NEWS OF THE WEEK. —A 12-year-old boy, while coasting at New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, on the 206th nit., went under a railroad train and was Killed, —Lee Wells and George Urqubart, each 14 years of age, quarrelled in Houston, Texas, on the evening of the 26tA ult. Urgubart drew a revolver and shot Wells dead, «Four masked men broke into the house of Abram Iarnish, » farmer liv- ing near Rohrerstown, Lancaster county, Penna,. on the morning of the 26th ult., and, Presenting revolvers at the heads of Mr. and rs. Harnish, made them hand over what money was in the house, $70, Durglars entered the Baum House, in Miamisburg, Ohio, on the morning of the 27th ult., Charles E. Baum, the proprietor, opened fire on them and was fatally shot by ene of the burglars. The safe had been broken open and $700 taken, — According to Munhall’s dictionary of statistics the average age of all the people living In France is 32 years, 2 months and 12 days. In the United States the average is only 24 years, 10 months and 24 days. -— William S. Bracken, a member of the New York Produce Exchange, shot himself in the head in Greenwood Cemetery on the 27th ult, It is stated that be cannot recover. William C, Eddy, a hackman in Watertown, New York, after shooting three times at his wife on the morning of ihe 27th ult. cut his throat with a razor and died in a short time. He had been on a spree and his wife refused to live with him. She was not injured, Maggie Gugan, 15 years of age, was assaulted and murdered on the morning of the 27th ult., in a boot heel factory on State street, Chicago. Zephaniah Davis, col- ored, aged 22 years, who was employed as janitor, is supposed to be the mur derer. He has disappeared. —Dr, Schliemann returned to Athens recently from Cengo (Cythera), where he attained his main object of discov- ering the ancient temple of Aphrodite mentioned by Homer and Herodotus, but except gome Cyclopean walis there are no vestiges of antiquity, —A despatch from Mount Vernon, Illinois, says the weather continues ex- tremely cold, and the homeless have suffered greatly during the past 48 hours, The Fipance Committee has issued a card to the general public stating that all subscriptions received will be devoted to the purchase of building material, household furniture and other articles necessary to provide the destitute and needy with shelter. Miss Clara Barton, President of the Red Cross Association, has received from the Chairman of the Relief Com- mittee at Mouct Vernon this despatch: “The cyclone at Mount Vernon caused the death of 25; wounded, 215; over 500 houses destroyed, in which pearly 2000 people lived; 1000 homeless and houseless; about 500 being dally fed by charity. The extent of the suffering cannot be described. If possible, come and help the sufferers at once.” Miss Barton and Field Agent Hubbell will go to the scene of suffering. —The ice in the Susquehanna broke up at Lock Haven, Pa., on the morn- ing of the 27th ult. Afler moving a little more than an hour a gorge formed on the Pennsylvania Canal Company's dam and extended to Farrandsville, six miles up the river. No serious damage was done, Large gangs of men are at work clearing the Columbia and Port Deposit Rauroad track of Ice. —As the steamer Julla, plying be- tween South Vallejo and Valiejo Sta- tion, California, was about to leave her moorings on the morning of the 27th ult., with about seventy persons on board. an explosion occurred. Those ox deck were thrown Into the water, but the majority were below the decks, as it was cold and foggy. Fire fol- lowed the explosion, and after being burned tothe water’s edge, the steamer sank to the bottom: with a great num- ber of victims buried under the debris in the cabin. It isbelieved that between 30 and 40 lives were lost. Up to a late hour on the afternoon of the 27th uit., twelve bodies had been recovered. — Chief Arthur, of the Brotherhood ¢f Locomotive Engineers, has informed the officials of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad and the Chicago Post-office that the Brotherhood men could not take oot mail trains, The officers of the Burlington road said on the 28th ult. that applications for pc- sitions as engineers and firemen were coming im constantly from all over the country, but as the c.mpany does not accept anybody except after rigid ex- amination to see that they are compe- tent, the process of hiring men is siow, They do not expect the road to be in ruhning order again for ten days, About fifty men have so far been se- lected. No effort was made to remove freight on the 28th ult., and none was received. The striking engineers hint that the difficulties will come to an early termination. They have, It ap- pears, some encouragement from somewhere, but from whom it comes or anything further