J .'- i It will be the duty, as stated in the EBENSDURC. PA.. FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1882. ' Cam;:f:on"s State Convention reas BemMeil at llarriburg on Wednesday last and nominated a Lancaster city law;,.-, named J'rosius, for Congress-man-af -large, in place of ' 'glorious old Toiu Marshall. What else, if anything, was dune we are unable to state. Col. t'RKDEr.iCK Conklixo, of 2sew lork, makes the statement, the truth of which is not likely to be assailed, that during the twenty-two years rule of the republican party two hundred and ninety-six million acres of public land, as veil as sixty-four million of dollars in Government bonds, have been giveu away to railroad corporations and other monopolies. Here is a declaration wor thy the solemn reflection of every citi zen of the country. com- mittee, at its meeting atllarrisburg on j Wednesday next, to take op and dispose j ot the rules for the government of the i party in the State, which was attempted to be done by the convention of last year, but which it failed to do for reav sons not necessary here to mention. These rules were prepared by a commit tee regularly appointed, of which W..II. Ilensel, Esq., of the Lancaster InteUi fffnctr, is chairman. They provide that the State Central Committee shall con- LETTLU FROM CALIFORNIA. Tcelock: Stanislaus Co., Cal ) JuneS, 1882. J Dear Friend As my 65th birthday will be here in 10 days, I shall write you a letter just for a birthday present, But I suppose you are so proud of yur new Court House that California news would be a stench in your nostrils. I was pleased with the advice u. S. trave you about making money, and if there was no hereafter I would advise vou to take it. If you get no help here In life's trials, you may get to be a door keeper in the house of the Lord, which David thinks is better than to revel in The Democratic State Convention. WILD WESTERN WISDS. EWS AND OTHER XOT1NGS Judge Bradley, of the United States Supreme Court, to Whom Mr, Heed, the counsel of Guiteau, applied last week for a writ of habeas corpus, filed a denial of the application with the clerk of the Court on Monday last, on the ground that the Court of the Dis trict of Columbia had full jurisdiction in the case and that no reason exists for granting the writ, This was Guiteau's last chance and he will undoubtedly be Lung on next Friday. a. i a. a - ...I r, Aon 1 1 1 - rk t Via laoara sist of the chairmen of the respective , of R blican party are now doing County Committees, who shall annual- i in -Washington, D. C. You are not ly, at their January meeting, elect a j State Executive Committee, (from with- ; in or without its own membership), to consist of 6eveu members, for the special ; management of campaigns ; that the j State committee shall meet the evening : before the convention meets, to appoint j the temporary chairman and secretaries of the convention, and agree upon and 1 Cx the prima facie temporary roll of the convention and certify the same to the : temnorarv secretaries that tho retire- ! tne Republicans to divide, the printers temporary secretaries , tnac tno repre their fuU ghare but when U)(, Dem, sentation in State conventions shall con- , ocrat3 cet a few surplus crumbs, the sist of two delegates for each represen- man who sets np at night and sets type tative in the Legislature from the re- i to keep the party together in time of alone, however, in your misfortunes. In our county one I. D. Spencer has run a Democratic paper for 14 years, when times were hard and the country new. Now, that the people are in a more pros perous condition, a gorilla from new Zealand starts a Democratic paper and some of the Democrats are willing to support it in preference to the regular organ. Happily he has no more influ ence with ths masses than a tit bird would have on the back of an elephant. When there are any loaves and fishes for The Democratic conferees of the Fay ette, Westmoreland and Greene district met on Friday last, and on the second Lullol unanimously nominated Charles L Boyle, of Unioutown for Congress. This is the first nomination in the State made by tho Democrats, and it is one of the very best that will be made by eith er p.irty anywhere in Pennsylvania. There are few betU r equipped men than Mr. Boyle for a seat in Congress. Be tween Liiii and Morgan It. Wise, the present member, the difference is a3 great asthat between aBeugal tiger and a singed cat. spective representative districts, which abolishes the useless system of Senator ial delegates : that at State conventions the corumittees on credentials, resolu tions and permanent organizations shall each consist of as many members as there are Congressional districts, the delegates from each district to appoint one member for each of the committees. These rules, with, in our opinion, one exception, ought all to be promptly adopted by the convention,, and their consideration oughtto take place before trial is ignored, and some scalawag steps-in and gets the best of the crumbs. What a fine arrangement it is that there is a heaven and a hades in the hereafter. There never was a time when the Democratic party had better prospects for obtaining the control of the Nation, State and County than at present, yet the Devil steps in and divides them just when they should be united, I hear of division and discord everywhere, and Pennsylvania it not an exception. Now that the Republicans are divided, it is the best time for the Democracy to be united, but false ambition rules the hour. Such is political life, which, like n . i ' . I the fragile flower, blooms but to fade any of the State nominations are made, j and d nQ matl'er how rich the goil in oiuer io secure uuai action upon which nroiiarrutec it, ast year's conven-1 The wheat crop ii A dfstatc ii from the correspondent of the New York Jit raid, dated near the mouth of the river Lena, Sibeiia, April 12, 1-2, states that Engineer Melville and the searching party with him found the bodies of Lieutenant De Long and Lis ten companions on the 23d of Marcli about thirty foet from the edge of the river b.mk. The bodies were in two diflt.ici.1 plact s, those of DeLong and two others bi.-ing covered by about a foot of snow, with one of I t Long's them, the failure of 1 tion to adopt them having been caused by the single fact that their considera tion was delayed until after the nomi nation for State Treasurer had been made. The one exception we make to them is the proposition to increase the membership of a committee to double the present number of the members of in our fetate is a dis appointment and a delusion. Up to the first of May there were strong hoies that the year would equal 1880, when this State raised more wheat than it ev er did in any one vear before or since. But on the 4th, 5th, fith, 7th and 8th days of May a frightful northern gale blew great guns and dried up 75 per cent, of all the moisture ir. the earth and air and chilled the wheat, little of which has recovered from the effects. Our One week from to-day the Democratic State convention will assemble at Har risburg to nominate a State ticket, which will embrace a candidate forGov vernor. Lieutenant Governor, Supreme Judge, Secretary of Internal Affairs and Congressman-at-large, and to take such