NEWS OF THE WEEK At Mount Vernon, Kentucky, on the evening of the 28th, William Levisey, aged 14 years, was stabbed through the heart by William Vowals, aged 10, The murderer had some boy- ish grudge against victim, In a juarrel in a gambling hell in Boston on de 28th, David Lanahan was shot lead and Edward Flanagan mortally ~ounded by Adolph A. Albrecht. The three men were alone in the room, playing fare, and the quarrel arose wer Lhe game, Albrecht, who i8 a Iruggist, claims that he acted in self- defence, but several circumstances are agamst his story. His victims were proprietors of the place. —The Sanderson Steel Works, in Feddes, a suburb of Syracuse, New York, were destroyed by fire early on Jie morning of the 28th, The build- ngs covered two acres of ground, ind the loss is estimated at $220,000. The works were owned by English *apitalists, being a branch of the Sand- erson Works, wn Sheflleld, England, and they will be rebuilt at once. A fire in Memphis, Tennessee, early on the morning of the 28th, destroyed I. Besthefl & Co.'s furniture store. Ulla- thorne & Co.'s seed store, William Juinn's bourding house and saloon, ind James Cuarrey’s Tivoli Garden. I'he loss aggregates $65,000: insurance, $21,000. The Sargent Paint Com- pany’s building in St. Louis was burned on the afternoon of the 25th. Loss, §40,000; insured. The leather manufactory and storehouse of John Maxwell & Co,, at North Winchester, Massachusetts, were burned on Stl Loss, 8100 000. lis SP the evening of the 2 —There was a general snow and wind storm through Nortuwest on the 26th Trains on many railroads were deluved, ind in Des Moines blocked by snow. and heavy ut the ‘ 3TH and ~ Li the streets —No further Is upon the mystery iL Lhe 11 at New Jersey nan called at the 'r & Street Sla- tion in New York. } z i SHE Deieved dressed hh, and was her ption of cloth. und near » that of | FAW 81X week away from gated t Li i i alse ol $42 s30¢} : GaugZul ra afterward she lea: married before. The girl lived, Hes woman gaid, had threatened her husband, and he had threanened to kill ber if she did. The woman would give no name, but sad Rahway on the 20th, The Chief of Police of Rahway, said on the 28th, that **every clew he had worked upon thus far proved to be false.” A con- stable from Crawford arrived in Rah- way later and was closeted with the Chief, He claimed to have informa- t 1 daughter, the $ 5 riiere 16H Were Bile = LO ion a young man living In Raliway. -— here are now oq factories in the United States. are in the Western being in the city of Chicago. Te There are 3537 retail dealers in oleomargarine in the United States who paid special taxes as such in the months of Novem- ber and December, 1836, and January and February, 1887, The number of wholesale dealers is 206. The tity of oleomargarine manufactured and removed for consumption or sale. at 2 cents per pound during the months of November and December, 1886, and January and February, 1887. was 12.. 645,740 pounds, and the quantity ex- ported from the United States during the same period was 152,797 pounds. The figures are taken from a state. mont prepared in the Internal Revenue Bureau, ~Two cars of a train on the fron Mountain Railroad were thrown from the track by a broken rail and capsized at Hillard, Missouri, on the 25h. Several passengers were seriously in- jured* and a child in its mother’s arm was killed. Two freight trains on the Canadian Pacific Railroad ran into each other at Franktown on the morn- ing of the 27th and both were wrecked. The loss to the company is 810 1,000, OleOWArgarine States tha wien ' Guan- —1It is announced that the Jersey Central Railroad has made a contract with the Clearfield Coal Company for handling its coal. This will involie the building of a new dock at Commu- nipaw that will cost about $500,000, the contracts for which have already been given. —The Iron manufacturers of Pitts. burg are quoted as say ing that the card rate of iron “will bardly go any higher than it 1s at present, as representatives of Swedish and English fron firms have recently invaded Pittsburg and are making desperate efforts to place orders for foreign iron.” It is reported that the iron business 18 not as good as it was afew weeks ago. Pig iron has declined fifty cents a ton during the past wonth and muck bar $1 50, -A fight took place between cow- boys and shepherds near Grant's Station, Arizona, a few days ago, in which one of the herders was killed and three other herders and a cow. boy were wounded. One of the wounded has since died, Ephraim Sehlogerman, a peddler, was shot and dangerously wounded near Ephrata, Penna., on the 28th, by Charles Barn. hart, a cigar maker, Barnhart and several companions were annoying Schlogermsn, and when the latter started to run away the scoundrel shot him in the back. - Benjamin Mobbs was found hanging in his reom in Hazen, Arkansas, on the 26th, and it was thought he had committed sul- cide, It now turns out that he was strung up untii dead, and robbed. The murderers are not known, ~A telegram from Defiance, Ohio, says that a few nights ago the Cecil aqueduct on the canal was blown open. The pext night armed men drove away the guards who were Sratehing Tio reservoir apd blew out the banks in two piaces, ‘and finally dynamite was used to destroy the locks, It will take halt the Summ 1 repair the damage already done. A strong effort was recently wade to in. duce the MIL Ure to vacate the —The dwelling of Matthew Massick. at Laadlowville, New York, burned on the morning of the 29th. and three children perished in the flames, ‘The Caswell building, in Troy, New York, occupied by Fessenden, other firms, wis destroyed by five, on the 209th, The Fulton street front of the Boardman bullding was damaged, The total loss is estimated at $130,000, which is covered by insurance. firemen say the flames 1n the building burst out in several once. The West Polnt Caswell Cotton Mills, ou the 28th, with a grist mill adjoin- Ing. The picker room and warehouse, with 2000 bales of cotton, were saved. The Joss is probably covered by an in- surance of §200,000, A fire in Colum- destroyed the shoe store Bedell and the clothing store of J. K. Harris & Co, Loss, $20,000; insurance, $17.000. —There was a hard frost, with in the districts around Norfolk Danville, Virginia, on the night of the 5th. It is feared tha! much damage bas been done to early frulis and veg- etables, A ternble storm of hail and wind visited Ackworth, Ga., on 25th. Two dwellings were demolished, ice, —A telegram from New Brunswick, New Jersey, says the tailroad has been running local pas- senger traflic between that city and Jersey City for the past few days in tive, and it has been found feasible, to heat a limited number of cars by this means and maintain a sufficiently high temperature, ~The First 2 mal burg, Penn: ized to begin Bank of Pitts- the 20h author- th a capital of OUnebwe. tha ‘ i . U4 tercolonial ted M SNOW 1 i Railway is ““unprecede and all travel Thera Canadian | us | stopped. s also Kas occurred the Von Storck mine at Scranton, Pennsylvania, by which fire boss Lewis and two miners, named Thomas lewis and Edward Owens, were killed. Ten men were Ini An explosion of » 2 + 1 10 the 30th ul on ir + 1 factory of DPingeree & in Detroit, was destroyed by the evening of the 30th ult. it $200,000, A fireman was fatally N ~The shoe ire on Loss, was burned on $40,000; insurapce. at Aiton, lllinos, JUth uit Loss, I $13,000. The freight house in ( usetts, was burned mtents, loss Massac! ult., with its ¢« Wiley -—A gpecial to the Journal from St. Johns, N. F., dated Boston, March 30. The steamer Eagle, from the sealing grounds, 13 reported le 200 men, No particulars |} received. SAYS: on the 30th ult, at id Lexington, Kentucky. K at night the depth had inches at Louisville and eleven inchns at Lexington, and in the latter ci roof of a livery stable had been crushed in by the superincumbesnt snow, storm was the meter the State, —S. H. Allis, a compositor, is re- to have commitled suicide the morning of the 3 ult. ferry boat in reached general in ported early on by jumping from a New York. He left letter to his wife, saying he “had lo everything, and, though he did not know where he was going after he was dead, it was something to know that he would ba bevond the reach of Ler tougue, *’ Thomas C, Reynolds, Lieutenant Governor of Missouri, committed sui cide in the custom house at St. Lous on the 30th + by throwing himselt down an elevator shaft, He was over 70 years of age, and had been for some Lime affected in his mind. ity Lil ex. 1 Wis, aged Ringt 18 years, was own Mountain, near Shenandoah, Penna, The crime was generally imo puted to the Mollie Maguires, suspicion pointed to Charles Freder and Michael Hertzol, of M lin, the home of the murdered man, Fredericks died on the 28th ult., and before his death made a confession that he and Hertzol committed the mnrder for the purpose of robbery. Hertzol ins been arrested, On the evening of the 26th ult., Corporal Boyer and another sol- dier were approached by four Mexicans on the Fort Ringgold Reservation in Texas, and one Mexican opened fire, shooting Boyd dead. Three Mexicans have since been arrested on suspicion, A man, arrested in Jersey City on sus- picion of baving murdered the young woman at Rahway, was arraigned on the 30th ult, and remanded for a further hearing. ~~Alfred Smith, convicted of the murder of his wife and another woman, named Wilson, was sentenced at Cleve- land on the 28th uit,, to imprisonment for life. ~The thermometer marked ten de. grees below zero at Ottawa, Canada, on the morning of the 30th ult., and thére was nearly five feet of snow on the ground ~In the boiler works of T. M. Na- gle, at Erle, Penna., on the morning of the 31st ult., while steam pressure was being got up in a twenty-horse power boiler which bad just been subjected to # hydraulic test, the flue plate gave way, and the superheated steam cushed out, Ed I. Bturtevant, inspector for the Hartford Steam Boller 1nsur- ! | ance Company, and Patrick Kelley, , William McCloud, James Welch and ! A. L. Murphy were frightfully scalded It was not believed that Sturtevant, { Kelly and McCloud eould recover. { When the explosion took place the | guage registered a pressure of only 140 { pounds, but it was probably defective, ~Fdward M, Newman, employed by | Michael Levinson, wholesale clothier, | in New York, was arrested, on the 31st | ult., on the charge of having defrauded the firm out of $75,000, by making false entries and misusing checks. | —=The express car of a train on the | Lake Shore Railroad was entered near | Uties, on the 30th ult., by a man who | told the express messenger, Leake, to | ““bold up lis hands,” and then shot {him in the shoulder. The assailant | then rifled the safe. The loss is vari- { ously estimated at from $1000 to $3000, { | i — Anthony Knoll, arrested n Jersey City on suspicion of being the Rahway | murderer, was discharged on the 31st ult, In the afternoon, C. H. Eld- | ridge, President of the Hudson River | and Maine Ice Company, viewed the body of the murdered girl and the | clothing, and said it was that of Mary | Cregan, who was a domestic in his | house in Brooklyn. *‘She came from { Syracuse three weeks ago, On the 23d ult, she started for her uncle's | house on Elliott place. Brooklyn and { bas not been seen since. Mr, Eldridge {could not identify the clothing, but is positive that the girl was his serv- ant. Her trunk is still at his house. She frequently received letters from a | triend in New Jersey.” A loquacious { young man, named T. Neary, { who thought the body was that of his | sister, but could give ‘‘salisfac- | tory answers’ upon examination. has | been locked up. 1 John not ’ led n severely by of a blast at West Roxbury, JULh ult, Betsy mall childre: 2} a @ 1 Joseph Holland was ki homas Gly injured hts ead £3 sachusetts, on the i d, left three 2s hiavaer Brookhaven, ¥ Ff fi ong the Norfolk road were shattered The report ol steamer Eagle, of t. } foundiand, has been confirmed b finding of wreckage from the vessel Fank Island, off Bonavista ippearance of the wreckage that the vessel's bollers explo it i8 believed that all on board wer t } rew of 250 men, 1 t ts % 4 . HO. ae Dad A ( fr d, murdere: remate he - Tarleton Steele, colors his wife and attempted to « body near Ada, Alabama, ago, He has been lodged Mootgomery, and has confe guilt, John T. Neary arrested in , after talkia he police, on the recent murde charged on the mo Was a detective identification of the body mur. dured girl by Mr. C, H. Eldrige turns a mistake, It is now said ber “that of a Danish immi- Was it or to v & iO Fuspici Was dis- He Boston, ET there, ning of the lat, from ’ of the ssf # Oul Ci ng is #4 y be ¢ * grant = — Mrs. Angus Camer States Senator Cameron, herself into the river at la Wisconsin, on the 31st ult. She Wild rescu=d and restored It was her second a tempt at suicide, her mind baving affected by an injury to her spine several years ago Kelly, of 'hila inl i i Le Crosse, LO consciousness, * Deen ~Chief Detective phia, returned from evening of the lst with urities, all Miller the prop- stoler Brothers, erty from adelphia, whose safe was broken open bed on the of March I. Access tothe building was gained means of an unoccupied store next door. The burglar, John Talbot, was arrested by Inspector Byrnes, of New York, ing on the suggestion of Chief Kelly, who was convinced from the character of the 106’ whose wo. k has served a term and is now under night Mil act T'allsst A AlN in indict. ing recently escaped from Slreet Jail, Raymond ~The house of J. Ii, Bolin, in Cel. on the perished was dan. oth uit, and three children in the flames, Mrs. Bolin gerously injured, ~The snow blockade oa the roads in Quebec bas beea raised and the English mails which arrived in Halifax a week ago were delivered In (Quebec on the morning of the 1st. ~The total coinage of the U. 8. Mints during March was $5,195,000, including 3,020,380 standard dollars, ~Joseph Lindenwmuth and John Slat- tery were injured, the former perhaps fatally, by the explosion of a keg of powder In a mine at New Castle, Penna., on the afternoon of the 1st, Lindenmuth hung his lamp upon a prop, and was filling a cartridge when the lamp fell into the keg. ~The Board of Pardons at IIarris- burg m the lst commuted the death sentence of Willlam Buset, of Elk county, to imprisonment for life, ~The trial of Dr, James Hodges in San Francisco, for exploding a bomb during a Patti concert, has resulted in a verdict of assault with an intent to commit murder. Hodges testified that he had gone to the theatre with the intention of ending his life while atti was singing, so that he “could be her page in the spirit land.” ~In Lexi + Kentucky, on the Slst uit, ‘Sam’ Magone, ‘a lead rail- hatter,” playfully painted” a rifle at a ten-year-old colored girl and it oil, The girl was wounded In the forehead, and her recovery is doubtful, Magone becamo *‘frantic with grief at the accident.” 4 58.467 during March. Total cash in the Treasury, $453,117,086. Unbelief is the influence of all sins, and binds them down upon us, Let us search ourselves in the place and atterwards the world. Hope is the mainspring of happiness resolution is the secret of success, The wise and prudent conquer difli- culties by daring to attempt them, Be severe to yourself, indulgent to others, and thus avoid resentment. Sclentific scrutiny may take things to pieces but it can’t put them together again, display; we retain by the qualities we possess, The most completely lost of all days is the on which we have laughed. The wise man does not speak of all he does, but he does nothing that cannot be spoken of, dociely is a troop of tninkers, and them take one not the best heads best places, the among We must do quickly what there is no hurry for, to be able to do slowly what demands haste, Small service is true service lasts, Of friends, bowever scorn not one, He who is the most prouiise 18 the most formance of it. He who find ain ir radi in Ws il 18 as untimely frost, As long as we are 1 us living grace, t What's vine whe 5 : GFE when you thir it? the use RE Lear Reputation is rarely proportioned to We have seen a th t merit Lh that { if eemed, either for the ttained, or for ave not vet a 1 possessed, think of religion escaping what wrath to come, we shall af we are already under we are Lhe burden of death, for we cur 31iy f nger if we of f Neans ol ws lw OLY we + nog $a. ii C8Came ourselves, To be prudent, ho accomplishments infi are those being florid and learned; or all that which the world calls great, as good scholars and gentlemen The happiness of your life d I upon the quality of your thought therefore guard accordingly, and care that you entertain no notions suitable to virtue and nnreasona nature, good, are gher than of une I think that if you observe what Justice and kindness both say to you in the journey of life, other people will be glad to walk with you and be sorry to part with you, and that when you get to the end you will lvok back on your course with satisfaction and joy, This may be said of the trials of God’s servants in every age: that love appoints them, wisdom chooses them. Providence arrar g28 them, promises aad glory shall be the issue of every ope of them when every mystery shall be cleared away, and when He who is death to be swallowed up in victory, that is in the highest condition of splir- itual health, work, The first appertamns more di- rectly to the heart; the second appertains as well to the head, the hands and purse. The fullest combination of the two would almost realize the ideal of church life in its highest form. “How was It possib'e for yon to swallow 80 nauseous fruit?” asked the master, Lokman answered, *‘1 have received so many sweets from you that it is not wonderful 1 should have swal. lowed the only bitter fruit you ever gave we." The master was $0 much charmed with this reply that he gave Lokman his liberty. The beautiful answer might teach us 4 lesson. We take the gifts from our heavenly Father with a smillog face; but when he sces best for our good to send us something we do not like, our countenance falls, and even if we do not speak, our sullen discontent is apparent to all, TRIBUTES TO WOMAN Poet x of many thie Preachers Lands, ans From SALON Woman i Woman Wore $1 ignity, AH that shakespen only heroine Woman js SL woman In wishin man destroys i Nature masterpiece, There is a wou all great things, If woman! alone can restore it, I wish Adam is body Yi 43 ¢ THEA I'o a gentleman of her sex, What is a woman? ture’s agreeable | A handsome rood woman is A fashion abl with hersel Won L§ f + : Lat Lu Tr Woman at all whes WwW COZY W ty This means th n cheerful hard work on the one side, thrift and self-denial on the other—in t. union. the yoke of marriage is an apparatus that should sit on two pairs 1s iait Ig a girl wait to wear het it until it has been nicely seemly in see own part of The Code of a Quakeress, The following 1s a code of rules beth Fry, the noted Quaker reformer: 1. Never lose any time. 1 do not think that lost which is spent in amuse. ment or recreation every day; but al- ways be in the habit of being employed. 2. Never err the least in truth, Never say any ill thing of a per- son when thou canst say a good thing of him. Not only speak charitably but feel so, 4. Never be irritable or unkind to anybody, 6 Never indulge thyself in luxuries that are not necessary, 6. Do all things with consideration, and when thy path of duty is most diffi- cult, put coufidence in that power alone which is able to assist thee, and exert thine own powers as they go, A I AI SO iri. A wan displeased with the world is never satisfied with himself, 0 oS NEW WEATHEY BIGNAL Adopted for general use by States Signal Sorry alter March 1 pendent. t« i conditions, prepared at Nional ¢ ignal Washi i} fficer, daily Ours nin As the wea ran tie aphed i —-— The Gulf Stream’s Warm wn iS equi (0,000 lay. wh ve by 1.5 } JUAlor, amd ved hy ail ¢ Live 1 ils ir reaching, t the heat of Atlantic Ne exe * fen Wi OF Oe § HITE i he Arabian Mar bea ire Nad b SPOOLS, € Vey evel 44 Som. Fst $ns with fiea-bitten § ) . 4 ’ for hel head, nostril thin and « panded, the throat of a Zame-Cock, Lhe her skin so thin and soft that the thon my runs she was what you woukl consider in England a pony, 14 hands 14 inches high; but she was as broad almost as a dray horse, and her tail was set up so high that as she moved about her loose-box you could, stooping, walk between it and the ground. Her feet were black and hard, and the tendons below her hocks and knees were like harp strings. Add to this that her bead was so lean that you might have boiled it without obtaining any flesh from it, and you have a picture of what this desert-born mare was, The tree will not only lle as it falis, but it will fail as it leans. And the sat question every one should bring ome to himself, is, “What is the mn- clipation of my soul? Does it with all ita affections and powers, lean toward God, or away from him?” The human heart is like heaven the more angels the more room,