WEEK —A violent hail storm on the 25th passed through the lower portion of NEWS OF THE The hour, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, storm continued about half an and was plants, the leaves of which were cut into shreds, wheat were levelled to the ground. There wus a severe hall and wind storm in Central Illinois on the 24h, which did great damage to the grow- ng crops, —A fire in Port Deposit, Maryland on the 25th destroyed the tin can fac- tory and hardware store of Reynolds Brothers, with several stables and out- buildings. The loss is estimated at $25,000, insurance $15,000, The fire was started by the falling of a hot soldering iron into a mass of rosin. During the fire a man named Rogers was dangerously, if not fatally, injured by falling from the roof of a neighbor- ing house. The fur hat works of Ferry & Napier, at Matteawan, New York were burned on the 25th. Loss $40,000. The store house of the glass works at Newark, Ohio, was struck by lightning on the 256th and destroyed. Loss $40,000; insurance $15,000. -— Reportsfrom all parts of Manitoba and the Northwest assure crops and a harvest two weeks earlier than usual. : ~ Reason Stamper and Dinkins were married at Ashland, Ken- tucky, on the 26th. While they were receiving the congratulations of their friends a woman named Frances Piles rushed in and attempted to shoot the groom, but he disarmed her. She said named Black two years ago. At wedding i Paterson, New Jersey, on the , Lhe festivities were story warehouse at the foot of West ult.. caused damage to the the extent of about $77,000. —**Jack’ Keef, a local **sport,” was fatally shot by Morgan Anderson disreputable house in Wooster, Obio, on Jefferson Riggle, a special oflice Fort Worth, room, and terrorized, passengel When a Missouri Pacific train arrived on the from the waiting room, where he had In the U. of Vermont, against public executive | ressions, was read by Mr. Manders { Mr, Horn also spoke Jat much | against the proposed change, Two { vetoes of pension bilis were 1 resented { and referred, A conference { the Consular and Diplomatic Appro- | priation bill was agreed to, The Chair { laid before the Senate a joint resolu- | Lion iii, ten days. Mr. Edmunds sald he would state his rea- The Legislature was considered, a night held, but it was not dis- tion, and priation ll session being posed of. the coaches, stricken {rom the cars. armed with a six-shooter.”” He finally overpowered by four men. and the train moved on. ~The family of F. C, M. Lautz, in Buffalo, ate for dinner on the 28th ult,, was vor.” Later in the afternoon the family were taken very sick, the servant girl All the sick persons, six mm number, are sald to be ~The house of William Miller, near the years of Otto Plotz, 31 years of age, death in flames, the 28th ult. He had been drinking. —The Knisely and Miller Galvanized prying open with clothes poles the win- dows of the house in which they were held. John Earle and others attempted to stop disturbance, when a fight occurred, during which Hodgson struck Earle on the head with ard Earle died of concussion of e bn Hod: as been arrested. —_W. NS, 40 vears of age, committe his boarding house a the 26th, He had 1 out within a short ti and It a drummer in Cleveland, O! in a house of the 26th. age. wl his wife and his in: tain promises made to an inmate of the house is thought to have been the cause of the deed.” the Lilt y and } h son bh . ah x + McColium, a dentist i i1 1 rit Le gaugnt iemorse 10LtyY to perfonn cer- —At Eagle Bend, Mississippi, on the 20th, lL.ee Brown, colored, and killed Alfred and Henry Morgan, white, and Cornelius Jackson, colored, Brown was porter in a store, and the white men ‘refused tolet him close it a up, shot Alexander Miller, an old farmer, and his wife were killed by a railroad train striking their wagon at a railroad crossing near Lafayette, Indiana, on the 20th. nder storm, accompanied by hail, did damage amount 2,000, in the Ci nearly $25, ley, Penna. on the 26th. ~Johin N ored of the apper, aged (UU years, col- janitor of Lincoln school . in Harrisburg, committed on the 25th by jumping into the in New Orleans on Sunday, i aged 65 years, his wife's throat with a razor, and then cut his own throat and slashed of his arms. It is believed he will recover. He was released from an insane asylum two weeks ago. John A, lLeddele, a wholesale clothier of Montreal, com- miited suicid the 27th, ult, y cutting his ti Domestic troubls is supposed to have been the cause, the SUCH Canai, NTS: Joseph Villio, cut ab with one — Prof W. Merriman, princi. pai of High Sehool at Beloit, Wis- consin, was shot and perhaps mortally wounded by burglars on the 27th uit. —A duel was fought the 23th on Alphonse Reed, near Opelousas, Lousi- ana, Adam was dangerously, if fatally. wounded. A violent thunder storm ult, Several houses were was broken off by the electric fluid, Cornwallis street, passed into the ground, and badly tore up the street for a length of two blocks, throwing large rocks to the surface. In another street the lightning a gutter, throwing cobble stones over the roadway,” ~Six cows which had been suffering all Turkey Hill, Lancaster county, Penna. , were killed on the 28th ult, by an order of the State authorities, —Three dynamite bombs-——pieces of each end and with fuses attached —were found on a vacant lot in Chicago on the 28th ult. The finder threw two of them into the river, third was taken t police station, where it was *‘recog those made by Anarchists,’ but the tO Aa asoneof t -The Republican State Conventi Pennsylvania on ; following ernor, General James i t Governor, William Anditor General, A. Wilson Secret Internal Affairs, Thomas Stewart; Congressman-at- Large, Osborne, The lares for the of arrears of Inter-State demands the importation ‘‘of er labor, criminal and con- tract labor, and the products of Eu pean criminal labor?’ declares for m of our dairy products from ‘unjust competition, and from any all aduiterations or counterfeits;” favors arbitration in labor troubles; the maintenance of the pro- Ol aly oi repeal of pensi Congress; the foreign paug the protectic Of demands tective tanfl, and expresses the opinion that the Legislature should at adopt measures for the of a Prohibitory Constitutional amend- ment to a vote of the people. -— At Albion, New York, on the 20th ult., when the Chicago express train was moving out of the station, a tall dark cemplexioned young *jumnped aboard, rushed into a snatched a hand-bag from the lap of Boston Iady on the way to Niaga: Falls, jumped from the moving train The bag contained a large sum of money, valuable papers and a ticket from Boston Niagara and return. Ones nan Car 0 A great cave-in occurred on the JUth ult., on the Lehigh Valley Rail- road at No. 8, Stockton breaker, near Hazleton. The chasm iz 300 feet lon by 150 wide. Travel or = railroad being laid on the around the spot. ~—A new enemy of the cotton crop has appeared at Raleigh, North Caro- lina. “Lice attach themselves to the under surface of the leaves and suck the juce of the leaves and young buds assoon as the latter put forth. A stalk will in one or two days after being attacked look as if it had been dippad in hot water, and be drawn into knots and granulations, ‘They are damaging the crop to the extent of per- haps fifty per cent.” FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS, SENATE. In the U, 8, Senate, on the 28th moving the political William H. F. Mr, George a hke bill Lee, of Virginia, and for John | Illinois, — At Reading, Penna., on the 28th uit., Rev. D. B. Albright, an aged minister, formerly Saperintendent of the Bethany Orphan’s Home at Wo- melsdorf, convicted of cruelly and bru- tally beating Harry Kramer, an orphan inmate, was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and all the costs, ~On the 27th ult three men broke mto the house of Mrs. Dennis O’Don- nell, on the mountain three miles north of Hazelton, Penna., and taking out a safe, rolled it to the foot of the moun- tain, where they blew it open and took therefrom $200 in cash and numerous valuables. A number of the neighbors searched the mountains, but could find no trace of the burglars, —James Turner and wife, returning home near Winchester, Ohio, on the 28th ult., were thrown from their wagon by the horse taking fright at a drove of hogs, Tarner was fatally n- jured and his wife was killed. ~Mrs, H. G. Farmer, her six-year. old daughter, William Brayton and two children of C, W, Girsch, were drowned near Bristol, Rhode Island, on the 27th ult., by the capsizing of a sail boat, by the without were two- thirds passed vote, Necessary debate, Post-office Appropriation bill, The question being on the opon the $800,000 ocean mail clause added by the bill. Senate insisted on its amendment by a vote of 33 yeas to 12 nays, 6 Democrats affirmative, The Des Moines River veto, upon motion of Mr. Plumb, was then taken up. Mr. Evarts spoke in support of the veto, and Mr, Allison in opposition to it. Pending debate, the Senate went into executive session, and, when the doors were re-opened, ad- journed. Ia the U. 8B, Senate on the 20th a joint resolution was passed appointing General William 8, Sewell, of New Jersey, General Martin T, McMahon, of New York, and Captain John IL, Mitchell, of Wisconsin, to be mana. gers of the National Homes for Dis- abled Soldiers, to fill vacancies, Mr, Beck introduced a bill, which was re- ferred, authorizing the Postmaster Gen. eral to appoint and remove postmasters of the third class—who are now ap- pointed and removed by the President, The bill to quiet the titles of settlers on the Des Moines river lands was passed over the Presidents veto by a vote of 81 to 156, Conference reports on the Army Apprapsiation bill, and the bill to amend the Pacific Railroad acts, were agreed to. The ive A propriation bill was + pe ing which the Senate HOUSE the 25th, various by the In the House, on Speaker presented the messages transmitted They were read Presi- pension to the widow of Major Genera Hep- lowa, moved that its consid- until the The Sundry Civil bill was considered in Committee of the Whole. Pending action the Committee rose. An tion of pension bills, Adjourned. In the U. S. Holise of 20th a conference was agreed to on requiring the of select- conveying and surveying lands. As the bill originaily passed the House it applied only to the Pacifle system, but as amended by senate and agreed to by the ( ence Committee, ite provisions tended to all land grant sundry Civil bill was consi of the Whole, if the will hi ing, their are roads, lered When onsiders il ' > : Commities al been “ commit tee r most emmy reiterated 1 Sundry Civil © itt ¥ mite Of ‘1 yi1l | was Hole In the House, the conference propriation 1 was agreed General Deficiency bill and referred to the Commi Whale. It appropriates The conference Office Appropriation bill The Senate 1 ment which master and foreign steamboat can be combined in the foreign 200 miles di office on report on the sill rida report on WAS agreed Lo, ecedes fir } AULhorize General {oo cont office Is not stant from on ie same term : steamboat service, The Ser recedes from the amendment : ~ ‘1 (HE) 1® Appro} sial car service, mail service a nown as . midy Conference Agricuitun also agreed journead. In the House, on the 30th were reported sion 10 examine, adjust all claims uit., bills establishing a commis. and arising oul of Indi treaties and Indian depredation amending the laws relating to spection of steam vessels (a Senate bill), Mr. Breckenridge, from the Ways and and Means Committee, reported a bill to regulate the manufacture of vinegar from grain. The Sundry Civil bill was resumed, and the last page of the nll was reached in committee. A confer. ence report on the Diplomatic Appro- priation bill was agreed to, Acjiourned. tas th report Hpon casa A In order to render glue insoluble in sary when dissolving the glue for use to add a little potassium bichromate to the waler, and to expose the glued part to he proportion of bichro- for most purposes about one-fiftieth of aa —— II os ts. THE MAMMETS VHILADELFHLA, HOES. ocosnnnrrsnssnnncrsaninne 3 SHOOP. co cousssvsssnsresesimnsnnss Lie Cotton, MIGAUDE cus svssvnnnrnns #5 Flour, Wester. .ocvvrvivnenssc B33 Ha do Pennayivaiif..ceees sasvss 2 50 Wh Western White. vou. vues 0 82 ao IVRRIB. senses suvnse RYO.oosrsssssrernnnsassnsnnnsnns OBIE. conssvrnne COT. sensei ssnsnnsnbosssssunansng > do eRsassasT atin BOBO. convrissncnssnsrnsnansnns LE Le AERA RN ARRAN TAREE AAAS Ww Peuna and Ohlo GO" NY, anil WeMGH sneer: po CORRBAB. cs sssssassssnisesss Op Dar ba LARA. ovoveivvonnesvssunsnsinennss SHER RN SRR R RENE a tne asnane a] gS 882888. 2..88538 HAAR ERR EERE RRR ERR CREB RARER RRR RR RICO. cossossvcnnnnssssinnsssnnnns : » phil TLE 5S re RE aaRnne FERRRRRRE RARER PARANA ER RARE aera Besser KERR Rsa aan do en Hay ~TUROMY .sonvee.. cesar annn NEW YORK. ngur WORN. os sunssvnsssunsed RRA NvEamE Ra Berweid «8.8888 CERNE Ecce uliNE En a Peo - < £ Cerarenene SRERRRRERERNTRNY LE EINER RRR Rea SEERA ERROR RL eae 4 Lomo PANTER RIE » eoww - 52 = ooan SaspEszIgas I do not mourn, sweet wife of mine : ruby lips of thine I That marble Lrow-—— Were Kiss by one who might bave been, ' ; lad 1 not chiance ld Thy to step between, husband now 1 do not grieve because thy heart, Ero Cupid touched it with my dart, For him would beat, which owns hand my ring a “Mispah'’ thing, meet, dF WTILS Were paaced our waist, ime around ¥ 80 sweet and slim, Al, no my love! the woe you see ine because you wedded me Instead of him, RR RA RRO TS SE MISS RUTH'S SCHOLAR. lifford taken in he Miss Ruth C has ity af l of its 1 per iod cominencement, She was a rosy, pretly of scarcely little with a dimple gixieen, May Fobes, big blue eyes, where the light seemed her mind. The through idea of her being a grim, stern listress Ruth was po h then wanted some rather absurd, but wr, and they the school wh Wa was rad grag uated in the city, so he he was at ten dollars a month, trying to as and dig: d as possible, “Teacher! teacher! roaked lit H ugh the seh i Mi r 1 111 es V0 . shouldn't « Les rd, pus! “Hug! iy are Wan Vi swered Hugh, al Have nproved vers Much, n Hugh,’ she said, as they walked home through the pine woods the last of t “I am here next year to help you on, but mus. study perseveringly. and 1 will ws Hl fae | al : }s He erm SOIT) I shall oe vou wig learn said Hugh, livin’.’ ‘And there should not,’ “My folks are a bad lot,” “and nobody wants to Siah Leshie’s boy.” “But when they see that Siah’s Les. tis $s LRG WO a trade." mus iI3 no reason employ Hugh burst into tears, “Oh, teacher, teacher! you are the only one who ever told me I could be If you only wasn’t going away!" Ruth tried to console and comfort the lamenting young Goliath, but the last she saw of him he was sitting with his head against the trunk of a tree, with now and then a strong sob shaking his whole form. “Poor fellow!” she thought. hope he'll come to good.” She did not know that, close to his heart, he was wearing a bit of blue ribbon that she had one day dropped in the school-room, She might have smiled, had she known it—she might have been angry. Dut to Hugh it was all he had left of the pretty creature who had been like a guardian angel to him, And ten years passed away, and Ruth completely forgot the young clown of the village. “I want you to look your prettiest to-night, Muth, for I have a new cava lier to introduce to you--a splendid fellow!” “Indeed! who is it?” “Well, he is a friend of Mr. Tracy’s, just arrived from Europe, where I am “1 told he lias distinguished himself scientific and literary circles, besides having received an inheritance from far relative that | him wealthy, Isn’t it quite romantic? And he is so | handsome, too! His name is—"’ But here some new visitor, claiming Mrs. Tracy's attention—it was the day of weekly interrupted her enthusiastic and Ruth Clifford did sad in away BReoteh independent iw +7 her morning reception recital, hear not the i ilowever, she went ou Mrs. Tracy's herself in “her elaborate costume home, and, acti suggestion, dressed prettiest,’ to be sure, for delicate rivaled, A good was poor, but one whose could scarcely be by straw colored ribbons and a few yellow the she sash, and bright hair, formed toilet, but when the finishing ih of hei her there was a smile of gratified pride on She did not think Mrs, be ashamed “You are looking very nicely, my the little her said young matron, with a | y 1 nod, as she beckoned side, afterward, Ruth heard minutes pro 17) And five her name nounced, EATS { LABS Mi ituth looked timidly uj hfford, ALLOW me feslie.”” 1 eyes, and ack: a } I A iis faded bit of blue ribt : “Do you remember who dropped bosom a ns this me autumn day. oked at him 1n su do you remembe a great awkward by name? Well, he ariel O80 ana 1 A never suspect same? Well s changed aspira id noble on that day 1 to pay my neglected y listen to the fs a 5 » sions of those aroun ir scholar has graduated at . And Buthh Clifford felt in the nes born glow of her happiness that sl indeed cast her bread upon end many days afterward urned to her, aah a Who Sets Fashions for Women SIMOITY 13 SOTO N The Gain was quite Ogee by the press and sarcasin of theatre-goers, It disappeared from street and for a time, but has become again the The other day during a brief in- of wearing a Gainsborough nearly three fest liam. eter walked on le of State street, from Lake to Adams stared at by 10,000 wis the object of 1 from sarcasm to seem to mind it, but strolled leisurely along with her parasol at an angle of 45 degrees, and hummed an air from the “Mikado.” She was in no hurry, but stopped at every other shop window and gazed therein, She had not walked a block before the universal feminine comment was: “The Gainsboroughs are coming in again.’ And so they are if that lady is as good an advertisement as she has been in the past. She is under salary from a millinery firm on Wabash avenue, and I have seen ler walk more than one article of head dress into popularity in the self-same way. parquet 1 sunshine a lady the west 8 she was and J remarks ranging she did not | urious eves, wonder, i ainsi MI MI i 5 Honest, hearty, contented la the only source of happiness, the only guarantee of life, lack occupation that ann A SNOW WHITE IBEX KILLED. A Rare Animal Disposed of by an Od Frapper in the Owl Mouutains, In the Owl Mou us, Washington a aspt 4 y Territory, Is snow or white ibex. i ulie POR | “ HIETVaIS a we Tdre animals was recently by an old trapper and hunter known as Shos! Jack. of the Ig hi Lone The snow ibex attains the size nn ol ountain sheep, has 44 a coat of dazzling wl * and of true ibex © breed, It ve anc when most dangerous adversars horns, with powertul, and their of 5, and ackwa Sweep two feet, are formid ; are formidably used Tom Anten, then a or and hunter, now half owner in § BINCe rari t Pe » the noted Jonanza Oil Horn Basin, came near an Owl Mountains, 7] band of blacktail deer, w | om was in pursuit of a 1160 he esp sul ahead of him what he at first took fora Q : saw iL later he was an animal, knew it mus Untalin rara avis, a s: ibex, an old ram, was v Anten at once Ha the rare prize, Au! his tracks, secure {f confronted by od animal. Am Os sent the hi wher ————— A How Kerosene is Distil Petroleum consists different fluids, win ty from the boiling nearly a red heat. over, at Very gradually assuming { dense Bot would thi the onginal In the purposes, s in lamps and st of t dist } very | i y Lakh he v}s dt 15 AN but little color, is the c ting oil or the still it Kerosene. has : ry offensive ods due to decomposition of certain portions of the petroleum at the To remove the offensive compounds the oil is first agitated with about 5 per cent, of oil of vitriol. Thais combines with the offensive oils forming a black, tarry residue that falls to the bottom of the tank as soon as the oil is brought rest, The mixture of acid and oil called “‘sludge,’’ and is used in large quantities in the manufacture of com- mercial fertilizers, After the acid drawn off and the oil washed with water, it is again washed with a strong solution of caustic soda, which removes the excess of sulphuric acid and some ¥ WO is 18 the oil. The oil after another washing with samic odor nf Kerosene, and possesses a slight opalescence peculiar to these oils, As usually prepared they belong to the class known as “high test” kerosenes and consist almost entirely of oils {hat exist in the petroleum already formed, being merely separated from the largest and heaviest portions. Sach oils are called the educts of the petroleum. The heaviest portions of the distillate contain parafline oils, They also, are mainly educts of the original oil ; they however, contain a much larger propor- tion than the kerosene of the products of the oil. A tarry residue remains in the still called *‘residuum. 5c In youth, grief Is a tempest which makes you fli; in old age it is only a cold wind, which adds a wrinkle to your face and one more white lock to. the others;