action in regard to the future of the par ty as will tend to the advancement of its interests and its perpetuation. It is hoped that wise counsels may prevail in its deliberations, and that the utmost harmony may characterize its proceed ing. Let the convention give us pure, able and truly honest Democrats as can didates, whose names have never been tarnished by a single blot of political dishonor, and a platform of principles founded upon the eternal principles of Democracy, and a triumph of no ordi nary character will be the result. Let it proclaim with unerring precision the principles and policy of the Democratic party having for its guiding star the fundamental and immutable truths pro claimed by the fathers of the party nearly a quarter of a century ago and all will be well, and the political bon dage, the corruptions, the aggressions and the usurpations which have existed for the past twenty years, and wholly chargeable to the Republican party, will give place to a deliveiance from the evils that have been steadily oppressing our people, and which have been driv ing our country to perdition with fear ful and astounding rapidity. The con vention, by its wise conduct, will prove the harbinger of success ; and the Dem ocracy of, the State are looking earnest ly forward for the realization of the hope that is within them, which must not be blighted in the slightest degree. They demand that their voices shall be heard in that convention in the iuterest of the Democratic party, and hopefully trust that no evasion or departure from principle will characterize its proceed ings, and that no political trickery will be allowed to prevail, as lias unfortu nately been the case at different periods in the history of the party. Let the good of the party predominate, and let the nominees of the convention be the i most capable, the strongest, and the , most substantial material in the com- I monwealth, who will be an honor to the party and an assurance of success, Greensburg Democrat. TERRIBLE TORNADO IN IOWA, MT3SOCRI AND KANSAS MAS T LIVES LOST AND MUCH VALUABLE PROPERTY DESTROYED. Pep Moines, Jure 18. A tornado swept through Central Iowa late last niclit from northwest to southeast fiom twentv miles north of Des Moines. Ttie town of Grinneli Timber rafts are selling at Marietta as high as twenty-six cents per cubic root. A chicken with all the symptoms o: drophobia, was killed in West Chester the other niiv. . Twenty-seven Apache prisoners at Chi huahua, Mexico, were taken out on Monday last and shot. was struck by it and half of the town was i I'unv. weak, and sickly children need left in ruins. The foUowinz despatch was I Brown's Iron liitters. It will stren received from Grinneli early this morning Our ctty Is halt In ruins by aeyglone. Krom five to ten persons are killed and from fifty to one nun- j dreil wounded. Send doctors foin Newton and i Ie Moines by special train. W'e hare no wires working outside of the town. Send Immediately, ! ry order of the Mayor of the citv. Moth colleae buildings and half of our best residences are flat j on the ftround. . irt. Christian." I A short time after 1 A. m. a soecial train y bearing twelve physicians from Des Moines, Colfax and Kellogg, proceeded to the scene i of tho disaster, reaching there at 3.40 A. M. j A despatch says that thirty-two are dead . and 100 or more are wonnded. j Eieht deaths are reported from Malcolm, j which is entirely leveled and destroyed. j Brooklyn has alsosuiTered somewhat. Some ; eight students are badly injured, having ; been due out of the ruins. The Chapin ' House has been turned into a hospital. Some of the most dangeroue cases are being cared for there. A later despatch from Grinneli pays the surgeons now report that forty-one are dead strencthen and invigorate them. The Very tilev. William Walker, Prior of the Order of M, Benedict, at Newark, died on Saturday, aeed 42 years. Stiiloh's Catarrh Kemccly a positive cure for cstarth, diphtheria and canker mouth. At James' drus store. E. W. Wall, of Niobrara, ate 102ec(?son a wager at one sitting, drinking whiskey be tween each dozen. His competitor ate 03. The sons of Thomas Bntler and Michael Leonard, 12 and 13 years old respectively, were drowned on Saturday at Leicester, Mass. Oliver Larson and John refers were drowned by falling from the steamer Annt Betsey, near Hastings, Minn., on Sunday nieht. There arc now four oil wells in Garfield, the new oil town of Warren county, the as; greeate production of which is 800 barrels I j rer day. I j Henry II uddletnn, colored, was lynch- j ; ed at Winchester. Tenn.. on Saturday niclit i and that five or six more cannot live through ; for outrageously assaultini a widow named . the nitflit. The snrtreons report that the I Yauehn. 1 Hie liev. i.eo. n. inayer, or ltouroon, Ind., says : "Both myself and wife owe our ) Jives to Shiloh's Consumptive Cure." At number of wounded exceeds 150. The num ber of houses destroyed is between 140 and 150. The total loss of propertv is now esti mated at 600.000. It is feared that the nnm- James' drug store. ber of deaths at Orinnell will reach seventy- ' The SlieritT of Montgomery county last ty-five. The path of the tornado Is now j week levied on twenty-seven dogs, valued at well denned as having been about twenty- j from 5.H to 53.000 each, as the property of five miles long and half a mile wide, extend ing five miles northwest of Grinneli and twenty miles southeast, News has been re- a delinquent debtor. David Thomas, father of the anthracite iron business in the United States, diPd at ceived that Mr. James, his wife and two j Catasaqua, Pa., Tuesday afternoon, of pnen other persons living four miles northwest of , mouia, at the aje of 8S years. Grinneli, are dead. It is now thought that Georce Mitchell, wife and sister, out rid the loss of life outside of Giinnell will reach . ing at JSliiloh, O., Monday night, were fired twenty-five and the total loss nearly 100. j on ;by ambushers. Mitchell was wounded Eight persons also, at least, were killed at i and his sister fatally injured. Malcolm Station, nine miles east of ;Grinnel, Are you made miserable by indigestion and several were killed in the farming dis- j constipation, dizziness, loss of appetite, yel trict between those towns. A freight train j low skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a positive on tne hock lsiana ranroau was caugut in i cure At james drugstore. At New Orleans, on Satutdav afternoon. John King, a watchmau on the United States dredge boat Essayor, went out sailing upon thp rivpr. tftkinu in flip boat with him ten f hv I boys, sons of well-to-do citizens of Algiers, 3 ji iijr , r-;f,H I-:,i.. T-i.:i . I I.. the boat capsized, and the following ix boy? : were drowned : Thomas McCormack, af.c-d ' 16; George Mcuormack, 14; Willie Shory, 15: Merry Megget, 14; Daniel Kelley, 14 ; Charles l)uplesis, 13. The trark of the recent tcrnado in Towa begins at Jefferson, t miles west of Grin neli, goes eastward a few mile, south and parallel, keens that course to Marshall comi ty, when it turns southeast and goes straight j to Grinneli ; thence to Iron Bidge, 14 miles southeast of Brooklyn, then took a southerly turn to Henry county, and thence to Mt. Pleasant, where it stopped. The distance from Jefferson to