The Millheim Journal, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY I{. K. OlTice in the New Journal Building, Penn St.,nearHartman's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OR $126 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCH. Acceptable Correspondence Solicited Address letters to MILLHEIM JOURNAL. B US INE S S CARDS IIARTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. "jr B. STOVER, Auctioneer, Madisonburg, Pa. ■yy H.REIFSNYDER, Auctioneer, A. J. W. STAM, ~ Physician & Surgeon Office on Penn street. MILLHEIM, PA. JNR. JOHN F. HARTER. Practical Dentist, Office opposite [the Methodist Church. MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM PA. J~yt GEO. L. LEE, Physician & Surgeon, MADISONBURG, PA. Office opposite the Public School House. -yy # P. ARD, M. D., WOODWARD, PA O. DEININGER, " Notary-Public, Journal office, Fenn st., Millheim, Pa. Deeds and other legal papers written and acknowledged at moderate charges. nyy J. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Havinq had many years' of experiencee the public can expect the best work and most modern accommodations. Shop opposite Millheim Banking House MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. L. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Corner Main & North streets, 2nd floor, Millheim, Pa. Shaving, Haircutting, Shampooning, Dying, &c. done in the most satisfac tory manner. Jno.H. Orvls. C. M. Bower. Ellis L.Orvis QRVIS, BOWER & ORVIS, Attorneys-at-Law. BELLEFONTE, PA., Office in Woodings Building. DTH. Hastings. W. F. Reeder. HASHES & REEDER, Attornejs-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east or the office ocupicd by the late firm of Yocum & Hastings. J C. MEYER, Attorney-at-Law, BELLEFONTE PA. At the Office of Ex-Judge Hoy. C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-haw BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county Special attention to Collections. Consultations in German or English. T A Beaver J. W.Gephart. "GEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street. North of High Street JGROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST., BELLEFONTE, PA. C, G. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. F r ® e Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to witnesses and Jurors- QUMM.INS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything done to make guests comfortable. Rates modera** tronage respectfully solici ted "y JRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODSCALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good same pie rooms lor commercial Travel ers on first floor. R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 60. Gieser'sVirgiuiaTurkey. Caesar Alexander Shakewell, a color ed citizen of Bridgeville, owned uo tur keys. and his richer white neighbors had put theirs in special security as Thanksgiving Day drew near. Mrs. Shakewell kept nagging Caesar about a turkey until he determined to have one before another sun set, at any cost. He sat down before the fire in the twi light to study out some plan of action on the important question. It came to him quite readily, it ap pears , for all at oute he found himself carrying it out. He had noticed a loose board on Col. Fairgrove's back fence the day before. The Fairgroves were easy-goiug people, not much giv e n to hammer and nails, and they would be sure to have a turkey iu a coop in the backyard getting ready for the annual feast. Sure enough, the board fell off at the bidding of his brawny arm, and there in a pen in the corner was the bird of his hopes. The slats of his coop drop ped before the same potent force, as though they had been mere ravelings. It was no trouble at all to tie his legs, cover his body with an old bag and slip quietly away with him. Once at home Caesar Alexander put him in a barrel and laid heavy sticks of wood on the open top. Then he called to his wife to come and see him and to quitt 4 j irrin' ' him about their Thanksgiving dinner. She appeared, looked at the bird with eyes like saucers, and then grew very grave. 4 Wbar did ye git him ?' she asksd, with something like awe in her voice. 'Worked for 'im, o' course,' raid her gentle spouse, with a sneer. 'Knowed al the time dat I was to git 'im ; but you had to hev yer fill o' jorrin' and complainin' at me for a wuthless nig ger. Kuowed it was no use to tell ye. Ye wouldn't b'lieve me till he come." Mrs. Shakewell looked at her hus band,a fresh well of admiration spring ing up iu her heart. He was a super ior creature, to be sure ; she would neyer doubt it again. Before going to bed Caeser Alexan der went into his small yard, lifted a stick or two of wood from the turkey's barrel and took a long and fond look at his prize. Suddenly a hand was laid on his shoulder, and be turned with quaking knees, expecting to face the village constable ; but dark as it was he could see that the hand belonged to a gentleman of his own color, though one ; with whom he was entiiely unac quainted—'a kind of old fashioned lookiu' nigger,' he said when telling the story afterward. Iteassuied to find that it wasn't the law he had to con front, he put considerable bravado in to his voice as he said : 'Who are ye, anyhow ; and what (Dye want in a geuiraan's yard at night ? It's forenenst the law to creep aroun' honest folks' houses on the s'y that way.' 'Caesar ! Caesar !' said the other, without appearing in the least iutimi dated ; 4 I am one of yer aincestors from 'way back, and I can't come to yer in daytime because I've been dead a long time.' Here Caesar's teeth chattered aud his legs gave way under him. 'Brace up 1' said the ancestor, slap ping him on the shoulder. 'Brace up ' I'm here for yer good,not for yer haim. I want ye to kerry that turkey back. Ye've done some thing to disgrace the name of Shake well, and I won't stand it. The constable will be down onto ye to-morrow mornin' 'fore 'J o'clock if ye don't, an' there'll be a neighborhood scandal about this bird that'll make the whole rare o' Shakewells shake in their graves. Caesar 1 for the sake of your proud and honorable aincestors take that bird back, and to morrow take yer gun and go to the woods and git one o' the turkeys uv yer fathers—an' it's a bird that no nigger ought to turn up his nose at, either.' Here the 'amcestor' sniffed delight edly at something invisible, something in his memory aparently, and then went on : 'lt's a bird dat no man owns ; it's de true Vahginiah turkey. 'Tisu't a feathered bird ; 'tisn't a fowl at all. It wears fur and has hfty teeth, a brist ly tongue, a long prehensible tail—you see, Caesar, yer aincestor had laroin'— and plantigrade feet, Caesar, it has plantigrade feet.' 'Ugh !' said Caesar, too dazed to ut ter an intelligible word. The 'aincestor' continued : 'lts feet has as many toes on each foot as a man and long shai p claws on every toe ex cept its inside one. It uses dat as a thumb. It is a marsupial turkey, Cae sar.' Here the ancestor smiled at the towering proportions of his own learn ing, but presently talked on. 'Alive it has an odor ye can't mis take, an roasted he smells better nor a flower garden. He's a bird worth giv in' thanks over. Now, take dat ole, droopio', white folks' turkey back to MILLHEIM, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25., 1886. his yowner, and go out ter-morrah and git de 'possum, de 'riginal turkey ob old Vahglniuh, de turkey of yer fath ers'—and lo ! the ancestor vanished. Perspiring at every pore Caesar Al exander shouldered the turkey and started toward Col. Fairgroye's. Just as he was about to euter the yard, through the break in the fence pre viously made by himself, he felt anoth er hand laid on his shoulder with con siderable emphasis. Fearing that an other and still more terrible ancestor was about to have speech with him, he sank to the earth, without daring to look around. Then the hand grabbed him more tirmly and gave him a vigor ous shake. He looked up. appealingly and confronted the c instable. With a groan he fainted dead away. 'What ye groanin'and carrying on like an animal fur ?' was the next thing he heard. The question was propounded iu his wife's most ungen tle voice. He opened his eyes slowly and in ab ject fear, aud found himself sitting by his own fireside, the children in bed and Mrs. Shaaewell standing by him with her hand on his shoulder. He never was so happy in his life. Col. Fairgroye's turkey was safe where it belonged ; he had never stolen it, and he hadn't met any dead and gone an cestor at all. only in dreams. Further more, he inwardly iesolved that he never would, if aucestors' visits only followed thefts. The next day when he set off with his gun he told Mrs. Shakewell that he would bring home a 'Vahginiah' tur key. And h9 did. He held it up with pride aud joy on his return, aud was rewarded by a smile from that exacting lady. The 'possum was eaten with gravy and grace, and Mr. Shakewell's stand ing in the community remained unim paired. As he bent over his own fragrant thanksgiving board he had more than usual ciuse for gratitude. 