THE PLAINDEALER J. VAN SLYKE, Editor/tfnd Pub. HENRY. ILLINOIS HAVE INDICTED FIVE. SOME ONE MUST ANSWER FOR SANTA FE SHORTAGE. plMMjrb Pailiun Etrnliifi Show* UfRS tl^ecreaie. the Magnate Pulls _ Another IHvldrntl Irom Vp Hti Sleeve--Why #rof. fitecre Was Kemoved. of at de- the Chi- Big Vtah In the Net. THE government investigation into the alleged violation of the interstate eommeiC3 law by the Santa Fe railroad In the payment Of rebates to shippers, resulted Friday in the voting of in dictments. These indictments, fol lowing close uncn those Baltimore and, Ohio officials Pittsburg, have < reated a cidedlv uneasy . feeling am«g officials of the various roads m cago. Inasmuch as Expert Little's ex amination of the Santa Fe books showed a shortage of $7,000,000, a large part of which is supposed to have gone into rebates, it is sup- po ed that the government has still abundant room for investiga tion. Seven indi imonts were found against the following five men: John A. Hanley, freight iraftic manager of the Santa Fe, who resigned two weeks ago.his resignation to take effect Nov. 1: W.P..lcnkins, general manager of G.H. Hammond & Co. packers, at Ham mond, Ind.: Nelson Morris, the (,'hi- ca?o packer, :-aid to be the largest shipper of cattle in the world: Jo eph W. l-ieinhart,ex-Fresident of the Santa Fe. and until recently one of its re ceivers; Isaac Thompson, a large cattle shipper, of Kansas City. ' Pullman Earnings Decreased. STOCKHOLDERS of the Pullman- Pal ace Car Company held their annual meeting at Chicago, over &2f>,000,»;()J of the capital stock I eing represented. Director * George M. 1 ullman, Marshall Field. J. W. Doane. Norman Williams and O. S. A. Sptague, of Chicago, and Henry C. Hultert, of New Yurie, and Henry R. V eed. of Boston, were re elected. The us &l quarterly dividend of $2 per share, payable Nov. 15, was declared. The financial statement for the year ending July 31 is as follows: 1891. 18»J. Revenue $9.M»f>,o57 $ii,38<>,ho6 Btobnrsnients 7,274,6*0 7,sk;M47 Sarplns 2,3 0,416 J,i06,448 The total number of cars owned or controlled by the Fullman company is 2,5S8. being an increase o: fifteen over the previous year. The total assets of the comnany are $62.04^.606. In spite of World's Fair travel, the total num ber of passengers carried for the year was but 5,2^2.323, against 5.673,219 the previous year. The total manu factured product of the company amounted to $4,925,331, against $13,- 414,708 the previous year. Total em ployes number 10,858, against 14.035 the previous year. Total wages paid wer6 $4,S*ri8,548 and $7,751,64-1 respec tively. The Pullman Savings Bank showed deposits July 4\ of $356,36), a decrease of $25'i,740 as compared with the previous year. fallen off one half in the past fourteen years, owinsr to the absence of a sys tem of cultivation. In' many plates the natural beds <have been scraped clean. C. S. WIGHT of Pittsburg and R. M. Frazer of Cincinnat", freight agents for the Baltimore and Ohio Railway Company, have been indicted by the grand jury in the United States" Dis trict Court at 1 ittsburg for violation of the interstate commerce law. THE Rev. Charles Woodhouso, M. D., died at Rutland, Vt., aged 83 years. He entered the Universalist ministry in 18--P. In 1866 he was graduated from the Hahremann Medical College in Chicago, and was later lJrofe;s:ir of Medical .luriprudence and Insanity in that institution. Two YOUNG daughters of John N. 'Scatchard, President of the Bank of Buffalo, and Miss Emily Woods, his sister-in-law, in whose charge the children were, were killed by being struck by an engine. They had crossed one track and failed to see a train ap proaching on another. BREVITIES, BOSTON people, on Wednesda •, bought $10,000 worth of Columbian coins. AT Baltimore. Eugene Fchawecker, of Cincinnati. Ohio, committed suicide at the grave of his fir t wife. AT a public meeting at Hinckley, Minn., it was decided to srive a medal to each trainman who helped save life in the forest fires. MRS. E. L. MOXLEY, in San Fran- «isco, is suing for property worth •200.000 now held by a woman Mr. Moxley also married. THE Postoffice Department has de- claied the Co-operative Loan and In vestment Company of Mississippi is conducting a lottery. THOMAS FOGARTY. a Southern Rail way fireman, kicked down Mrs. Lyder- hodes' door at Knoxville and was shot and fatally wounded by the woman. THE remains of John Yipon, a Colo rado miner, who has been missing from the Cochetic mining district since July,have been found in a canyon. A hole in his skull, evidently made by a miner's pick, points to murder. GENERAL WILLIAM FRANCIS REY- 9 HOLDS, a gallant soldier in two wars, was found dead in bed at his home in Detroit. He spoke at a church meet ing the night before and retired ap parently in his usual health. He died of hfeart failure. IT is learned that J. C. Thompson, the absconding cashier of the defunct First National Bank of Sedalia, Mo., left the Cltj; of .Mexico .evoral day».|^ him. ago. His friends claim to have in- - - formation that he is demented, and the next news they expect to hear is that he is dead. DR. A. B. CDNKLING. who has been mysteriously missing from Cassopolis. Mich., has returned to his home. He says he was kidnaped the night of Sept. 2 by two colored men. and has since been confined in several differe: t -cities under guard. When liberated, he was in Cincinnati. MEMBERS of the faculty of the Uni versity of Michigan say that Prof. J. SOUTHERN. B. Steere was not removed from the., chair of systematic zoology becaus«/y THE first consolidated mortgage deed of his lecture on the immorality of j of the Southern Railway Company was the professors and students and his enthusiastic advocacy of the cause of prohibition, but because of iccom e- ten y. OVER 1,000 cigarmaker.s are out on strike at Tampa City and Ybor City, Fla. They demand New York and Chicago city prices. MRS. E. L. MOXLEY. in San Fran cisco, is suing for property worth $200,0^0, now held by a woman whom Mr. Moxley also married. * EUGENE V. DEBS spoke in Cooper Union. New York, detailing the causes of the railroad fctrike. its objects and the lessons it has taught. He is on an organizing tour for the American Rail way Union. WESTERN. IMP&ACHMENT proceedings against Health Commissioner Drl Walter Kempster of Milwaukee for the man ner in which he has handled the small pox epidemic in that city were begun in the common courcil. Twenty-eight physicians have i-igned a demand for the Commissioner's removal. s Louis DUMONT, a Canton (Ohio) grocer, was fined $50 and costs for sell ing oleomargarine without atta ̂ hing a list of ingredients to the label. The fine was paid by Armour & Co., Chi cago, who announce a dete^ipination to settle the c nstitutionality of^ the law through a parallel Cleve aod case. GEORGE DIXON,'an ex-policeman at Sedalia, Mo., demanded admittance to the office of S. T. Lure, against whom he entertained an old grudge. It be ing refused Dixon legan to batter down the door. Shooting then began, during which Fixon fell dead with teveral bullets in his body. Lupe was also injured. IN drawing water from a well in Homer, Neb., Fd Morris found a $5 bill in the bucket. Subsequent draw ings brought up $15. The well was then drained and $1,128 recovered. The money is believed to have been se creted in the well by a bank cashier who formerly occupied the house. lit lsitl the cashier reported himself robbed of about this amount. A war rant has been issued lor his arrest. YEUNG SEUNG. the Chinese inter preter at Kansas City, Mo., has ap pealed to the police for protection against sixteen Chinamen who were recently fined $25 each for playing fan tan. He claims Chin Pon, a slayer for the Highbinders, has been imported from Philadelphia to do away with him. The frightened Chinaman savs Chin Pon will inveigle him into a fight and either strangle him with a silk cord or stab him to death. AT Kansas City, Mo., burglars forced the cellar door and were entering the home of A. A. Mosher, A ice President o: the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Trust Company when they were sur prised by Charles Fears; n, a private watchman, 'ihe burglars shot and killed Pearson and escaped, leaving no clue. In Mosher's house were valuable silver plate and the family jewels, but only a few hundred dolla s in ca<h. THE man who died at the New Fil- beck, Terre Haute, lnd., where he had registered* as *R. A. Hall," was given a paupers burial. Luring the week he wa-> there he refused to talk about his personal affairs further than to say he had a wife and children in Chi cago. Most of the letters in his pock ets wero addressed to "R. A. Potter." The mvstery of the conflicting stories regarding the dead man's name and occupation is still unsolved, and many believe he was an impostor of some sort and had the letters for use at suit able times. ED SMITH, al:as Donahue, wanted for the mimler" of Feed Davenport at Crossvijle, White County. 111., five years ago, was arrested at Denver, Colo., and Deputy Sheriff Arkman. of White County, left for home with the prisoner h ridav evening. A reward of *1,000 was paid to Detective De Lue of Denver. During five years the pris oner was chaled through India, China, England and the continent, and on re turning to the United States via San i Francisco was arrested. After his j arrest Smith broke down and spent I two hours crying. j S.'ENES similar to those of the famous Cincinnati riots were enacted in Washington C. H.. Ohio, Wednes- i day. With the aid of the State i troops the law was preserved [ and a negro saved from lynching at the hands of a mob of excited citi zens. but it was at the co-.t of two men killed and ten .seriously wounded. Y\ illiam Dolby, the negro who as saulted Mrs. Mary Boyd, was the man upon whom the mob wished to wreak its \engeance. He was taken to town Tuesday night and there were rumors at once that an effort would be A crowd gath ered at the ail nd the force of depu ties was aided by the local militia. Wednesday morning the crowd in creased in numbers and the Columbus militia was sent for. Before the v arrived Dolby had been tried and convicted in a hurry and sentenced to twentv years in prison. 1 e was taken to the jail, which was soon stormed by the mob. The infuriated men listened to no warning, broke down the door and ie-, ceived a volley of bulle-s with fatal results. EASTERN. filed at Knoxville, Tenn. It includes all the roadbed, buildings and equip ments of the road in Virginia. North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia and the District of Columba. The mortgage is f«jr $1«0,- OOO.OCO in favor of the Central Trust Comoany of >ew York. Gold bonds to run it-0 years at 5 per cent are to be issued. The mortgage will be regis ter© J in 176 counties through which the road runs. It contains over 50,000 words, and Deputy Register J. T. Faulkner will need two weeks to copy it. ENGINEER SIMPSON, of the East Louisiana Railroad, is responsible for a lrightful accident that occurred Sun day morning at the crossing of the Louisville and Nashville and the .Northeastern Roads, at New Or leans. The accident will, in all probability. been destroyed but two Sisters of St Joseph were burned to death, two in* firmary natients also perished, and a third sister was dangerously inured. The fire originated in the San Jacin to Hotel, a boarding-house at Frank lin and San Jatjinto streets, from wtich the blaze spread rapidly to the adjoining small buildings of St Joseph's Infirmary on Franklin street, destroying a largo two-story frame annex and then the new four- story brick main building. The de struction ot these, buildings was ac companied by loss of li e. Sisters Doleraland .lans were burned beyond all possibility of rec ignition, while Sister Clothilde was fearfulty burned about the lace, neck, breast, and arms, her recovery beinsr ifl doubt. Two pa tients are also missing, but there is not the slightest doubt that they also per* ished. . . WASHINGTON. THE cash on balance in the Treasury at Washington, D. C., Friday was $117,866,956; the gold reserve $60,249,- 953. THE work of equipping the troops of "the regular army with the new magazine rifle is progressing as rapid ly as the limited plant of the Spring- held jXationat Armory will permit. The fabrication of the complex and accurate machinery necessary to make the new weapon required much time, and, now the plant is in running order, the output is about 25,(M 0 arms per year. As fast as the arms are com pleted they are issuedt to the troops, and at this rate it will be about a year before ou • army Is brought up to a modern stand ard, being supplied with mag azine guns. When this work is accom plished the ordnance officers will turn their attention to the militia. A sam ple weapon has been sent to the Na tional Guard of each irtate so that the men may familiarize themselves with it. but at the present rate of output it will be several years at least before they can be supplied. This fact has deeply impressed some distinguished military men in Washington, taken in connection with the lather starting suggestions made by Gen. Schofield in his annnal report just published touch ing the insuh.ciency of our army in the point of numerical strength and his comparison of the United States with Ctyina fi-om a military standpoint. FOREIGN, A REPORT comes from.Honolulu thai ex-Qiieen Liliujkalani is insane. IRREGULARITIES ,in the Bank of Brazil, involving $20,01-0,00', have been di covered. They occurred dur ing the recent revolution. HAS the Czar of all the Russias been skillfully poisoned and slowly put to death by scientific ireans in the handrj of nihilists? Dr. Georg Fr. V. Schmidt, the Gorman traveler, now in Minneap olis, has received secret dispatches from St. Petersburg which throw a strong light on the crisi- in European politics caused by the impending death of the Czar. These dis patches cam i written in sympathetic ink on an apparently blank piece of pat er. The application of heat brought out some strange stenographic char acters which the Doctor readily trans lated. He showed the dispatch to an Associated Press reporter, and re marked that in order to send such things from St. I eter sburg it is neces sary to doubly protect them by the use of sympathetic ink and a secret code. The most sensational matter in the di-patch is the intimation that the Czare illne s has been caused by other than natural means. IN GENERAL WILLIAM GRIER, Ellsworth McFee, and Nathan Grier were burned to death near Celina, O., in a bam. THE recent storms from the west ward reached a climax Saturday night in the heaviest gale experienced on the lakes sinqe the storm of last May. The largest and best steamers that the lake shipyards have turned out, with- their powerful machinery, were not able to breast the storm and were forced to turn and run for shelter. Tho storm was general on the four upper lakes, Lake Ontario seeming to have escaped the winds. The schooner A. J. Mowrv was nearly wrecked off the Wisconsin coast. Her spars and rig ging wero carried away, and several steamers refused to so to tho boat's assistance. She finally made Chicago harbor. R. G. DUN & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: ..uaiiitisii is still wattln; for the develop ment of retail trade, i here is a litile bet ter demand in some industries, but not so good in others. 'Wholesale dealers in nearly all branches are Raiting, because business does not yet show distinctly what it is to be. Lo*Wer prices for the great farm staples and lower waxes iu some es tablishments hinder purchases for con sumption, while political Interest and un certainty also have some retarding influ ence. Meanwhile iurge imports and small exports of merchandise, with Inadequate employment for money here, raising the rates of foreign exchange on the pos- FOfiGOT HIS ORDEBS. CARELESS ENGINEER CAUSES A WRECK IN LOUISIANA. V Vails to 8top at • Crossing and His Train Crashe* Into k Coach Filled with Ei- curftlonlnt* -- Took, to the Swamps to Avoid Summary Punishment. TO BAR THE UNWORTHY. Nlnetf*n Ar* Hart. Engineer Simpson of the East Louisi ana Railroad is responsible for a fright ful accident that occurred at the cross ing of the Louisville and Nashville and the Northeastern roads, two miles from New Orleans; an accident that will result in at least one fatality, while nearly a score of passe igers on the Louisville and Nashvil e railroad re ceived severe injuries. The Louisville and Nashville "across the lake" excursion train, consisting of eight coachei 4 well leaded with pleas ure-seekers, a large proportion of, them being women and children, pulkjd out on time. As the train approached the Cfossing of the Northeastern tracks Engineer Hanley brought his train to a stop and whistled as the Jaw require *. He then gave the signal to g > ahead and proceeded across the tracks of the Northeastern. The East i ouisiana train, carrying excursionists to points in St. 'ram- many parish, wai booming along its tracks and, with a wild shriek from its whist e for 'down, brakes," it crashed into the cixth coach of the Louisville en Nashville train. The ctl- j lieion threw a crowded coach complete ly into the ditch, while tho attacking en>ine was derailed and bi ried its nose several feet in the toft mud. Pas sengers on the ! ast Louis ana train weie unin iured except for the shock of collision. Not so with the coa^t ex cursion, however.. Just before the iron monster struck the coach several of the passengers saw it coming and a panic ensued. There was a wild r Jth to escape from the dtomed coach, but before one of the passengers could reach either platform the apprca hing engine had st uck, and the coae .. with its living freight, was hurled from the track into the dit^h. Women and chiluren shrieked in their tor or. wuile men fought their way blindly for some escape from the coach. Seats were torn up and hurled in every direction by the fcrco of the collision, a:.d after the first wild panic had subsided there were heard piteous moans from different quarters of the wreck, telling of painful injuries. The greatest indigr ation and anger pre vailed a uong tho witnesses ( f the co - lision agains., Fng.neer Simpson, w. o had ruthlessly disregarded the law re ouiring him t;> st >u and had caused the frightful wreck. Inquiiy ao- veloped the fact that Simpson had esca ed to the swamp. Mtrong Movement 8tarted In Boston to Kewtrlct Immigration. The restriction of immigration is a subject that has been more or less aim lessly discussed for many years; but now at length a movement has been started that will take practical steps to remedy whatever defects exi-t in the system. The new organization is named the mmigration Restriction League. Its object is to advocate and work for the lurther judicious restriction of im- •migration, it will issue documents and circulars m all the States, and in every way try to stir up pub ic opinion tp the necessity of some action. The league will by no means advocate the exclusion of immigrants, either /of laborers or other persons of such character and standard as fit them to become citizens. It will endeavor to be a practical working body, aiming to place before the people all facts showing the need of further regulation and restriction, in the hope of bringing about some re- lorm in the pre ent system, of what ever nature it may be. It is signifi- j cant that foreign born, citizens are i likewise interesting themselves in the 'movement, and the leagues member ship includes many prominent German- Americans and jrish-Americans. The labor organisations. jed by Samuel Gompers, are preparing to second the new organization's propaganda, as it is directly in the line of the contract labor law and other legi lation in which they are concerned. 'ihe League iffNjtrictly non-partisan and n >h political, ̂ yi^jijentral head quarters are in Bo ton, and the Chair man of the Executive Committee is Robert EeC. Ward. It proposes three remedies. It w; uld insist that each f< reigner desirous of tettling here should pay a money tax. should have certain educational qualifications, and shou d at the port of embarkation have secured a consular ^certificate, attest ing his fitness to be&ome a citizen of the republic. From carofully prepared fctatistics it is evident that we are getting the undesirable emigrants, while Sovth Amirica, Australia and e\en Africa are attracting those whose labors a e especially desirable in the upi uilding of new countries. Such a condii ion of affairs the league hopes to reverse, and with su h object in mind it will have a suitable measure introduced into the next Congress. The league has collected valuable >t itistics illustrating the e'eriorating pr cess of immigation during the past twenty-five years. Here are some figures that a:e instructive: JIBEUPON THE MOB. VERY NEAR TO DEATH. Brilliant Career of Comedl<in Scanlasi Is About to Clone. It is believed that W. J. Scanlan, the Irish comedian, whose brilliant career on the stage was | rematurely en e i by hereditary insanity, is very near death. The Iris11 favorite has had a strangely romantic life. Many will be surpri-ed to know that when a boy. he was a boot-black i i New i'crk. Regained many patrons by amusirg them with imitations and say ings of a humorous nature, and often times woul , have as ! enthusiastic and admiring anaudiet ce about him, listening to his drolleries as he ever had in the days that fol lowed. Finally it dawned on one of his more influential audit rs that this youth was an embryo character actor, an i he was taken to an uptown rescrt to do funnv things for the pleasure- seekers. He scored a great success and an interested and Wi althy la Jy furnished money to train him for the profession to which he was so a mira- bly adapted, and in which he, has amassed a fortune now in tho posses sion of the woman who proved nis first rcalfrienJ. Year. 1SI>:» inhO IHfcli 1RK7 18 Kl 1MI1 l-!>2 mt 1S!H Immigrants from Austria- Hungary. JWy. Poland and Russia 3.SIS Hti,t-12 7l.7:« 114.781 1 4.871 "J.',0.0 2W,'.W7 1SS,14!» 120,587 Immicrants from United Kingdom, France. Germany and H"andlnayla. 260,(183 '2<J2,90« 240,770 932.748 i6i,74» 292,030 812,ROi 212,169 1 1,95) W. 3. SCANLAN. The decrease in 18J3 and 1894 of the number of immigrants coming to our sho'ies is attributed to cholera in 1MM and to the pinic for i^vM. It will be seen fr< m the above that while the iininiizrant; from Austria-Hung iry, Iroland, ital.v a d Russia wjro about one one-hi ndrodth of the n imber from the i nit ed Kingdom, Fiance, Germany and Scandinavia in in lHf-0 they were one-tenth an 1 in 18^4 nearly equal to it There are now 10,000,000 per sons of foreign birth in the United States, and o^er l'l,000,,00 of foreign birth or parentage. Statistics have also been prepared sh wing that 4 • per cent, of our for eign barn >opula'ion are settled in cities, a ,d that the same class consti tutes one-third of the insane of the nation, literature containing facts like these will be presented to the peop'e so that a sturdy sentiment shall be created in favor of the pro* posed changes JUDGE THOMAS CASWELL. FEW ANIMALS BURNED. Most of Them Escaped Before the Flames Overtook Them. Immense numbers of wild animal and game have been driven by the late Western fires from the burnoj districts to the vicinity of the towns and whe i the hunting season opens it is believed it will bo the mor-t profitable ever seen. A gentleman living in the burned re- region declares that there havo been very few wild anituais burned, basi g ! his statement on knowledge of the habits of deer, elk, moo-e and bear. Ha says that over a wed'k before the fire\ broke out there was a decided Thfi New Grand Commander of the South ern .Jir'sdli'tton of the Scottish Rite. Judge The mas Hubbard Caswell, the new Grand ( ommander of the South ern jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite, was born in Otsego County, N. Y., in !S2f>. His Masonic life began in Nevada City* Cal., in 1851, when he was made a Mi-ster Mason. He was exalted to the Loyal Arch degree in 1855, and created Knight Templar in the s me ,\ ear. Ho was crowned an ac tive inspector gen- T. H. CASWELL. ERA _ ;;; D degree, of supremo council for tho southern juris diction in the city of lialtimore in 187u. and in J>83 wa'i made grand min ister of state^of the sup: erne council, I 33d degree, for the southern jurisdic tion of the United States. In lie was elected deputy g a id commander by the suureme council of the southern jurisdiet on of the Scottish Kite. movjement on the part of all sorts of sl'billties of gold*"exports,"somewhat":iffect big/game. He saw half a dozen black the stock market. The baiting attitude -b^ar in one morning, ail tr, tting along is disturbing to those who have looked for continued gain, though rightly considered it 1s the natural consequence of condi tions which were to be expected at this season. MARKET REPORTS. $'! 75 4 00 2 00 61 49 rp..., „ TT , ,, j result in at least ia ti Hazard Snowden, the I one fatality, while nearly a score oldest Presbyteriai minister in the j passengers on the Louisville State, died at his home in Forty Fort, ' Nashville Railroad received severe Pa., aged 95 years. He was the oldest i®"- The greatest indignation living graduate of Princeton Theo logical Sem nary. WILLIAM A. HERRLICH and his son, Robert, coal dealers of Baltimore, Md., had an altercation about the division of the profits and the son shot his father four times. The wounded man is not expected to live. OYSTER dredging on Chesapeake Eay begins this wdek. The supply has and anger prevailed among the wit nesses ot the collision against Engineer Simpson, who had ruthlessly disre garded the law requiring him to stop and had caused the frightful wreck. Inquiry developed the fact that Simp son had escaped to the swamp. THK worst fire in tho history of Houston, Texas, broke out at 2:40 on Tuesday morning,' and before it waa got under control at 4:30 o'clock not only had a large amount of property CHICAGO. CATTLE--Common to Prime.... HOGS--Shipping tirades..!..... SHEEP--Fair to Choice WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2 OAIS--No. 2 27 Rl»e--No. 2.. 46 BUTTER--Choice Creamery as K«os--Fresh 16 POIATOEH--Car-lots, per bn. .. 00 INDIANAPOLIS CATTLE--Shipping. 3 CO Hoos--Choice Light 4 00 BafeEp--Common to Prime 2 00 WHEAT--No. 2 Red.., 4» CORN--No. 2 White /63 OATS--No. 2 White. 32 ST. LOUIS. CATTLE HOGS - WHEAT--No. 2 Red COBN--No. 1 OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 2 CI N CI N NATL CATTLE HOGS KHEEP WHEAT--No.'/ Red CORN--No. 2 Mixed OATS--No. 2 Mixed RYE--N6. 2 : DETROIT. CATTLE Hbos I WHEAT- No 1White'.' ! i COKX-NO. 2 Yellow | OA-IS--No. 2 White TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2 Red I CORN--No. 2 Yellow : OA IH--No. 2 White i RYE--No. 2 ! BUFFALO. WHEAT--No. L White I " No. 2 Red I £oBK«^io, 2 Yellow f OATS--No. 2 White I MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 2 Spring. CORN--No. 3 OATS--No. 2 White BARLEY--No. 2 RYE--No. l PORK--Men, <3 6 25 (dt 6 50 <3 3 60 09 62 60 28 48 23% 18 70 (3! 5 76 (J? 6 60 («C 3 60 •0 <§>:. 63% & 33 3 00 & 6 75 3 00 (g 6 00 48 49 46 & 4» 28 (4 39 49 <3 61 @ 5 50 4 00 6 50 2 00 IS 8 00 50 51 52 63 :;o V* 81 S3 & 64 2 50 m 4 50 4 00 <& 6 60 2 00 (ft 3 00 54 & 544 GO «iI 32 & 83 U & 53 50 0 60)6 31 ict 32 48 & 60 67 <§> 18 95 55 H M & 65 34 & 3454 54 & 55 60 as 60 H 31 & • S1.& 52 w 56 41 60 NEW YQKK. CATTLE ' Hoos SHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 tted.. . CORN--No. 2 . . . > OATS--White Western BUTTER--Creamery EGOS--Western 12 26 (312 76 3 00 3 ro 2 00 ' 65 66 36 23 IT (4 6 60 C* 6 75 <a 3 76 <9 66 & 66 & 40 0 26 Vt » in the same methodical sort of way. Deer were all moving out. he ?ays. and a dozen could be een to cross the head of the lake in an hour if a close watch was kept. "All these wild animals have a sharp instinct for impending danger," said he. "An old woodsm. n or hunter w 1 begin to hustle for cover himself when he sees birds and beasts alike moving in the same direction. There h v i been several forest fires of greater or less severity since I have had to do with the country between Tower and the ( anadian *1 ne. and each time I have noted that full warning was given of a coming disaster by the be havior of the wild anim tls in the for est. They know better than any hu man being when there is trouble com ing, and you'll see them begin to dig for safety a full week before a fire sweeps across ̂ he woods." L'qunr War Imminent. A second decision has been rendered by the Supreme Court of South Caro lina relative to the constitutionality of Gov. Tillman's ] et measure, the dis- pen-ary law, whereby tho State con ducts the sale of all intoxicating drinks. Last spring the State was virtually in a condition of rebellion owing to the manner in which the law was being enforced, but a quietus was fortunately put on the matter at the time by a decision of the Supreme Court to tho effect that the law was unconstitutional. Since then the per sonnel of the Suoreme Court has changed, a Tilliranito having b §n promote! to the Lench, and now there is a second decision that the law is constitutional. The effect of the de cision will bo to resume the crusade against all individuals engaged in the sale of 1L u ir, and we may cxpect a re newal of the disgraceful scenes at Dai- lington, Florence and other places which gave South Carolina u notoi'iu s prominence several months j go. JOHNNY BULL WEDNESDAY (red* in the face) -- I THURSDAY--".No, I hadn't heard of "Fight!! Who wants to fight? Lemme | any fight. Had You? ' at him! Anybody think they can get J Madagascar now. " OHIO SOtDIERS SHOOT INTO WOULD-BE LYNCHERS. or Bloodahed About WMhlnfton Court HODHI Ohio--Citizens, Eager to Wre«k Vengeance on » Negro, Storm the #ail--Threaten to Vae Dynamite. Three Killed and Many Hart, At Washington Court House, Ohio, three men were killed and about a dozen injured, some fatally, by the militia, in the endeavor to keep mobs from lynching William Dolby, coloted. Dolby assaulted Mrs. Mary C. Eoyd, age^ 55, at Parrott's station a week ago, and was captured at Delaware, Ohio, and brought into court at Wash ington Court House. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to twenty vsars in the penitentiary. An angry mob gath ered about the jail after Dolby had been identified by his victim, and Sheriff Cook called to his assistance the local militia company. This ac tion increased the fury against Dolby, and Gov. IVi c A inley was appealed to for additional assistance; and troops from Columbus were sent, CoL Coit in command. The mob surrounding the jail andg court house attempted tb take Ddlbjr from the officers when removed from the jail to the couH house for trial, but we. e kept at' bay by the free use of bayonets and clubbed »guns. When brought to the court house Dolby broke down. While bringing him fiom the jail the mob charged and almost succeeded in getting him. Henry Kirk, the brother-in-law of the as- 6aultedjwoman, was knocked down the ttepsand badly bruised. Another man was bayoneted through the finger, while a bayQnet was thrust through the olothes of another. Deputies, with revolvers drawn, guarded the prisoner in the court room. Dolby cried like ia baby and kept looking around for help. Soldiers were marched in to keep the crowd quiet. After the sentence fhe prisoner was taken to the grand jury room. A mob gathered about the Court House, and it was impossible to get the p. isoner through to take him to the train. The ofi cers weie powerless to get Dolby from the Court House to the jail or to the train, and Sheriff Cook wi ed the Governor to send more troops. The mob grew rapidly in numbers and desperation. Col. Coit. maJe a speech, asking the crowd to disperse, but It was received with jeers. The prisoner was prostrate from fear aid lay crying and moaning all the time. Uuitriln Fire Unoa the Mob. The mob kept Dolby and his guards prisoners in the courthouse until ti p. m. and then made an attack. The militia repelled them without firing at first, lut at 6:45 p. m. the south door wa* forced open. '1 his door opens up on the street, which was filled with men, women, and children. The de,- tachment of the guards finally fired oh the attacking party. None of tho latter was hurt, but a dozen or more Eersons in the street Were struck, two illed outright and five more were fatally wounded, one having since died. The wounded were all hurriedly removed from the scene by friends. Tne people were frenzied and threatened to dynamite the court house. Additional troops were or dered from Cincinnati, Columbus, Chillicothe, and other points. BOMB AT AN IRISH MEETING. Dastardly Attempt to Blow Up the Blake Reception in New York. The reception given by the Irish Na tional Federation to Edward Blake, M. P., at the Lenox Lyceum, in New York, was productive of some results never dreamed of by its originatdrs. In the heart of the meeting, and while all eyes were turned upon Mr. Blake as he stood upon the platform delivering one Of his most impressive sieeches. a stoutly built, frowsily dressed man walked swiftly around the back of the front tier of boxes until he reached the last one nearest the platform and to the left of the pr scenium arch. In his hand he carried an old, bulky, green gingham umbrella, which he heemed to hold with peculiar tender ness. Outside the box he stopped, hesitated a moment, and then enter ing, took a chair in a corner nearest the stage. Tho old man left in a minute. It might have been a minute or two later when a sharp cry from thejjsem- en in the box, resounding througli the house, startled everyone from their seats and stopped the speaker. At the same moment there leaped out a gush of flame and smoke, and then fallowed the shriek of "Fire" and the simulta neous movement of .'.00 panic-stricken creatures to the door, but even as they turned Patrolman Lilley rushed into the box, violently dancing on some thing with his feet, while the voice of Mr. Blake rang through the big build ing calling on his audience to keep their seats. "The fire's out. Come back," cricd those on the platform when the flame had gone and the smoke disappeared. As Lilley stooped to pick up the burning frame he saw lying among the fragments of the umbrella a small, stout tube or bottle The tube was eight inches long and tw > in circum ference, and capped with a covering of gelatin. The tube was filled with a white liquid, which the police think is nitric acid. Attached to the gelatin had been a piece of fuse half burned away. i MUST IMPORT WHEAT. European Crop 116.000.000 Huaheis Short --Estimate* by Conntrles. The condition of the crops of Europe for 1W4 is given in the forthcoming report of the btati tician of the Agri cultural Departm?nt for October. The estimated wheat harvest amounted to 1,435,410.000 Winchester bushels, against a regu'ar consumption of 1,553,- f,0J,000 bushels. The harvest by coun tries is as follows: Produc tion. bu. United Kingdom 61,S91,000 France 343,426.000 <iermany Hpain and P< r:ogal... Italy Austria-Hangary. Bonmania Bulgaria IluKftia Belgium.- Holland Penmark Other countries 113,f 00,(00 . .110.600,000 . .122.959,000 ..217.000,100 .. 44,OUO,t OO .. 31.000,000 . .310.' 00,000 .. 16,500,000 .. B,115,000 .. 6,100,000 .. 64.SUO.OOO Consump tion, bu. 233,001',COO 3S0,000,000 12 ,000,000 lift.100,000 149.0CO.OOO 19ti,0 10.000 15,000.000 •20,000,000 2 .9,000,roo 25,000,000 35,000,(00 H,500,000 4:J,OOO,OOO This gives 116,000,000 bushels as the approximate requirement from abroad. Owing to unfavorable harvest weath er, only a small part of the wheat in Great Britain is fit for milling pur poses. The oat crop is considered ex cellent. There is about 2,475,<>48 bush els of last year's wheat crop in first hands. The amount necessary to be imported to meet all demands will be about 189,T!H',(>80 bushels, at about 3,(i4f>,0tX) bushels a week. Official esti mates of the crop just gathered in France shpw the quantity of wheat in excess of the average. The harvest makes France practically independent of outside supplies, but some wheat will probably be imported. The wheat crop in Roumania is the smallest for five years, the rye crop falls below that of last year, and the yield of bar ley and oats per acre is the 1 west in five years. There was about half a crop ox corn. In Germany wheat shows a falling off in quantify and quality from last v!y«ar and the potato crop is very disap pointing. The Austrian wheat crop is expected to measure 50,000, tOJ bushels. Barley and oats have an average yield, but corn does not promise so well. Italian grain is reported excellent in Quality. The corn crop, damaged by drought, is looked upon as lost in many districts. Belgian wheat hat vested under very unfavorable conditions is in ured in quality. Hungary's wheat fields yielded lti7,ulO,GOO bushels rye, til,000,000; and corn, t50,000,000. There is an average rye crop in Austria, ex cept in quality, which is deemed poor. In Russia the approaching completion of the Siberian Railroad is expect2dt© open up to commeiCB a new field, and "a new and vigorous competitor," says the statistician, "will before long be found in the markets of Europe," as an enormous quantity of fertile land will be brought under cultivation by the railroad. WANT TO BE GOVERNORS. ERNEST CADT. His education Men Who Seek High Honors at the Hands of the t'eople- Emest Cady, whrm the Democrats ot Connecticut have chosen as their leader in the gubernatorial contest, ig the present Lieuten ant Gpvernor. He is a p r o m i n e n t ^ F r e e Mason, a Grand Army man on the strength of service in the navy during the civil war, a wealthy manufact urer and leading citi zen of Hartford. He was born Sept. 0, 18h2, ; at Stafford, Tolland; County, lost his fa-' ther when but nine years old, and there after supported him self by his own labor. he received at the winter terms of the fmblic schools. Since 1802 he has been n the firm of Pratt & Cady, manufact urers of steam-boiler appliances at Hartfcrd. Mr. Cady has twice been elected Lieutenant Governor on the ticket with Lu on B. Morris. The Republican nominee for Gov ernor of Massachusetts, Frederick T. Greenhalge, was born in England in 1842. Early in the '50s his family cama to the United States, and settled in Low ell, Mass., where the subject of this sketch e n t e r e d t h e p u b l i c schools. In 1859 he entered Harvard Col lege. but three jears later was obliged to leave because of the death of his father, which left him tho _ main support of his v. T. GxiSBNHAiiGB. mother and six sis ters. he being the only som He was admitted to ..the bar in 1865; held sev eral city offices, and in 1885 entered' the State House of Representatives. He also served in the Fifty-first Con gress He is a very popular man in his State. FEEDING WHEAT. Report by the Kansas Board of Aurlcu'- tnre Says It Is Decidedly Profitable- Farmers can not fail to be interested in an elaborate and able report just published by the Kansas State Board of Agriculture on the advantages and disadvantages of wheat as a food for farm animals. The conclusion reached is that, at the present price of wheat, there is decided profit to be gained in feeding wheat instead of corn. In order to get at the truth in this late phase of the cheap-wheat prob lem, the Secretary of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture recently sent a carefully prepared list of questions to 1,000 wheat growers, stock growers, feeders and dairymen, and after edit ing the replies found himself in pos session of HOJ very useful contributions on the subject. From the answers and estimates of these observant and prac tical men he compiled the following interesting conclusions: Of the 1:4,827,523 bushels of winter and spring wheat raised in Kansas in 1893 there has been used as feed for farm animals 4,059,323 bushels, or lt\4 per cent. Whea-fed whole, especially t > hogs, 15 per cent, of the wheat grains are swallowed unmasticated and go through the tnimal undigested--a shameful waste. Yet three-fourths of the men reporting, lepresenting fifty cojnties. state that, p^und for pound, wheat is superior to shelled corn for fattening hogs--even with tho one-fourth waste. This superiority is estimated va iously at from i to .'i5 per cent., the a\ erage pla ing the superi ority of wheat over corn at lt» per cent. As to how much live pork may be ex pected as a fair return per bushel of wheat fed to hogs, the average of all the answers is eleven pounds. It is also of interest to note that the ccst of raising a bushel of wheat in Kansas ranges from 56* cents, where an acre yields only 10 bushels, down to 2ti cents where an acre yields 35 bushels. The Secretary sums up his conclu sions thus: Under existing conditions wheat has be-ome a very unusual and important factor in the grain feeding of all classes of fai m stock. It is su perior to corn in prodU.ing healthful, well-balanced growth in young ani mals. Mixed with corn, oats or bran, it is much superior to either alone for working horses. Fed to cows it is far and away ahead of corn as a milk pro ducer. For swine it gives generous results, but is used at a disadvantage when fed whole, especially without soaking. For cattle the clear wheat is rather too carbonaceous unless mixed with corn or oil-cake. AMATEUR OARSWOMAN. Miss Rose Rosentheim Easily Defeats Miss Ashley at i!t. Louis. Before a throng which packed the levees and the great Eads Bridge, at St. Louis, Rose Rosentheim finished easily first in the mile and a half scull ing match for the female championship of America, defeating Miss Tillie Ash ley, of Hartford, Conn., who. seeing the race lost, stopped rowinsr -before the contest was half over. The time was 12 minutes 23i seconds. Miss Rose Rosentheim, who is now the champion amateur oarswoman of America, received her training for the recent femal'e rowing race, at St. Louis, Mo., frcm Fred K o e n i g , c h a m p i o n amateur oarsman of America, and the W e s t e r n R o w i n g Club Miss Rosen- 'Z^theim is a decided ^ brunette. She is five feet five inches tall a n d w e i g h s 1 3 1 pounds, but can row at 1^5 pounds. She rows t h i r t y- f o u r strokes to the min ute, while her opponent. Miss Ashley, takes thirty-six strokes to the minute. This race WJS of special interest, being the first of its kind to take place in this corntry, except th;.se of purely local character, among boarder* at seaside resorts. The stikes were the amateur oarswoman championship' of America, and a suitable trophy. BOSB XOSENTBEIX.