cannot be learned, The company notified the strikers that those who did not apply for tions by noon on the 20th uit,, wi be considered out of the com- pany’s service. While none of the iSnecal ofictrs were willing 0, cuter a literal interpretation © © No« tice, it was generally understood as an uitimatum on the part of the com ; to cut loose from all fashion. They wrapped themselves in sheets, put on false faces made of dough and then burst suddenly in upon the guests, Four girls fainted, two were restored without much trouble, but Dora E. Akins and Lizzie Chaney ‘‘weare restored only to pass lnilo a con- dition of frightful delirium, screaming and crying constantly. The physicians hold but slender hopes of the recovery of their reason.” —While a farmer named Miller and his wife were at church on the even- ing of the 27th ult., their house, near Fair Haven, Minnesota, was burned, and their three children, aged 13, 10 and 7, perished in the flames, The explosion of alantern caused the fire, —A passenger train on the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St, aul Rallroad was run into on the evening of the 27th ult., by a freight train on the Mendota branch of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, at East Clinton, Illinois, DI. R. Wilhelm and Road Master Seigrist were fetally, and Thomas Morrison severely, injured. The blame for the accident is laid on the “Q.” engineer, a green hand, —John K, Eisher, cigar manufac- turer of Manheim, committed suicide in a hotel in Lancaster, Penna., on the morning of the 28th ult. Several weeks ago he was arrested in Philadelphia on the charge of assaulting & woman, and this 1s supposed to have caused suicide. Norman Lawshe, son of Colonel Peter Lawshe, a well-known editor, com- mitted suicide at his father’s residence in Atlanta, on the morning of the 28th ult. It was “about a girl.” --Edgar Haney, a young newspaper and periodical vender on the Norfolk and Southern Railroad, was found dead in one of the streets of Berkely, Virginia, on the morning of the 25th ult. His appearance indicated tnat he bad been robbed and murdered. —~—Zeph Davis, the young colored man who murdered 15-year-old Maggie Gaughan in Chicago on the morning of the 27th ult, made a confession on the 29th. Hea says he was alone in the store when Maggie came in, on the morning of the 27th ult. After she had stood by the stove some time he told her togo to work. Some words passed between them, and, becoming angered, he picked up a hatchet with which he had been splitting wood, and threw it at her. The weapon cut her forehead and band, Then she began to strike at him, when he Killed her with the hatchet. He denied baving criminally assauited the girl, Davis claims to be 17 years of age, although he appears to be two or three years older. Willllam Beeson has been ar. rested at Meridian, Mississippi, for the murder of the Watkins girl at Gaines. ville, Texas, last summer. Jeeson was bent on robbery. The Watkins girl awakened, and he killed her and struck the Bestwick girl with » hatchet, The latter recovered, Ata ¢ lement known as Spanish Camp, GO miles west of Xouston, Texas, on the morning of the 26th ui, a negro cabin was set on fire und the occupants shot down as they ran from the building. Five were killed, one severely wounded, and two per ished in the flames. In the same neighborhood the dead Lody of Wil- liam Battle, colored, was found hang- ing to a tree. The affair is said to be the outcome of & suit over the title of the land where the negroes lived acd which they bad purchased. The suit was decided in favor of the negroes, The settlement is sald to be composed of Mexicans, negroes and desperate whites, -A train on the St. Lowe, Arkansas and Texas Railroad was stopped about a mile from Kingsland, Arkansas, on the morning of the 20th, by three rob- bers, They took the coutents of the safe in the express car. The exact amount taken is not known, but is believed to belarge. The mail car and passengers were not wolested., The safe of Mogle & Gllbraith, jewelers, of Greensburg, Kansas, was robbed of $7700 in watches, jewelry and money, on the evening of the 28th. ~In Kansas City, on the 20th nit., part of the roof of the nearly com- pleted Midland Hotel collapsed, and a tremendous mass of brick, mortar, fron pillars and other debris fell to the ground floor, eight stories below, Frank Edison, a young carpunter, was killed, and about twelve others were injured, but only one, Jolin O'Brien, a plumber, is believed to be in a dan. gerous condition. The loss on the building is estimated by the owners at not more than $50,000, The cause of the disaster appears to have been the giving way of a “shoe supporting one of the trusses which held up the roof and ceiling of the top floor. The heavy steel beam, being knitted to others, pulled the adjacent truss down and they tore their way down through the lower floors. Outside of the place where the floors were torn through no damage seems to have been done to the building. -=A slight earthquake shook San Francisco about 3 o'clock on the after. noon of the 20th ult. At several poiuts north of that city a shoek was felt severe enough tc cause people to run out of their houses in alarm, - Annie E, Briggs was arrested in Lowell, Massachusetts, on the evening of the 20th ult,, on the ch of shop lifting. Dress goods val at $1200 were found in ber rooms. It is said that for two years she had been ship ping goods to Vermont. ~Mrs. Mary Brow herself 1n Lousville, evening of the ant [44 a widow killed ay Sons Forsyth, who had confessed that he murdered County Treasurer Hill by cutting off his head and that he had robbed him of $6000, and hanged him to a tree. Frederick A. Hale, a prom- inent. architect im Denver, Colorado, killed M. F, O'Reilly, a contractor, on the 20th ult, O'Reilly commenced an attack, when Hale shot him. At the coroner's mguest ale was exonerated, A shooting affray occurred on the morning of the 1st at Culpepper Court House, Virginia, between Edwin Bar- bour, one of the editors of the Advance and Ellis Williams, a son of the editor of the FErponent, Barbour shot Wil- hams dead and was slightly wounded himself, The trouble grew out of an article in the Advence which offended Williams and for which Barbour as- sumed the responsibility. Barbour is a nephew of the United States Senator elect from Virginia. —Harry Witmer, a painter, living near Lancaster, Penns., committed suleide on the 1st. Christian Jauner, Sr,, the Adams Express Agent at Olney, Illinois, hanged himself on the 20th uit. He was short in his accounts about $500, There was also a shortage of about $300 in his accounts as treas- urer of the A. O. U. W. Lodge. Mrs. Heaton Manice, who arrived in Chicago on the 20th ult,, and regis- tered at the Leland Hotel from New York, shot and killed herself on the morning of the 1st. ~The worst storm of the winter set in at Duluth, Minnesota, on the evening of the 20th ult On the 1st high winds prevailed, and thick snow rendered it almost impossible to see across the street, Departing trains were obliged to use two locomotives, ~ A despatch from Aberdeen, Missis- sippl, says four colored men were drowned in Oldtown creek recently. The first to lose his life was ope who attempted to ford the siream on the 22d ult,, and was drowned. On the 26th ult., three hundred negroes were searching for his body, when a canoe, containing six of them, was capsized and three of its occupants drowned, Patrick Foley and Michael Riley were killed on the morning of the lst, in Seventy-first street, New York, by the premature explosion of a blast. —A pouch of registered mall was stolen from one of the mail wagons in Cincinnats, on the evening of the 20th ult, The empty pouch was found in the Ohio river, near Riverside, W, L. Fensler, driver of the mall wagon just belind the one robbed, has been arrested, A telegram from Lancaster, Penna,, says that Solomon Sellers, George Metzger, Abram Metzger and Charles Wolfe were arrested on the evening of the lst, charged with com- mitting the masked burglary at the house of Abram Harnish, a farmer, near Rolrerstown, on the evening of the 26th uit. Sellers lives In Lancas. ter and the others near Harnish's farm. —W. W. James, Jr., a prominent merchant of Bristol, Tennessee, com- mitted suicide on ist, E. A. Mcleod, Postmaster at Palmyra, Missouri, whose committed suicide on the 21. ~~ An attempt was made on the after. noon of the 24, at San Francisco to of the Superior Court. was leaving the court room he was shot at twice by Carl L. Lange, but without effect, Lange is a Lrother-in-law of Shatter's son, and a divorce sull has for some time been pending between the younger Suafter and his wife, At Baracoa, about 80 miles from Havana, a mother killed her four children, Two she murdered with a hatchet, and two she held in a tub of water until they were drowned. She said the devil tempted her to the crime, ~The Treasurer of the United States, in a letter to the House on the 24, says that the aggregate loss on all the issues of Government notes by de- struction, up to January 31, 1888, would seem to be not leas than $3.700,- 000, and that $6,400,000 of this sum may be regarded as having been de- stroyed and out of circulation prior to May 31, 1873. The percentage of de- struction of notes, the Treasurer says, will undoubtedly be greater in notes of small denominations than in those of large denominations. ~—B, T. Gividin shot and killed B. H. Lawrence, in Louisville, Kentucky, on the 24. They quarrelled about money matiers. —A despatch from Marquette, Mich- igan, says all the upper peninsular rail. roads are blockaded by one of the se- verest gales and snow storms ever known there. In some places eighteen inches of snow fell and in many parts the drifts are six or seven feet deep. I I II Ln an 50th CONGRESS.—F irst Session, SENATE, In the U. 8S. Senate on the 27th ult, a resolution was reported to amend the rules 80 as to permit the Committee on Ap to report general ap- propristion bills five days alter being received. The Nicaragua Canal bill was considered, amended and passed — yeas, 38; nays, 16. The Dependent Pensions Lill was considered. After an executive session the Senate ad- -. In the United States Senate on the the Government, wus takes from the calendar and passed. The Compulsory Indian E lucationa! bill was considered and a substitute for the bill offered by Mr, Vest was agreed to, and the bill passed, After an executive session the Senate adjourned, Inthe U, 8. Senate on the 1st, the House bill to amend the act to restrict owxship of real estate in the Terri- tories to American citizens (being slm- lar to the Senate bill passed by the Senate recently, reserving legation property in the District of Columbia from the operation or the law) was passed. The Dependent Pension bill was considered, pending which the Senate adjourned, HOUSE In the House on the 27th ult., Mr. Breckinridge, of Arkansas, called up the adverse report of the Committee on recting the Becretury of the Treasury trust, After some debale the resolu- tion was laid on the table, A number of bills and resoiutions were duceed and referred under the call of States. Among them was one by Mr. Crain, of Texas, proposing amend- the date for the commencement and President and Vice President, and de- the beginning and ending of in Congress, it the the memory of W, Ww. Corcoran, was unanimously adopled, and House adjourned, Inthe House on the 28th ult., the bill for the organization of the Terri tory of Oklahoma was discussed until when It wept over, Bills were passed ings as follows: $400 000; 000; Texarkana, $100,000; Columbus, Georgia, £100,000; Charleston, $300, 000; Indianapolis (for additional ground), $125,000; Bay City, Michigan, $150,000; Milwaukee, $400,000, urned, in the General Land bill was reported, The bill authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to purchase bonds with the surplus revenue was considered in Committee of the Whole, and, after an interesting tariff debate, reported to the House and passed, A bill was passed providing for the fining and im- prisonment of any person false evidence as to the chacter of any publication for the purpose of securing its admission to the mails as second- class matter, aud for the punishment of persons forging or fraudulently changing woney orders and postal notes, After the delivery of eulogies upon the late Representative Moffatt, of Mich- igan, appropriate resolutions were adopted, and the House adjourned, In the House the 1st, Pennsylvania, on Mr. of Meigs Medical and medical Mr. Bland, medicines and surgical appliances, a bill providing for the exchange of worn, defaced, clipped, punched or Also a bill of $3 gold tion than El for new coins, to prohibit the colnage pieces, $100,000 building at for a public for a public bullding at Hoboken. Mr, Committee on Foreign Affairs, called up the joint resolution accepting the invitation of the French Republic for the United States to take part in the International Exhibition to be held in Paris in 1889, Inthe U. 8. House of Representa- tives on the 2d, Mr. McKinley, of Ohio, secured unanimous consent to signed by glassblowers protesting against a reduction of duty on ime ported window glass, as proposed by the Mills tariff bill. Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, from the Committee on Rules, reported a resolution, which was adopted, providing for an even- ing session every Friday, for the consideration of private and polit. ileal disability pension bills. Under the terms of the resolution the House is required to take a recess at 5 o'clock on Fridays and to re-assemble at 7.50 o'clock, the evening sessions to be ad- journed not later than 10.30 o'clock, A bili was reported favorably from the Post-office Commitiee creating the office of Assistant Superintendent of the Hallway Mall Service, with a sal. ary of $3000 per annum, and 54 chief clerks, at $2000, with aliowances of $3 per day for expenses. Bills on the private calendar were considered in the Committee of the Whole, and an even- ing session was held for the consider- ation of pension bills, tei ———————— Home. Boys generally do not really know what a good thing home 8 to them until they are deprived of its comforts, its attractions and its sacred associ- ations, Many boys, like the prodigal son we read of in the Bible, get tired of the restrainis of home, and think they are getting too old to be “tied to their mother’s apron-strings’” an longer. But alas, how many =» have realized, when they left their and took hold of the ‘apron- strings’ of 8 cold snd selfish world, after all, as Howard Payne so beautifully wrote: “There is no piace like home.” Rn AMIS ONLY A MATTER OF PRACTICE, ——————————————— A Man With a Theory for Beating the Roulette Table, A ——— “ome with me and I'l show you how to beat roulette,’ seid Mr, Adolph Bureau to 4 reporter. As Mr, Bureau is a European guide and claims to have been a croupler at Monte Carlo, the reporter thought his secret might be good to have in New York, Application was made to four gambling houses, two of which were denied 1m each case. The outer guards expressed in pantomime to the re- porter that he was not personally re- garded with suspicion, but that the | discourtesy was intended to apply only to his companion. “Yousee how this is,” exclaimed the chagrined croupler, ‘*‘they won't give me a chance to beat their game, | They know me too well,”’ | “How is it,” asked the “that if you have such a reporter, wonderful system, you’ll tramp all over Europe with tourists and be broke two weeks I should think “That’s just it. They won't let me play there. You see, I was employed two years and then dis charged. I was unjustly suspected, it is true, but that doesn’t make any dif- ference, **Did you ever break any banks in this country?" “Yes—in San Francisco, Omaha, Chicago and New Orleans. There is {a kind of Free Masonry among these Awericau gamblers, and 1'm black- i listed, Every big dealer in the country i has my deseription, and the little games ain't worth bothering with. Bat if I can keep my bead this winter 111 break some of them yet If I have to disguise | myself,” “But this wonderful system of yours, ! what is it like?’ *It is no system at all, It* jute certainty, 1 go into a is abso- strange fu reality I am not playing at all, but making a study of the man at the wheel. Every dealer has certain pecu- liarities of motion, and these 1 must { familiarize myself with, Then, too, | the apparatus must be studied, I must observe, compare and estimate ac- Lion of the ball to get | strength of dealers’ wrist, | data once ascertained 1 keep cases on i the numbers which come out most fre. | quently and make a list of those which { do not come out at all, By practicing { with small bets 1 prove that | have my | man sized up right, and then 1 begin i to ‘plunge.’ Of course, I aways avoid following a heavy player, and must, | therefore, play under him. It may i take we a week to learn two dealers’ the an | come in and block my game. When | | have measured the strength of a man’s { wrist and watched bow and where he { let's go of the bali, I can pick out the { four most probable winning numbers, { 1 play all four of these straight, and I am right on one of them three limes { out of four. Of course 1 must not win | too often, but sometimes my luck is such that I keep on hitting it right in spite of myself. 1 won $7,000 in San ! Francisco in less than an hour.” “How did you happen to wmvent | 8zheme?”’ i *“ldidn't invent it. A gambler at { Moute Carlo taught it to me. The managers there Know it well, To show you that I am ambidextrous, look { here,” an’ ‘aking a pencil in each band, he wv mwultaveously in oppo- | site directiis u a theet of paper what a listener prosounced to be genuine shorthand, “Well, there was one Monte Carlo who could beat all the croupiers at roulette but myself. We work only four hours at at a time, to | be sure, but it used to make my right { hand tired, and so I learned to use my left, It was this gift which puzzled the old Frenchman, Fipally 1 used my left band altogether when he was playing. But one day be beat me, and after that it was a regular thing, no matter which hand I used. 1 was ac cused of being in league with him and discharged.” “How did you find out the system.” “It isn’t a gystem, 1 tell you. Well, I went to the old gambler and told him he had ruined me. He then explained to me that be had once been a surgeon. For several years he had been experi- menting in this eye-measurement of the strength of a man’s wrist, the speed of a motion and the exact spot at which the ball left the hand, 1 told one of the managers of Monte Carlo this, but he wouldn't reinstate me or even Jet me play. The old gentle. man and [ got a roulette wheel and practiced until I could read his mo- tions as well as he could mine. We traveled together for several months and made much money, often playing opposite to one another when we struck a difficult game, If I had some young gentleman, whom I could trust, to teach for three or four months, I could beat the New York gamblers through him. It's only a matter of practice.” this oid fellow at Judge Not, a Story of Fallen Pride, “You must give up all acquaintance with the Parsons family,” said Miles Willams to his daughter, “There has always been a suspicion that one of them killed their father and we ought to shun them.” Emma's eyes clouded with tears, for she was secretly betrothed to Joung Alden Parsons and knew it wou she told him 5g Est the community. Alden Parsons was earning a handsowe mcoine in 4 great clothing concern in the same town where Erastus Williams was bank cashier, Miles Williams, although ecomforta- bly situated as to pecuniary matters, continued to pursue in his mature years hits early habits of industry, and, ilke many a farmer worth double his money, he got up at 3 and 4 o'clock of Summer mornings to drive to towp with early vegetables, When, therefore, Alden Parsons, on bis usual walk from the farm to his place of business, one morning in June met Mr. Williams with his horse and light wagon in the suburbs he was not surprised, He had frequently wet him before, and accosted him respectfully, receiving a surly nod in return, “Anything new in town, Mr. Wil. Hams?” remarked Alden pleasantly, as he passed the oid farmer, Mr. Williamns hung his bead down and seemed to conceal hus face as he answered, almost chiokingls: **No, nothing —nothing.”’ Alden hardly noticed the farmer's peculiar manner, and went on his way. When he aritved at tis desk he soon found that there was something new and startling. too. The morping paper contained a full account of it, Erastus Willlams bad been arrested the previous night on the charge of stealing the funds of tbe bank. He bad quietly submitied to the officers and made a clean breast of Lis g The amount of hig defalcalion was about four thousand pounds father and another well-ktiown eilize were his bondsmen Lo the bank, wi the paper added, was very likely. ow to the responsibility of the surelie suffer little loss. The trial showed that Erastu liams had ginned to satisfy the ext gance of a silly wife, He did wake any defence, but through 1 tercession of friends was Jel off w light penalty, To satisly the lu ang Miles Willisms was a diferent hee idol Aud be was a beller man Now that own heart bled for his gullly was inclined (oo be more and especiaily whom was shadow ienient werely the of sus i CLOTH. He could not but notice thal 8 ever when they met; that there was no trace in Alden’s manner of gratifica- tion or gloating over the wisfortunes of the map who had treated him so harshly, Emma, too, was even more devoled and obedient than ever, Her tender affection was a pillow of down for the throbbing head ber venerable parent. “Does Alden asked of ever speak the father one Ww you day of Emma, “*No, father,’ she answered, “except to salute me when we happen to pass ’ The old man was silent for some moments, as if reluctant to express what was struggling in his mind. “Do you think be likes you yeil?”’ at **1 do, father," was the prompt and deliberate reply. “Emma,” sald the parenl, more moved than she had seen him since the day that he came In with the news of his son's arrest, *I—I1 am sorry for the way I treated that boy.’ **I don’t think he has any hard feel ings on account of it, father,” was the daughter's soothing answer, ‘*1f you don’t, Emma, then you mi: consider that what I said to jou tw years ago 1s unsaid,” were the father’s closing words, and with this he dropped the subject. A moment later ihe door opened, neighbor burst in excitedly. “Mr. Williams have you beard the news?’ he cried. “Of course you have not. You remember how the body of Mr. Parsons was found in the pond, and now Benjamin Appleby has just confersed on his dying bed that he killed Parsons unintentionally in a dis. pute over some hay at Appleby’s house that same night, and put the body in the pond. As to Billington, Appleby says that Billington had nothing to do with 1t, but that he—Applaby—per- suaded Billington that another man Billington saw on (he road that night must have been Parsons. Appleby is at the last gasp, If not dead already. I'm glad the truth is out for Mrs. Par son's sake,’ Emma and Alden met that evening al the same big corner as two years and a balf before. Emma expiained to her lover her father’s change of mind, She added: “Alden, you will not have (0 conbinue living down calumny any longer, now that the truth is out. There rem:ins for our family, now, the more d Malt task of living down, not falseboou, but the truth.” “Emma, darling,” answered Alden, a8 he took her hands, and the old love shone undiminished In his frank blue eyes; “your brother’s fault is not yours. and If there is to be any hving down I 5s A In the tenderness and devotion of his son-in-law old Mr, Williams nds some relief and compeiasation for the terrible blow which he received through the guilt of his favorite son. A Trio of Eights
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers