A RAILROAD HORROR. A Fast Freight on the Chicago and Atlantic Railroad Crashes into a Passenger Train--Thoe Wreck Burned to the Trucks. Thirty Persons Said to bo Kinled and Many fojured CHICAGO, October 11. Passenger train No.12, which left here at 7.45 last night, stopped just this side of Bouts at 0.45 to Wass some re- pairs, The freight train, No, 48, which should follow on instructions, received a clear bill at Boone Groove, six miles west of Kouts, and had got up a good speed when it crashed into the rear of the halted passenger train, which was unprotected with hghts or fog torpedoes on the track. The night was dark, and the scene during the next half hour was dreadful. The rear coaches of the pas- sepger train were smashed and tele- scoped 80 that three occupied less space than one. The live coals from the freight engine ignited the debris under which the wounded and dead were lying. Before substantial assistance could be rendered thirty people had died. Some were mercifully killed by the first shock, but many were slowly roasted to death. No one in the Yullman sleeper was hurt. The conductor tel- pgraphed to his company hera that all sscaped before the fire reached the car, and none were injured in the collision. No means existed for checking the tire, and only atter it bad burned itself out was it possible to do anything for the few still alive imprisoned in the debris, Forty per s wers wounded or burr ed, | yr both. All were on the train when | it left Chicago. but no names known up to 2 30 o'clock. General r Broughton, wi all the clerks and others who coud yf any use at the scene, left 2s soon us he heard of the accldent this morning. I'he way train, due here at 11.300 clock | from Kouts was delayed several hours | by the block on the track. W. A. Duncan, of Syracuse, N. Y., arrived on this rain, He saw the wreck. KE glteen or twenty the pumber at which he places those known | to have been killed. A number these were burned vefore his eyes. little Botemian boy was hemmed but not reached by the fire, and saw his father, mother and two sisters slowly roas ing before his eyes. He was dying as Mr. Duncan left, There was a doctor on the train, Mr. Duncan sald, who lost his wife and daughters in the buruing wreck. He could absolutely nothing, and saw Lbhem en circled by seething tongues of fire and cremated The train was not track on which the wreck but switched the remains of the train being still too hot to move, A PASSENGER'S STORY, Several passengers, who were on the ill-fated train, arrived in Chicago this afternoon. One of them, a gentleman from Taunton, Mass, who was on his way home, was sitting in the first car asleep. “The first I knew,” sald he, “I heard a frightful crash, and the car seemed shattered, and the pieces were flying past me. The next I knew I I found myself almost buried in the ruins and thev seemed to keep p were | Man ge i8 4 Oh A in iil do taken over the servi rel occured, around around, puing up. 1 tried to extricate myself and found 1 was pear a window. It was all dark and all around me were yells and groans, and the blackness made ii fearful. 1 didu’t seem to be hurt be- yond being shaken up, 50 I calied for help out of window, Some man, don’t K who, helped me out ned In i the Ri wen 1 others out. y AD OW tur and helped to get after 1 148] OuUL, . whole fire we were working on it bit by bit and let ble erie ne plas ' At one | wolnen appar ok ve up burn, wi of 1 Cars. Lares held insids JUL there were two 01 ently all together, and we tried to ge them out, They were shrieking ali time in a manner to freeze one's blood, for the fire was coming nearer Lo them all the time, We w we could, but could not gel them out, and the fire came ali around them and finally silenced their screams. To hear their desperate the fire cawe nearer and nearer and foally reached them, was simply appalling. The wreck burned to the trucks, no facili- ties being on hand to extinguish the fire. A ecarload of the injured was taken eastward from the wreck thia forenocn. They were maimed, bruised und burned, some quite badly.’ LACK nF FACILITH | Frank Cramer, the General West i Agent of the Gulon Lime of steamers was on board the wreck train, but es- caped uninjured. “The first we who were in the sleeping car knew of the accident,” said Mr. Cramer, coach was run into from the rear, The forward coaches, it seems, were tele scoped by the shock, There were only geven passengers, I think, in sleeper, and nove of them were killed or injured, 1 was asleep when the shock occurred. 1 dressed myself and, when I got off the wreck, 1 saw that the whole train was ablaze. Many who were killed or seriously wounded must have been burnt up, as the fire broke out as soon as the accident occurred. The trainmen did what they could to relieve the wounded, but facilities were lacking, and many people doubt- less perished in the flames because no help could reach them.” Dr. MeKee stated that only nine bodies had been recovered, and they were so badly charred as to be almost beyond recognition, the most left of any of them being a blackened trunk, and mm some cases little beyond a few handfuls of ashes, The nine were as follows: The Miller family of Dundee, father, mother, two brothers and a girl, (their 14.year-old boy Herman will probably die also); Dr, Perry, of North Judson, Indiana; Dr. Perry’s wife, Dr, Perry’s daughter, aged 11; a young Irish lady. The killed and wounded were taken from the scene of the wreck to Hunt ington early this afternoon accompa- nied by the Coroner, THE KILLED, , CHieaoo, Oct. 11.—The Daily News special from Kouts, Ind, says: Twenty orked as long as Clies as es . oul the LAER TTT ECA only two or three of whom are injured. When daylight came the remains of ten people were found, and this, the railroad officials claim, is the extent of the fatalities, No one knows how many passengers were on the ill-fated train, Superin- tendent Parson claims that the nnmber was very small, but survivors claim that there were fully fifty passengers in the two coaches. How many occu- pied the sleeper is unknown. The vice tims, 80 far as Known, are: Dr. William Perry, of North Jud- son, Ind. Mrs, William Perry. Grace Perry, aged 10. Charles Miller, aged 50, Mrs, Lena Miller, aged 485. Minnie Miller, aged 7. Fred. Miller, aged 20. William Miller, aged 17. Two unknown persons complete the list of the dead as certainly estab- lished, It 18 impossible to obtain a list of the wounded on the train, as only two are left behind. They are: Herman Mil- ler, aged 14, skull fractured and right leg shattered; recovery impossible, Joseph McCool, aged 24, of Boston, injured about back and limbs. WEEK. NEWSOF THE —A few days ago a wealthy coal op- of Pittsburg received a letter from New York inviting tion in a scheme to defraud ernment of $100,000, The letter signed C. H. Bedell, but gave no de tails, The coal operator police, and then made an apj for the 1lth, but appear. The police of New i the GGov- ointment 4 he i York i a not ers of the Department Ottawa, y quantity of rubber a di. rivh nt merchant Ontario, clothing imported by New DBrunswick, —In Monroe county, Georgia, on U A. J. Goin Willlam Han ad betel mel edc and for several years, other on the public road. After som words they tired at each other, Han was killed and Go'n mortally wounded —An express train New Y ork, Pennsylvania and Ohlo Raliroad collided with a freight train on a side track, owing to a misplaced switch, at Warren, Olio, on t 11th, joth en- gines and moore than a dozen Cars were demolished. Engh Fireman Adsit passengers on the ae eer badly ly hur escaped with a severe were the shaking up. —A from Drownsville, Texas, says reports of another hurri. cane in the Gulf moving westward create great uneasiness there, Seve inches of rain the evening of ti 18 highs despatch fel on jth, and dio than ever before, The whole countr) along the river is undated. In Mata- moras the flood has spread greatly, The mer Aranzas has been two days off the bar unable communicate the town account of weallier, —At Bethlehen a monument el to the rho died in the the Grande sled ww on the 11th of $4000 Penua., on lL a Cost sailors of 1 war for the Un Arge assemb- and malitary (rand Arms soldiers and unveiled in of a age, lhe a Civic which inc towns presence Te Was parade ded Dara . G80 > Posts from all x Valley and fi J , NOW Jersey. ties and Tampa, 1 reneral Hose remaining ibume the urine, acteristic icter the 10th. It 1s all over the an the city authorities are doing nothing.’ Three new cases and e death were reported on the 11th. The fat [ marked by the characteris vomit, Wi - A deposi nin i ik wi hue, One poland é@ OF : black t of gold yleidi covered (Quebec, in Buckingham ~It is reported from Drownsville, Texas, that the ranchercs ln pursuit of the of Senator DBerrera, v and ‘executed’ five of them in Berrera, it may be re- was recently captured by bandits and held eight days until $1500 was paid by the family for his release, Before beng Killed the bandits fessed a plot to capture and hold for ran. som a promiuent capitalist named abluctors i noon of the 10th, because she refused to live with him any longer. While she was drowning her brother appeared and shot his sister's murderer, who sank with the body of his victim to the bottom of the Amite river. -=The dead body of a young woman, supposed to be Anna Zofinsk:, aged 19 three weeks ago, was found on the afternoon of the 12th on a mountain side near Plymouth, Penna. She had apparently been murdered, ~For the past four days forest fires have been raging in Sonoma, Alameda, San Mateo and danta Cruz eounties, California, all in the vicinity of the Bay of California. Several fine farms have been completely burned over and the ground is cov. ered with carcases of all kinds of dead apizals,. Many families have been rendered homeless, Fire broke out on the 12th in the cargo of the British steamship Hugh Lenden, load- ing at Savannab, Georgia, for Liver- pool, and at last accounts was burn ing flercely. The vessel has four thousand bales of cotton on board, The fire was extinguished after peven. teen hundred bales of cotton were damaged by smoke and water, ~Snow fell in Utica, New York, on the morning of «the 12th. It was passengers are known to have escaped, the first of the season. ‘The first snow i i i i i The tops of the Adirondacks are white. Frost was reported as far south as Gibson, Mississiypi, on the evening of the 11th. — RR. 8. Hicks, cashier of the Staf- ford Springs National Bank, in BStaf- ford Springs, Connecticut, was arrested on the 12th, on the charge of misappro- priating the funds of the bank. It 1s said the defaleation will exceed $100,- 000, but the exact amount will not be known until returns are made from various New York and Boston banks, It was Hicks’ method to falsify the books 80 as to show excessive amounts due from those banks, He to having taken $73 000. The capital | stock of the bank 18 $200,000 and the surplus $24,000, while the undivided profits amount to over $3000, Hicks gave bail In $40,000, —A telegram was received in Ot- tawa, Ontario, on the 12th, saying that five men and a span of horses on Mc- Kay and Doherty's Limits have been missing since the 10th, and it is be- lieved they were drowned in Kippewa | lake while crossing on a frail ferry | contessed | —The Coroner at Huntingdon, In- diana. on the 12th, begun an investiga- | tion of the facts attending the collision | on the Chicago and Atlantic Railroad, | eighteen passen- | gers were taken out and nine killed and burned. All the trainmen examined | that the night was foggy, and that Caneer signals could not seen they were right upon them, be until —*“The best counterfeit f{ive-dollar Yih} the 12Lh, build veel al the Govern- rece] } ng. in , In HCRGO, Lhe wus front FO ‘ + ‘i had consumed much grain and several farm houses, — A despatch from Havana says a cyclone swept over the southwest por- tion of the eity on the 13th, moved In a westerly direction. It was raining heavily throughout the island. ~The money taken from the Pacific Express Company by Messsenger John Owen has all been recovered It was found on the 12th concealed in a barrel of ashes in the rear of Owen’s residence ip St. Lous. The amount ound was $33 000, Owen told the detectives wheres he had hidden the A burglar entered a dwelling Lac, Wis. William on the Upon being dis covered he attacked the five wotoen a club, seriously injuring all of them, and then made his escape, He secured but $3 as booty, A reward Las been offered for his arrest, A telegram from Nogales, Arizo- na, says that all attempts to get news of the storin on the southern coast have fulled, It is believed, however, that the cities of Mazatlan and San Blas “have been wholly If not partially de- occupied by Mrs. ~The deficit In the sccount of th National Bank of Stafford Springs according Lo amr estimate by the bank examiner on tne 15h, reached $84,000, ‘Aside from the above. tb debts amounted to $7 in addition to what is recor- the books in the way of notes, ig an aggregate of over $150,000 ler of the Cuarrency that he did no 6 bad FIRM) oinped in Deen ar- Texas, on Lhe highwayman Newsome Coleman, charge of being the lone hig t ~ 1: rrr} . Danger aug Oal —]t i8 from residen reported ( Pr Kil ired Ly the the IZ. Oue mi ill Was iS were in) —A 4 southern coast of Mexico, on the Tih and Sth mst, Quelit a city of more than S000 people, tally destroyed, | No ained, as the wires are down, hes state that she supposition | were a number of wrecks In | f astrous storm occurred on the 0. was U Aan: 1 ¥ obt Lives ost, particulars Despatc but U i It Is i i Orange crot ia igt I IY : or11lf . eo! ¥ # TE ae guil, £ CLS Cannot De ascer- alned, reported that the entire oa is de- | wyed. Michael Rogers, driver, was thrown yn a chemical engine while going to in Syracuse, New York, on the th, The wheels passed over his est and he died in a short time, In the Chicago | Ocean, Dr. T. G. McLure, of ye Grove, who was active in alding he sufferers at the wreek at Kouts, on | icago and Atlantic Railroad, ‘Those remains which were re- © an Interview in } foam 8 L$ ii 01 the seats near the windows, and fell 0 itwards when the charred frame-work | tell to pleces, but those who were 8it- | 1 whose remains fell on red to i of them, except would {ween Lhes ing inside, an rails, a vestige thie were bu t perl of bone be Was y dest roy ex wWoniv! he rear $n stated rain i session of the con au nineleen passen gers were missing. hime Minnie Demor, 17 ted daughter of Manistee, she years old, the | James Hepder- Michigan, has con- smothered the baby : q ’ a lop OL son, # » £5] no want poisoned the cows ¢ have Lo milk them, Henderson's house five Perca killed a man New Mexico, some months | He was tried and condemped, was gran‘ed a new tnal, and the interval was released on ball, I se i she | and set times, in Los] it. She 0 Carlos ago, in | He | Ysleta, when 2th by two officers, riding to El Paso, tally stabbed Officer T'ruj ws arrested while in Perea fa- ilo, and then (raskey, but ter was too quick and shot dead, Aleade Pino, a Mexi- | Wright, a cowboy, | al on | al the ial Perca at Grant, New Mexico, on the Pino shot and killed Wright, named Bell, who was working for Wright, shot and killed Yino, ~ An accommodation train on the tallroad was run into at a station near Independence, Mis- souri, on the morning of the 13th, by an express train, A woman standing on ths platform of the station was killed by flying debris, and three per- sons on the train were severely injured. Many others suffered slight injuries by trying to break through the windows. The collision was caused by the failure of the despatcher to notify the express conductor that the accommodation had preceded him. ~One more body, making seven in all, bas been found in the ruins of the chapel and laundry connected with the Northern Ohio Insane Asylum, near Cleveland, which were burned on the night of the 12th, It is thought all the injured Inmates will recover. Three escaped patients were captured on the 1h, and only two are now unaccount- for. eA prairie fire was started by a threshing machine, near Lake Benton, Minnesota,on the 18th. At last we. counts It was spreading rapidly, and at §oread tigate the epidemic Guileras { delinite v HE 0 Associated patches report a high wind th aftert y f 141} on Lhe a 000 of the 1480, 180 18 given. Magnolia, or Press despatches a large fire raging atl its suburbs, United report tha earthquake sl in Charleston at 1d that Was slightly in Augusta, but the Associated 1688 Lelegrains say that ‘‘no earthquake symploms have developed at Augusta or Savanah, 1 are the nearest points tof with which communicatic Later the communication t wk midn hid i Bile , AI f ’ Af IAT 88 Mm is tela. ton in morning was opened miles from jegraphers there ffer for the Charles. ALMOs. 2 A nterrup- by a fire graphic with Summ Charleston, * have no explanation to o 4 ws suGaen iii Wires, erraption the They ‘ or terrestrial report no disturbance, telegram says the have caused r s large phospbale ia been Ti Hig snip + pi iS engine his recklessness in running a! hy ough 4 =e . i a rate of speed t the fi -— n Centre. led three men engine I'he boiler in a saw mill on the h, kKililng completely wrecking aud mill, The the 14th Marine Hospital Bureau on received a telegram from Dr, Porter, President of the Key West Board of Health, announcing his ar- rival in Tampa, Florida, on the morn ing of the 13th, and saying: “Have cases indiscriminately. I'he 18 undoubtedly yellow fever, presenting the characteristic tests,” There were three deaths from the fever of the 13th, aud several 14th. The case of yellow fever reported In Pa- we 13th, did not originate The victim was a refugee from I'he bause where he died was there. Tampa. fects were purned, THE MARKETS, Peel city 1am Bl.cos soviesenes R BD BIRIIE. cc oonnssins cansvrsnnnslB POIE MOBB. cov covsviissnnssnne i Prime Moss, DOW. cose asss iB Biden SINOKEA. couse oo soamas== Shoulders Smoked... «os GO I BBL, cuvsnoversnsoninn es Booed Boel, uv. ovis osnmtive v= Lard Western bis. ....cuvieeies § ¢ $ 8 +B [ER BEL awd LArd JOOB0 ..oovscicirsssnniins U Ro West, and Pa #UP.... vovivine Po. FRIGHT coovvsssnnnsorsnnsns MIRO CIORE. oc vcovnssnpsninasnss™ fuk So Wh bisaviennnionees § ORE ovesnnsssses sosvas B GRAIN Whest No.1 10d. coves vannnins Re Corn, No, 8 WHS. coo ve covnei= BOL Besonpcacasssssrsscrnnnss™ Ont, NO. | White, new ........ No, 2 AO ROW, Louven sav NO, 8 Mixed, DOW. seve sone FISH LACES 18. ...co00 vu odl No, 2 coon sesraressnnsiB BUGAR- P Bs csi annrnn mrsnnanes 68:1 CGEADWIBLEd oo vivieiiiimmmunas Is QORIOG A ssngscsssns sxvassss 8 HAY AND STRAW TIOULY, OROLOR. cov conernnnnsdd BO MIRO. cuvunirrnnt wusnaninens dB Out HAF vvvivsrrivion vavisnsnid 50 0 ERW chnnnnnnvnnes veranall _—— DORL BIPAW .couvunnrsvapsnnss™ -— WOOL Obl, Penna and W, Va. Fess XX and Arsrarinsssssansransns suvelil OMIMOR. ois ssassssssanssesassnennns Un ARSE AEEBRRRERRR ES E8112 BS BRICKS WIT HOUT STRAW: Or, Perseverance Must Conquer. Minna was getting discouraged. Evervihing seemed to be going wrong, from the time the coffee come up cold and the toast had been burnt at break. fast, which had given Ferdinand an opportunity to stick up Lis nose Fer- dinand was her cousin, and considered himself a great swell, so she did not like to give him an opportunity to find fault with her housekeeping. Sue was voudering how all the money was be found to pay for the luxuries her mother had ordered to tempt his arls- tocratic palate, for she only al- lowed so much to set the table and pay expenses with, “It's like trying to make bricks with- out straw,’ she said to herself as she paid the cook and found that she had only $4 left to finish the week on. *‘'1 do ¢ to was keeper.” Then she sat down and had a good cry. She was glad to see her eousin Cuthbert Craig drop in an hour later when she had composed her nerves somewhat, Cuthburt looked about him with comprehensive glance, which falled ne to include Minna’s tear-swollen ¢ lids, “How home?" “Mamma has been perfectly well the Winter, She has me to Kate this n i i ¢ § tl miki he i a is cousin Harriet? Is she at Aires 1% wy hs materi . Minna. There despondentd } fully wh * There I'here never would be a » never was a fight.” ALSWEr. no ot eves ublesome tears, the way, Min resent y.''w ill youg HE, with me Lhis evel having », seemed inn 3 $ el he CA ntin : what cause “The old to make br “Perhaps you | bricks Minna?" “The house know.’ “What represents straw ent instance?’ “Oh, many strength and AN] ee “And a little more courage and severance,” added Cuthbert smile, “I'hat is easy for you to bert. You are so strong It “Am I, indeed? 1 was thinking of borrowing straw from you you can effect a profitable exchange of commodities, Think it over, will you? 3 all tl ks without straw.,”’ ry to make Oo INany must be built you ’ in the pres- Jie Hie more re mor Lime A tie things. a 1it ik fn Goodby. Dr. Craig came lor his cousin thal evening in the cosiest of coupes. He lillies-of-the-valley. Minna fastened a handful in her dress, and through the evening their heavenly odor linked itself with every tender strain that rose, When they reached home the fire was out and the room cold, yet Cuth- bert lingered, “Minna.” he sad abruptly, ‘‘did you know that I bad got that place in the life Insurance?’ Her voice, in reply, was quite low: “The place of examining physician? Was not that the one you wanted?” “Yes,” said Cathbert, with a sud- den fervor. *'1 did want it, and I worked hard for it with one purpose, with one end in view. He bent over ber chair. **You know what that was --my one love.” She spoke not. He went on, passionately: “fave I been trying to make my bricks without straw? Ilave 1 been work ng and hoping in vain?" “No Cuathbert,”” she answered, softly, placing her hand in his, “not in vain,” ~50ft wood compressed by hydraulic machinery is reported to be a useful substitute for box-wood for the manu- facture of loom shuttles. RSH Gazing Into Shop Windows. One young man wis walking reflect- ively along, and the clans of articles that seemed to interest him were very peculiar indeed, He stopped in front of a large display of laces and read with great satisfaction the sign, * Prices completely wrecked, Only five centa a yard,” “Cheap enough’ he mut tured, and passed on by window after window of smokers’ articles, beautiful paintings, gentiemen’s capes and hats, titl he came a display of Jad bos gloves, Here hs tarried a long Lime, A while after he was standing in front of a display of wall paper. What was thinking about and why was he alone? Was he on the verge of some mental Bubleon, the crossing of which was connected in some way with the | prices of laces, gloves and wall paper? Perhaps the most interesting obser- vation of human nature that can be ng a walk by the shop win- 10 he taken during dows, and ope requiring no very keen powers of perception, 18 afforded by stepping up in front of any deserted window. It 1s not necessary that there be anything on exhibition, Let there be nothing inside but a bare shelf, Stand there a moment gazing within and soon somebody else will step up side you, then another, and within a there will be several t can be repeated again 1 uniform success —-—— Drinking Buk. - oa ie Rise of the Rose he small rose of China that marked advance Lo- standard. The tea f blooming, not an- all in Europe be- n. but contin bly crops. This bab- was taken ad- ally hybr s ry ROTL8— r is Gousy YEE | “adel of the va ligree, and } adnction irom every hems - Heredity in Handwrting lieve in ber I) } you be writing? A friend 1 to ee with much show of reason. His life has been a long and he says ng the signatures of fri his, he f quently startled by the close relation- ip of their penmanship to that of nts. Inquiry does not demon- t the children have mtention x1 the handwriting of their without intent have come same pen pecularities. in some instances the difference between | two could scarcely distinguis! The studen { heredity and Ms many whims | new fleld of lalx | that might prove interesting in the developme in hand the thwory edily advocales one, that x 3 that now, inl children of 8 ie ids of sl Ler pare strate th ally cop sires, but the } A 1% into in be ed ¥ 1¢ bas here a nt. How Carrier Pigeons are Trained The training of carrier pigeons ix gins as soon as they are strong enough The yound birds are taken In a covered basket to a place about hall a mile from their home and set free. Those which do not go home are con- sidered worthless; those which do so at once are tried again, the distance be- ing increased each time, until it is found that they will go back, no mal. ter how far away they may be carried. The messages conveysd by these birds are usually written or photograped on very thin paper, and tied around the leg of one of the tall feathers in such a manner that they do not impede the flight of the binds, 1 to 1s “ Spain ia to have the luxury of dining cars on her railways, under lhe man- agement of a special company, which has obtained a concession of the right of running them for 20 years. According to Dr. Van Der Ven's re- searches phosphor-bronze in telephone lines has aboul 30 per cent. of the con- ducting power of copper, silicon-brense about 70 per cent, while the steel as used in wires has only about 10.5 per cent. : Wing vetting, two-inch mesh, is said pow w be Sheapes than Joa for fenc- ng poultry, more y arranged with less labor