-r - NEWSOF THE WEEK. —'1'ne runerm of the Anarchists, Spies, Engel, Fisher, Parsons and Lingg. took place in Chicago on the 13th, in a quiet and orderly manner, There were five hearses, bands of music, members of the Central Labor Union and other organizations. There were a large number of floral tributes on the hearses, and on the coflins were sashes of red gilk. The streets through which the prozession passed were crowded with people. The ceremonies in the cemetery included a speech by Captain Black, eulogizing the “martyrs,” and a bloodthirsty harangue by Robert Reit- rel, editor of an Anarchist sheet. — While Deputy Marshals Cole and Walker were attempting to arrest Big Chnee, & Cherokee Indlan, near Green- feld, Cherokee Nation, on the 11th, Walker was shot and killed by Chnee, who then escaped. — Late on the evening of the 12th, an elderly couple named Kelly, living in DesMoines, were startled by a volley of stones thrown against their house by a gang of rufManly boys. Kelly, taking a gun, went to the door to chase away the boys. His wife followed, and they went around the house In different di- rections. As they turned one of the corners, Kelly, mn the darkness, mis- took his wife for one of the boys and shot her in the breast, inflicting a prob- ably fatal wound. —Thomas Craddock was murdered by Thomas Gunn in 8 drunken quarrel in a tenement in Brooklyn, on the evening of the 13th. Gunn struck Craddock in the abdomen with an axe. They had been getting drunk together, and Craddock’s wife and five children were In the room at the time, —In Louis, on the 13th, Mrs. Mary Duff draped the stars and stripes, and displaved the pictures of the hanged Aparchists in the windows of her room. A crowd soon gathered, and a nurmur of displeasure was followed by a shower of missiles knocked lown the plctures. Mrs. Daff then pened the door and harapgued the crowd. She was answered by a shower clubs, which demolished win. dows and bruised the woman. She re- turned the fire, and with a hatchet in her hand was defying the crowd, when the police appeared and quelled the disturbance. — Ethan Leak accidently discharged a revolver and severely wounded his wife near Jamestown, Indiana, on the evening of the 14th. Thinking he had killed ber, he committed suicided. — Mildred Taylor, colored, 30 years nid, attempled suicide in Boston on the 13th. She soaked her might dress with kerosene and applied a match to it. The pain caused her to call for telp. She was fatally burned. A man who committed suicide at Fredericks- burg, Virginia, whose name was given as **C, Ward,” is believed in Bangor, Maine, ‘to be Jacob Stearns, fancy goods dealer, of Bangor, who failed several weeks ago, and was arrested on *harges of forgery and fraud. John S. Cramp, a ship carpenter from Philadel- phia, committed suide in his board of rouse in Baltimore on the eveninging he 13th by inhaling illuminatin Domestic trouble en the cause, —Rudolph Paech, of Chie 14th, had his wife, g Oppitz, his sister-in-law, and Mi Oppitz, his father-in-law, arrested on the charge of assault, and they were placed under bail. He charged that his wife said: **1 bave no use for a man who is too big a coward to make bombs to kill the police, If you won't make bombs I'll leave you.” At the same time his sister-in-law dashed a bucket of water in his face and his father-in- law caught hum by the neck, —Sepator Vance, of North Carolina, was thrown from a wagon near Black Mountain, on the afternoon of the 12th, and received a cut on his head about three inches long, and reaching to the bone. The injury, though severe, is not considered dangerous, —A telegram from Havana Francisco Echwarria has been napped at Guamutas by bandits, John H. Webber a young man in the employ of the Northern Pacifie Ex- press Company in St. Paul, Minnesota, has disappeared, and it is reported that he took with him a large amount of money that had been expressed to western points, The amount, it is stated, will not be known until the claims of the shippers are all in, —A collision eccurred between a freight and stock train, near Glyndon, Minnesota, on the evening of the 12th, by which five laborers, returning from Montana, were killed. ~Htephen H. Culver, colored, and two of his children, one an infant, the pther a youth of 19 years, on the morn- ing of the 12th, by the burning of their house, in Aune Arundel county, Maryland, —A report reached Louisiana, Mis. sourl, on the 15th, that the crowd of armed farmers and citizens In pursuit of the two tramps who on the 12th at- tempted to feioniously assault Mrs, Beauchamp and Mrs. Browning, in the sovthern portion of Pike county, over tock them on the evening of the 14th and banged them to a tree. Alfred Nelson, aged 11 years, and Arthur French, gaged 7, had a quarrel in Wes. ton, Massachusetts on the 14th, Nel son threw a stone which struck French in the neck, severing the jugular vein, and causing him to bleed to death. At Wickes, Montzs, on the evening of the 14th, a Pinlunder, whose name was not known, shot and killed John Eid, rad gerously wounded John Lan- burg. The Finlander then kilied him self. He is thought to have been insatie, as he had no troubles with Lhe men he shot. A fight occurred near Hemphill, Texas, on the evening of the 18th, bétween a Sherift’s posse and Willis Connors, an outlaw, resulting in the death of Connors and hie ten-year- old Connors was the father of nine sons, eight of whom are sald to have been killed during the past five years «in fights : with officers. At'St, J Louisiana, on the morning of the 14th, G. Blum and Charles Paver enarrelled, and the latter fired twice at St. shied waich e + UL the 8 i SAYS kid. Blum, but missed his alm. rode off, Stopping at a school house be called out his sister Belle and fired two shots at Ler. but without effect. By this time a Sheriff’s posse was in pur- suit, and Favor, seeing himself about to be overtaken, fired mmto the crowd and then fatally wounded himself in the bréast. —A freight engine on the New York Central Rallroad exploded near Palatine Bridge, New York, on the morning of the 16th, Fireman Stein- graves was thrown twenty-five feet into the alr and killed, and Engineer Mitchell was dangerously injured, A freight train on the Chicago, Burling- ton and Quincy Railroad dashed into a wagon, near Orion, Illinois, on the 14th, The vehicle contained three children of H, Shult, Ilda, aged 12 years, was killed; Willie, aged 10, fa- tally, and Oscar, aged 14, severely in- jured, Both horses were Killed, A disaster occurred on the Pennsylvania Railroad, near Tyrone, on the morning of the 15th, by which thirteen cars loaded with Chicago beef were wrecked, The company loses about $10,000. Edward Cullen was danger ously injured while superintending the work ot clearing up the wreck. —A derrick in Putnam’s quarry, at Newpoint, ten miles east of Greeus- burg, Indiana, fell on the 15th, killing John Davis and Joseph Naper. —The richest gold mine ever known is reported to have been discovered about ten miles from Prescott, Arizona, The ore is said to average $1000 per ton, ‘‘and thousands of tons are in sight.” —A telegram from Newark, New Jersey, says one of the boilers in Hel- ler Bros.’ blast furnaces, at Woodside, on the line of the Greenwood injuring Wellington Cord, Juckman and John Bernard. followed the explosion and troyed the building, causing a | The boiler had recent pronounced soun siler in the Belleville Steel ! aterson, New Jersey, exploded on tl Two men were badly shaken The . ing caught fire and a loss of $10 sulted, —Judge Z, W. Bunce reached age of 100 on the 15th, and was dered a reception by the leading cil! zens of Port Huron, Michigan. was born in Hartford, Connecticut, } years, and Albert yp de- ly da. 16 build 3) re- stood the famous Judge Bunce was a member on which Oak. of 1824, and Judge of the Circuit Court from 1834 to 1840, and firm as those of most men of years. Judge Bunce was not at time a total abstainer, and still smo» a pipe.” —The house of Inspector Anderson, at Orangeville, Ontario, was wrecked by a dynamite bomb, on the i) ny again alone shock, and Anderson, who had just left hou e, was stunned. A note was found tacked to the fence, warning | to desist from his efforts to enforce the law. ‘‘Several Orangeville Keepers fined for the in AYE Deen Vio- tows 3 iy » . law during the pa a4 no explosions ¢ able colncidencs Ways oc niense fp A law. excitement town, his is Ul explosion that h in two years, —Thomas J. Bowen, 50 years of age, a well-known contrastor, of Wilming- ton, was Killed on the 15th, at Kirk. wood, Delaware, by the accidental dis- charge of a gun. in the mite Urangevilie a8 OCH fr Iron Works, in Dubuque, Iowa, on the evening of the 14th, explosion was all in one direction, away from the men at work. The bomb was made of inch and a half gas pipe about two feet long. The pipe was aplit in several pieces, it dow. The company has had no trou- bie with its men, ~ Early in October Senor Barreo, a wealthy rancher of Starr county, Texas, was captured by bandits and carried into Mexico, where he of E1500 to his release, On the 14th three of the bandits were captured by the Mexican police, H. Schreiner, got —John York, was arrested on the 15th, charged by the President of the company with applying the proceeds of stock sales to private uses, He was admitted to bail. ~The drying-house of the Hancock Chemical Company, near Ishpeming, Michigan, blew up on the 16th, killing six men. namely: Wilham Renaud, Charles Barkell, Thomas Thompson, Timothy Crowley, Willlam King and Willis Lapp. Fifteen hundred pounds df dynamite was stored in the building, and the shock was felt for miles around. Not a trace of the bullding or the men was left, ~ Five colored laborers on the exten sion of the Nashville, Florence and Sheffield Railroad were killed on the 16th by being buried under a mass of rocks and earth loosened by a charge of dynamite, near Wayland Springs, Tennessee. It took 48 hours to dig the bodies out. ~John Powell was killed and Alfred Hurdy fatally injured by a fall of rock in a mine at Plymouth, Penna., on the evening of the 10th, ~A special freight traln on the Vandalia Railroad ran into the rear of & regu nr freight train near Seeley ville, Indiana, on the evening of the 15th. A caboose and four box cars filled with goods were wrecked, and the wreck and the special engine were consumed by fire, A brakeman named George was seriously injured. . «=A canal boat loaded with 8000 bushels of wheat for Now York city, was sunk on the 16th by striking some Socks m the canal at Tonawanda, New ork. TS A ! | fire originated ten or fifteen miles northwest of Helena, and has extended | no danger is apprehended in the city { 80 far. A lotof cotton in the flelds has | been burned. —A despatch from El Paso, Texas, says: Two more raids are reported to have been made by the band of Indians supposed to be Apaches, who raided {two or three ranches | miming district In Mexico, some months ago. Three weeks ago they attacked three Mexicans, killlng two of them, On the 10th they attacked a mining camp. But two men were in the camp at the time, and both escaped. One of these men, a German, named Schnei- del, says there were five bucks and two squaws in the party, Thomas Green shot and killed Tew Baldwin In Lex- ington, Kentucky, on the 16th, Green is a newspaper correspondent and some months ago wrote a communication concerning the conduct of Lhe election in Jessamine county, charging Baldwin and others with certain unlawful acts. The quarrel occurred over this matter. —A man registered as J. Westervelt, Detroit, at the the Hotel Hamilton, in Toledo, Ohlo, committed suicide on the morning of the 16th, by shooting himself. Mrs, Levin Mears poisoned her nine-yeai-old daughter and at attempted suicide, at Cambridge, Maryland, on the evening of the Iith, Domestic trouble was the cause, she Laving separted from her husband, — Ex-Governor Hauser, of Montana, | who 18 in Chicago, says that “‘although | the Territory lost $20,000.000 in cattle last year there had not besn a single { fallure, They had built of from 25 Pacific road five branches, to 50 miles long, running into the Ter- ritory. Gold, sliver and copper hae been taken out to the amaot 3 anid Montana ha nn half i United States, int (HH) (HO ii vt 3 COl more 1{ I { Wil -A telegram from gays J. W, Johnson, lawyer, left for parts 16th with his youngest ¢ | girl, aged 6 years, leaving his wile | three grown daughters, *‘“‘He was the owner of a farm and a hotel property, it recently became fipancially in- | volved, and ast execution entered { against him for $50 away.” Johnson was at one time Dis. | trict Attorney of the county, a promi. unknon on Lie th wie of the next U. S. tives shows that it will Democrats, 153 Republicans and 4 Is dependents, Tne Independents are: Anderson, of Iowa; Nicholas, of North Carolina; Hopkins, of Virginia; and Smith, of Wisconsin. —The walls of the Everson building. in Syracuse, N. Y., fell on the afternoon of the 17U, f ally injuring two men nonds and Perzen. hospital. Near Bessemer, Michigan, on the 16th, Captain Green and miners fell from the top of the shaft- { house to the bottom of the shaft at the | Anvil Mine. The m were killed and was fatally ition Powder factory of the U ¥, I El Paso, Texas, was blown ners (zreen pany, near } dered him to go away and not return under penalty of death, The house has repregentative of one of the litigates, The other occupants of the house were not disturbed. The Sheriff of Lancas- ter county on the 16th reinstated Geig in the house from which he was evic- ted, Another man was also placed In the house to assist Geig in the event of another attack, —Disastrous fires are reported in Faulkner county, Arkansas, destroy- dwell- ings and forcing the people to flee to places of safety, Cattle are ‘‘running wild to get out of the way of the flames,” A telegram from Hillsboro, again raging in that vicinity. Many of the houses are filled with smoke, Ile- ports from the country state that the fires are destroying an immense amount of property and in some instances peo- ple have had to fight tor their lives. ~1It is reportsd in St, Paul, Minne- sota, that two children, while return- ing from school near High Prairie, Rice county, on the 11th, were at- tacked by wolves and devoured. A few days before a man was attacked by wolves in the same vicinity, and it was only after a long fight that he escaped, —On the evening of the 16th, the door-bell of St, Joseph's Orphan Asy- lum, tn Cummingsville, Ohio, rang, a gas-pipe bomb, nearly two feet long, with a fuse attached. The fuse was quickly cut off. The bomb is in the possession of the police, — on the Joseph, large bomb was found of the City Hall in sour], on the morn h An hour later another was found back if a wholesale grocery house, They st ng of the 1 dvnamite and had the appear- MR It 18 roported that an aerolite weighing three tons dropped with a loud report in front of the Merchants’ National Bank, in Amsterdam, New York, at 11.20 on the morning of the 18th, making a deep indentation in the ground, It wasviewed by large crowds, Local experts are sald to have found traces of iron, nickle, aluminum and other metals in the aerolite, The Dudley Observatory was notifled by telegraph. — Mrs. George McPherson, who lived with her husband near Menlo, lowa, arose atter midnight on the evening of the 16th, dressed herself neatly, and then hanged herself to a tree outside the house, She was worried by her | husband’s business losses, John Rey- nolds shot and killed himself on the at his home, near Pleasantville, lowa, as he was about to be arrested on a charge of forgery and obtaining money under false pretences, -—The total umber of bales of cot- ton destroyed by fire in Memphis on the evening of the 17th, was 12,700, valued at $025,000, The express com- pany, it is understood, carried $300,000 insurance, but will claim that much if not nearly all the cotion burned was insured under policies beld by pur- chasers, and for all such the company | 18 not liable, Litigation is expected. — Forest fires are burning at many | points about Little Rock, Arkansas, | For four days fires have been raging | hills and in the bottoms of the and Sulphur river near Texar- sweeping everything before them, All available help is employed in fight- ing the flames. Large numbers of ci tie been burned. around the the on the | Red kana, il and hogs have ere burning Hope, Arka ¥ farmers are fighting — Andrew Henry, the cok to Marietta, Penna., Wiis arrest : it by i! Williams’ Hospital, nt tha JAN Waa , murder Williams, in HWgO, Q ? Was Bi Wee Ks edd thar Lil dered ab was f {at the power-he the Pittsburg Traction Railway Company fell on the 17th, throwing four men a 3:2 ty {ent to the ground. 3. Wart Conrad and F, E. Zimmerman severely injured. An truss was { litted, and the scaffold gave way under the usual weight, trey ALO { eran church, in Gettysbnrg, Pennsylva- { nia, on the 17th, and was killed, A quantity of coal fell upon William Townsley, in a new Ilhinois, on the 17th, crushing bim to | death, —-L aptain A. 1 of Detroit, 1 igan, a prominent vessel man, and the owner of a lin Mrs, 2 al her fo ar fu then shot himself dead, Captain Mills infatuated with the woman, and quar- relled with her over some appointment he sa‘'d she had made with another man. C. l.. Scott at their home in Granito, Mon- tana Territory, on the 17th. C. pott, Jr., edttor of the Cherokee Ad- «ate, who killed B, H, 18 in the woods across the Fort Smith, Arkansas, and ered to the United Marshal on Recently there have been a fires in the Slates 1e ghborhood of Mex CO, 3 gut Neots ste pe ine on the Chesapeake and fell sali, Ohio Southwestern into the bed of a creek, near Pa on 1 morning of ing through a trestie, the bh had been burned conductor and brakeman and two other train men Ra road 2, d 14 the supporis of AWAY. A were Killed, were seri- {11 ne by a fall of rock. -— At Academia, near | Penna,, on the evening of the Damel Coder, 27 years old, shot fatally wounded Libhie Rissinger, aged 14 years. Jealousy was the cause. On the: morning or the 17th workmen found the nude remains of a young woman, known as Neibe Shipley, lying in ashallow pool of water near Y oungs- town, Ohio, The girl years of age and lived Ohio. Her clothing was found near the body, Bhe had been choked to death. Peter Bays, a stock dealer, re- ceived a considerable sum of money | for a check in Hartford, Kentucky, on {the 15th, and started for home, eight miles distant, after dark. Three miles away he was halted by three men, one of whom took his bridle while others demanded his money. He shot the man holding the bridle, and, put. ting spurs to his horse, escaped, On the 16th he returned with a neighbor to investigate, and found that the per- gon shot was Harry Fleuer, a reputa- ble young man of the neighborhood. He refused te tell who his companions were, but sald they only intended to frighten Mr. Bays. It is thought Fleuer will die George W. Russell, a large cotton planter, was fatally stabbed by one of his colored tenants, at Garland City, Arkansas, on the evening of the {6th. © Russell's son witnessed the attack, ran to a neigh- borg store, and, grabbing a shot-gun, shot the colored man dead, - William Dunbar, sentenced two years ago to six years’ imprisonment for burglary, escaped from the jail at Allentown, Penna., on the evening of the 16th. He dug his way through the three-foot wall of his cell, scaled the thirty-foot wall of the jail yard, and lowered himself by a rope toade out of his shirts, ~At Bird -in- Hand, Lancaster county, Penna,, on the evening of the 16th, about twelve masked men entered a house and overpowered Leonard Geig, one of the occupants, Ther led him to the edze of the village or. Mifflintown, 16th, in ~Mrs, Winifred Egan, 31 was killed in the elevator of the Berk- shire Apartment House, in New York, on the 18th. She leaned out of the and was crushed between it iL shaft. The elevator man to keep the guard closed. «~The dead bodies of tramps were found at VY anceboro, Maine, on the morning of the 18Lh, One lay on the rallroad track, the was in the river below, men feil It is from a freight tran, «An engine and one on the south coach jumped branch of the Railroad, near Brazil, In- the 18th. The passengers barely escaped before the coach was fire. Engineer Felton Brakeman Robertson ~-At Bridgeport, Connecticut, on the 18th, Charles W, Whipple, who shot and killed Charles Adams, in June, 1886, pleaded guilty of man- slaughter and was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. Adams was too intimate with Whipple's wife, and it was during one of his visits to ber that he was shot. —A telegram from Gloucester, Mas- sachuselis, says thal during the year which ended October 3lst, 17 vessels in the fisheries business have been lost, with 127 men, leaving 60 widows and 61 orphans, In addition to those lost in their vessels 41 other seamen met death by drowning or accident. ~ Official returns from all the coun- ties in Pennsylvania except Butler, Elk, Forest, Lehigh, Perry and Potter have been tabulated in Harrisburg. The total vole will aggregate nearly 750.000, or abont 8 per cent, less than that polled for Governor last year. The Prohibition vole ahows a loss of over 13,000, and the Labor vote an increase of over 5000, * Full returns of the re. cent election in Virginia for members of the General Assembly show that there will be 26 Democrats and 14 Re publicans in the Senate and 61 Demo- crats, 88 Republicans and one Indepen- dent in the House. The Democratic majority on joint ballot is 34 » Points for Storekeepers, Listen attent | has to say. 1t 18 better to order goods twice { to overload once, A good listener is appreciated than a good talker. Keep your own plans and wha | intend doing to yourself. Always study the wants of { customers in taste and dress, Greet your customers cheerily. | smile wins when a frown doesn’t, Prudence in promises 1s if the redemption « Be prepared at all th IONS ana mm ively to what every one Han nore antee ( clothes so L clean, A patch shos ness and clear 8 i respect, economy and honesty, Goods will pot always sell themselves, and the latest styles will not of them- selves increaSe your pis unless aided by your business al wes, How. { ever, with th secure bus. iDeSsK, Keep your store in apple-pie order. lL.ook at the samples of every commer- i clal traveler who may offer to show {them to vou. You can only improve by it. You don’t need to buy from each one, Don’ buy too much at any one time, fm you can -——— A Queer Umbrella. Frank M. Taylor, the superintendent of the great ocean pler at Long Branch, | carries a unique silk umbrella. The { handle i8 topped with hammered gold i from a $5 found on the beach last winter. The stick was cal from one of the leaves of an ebony table | which came over with the Puritans In the Mayflower. The ribs are covered with silk taken from the dress worn {by a lady at the time she was pulled | from before an engine in time to save | her life. The ease, or cover, 1s made {from cloth from he catafalque {in the funeral car of President Gar- | field. piece i — — AT — ns THE MARKETS, — PROVINIONS- f oly DAI Diocese covnnnnnnn R Pork Mess. ... .. asus dB Prime Moss, DEW, .covnsevens ib Sides smoked. Shoulders sapoked. 