NEWS OF THE WEEK —Mrs, Annie Kelly and Mrs, Ellen Barrett was arrested in New York on the evening of the 23d for counterfeit- ing silver coin. The officers caught the women at their work and captured thirteen plaster of Paris moulds, files, melting kettles, metal and one hundred and sixty-eight counterfeit dollars. The wemen are sisters, and one of them, Mrs. Kelly, 1s the wife of a counterfeiter. They were held on the 25th in 85000 bail each. James Nixon, wn old man, living alone near Hamans- ville, in the western part of Penna., a8 been robbed of $5800 in cash and rovernment securities which he had secreted in his house. Recently he was decoyed from his home by two men, who represented that they were real estate speculators, and during his ab- sence a confederate entered the house and secured the treasure. Nixon did not discover his loss until the 25th, The store of Clevelaad, Brown & Co., dealers in neckwear, on Otis street, Boston, was entered on the 24th by burglars, who carried away over $2000 worth of stock, The goods were taken away in broad daylight. —Three young men, Charles Mercau, August Rousseau and Joseph Huard, vere drowned at St. Romerald, Quebec, on the 24th, by the upsetting of a boat. While Hamlin Miller was driving across the Auglaize river, in Allen county, Ohio, the evening of the 231, the horses became Miller and his wife and child water. Mrs. Miller were drowned, as Miller ne ug on yt a into a9 1 the child wn near Alle I'he many? pan: Vosburgh hnildis vundang, ibhout S200. 000. nearly IL SEU, ' i irance. I'wo hundred of work, A fi in Chicago | ra i a, rs in printers’ £ WN rl ell Or. shot dead, room a i The youth Mare: tally wounded his beart, sulci Of beer felled ’ +} hatchet. was br then {hrew open ¥ x screamed for belp and her husban to the kitchen, where he cut his with a knife. At Jefferson City, sour, on the 26th, ex-Supreme .Jud; John Henry and State Auditor Wali quarrelled the street, and J Henry was shot once in the night and again in the breast, and Walker | was severely cut in the head, by a blow from Judge Henry's cane. The affair | grew out of an investigation of Walker | by a Legislative committee, hefore which Henry was a witness, —A special train arriyed at Topeka, Kansas, on the 26th glt,, having on board a party of injured men, consist- ing of Lieutenant Governor Biddle, Secretary of State Allen and State | Auditor McCarthy, of the Kansas Board of Railroad Assessors, who have been making a tour of inspection or the Chicago, Kansas and Neb road. They were accomps” President Low and Gegpe~ : +1 Manager Fischer, and, ¥ 3 «th Yoo entire train “ore Ww Lt STs ® Wore 7 ,r less bruised and wed, The P¥ ty left Horton on the ofith, 10 RO "west on the Atchison branch of ¥.e Rock Island, and one mile west of that place the train was hurled down an embankment 25 feet high. Mr. Allen was hurt the most severely, but not dangerously so. A train of fifty loaded coal cars on the Erie Railroad ran away near Big Shanty, Peana., on the morning of the 2uth, and jumped the track while go- ing at the rate of sixty miles an hour, I'he train was completely wrecked, and brakemen Lacroix aml Crawson were dangerously lpjured. Lacroix, it is thought, will dle, — A derrick upon the terrace in Washington fell om the morning of the 26th, injuring two men, one, hamed Reilly, perhaps fa. tally. At Topeka, Kansas, on the 20th, Henry Nagle, while painting the inside of a huge vat in a vinegar factory with a patent preparation, was overcome by the odor and perished from asphyxia, C. B. Post, a prominent merchant of Centreville, Penma., was kiiied on the morning of the 26th by a kick from a colt. During the passage of & Memo- rial Day procession in Atlanta, on the t1 hie on 1 i er (Aska aled by new Capitol | 26th, arunaway horse caused a panic by trampling down the people. Several | persons had limbs broken, and one old i lady was 80 badly kicked in the head | that her recovery is doubtful. M. J. Scanlan, a freight brakeman on the Fort Wayne Railroad, was ar- | rested in Pittsburg on the 206th, on & | charge of robbing freight trains. This | is the first arrest made outside of the | wholesale arrests on the Panhandle. i Others will follow, however, as it is | stated that the Pennsylvania Com- Jay has evidence implicating a pum- er of employes on thelr various lines, -- Willis Brothers’ grocery, in Al- legheny City, Penna., was burned on the morning of the 26th. The upper part of the building was occupied by the Willis family and some lodgers. Two men, named Eberman and Hog- glitzrun, were fatally injured by jump- ing from windows, and after the fire | was extinguished the dead bodies of | Sophie Boles and Frederick Shultz | were found on the fourth floor, The loss on property 18 about $20,000, Itis supposed the fire was started by an ex- plosion of natural gas, -In Paulding county, Ohio, 25th, two hundred masked men over- powered the guards at the reservoir, blew up the banks, and, saturating the locks and timber with oll, burned them, On the afternoon of the 20th, the Governor ordered the Toledo com- { pany of National Guards to the scene { of the riot. on the Falk, of New York City, arrived in Chicago on the evening of | Lhe h, 1 putupata l Dur- ing the night his room was entered, | watch and ch ] with a sn) 1 PSU 10tel, I, small a, were standing ty Tont fr " 9 A005 ’ + ng at s 1€CK $ Lites ’ ort wrap the ot the pos ing at ant workmen was libera 4 Bu several 3 used t ano Hi rope around * 1113) L FLAME e oO fifty degrees about to descen te the id én " WAS ons, Penna. , breakfast, | married pr was Mrs, Gairdner’ y i Hild Jl S68 3 CLM rl (za i 08 of the wile of Keeper oy ; by the the tin wel cloths 1088 Ix 1 ten miles nort) which I'be bu lyeing cans, on o_o Tl A : A " west of Loledo, Ohio, was destro on the 206i. , the insurar ~The anniversary of t! a WAY « Diladay of by banqus ~hrated on the Pittsburg, N ~ ard addresses in | Des Moines ,<% Yok, W ashington, At th © Jdartferd and other cities, Pictshp Americas Jub banquet, Jo wag ‘6 Governor Foraker, of Oblo, ne principal sp®aker, 44 —A West-bDourd express train on the Southern Pacific Railroad was stopped and robbed by several men at Papago station, eighteen miles east of Tucson Arizona, about bLalf-past nine o'clock on the evening of the 27th. [Ilarper, the engineer, when approaching Ia- hago, was signalled Ly a red lantern to stop, He slowed down, and as he ap- proached the light noticed obstructions which would have derailed the engine had he not stopped. The robbers va- rlously estimated at from five to eight in number, fred several shots into the express car, and a man with a pistol in each hand boarded the locomotive and commanded Harper not to get down. The other robbers had, in the mean- time been prying open Lhe express car, and, failing to get it open, they placed a stick of glant powder under it and j compelled Harper to hight the fuse at- i tached. This he was obliged to do, but to avoid being blown up the messenger opened the car and the robbers took possession. After extinguishing the fuse they then took charge of the car, uncoupled the engine, baggage and ex- press car from the remainder of the troin and made Harper get on the ens gine and pull ahead two lengths, This being done, Harper was again put off and the robbers took charge of the en- fne and pulled six miles toward ucson. Here they killed the engine and left it. During the run the robbers went through the mail and express thousand dollars from Wells Fargo & Co, road money, one £1210 and one of 8500, and also two packages of postage stamps g Francisco, None of sengers were molested, them knew nothing of On. or the other and some what was of Olpg o oH Dr. W. T. Northrup, a prominent physician of Haverhill, Scioto county, Ohio, was murdered on the the 27th, by Thomas McCoy, a saloon keeper, and his brother, Alfred, the Postmaster Alfred McCoy. Dr. Northrup had in curred the displeasure of the McCoys They waylaid him when he was going to his office, and began firing on with pistols and shotguns. He unarmed, and drew a pocket-knife and badly wounded Alfred he was fatally shot, tana, on the evening of the Rowland, while drunk, Martin, a saloon keeper, arm. Joseph Bussiere, shot through and dled. lynching. in the abdowen friends threaten AL W. B. Towler wounded Rev, ( latter’s house. mortem and Stivers, shot F. Stivers made an statement that Towler fatally in iil 8 died on the ning of mor S34 > A vault and safe in chandlery o 3. Carpenter the & C lied open on th | jewelry aggregating 27 (Kk) of ’ . Hel tv Ii . 40 land, ex-Treasurer ' Liana, was arrested for embezzlement and held When he ly a discrepancy of account Ait V { i in his 1 yr ¥ InwWyer oi have young y eported to tne gqquares from { wk on the evenit 20 hh ult., they arrived gattling Run. Ten treel near ich * ui tuate two hi 1 persed. nor eleven o : at the jail thousand the jail, luded many ! by iatler with a people were on | # he crowd, wh seemed a suriosity, About nearly all bad dis e i chiefly urs Sx tramps got into a light at the natural gas well near Anderson, In- diana, on the 28th uit.; and two of them were pushed into the flame of the burning gas, One died almost in- stantly from inhatling the flame, and the other was fatally burned. Abra- ham lL. 'ttlejohn and his wife, an aged couple, perished in their burning dwel- ling, near Clinton, Alabama, on the evening of the 28th uit. Circumstances indicate thet they were murdered and that the house was burned to conceal the crime. Felix Griffin was shot dead and two others were badly wounded while trying to steal horses from & on the evening of the 26th ult. Charles Pillepaugh, a farmer, of Grafton, Wis. consin, was found murdered in his house on the 20th ult, and the dwel- ling had been ransacked. He hved alone. Andrew Tingle, an aged man, was found on the 20th ult, on the roadside near Hummelstown, Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, with a bad scalp wound, evidently inflicted by an axe, Ile was unconscious and nearly dead from loss of blood when found, and his recovery is doubtful, ~James DD. Westcott, ex-Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Flori- da, died on the 20th ult, in Tallahas- see. He was a son of the first United States Senator from that State. Marker Bush dled on the 20th ult, at the City Poor Farm, Pittsburg, of softening of the brain, He was for many years tor of the Bush House in Pitts- burg, and at one time also owned the cars, but did not get more than five Point Breeze Hotel. Philadelobin. Te. large sums by betting on horse races, Jonn Hanser and Henry Goshnel, New Hampshire, on the 20th The Commissioner of Agriculture, a telegram nee of among cattle —Reyv. A. M. Morrison A few days ago he was arrested Massachusetts and returned to Balti- more, He was tried and convicted on 20th ult, and sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment in the peniten- ! THE SMITHS, | A Mass of Valuable Information Re- garding the Patronymic. { the express train on the Southern I’a- zona, on the evening of have been “spotted” | be only a question of | are captured.” | -E. F. M. Simmons, lat t of the burned Hotel Del the 27th ult., and that “it will time before they @ manager Monte, $20, 000 bail on the 25th ult, of sett fire to the hote { 11g 1 i STATE LEGISLATURE, SENATE. 36+] nally ex f the Mechanic 3 { Neanor 1} © On Was ointment he H payment AWS axis Were report | was ind 44. ¥ act 80 i 74, nays men and [remen for a pension reading. The A was considered. The bill assessment laws passed number of appropriation bills, In the House on the ulit.. the | General appropriation bill was reported. ments rt «1 . al LF Crit did 1887 , and 2.750.000 for This includes $1,500,000 a for the public schools of the State. Mr, Ring's bill to give preference of ap- pointment or employment on all public works to honorably discharged soldiers, sailors and marines who fought for the Union in the late war of the rebellion, | | was passed to third reading. The bill authorizing the Auditor General issue to such of the | the Republic posts as apply for them arms and accoutrements | custody as are not necessary 1858- hh Vears 8d. ‘ to in ii for | amended so as to include organizations | of Sons of Veterans, and passed second reading. Adjourned. ————— REALISM EASILY BECURED .—ater- | familias (reading)—**Mourning dinners | are the latest Parisian folly. Twelve | young ladies, dressed in the deepest mourning and heavily velled, compose | the party. The dining room is draped in black, silver wreaths and tombstones take the place of pictures, The chairs are shaped like coffins set on end and | hung with jmmortelles, Knives and forks have bones for bandles and the champagne is served in skulls, The dinner 18 eaten in silence to slow Daughter—"Aré they given by peo- ple who have lost relatives?" “No. The paper says it is only a whim, but I don't see how Lhe guests can keep from laughing at the ridicc- lousness of it.’ “Maybe, papa, mvitations are only wsued to young ladies whose fathers ‘have refused them a new dress.” drink- liquid milk peo ix to drank A single Pers n at private parties ii very lite, xecntions in France, ndering execulion ‘hey have no bia in France, The executioner 1s | a hero por an outeast, as in other coun- tries, The systeth of executions has been simplified much as possible, | The instrument js erected the night be- | fore , and tried on a dummy (0 seo that Lit work well. Formerly the condemn. ed was tortured torn and | hacked, and he was always encouraged by having a good look at the gleaming knife as he approached the ghastly in gtrument, Now the knife is hidden, the victim is in position in twa or three seconds, a noiseless touch of the button and all is over, nil Ue isi It is good discretion not to make much of any man at the first, because one cannot hold out that proportion, as often and 4 THE ORIGIN OF FPETICHISEM the Resual of Thinking Reasoning Regarded as Modes even Hen worthless whe: he sun was WO meas ght as well as the he Greeks and with clouds, n order hours of the of the day, U used the clepsvdra, whi Pean walter steals away’ and a Lage filled wit and a hole wa in the botton through which th 1 walter 3 lass could run. The g t \ Was not trangparen t 3 ! Aw + “er from the outside NOW DN tl were escaped So there nade inside, certain marks that told fhe : notches into the water, and the water ran out in Hs with the of was left showed the hour. the water dropped ink which a block of the block rising as the hours went oun, Once ale another woe was float in awhile, some had a clepsydra that sounded a note at every hour, man al vers - A J R——— How few whom God has blessed with the responsible gift of genius can truthfully say with Walter Scott: 1 have tiled to unsettle no man's faith, to corrupt no man's priveiples, aad 1 have writien nothing which oun my deathbed 1 should wish blotted out,”