Mt. Pleasant is 2"0 miles, and the velocity of the storm was about t"0 miles an hour. The Eufaula (Ala.) Bulletin says that Robert Hatfield, a fanner of that county, living on the upper t'hannahatchie creek, about nine and a half miles west of Euf.tula, died on Monday night lat from the effects of an accident that tx'fel him some two weeks since. He was fitting in a chair on the porch to his residence and hv some means t he chair slipped, throwing him verv heavily and j breaking the thigh-hone of his rit-'ht leg and I dislocating his hip. He lingered in great pain until death came lo his relief. A young woman namedi Lem'na Mouter, aged about 2 jears, a native of Sweden, was struck by a freight train at Tyrone, on last Sunday evening, and falling tinder the wheels was run over and had hT head sev ered from her body and was of course in stantly killed. Deceased had been in this country only about three months, and was employed as a domestic in the family of Mr. ! I). T. Caldwell. Another young country wo man who was with her at the time of the ac cident fortunately escaped without injury. A sloop from Perth Amboy. N J., at anchor in tho river opposite West Point, was struck by lightning, on Friday last, and a colored man on board was kilied. At West Newburg a barn was struck by lightning. Clarence 'stnnbrough, aged eighteen, and a boy named Decker were standing in the door way when the lightning passed between them and killed a horse. Manbrough Was rendered unconscious, but recovered. At Highland Kails a house ai.d a large barn were burned by the lightning, but nobody Know That Browk's Ircn- TStttt? -will cure the worst ca. cf dyspepsia. Will insure a hearty ?p-.ct' and increased dits.;" Cures general deLII ty, an-j gives a new leo.se cf Dispels ncrvcv.5 dq:rfs;:n and low spirits. Restores an exhausted nurs ing mother to full strer. h and gives abundant sus tenance for her child. Strengthens the mu c!e ts. 1 ficr-cs,enrichetheb'.o -,i Overcomes weakness, wake fulness, and lack cfcntrrr- Keeps off all chills, fcvers. and other malarial j-.o! -or.' Will infuse with nc-v the weakest invalid the wind betweenGiinnell and Malcolm sta- Two pynlmiAna rf ira nonnrrol r. Ilia Tinn and was hadlv wrecked, delavini? tho ! T.ehicrh nnrt WilbocliQrrn mia v, ,irl-7 I Was hurt. trains west three hours. A freight train on morning- There were eight miners badlv ! The country will be treat ly relieved to the Iowa Central road was also derailed lust , burned. 1 he mine is on fire the House, makinir the convention con- sist of four hundred and two delegates, .at was late, and a fine rain on the . 1 ; vui uay ui -May siiiuiait-u nic gluu,'ii in this neighborhood, and here we win This we think is unadvisable and would be a mistake. A convention thus con stituted would of course be more orna mental than one consisting of half that number, but it would not be any mora useful nor in any way more perfectly ' represent the wishes of the Democracy : of the State. Cambria county would be ! represented by four members instead of ! two, and we are opposed to any such in- ' crease, believing that no souud reason i ! can be given why it should be made. Li'ii.ls sticking out of the snow. Tiie j - Ctlp.rs w found at another place cov- j That annual stupendous swindle up trtd with Fii w. None of the dead had on the national treasury, the lliver and Loot 3 nil. their feet being covered with ! Horbor bill, passed the lower branch of ' i m-iiu rn i 1 nril-i u In vnt n r,f on. In th e ra r. hich had been tied pockets of and of Lad t ail i.. The hutiJ of all were more i cr lc -i lunn-.i, as though when dying j tli'.-v !.,: V' . l.iwled into the lire were pieces of burnt skin a l lit ot winch they AVii at was never done in this country Lcfoic, or in anv other country in the world, v.as doi.eby tho House at "Wash ington on Monday last, Under a sus pension of the rules and without a word cf delate, it passed a bill appropriating the colossal sum of one hundred millions of dollars for pensions. Let the taxpay ers of the United .States reflect upon this swift and profligate expenditure of their money, the fine fourth of which, in tho Irliuf of -Ir. JJeiitley, the late Connni-)Siontr of Tensions, is based on fraudulent claims. As the New York h'urLi says, this k-is tho labor for a year cf two hundred thousand laborers voted without debate. It is the full pay for a year of an army cf fivo hundred and fifty thousand private soldiers that the rules of the House wero suspended to distribute among claimants for pen sions.'" In comparison with this huge job, the cl7.o0,0X) lliver and Harbor bill swindle of the previous Saturday must liido its diminished bead. The day of reckoning lor these outrages will surely come. 110 yeas to 47 nays. The amouut appro priated in thj bill exceeds seyenteen millions of dollars, and by the time the Senate amendments are made to it tho grand total of the plundering scheme will not fall much below twenty millions The vote in the House, as above given, shows that oh its :inal passage only one hundred ar.d sixty-six members voted, while one hundred and twenty-seven shirked the question or refused to an swer to their names. A member of the House from Michigan, named llorr, was lrank enough to admit that he would not vote for the measure were it not for the fact that there is a large surplus in the treasury- have a fine crop. But the shower did not extend any great distance. We and a few neighbors were in luck, while oth ers will not be able to make even good pay out of their crops, which promised so well a month before. I am pleased to read of the general prosperity of Cambria and "Westmore land counties. I was born in the latter and spent half my life in the former, and these evidences of prosperity cheers my down-hill life. I read daily of some friend or acquaintance striking a bonan za, and hope, sincerely, that your turn may come soon and solid. "We used to say here that the "Chinese must co," but now it seems that the 'Chinese must come." They are com insr a thousand a week, and will come till the middle of August, and even af ter that, for there is nothing to hinder them from coming according to the late bill passed by Congress, bnt the resi dent, and he will not binder them much "you bet." I low does tt come that our race falls in love with every race, while it does really deerade its own ? The poor white girls in the East who obtain a living by making shiits at five cents a piece, and shoes at but little more than that, have no sympathy from nabobs and shoddy ites, while the lousiest nejrro, or Mongo lian, or Indian in the land is taken up and petted like an only begotten son. In j other races "like loves like," out our race seems to love contrast, and the greater the contrast the greater the love, How long our honest farmers and me- li-niifQ iwnrmir. t ho rilici.ilQ sif. AVab- The till was j jnarton city to plunder the nation while A Grand Labor Pemonstr ATrox. The Pittsburg Di.yatch of Monday last, in referring to the workingmen's parade in that city on the previous Sat urday, say3 : Saturday afternoon witnessed one of the greatest events in the history of modern trades-unionism. The great demonstration, which has been looked forward to for so long, took place under highly unfavorable circumstances, but notwithstanding this, it was an immense success m every particulat. In numbers, it thiew far in the shade the most enthusiastic political procession of an excited campaign the city has ever seen, and in sobrietv, order and the manly and digni fied hearing of the men it has rarely been equaled. Anions the oldest inhabitants few can look back to a procession of 8,0oo, 10,000 or 12,0o0, with not a single, case of drunken ness or disorder in the ranks ? Yet this was truh of the workingmen, and it went even farther than a mere show of numbers to wards winning th-i respect of the community and the approval of public opinion. The morning opened clear and pleasant, and the early trains on all the roa ls brought in large excursions. Chicago, June 18. The latest reports in regard to the cyclone in Iowa indicate that forty persons were killed and a great num ber wounded and that much property was destroyed. St. Locis, .Tune 18. A. special despatch from Kansas City says : "The most severe and destructive wind and rain storm Unit has visited this city in years occurred hetweea 1 and 2 o'clock yesterday moi-nlnir. The velocity of the wind was estimated at sixty miles an hour. The rainfall was heavy and the liulit ninir terrific. Scarcely an exposed buildinirln the city remained whole :"chimncys were blown down, roots taken otf, and In many eases, hones ruined, Amorn the more serious looses are the iron hridife, costing $10.001 between thi city and Armourdale. three sunns of which were carried away ; the street railroad st aides weredamaeed about $10.(H0, and the court house, which suffered to tho same extent as CJoatcs' opera house, lost its rof. hear that "Mr. Cameron believes that (ien Shiloh's Vitalizer is what von need for ! erai Heaver is me c hoiee oi nine-ienuis oi , constipation, loss of ar-netite. dizzines. and I Republicans in tne rate inn,mnmr all symptoms of dyspepsia, rriee 10 and 73 He thinks that a new convention would not cents per bottle. At James drng store. About thitty rigs and small tanks were struck hv lightning in various parts of the Bradford" oil field on Monday and several thousand barrels of oil were destroyed. At Cauchnla Station, Ala., on" Monday morning, lienjamin Butler and his wife beat only tie a needless expense, but that it would certainly result in the reimminption of the old ticket and would prove a farcical pro ceeding. Besides, the calling of a new con vention would be an admission that the first convention did not propel ly perform its duty, an insinuation that the cn;it irana hisfiie-nds tlliiir tnv a itt.A 1 ra f . .loitVi ati.1 ( I, .. n, ; 1IU1 1 glia II 1 1 repel. i his body out of the window of their house. t A special to the Pittsburgh pofcfi from j Ten colored men and a white woman, ln" rnace, June lf, says : u.ia.n Nash, j occupying a cabin in the bed of Two-Mile formerly a resident of I ns county, was ar ! creek, near Winehescer, Kentucky. w,.re rested near here on the charge of committing I drowned on Wednesday by a sudden flood. a cold b.oo.lc.l and brutal murder here near j Governor Mierman, of Iowa, h issued i !" t'1?h3 years a-o. The victim wns a prom- an anneal for aid inlhehalf of the sufferer.; of ! mem larmer name: v.rowms, wtiom -a-n JJ WiVer St., TVt;T.T. r,t form Trr I Lir - f r.t ufferCT frrra V'.x-i I) g-ep5:a.s?vf C'crj::-- -r." :.-, 3 dcbii;tated tea: If.' . . -t . nvthir.(5 cn rr.T v .?. n I fc had l..:it tt;--. a t.-- f ir.illy, Trhm h;t Kii - ; tie, TT. y hus.iar.1 1 h Tr. , Ik -4 F:TTv-s vr:'...-i m I-., aper, induce i rn t- f r t-. 1 am now iatc;r. t:.o t .-! ; t. , nd have tict ic.t . c.. :r. t f o&rt as I iu t t:;e t -t-z: : Brown's Iron BiTTirs will have a better t.nic effect upon any one who needs " bracing up," tl.ir. any mcdicins rr.aJ;. I the cyclone in that State. Contributions , at" laui -r nau c.eu irom m, i e i VTAD"? DIMTITn 7, r,l should be sent to Hon. J. B. Grinneli, Grin- everutiu of July 4, is 4, and lat am to death , I LAil 0 KCl HUli'-U lUI i t i ' noil i- ! with stones. No cause was assigned, but the , u " u the hotels were snore or less injured, and business houses atid dwellings in every art ot the city suf fered. The total loss will probably reach $-200,0Oo. 'Information Irom the surrounding eountry shows that the storm was general and that great damage was done to crops and property." Cairo, 111., June 18. A heavy wind and rain storm swept over this city a'xut :? o' clock p. m. to-day, doing considerable dam age to roofs and trees and overturning about twenty box cars in the Illinois Central yards. The Yincennes wharf boat was unroofed. At the. Beach Ridge a colored man was killed, and his wife, a white woman, had her arm broken by their house falling in on them. The wheat crop along the narrow-pauce railroad was badly damaged. Telegraph communication being cut otf from other nnints the damao-A to this section cannot hp Fully 8,ono people i estimated at present. At Metropolis City the storm was very heavy. It blew a whair boat loose, sank the steamer Jennie Walker, blew down the chimneys of the steamer Paris Brown, sank a coal barge, and blew the roof off a flour null and several other build- passed through the Union depot. The influx of visitors continued all morning and the va rious roads leading into the city had all tho traffic for afew hours they could convenient ly handle. A moderate estimate puts the entire number of strangers in the city up to i jnga. z o ciock. wnen trie procession started, at T T , I 25,000. The weather, which in the morning I . Leavevwotith, Kan .Tune IS. A tern promised to be so favorable for the occasion, b e wmd-atorm prevai.ed between W l became threatening in the early afternoon "'Tl1"-' '"" VPf3 an,l the fenr that the heavv showers of Fril Academy, four miles South of till, Cltj. Sllf- day night would be repeated had the effect TrJVy, LVJ, Zll Vn i t '! ! . r.t t.i . . i .1 a xi,. r. 1.1 .1 ! linn. viuiMi ii. xvuiiiii .'n isuiiiAin nun : sell, la While trying to ford a stream in I.im county, Kansas, in a wagon. Mrs. John Seals and her two children, two children narued Jankley, and a child named Jacket t were drowned. Nineteen firemen were injured by the falling of the wall of a burning building near Boston Saturday morning. Nine or ten were severely hurt and two are iu a dangerous condition. Three acres of land on which was a grove i of trees, at Bellaire. O., slipped into a valley. ; The trees retained their perpendicular posj. i tion, and the grove seemsto be thriving in its J new situation. I Three sons of Duncan Taylor, aged 8, 6 ! and 4 years, playing in a stable at Brussels, J tint., on isaturnay, went into the oat nm, the j murderers were but it drunk. They lied the ! country, and the son on r-t urning after seven i I years has ju-t been arn ti--L j ! " Dr. Jarvis'Gay, of Newroad, Mass., a , I veterinary surgeon. "nged so, was called early ; I Sunday morning to attend a sick horse at I Canton. He stopped on ids wayat the house j of George W. Edmund toini'piire the road. I t Edmund had recently moved there and had j i been often rohncd by tunglars. Seeing Gav i : enter the gate he ordered hiia to stop and tell ; ' his business. Cay, hard of hetring c(,niii- ! j uedihis approach and Edmund shot. Ed- ! i niund dared not leave the house during ti e j j night. Sunday morning he found the do.-.- I . tor's dead body in the yard, and his horse I hitched at the p--t. rJPIio rV'-v V;-;c WEEKLY WORLD of keeping hundreds from the ranks. lid of which closed on them. All were found dead from suffocation. At Wheatley Station, Ark., on the Mem phis and Little Bock Bailroad, John Snoddy and William Wa ker quarrelled about a bus iness matter on Saturday night, when a fight ensued and both were killed. Sunday was a day of drownings. Six boys were diowned at New Orleans, five men and two children in the province of Quebec, one at Cooiiey Island, and very likely some In other places. In the storm on Thursday last lightning struck the water o; Mead s point at JSorwich, . ....u:..i.i , i inanei an. L.anaman. oi this city, anu aiary i n. v.. throMinca Die roiimn or water to a vim ii in ii s i ;t i ten ii p cm 11 iiin-ni , .iiti. iihiiuuuy i , .. n.'t r , I . . , . , , , i at 2 o'clock. There were fully 20,000 men in Austin, of Carrollton, Mo., from eleven to j Freat height, and hundreds of arce bass and line, but the vast body of men was only ', ep" "ea? wf 'n5ta!1tiv killed.-- j other fish were soon floating dead upon the : tairlvon its way when huge drops of rain About twenty other children were uninjured. I surface. began to fall, coming thicker and thicker J ne nsa t-en tral ,e'CJ"r lo:n ; Etahdlenb Doanmoe a young Kiowa In The. dense crowds along the line were a ' '""J of.J' "f JJ1: '" ,n dian; late a student in the Carl.sie training obliged to seek shelter under convenient Ul" clx? " county is about ?"... , school, and now an assistant in the same in-' . . . .... f V lui t. iu Ti rT snrtcui cIl it mron ttur Tin fruit n . i -. i.'j-.w, . in-.. mi m hnrd ixt tnon h.tt tho - k. t ' "j - " 1 MlunMHI W lildl I it'll v: l.niil ft X'M-l'li;illrt, logrolled through the House, as it al- i thev work hard at home for a mere sub ways is, by a combination, embiacing sislence, is a question that has not yet members of both parties, who believe in the doctrine that it is perfectly legit imate to rob tho treasury by squander- I been answered. lion Kot. AVi: do r.ot think it at all likely that the nouiinalion for Governor at the Democratic state convention at Ilarris burg, on Wednesday next, will meet with much favor from the Philadelphia that independent organ having apparently reached the conclusion that llio coimntiuii is bound to make a mis take. It warns it against the guidance of "machine placemen and llourbou stupidity,' and pre Jicts a revolt of fear ful proportions '"if Demociacy fails to respond to tho imperious demand for candidates of tho most pronounced in tegrity and com'tency. " If there are any "machine placemen' who propose to control the action of the convention they don't live west of the Allegheny mountains, so far as we understand the present aspect of Democratic politics in this State, but must havo a local habi tation in the Timet' own city, where its supposed favorite candidate for Govern or usidcj. The geutlemen most prom inent as candidates for the nomiuation r.r Hopkins and Trunkey from tho wert, WoiVtrton and Coxe, from the M.hiiKh..iir.a region, and Monaghan nr.d i'atlisoti, fium the extreme east. "Will ti e 77.(. hazard the declaration that t il lit r of thee candidates is not a man "of tho most pronounced integrity and competency,'' the standard, and tho only true one, by which they must be judged by tin- voterr, of the State ? "We believe that twj of I he. six persons we liae mrru-d will be the nominee of the couvchli a, i lie editor of the Toms who io e; .-lionally familiar with the present ;. Ileal outlook in the State is biulit'c::S of the same opinion. There Will be no 'dark horse' kept out of view for a while and then entered in the race to carry off the prize. With such names lioi.i amongst which to choose, how.can ar.y mistake be committed, or what chance will there be for "'machine p'acemen or Bourbon stupidity." to con trol tki convention ? There will be none, alKiofutcly none, and yet from re cent u:;d mysterious , utterances of the Time our conviction is strong that af ter the nomination has been made its editor will discover that "Bourbon stu pidity has triui'tpbetl. must wait and bee. the public money on some useless stream in his district, with the aim of pleasing constituents and making them solid for his re-election. It was for this purpose alone that Harry White successfully en gineered through Congress an appropri ation of about twenty thousand dollars, to enable Ned Woi rail and his assistants to spend the summer in a survey along the Kiskiminetas and Conemaugh riv ers under the silly pietence of making them navigable by slack water improve ment. White would have attempted a repetition of the swindle if lie were now in Congress. His successor, however, who has a conscience, did not make any move iu that direction. If the Presi dent had the same power that the Gov ernor of this State has over an appr o- priation bill, a River and Harbor bill ; Beaver at Chicago. Gen. Beaver has made a serious political blunder, if he has not deliberately lied, in challeng ing the assertion that when he voted for Grant at Chicago he misrepresented the known and plainly expressed wishes of his constituents. The best that has been claimed for him, we believe, has been that as he took his credentials from the State convention he took his instructions from it, too. and in voting for Grant be was true and not false to his constituents. Hut it must be re membered that a large portion of the Republican delegations from New YorK and Pennsylvania successfully asserted and vindicated before the Chicago con vention the right of district representa tion and the privilege of the delegates to break through the attempted instruct ions of a State convention. If, there fore. Gen. Beaver had been originally nominated for national delegate by his immediate constitnents, and they had I expressed their preferences unmistaka bly, he was in honor oouini to serve gs, and large ranks. The procession moved on, however, without a break and the steady tramp of the column of workmen continued until the last man had passed. One hour and 40 minutes was taken in passing a given point. The men marched in ranks of four with scarcely wheeling distance and very short iutervals between the various divisions. Mt. Lake Park S. S. Assembly. This summer gathering of Sunday-school workers is half stripped from the trees. There will he, nevertheless, a good crop. An unknown man was blown into the river and drowned. Darns and houses were blown down and un roofed, trees were uprooted and general de vastation was wrought. Saratoga, June IS. A very heavy storm prevailed here between four and six o'clock Saturday afternoon. Considerable damage was done by the overflow ot water courses, and some of the embankments of the Mount McGregor KailroaJ were washed out. In I one of the girl stinients, also a iviowa, on Saturday. A despatch from Mavsville, Ky., ssys the 1 army worm has appeared in that county. On ! Wednesday morning a train on the Kentucky i Central road was blockaded at Marshall sta tion several hours by army worms eight inch- ; es thick on the track. I "Great oaks from little acorns crow." When Mr. John Hester, of Walton, ia.. was married, twenty-one years ago, his uncle presented him with a sheep and ner two Dr. J. S. M Kr.N7.ti:, the New York Ocn- j list, who is stopping at the Mansion IIoti, ir.U-nds leaving here in a day or two. The : Doctor lias hei'Ti very actively engiged iu the practice of his profes-ion duiirg his sf.jy ln-re of three months, l'rom our exchanges j before he came to our town, and from many ; persons that h" h:is treated since he cnuie . ; here, we have h: ud the 1-t'r.t report regard- 1 j ing his sk iil at d miiiv in 1 lie ii ; ,t: i.i.