40 In MAIL, unninnnnnne Smoked Beef, ......... serennee~ 18 Lard Western DIS... coevssnss 8 81% Lard sssasernsces 0 00 FLOU Re West, and Pa. sup... . 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Ohio, Penns and W, Va, Fieses XX EE 0 a Yitess sees nd mi Sar eERRRR TREE * ARRAS LER BASEBAND | Baal | 112 — wr chen ban lasnwe axllill fe | BEES -—— EERE 22111 errnisrrenrrinnnsy = af] ei 180 | 15 04 AT ARBRARER RRA Nn Steen Phenomenal Preooe ity “Oh, George!” cried young Mrs Merry running to meet her husband a the door, “I've got something the bes to tell you,” “No, sald George; “wi “Why, don’t « iat is Le you think —the baby can talk! He's said ever and ever many things. Come right nto the nursery and bear him.” George went in, “Now, baby,” sald mamma persua sively, “talk some for papa. Say ‘How do you do, papa?’”’ “200, ROO, g00, 200," said b AY. “Hear him!” says mamma ally, “‘wasn’t that just as plain as plals can be?" George says if 80, too. “Now say ‘I’m glad to see you, papa.’ “Da, da, boo, bee, boo,’ “Did you ever?” cries wpamma. ‘ie can just say everything. Now, you precious little money bunny boy, say ‘Are you well, papa?’ “*Boo, de, de, goo, goo.” ‘“There it 1s,” said mamma, ** Did you ever know a child of his age who oould really talk as he does? . Ie can just say anything he wants to; can’t you, you own dear little darling precious you?” ‘x00, goo, de, de, di, goo,’ ‘““Hear that? He says ‘Of course I can, just as plainly as anybody could say it. 3, Greorge, 1L really worries 1 80 phenomenally bright, Ti Bo ecstatic is and tries te think v ¥ it me tg hav CRE Vir 1i¢ vs i» Xan bLirats ii OCUIIBLS 1% INANnS WHO Ori» nounced them ao goo ndition, tad presented He large hundred DABINGss, however ones get and the serve ntiary. ‘The at once began efforts iL was ght months of his sentence hat the ufluence of the cons prevailed RiBO the man ith a sum of money, about dollars, with which to g« All this was of the machinery o an operation, continued It FOTK, American was cond two years in the American consul for the release of not until he ha rved e Ww penitent man, but the Lif * from the while Bois berm} festival. The Crar's Strong Wrist During his stay with his wife's par- Fredensborg the Czar ad an other opportunity of displaying his re. markable physical strength. A Ger man conjurzrof the name of Lowe wa giving a performance in the presence o the Danish Court and ol imperia and royal guests from al He in particular in his tricks with cards, 3 he had concluded I wo rare arose from his seat and walking up to the conjurer, told him thal he would show him a trick wh Was his skill. Calling for a fresi pack fifty-two cards the Cza ged it tween his thumbs and forefls with one jerk tore the pack in half few minutes later he called for silver dollar and bent it d tween the thumb and forefinger o night hand. the road, showed great skill As rformance ; RB 1. 4 iis ri t bevyon Kf igers ouble ———— Ducks and Snapping Tartie A Norwich, Conn., man, who had stocked his pond with a rare and hand. some breed of ducks, found that they were slowly disappearing. bul where they went he could not determine, Oue day a visitor, sitting ou the piazza, sald: “You've got queer ducks. I've seen two of them dive, bal ilhey haven't come up yet.” This was a sug- gestion to be acted upon. 1he owner drew off the water from the pond and found seventeen snapping turtles. I killed them. and now the ducks do no disappear, or at least when they 2.w they come up again. crates sein Exposure to the sun, 18 is said, wil remove light scorch marks, and fruit o rust stains yield quickly weak sol usion of oxalic acid, A riTrLe motheriess girl of five years, who was jeft in my oare for years in New Orleans, was one Babbatt morning, busy over her doli’s wardrobe when Ireproved her by saying: “Lily, God 18 not pleased while you play with your doll to day.’ She looked seriously into my face am sald: “Mrs, Reo, God has nothing W do with me, Jesus takowssure of lift tov 0 Sle
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers