vko.h all Aitnrxn Tin: ktate. Gitthrrrd fram all Sectlona of the Coinmoawcalth, Ttrcms, May 81. Yesterday special train on the Tyrone and Clenrfleltl road, ampoM-d of Walter Main's circus can, got beyond the control of the trainmen and came down the mountain with fcnrful sapidity. At Vail station the train waa Wrecked and animal, men and broken Bra were piled up together. Several Hirers and lion made their eacape and only after Mm greatest exertion were they re-cii plural, and then not until one of the tigers had killed several domentie Animals In the neiuhborhood. Five men were killed out light and ten other were wounded, sonio atlhvra fatally. The cart are a complete wrack and will take several dnys to get the property together. The wreck is one of tba womt that hat occurred on this divi sion, and the worst In numlx-rof lives lost. Those killed are: William Henry, brake Ban, Tyrone; Frank Brain, Indianapolis, InrL; William Murperly, Kant Liberty, l'a. ; John Stayer, Hontzdale, l'a.; Ixmie Chum plain, Kochoster, N. V. The Injured were taken to the hospital in Altoona. They ace: John Chambers, colored, Chnnitars barg, bitten severely by a lion; Willis Obrannon, Cliamborsburg, wound of the scalp; Arthur Iiuchards, Penchville, l'a., wounded nbout the face; George Corlin, Holiidaysburg, contusion of the chest; Frank Harret, Tnrentum, contusion of the left arm; David Jonts, llnrrmburg, sprain d right leg; Frank Motso, Uocliesler, N. Y.. wounded about the bond; William Karens, Williaiustown, Pa., rliflit ankle injured; William Patchel. frubois, l'a., contusion of the left knee; James i fancy, Aiberton, I'tt., badly injured about the body. WiLKES-BAnns, May 25. The danger ous and disgraceful scenes that threw Plymouth people into a constant turmoil and dread three yenm ago, owing to the church war, are likely to break out afresh. By a recent decision of the bishop Rev. father Kosalko, who was driven out three years ago, has been ordered back to the parish. He forcibly took possession of the church Tuesday night, but was not allowed to rater the parsonage, the housekeeper stand ing guard with a revolver. The people are up in arms, and any slight encouragement would precipitate a riot. Three years ago this church was at war. Graves were broken open and desecrated, and attempts wara made to blow up the priest's house with dynamite. Not until the "Polish King," Martin Wilkes, was sent to the penitentiary for a year was the trouble aba tad. Wilkes Is now as; aiu in Plymouth. Scrajtox, Mry 81. Vance HarjMjr, of Chester, waa arrested here Monday night and taken to Philadelphia yesterday on a warrant issued by Magistrate Durham, charging him with embezzlement of $1), 000. The warrant was sworn to by George W. Carpenter, of the Girard buildinj in Philadelphia, agent for the Union Deben ture Company, of Minneapolis, for whom Harper waa a sub-agent in charge of Northeastern Pennsylvania offices. Har per ia accused of disposing of bonds en trusted to him for sale and using the pro ceeds for his own benefit. Scr anton, May 29. Henry Chapman, a brakeman on the Susquehanna division of tbe Erie railroad, waa shot in the groin and probably fatally wounded at Susquehanna by Lottie Dorsey, the notorious "White Widow," of Lee Dorsey, colored. The Dorsey woman Uvea near the depot and claims that Chapman came to her bouse and began to abuse her. She put Win out mid he returned with a stick and waa about to assault her, when she shot him. The victim lives in HornelUville, where he has a wife and three children. Tnr.no.NT, May 80. Through the care lessness of one of their number six miners employed at the Middle Creek colliery of the Heading company were most seriously burned by an explosion of gaa yesterday. The names of the unfortunate men are: Charles Mnurer, John Seager, Frank Huth, Willium Uoltz, William Bretzius and Wil liam ErdtMHTi. The injuries of the first four are fatal. The explosion was caused by one of the men carrying a naked lump. OoKNEixsvii.LK, May 80. A horrible tragedy whs discovered in Sfcw Haven, just across the river from here, about 8 o'clock yesterday afternoon. An entire family named Hoy, consisting of mother, father and two children, went found murdered in their bous?. The Hoys lived in a house in tbe thickly settled neighborhood of New Haven, and no one had ever dreamed that such a tragedy could be enacted without arousing the neighbors. Philadelphia, May 80. David Coldren, aged 43 years, shot at but missed his wife Kate yesterday, at their home, 4520 Lan caster avenue, and then fired a bullet into bf own brain. The suicide and woitld-be murderer had been oa a week's spree since receiving his pension money. A recent ac cident injured his head and he is believed Co have been insane. He left a letter de nouncing his spouse. Wilmamsport, May 27. Henry J. VTeas ner, of the Williamsport Pluning Mill Company, was run over by au engine in tbe Pennsylvania railroad yard, in this city yesterday and died two hours later in the hospital. He was terribly cut and braised, bis left leg and thigh right !; and left arm being crushed, He was a highly respected citizen, 53 years old, and leaves a widow and two daughters. Heaping, May 27. A notice from' City Controller Koch to some of tbe council manic committees has caused u sensation among councilman. He has Informed tbe eoramittees that hereafter he will not tlgn warrant for expenses incurred by commit tees, except for such things as are clearly allowed by law. Feasting at the public expense is to be stopped. SitiPPENBiiuiwi, May 27. Peter West, who resides near bera, and Hiram Plough, pension agent at this place, were arrested by Deputy United States Marshal S-'amuel S. AniltTion, of Jturrlalturg, and Detective Hcbweeler, of Philadelphia. It is alleged that West and Plough wure lu collusion to obtain extortionate pension fees from their clients. Cauusi.e, May 27. Yesterday afternoon the jury returned into court with a verdict of murder in the first degree nsalnst Charles Halyards, which was received by the crowd present with every mark of ap proval, halyards, though striving to put on a bold front, showed Eigns of a break down when he heard the verdict read. Philadelphia, Muy 00. IIoiuliiiR stock dropped to 8 1-4 yesterday afternoon against 10 11-10 at tlio cloao on Saturday. The sales were heavy. A disapprov.il of the reorganization plan by the speculative public ifi the cause, This is tlm lowest ligure rencl;l since the receivership was instituted. fiHAHoxi.-?, May 81. The through Phila delphia freight train was wrecked at Pax iiwrs yesterday. Twenty cuts left the truck. No one was injured but the dauiau in bcAvy. Tin; sews rnoji all Anorsn. . Condensed Aeenunts of all the Important' Happening-. Arkansas floods are receding, desplts more heavy rains. Bethlehem iron works have Just turned out four 18-inch guns. A quarantine mny be necessary to check the Lancaster county flea plogua. Three cattle owned by J. M. McDonald, near Phuenixville, were killed by lightning. Colonel Rockwell Tyler died at White Sulphur Springs, N. Y., kgtd sixty-eight years. Big Improvements are ninUng at the Thomas Iron Company's furnaces at Hel leitov.n. Thirty-one inemliersof the Union league, of Philadelphia, spent Sunday at Gettys burg. The Lancaster flea or lousu pest bas ex tetidco! to' the. western borders of Chester county. The Viking ship, from Norway, has ar rived oir Newfoundland, " l'a way to the World's Fair. While attending a meeting of Heavenly Recruits in Reading, George Gorman dropped dead. The National Federation of America ap peals for money to help the home rule bat tle in England. In a cpiarrel at KlliottljorouRU, Alle gheny county, Michael Fleckeusteiu shot Patrick O'Dounell dead. Kansas' populist state officers have form ed a publishing company and will send out tons of Alliance literaturo. The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company has paid into the state treasury $50,000 tax on loans for Ibid. Putting four bullets in his wife's head, Captain W. F. Ahrron, of Sassafras, Ya., then blew his own head off. Going to sleep with a lighted candle in her lap, Rtcd Mrs. Davis, of Ebensburg, woko up fatally burned. Archbishop Sntolll, the apostolic dele gate, will go to Chicago, to preach a mis sion to Italians of that city. The body of an unknown man was found in the river at Allentown nnd the coroucr U Investigating tbe matter. Lnwrenceville, 111., was visited by a ter rible windstorm. Trees were uprooted and several houses destroyed. A movement Is on foot to connect Sea Isle City, Ocean City, Cape May and Phila delphia by a telephone system. Proved an embezzler of $3,000 from the Victoria Mills, of Newburyport, Mass., Agent J. Albert Mills, is missing. Harry Dodd, aged 18, and Thomas Slajr- er, aged 17, evpert swimmers, were drown ed in the lake at Muskegon, Mich. A decree for $1,200,000 against W. N. Riddle, late president of the defunct Penn bank, Pittsburg, was sold at auction for$l. The dead body of a tinker named Fernell was found on tbe railroad near west Chester. Death resulted from heart disease. While older people hunted for rones, 11- year-old Frank Art ley jumped into the river at Johnstown and saved a drowning child. Professor W. M. Irvine, of Franklin and Marshall College, has been ohosvn presi dent ol Jlercersburg College, at Mercers- burg. R. Cory, of Lnkevlew, Iowa, and George Burgess and Bert Cory, of Odebolt, Iowa, were drowned whilo fishing in Wall Lake, ui Review. In a cmsade upon towboat owners the afllcers of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. at Pittsburg, cut loos and set adrift thir teen beats. With suiajdAl iutent, Charles Van Maus bach, of Zlonvllle, threw himself in front Df a train In Pottstown, but was rescued by an odicer. A long fight has ended In the selection )f Professor Q. W. Bible, of Indiana, as principal of the new troudsburg tate Normal school. Tbe Van Wagoner Williams Company, hardware manufacturers, at No. 14 War ren street, New York, hare been put in a receiver's bauds. Running in front ef a horse, Jesse Jones, 9 years old, of New Haven, Conn., was seized by the trousers and carried two blocks screaming. T. C. Ervin fcCo., dry goods dealers, of Chattanooga, Tenn., have made deeds of trust to secure preferred creditors to the amount ef $80,308. William F. Boyle, ef Preeland; George W. Fink, of Irwin, and William H. Hay, of Meyersdale, have been appointed presi dential postmasters. Mayhew Little, the pioneer expressman Df Ocean Grove and Asbury Park, N. J., snd founder of Little's express, died at bis home ia Asbury Park. - ' . By falling to advertise their primaries, as reqHired by rule, the Fayette county re publicans, it Is said, will not be able t hold a legal election this fall. Dr. Seward Webb, the New Tork mil lionaire, Is bnilding about his private park in the Adirondacks, a wire fence sixty three miles, that will cost .$50,000. Trying to drown himself In the river at 1'opeku, Kan., James Dalton, supposed to be one of the Dalton gang, was rescued by a policeman and found demented. A petition in favor of the reinstatement sf llev. Dr. Richard L Bintsell to the rcc-toi-hhip of Epiphany church,' New York city, was presented to Archbishop Satolll. John Wanamuker, of Philadelphia, will supply'8,000 pairs of shoes to the National uuMd, iniil Augustus Thomas & Son, of Philadelphia, will furnish 8,000 canteens. Dr. John Rchrudy was arrested in New Vork and rehoticd ou $5,000 in the action uf Mrs. Sarah J. Monroe to recover $20, IM0 danuiKcs far alleged breach of prorulso of marriage,. It is many years since crabs were so kciii'cu in .South Jersey waters. Very few me lieiiu caught and none are belug ship ped to 1'iiilttdelpliia or New York markets Itou Sea Isle. City. The schooner William M. Bird, Philadel phia for Bnttun, which was ashore off ilauV.eicliief shiml, near Vineyard Haven, iiu;.. three days, has been Itoitted and towed to Uuiiton. Rev. R. A. Olln, S. T. D., rector of Trinity Kplscopal church in Wutertown, X. Y'., and one of the most prominent eM'i',;ymen of his denomination, died there from pneumonia. The coutrac t for the construction of the Chester, Durby and Philadelphia street electric railway has been awarded and the work of eoum notion will be started In a f';w days. Jolfh L. O'Brien has been appointed re ceiver in supplementary proceedings for Alexander W. Harrington, wholesale deal er In pspcr, at No. 28 Elm street, New York, and Harrison, N. J., in the suit of tuii llousiitoiiic National banit. Theodore Hook It was Hook who perpetrated the jest that forms the turning point in Gilbert Gurney's career. One clay he and the elder Mathews, the comedian, took a row up the river to Richmond. Passing a well-trimmed lawn at llarnes, they ' noticed an inscription-board sternly forbidding any strangers to land. This was enough for Hook. Tying the lioat to a tree, he and Mat hews landed, taking with them fishing rods and lines.' Hook acted as a land surveyor, Mathews as his clerk Pacing slowly to and fro across the lawn, ihey used their fishing-rods as pretended measuring and levelling staffs, their lines as yard and rood measures. Soon a parlor window opened The occu pant of the villa, a well to do-alderman, strode out in great wrath and demand ed what the two interlopers were about. Hook cooly but courteously informed him that a new can-1 was to be cut directly across the lawn, and that he and his clerk were taking accurate measurements. Tartly in rage, partly in despair, the alderman invited them in to talk the matte over. Dinner was just ready. The wine Jlowed freely. The alderman sought to persuade the surveyor that another line forthecanil might easily be obtained. Hook said he would do his best. Good humor ! was restored, the conversation erew general, the novelist and the comedian succeeded in charming the, household. At last Hook sat down to the piano, I and finally, after numerous brilliant impromptus, rattled off the following lines: Many thnnks for your excellent faro. But wc are not the men tuat we look: My friend's Mr. Mathews the player, And I am one Theodore Hook. W. aS'. Walsh, in June Ltypincotl's. I have not used all of one bottle yet. I suffered from catarrh for twelve years.- experiencing the nauseating dropping in the throat peculiar to that disease, and nose bleed almost daily. I tried various remedies without bene fit until last April, when I saw Ely's Cream Balm advertised in the Boston Budget, I procured a bottle, and since the first days' use have had no more bleeding the soreness is entirely gone D. G. Davidson, with the Boston liuget, formely with Boston Journal. It Should Be in Every House. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps burg Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds, that it cured his wife who was threatened with Pneumonia after an attack of "La Grippe," when various other re medies and several physicians had done her no good. Robert Barber, of Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr. King's New Discovery has done him more good than anything he ever used for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Free Trial Bottles at C. A. Kleim's Drug Store. Large bottles, 50c. and $1.00. INK HAM'S Vectoleipolno Ia a positive cur a for all those painful Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, of the Womb, and consequent Splaal Weak-: ness, and la peculiarly adapted to the Chunge qUfv. Every time it will cure Backache. It haa cured more cases of Lencor-: rlicea than any remedy the world has ever known. It Is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the L'terus in an early stage of development, nnd checks any tendency to cancerous humors.. That Bearlng-down Feeling causing pain, welcht, nnd backache. Is instantly relieved and permanently cured by Its use. Under all circum stances it acts In harmony with the laws that covern tlio female system, and is as harmless, us water. It removes Irregularity, Suppressed or l'nlnful Menstruations, Weakness of tlio (Stomach, Indigest ion, Hloalinif, Flooding, Nervous Prostr. tioii, Headache, General Debility. Also Dizziness. Faintness, F.xtrema Ltissltuuo, "don't care" and "want to bo left ulone" fooling, exci tability, irritability, nervousness, sleep lessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the "blues," ami bucltiiehe. 'J'heso aro sure indications of Femule Weakness, soinu derangement of the Uterus, or Womb Troubles. The whola Ktory, liowever, Is told in nnilluMnited hoolc entitled "Guido to Health," by Mrs. l'iuklmm. It con tains over HO pities of most important information, which every woman, mar ried or single, should know about her eelf. Send 2 two-cent stamps lor it. For Kidney Complaints and Uncltaolio nf either sex tlio Vege tnlilo 'otuiioiind is tiitenuHlcd. (VY'.VVyV) AlldlURL'lhlUMll l.iTtr rum, ur,o., ruifUlllniHUMH.Coniitl. patlon, an) Turpi J I-Ivor lly mull, or of (Ii ukuIiIi. tiniiml. or cent bv iiiih), In form of 1'iltit or Locnpen, en recciptnl Jtl.O.). Currrjipoitttr nee fferlu utttivJt'fvtt, ion can ndnri'ss in strlcicst tviiimenea, LVDU V.. riNKUAU 31 Kit. CO., I.yua, Uut. LOWENBERG CLOTHING STORE for :Fortyhvo Years lias tike D.t aids-tad and aniovecl Mie patronage and con. - 1 JL " ' - ty, We merit etl :ii Localise we liaye always stood on II 10 rock of Truth, Honesty -and Fair (1 online; -to a'lL L - . . . Yotldnrtis misrepresented and everyone pleased; We are showing a Beautiful line of spE-iira suits fov mex BOYS and CHILDREN. Also a full line of . TOURIST HATS in aU uoto's, ana ino cw wwjv niuxiiii wwi"1 ii.ii au me POPULAR CLOTHING STORE. OF D. LOWENBERG. ON TOP. THE PEERING PONY BINDER. "A Little Beauty" A Great Some" Cuts Harvest Expenses in Two. The New Deering Mower a a ki m m: ... riMab.u-ia jsi.t.. You know what it has been ; This year it is without doubt BETTER THAN EVER. tevJ Don't buv a Binder or Mower :4hiLi nnfi von kpp the IJ1.Ej1v11XU. 3 J Send for our Beautiful New Cata logue, "Triumphs of the 19th SadNtiMWi Century. D- W. KITCHEN, AGRI9ULIJSi,oRP,ALEMENTS BLOOMSBURG, PA. 9 9 TM Finest Material, The F most 8kjl Tke Finest KrimmGd:, The finest Gut, Wke finest Mk&e, auM The FINEST FITTING'. that can be found in Bloomsburg is at 1 E THE RELIABLE CLOTHIER. You will positively get the most value by trading with I. Maier for your CLOTHING, HATS, SHIRTS, NECKWEAR, &C. '3o&fiiifiBg made to order co&'ace wtySes, nnd 1. MAIER, Bloomsburg, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers