NEWS FROM NORRISTOWN I'WO MEN STADBED, ONE MORTALLY. NORRISTOWN, PA., Feb. 11.—Four Italian laborers, employed at Albertson & Son's glass works, became engaged in a quarrel at noon to-day, and Peler Petrello stabbed two of them, one ‘atally, indicting a long, deep gash in his abdomen. The victim 1s Frank Bimo. The attending physician sad .0-night that the man could not live. The other wounded man, who was cut in the back, 1s in a critical condition, but 1s likely to survive, A third man, who interfered, was knocked down with a shovel by Petrello and rendered senseless, The assailant fled, pursued by an cilicer on horseback and a posse on foot. He was driven into a woods in Plymouth township this evening, and when darkness set in the hunt was abandoned. THIEVES MAKE A GOOD HAUL, NORRISTOWN, Pa,, Feb, 11.—DB, I'. Richardson, residing in Plymouth township, near the borough line, re- ported to the police this evening that his dwelling bad been robbed of jew- elry, silverware and clothing to the value of about $600, Mr. Richardson and his family bave been away since on the 9th. ’fhey met in a bar room and opened ‘dre simuitaneously, Wal- ton Was Y.{ljed, and D. A. Martin was shot Iv, the arm, The Marshal was not Ir, jured, ~~A broken rail threw a freight car and a passenger coach of an accommo: dation train off the track at Naginey, Pa., on the 11th. There were nine passengers on board and they were all injured, none fatally however. — While two young sons of Ell W. Carpenter were firing at a mark against a woodshed, at Bucyrus, Oho, on the 11th, one of the bullets penetrated the siding and struck their mother, who had just entered, in the side, inflicting a fatal wound. -On the morning of the 1lith an explosion occurred at a point midway between Willlams Bridge and Bedford Park, on the line of the New York, New Haven and Ilartford Railroad, just as the train from Stamford, Conn., which 1s due in New Yorkat 9.40 a. m, passed there, It is believed that the explosion was caused by a gang of Italian workmen throwing out a dyna. mite cartridge too suddenly. Every pane of glass In the train was shal- tered, and the 500 passengers wers ter- ribly shaken up. A large known of the robbery until the for mer’s return this evening. ny, Gp NEWS OF THE WEEK. —A diabolical attempt to burn and blow up a five story double tenement on Hester street, New York, was discov. ered early on the morning of the 10th, Bundles of rags saturated with kero- sene had been used; also several pounds of gunpowder, Fortunately the pow. der had pot been reached when the flames were discovered and exting- uished. The author of the plot and its motive are unknown. Simon J. Dillon was stabbed and killed in a bury, Connecticut, on the morning o! the 10th. ~—Cmsar Frazer and Edward Criss, both colored, were arrested on morning of the 10th in Charleston, South Uarolisa, for the murder of E. H. Holdenberg. Frazer confessed his guilt, while Criss asserted that be was innocent. —A fight took place ten miles from Newport, Kentucky, on the afternoon new rallroad, between Italian work- men and negroes, Three men are re- ported to have been killed and a score wounded. The trouble is said to have severe cuts about the Lead and face fro e flying glass, —A secret service officer more counterfeilers In county, 16 in all. this gang since, but arrested several 7ures commenced active mesa Years against arrest of one of the others 80 badly that parity scared the tuey ceased work. —A loaded car dast:edd down the in- at Galusha A. Grow’s mines, Pa,, ‘on the 11th, Killing Edward M. Baker and injuring Robert E. Crisswell. the 11th, precipitating the cage 95 feet bottom, George Harper was his son slightiy and a man Dexter and Melverne Cole, two young Nova Scotia, on the 11th, setting of a canoe, by the up —During a fight between Pravzero i the evening of Policeman and ace side and W. Cox,a prominent citizen of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, was shet dead i of a jug of whisky. No have been received. ~—Wililam Holden was killed by = man named McGrath, In Montreal, Quebec, on the 9th, Holden bad called McGrath a *‘nigger.”” McGrath 1s a white man, but his wife has negro blood in her veins, E. H, Oldenburg, a grocer in Charleston, South Carolino, 60 years of age, was murdered al his store on the evening of the 9th, by two unknown negroes, wbo had entered the store for the purpose of robbery. They escaped with about $50, While a num- ber of colored laborers were relurning to a camp in Lee conuly, Kentucky, a rufian named William Shaw one of them to drink with him, While the man was complying Shaw raised i particulars i i i ! ! i i i i The enraged colored afterwards had him lodged Haywood Handy, colored, shot and killed a young white man pamed Charles Stewart, in Dossier parish, Louisiana, on the 8th, and was lynched by a wob on the same night, pears that Handy amd two other negroes were charged with hog steal. Court =n few days ago. Feeling that Handy and the others had avaded justice through various techni- zalitles, and inasmuch as their past record fur hog stealing and other of- fences was bad, a few of the citizens residing ia that vicinity determined to at least give all of them a flogging and potify them that if they were ever charged with the same crime again they would bave to leave the parish, When the party reached Handy’s house be refused to allow them to enter and they burst the door open. Stewarl was in the lead and Handy shot him. — William Hamilton was stabbed to jeath by DPenjamin Brown, In St Ionis, on the evening of the 10th. They quarrelled over a game of cards in which five cents was the stake. A boller at the brick works of Guild, White & Gillespie, in Chattanooga, Tennessee, exploded on the 11th, killing Charles Falls and fatally injuring his son, During a dance at San Jacinto, & a hittle mountain town in California, a few days ago, an earthquake shock oc- curred, and ihe two hundred people present sought safely by jumping through windows, Many were tramp- led under foot and others were cut by glass, but no one was fatally hurt. ~The Hessian fly is reported to be destroying tlhe wheat crop in Central lllinots. The dry freezing weather is also reported to be killing the wheat. ~Michael Rizzolo, alias “Red Nose Mike,”” on trial in Wilkesbarre, Pa., for the killing of Paymaster McClure and Stablewan Flanoigan, was on the 11th found guilty murder in the first degree. Sentence was deferred until the 16th. Father Ashfield, a at ~t. Peter’s Catholic Church, Memphus, Tennessee, was stabbed to death on the morning of the 11th by W. Reeves, a young man, whom he been instrumental in having re- leased from jail, where he had been { i i } entered protest.” Harrell, whose !+use he Mrs, Plarrell’s during her husband 's absence, —The case of diss Margaret Willlamrs against David Kearr, for $10, 000 damages or breach of promise of marriage wi tried in New York on the 13th, au nited in a verdict for the plaintif 1500, Miss Willlams was Lhe sister urs first wife, — Policeman J Hampton, lowa, on the evening of the The former made and was shot and fatally Befrankie a business of re. for the Northern Wisconsin dives, —Peter Rooney, shot and fatally wounded in Chicagoon by Ferdinand Vecchione, an Italian blacksmith, who caught Rooney climbing through his ~—An epidemic of a virulent charac ter, the nature and symptoms of which are not clearly stated, Lake. Manitoba, and their extermina- tion is feared. An explosion occurred at Johnson's Harline and demolishing the building. William Harris, a notorious character James Jenkins, a young raslroad brake. man. As Harns was being removed to mob, but was retaken by the sherifl and his deputies, was being taken out of town, be was again captured by the mob, and was being strung upto a tree when Rev. Mr. Hudson, a Baptist preacher, ap- peared on the scene, and, after an im- passioned appeal by him, the crowd re. turned Harris to the calaboos, On the evening of the 13th another mob at- tacked the jall and forced an entrance, but found that Harris had been taken to Coffeeville, At last accounts it was sald that another mob would go to Coffeville and lynch Harris, Charles Gabit, a laborer, 36 years old, shot his wife in Reading, Pa. on the 14th, and then shot himself, The woman's wound 1s slight, but Gabit's condition is dangerous, ‘They quar- relled about Gabit's failure to support the family. Tascott, the alleged mur- derer of Millionaire Snell in Chicago, has, it Is stated, been arrested at Deer Lodge, Montana, His captors claim that he has all the marks mentioned in the descriptive circular sent out, Sophia Buck, aged 30 years, living on the second floor of a tenement Louse in New York, threw her T-months-old babe out of the window on the morn- ing of the 14th. The child was fatally hurt. The woman was abandoned by her husband, who left her ill and des. titute, and while brooding over her condition her reason gave wav. ~All the Calumet shafts, except No. 5, at Calumet, Michizan, were sealed on the afternoon of the 13th, as the miners in shafts 2 and 4 were compelled to leave by gas and smoke, Fire is still burning in the section where it broke out, but, it is said, there 1s no encroachment on the new timbers, The old process of *smothering’ will be resumed, and the mine remains closed tor an indefinite time, ~An unknown man advanced in front of a railroad train In a suburb of Chicago, on the 14th, and, deliberately head on the rails, was decapitated before the engineer could in Ne n Further aavices rrom Shanghi « the China steamer which bas arrived +’ Francisco, state that the famine Un Aunui and Kiangsu 1s worse. In ove province 300 families are starving, and altogether several millions are suffering from famine caused by drought two years in succession, -—A despatch from Helena, Mon- tana, says that A, C. Webster, a stock raiser, just in from the cattle ranges, says that, while the present very agree- able and spring-like weather would ap- pear to benefit cattle, it came far from it, The streams are frozen, and, as there is not & particle of snow on the ground, many cattle are in a famisbed condition for water, It is feared the streams will ran dry very early this year owing, to the ve ry light snowfall. —The saloons in Badger, Duncombe, Lehigh and Barnum, lowa, were raided by citizens on the 13th, and the liquors spilled. 1t is stated that active measures are to be adopted In Fort Dodge at once to make the city “dry.” —A passenger and freight train on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy 13th. of the ss Ar SENATE. Senate on the 11th, the Mr. for his new Mr. Dawes presented Inthe U, S, of ed, Coke term were {i Virgima, against the con- tions to Indians as unwise, mending ther equivalent and recom- farming Mr. Dawes memorial was in the hand- of one the students, was signed in their own handwriting by al in of own unprompted idea. The was referred, On motion of Mr. Sherman petition When the doors were 1e- and the Pending iis con- Vos £8 § A illu asloe temporarily In the United States Senate, on the bill to establish a National Health was reported and the calendar, The Naval of Joard A INEStage Was re. regard to the Deliring’s Sea seal (sh- eres, Mr. DEvarts asked unanimous for the setting aside of the unfinished business, the Unlon Pacific tious in regard to outrages In Washing. toh county, Texas. After discussion the resolution was taken up. It di. on Privileges and Elections to carefully reverse the ex laws regulating elections ing for a more complete protection of the exercises of the elective franchise it, and to report to the next Adjourned. In the U. in baif a million for the protection of American interests in “amoa was retained, and that the ap- propriation of $100,000 for a coaling ferred to the Naval Appropnation bill, had passed tbe Senate on the Mr. Coke obtained the HOUSE, In the Housa on the 9th, the ost Pending discussion the House adjourned. In the House on the 11th, a confer. ence was ordered on the amendments to the Direct Tax Refund bill. The South Carolina contested case of Smalls vs. Elliott was taken up. Pend- ing ils discussion, the House ad jeurned. In the House on the 12th, the Senate bill appropriating $250,000 to enable the President to protect American in- terests on the Isthmus of Panama, was referred to the Committees on Foreign Affairs, with leave to report at any time, Mr. Townshend, of lllinois, introduced a bill, which was referred, appropriating $50,000 for a special dis. play of the farm products of the United States at the Paris Exposition. The consideration of the Smalls-Elliott contested election case was resumed, Mr. O'Ferrall, of Virginia, defended the majority report in favor of the sitting member, Mr. Cooper, of Ohio, spoke in support of the contestant, and was followed on the same side by Messrs, Johnson, of Indiana, and MeComas, of Maryland, Mr. Outh- walte, of Ohlo, spoke In support of the majority report, and Mr. Smalls, the contestant, then spoke in his own be- half. The General Deficiency ill was reported and the House adjourned. In the House, on the 13th, three vetoes of private pension bills were re- oeived from the President and referred. Mr. Oates, from the Judiciary Com- mittee, reported a bill to amend the Naturalization laws, which ‘was ordered printed and recommitied. Mr Wise, from the Committee on Naval Asal, reported the bill award: Chief Engineer Melville for Mvp, tion bill was reported and referred to the Committee of the Whole. The seat, was a SA MAI I. Bean ot ty unaccompanied by virtue is BENATE, +i the Senate on the 12th the Presi dent pro tempore appointed Messrs, Delamater, Reyburn, Brown (of Mont- gomery), and Henninger a committee to represent the Senate and to meet other committees from Philadelphia City Councils and the State of New Jersey to make inspection of that part of the Delaware river affected by the operation of the River and Harbor bill. Adjourhed. In the Senate on the 13th, the ap- pointment of Thomas I’. Butler to be lay Judge of Chester county was con- firmed, The President pro tempore signed the writ for a special election in the Eighth Senatorizl District of Phil- adelphia on March 14th. Bills were passed finally, dividing up the cities of the State into three classes and making Labor day a legal holiday. Adjourned. In the Senate bills were Introduced, as follows : By Mr. Shull to prevent the forma- tion of trust and combinations to reg- ulate the sale and comsumption of i general use, ployment of children under 12 yeurs of | requiring kept mn all under 16 years a register | places of all the minors | of age. | The Senate bill making | afternoon a legal holiday, and pamiog {on third reading. In the House on ary General Committee reported favor- ably the bill to allow druggists to carry on their business on Sundays, The Appropriation Commillee re- ported favorably the iil to appropriate Adjourned, A LSAT JOHN DULL OWNS UP. A ———— fhe American Girl is the Gul of the Pertod, The Yondon Dafly Telegraph says if may fairly be acknowledged that the ‘American girl’ is the girl of the period. What she may become in the future no- body can tell, At present her destiny seems superb, Her father finds eilver, strikes oil, kills pigs by the million, or raises corn by the square mile, bhe is pretty, can talk well, does not know what deference or diffidence means ané enters Europe full of money, ing’s Roman of John Bull, It is still truer of the little girl whom Uncle Sam does his best to spoll by unlimited ten- derness and mnumerable cheqies, As her wealth—sometimes all combined— she Linas French nobles, Italian princes will, James and SOme- Mr. is not so eager capture coronets at her Mr, Henry i Howells point out, she for these ornan ed, For the truth mi i s (10 riage Goes {#2 as might be en be tol not seein means . 3 W het ' | what it sii English women, f virtue or a fault ! French i lege at Thiladelphias also to make an | appropriation of $20,000 to the Gettys- | burg Memorial Association to purchase {| the ground upon which the batlie fought, Mr. Richmond introduced to | prevent the erection of a slaughter house within 1000 feet of a public square or schoolhouse, The bi to establish a Doard of Di- reclors of a bill } up and passed without farther amend- tent, and sent (o the journed. Senate, In the UU, 8. Senate on the 14th, mes. sages were received from the President vetoing two private pension bills, The House bill for the allotment of lands in severally to the Oneidea Wisconsin was reported adversely, Mr. | Hoar offered a resolution, which to transmit the sworn testimony regard to alledged frauds in the | New York Custom House taken by special Agent Byrne. On motion of ! Mr. Edmunds the Committees on Com merce was directed to cousider the expediency of the purchase by the Unged States of the Dismal Swamp Canal, with ment of an adequale walér way be- tween Chesapeake Bay and the North Carolina Sounds, A conference was ordered on the lLegisialive Approprin- ton bill, Mr, Coke spoke | the Treasury coples of all by the Commitiee on Privileges and Elactions, After an executive session | the Senate adjourned. HOUSE. In the housa on | fers’ orphans’ schools was instructed | to especially investigate ihe trouble in | McAllisterville School. The Anti-food Adulteration blll, which | ported adversely, was recommitled, | Adjourned. ! | introduced by Messre, Kratz and Fow | to prevent trusts or combinations from { affecting the prices of commodities or | restricting trade; by Mr. Hayes, for | the incorporation and regulation of passenger railway companies, and by | Mr, Thompson, to prevent the sale or | gift of cigarettes to persons under 16 | years of age. The biil to prevent per- | sons from unlawfully using or wearing the insignia or rosette of the Military Order of the Loyal United States, or the badge or button act of 1874, “0 provide for the incor- passed finally. Adjourned, In the House on the 13th the bill regulating veterinary surgery, which had been recommitted, was reported back with slight amendment, and goes on the calendar for third reading. Ad- journed, In the House on the 14th the Senate bill was passed providing for writs of error to the Bupreme Court of the United States in all cases involving the jurisdiction of the Court below. A conference was ordered on the Legisia- tive Appropriation bill. The bill to divide a portion of the Sioux Reserva- tion in Dakota into separate reserva. tions and to secure the relinquishment of the Indian title to the remainder was taken up and passed. The Forti- fication bill, with the Senate amend- ment, was referred to the Committee of the Whole. The ronference report on the Senate bill for the admission of South Dakota as a State, reported a disagreement, was accepted and an- other conference was ordered. A res- olution was offered by Mr, Baker, of New York, instructing the House conferrees to withdraw their de- mand for the admission of New Mexico, and agree to the admis. sion of North Dakota, Moniana aod Wash and vide for the ad- mission of South Dakota after a new election. Mr. Cox offered a substitute, differing from Mr, Baker's resolution only 1n omitting the provision for au Slection in Sou Dakota. he satatt, was accepted r. Baker, a Mr. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, de- manded a division of the instructions, the all | and homes, ractiven F404 wit no ques Ii as the wife and mother | with rule; and es | the slender bind the sampler Yaukes palron, we mal tthe wit and cent, the intelligent rapid repartee that pi $ ¥ it w 114 3 % NAL DARLIOLRIVY., Toe immigrants to this country from England and Wales last year cxceeded those from Ireland by 25,000. Maxiy is reported to have devised a gun that wiil dre 1000 shots a minnte in any direction. This is supposed to be is Maximum effort. EE on A pin has been introduced in the IMinois Legislature, providing for the » » electricsty, ars similar to York law, those of the New ———— Wer Wearner 18 FLORIDA.— Southern papers state that the Florida farmers are complaining of the extreme- ly wet weather of the past two months, which has greatly retarded the trucking business in nearly every section of the State. Vegetable growers are much eir crops will most likely be too late in maturing lo Prices, —_-—— % wmtato 4 Ysa of Pr God Lats formed oul ; A Sa Territory name 4 n tho new ashi ngion posed, a t of Winona Dakota, to Lhe man, gan Ona th . &f POT € BC SECON 3 BOL W | gan militia, a State has the sported a gorgeous uniform, pressed the German officers at Ul as a remarkal He spoke ol his racks and elsewhere man for his years, aclhieveme the field of Kalamazoo i of turning the tide of war al Cold wats and saving the day at Dattle C too, to Windsor from i: » J Yee stall detachment, and bel ned, how he expla ! over a state of terror and alarin und closed. He spoke warches he had made Clair Flats, and gave +F yf § outs LI loon a the siege of MM Phil. fo have part actions as Dut it was « that he didn’t pay stantly borrowing mn ficers do not Wke a man who borrows of General “eI many the young werved tinally his bills and was con- ney, German money, preferring to have a mol of that Industry themselves, Fu the pretentious foutd to be a swindler and had to Michigan officer escape arrest, ——————————— A — A ————" Feeding a Hungry Beggar. { bas for a six mouths been the victim of | a beggar, who always told him the same story of not having had a mouthful to eat for twenty-four hours, He made thie very common mistake of answering the appeal with a dime or a quarter. Recently several of his parishioners told him about this perpetually hungry man and how he had receivel financial aid from them. Recently the good dominie was the recipient of a visit from the hungry man, This time he had fasted ‘ocnger than usual. ‘My poor fellow, you must be hun- gry,’ said the clergyman, sympatbetic- ally; ‘come down with me to the kitch- en.’ The beggar’s face fell, but he follow. ed. At the master’s bidding the cook wiaced an enormous roast, from which the clergyman cut an enormous slice. “There, my poor fellow, eat your fill.’ The fellow ate, not daring to refuse, and, as his plate became emptied, the clergyman, with ferocious hospitality, replenished it again and again. The beggar ate until it became positively painful to watch him. After he had eaten about three ordinary meals the clergyman relented and dismissed the beggar with an invitation to call when- ever he felt hungry. Tur reclamation of arid lands by means of reservoirs and canals, to be built by the government, will be a proper thing to do whenever the people of the United States run short of other lands requiring no such artificial works. Maj. Powell estimates that when the works Lave been erected it will cost the furm- ers from $1 to $2 per acre to irrigate their lands, For these sums, capital. ized, millions of acres of well watered Jands can be bought out-night, It is a waste of money to reclaim and lands at a time when there is an abundance good land unworked. down RAIN MOS ochanty. She'll sit ner daund re out a ng. Plans i a bridge ong, from The cost , which does et prolit t and traflic is The engineers ASSengers o trust. twenty- trouble. on the desert Lhe not seem extravagant, val the to be realized from {iv $20 000 Ox of coHurse, that have to be educated themselves on a bruige three miles long, built over the sotoe Straits of Dover, bul that, contrary, everybody boals estimated at assume, woull not rior Hy would and flock to the rulge. EE — —— ——— i i Wesrenx civilizat have a bard time of it in China as long as the | Emperor puts so much faith in his | astrologers as to stop the building of a | railroad because of an evil omen—a fire | in the Imperial palace. The astrologer, as Jong as he is believed, has a great ad- | vantage over anybody else, lle can get | omens of all sorts from every day events | and rule the country by his mysterious | power. The first steps in the civiliza- | tion of China will have to be made in the direction of freeing the rulers of superstitious faith in their asirologers, and this will be no easy task. There is one other way of getting round the difficulty, and that is the par- chase of the astrologers, but that is une moral and subjects enterprises of great pith and moment to a greal deal of risk, > ware 11 On Wail SA an Troy. Ricnaros, of Yale College, has wade a.study of the records of 2425 students in order to determine, if possi- ble, the relations of athletics, in Yale, to scholarship. The general result is that the athletes fall slightly behind the non-athletes in scholarship, bul not sc much as to demand a suppression of such exercises, In some branches of athletic exercises the students who en. gage in the sports are above the average of the non-athletes in scholarstup, For the slight difference noted between the two great classes, there may be greater strength and epdurance or physical de velopment compensating for the loss of scholarship. This does not appear from the report, but a bealthy, energetic wax with fair scholarship 1s a better product of college education than a debilitated student with higher average in book studies. So far as statistics go, how: ever, the most that can be clalmed fou Prof. Richard's report is that it is nega- tive in Its results, and shows that athletic games do not seriously interfere with the scholarship of students. nS I MI A113 Trust no secrets to a friend which, i reported, would make an enemy.