'Vahginiah turkeys was good enough fer my fathers, and good 'nough ftr me,' he often says ; but though he sometimes tells of the encounter with his ancestor, he never tells of the cause of that worthy individual's visit to hiao. MAX ELTON. BLACK CHEWING GUM. Lately there has crept into the Detroit mark et a substance known as "black chew ing gum,'* made out of tar, which is said by medical men to be extremely harmful and pernicious. It is becom ing a great favorite with local gum chewers, but physiciaus assert its use is productive of sore mouths and in numerable throat diseases. Put up in fancy 'paper, sold at a penny a block, flavored with some unknown ingredient, and christened with a sweetly-sounding name, as "luti-tuti," for instance, the black chewing gum is forcing its entrance into all grades of Detroit society, and driving its rivals to the wall. But it is nothing but tar—cheap tar at that —mixed with gelatine and flavored with—heaven and the manufacturer only know what.— Free Press. A SHOWMAN CAUGHT.—A show man was making a great fuss at the front of his exhibition of the wonders he had inside. A man standing in the crowd, with a little boy beside him, cried out: 'l'll bet you a dollar you cannot let me see a lion.* 'Done,' said the showman, eagerly; 'put down your money.' The man placed a dol lar in the hand of a bystander, and the showman did the same. 'Now walk this way,' said the showman, 'and I'll soon convince you. There you are,' said he, triumphantly; 'look in the corner at that beautiful Numi dian lion.' 'I don't see any,' respond ed the other. 'What's the matter with you ?' asked the showman. 'l'm blind,' was the grinning reply, and in a few minutes the blind man pocketed the two dollars and went away. AN EDITOR. Editor Daily Paper—'So you would like a job on the paper, Rastus ?' Rastus—'Yes, sah. I kinder feels dat I wud make er good journalis' wif a little 'sperience.' Editor—'Quite likely. Well, Rastus, we'll give you a tiial. You can carry that ton of coal on the sidewalk up to the sixth story, then wash down the windows, and scrub the floor,and clean the sub-cellar, and ' Rastus—'l say, boss, I reckon I'll try an' git er job on a weekly paper fast. Gittin' out a paper every day am too much ob a strain on er pusson what has nebber had no journalisticum 'sper ience. 'Deed it is.'— Puck. The oleomargarine law goes into ef fect Nov. 1. A I'APER FOR THE HOME CIRCLE. List Week's Tempest. Vessels and Men go Down on Lake Michigan. A STORM THAT HAS DONE VAST DAM AGE EAST AND WEST OK THE MIS- LAND AND WATER AND BRINGS WINTER. Tho first great gale and snow of tho season began in Dakota on Tues day and swept eastward to tho lakes. Seven lives are known to have been lost by wrecks on Lake Michigan aud many marine disasters are believed to have occurred. The snow has largely obstructed travel in tho Northwest, where the railroads have been blocked by the snow. Swamped in the Breakers. SEAMEN DROWNED FROM SINKING VESSELS ON LAKE MICHIGAN. MILWAUKEE, NOV. 17. —While the storm was at its height this morning the barge Dixon, which was one of the tow of the steamer Justice Fields, foundered off Kewannee, on the west ern side of Lake Michigan, about one hundred miles north of this city. Two seamen were drowned. A few hours later the Emerald, another of the barges in tow of the fields, got into the breakers and quickly swamped. Five of her crew were swept away and lost. Breview, the mate, was saved in an unconscious condition. The gale blew so terrifically that the steamer was unable to save the bar ges. During a terrible gale and snow storm last night the schooner P. S. Marsh, loaded with coal, ran on the beach near Graham's Point, in the Straits of Mackinac, between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. The cap tain signaled at ten o'clock this morn ing that she would soon go to pieces. Help has been sent for, but it will be impossible to do anything to help the vessel to-day on account of the big seas, to which she lays broadside and which are momentarily growiug larg er. Another schooner is ashore a cross the point four miles from St. Ignace. An Early Blizzard. HEAVY SNOW FROM DAKOTA TO LAKE MICHIGAN—TRAVEL IMPEDED. CHICAGO, NOV. 17.—N0 such storm as that of to-day has been known throughout the Northwest so early in the season for many years. In this city a steady rain has been falling since 7 o'clock last night and prevails generally between here and the Mis sissippi river, west of which there is a heavy sncw and howling blizzard, seriously delaying telegraphic com munication in all directions. At St. Paul the snow was continuous yester day, growing heavier after midnight, aud this morning the people found the streets so badly blockaded that travel was next to impossible. The blizzard began in Dakota and swept east and south through Minnesota, Wisconsin, lowa,Northern Illinois and Michigan. At Sioux Falls, Dakota,the snow con tinued for eighteen hours and the temperature fell to zero. On the Illi nois Central Railroad, between Fort Dodge and Sioux City, the cuts are filled with snow and snow plows have been sent out to clear- the tracks. Trains are impeded cn many roads and the blizzard is moving eastward, bringing the snow and falling ther mometer with it. At St. Paul at 9 o'clock" to-night the storm had raged forty-eight hours and showed no signs of abatement. Street cars have not been runrii ug in either St. Paul or Minneapolis to-day and trains on all railroads are from three to six hours late. While the storm seems to be general throughout the Northwest it is most violent in Southern Dakota. A Sioux Ftdls special says that more snow has al ready fallen than during the entire season last winter. The wind is blow - ing a heavy gale from the north and the snow is drifting very badly. Trains on nearly all the roads are a bandoned. TLe temperature is at ze ro and falling. There is also strong electrical disturbance. Other points state that the storm is no less seyere. A train with one hundred passeng ers on board is snowed in eleven miles west of Canton, Dak. The passengers are being fed from a small station near by. The Milwaukee Railway is lined with dead engines in snow drifts. FOR WHAT SHALL WE BE THANKFUL. Some Old, Oft Repeated Questions, andThoirUnfashionable Answers. 'For WIIHL shall we ho thankful V say the sorrowing. '(lrief abideth with us, and in our hearts is the bitter ness of cotinuued trouble.' 'For what shall we be thankful ?' say the poor. 'The earth overllows with plenty, but we are destitute. Cold and hunger is our portion, and want is our companion all the days of the year.' 'For what shall wo be thankful V' say the hopeless. 'The days go on,but they bring us no joy. The sun and moon traverse the heavens without warming our chilled hearts or lighting our dark pathway.' 'For what shall we be thankful ?' say the disappointed. 'Wherever we turn, there, waiting to dishearten us, lurks disappointment. When we rise he it is that causes us agaiu to fall.' 'For what shall we be thankful ?' say the tempted, the mistaken, the fallen. 'Our temptations have over come us ; our mistakes have destroyed us ; our sins have crushed us. For us there is nothing left but wretchedness.' 'For what shall we be thankful ?' say the bailled. 'When we strive we fail ; when we pray no answer comes ; when we hope our hopes are never re alized ; when we love our loves are lost to us.' 'For what 'shall we be thankful t" say the bereaved. 'Death has robbed us and left us moaning. Our sore hearts cannot take up the cry of rejoic ing, for we weep uncomforted.' 'For what shall we be thankful V say the sick. 'We suffer and know no ease. We are full of anguish night aud day.' 'For what shall we be thankful ?' say the persecuted. 'Our enemies out number us ; our burdens are greater than we can bear.' ♦For what shall we be thankful ?' say the weaiy, the wounded, the forsa ken, the heavy of heart. 'For us there is no rest, no happineos, no help. Weariness is our portion and burdeus our inheritance. We have no cause for rejoicing from the beginning of the year to the end.' For these, for all these, it is written: 'Rest in the Lord. Oh, rest in the Lord. Wait patiently for Ilim and He shall give thee thy heart's desire.' To these, to all these, the promise has been given. To these, the words from a plain old sermon come with power to heal : 'There is heaven to be thankful for. Whatever sorrows be reave us here, whatever fatal mis takes darken our lives, whatever irre deemable losses befall us, we may yet rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him in the little life that remaius ; for beyond this world's gain or loss, high in the serene air of beaveu, when ex istence ceases to be a lesson and be comes vivid life, there and only there shall He give us onr heart's desire in its immortal fullness. Here knowl edge is defiled, love is imperfect, purity the result of fiery trial, wealth rusted into covetousness ; but in beaveu is the very native country of pure knowl edge, perfect love, utter siulessness,and riches that neither mot nor rust cor rupt, that bless and curse not.' Another Storm Predicted. It seems that another storm period will occur next month,it' Professor Fos ter knows anything about such things. He publishes his prediction of a great storm period, extending lrom Decem ber 4th to 17th, during which will oc cur some of the most destructive win ter storms of recent years. Heavy snow and high winds will greatly im pede railroad travel and he advises the railways to prepare for blockades that will occur in'the western states about December sth and reach the eastern states December 9th. He suggests that many lives and much property can be saved from loss by making preparations for the severe weather of this stoiui period. NO CHANGE NECESSARY. There is a millionaire in town who has a great reputation of meanness. Most millionaires have that reputation, but most of them are mean to their friends and relatives and others. This man is mean to himself as well. This millionaire was interested in some of the recent failures, and made some sweeping losses. ♦Oh, it's awful 1 awful I I'm ruin ed, quite ruined 1' he said to a fellow sufferer. •I am sorry, but, after all, there's one great thing in your favor.' •What is that ; I can't see it.' •You won't need to change your m ode of life at all.' • The excessive smoking of tobacco, it is ; igain claimed, causes loss of eye sigi tt. Are men's eyes poorer than woi en's ? Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. KIDNAPPED. There was nothing|new in the plot of the desperate villains who sought to ex tort money from Mr. Ross by stealing his son Charley. The kidnapping of children for the sake of gain or revenge has been practiced for hundreds of yeais. There are doubtless to-day in this country a score or more of Charley Ross cases, but as the parents are not rich and prominent, and the search not aided by legislative action and the unit ed press,they are seldom heard of by the great public. The case of Willie Albright, an Eng lish lad,was full of strange tdventures. He lived at Sheffield with his parents until five years of age. His father was employed in a great factory there and his mother was a dressmaker for the neighborhood. They lived in a cottage in the suburbs of the town, and at the age of lour the boy was permitted to run about the neighborhood a good deal. At five, when he was kidnapped, he was sent to the stores to make pur chases, and knew all the streets clear to the factory in which his father work ed. One dry in 1861, about 2 o'clock in the afternoon, be was sent to a stoie three blocks away after some buttons. Before lie reached it a strange man ac costed bun and asked his name. He then gave Willie some sweetmeats and asked him to go and look at a Bunch and Judy show iu the town, promising to return with him in a half hour. The boy eagerly set off with him, and was taken to the railroad depot and placed on a train iu charge of a middle-aged woman,who gave him some more sweet meats and was yery kindly spoken. She said the show had moved away and they were going after It, and the novel ty of the child's position prevented him feeling any anxiety. When the detec tives came to take the case up, as they did two days after the boy disappeared, they got no clue whatever. Although he had walked a mile or two hand in hand with the abductor along crowded streets, nooody remembered seeing the pair. They bad gone openly to the railroad station, but no one there bad noticed them. The guard on the train dimly remembered a woman ana a child in a compartment, but could give no discription. As the Albrights were poor and no great stir was creat ed, aud no great effort was made by the detectives to restore the boy to liis par ents. The boy was taken from Sheffield to Liverpool, being so well treated on the way that he had no thought of his home. At Liverpool he was told that his name was John Man ton, and that the woman was his motlier. When lie disputed the point he was soundly whipped. His hair were cut close, his dress entirely changed, aud a liquid was rubbed on his skin which turned it dark- Except when he asked to go home, or denied that his name was Jonn Manton, he was kindly treated, and alter lie had been beaten seyeu or eight times he accepted the new name, and ceased to refer to his parents. Young as he was this was a stroke of policy on his part. He realized that he had been stolen from home.and he kept repeating to himself that his true name was Willie Albiight, and that he lived at Sheffield. Alter a couple weeks lessons in tumbling and tight-rope walking were given to the boy. lie was never per mitted to go out alone or to converse with strangers, and it soon came natu ral lor him to call the woman mother. In the course of a couple of months the past seemed a dream to him, and he would have forgotten .ill about it had he not kept repeating to himself : "1 am not Johnny Manton, but AV illie Al bright, and they stole me away from Sheffield." He was in Liverpool six weeks before he knew the name of the city. When he had been taught how to dance, sing, tumble, and walk a tight rope—a matter of three months' lime—lie was taken around the country with a small show, which the woman owned in part. The novelty of travel was so agreeable that he almost lorgot his situation, and was for two or three years quite coutent. There was no one to teach him how to read or write, but he was quick-witted, and could reason beyond his years. He had hopes that the show would some day reach Shef field, and he would slip out and run home,but the people of course carefully avoided the place. Ouce, when they were showing at Doncaster,a few miles away, Willie observed a man whose face had a familiar look, gazing at him in an honest manner, and presently heard him say to a friend : "The laddie keeps me thinking of the child who was stolen away from neigh bor Albiight; tut of course it can't be the one." The boy was about to call out that his name was Willie Albright, when the woman, who always kept an eagle eye on him, came closer, and intimidat ed him. The show then hurridly pack ed up and left the place. The boy now realized more fully than ever that his right name was Albright, and that he had been stolen from home, but he also realized his hopelessness. He had been told that if he eyer tried to runaway, NO. 46- NEWSPAPER LAWS If subscribers order the discnntiiiu ;tion ne\vs|:i|i'rs tlifl nut>llilier may routinm* solid ilti'iti until all arrearairen mo r i If Hiil^( , rlt , ' , rs is % p!rrt l:ikp Uioir newspapers from llieofUoe to wind! it. ire sent theyare held until tin h ivesoitled tlie'liills and orderc d Iliein Uiscoidinie* i. If subscribers move toother places without In forming the publisher, and the newsptijims ,ue sent to the former place, they are respoiiblble. C 1 ADVERTISING RATES. 1 wk. i mo. 13 moa. Gmos. I yea I square *J 00 + 1 (Hi | $5 00 *(5 no ?8 00 Ucolumu 4 (N> 0 (H> I 10 00 15 00 IS CO 1/ " 7 (HI 10(H) IMHI :ieo HOOti 1 " 10 00 15 00 1 25 00 45 00 75(H) One Inch makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices f ./iO. Transient adver tisement* nnd loeals 10 cents ner line fur first insertion and Scents par line for each addition al insertion 1 * wild animals would pursue and devour him, and he was in mortal terror of a bulldog which followed the show. lie therefore humbly obeyed all orders, and made no move to run away. lie was about eight years old when he changed masters, being sold for a good round price to a man who called himself Prof. Williams. This man was a ventrilo quist and juggler, and he took the hoy to Australia with him, and gave hall performances for a year or so. They then returned, and made the tour of Scotland and Ireland, and sailed for America. Albright was about eleven years old when he landed in New York. The Professor then took the name of La Pierre, though he was no French man in look or speech, and trayeled for a year. One day as they were Ailing a date at Cedar liapids, lowa, the boy was sent to the postoflice with letters, and a curious tiling happened. One of the four boys who had witnessed the performance the night previous made up to him in a friendly way, and asked his name. •• Johnny Manton," was the reply. "Y'es, but that is your stage name. What is the other ?" "Willie Albright." "That's funny. A family named Al bright live next door to us. They lived in England." "So did I." "Maybe you are related. I'm going to tell 'era about you." Two tours later a man and his wife called at the hotel and asked for the boy, and the mother had no sooner set eyes on him than she hugged him to her heart. The father|was longer mak ing up his miud, but he soon came to feel certain that John Manton was Wil'ie Albright and the boy who had been stolen from him seven or eight years before. The parents had been in America three years, and had long be fore given up all hopes of ever hearing from the child. The professor made a great kick,as his bread and butter were at stake, but when he found the people determined to have justice done he slip ped away in the night and was beard of no more.—AT. T. Sun. SINGULAR ACCIDENT. The Limited Express Struck By Rolling Rocks. PITTSBURG, NOV. 18.— The heavy rains of last night caused a most dis astrous landslide from Mt. Washing ton, on the south side of the Monouga hela river, the sides of which are al most perpendicular, and along the base of which the Pan-Handle Railroad is constructed. The Limited Express on the Pan-Handle Road, due in the city at 9.40, had reached a place just beyond the Point Bridge, one mile from Union Station, when a mass of rock came crashing down the hillside. The train consisted of three Pullman cars, in ad dition to several mail cars. The first sleeper was the Cincinnati,and the sec ond and third from Indianapolis. The first mass struck the Cincinnati sleep er, crashing through the roof near the centre. This car had very few passen gers in, and nearly all of them were un and in the lavatories. D. Arubeim, of this city, was standing in the isle and was crushed beneath a huge rock. Mr. A. S. Bennet, of N