The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 22, 1887, Image 6

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    a
TAEAT
NEW THE WEEK
—A railroad thght began in Indiau-
gapolis on the evening of the 11th. ‘The
Indianapolis, Decatur and Springfield
Company enters the Union passenger
station over the tracks of the Indian-
apolis, Cincinnati, St. Louis and Chi-
cago Company, using 600 or 700 feet of
that line, and has been paying for the
privilege, They grew tired of paying
cut money and proposed bullding a
track of their own. To do this it was
necessary to cross the tracks of the
other company. On the evening of the
11th the Decatur people put 150 men
at work, and the crossing was almost
completed before the officials of the
other road learned what was going on.
They then ordered a locomotive and a
force of men to the scene and attempted
to stop the work. ‘‘The crossing was
2 sort of temporary affair, intended
Lo establish the legal right of the De-
;atur people, and the Big Four people
tried to demolish it by running a loco-
motive upon it. The locomotive was
:hrown from the track, and while the
Big Four gang was engaged in replac-
ng it, the Decatur people practically
completed another temporary crossing.
At a late hour the Big Four people had
the crossing blockaded with a locom
tive and several freight cars.”
—The coroner's jury investigating
the boiler explosion at Chester, Penna. ,
on the 10th, decided that the explosion
from faults originating
arose |i
manufacture of the boller plate.”
in the
Jameda,
on th
News
death, filliam E.
Gan,
the n ay
spectator in a Sydney
he was stricken with a fainting
never recovered conscious
o'clock on the morning of May 18
died. Mrs. Sheridan, who ]
playing an engagement at
arrived at Sydney just t
her husband’s death.
poor all the time he was in Australia.
Mr. Sheridan was born
June lst, 18390,
stage at the age of 19, served tl
years in the Umiom army dunnog ti
war, was married in Boston in 1
and was leading man at Pike's Ope:
House until was burned,
He was for several years a suppor
Edwin Booth, and during
years of his life appeared frequently
a ‘‘star.”
The house of a farmer named
ward Menota, South Manit
was burned on the evening of the
and three children, aged from
twelve years, perished in the fi
a5 a
"
[1€38,
he
1
1t
i
wi
3, in
—James Loftus and Edward |
each 12 years of age, were
the 12th, while bathing at Gr
rington, Massachusetts,
—The town of Trenton,
and its neighborhood bh
SWAarms
rose
aro
noe
0
we been ii
for a week past by
apparently identieal witl
fly of the dispensatory
vegetation and blist
“Fully a thousan
his son
a quarrel
Scott also shot
condition,
is in a critical
City, Mississippi, on the evening
11th, by two brothers named Collur
in revenge for his having insisted
they owed him a balance of
a debt.
—The United States Treasurer re-
ports that the total circulation—coin
and currency—on May 31st, 1887. was
$1,207 256,660, being a net increase of
$08,566,645, as compared with the elr-
culation May 31st, 1886. The increase
by items was as follows: Gold coin,
$10,870,944; standard silver dollars,
$2,463,384; subsidiary silver, $2,946 842:
gold certificates, $10,840,052; silver
certificates, $49,956,190, and United
States notes, $4,521,722; total, 887,000,-
C43, which amount was reduced to
$58,566,545 by a decrease of $28 442 408
in the circulation of national bank
notes,
The First National Bank
ance, Ohio, was authorized
11th, with a capital of 100,000,
— While a number of men were ex-
amining a charge which had failed in a
quarry near Leesport, Penna., on the
afternoon of the 1liih, it exploded, in-
juring three men, two of them, nnmed
Francis P. Kauffman and Philip
Schaeffer, fatally. At Olean, New
York, on the 13th, Lemuel Hart was
killed and several others were slightly
injured by an explogion of unitro-
glycerine at the works of the Galla-
gher Torpedo Company, During a
game of base ball at Marblehead,
Massachusetts, on the afternoon of the
13th, Smith Billings and Joseph
Thompson, while running to catch a
ball, collided with great force Billings
bad his frontal bone crushed in and
was terribly gashed on one side of the
head, and his condition is critical,
Thompson was also badly injured and
was insensible at last accounts,
-~ Five men were killed and a pumber
injured by an explosion of dynamite at
the Inman mines, four miles from
Chattanooga, on the evening of the
13th.
— Panama advices to the 4th inst,
report a landslide on a farm in Con-
cordla, which killed 16 persons—Fedro
A. Restrepo, his wife, nine children
and five servants,
There was a small riot on the af-
terncon of the 12th, at a pienie of
about 2000 New York Anarchists at
Oak Cliff Park, in Hudson county,
New Jersey. While the festivities were
re ‘
iv CenLs on
of
on
Alll-
the
at their height, a man named Winn,
who tried to take a short cut through
the park, was savagely beaten and
thrown over a fence among some base
ball players, These went to his assist-
ance, and several constables also ap-
proached the park entrance, and all
were assaulted by the Anarchists with
stones and clubs, Pistol shots were
also fired and two constables and a boy
were wounded. It was announced on
the 13th, that the Ihstrict Attorney of
Hudson county had taken steps to
bring to punishment Johann Most and
a number of his followers for the riot-
ing at Oak Hil Park, A demand will
be made upon the New York authori-
ties fer Most’s extradition.
~The Hall & Ordway Manufactur-
ing Company (boots and of
Nashville, failed on the 1 The
firm’s liabilities are reported to be
$160,000, the individual liabilities §46,-
000, and the {firm's assets $200,000,
The Ohio Steam Heating Company, at
Cineinpati, made an assignment on the
13th. Liabilities, $7
000,
—Jt 18 said that
the hop situation
ley indicates that,
ages by vermin, one-third
age crop will be hary
crease in acreage is fully one-third, and
the yards’ average is fair. Many
yards
twelve
and twenty-
shoes Js
ith,
fi) ¢ qa Si
3, OO h ARSELS D J,
a careful review of
in the Mohawk Val-
1 ible rav-
l an
1 He de-
{
arring poss
¢
of
ested,
wyer-
only
were not c¢ l'en and
cents is being offered for '85s,
t } "863.
B
4
10 first degree,
that sentence
18 25th
YO Cf
t inst,
red, was lynched
n the evening of
Martha
Years,
i, aged J0 years,
In Scurry count
th, James Taylor,
was attacked by four
of whom had knives
six-shooter. He captured
and Killed all four of his
“*Dago Joe,” a half-breed
accused of the murder of a
. was taken from officers and
near Duncan Station, Missis-
mn the 12th
11
ii
ee
from De:
i Johpson’s com-
1 a murderous band
rom Mountains
t N
. Ee WW. Bailey & Co,,
Brine—was announced,
and CU, J. Kershaw & Co, asked a
lay from their creditors, promising that
funds rthecomin
The panic extended to other cities, but
no serious trouble was reported except
at Milwaukee, where three failures
were announced, viz: Frank Wilson,
Joseph Wilde Hill, Fleitzheim & Co.,
the latter being the Milwaukee branch
of C. J. Kershaw & Co., of Chicago.
Hooker, Crittenden & Co,, closed out
all their trades, Their failure depends
on the ability of the Kershaw crowd to
meet all their obligations,
~By a fall of top rock in the
aware and Hudson Company's
Creek Colliery, near
the morning of the 14th, Peter Cem.
mer was killed, Simon Charmesky so
badly hurt that he died within an
hour, and Michael Fisher and Jolin
Bradosky severely injured, the former
perhaps fatally
Wesley and Elmer Fisher,
brothers, were crossing a bridge near
Butler, Ohio, on 135th, with a
traction engine, when the bridge gave
way and both men fell into the water
fifteen feet below, where they were
pinned by the engine. Wesley was
held under water and drowned. El-
mer was held fast by the feet, but his
head remained above water, It took
nearly two hours to release him and
get out his brother's body.
~The Mound City Street Car Com-
pany’s stables and the stables of the
Lafayette Brewing Company, In St,
Louis, were destroyed by fire on the
morning of the 14th, both fires happen-
ing almost at the same time. The loss
on the brewery stable is $15,000, on the
car stables $50. 000, The old Watuppa
mill in Fall River, Massachusetts, used
a8 u storehouse by the Pocasset Manus
facturing Company, was burned on the
evening of the 13th. Loss, $30,000,
Swindell Brothers’ floating saw mill at
Apalachicola, Florida, was burned on
the 14th with 1.000.000 feet of boards,
Loss, $50,000, Turnbull's white lead
factory in Newtown, Long Island, was
burned on the 13th, Loss, $75,000,
~=J, C., Chase was robbed by two men
in the woods near Tremont, Massachu-
setts, on the 13th. They took $500
and a wateh from him and left him tied
to a tree. Frank Fowler, charged
bp fat .
Rosenfeld & (
i i
shoul be {i
Del-
Mill
1
the
amount of 837,000 on Governor Bate,
of Tennessee, over
rested on the 18th, at Rich Valley, In-
diana, where he was hired as a farm
laborer,
— Four persons, whose ages range
from 12 to 45 years, have been drowned
near Kalamazoo, Michigan, since the
11th, while boating or fishing. Mat-
thew Rapp was killed by lightning
while opening his door near St. Joseph,
Missouri, on the evening of the 13th,
In Jersey Clty on the 156th Charles
Burch, a policeman, 34 years of age,
twice shot and fatally wounded hus
wife and then committed suicide,
shooting himself twice in breast
and once in the head. The couple had
been married eleven years and had
three children. Burch was a ’rotestant
and his wife a Catholic, and they quar-
relled frequently on account of their
religious differences, In Columbia
county, Oregon, on the 11th, Lew
Backus and G. DD. Stoddard quar-
relled over a division line fence, and
Backus and killed Stoddard.
Backus fled, pursued by a constable,
The latter ordered him to hault,
Backus, who was armed with a Win-
chester rifle reiused, whereupon the
dead, It
hot him
Strombac
the
shot
constable sh
ported that Caspar
posed by the police of
Jersey, to be the murderer of th
known girl found with her } {
March, was arrested ou the
a small town in Illinois,
hh was employed as a
n near Houte:
> years of age
rom Salem, Illinois,
was caught
confessed the crime
}
ily
12.1
xr 04
INALIwWay
‘+
laborer
at lu where
to a fellow coun
John Bauman, an
Inmknown ace
4
wih
named
had an
tryman,
compile
photograph of
In HKowan cou
on Lie evenir
iff
¢
Ig Of
the
and his s
from More-
from ambush,
mortally
belong £
disgrace
ky.
hile ex-Sher Hamey
were riding home
head, they were fired at
1 are believed to be
did n«
factions
but had
HAVEer gany
| y #
Hey )
the
I
among
—— prevalenc Ol bies
tt in taitoun
dogs and cattle is
ounty, Fl
been bitten by rabid dogs, an
Several persons have
1 r
Lo
: se
¥ rt + y
1x “4 I
PARTL ait
TEA’
Trelo:
is, Michigan,
premature explo
I were white-
New Ring-
and Henry AT
ryatal Fal
the
ie nel
Hawn's
ne of the robbers
missed him, where-
toe robber fred at Anker with
iis revolver, inflicting a fatal wound
breast After Anker was
robber knocked him
down, his pistol from him and
blew out his left eye, but the man es-
upon
0
left
+ x
OG
i A i
not yet been captured,
bers retreated in an opposite direction,
While colored schoo s were holds
ing a picnic in & near
Louis, on the 15th, a gang of colored
roughs went to the grounds and after
drinking beer refused to pay for
When Adams, the booth keeper, re-
monstrated, the rowdies assaulted him
with elubs and drew pistols on him.
Adams went hmoe, procured a Win-
chester rifle,
promiscuous fire on the gang, two of
whom, Jeff Smilh and Henry Hall, he
seriously wounded, the latter perhaps
fatally, Joseph Duquette shot his
wife and then committed suicide, at
South Bridge, Massachusetts, on the
16th. It is expected that the woman
will recover,
—The trouble in the Chicago wheat
market continued on the 16th, Kershaw
& Co., being unable to meet their obli-
gations, There were fifteen failures in
all on the 158h, with 8361,000 liabili-
ties. Including the three large fallures
on Tuesday, the liabilities aggregate
nearly §2,000,000, An additional fail.
uie was announced on the afternoon of
the 16th, that of John J. Byrant & Co. ,
with liabilities estimated at $150,000,
The suspension was also announced of
Griffiths, Marshall & Co, of Minneapo-
His and Duluth,
~=A report was received at Min.
neapolis, on the evening of the 16th,
that a tornado had visited Grand
Forks, Dakota, killing four men.
«Thesteamship Vidette, from New
York for Mobile, foundered 100 miles
off shore on the 13th inst. Her crew
have arrived at Pensacola, She was
valued at $60,000 and had a large as-
sorted cargo.
«Two new cases of yellow fever
were reported on the 16th, in Key
West, making a total of 20 to date.
Sixteen patients are now under treat-
Heh three haye recovered and ten
died,
grove St.
¢
it,
age, committed suicide near Saratoga,
New York, on the evening of the 16th,
for gangrene, Mrs, Dr. Harry R.
at her father's residence in
New York, on the morning of the 17th,
No cause 18 assigned. John
prominent citizen of Liberty,
York, was shot and killed by
New
Curtis
Wales had a handful of red pepper
{| throw in Fishe’s eyes, and also a
i volver, but his rival was too quick
{ him, Wales was a married man,
| leaves a widow and one child, Benjamin
{| Hance, colored, aged 18 years,
| taken from the jail near Leonard-
| town, St. Mary's county, Maryland,
| early on the morning of the 17th, and
| lynched by a mob, Ile was charged
| with attempting assault a white
| girl, Thisis the first lynching in St.
Mary’s county. ‘Jack’ McKelway,
of Mapleton, Penna., was arrested on
the 17th on suspicion of being one of
{ the party who committed the robbery
at Peter lHawn’s place on the
{ He was away from home on the
until the evening of the 16th, and was
| not explain his whereabouts,
if Mt.
1 the evenin
Tse
for
to
14} §
1th,
i
Mid
able to
ndaged,
MeKelway, and
sent to arrest Lil
who was sl
byes
Was 11g
Mi.
despatch
says tl
that
damage,
flooded
ations,
glorm
points neg
Maryland
’
3 y ‘1
2 much
Al
on u
ASSaUIlIiDK
»1pless female nm:
bodies of
kota on the aflernoon
been received, In Gran
five buildings,
church
Dakota,
BONS
Was
were kill
vrabia
ble Inform
folks who have never
but Coney Island, N
know pretty well Dy
Arabia ought to b
unending level of burning
fully decorated with human skeletons
and milestoned with i palm
| trees thirty leagues apart, each over-
banging a “lipid well” (whatever
that may be), while bands of dusky
robbers mounted on horses
| the singular property of always going
at full galop and never needing to
}
dreary,
sand, taste-
. ta vt
SOLILATY
of
be
Brass in Students’ Lamps.
think that the
is forced
“A great
brass { t
nany people
1
in student lamp stands
tool of the brass worker, but that
lamp
instrument
sald a repairer the
‘*The 1864
2 lathe, the same as is used to turn out
A block
right shape is placed
a flat of
latter put in motion, and when a high
other day.
in the lathe, with
piece brass against it, t
small blunt
instrument is placed against it so as to
d it to When
lent mold,
this is done the rod 18 run through the
+
fit a wooden
hole, and an iron plate placed in the
whole solid
| style of clothing repulsive to every
| right principled mind, living comfort.
{ ably where there is nothing to eat, and
| one to rob,
But these well ascertained facts are
rarely shaken when confronted with
Arabia as it is, which does not agree
by any means with Arabia as it ought
to be. The untraveled traveler
with amazement Arabian mountains
several thousand feet in height, Ara-
| bian valleys as green and beautiful as
the charming little glens that lurk
| amid the black lava ridges of
| Arabian fortresses armed with
pean cannon, Arabjan coffees
sees
Euro-
planta
with a a
A
hour.
composition gives
done.
good man can turn out an
The top and bottom of the holder is
also done in the same manner,
takes longer.
“There is
s (rérman
at a
ie. He had hot coffee fo
ir
stirred it tt
iv LUO
the
‘
or, and when the m
"aK ¥ Yig vy ¥e i rn } *
18 800Nn disappeared, much
d the
They were 1
say of the host
amazemen
an
$) ‘a
we
gues
i3 same me
Er —
ann Manufactory.
heartily
ff =
pieasur
A Iniracie
——
iriplet of Girls,
born in Goshen, on March
jet of girls, who made on
markable records known,
They were Sibyl, Sarah and Susan Harl-
burt, children of Gideon
(Beach) Hurlburt, For the great period
eighty-seven years this triplet re-
mained unbroken, Sibyl dying at
. 1875. Her wedded
and
¢
Qi
name was Luddington.
the next year Susan (Mrs, Grennell)
Sarah lived to the
larly Mrs. Grennell and Mrs, Bushnell
that up to 75 or 80 years of age it wa
wt intimate friends to
tell them apart; even they could mistake
one another among themselves,
w- A
Pictnre Paper Thinks of
Paper Pict
What a
nres
The newspaper mania has
got preity well disseminated through
picture
Java and Brazil, Indeed, the whole
northern slope of the
tains of Yemen is still as rich and pro-
| ductive, even after centuries of Turke
| ish misrule, as in the rar off days when
Mocha was the chief outlet of southern
Arabia, little dreaming that it should
one day be as magnificently useles: as
a London footman or the head steward
of an ocean steamer,
What Became of the Milk
Al an evening gathering a gentleman
told a painful story of a little boy sent
by his parents for milk. In returning
home the child was accidentally run
over and killed. The story was told
somewhat dramatically, and with much
pathos, and at its conclusion the whole
company remained silent for some mo-
ments, Then one of the ladies spoke
up and said: “And what became of
the milk ?"’
c—————————
Millet 1s excellent food for young
chicks,
Self love exaggerates both faults and
; our virtues,
ordinary means of art
themselves with
This shows
remote from
manage to decorate
illustrations,
presently come back to common sense,
No doubt there will aiways be pictures
in the daily newspapers,
portraits of interesting persons will
They
A ——————
To shape the ctaracter of a child
aright is a task which perhaps ouly
those who have been wisely disciplined
in youth are thoroughly competent to
perform. Few know how to go about
it; fewer still possess the requisite pa-
tience and equanimity to adhere per.
gistently to the rules under which alone
it can be accomplished. The great
difficulty is with those strong propensi-
ties, which, wholesome in themselves,
and implanted in our nature for wise
purposes, may become, if unregulated
by principle, the source of the worst
vices and the most heinous crimes,
’ "
FOOD FOR THOUGHT.
On th
again.
I.ife is a short day, but it sa
ing day.
What makes life dreary
of notion.
Fora messenger |
read. ’’
e same streamn we never float
WOrK-
nay
It
quish a dove,
i# no honor for
Nothing
what is
Is
iv i
can come oul
in it,
85 10
house 18 on
When
course of
| lived.
{ Things are
| them for all, some!
| sacrifice them.
Pride hel
thing when it only
own hurts—
Man mus
grudgingly
WOrk 4s a man
time to |
fire,
one I
nature
vi
D8 Us
AS reasonably
ushroom bed
£54 ¢ { x
Lis irom snail
than happl
sufferings
| common joys
aif.
is not Bo easy or
reasonably expect 1
emplary
| The trutl nnot rned, behead
| ed or crucifies A lie on the throne is
| & lie still, and truth in a dungeon is a
truth sti
il, and a lie on the 8 on
the way to
iy
the
{ dungeon is on the way 1 viel
There appears to exist a greater de-
igire to hive long than live well.
Measure by man’s he cannot
| live long enough; measure by lus good
| deeds, and he has not lived long enough;
| measure by his evil deeds, and he has
| lived too long.
When one thinks tha
| for him, and that be
and selfish world, he would to
| ask himself this question hat have
| I done to make anybody care for and
love me, and to warm id with
faith and genercsit rally
the case that those the
most have done th
It was a very pt
| who why
{ be with Dbeauly? hat
{it was a that but a
blind man could ask since any beautiful
oliject doth so much attract
| of al} men that it is in no man’s
{ not to be pleased with it
Oh, cursed poverty! 1k
{ be one of Satan, for 1 myself have i
at thy scanty table, and slept in y
cold bed, 1
throne 1
wirone i
3 r . 0 3 fy ‘ in
Geieal, ana Wud in
Ty.
fo
Gesires,
t nobody
ik alone
CATES
a cold
well
ds
nim
ould
oper answer
asked, Any man
pleased
juestion none
the sight
power
wow 1h
fur
to
eaten
tt
u
And never yet have 1 seer
thee bring one smile to human Lips, or
| dry one tear as it fell from a buman
eve. Dut 1 have seen thee sharpen the
| tongue for Liting speech, and harden
the tender heart, Ay. 1've seen thee
| make even the presence of love a bur
| den, and cause the mother to wish that
the babe nursing her scant breast had
| never been born.
Each one can do something to
regulate the innate love of nov
elty within himself, 80 a8 10 make it
available for good. First of all he
[ must recognize and not ignore it, then
be must make it the exeeptioy aad no
the rule. He must accept sameness,
not as an evil to be done away with,
but as the necessary and serviceable
warp and wool of life, on which the
embroidery of change must be skilfully
and spariszly introduced, This novelty
will never lose its charm and is sources
L will be kept fresh and invigorating.