CUMMARY OF THE NEWS. Beord of Important ErnU During th Past Week. THURSDAY, 1V1.1 M. Tb atrlke situation tn South rn Knnma fctarious, and but (or the Appearance of btrifTt posse at Weir City yeeterday a Maodf battle would have been fought. TSe marine honplul mrriet Km reoeiTed formation that yellow ferer contlnuea at Kmambuoo, Braxil, four canes having ham reported in the two weeks ended ye vday. Last evening Vice-President Stevenson gave a public reception tn San Francisco. George Frederic Parsons, for 10 years aa Htorial writer on the New York Tribune, fed yestenUy. Sunday, October 15, has boon chosen as tke date for the celebration of Cardinal CRbborts' stiver Jubilee. Busaell Sage, the New York millionaire, k being sueil for seduction under pruailw 4 marriage by Delia Kcegan. The amount axkad for Is $100,000. Mr. Sage denies the charges. The suit was begun in April, bat has been kept quiet until now. Mr. Qutnby, the United States Minister tn The Hague, has received his final in sarnotlons, and will sail for his post on Saturday. The funeral of Miss Garrett, the deaf route Instructor who committed suicide in Chlrago, will tike place at her former fcome. Cheater, Pa., ou Saturday. Rev. John Allison, one of the best known Presbyterian preachers In the country, died yesterday at St. Paul, Minn. The Tucker Men's Furniithlng Co., of TJenvec, made an alignment yesterday; liabilities (ti,000; mortly in the east. Fire yesterday burned out the wholesale boot and shoe store of J. M. McDonnell, atTroy.The aggregate long Is about $tf0,000. The cyclonic storm aocompanlud with bail which paed over Connecticut Tues day evening made terrible havoc with the tobacco crop in the town of East Hartford, the largest tobacco growing district in the fertile Connecticut valley. Fill DAY, JULY Sk Swedish day was celebrated at the World' Ftir yesterday. The U. S. S. Yorktown dropped down New York harbor yeHtvnlay to the powder station and after supplying herself with ammunition the ship will start on her long voyage to join the Pacific station. TheVuweU of the suicide Chicago banker, Herman Schalfner, will not pay 12 1-2 per cent of the liabilities. Five thousand people saw the dosing ex ercises of the Ocean Grove Suntay School Assembly yesterday. The parade of chil dren was led by 86 flower girls. Senator Edward B. Osborne, representing the old Fifteenth district, was found dead In his bed at the residence of his son In Albany, yesterday. Two hundred boilermakers and sheet Iron workers quit work in the boiler yards of Rohan Bros., Wangley, Garstang & O'Brien, St. Louis, yesterday. Miss Jennie Odeukirk, 25 yean old, reg istered at a Chicago hotel from New York and swallowed a dose of laudanum in her room. Her life was saved, however. She (fused to tell her motive. SATl'RDAY, JVLY St. The Commercial bank of Milwaukee failed yesterday. It had weakened since the Plankington failure by depositors with drawing their funds. Eight mothers of eight young house breakers whipped their sons in the court room before the judge at Harrodsbarg, Ky., Instead of having tbem sent to the penitentiary. Mrs. Margaret McCabe, of New York etty, was sentenced to nine years' impris mnent for having thrown out of a win dow and killed a two-months-old baby. It was announced yesterday at Spring field, Mass., that at a conference of Demo crats it was decided to nominate Mayor Hate Matthews of Boston for Governor and James H. Carroll of Springfield for Lieutenant-Governor. Fire in Long Island City burned over two entire blocks, made over 100 families home less, and caused a loss of $4000,000. In a fight between miners now at work and the strikeis at Wier City, Kan., last night, women and children led the van. A regular battle took place In which one woman, one boy, two striker and three Ulnars were seriously Injured. A new lot of outlaws fully as desperate and vicious as the Starr gang have recent ly banded together in Indian Territory. Detectives have captured three mem bers of a gang of burglars and recovered about $10,000 worth of stolen property. The burglars lived in fine style in Ridge wood, L. I. The Texas cotton crop is tn the most critical condition for years. It has suffered tram drought and other causes, and grass hoppers, worms and other Insects have rallied the crop. When questioned as to the effect of an extra session of Congress on Eastern in vestors, Gov. Walte, of Colorado, replied: "Ob, damn the people in the East. We want to scare them to death." SUNDAY. JULY S3. The Agricultural Department haa Just issued a bulletin on the subject of peach yellows, prepared by Special Agent Erwin r. Smith. After a reception by the Merchants' club at San Francisco, Sutunlay afternoon, Vice President Stevenson and party started for Portland and Puget Sound. ' Shortly after 13 o'clock lost night fife broke out lu the King carriage works at Black Rock, N. Y. The loss is about $40,- UUu, with small In mi ranee. Charles W. Depauw and the New Albany Kail Mill Company of New Albany, Ky made an assigumeut Sutunlay for the benefit of their creditors. The assets are valued at over $1,000,000, and the liablli ities are not stated. Fifty creditors of the Armstrong Co., manufacturer of uniforms and regalia, of l,iiicHtfo, who failed recently, held a meet ing Saturday at which It was decided to reject the firm s offur of 2 per cent to lie paid in four, eight ami twelve months. MONO AY, Jl'LY 84. The British steamer Campania. Cant. Haines, from Liverpool, which left Queens town at 1:02 p. m. yesterday for New York, intends to take tlia northern course with view to lowering the record. About 500 negroes were shipped from Birmingham lust night for Leaven worth, Kan. It is proposed to replace strikers with them. Agents of the mine owners will endeavor to secure 1,000 more bug roes. The London and New York money markets war more easy to day. The New Hampshire Traat Company of Manchester, one of the heaviest financial Institutions In the State, has been enjoined. Bank Commissioner Lyford has gone to Manchester. President Cleveland spent several hours to-day on his message to be presented to congress on Aug. 7. Over 80 men were Injured, three fatally, in a fight Sunday at Pitts, burg, Pa, be tween roles and Hungarians. TUESDAY, JULY B. The 200th anniversary of Detroit's birth was celebrated yesterday and In honor of Antolne de la Motte Cadillac, the French explorer, who first settled there. The day will hereafter be Known as Uartillao day. In the suit of Delia Keegan against Rus sell Sage for $100,000 damages for seduc tion under protnlxe of marriage, Judge Buokstsver yesterday reserved bis decision as to further extension of time for the de' fondant to file an amended answer. It is reported that the management of the Pennsylvania road has decided to dls pense with the use of the telegraph wires almost entirely In the operation of its trains and to substitute for them long distance U-lephones. John II. McAvoy, founder of the McAvoy Brewing Company, and oDe of the best known citizens of Chicago, died last night aged ou. A new Anarchist monthly under the name of IMe Itrandfackel (Tho r laming 1 orcli) male its appearance yesterday In New York. The Grand lodge of the Theatrical Me chanics association of the United States and Canada has begun a three days session lu Cleveland. The United Statos ship Chicago sailed yesterday from Kingston, Ireland, for Cherbourg, France. Harry Hitchcock of Baltimore has lived five days with a broken neck. His chances for getting well are not good, however. William Kemppr of Baltimore, aged 00 years, is locked up, charged with enticing little girls into his house for immoral pur poses. The commercial travelers are gathering in force for the days that have been spec ially set aside for tbem at the World's Fair. The factories of Samuel Boyd, in Ger mantown, Pa., were closed on Saturday, and the superintendant told the employes to look for work elsewhere. Secretary Herbert of the Navy yesterday completed his inspection of the Charlestown Navy Yard. He expressed bis gratification with the condition of things. Commander DickenB has been formally detached from duty at the Washington Navy Yard and ordered to command the training ship Monongahela. The Canadian Pacific railway company notified 300 of its employes yesterday that their services were no longer wanted. Economy and retrenchment are given as the cause. WEDJfKSDAY, JULY SO. The National Cordage Company will probably be reorganized. August 4 has been set apart for "Scot land's Day" at the World's Fair. Peter H. Titus, the oldest resident of Long Island City, died at his home late lust night. He was In his ninety-second year. Edward T. McLaughlin, aged 80, pro fessor of English literature at Yale, died yesterday of typhoid fever after a week's illness. The abstract of the condition of National Banks in Chicago, Illinois, on July 12, last shows the reserve to have been 30. 61 per cent. The total loans and discounts were $81,563,000. F. Davis' grist mill at Rutland, the largest in the State of Vermont, was nearly destroyed by fire. One large storehouse and other buildings were saved. Loss about $40,000. The total number of pensioners under the act of June 27, lb90, who have been noti fied since the incoming of the present ad ministration that the payment of their pen sions has been suspended, is approximately 6,250. Notice has been served on the Nebraska State Board of Transportation by tbe Chicago, Burlington, & Union Pacific that they would apply for an Injunction to restrain the State from enforcing the maximum rate law. The law becomes operative on August 1. Alleged DUhonMt Failure. Lima, O., July 24. The recent failure of the Cltt zejis' Bank of Ada for a large amount will probably result in the prose cution of the bank people. Only a few hours previous Mr. Ahlfield, it is alleged, gave mortgages to his sons and relatives covering all his property, consisting of the bank building, three farms, his residence, etc. One of the mortgages was made to his eon, only 14 years old, and the depositors propose to contest the legality of tbe transaction. Ahlfield has property enough to cover all the liabilities of the bank. Itev. Russell Changes His Faith, New York, July 20. The Rev. Edwin Benjamin Russell, the well-known rector of the American Chapel in Florence, bos abandoned tbe Protestant Episcopal Church and has been received in the Roman Cath olic Church by Archbishop Corrigan. Father Van Rensselaer, of St. Francis Xavlur's, who had a great deal to do with th conversion of Father Adams, is a friend of Mr. Russell, and his change of faith U largely due to biin. Mr. Gladstone Shaken Up, , London, July 20. Closely following upon the shaking up received by the Prince of Wales lu St. James street a cou ple of days ago by the collision of his ham son with another comes a somewhat sim ilar accident to Prime Minister Gladstone. The latter was proceeding to the House of Commons when bis brougham collided with a van in Parliament square. Mr. Gladstone, though he received no serious injury, was considerably shaken up. Republican League Headquarter Closed. New York, July 0. The headquarters of the National Republican League In this city were formally closed yesterday and etlects snipped to Chicago, where the future headquarters will be established. Air. Anurew t. uumpnruy, the secretary of the league, has lolt for Chicago, where he will arrange for the opeulng of tbe new headquarters on Aug. 7. The Catholic Summer School. Plattsuuro, N. Y., July 24. While, cf course, no sessions of the Summer School were held yesterday, the extremely impressive religious services held at St. John's Cburob might Justly be deemed a portion of the programme. Solemn high mass was sungNn the morning, followed by a sermon by Rev. J. H. Mitchell, Chan cellor of Brooklyn, an eloquent and forci ble eaker. ... s , Train Bobbert and a State Police. This country has had in the past six montns, the Railroad Gazette finds, sixty-one attempts to wreck trains and forty-one attempts to rob trains. Train wrecking is most com mon in the belt of States from Mass achusetts to Illinois. These states have a big mileage and frequent trains. They are, as every one knows, the great tramp route of the country. The Erie and Central have more tramps than the Pennsylvania lines, and the roads between Pittsburg and Buffalo, Chicago and St. Louis, have more tramps than lines to the south or to the west. This accounts for the large propor tion of train wrecking in these states. Train robbing is a western disease and worst west and not east of the Mississippi. Two-thirds of the train robbers have been in a belt from Iowa and Nebraska to Texas, includ ing Kansas. The Railroad Gazette justly says that this is a Populist re gion and when a big political party and its leaders arc abusing the rail roads as thieves it is not surprising that some men in the season are led to try to even up things. But whatever the reason the serious thing is that train robbers, once rare, steadily increases. They occur in the old states as well as new. While most of them are west,a full fourth are east of the Mississippi. Their be ginnings have been seen in New York. No state and no railroad has made any provision against them. In all of them the peace, security and pro tection of the countryside is left to the country constable and the sheriff and his deputies. This has not proved enough to keep the peace in rural and thickly settled districts in any other country in the world. It will not here. Every other civilized country has a state police, part of it mounted, which keeps the peace on the farm roads, the highways and the railroads. Spain, forty years ago, was full of train rob bers, until such a force was establish ed. Italy had them until this was done. Highwaymen in north and bandits in south Europe existed in all European countries until a paid, or ganized rural police waj organized and established in some way. With such a police this evil has disappeared in every European country but Sicily, Calabria and Andalusia, where there are still bandits. This police was not paid by the rural taxpayers. Not at all. It was supported by the central authority. Here it ought to be organized and paid by the states. Until this is done the Railroad Gazette will have an in creasing number of train robberies to report in every half-year and the daily paper an increasing number of lynch ings for the lynching is really only an attempt to make up by popular violence for a loose and inefficient execution of the laws. Ptess. LOOK! LOOK! LOOK ! There is an average of 131 suicides a year among every hundred thousand men in the Austrian army. Flcrlriritu ni.pratec all tb nenal - --- -- .a . I u U.U.I Mai.liin.ru sin fViA f i -rv f Cha,A lllh.titiiw UN niv laiilt Ul m Ot-Uldl lady in Wigtonshire, and lights the house as well. The current is genera ted by water power. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures piles. DeWitl's Witch Hazel Salve cures burns. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures sores. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures ulcers. ' W. S. Rishton, Druggist, iy In the human body there is said to be more than 2,000,000 perspiration f;lands, communicating with the sur ace by ducts, having a total length of some ten miles. Why, Ok, Why My sisters, do you suffer so? You have suffered, so loner you think there is no relief, yet reuet is close at hand it you will only accept it with the faith that has saved thousands. You may have displacement of the womb, or some form of ovarian trouble ; small tumors may be forming in the uterus, or you may be approaching " the change of life. Lydia E. Pinkhanis Vege table Compound goes straight to the seat of trouble, dissolves and expels tumors from the uterus, removes backache, and invigorates the entire system. " 0 nder its influence I gained S3 pounds. I know its value. and proclaim it best in the world. I twill cure you, for it cured me.andanumber of my friends also." Ida B. Puicher, Clear field St., Phila. All drufrgittn "11 It. Aadrci in conndtnrs, l I.TDIA K. PlNKHAM M ID. JT' KU&C: Co., Lvrnt, Mui, Q9 s UrtrJtUm, He ceet. 7 . GREAT CLEARING SALE. Our immense Stock of must be reduced. PRICES are way down on MENS' BOYS' and CHILDRENS' Clothing. We are offering big BARGAINS in all SUMMER Goods. Call and examine at "the te of Clotliiii 1 0. LW EN IS mww: mmm MB to- s QWL'W ra& mow DEEBMG BIHBBBS. When our Competitors pitch into the DEERING BINDER with FOLDING PLATFORM, the intelligent farmer at once concludes that if they arc so afraid of this particular machine, there must be 6ome virtue in the DLfcKlNu; else why should they fear the Deering as a Competitor. Remember, we have two sizes of MACHINES : THE DEERING IMPROVED STEEL BINDER and THE DEERING PONY BINDER. lo see them is to appreciate their value. We are offering a few SECOND HAND BINDERS at a SPECIAL BARGAIN. If 7 ar? going to buy a Binder this year, come and see us. We GUARANTEE to give you FULL VALUE and can SAVE MONEY FOR YOU. D- W. KITCHEN, 'pgjjJQ .j?j5i?!iy?i pa. T&e Fim&t Patterns, TM Finest Materia TM Finest The Finest Trimmed 9 The finest The finest Wa&h9 Tke FINEST FITTING LC that can be found in Bloomsburg is at 1. EWAOER'S THE RELIABLE CLOTHIER. You will positively get the most value by trading with I. Maier for your CLOTHING, HATS, SHIRTS, NECKWEAR, &C. 'lotliniig made to order of eorreet styles, sibhI Sat sfaction guaranteed. I. MAIER, Bloomsburg, Pa.