, already apprised ofthe death of their old-time colleague, met at the usual hour. In the opening prayer' the sud den death of the secretary was referred to by the chaplain. The journal of yesterday was then read, and as soon as the reading was ended Mr. Morrill rose and, in a voice tremu lous with emotion, said: "In consequence of the recent calamity which has visited ns in the! sudden decease of a former eminent member of this body and a distinguished officer of the government, the Secretary of the Treasury, I move that the Senate do now ad journ." The motion was agreed to, and the Senate adjourned till to-morrow. . 49th Day. The House resolution for the appointment of a committee of nine to attend the funeral of Secretary Windom was laid be fore the Senate, and Ai r. Morrill offered a reso lution for the appointment of a committee of seven Senators to join the House committee in attending the funeral, and to take such action as may be appropriate in honor of the memory of the deceased, and to manifest the respect and appreciation of Congress for his public services. The resolution was agreed to, and Messrs. Morrill, Washburn, Sherman, Allison, Harris, Payne and Gorman were ap pointed. The army appropriation bill was then taken up and after some discussion was passed. A number of. bills of minor import ance were then disposed of, and at 443 the Senate adjourned. " v ; 50th Day. The Senate began the consid eration of the fortification appropriation bill this afternoon. An amendment to reduce the apprftpriation for gun and mortar batteries for the defense "of the harbors of Boston, New York,, San Francisco, Hampton Roads and Washington from $1,000,000 toK750,000 gave rise toa lengthy discussion. Mr. Dawes stated the reason why the reduction of the appro priation had been recommended. It was that there was an unexpended balance an hand tor the same works of $1,221,000 which, with the aum recommended, would make within $4,000 of $2,000,000 to.be expended. - The amend ment was agreed to. Without making any iurther progress wit h the bill the Senate went into executive seasion and at 5.30 adjourned until to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock. 51ST Day. House bill to amend Section 180 of the Revised' Statutes (in reference to temporary designations to fill vacancies in case of the death, sickness or absence of heads of departments) was reported back with a substitute. The substitute amends three sec tions of the Revised Statutes on that subject, and limits to 30 days the period of such desig nation, except where the duties are exer?ised by the assistant seoretary,in which case there is no limitation. After some discussion the substitute was rejected and the House bill passed; The consideration of the fortification bill was restarted, and the debate on that measure consumed the remainder of the afternoon. Final action was not taken. v 52d Day. The consideration of the fortifi cation bill was resumed, and after a number of-amendments had been considered the bill was passed. The Senate then proceeded to the consideration ofthe Military Academy bill. There, was but one amendment (and that one to the araonnt of $5,000) offered to the bi 1. It was agreed to, and the bill passed, the only delay being the timeconsnmed in its reading. The pension appropriation bill was then taken up and wentover as the unfinished business. The Senate then proceeded to ex ecutive business, and at 5 o'clock adjourned. 53i Day. The pension appropriation bill was taken up. It appropriates for pension! for the year, $133,173,085; foT fees ana expen ses of examining surgeons, $1,500,000; for sal aries of 18 pension agents, $72,000, and for clerk hire, $300,000. All the committee amend ments having been agreed to, the bill was passed Mr. Stewart not offering the amend ment of which he had given notice to insert the free coinage bill as part ot the pension ap propriation bill. The Senate tben. ou motion of Mr. Blair, took up the House bill to pro vide for the adjustment of accounts of labor ers, workmen and .mechanics arisiug undet the eight-hour law. Mr. Morrell said that the bill was too important a measure to be con sidered and disposed of in the mere selvage of a day. He desired to address the Senate upon it to-morrow morning, and he asked that the bill be laid aside informally. It was so or dered. After passing a number of bills of minor importance the Senate at 6.15 ad journed. , lionise 46TH DaY. The chaplain of the House also referred to the death of the secretary in a touching manner. On motion of Mr.MeKiu ley, of Ohio, appropriate resolutions were 1 hen adopted, and as an additional marl; of re spect the House adjourned. The Speaker ap pointed the following committee to attend the funeral: Messrs. McKinley, MiU, Dunne, Holman, O'Neil of Pennsylvania, Forney, Vandever, Blount and Snider. 47th Day. In the Houmj to-day the Mili tary Academy appropriation bill was. passed . withoutfurther opposition. The Houoe then went into committee of the whole oh the dip-, loinatic and consular appropriation bill. io action was taken, and after wm discussion tiie committee rose. On motion of Mr. Mc Kinley it was ordered that the House shall meet at 2 o'clock on Monday in-order to en able members to attend the f uneral of the late Secretary Windom. Public business being suspended the House proceeded to pay tribute to the memory ofthe late Lewis atson, of Pennsylvania. After eulogistic addresses by 'Messrs. O'Neil and Stone of Pennsylvania. s Holman, Boutelle, Herbert Payson, Mutchler, riair, MCAfloo, L.acey,tirosuis, liay ena Aiaisn, the House, aa a further mark ot respect to the memory of the deceased, adjourned. 48th Day. The chaplain, in his prayer, made a feeling allusion to the bereaved family of the late Secretary Windom. The message lrom Ihe President relative to the succession in the office of the Secretary of the Treasury was read and retcrred to the Committee on Ways and Means. ' Senate bill was passati, on Eiotion of Mr. Edmunds, of Virginia, for the erection ol a public building at Roanoke, Va., with an amendment limiting the cost to $75, 00O. Mr. J. A. Ownbey then appeared and annouueed that he was ready to testify in the silver pool in vestigation. He was remanded fo the custody of thesergearit-at-arrastoawit the further order of the House. Adjourned. 49th Day. After the approval of the jour nal the House proceeded to dispose of various matters of private business on the Speaker's table, referring the measures to appropriate committees or sending them to conference. Later in the day the House went into com-" roitteeof the whole Mr. Payson, of Illinois, in the chair on the diplomatic and conuSar appropriation bill. During the debate a long discussion arose on the Barundia case. No action was taken. . . ' 50th PAY. The House concluded the con sideration ot and passed the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill aud then ad journed. , ' 618T DAY. The Hue decided to day that for the remainder ofthe session it would in: et at H A. M. The sundry civil appropriation bill was taken up hy the committee ot t he whole. The consideration was smoothed' ing until the Worlds Fair paragraph haviiisr , been reached, it was agreed (owing to the late, new of the hour) that its debate should he. wtpoued until io-monow. Mr. Bland, of Mi iuri, offered rv silver free coinace anie:i' im-i;t ti)t!ic pnrajM 'iiph providing for, the coinageof gold and silver coins. Mr.Dlngiey of Maine raised a point of order agaiust ttie amendment, and the debate which followed was entirely technical in its character. Pen 1 ing a decision the committee rose and the House adjourned. rARMERS' ALLIANCE COUNCIL. I'he Presidents. Urging the Free Silver and Sub-Treasury Bills. The presidents of the State organizations of the National Farmers' Alliance met in Wash ington, the purpose being to formulate certain measures to be presented to Congress and to map out some feasible plan for disseminating the literature of the council for educational purposes. The meeting was called to order atlQo'cleoV with President Polk in the chair, representa tives of the following States being present: Virginia, Maryland, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, Mississippi, Kansas and Pennsylvania. The omy business transacted was the appointment of a committee on silver legislation. At the evening session the committee on iilver legislation submitted the following re. port: Retained-, That we. regard it as a high duty enjoined upon Congress by the constitution to provide for the unlimited coinage of both the precions metals, gold and silver, to the end that the people of the several States may ue provided with a circulating medium. We express our surprise, regret and indignation that this duty has been so long delayed and neglected, contrary as we believe, not only to the duty we have mentioned, but to the best interests of the masses of the people who are Hiifi'erings the pangs ot poverty and stagnation of business caused by a want of sufficient cir culating medium. We believe aud charge that such delay and neglect has been occa sioned by an undue influence in our govern mental policies by those whose interests it is to contract the currency and subserve monop olies and money lenders. We, theretore, urge upon Congress, the demand heretofore made by the National Farmers' Alliance and In dustrial Union for the free and unlimited coinage of silver upon the same terms and conditions that gold is now coined. We ex press our earnest condemnation of the exer cise ofthe arbitrary power which prevented a fair consideration of a free coinage bill at the last session of Congress, and, in this con nection we give expression of the hope that the free coinage bill which passed the Senate during the present session and is now being considered in the icommittee on coinage, weights and measures of the House, shall not be suppressed, but shall be speedily reported back to the House and enacted into a law. With proper respect and deference to our Representatives on the committee in the House, we say that any efTorts to unduly de lay a report on that bill so as to prevent action thereon by the House in the few re maining days of this Congress will merit and will receive still further condemnation by the farmers and laborers of this country. We have waited many years for the simple justice of having both. the precious metals restored to free coinage, and hereby declare our determination' to press the fight on this line until this relief is accorded to the labor ing and producing masses of our nation, and to hold responsible the men, irrespective of party, who obstructin any way the legislative enactment of this just measure so strongly demanded by the laboring classes of all patf ties. . . The report is signed by J. H.vMeDonaldj nVlU1tmon Ttxlt narcno TT h2 T-T a 1 1 4f a ar I a 11 ft Frank McGrath, Kansas, T. S. AdairtsLouJs iana, Maun Page, Virginia, and W. SrMc A lister, Mississippi. 1 DEATH OF CHARLES BRADLADGH. Tiie Celebrated Free-Thinker and Rad ical Passes Away. A cable despatch from London, Eng., saysi Mr. Charles Bradlaugh, member of Parlia ment for Northampton, who has been critically ill for some time past, has just died. Mr. Bradlaugh was born September 26, 1833. Owing to the extreme poverty of his parents he ceased attending school before h was eleven years old. He developed an early taste for politics, for at the age of fifteen he appeared as an orator before street audience') during the political turmoils of 1847-8. Ii: 1858-9 he gained considerable, notoriety by editing a journal called The Investigator, which was soon suspended for want of capital, and in which he published bis radical opin ions on religion and other subjects. He was now well known under tbe appropriate nam of "Iconoclast," which he signed to all hit writings. A year later he established "The National Reformer," which met with success and increased his reputation as a writer and debater. In 1868 he was a candidate for Parliament in Northampton, and has been prominent in pubiio and political life ever since. Mr. Bradlau gh's republicanism was of an ad vanced type, and .lie was in favor of the establish ment of a commonwealth after the American model. Mr. Bradlaugh end was quiet and peace ful. He was insensible when he died, and seemed to sufler no pain. The immediate cause of his death was uremia. The funeral will (ake place on Tuesday. There will be no funeral procession, no show of mourning and no religious service. A FIGHT IN A STATE HOUSE. The Treasurer of Georgia Smote the Ntate Geologist. The office of Georgia's State Treasurer in the Capitol building was the scene of a pugil istic encounter between Treasurer Hardeman and State Geologist Spencer. . The latter had called upou the Treasurer on official business Hardeman accused Spencer of gruffness in tpeech.- " "It is a falsehood, sir!" ejaculated Spencer. Scarcely .had the sentence been completed when a stunning blow from the arm ofthe Treasurer sent the Geologist spinning across the room. Tbe second round was a grapple. By this time other State officers had rushed in, to whom Spencer shouted: "Wbydon'tyou part Us?'' Spencer had a meeting later with a young son of Treasurer Hardeman, but friends again intervened. There has been friction between these officers for a long time overborne matter of punctilio. . KILLED NEAR HIS BRIDE. A Most Cowardly and Brutal Murder Committed In Kentucky. George Best while returning from Ilarrads bur to Cardwell in a buggy with his young bride overtook a friend who was unable to manage his spirited horse. Best got into the dog cart with the man and left his wife to drive his bucgy. Soon alter three Holliday brothers rode up and deliberately shot and killed Best in tbe presence ot bis bride. Bet's brothers are in pursuit of the mur derers. It is supposed the cause of the kiMing was a dispute thtu occurred a yciir so. TRADE OF THE WEEK; A Noticeable Expansion of Trad Everywhere Reported. ,JIaker of Dress Gooda Busy and Btaplei ' in Fair DemandThe Wheat Mr : ' Wet Active Boaluras Failure. . . Special telegrams to Bradstreel't point oni only a few instances where general trade hai expanded noticeably during the paet week In industrial lines makers of seasonable dross goods at Philadelphia are running their ma chinery at full capacity, in some instance being reported behind on orders. Cincinnati wholesale . clothiers have distributed lart Etocks, aud look confidently ahead to a profit able season. 1 Jobbers in boots and shoes, hats and caps dry goods and rubber goodsatlcndingintenoi jciiies, Chicago, Omaha, and St. Louis, report those stanles in a fair demand, with rathei Jess activity in groceries, drugs and hardware. flice is taken readily at advancing prices at ne South. Delays by Louisiana planters in making contracts with factors lias checked general trade somewhat in New Orleans. , Ttie decline in the Winter wheat states de mand for gene al merchandise hnsstimulated wholesale houses to extend their territory, jUinatia particularly having ielt tne neeu. Coider weather through the West has stiinu. - lateit general trade s.me. Southern buyers , ot dry goods appear backward. Cotton goodii prices are firm, except as to prit.tcl'jtli,which ; are weak. i The Winter's trade in woolen's lacks snap. Wool is in only fair demand, with steady prices. Cotton is less active and 1-lGo. lower on increasing pressure of supplies. , BUSINESS FAILURES. , Busineos failures reported to Bradstreet't number 271 in the United States this week against 357 last week and 286 this week last year. The total January 1st to date is 1531 against 1C2S last year. Bank clearings at fifty-five cities in the United States for the week are $!)9 1,028,003, a decrease from this week lust year of 1&7 pr cent., pointing in part to the effect on trade ol the storm which wrecked the telegraph ser vice at Eastern cities. New York city's clear ings, which constitute 58.3 per cent, of the grand total, are 20.8 per cent, iess thau those for the same period last year, while at filly lour other cities the gain is 2 per cent. The stock market has been improved !a tone and temper by decreasing prospecta of disturbing financial or other legislation. The money markets generally throughout Ihe country are exceptionally easy. THE WHEAT MAB&ET. . Wheat opened by inclining to strength on reported short export surplus, after which it weakened. Renewed strength was lent by the 1,000,000 available supply decrease. But later, the market having been oversold and exports increasing, prices turned sharply up ward and trading became quite active. The gain on the week is fully 4 cents per bushel, while Indian corn, on reduced request,, fell away 1 cents and oates i cent per bushel. The decrease in available stocks, United States and Canada, both coasts, was 1,435,000 bushels against 1,575,000 bushels last week, and 1,025,000 bushels in the like week of 1S0D. Exports of wheat and tiour from both coasts, including Montreal, reported to Bradstreet's, equal 2,093,143 bushels, against 2,205,000 bush els last week, and 1,613,854 bushels in the like weelif last year. Total exports, both coasts, July lbt to date, equal 58,730,773 bushels, airainst C2,52G,722 busnels in 1888-89, and 83, 416,885 bushels in 1887-88. Our own estimates, added to Beerbohm's tota s, furnish a total of 350,008,000 btisheU available on January 1st, 1691, in Australia, Europe, and afloat tor Europe m the United IStatea, aud in farmers' hands in the United States and United Kiugdom, as compared with 410,856,000 busnels January 1st, 1890, 40S,'880,000 bushels 1880, and 399,256,000 bush els January 1st, 1888. HEAVY ANNUAL EXTORTS. The value of the foreign trade of the United State in 1890, was the heavhst onlrecord, tha exports exceeding eveu those of 1SS1. Gains over 1889 and 1881, respectiely, were 3.7 and 3 per cent. The value of imports was also the heaviest year by 7 per cent. Larger ex ports of breadstuff and provisions offset smaller cotton and petroleum shipments, the combined exports ot these four great staplei exceeding tboss of 1889 by more than 6 pei ceuu - STARVATION IN KANSAS. Families laving on sixty Cent a Week Chop np Fnrulture for Fuel. A heavy 6now storm has been raging in Northwestern Kansas for nearly three days, and the reports which are coming in irom those counties where most of the residents of the unproductive farms are destitute, are har rowing in the extreme. In Decatur county the Commissioners have given the suffering families orders on stores for provisions to the amount ot CJ cents per week. This rule has been followed in several other counties where merchants would take county orders. This small sum is all that the people have had to keep themselves from starvation. They are suffering from intense cold, and many of them have been compelled to chop np their furniture tor fuel. Governor Humphrey hascaued all surplus coal at the Penitentiary Miues at Leaven worth to I e shipped to the needy counties for distribution. The need for relief is more pressing than ever, and unless fo.nl, clothing and fuel is sent there in large quantities, many deaths may result. BAPTIZED IN HER OWN COFFIN- A Singular Cat of Resuacltatlon at Yellow Spring, Ohio. A singular case of resuscitation occurred at Yellow Springs. . A consumptive, Mrs. George Tyree,' died to all appearances, at least and an under taker was summoned. Before he arrived however, Mrs. Tyree revived and said she' had come back to be baptized. ' So plaintive were her appeals that her wish he granted that the attendants sent for the Rev. W A. Gross. He at first refused to per ioral the ceremony, bat finally consented and withtheaidof Mr. Tyree immersed the woman in the metallic coffin whichihad been prepared for ber burial. Mrs. Tyree began to '"grow stronger at once and is much improved and on a lair road to recovery. ? , - .j . . . j -, . Lord Tavistock, the successor tothetitlcs and esiat.es of the late Duke of Bedford, is a d to be excessively pnrse-prond. As he has an income of Sl.SOO.usW a year, it can't be S denied lie ba o good deal to be proud of. SOUTHERN ITEMS. IXTEMKSTIUXi NEWS COMnXKI FROJI.MASY SOUIICES, , Thero w'ere bnlydeaths and 438 births in Braxton Coiinty, W.a-i J" yr Jn PPU' lation .oi4,000. : , The" Odd-Fellows of Richmond, Va., will erect a raoniimeiit'to the late Judga E. 11 Fitzhugb, who held a high position in the order. . i. ' There has Hot been a wagon to or from Dunmore, Pocahontas county, Va., since the 15th of .December, an account of, the depth oi the snow. " A few days rgo Rev, J. W. Stiff, pastor of the Methodist Church at Chesterfield Court House, Va., shot and killed a deer while rid ing in a jumper. ' Dr.W. J. Head was shot and killed at Aodalusta, Ala., by Dr. Cicero Jones. surrendered. The shooting was the result or a business quarrel. ' The new road from Germantown, Md.. three-fourths of a mile east of Pen-Mar, to Buena Vista, Va., is under way, and Blue Ridge Summit is to have a $3,000 station next spring. , , A mail carrier, named Hinchman was snow-bound in the mountains of Randolph coanty, W. Va., in a li'tle hut. for nearly three weeks. He was finally dug out by a rescuing party." . s . A 'benevolent citizen of Norfolk, Va:, who refused to allow his name to be made public, has donated 30,000 to the Boys Home, which will be spent in erecting a handsome ana modern building.-' , . A lump of .pure, gold weighing eleven ounces without any gravel or dirt about it was found at the if earne and Hathcock mine, near Albemarle, N. C It was found only a -few feet below the surface. Captain D.M. Moreeock, of Halifax county, . N.C, was killed by a, railroad train near Effingham, S, C. ' Heiwas a conductor on the Wilmington, Columbia and Augasta rail road. He is supposed to have fallen from his train. .. Ihe shipments of manufactured tobacco from Danville, Va., last week were 183,003 pounds. The shipments for the nerth were 1 fl5iT vt) vtsiti ttie week were -very large, and prices remain very firm without material change. ; The contract 'for rebuilding the mill of the Cumberland (Md.) Cement and Manufactur ing Company was given out last week, and the work will be begun at once. The new mill will bo built upon a larger scale and suppliedwith improved machinery and greater capacity. . ' Benjamin Pattersonwho died in the Hart count) (Git.) Poor House, was a blood relative of Betsy Patterson, the wife ot Jerome Bona parte. He was 79 years old and had the dis tinction of being the tallest man in Georgia,' being seven feet high. A special coffin had to be made lor him. . ' A steam boiler at Thomas M. Nunn & Bro.'s saw mill, near Mont Bethel Church, Holland, the engineer, and Robert S. Morris, a prominent farmer. John Nunn was dan gerously wounded. and Thomas M. Nunn and , three other men were injured. . In a drunken finht at Cascade, Pittsylvania c-iunty, Va.,Tom Matthews rushed on Harden Eanes with a long knife and cut him across the face and abdomen. Lee Eanes then drew a pi-tol and shot Matthews in the arm and abdomen. Matthews and Harden Eanes are both desperately wounded and the latest in formation from them is that both will probably die. A chartcf was issued' to the Pennsboro and Auburn Railroad to run from Pennsboro, W. Va , to the Gilmor , county coal fields, a distanco of 60 miles. Work will begin at once. The road is a link in the proposed Black Diamond system of railroads, to ex tend from Cincinnati to the Atlantic seaboard via Central West Virginia. , - A team of six horses, drawing' an empty wood-waon, while about to descend a steep hill on the side of Cntoetio Mountain, Md., near "High Knob," became frightened at something aud ran away, dashing down the Mccp grade at a fearful, rate, several teams making narrow escapes. from collision.' One ot the borscs fell down and the wagon passed over it, injuring it go badly that it died the next day. The noise made by the wagon and horses was so great as to be heard by persons over a mile away. 1 ' , One of the most sensational cases in the criminal annals of West Virginia has just come to an end in Whe'eling. " About four mouths ago the City of 'Huntington, Ironton and other points, ca. the Ohio River were flooded with bogus sAvey coin.; Detectives were put to work, and ''"tonally arrested Mrs. Gertrude Russell, the, wife of a prominent ciiiien of Athens coun!y,,Ohlo. Mrs. Rusel J was tried and convicted; lut obtained a new trial. Recently she .Wearac insane from brooding over her troubles. - . The last three months, have secnaremark nble revolution in manufactures in the Ohio valley, more than iour-fifths of the immense plunts located in Wheeling, Bellaire, Martin's ferry and between Wheeling and Steuben villo, Ohio, having been compelled to aban don the use of natural gas- on-account of its scarcity, and return .o coal. It is estimated that employment will lie given to 3,000 men in mining aud transport! ngx-on.1 by tbechange, wbieh atlccts plant employing 15,000 hands. Nearly $3,000,000 invested in giS plants are a complete loss. ' ' ' , At a meeting of the nnte cenitnUee on military affairs held in Raleigh, N. C,it was unanimously decided to report favorably on the bill incorporating the confederate soldiers' home located at Raleigh; give it six acres of state property known as camp Russell, and to make an annual appropriation. The com mittee was officially. in furmed in behalf of the veterans' asoeiatieDi that not only -would it take charge ot the maintenance of the home, but would make iuch-an appeal to tbe fcopio as will secure an endowment lor it. t is "further the 'special purpose of tbe as Bociafimi to extend aid' to ef cry needy soldier who has a family. -The supposed suicido of 4l-year-old Mary Dolan at the home of her foster-father, John Morau.in the northwest so barbs of Nashville, Tennessee, has developed into a case ef mur der It was claimed at first that the girl had taken strychnine and had fractured her skull by falling, and excitement has tun high, as the coroner's jury developed new facta. The jury rendered a verdict of murder at tha hands of John Moran, The latter -returned bomeentheeveningof tbecrime inadrunkt u condition and becoming enraged at the sup per which had been left for him, be struck the unfortunate grl with a hatchet in the forehead, causing alniont instant death. Mora 11 ua a Mrs. rnuiips, wno is accuseu 01 wii an accessory to the crime, are in jail, THE late George Bancroft was a good r.n of huRiness, in which respect he was uchke nine literary men of the ten. Though he whs !;ever ecouonicat iu his living expeies, he ktt a very snug fortune. As an illustration ofthe enthusiasm of his old aye, it is related that he took up the study of Shakepeire when 87, and prosecuted his new pursuit wr.h ail the urdor of youth. GOVERNOR RrssELL, of Massch".,-"",!. rides on horseback to and from ttie " Jlouie every day.-