-n i .f j eyes. On" li"t.tbio ca-e among many the 1 i Doctor treated here is young (ir:tnt llarnitz, j ; brother of l-iwyer Itarnifz. Tnis young gen- j tleman bad to h ave o:T going to school over i a year ago on account of his eyes. He trieri anil did everything to overcame the d;flietil- ' ty but without success until he c.Tne under j the care of Dr. M' Kenzie. The trouble has ! been removed. His siyht lie informs us is i now good and doi-s not bother hini a particle. I The 1 Met or made many warm frictils here, : ann we pre gi i I to ay. on the eve of l is de- parture, I.e did a v.it amount ot d We ! cheerfully recommend him to the ruliuted j wlwever ho nun 'go. CnruVV r'iV .sen.'mt. . Jif w I'rf H'c. i 1 -. -n ;oi'M5 w 4 !! 1 nnr-.. er t , l (f, ill l.tori 'jiiri :.v i't $1 A Yr.l 7. 7"f;- ; ; ' ? ii fVj'sV- Si.r .,'i;'', AC0M11KT7aMI!.Y -!L Shcn!'' 1 r r-1 ! ",.T -. T - t..i.:.l hv .-) t V w -r M;L-- Ii-. . -r TirEAVKi:KLYV(q;i 1? the eniy i-: 1 . A 1 1 t h f N i i. Tin- lrm fur- ; ;-Ti 3. The 1. r -i h r , irv "V .I'M 4. Thi 11' urn 6. The . 1.T- C. T':- 7. Tin I.. ?. A ' .-- i. promises to be one of unusual interest. The. j the northern towns of the county veiy heavy I lambs. Now his herd numbers largely over place is said to be one oflhe most attractive j hail, accompanied by rain, did great d"amage, j l.OOo. all produced from that one sheep, on the Continent, and many persons of j and many bridges are reported gone. j Two young couples of Co-hocton, Ohio, might be kept within moderate bounds, t.lim or resign bis place. The record, and until that power is conferred upon him no man can tell the fabulous extent to which the grab will be ultimately pushed. Among the forty-seven votes against the bill we tlnd, to his credit be it said, the name of General Campbell, tho member from Ibis district. Michael Davitt arrived at New York in the steamer Germanic at an j early hour on last Sunday morning, and was met by a largo party of friends and ! by his sister, Miss Sabina Davitt. At j his hotel he stated to a number of repor- j tors who called upon him that he would j spend twelve days in lecturing under the auspices of a committee of the Iaud League and would go as far west as Chicago. He said the object of bis vis it was two-fold first, to contradict the rumors of a split iu the Land League League movement, or of any difference existing between Parnell and himself, and, secondly, to explain the work done in Ireland by the Ladies" Land League in sustaining evicted tenants, the build ing of houses, and the maintainance iu the courts of rights of tenants. He will in his speeches, as be stated, deal gener ally with the present situation in Ire land, the failure of the coercion act of last year aud the effects of the new law now under its way through Parliament. He spoke on Monday night at the Aca demy of Music and went to Boston on Tuesday. Judge Trunkey was at his home in Franklin, Venango county, when the Democratic county convention met on Tuesday last, and a committee was ap pointed by it to wait on him and ascer tain whether lie would consent to be a candidate for Governor before the State convention. He pave the committee a letter in which he says that under no circumstances would he consent to the use of hu name. as made at that time by the Bellefoute Jlipublicun, now his home organ, shows that the county committee which sent the delf gates from Centre county to the State convention took a vote on Presi dent, which resulted, Blaine 22, Grant 4, Sherman 1 and the man who cast the Sherman vote said his constituents were almost, unanimous foi Blaine. The other live counties of the Congressional district represented by Beaver at Chica go bad instructed their delegates to use all honorable means to secure a delega tion from this State favorable to Blaine. Finally the district conference, which appointed Beaver and his colleague a3 the national delegates their nomina tions only being ratitled by the State con vention unanimously instructed Bea ver and Brosius to vota for Blaine for President, Mr. Brosius was present and Iersonally pledged himself to obey the instructions, (ien. Beaver was not pre sent, but the Times says his own dele gate from Centre county pledged him to obey the Blaine resolution. In the face of all this Beaver went to Chicago and voted for Grant, and then and there Don Cameron first gave out that Beaver was to lie the next Governor of Pennsyl vania. When Heaver says, or gets Coop er to say, tht he did not violate his in structions or misrepresent his "constitu ents he apparently lies. Lancaster Ia- i tclligencer. wealth and culture have already secured lots and are building tine cottages, lhe famous Ocean Grove grounds contained but three cottages at the end of three years, There j are alreadj lorty handsome structures at Mt. Jake. otonly the wealthy, but the mid dle classes can afford to enjoy this charming resort, as the expense during the Assembly will be reduced to nominal rate. The pro gramme will be as attractive as the place. The Lecture Course includes the names of Rev. Lyman Abbott, D. D., editor of the Christian Union : Itev. Thomas Guard, the celebrated Irish-American orator; ltev. N. Sims, D. D., Chancellor of Syracuse Unirer sity ; Rev. I.. S. Raldwin, D. D-, of China. One of the chief attractions will be a special course of four lectures by Rev. A. A. Wright A. M., of Lynn, Mass., on the revised new Testament, which are pronounced as schol arly and popular as any that have been de livered in this country for years. Mr. Wright is engaged to deliver the same course at Chautauqua. The Normal Course to be pursued at Mr. Lake is also the same asthat which will be used at Chautauqua, the text books decided on being Dr. Vincent's "As sembly Outlines." Sunday-school workers of all denominations are interested in this commendable project, the details of which we will give from time to time. For infor mation as to the accomodations, address Dr. T. II. Logan. Wheeling, W. Va. For par ticulars concerning the exercises, Rev. W, M. Frysingei, D. 1)., Harrisburg, Ia. Marshall, in refusing to attend the so-called stalwart convention, does not stand alone in Allegheny county. There is trouble iu the Stalwart camp. At a meeting of the Allegheny delegation on Saturday it was proposed that Mr. Josi ah Cohen, ex-chairman ot the county committee lie supported for Supreme Judge. Mr. Cohen raised a breeze by refusing to permit his name to be used, stating that as he believed the conven tion 1 1 be dea l he would not support the candidate for Cougressman-at-large. Chris. Magee tried to defend Mr. Coop er for recalling the convention, but Co hen was too much for him, and the meeting adjourned till Monday without taking any action. Mr. Cohen has al ways teen a Stalwart, but that will not prevent tho Stewart people from giving him a glad welcome. Tetirible Domestic Tragedy. A most shocking tragedy occurred at East Liberty, near Pittsburg, some time on Tuesday laslt, most probably after the noon hour, but pre cisely when can only be conjectured. At 1 o'clock a hoy narued Weinkauf went to his home on Frarikstown avenue, near Liberty station. Nineteenth ward, and finding no body on the first floor proceeded to the sec ond story, where he was horrified and ter rified by the the sifeht of his father and sb?p mother lying dead on the floor, ghastly corp ses with" their throats cut and a bntcher knife lying beside the man. The boy, who is aged seventeen years, ran to the east end police station at once and gave information to the police officer in charge. The man's name was Weinkauf. lie had been an em ploye at. the stock yards, but foi how long it was not ascertained. He had not been on goods terms with his wife, and had recent ly been discharged from prison. It is probable that the man abused her and was imprison ed npon her complaint. Naturally enough her action in prosecuting redoubled his ha tred for her, and developed a spirit of re venge which grew during his imprisonment and was precipitated inlo the horrible trage dy of Tuesday. Metropolis, 111., June !'.. A terrible cy clone struck this city yesterday evening. 1 blowing down several houses, killing Dick Turner, capsizing and sinking the steamer i Jennie Walker and scattering harvested i wheat in the vicinity. The damage is heavy. FURTHER DETAILS OF THE DESTRUCTION OF ;life AND PROPERTY IN H.WA. Des Moines, June 10. There are few new developments to-day from the destruction by cyclone at Grinneli. No further deaths are reported to-day, but up to ten o'clock to night 41 deaths had occurred at Grinneli and 'J.i at outside points, 17 of them at Malcolm ami in that vicinity, and five in the country northwest ot Grinneli. The doctors say that ! thought it would lie a romantic idea to elope down the river to Marietta by moonlight in a rowboat. The trip was only half made, how lU'TY TO OT1II.KN. I Ch ami;u:mh 'no, July 2", lsTo. j This is to lt the prop'.' k-iow that 1, ; Anna Maria Kraler, Wife of Tu'.ii is Kuder, , am now past seventy four viars of aire. My ! health has Ih-cii very bad for some years past. I was tiouhled with weakness, bad i cough, dy-pt psi.i, great debility p.n l eon.-di- ; pation ot the bowels. 1 was so misorai. e I could hardly eat anything. I heard of Hop Hitters, and was resolve ! to try them. I have only used three bottles, and 1 feel won 1 1 1 Aii-r. :l,.p.l llff IlilV (liU,cl HT11 ctl . . n ; n "ft V ever when the men were a nested for steal- j p0,v,..nre rt:Ku!ar. ,v appetite ood. a'n.l cough all gone. I feel so well that I think it my duty to let the people know, as so many knew how bad I was, w hat the medicine has e. so they can cure themselves Tin: rw v-ii v. On pi'lir- ..-', to tic ii -liriKlmil . I i r . . t I Him .ii ,a UXEOUAIlEBCFFIrM; i 1 1 r TKi i ing six or seven, and even more of the wounded i James Carey was killed, and John Welsh at Grinneli, won't live twer.ty-four hours, i Michael Lvn-h, Henrv Hughes and Edward anil some or tne physicians put the nnai death roll at Grinned "alone at more than 50, while some fear it will yet reach as high as , an untaxed clog in compliance with the new ot the wounded in that city there are now over 120 known cases, and some 80 of them more or less serious. In the country are also several serious cases of injury. The. best posted men at Grinneli yesterday esti mated the death roll very likely to reach 100. It is now H4, as we have it. There were six deaths yesterday and last night, among the ret that of Conductor Deignen. One hundred and forty-three is now esti mated as the ntinitier of dwelling houses de stroyed by the tornado in Grinneli. It is estimated this entails a loss of half a million dollars, which is nearly total loss as hardly any of them are insured against tornadoes or anything but fire. J. B. Grinneli states that fifty of the people in losing their homes lose all that they had in the world. Outside of Grinneli and In Malcolm and in the county there is also immense loss. Probably the aggregate of all will not foot np less"than three-quarters of a million dollars. Some of the business men of Grinneli think the actual loss will be larger rather than less. ing the boat, una tne ciris were sent nouie alone ana unmarried. Mrs. Hanks Dakin died on Tuesday morning at Harveysburg. O., from fritht at j UII)e flT ni( wnar sne oeneve.i was a spectre o. .miss i; i- . wjth R A M Kridek, Wife of Tobita 7ie Mil Kran. who committed suicide in the , . ' ' Dakin residence some weeks ago, and who, j Mrs. Dakin and husband believe, has haunt ed the house ever since. A terrific, gas explosion occurred in the lift in the Ntanton air shaft at Wilkesbarre, Pa., on Thursday morning. Five men carry- naked lamps caused the catastrophe. IV YOI'K wc: Morid I'.itf'itiriv-. C J I V 1 ". V 1 1 "TrTERECORD"BtTiLniNO.-Mondaymorn-ing's issueof the Philadelphia llecord appear ed printed from new type, on new presses, and was sent out from the new building at Ninth and Chestnut streets, adjoining the new United States postoffice. On the 1st of May, 1877, when the newspaper passed un der the control of its present publishei, the Mecord had a daily circulation of S,000. In the four months following the change of owners the daily issue jumped to 35,000, and within a period of five, years the Record s cir culation has risen to the enormous average of 80,000 daily thus showing a rapidity of growth that Is unequalled in the history of journalism. To-day it ranks third in Amer ica among morning daily newspapers of tho world. Only three French, three English and two American morning dailies exceed it: these are the Paris Petit Journal, the l'aris Moniteur, the Taris Heptiblique Francais, the London A'eics, Telegraph aud Echo, the New lork Sun and the Herald. WHY WOJIEX 18E IT. Because they have learned by experience that it overcomes despondency, ludigestion. weakness in the back and other troubles of the sex is whv women every wheie use Far. ker's Ginger Tonic Horn Journal. DELICATE FEMALES. The exactness of society, added to the cares of maternity and the household, have tested beyond endurance the frail constitu tions which have been granted the majority of women. To combat this tendency to pre mature decline, no remedy in the world pos sesses the nourishing and sfrengthening pro perties of MALT HITTERS. Thpy enrich the blood, perfect digestion, stimulate the liver and kidneys, arrest ulcerative weak nesses, and purify and vitalize every fuue tiou of the female svstm. The Pittsboro (V. C.) .VcoxZ says that duntur the late war Mr. Samuel ( ' ll icLo.n- of that place, died lu the ar;uy att-r an ab sence from home of one year. When his J corpse was brought homo the lid of the coffin ! was removed in order that his friends and '' relatives might tike a la.-t look. His dog (a ....... .i i i i i . nnegan probably fatally hurt. ' '." ' once rec- . r-oiwlnhle in Scott conntv. Tud.. shot . -'""'- '! master, begai. to wail and ln.l Hi"V ('IU OlL-iJ. A A' lOlllMM t lUf V "I ' . IU law of the State. This frightened Mrs. Wil- ... . u" lis Law into premature childbirth, resulting an cveryoony nan gone ,e laid down on it in the death ot the lady and the babe. Much an,l1 ,,',lre regained until he actuary served opposition is expressed to the law, and all ! so .leath ret us.ng to . ave or to eat the foci the constables of Scott conntv have resigned. ! "; tl,P family brought htm, and was buried Eight miles south of Genesee, III., Satur- J al t,w foot of 1,13 aler 3 urave. day. after preparing dinner for her husband and hired man, and while they were eating, j Mrs. Linquest took her son, aged five years, j to a corncrib near the house, cut his throat, and then killed herself. No cause is known, I but the woman is believed to have been in- ; sane. SrXDiY-SfflGCI. IEK A JiAMxoirf ; .'7 THE V(!".!i rlT ;l All Illustrated I'm., t 'or o..r I. s ' ' Fllh'lfilif .1 cvi-T n -.n'-. ' - " t i i r: , ir 'i--.-- ry.r r. : - j Mr. Radford Browning, who Jives near Wiregrass. Ga., has a catfish in his wed that his son put there in lSivj twenty years ago. They say it is nearly white. Every year or so when Mr. Brow inng cleans out his well he places the lish in a tub of water until he gets the. well finished, then lie places the fish back again. A terrible explosion occurred on Tues day afternoon on the farm of James Owns, seven miles east of Marion, O., resulting in the death of the engineer, A. L. Hines, and A Family and Communion Wine. The grape c rop of A. Speer's vinearis in New j Jersey last year was double that of anv pre- ' vious jear. His vineyards in New Jci-iy I have so increasedeaeii year that he lias been ' enabled to keep a stock live or six years ' ahead. None sold less than four years .id. j It has become a popular wine anion o the i .l.i'....i'.. :.. "V ... -V-..-W - ., :. ... i- I'M iv i.,n iii -,ew a oi k. nun is largely used lor communion aid aged perstms. I' Eheiistiurg, Fa. tl.f .1.4; I ! ; 5 !!- ii r !. r.u-u. 1 50 " soo cf I vci . n ml n if If- i A i. nn -iv.anccs ;.n 1 , j m CitL::i: Fi;' j Law reiiro Ki ! li.-irt !:- St i-.. 10 Vol" l.WI swathe IUTH0J If w A I(IM JI 1.1 71 GENERAL LIILBIUL WAL.NfT LF.E II A I It It LSI OKI. R. ii is Fiiun-if niiiiT'mi irum :i tirrs. Jt je as oi;ir hhht. ihi . n it name i r. 1 :ivi tr , is a pr-tii-t Voi til le Hair Kcnotvr. 1; will immediate. fh vpr. Tom r.arcer. have Ynnnc. !- ' . a" "'nrun. re--t,.re irr:iy - o i i j r - 7 .. ' nair I' it rt:imrnl pronaoiy iaiaiiy acumen. .v tieiecuve oouer where and low water were the cause. Both of the ' atu-ct the hcsiii men killed leave families at Caledonia Culiir. iin.l lireii Ui'f n new vmati h it ha" fallen utt. It il-.es: nnt in hit tni,nr whicn huli'tiur. Si ' n ti 7 : a ! : K TH K ( O : : ' it m: v The longest line of fence in the world will be the wire fence extending from tho Indian Territory west across the Texas Pan- Hv a disaster on Die Clarkesburg West ern railroad, near Weston. W. Va., on Friday last, a man named Carey, supposed to be from New York, was killed and thirteen others were injured, two fatally. 11. T. Goldsborough, jr., of IJalliiiioie, one of the inpired, died in a few hours, and Miss Leuna White, of Freeman's Creek, is not expected to recover. A picnic party quarrelied over their beer in Concordia cemetery, Chicago, on Sunday afternoon, "and a hundred men, tearing pick ets trnm the fence as weapons, fought a pitched battle. Heads without number j were oroKeu. ine women watcneu me tight ! it ImI anr Nilr.ite ol Silver preparation! I'HveM.jne. Ii will ch nee iiiiht er fa.lej li iir in a lew cih ? to a t-eaut-.lul i;lri?y lmwn. Ak your !r'ii!ir:t U t it Kieh hurtle is warrant-, smith. KiimjiCi, Whlet Airentn. I'hi!atle!rhia. ami N. 'i:it TENTdN. New Vcrk. ;3-i-lv. handle and thirty-five miles into New Mex- fronl a platform, which finallv broke down, V..TI,e Clarendon Aw is informed that injuring several of them and breaking a etgbty-five miles of this fence is already un- numher of tombstones. tier contract. Its course will be in the line of the Canadian river, and its pui pose is to stop the drift of the notthern cattle. It is a bold and splendid enterprise and will pay a large percentage on the investment. The fence will be over 200 miles long. Kkstoked to Sioht. Senator Alexan der's son, who was obliged to leave college six months ago on account of some affection of his eyes, Is back again at the State College ; wiui resiore-u ro"sii;iiu ui. .uciveiiz.ie, t.ie New York oculist, attended the case and thanks to his skill Mr. Alexander informs us his eyes and sight are better than they have ever been. The disease was functional and known to oculists as Compound Myopic As tigmatism. BcUcfonte Centre Democrat. Brt KLETCS AR.MCA SALVE, The Bfst Salve In the world for Cuts, Bruises, Burrs, Sores, Ulcers, Salt liheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cts. per box. For sale bv E. James, sole agent, Ebenaburgj f- 6-9. -ly J Captain l'aul Boyton has swam more than 2r.,ooo miles, saved hundreds of lives, and is officially reported hy the life saving service as having rescued seventy-two per sons from drowning upon the coasts of the United States. For hisseivices he has re ceived forty-two medals from European cov ernments, but not one from this country, of which he is a native. The committee of merchants formn.1 nt Lynchbure, Va., for the relief of the Patrick j county sufferers is in receipt of a letter from ' that section, in which it '.s stated that suftic- I ient funds have been raised to relieve the i distress of the people, who were really in a j starving condition, and that those who were reluctant to appear-? aid are desirous that ; nothing further be dfme, as they can now I make out until haricot. An extraordinary tricycle joarncy lias been accomplished by the Vice President of the Lyons Bicycle Club, accompanied by his wife, on a two-seated machine. The travel ers went from Lyons, through Nice, Genoa, and Home, to Naples, returning via Florence and Tuiin, the whole journey representing a distance of some 2,3oo miles liein accom plished at an average of about fifty to sixty miles a day on the road. THE GLOBE I'ATIM ITfl'KOYF.n OMAUUED HURT! I'irici: o.ve doll. ii;. SUPERIOR TO ANY IN THE MARKET, I OR IT HAS THE AND KELNTOKCED FRONT. Fere fee-Ply Linen Bosom ail Culs, SIAKIO IT THE fTRON41.il AND Must PERFECT FITTING DRESS SHIRT ix thi: woiu.n. IOK ALt IX I BKXsniUG OXLI BY V. S. JiAllKEJt lilZO., Agent. THE CATHOLIC WC- Is a Mac a 7.! ti? of 144 ' . t: - 'l "i"t-. or 1,7 j :' t ir,:; I.i.i t . ? .' - ' FOUR DOLLARS A -l iLv.i.ial ,v in Jr.mx. s : - S THE CATilH ii' iiiffil, ;- 9 BARCLAY STKFET. ' ,1 Pevjir VJ -TedKh In POTATO Atnl all It will ?t . t.ir. i i i:. -. It l.i tint - JJf I'T m;i ;! . ' i Irralar :rr. II. Jlf 1 I'lllMliitrK Ii. Irtmlif' I i, lf-: I, Staves, Heading i-3 11 i!- rnrc ?rh fhirt l roii-.f.nT 1 ih rn ntand Un.M-THK)i.o Patent Improved- IlUHl 10 advfinlam ol th Outlaw f flAPili & jesse mum. V.m(.!.-te I.f'rf tl,n., Klrt II Is Ii at n-s m-n. Aln ol th Yortnicrr llrot tirr ami it! i.r h .i i M.tl. I lf-Kni.il Illni(rntMl. OtrrMHI H-reiol inferior e'titionsi. nmnlite T.ani ny man, lotlj Itrrna I ll,rr,. . Jt Bif.iifsr ri:n . i ti K ' ,, and i ' v- ' AU . New an ' "- . V .". , . - i Wa. lftrcu i-c ' '' nr;h, I'a.. t't'fre. A -- ' r -v 1 r t ) ois.Bi.aSi.i(..'4AJu-N,l?? W.6ih5u,t in.ia u,U. ft
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers