The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 07, 1889, Image 6

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    TEN GIRLS KILLED.
TERRIBLE. EXPLOSION IN A SQUIB
FACIORY NEAR PLYMOUTH.
TWO MEN INJURED, ONE FATALLY,
WILKESBARRE, Da.., Feb, 25.--A
terrible disaster occurred at Plymouth,
a few mtles from here, this afternoon,
by which 10 girls, employes were killed.
Back of the Gaylord shaft stood the
factory of John Powell, used for the
manufacture of squlbs, used by the
miners in loosening coal in the mines.
The factory employed 84 girls, ranging
from 10 to 20 years, and several male
workmen. While the majority of the
girls were at their homes eating dinner
the people were startied by the deafen-
ing thunders of a terrific explosion.
They rushed terror stricken to their
doors and windows and in the distance
saw clouds of smoke ascending from the
squib factory. Soon a large crowd had
gathered around it, and women began
wringing thelr bands and men turned
away from the sight presented when
the charred body of a young girl was
seen lying in one of the rooms, and the
fact became known that at least 12
persons were in the buliding at the
time of the explosion, eating their
noonday lunch. The scene was fraught
with terror, as the girls, some of them
bleeding, others gasping for a few
breaths of fresh ar, rusted to the
windows and sereamed frantically for
help. About this time a dozen miners
from the adjoining colliery came
upon the scene, and as soon as
they saw the bleeding forms of the
girls, calling for aid, rushed towards
the bullding in a body, but fate preven-
ted thelr proffered succor. As soon as
they stepped near the door anther
terrific explosion took place and the
entire building eollapsed, burying in
the ruins the forms that & moment
before stood crying for assistance.
he braver of the men when tbe
smoke and flying debris had settled,
tushed among the ruins, and one
by one the bodies were found
taken out charred beyond
nition, bieeding and mutilated,
mothers saw and recognized
familiar token or piece of dress
which they could tell their loved ones,
the scene was one that represented the
extreme throes of sorrow and
tion. The bodies, as fast as they were
taken out, were removed to an under-
taking establishment, where they were
placed ina row. Their features were
00 badly mutilated tbat they were
scarcely recognizable,
The killed, so far as known, are:
Kate Jones, aged 18S years
Maggie Lynch, aged 21 years,
Hettie Jones, aged 106 years
Gluddis Reese, aged 15 years.
Mary Walters, aged 17 years.
Maggie Richards, aged 17 years,
Mary A. Lake, aged 17 years,
Ruth Powell, aged 19 years,
Esther Powell, aged 22 years,
Jane Ann Thomas, aged 16 years
The foreman, George T. Reese, was
dangerously if not faially injured,
John Powell; the proprietor,
badly injured,
Several kegs of powder caused the
explosion, but how they were exploded
is yet a mystery.
The scenes around the undertaker’s
establishment where the bodies of the
victims were taken were heartrending.
Eleven bodies lay there headless, arm-
less and legless, From
georched clothing and small
were the victnns identified,
of a young girl, supposed to be from
Scranton, and who was seeking work,
had not been identified.
The only theory as to the causes of
the explosion comes from the injured
fireman, Reese,
As
was
apart be dropped to the cellar, from
where be escaped with nothing but his
underciothing and ran across the fleld,
Tle says there was a pot of sulphur on
gquibs into, the miners when using
them Hghting the sulphur ead. The pot
must have bolled over and ignited some
logse powder whicls fired the kegs, There
were two heavy explosions and a third
light one, The girls were probably all
stunned by the shock, for not a ery or
shout was heard after the report. It
was dead silence, and the workers
toiled ior a'l they were worth, Only
the relatives and a few Wilkesbarre
reporters were inside. The bodies lay
on the floor, covered with coarse bur-
aps and were marked as soon as Iden
tided.
The crowd outside numbered hun
dreds, and was augmented as each am-
bulanece brought an additional body.
Finally, when all bad been identified,
the doors were opened and the crowd
filed in among the dead bodies only to
see what resembled large charred bil-
lets. of wood more than anything else
Up toa week ago 80 girls had been
employed, but an accident to a portion
of the machinery made it necessary to
lay off all but a few of them.
The fate of litle Jase Ann Thomas
excites much sympathy, She had
stopped work a few days, and had gone
to the factory this noon at ber moth
er’s request, to ask what the prospects
were for work. ~ While Inside she
probably chatted with the others, who
were enjoying ther noon hour, and
was caught in the explosion,
Ruth and Esther Powell were nleces
of the owner of the factory, They had
come from Wales some months ago to
work for their uncle, leaving their
parents in the old country, John R,
Powell, the proprietor of the factory,
was in Wilkesbarre all of this morning,
sod after returning bowe for dinner
started up the hill.to the factory. When
balf way up he heard the report, and
saw the bui collapse, He knows
notbiog about the cause. A storehouse
only 30 fees from the ruins contained
25 kegs of powder. Hundreds of
stood near it during the fire, not w-
ing its contents, and strange to say it
did not explode, as it became as hot an
a stove.
Eye witnesses, of whom there are
ones were 1owder kegs and the light
ones were boxes of squids, At mid.
night Foreman George T. Reese is
aving m delirium. ‘The bodies will by
removed to the homes of the vietims
tomorrow, and the fonerals will be
held on Wednesday afternoon.
A RAILROAD WRECK.
EIGHT PERSONS KILLED AND THIRTY
INJURED.
THREE CARS DREAK THROUGH A
BRIDGE,
81. GEORGE, ONT. Feb, 27.—The
St. Louls express, passing here east-
bound about 6 o'clock to-night, went
through the bridge just east of the
station. A broken tire on the engine
caused Lhe rails to spread, and the first
passenger car, the Pullman car and
dining car went through the middle
section of the bridge,
The Pullman car, containing the
most passengers, was thrown clear off
the bridge, turning completely over and
lighting right side up. The dining car
stands on and against a pier, and the
passenger cars remain on the bridge,
having stripped the tles ahead of it
over the section that collapsed. About
thirty wounded have been taken out
and eight or ten dead.
The train consisted of five coaches,
baggage, passenger, smoking, Pullman
and dining cars. As near as can be
ascertained, the accident happened In
the following manner: The piston-rod
broke just as the traln passed the
station, causing the rails to spread.
As it proceeded the engine, tender and
smoking-car crossed the bridge in
safety, but just as the passenger coach
was near the centre of the bridge the
terrible affair occurred,
The fireman, it appears, noticed that
all was not right and jumped, receiving
| 8 severe scalp wound, The passenger
car went over the bridge, turning a
somersault and landing flatly, The
Paliman remained on the bridge. The
dining car contained about seven peo
ple besides the waiters. Supper had
just been announced, and in a few
minutes the car would have been filled,
and all must have perished,
Following is a list of killed and In-
ured:
Killed—George Leggett, of Mitch.
ell’s; William W, Wemp, London; Dr.
Swan, A. W. Francis, of Woodstock;
Mr, Mclean, of the flim of McLean &
and Captain Moore, a Salvation Army
lass, from Brantford; Mr,
Woodstock.
Itjured=-Thomas L. Doublney, tem-
perance lecturer; Mrs, and May Jen-
ning, Paris; Mr. and Mrs. Buddin,
Dorchester; Murs. Higeins, Rossin
House. Toronto; Mrs; McLeod lnger.
soil; Miss Chaffee, Pontiac, Michigan;
James Hyslop, Gooderich; Daniel Pea.
aeck, BR. W, Wrisht, Woodstock; John
McKinley, Det: it; Fred Hancock,
London; George Forbes, New York: J.
R, Marshall aod Mrs, J. RB. Marshall,
Regina; J. f1. Wilson (colored) Chat.
bam; Mrs. Evans, Hamilton; George
Margotto, ! ning car conductor, Niag-
ara; Rober: iiiltoa, St. Catherine's; Mr,
| McLaughiiv, f.ondon: Conductor Re-
yell, serio D. W, Karn, Wool.
stock; W.
Dr,
W. Frances, Woodstock; Mrs.
i Sendall, Detroit.
i R, Darnes, general storekeeper of the
Grand Trunk, and W, M,
traveling agent for the Chicago, Mil
waukee and St. aul road, from this
city, are amoung Lhe killed. Conductor
Revell and Frank McLaughlin are on
| the wounded list,
M,
oS
A,
>>
—Mrs, Lizzie McAuley and her two
i children were found dead in bed to
gether, at their Lome in Chicago, on
ithe morning of the 25th, In the
woman's mouth was
| connecting with the gas Jel. The gas
wus turned on full, indicating that
Mrs, McAuley deliberately planned to
Kill her two children and herself. he
is the woman who shot her husband
December 4, 1883, while ina fit of
jealousy, No iudictment was found
against ber by the Grand Jury, She
| has suffered from a mild form of in-
| sanity ever since the murder, One of
| the children was a boy 3} years old,
| the other a girl 14 years of age,
{ ~—Rauth, the little daughter of Rev,
George Herbert Patterson, of South
Portsmouth, Rhode Island, died of
hydrophobia on the evening of the
24th, She was bitten by a dog in Sep-
tember last,
~Join Humes, Mayor of Iowa City,
Towa, committed suicide on the even.
ing of the 24th. It is stated that he
had been partially insane for over a
year past, and had been under the sur.
velllance of his friends, Curtis Crom.
leigh, aged 18 years, committed suicide
by shooting himself in the heart, while
standing on the steps of a church door
In Carlisle, Penna., on the evening of
the 24th, It is supposed he was disap
pointed in love,
~The Coroner, on the 26ith, began
an investigation of the explosion of
the squib factory in IDiymouth, la,
Foreman Reese testified that the girls
were sorting a lot of loose squibs lying
on the floor, some of which were good
and others bad, Kate Jones picked out
what she considered Lhe poor ones or
those that were empty, and threw them
into the stove. One of these happened
to be loaded and exploded, and a spark
ignited a lot of loaded squibs lying
pear, The explosion followed,
~When Mr. and Mrs, John Swan
son, who lived in Chicago, awoke on
the morning of the 26th, they discov.
ered that their twin bables, 2 months
old, lying in bed with them, had been
smothered to death.
«Francesco Arnoldo amd Martin
Glovauni were run down and killed by
a fast train on the Philadelphia and
Reading Railroad at Shamokin, Pen
on the evening of the 20th,
~A telegram from Cheboygan,
Michigan, says the victims ot the chol.
ie in Presque Isle county,
fall, bave lost complete control of
thelr legs and lowge portion of
and can h
id they
wre maimed in other ways for life, The
cause of the epidemis is now knowo to
ison from d ing fish
wm 's Day ited
by the fishermen ia that v nity,
vestigution will be made io the
During & fight in New York on the
26th, Richard Yarwood struck John
lehman a heavy blow in the face,
knocking him down. In his fall, Leh-
man’s head hit the sidewalk with great
force, and he lay unconscious. While
in that condition Yarwood kicked him
brutally about the head and body.
Lehman died soon after, his skull
having been fractured in the fall. Yar-
wood escaped, Terrence McKiernan,
a saloon keeper in Waterbury, Connec-
ticut, shot and killed Michael Cleary,
on the evening of the 25th, William
Emerson, a mulatto convict in the
State Prison at Fert Madison, Iowa,
assaulted Deputy Warden Townsend,
with a knife, on the 26th, Townsend
shot him dead.
—The collections of internal revenue
during the first seven months of the
current fiscal year aggregated $74,202, -
596, an increase of $2.651,2064 on the
collection for the corresponding period
of last year.
— President-elect Harrison and party
arrived at Washington on the afternoon
of the 26th. Not a single mishap oc-
curred to mar the pleasure of the
journey from Indianapolis. The traln
was stopped about a mile outside of
Washington, wheie the party alighted,
took carriages and were driven to the
Arlington House, thus escaping the
crowd awaiting their arrival at the
depot.
—An explosion occurred in Cham-
berlain Coillery, at St. Clair, Pa., on
the 26th, Nobody was killed, but W,
L. Giiti'h, Frank Dix, Richard
Barnes, Willie Thompson, Thomas
McKernan and Joseph McGough were
severely, and some of them perhaps,
fatally burned,
plosion is not positively known, but it
| is attributed to the accumulated gas in
| # newly opened tunnel coming in con-
tact with the naked lamps worn by the
men al work in a connecting gaugway.
disaster at the squib factory at Ply-
mouth, Penna., took place on the 27h
| ult. There were nine hears*s, followed
{by an enormous throng. The bodies
{ were interred side by side in Shawnee
| Cemetery.
Tarentum, Penna., on the evening
tof the 206th wit. The concussion
almost completely demolished two
brick dwellings, one occupied by Joel
Smith and the other by W, G. Prit
chard, All the occupants were more
lor leas injured, and Mrs, Smith, IL}
feared, faally. A second explosion
took place on the morning of the 27th
{ nit. in Pittsburg, which wrecked a
{ frame house of Patrick Murray. The
| five persons in the house were slightly
injured, Alonzo A. Shaok,
about 30 years, a freight conductor on
| the Western Maryland and Cumberland
{ Valley Raliroad, was killed on
i 20th ult, near Edgemont. A train
separated in going down the mountain,
and when it came together Shank was
crushed,
| at
~Jolin Brofee, postmaster at Mount
{ Carmel, Pa,, was removed on the 27th
iult, It is said that he appropriated
own use, His bondsmen made good
ithe loss, A despatch from Chicago
says that Jacob F. Goodman, cashier
of the Cook County Treasurer's office,
has dicappeared wilh about $7000 of
the county's fund, His bond will
| cover 1 shortage. Eleven produce
| merchants in Pittsburg were on
'
a8}
{ 27th ult, convicted
| garine for butter,
{ $100 to $250 each,
— Edward
| woundea Kittie Palwer, in Aurora,
| Lliinos, on the 20th, and then shot and
nd were floed from
him. Doth were colored, and Artise
had proposed marriage to the girl, but
| was rejected. John Holler, living near
| Dickinson, Dakota, killed bis wife at
| and then commitled suicide, Before
i following his wife Le locked his five
George Westphaul killed Jack
Cooper on a range In Carbon county,
Wyoming, on the 26th ult, They quar-
reled over the ownership of an unbrand-
od steer. James Matheny has been
arrested in Chico, California, on a
requisition from Governor Francis, of
Missouri, on a charge of attempled
murder, The crime was committed
four years ago in Montgomery county,
Missouri, David Watson stabbed and
fatally wounded Adolph Hughes in
New York on the 28th ult, They are
both colored and quarreled about a
woman, IRRobert Mullen shot and fa-
tally wounded his brother-in law, Rob-
ert Moore, near Springfield, Kentucky,
on the evening of the 28th ult, Mul
len’s wife had left him and bad gone to
Moore’s house. Mullen went there to
force her to go home with him,
David Barkey, 11 years old, was
bitten by a dog in Wooster, Ohio, eight
years ago, and is now sald to ve dying
of hydrophobia. During one of his
piroxysms on the evening of the 27th
ult., he bit off two of his fingers,
50th CONGRESSB.-Senond Session,
EENATE.
In the United States Senate, on the
26th, Mr. Dolph, from the Committee
on FPublie Lands, reported back the
Senate bill, vetoed by the President,
{ for the relief of William R., Wheaton
and Charles H, Chamberlain, of Cali-
fornia, with a recommendation that it
| pass, notwithstanding the President’s
objections, Mr. Dolph explaimed the
prehension. The bill was passed—
| yeas, 35 ; nays, 8. The Army Appro-
| priation bill was passed, with some
| additional amendments,
{ joint resolution for the relief of the
| Venezuela steam Transportation Come
pany (to obtain Indemnity for the
{unlawful seizare and detention of
| steamships) was passed ; also tiouse bill
{ the navy (allowing them nt
| kit of clothing worth §45). After an
executive session the Senate adjourned,
{| Appropriation bill; the Post-office ap-
i propriation bill was reported back, and
i the conference report on the Agricul.
| tural Appropriation bill was agreed lo,
Senate bill to amend the law for
{ protection of the Alaska salmon fish-
| eries was passed, Mr, Platt, from
Committee on Territories, reported
| bills for the admission of Idaho and
| Wyoming as States, and said that as
| soon as they were printed he would ask
to have them considered,
from the Committee on Privileges and
| Elections, reported an amendment to
the Dellency bill, offering a reward of
| $256,000 for the detection and convie
| tion of the batlot-box thieves of Plum-
| merville, Arkansas, The bili to
{ amend the Inter-State Commerce law,
with the House amendments, was
consulered, pending which the Senale
adjourned,
In the U.
i the bi
the
¥
the
NS, Senate on the 28th ult,
i in regard to the Alaska salmon
fisheries, with the House amendment,
wag referred the Commitiee
{ Foreign Relations, Mr. Edmunds say-
| ing that the amendment involved a very
{ important and difficult quest!
i short execullve session was hel
Post-otlice Appropriatioa
passed, with some amendments,
{ House amendments to the bill to amend
{the Inter-Siate Commerce act were
considered, and a further conference
Another execulive ses-
$
vO on
| was ordered.
| was ordered on the Naval Appropri-
{ation bill. Conference reports were
bill, the Fortification bill and the bill
| private entry.
until 8.30 P. M. Noe quornm was
| business was transacted. Adjourned.
HOUSE.
| aged to escape,
~The house of Herman Umberger,
an aged farmer living about ten miles
| east of Ligonier, Pa., was entered by
| two masked men on the 27th ult, They
| claimed that they hod a search war.
| from a peddler in the neighborhood a
| short time ago. Mr. Umberger tnno-
i cently aceompanied them through the
| house, and when be was forced to open
a trunk containing $13,000 he placed
the money in his pocket. They then
commanded him at the points of revol-
vers to hand it over. This he strenas
ously objected to, when they fired five
shots into his body, killing him almost
instantly, They took the money and
fled In the darkness, The aged wile
witnessed the murder, but was Loo old
and feeble to be of any assistance to
her husband,
- FB. Coburn, aged 23 years, a Lrav.
elling salesman, shot and killed his
wife, Lizzie, at their residence, in Bos.
ton, on the evening of the J8th wit,
and then went to a hotel and shot hime
self in the face, loflicting fatal wounds,
Mrs. Colburn was about to become a
mother, No quarrel 18 known to have
taken place between them. Anthony
Lare, a Hollander, who has only been
in this country four months, stabbed
aud fatally wounded his young wife,
in Paterson, New Jersey, on the 28th
ult, He was married two months
before sailing, He had no means and
would not work, and the trouble arose
because the wile refused to remain
dependent upon his friends, who were
hard-working people, Lara was also
bally cut in the struggle with his
e.
~Mrs, Higgins, of Toronto, one of
the persons injured in the railway dis-
aster at St. George, Ontario, on the
27th ult, died on the 28th ult. Muss
Andrews, of Belleville, pA lawissipol;
Miss McLeod, of Ingersoll; and Dr.
Lequesae, of Cleveland, Ohlo, are all
in a critical condition, and their recov.
ery 1s not expected,
~The ive-yeaboid daughter of Mr.
and Mrs, C. Domick, in Watertown,
Now York, was killed on the alt,
house, w aa jelcle, about
100 pounds, fell, striking on the
ence was ordered on the Senate amend.
{ments to the bill opening to settle
ment a portion of the Sioux reserva-
tion in Dakota. The transaction of
prevented by a little more *‘fllibuster-
ing’ started by Mr. Bland, That
{hour having arrived, Mr. Randall
reported the Sundry Civil bill, and a
conference was ordered on the Senate
amendments, The Deficiency Appro-
priation bill was passed, and the con-
ference report on the Pension Appro-
priation bill agreed t~.
then went inte Committee of the
Whole on the Indian Appropriation
bill, An exciling debate ensued, the
speakers being Messrs, Kennedy, of
Onto; Crisp, of Georgia, and Breckin-
ridge, of Arkansas, The consideration
session, but It was not Onished., Ad-
journed,
In the House, on the 27th ult, the
indian Appropriation bill, the last of the
regular appropriation bills, was passed.
Pending consideration of the confer.
ence report on the District of Columbia
Appropriation bill the House adjourned.
Tn the House on the 28th ult., the
Senate blil for the protection of the
salmon fsheries in Alaska was passed,
with an amendment directing the
President to cause one or more war
vessels to cruise in Alaska waters and
seize all vessels unlawfully engaged in
seal hunting, Conference reports were
agreed to on the Agricultural Appro-
bill and the bill to establish a
« 8, Court, with civil and criminal
jurisdiction, in the Indian Territory,
A conference was ordered on the Naval
Appropriation bill, The conference
report on the bill to divide the Sioux
reservation in Dakota was Yo.
In the evening soasion,
was
PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE.
EENATE,
In the Benate, on the 206th,
Henninger introduced a bill providing
constables for the extra work imposed
upon them by the High License law.
tion treaty with
reported
vote. The House amendments to the
Nautical School Ship bill were rejected.
The vote defeating the Saturday Haif-
holiday bill was reconsidered, and the
bill resumed its place on the calendar.
Adjourned,
were passed finally to authorize passen-
ger rallway companies to lease fran.
chise and property to motor companies,
and prolabitiog tue sale of liquor on
Memorial Day. The bills giving pre-
ference to ex-soldiers in appointments
Gossiping.
One of the most Tamcntalile weak
nesses of human pature Is exiiibited in
some people, perhaps. In spine cf Lhe
the this JOUNKAL. Ii is
to pry into other people’s business and to
learn little things which do nol concern
them with the view of telling {0 others
what they bave heard
—and what their eyes have seen con-
Such
of the mind, Such persons in many
cases are so given up to yielding to this
weakness, and to the gratification of
vorably, Samuel R., Downing, of Fay-
ette, was confirmed as member of the
State Board of Agriculture, and J.
Montgomery Foster as Insurante Com-
missioner, Adjourned,
In the Senate on the 28th ult., Mr,
Harlan introduced a bill
ing all suspended electric wires
in cities of over 30,000 population, The
bull is designed to go into effect after
violating the provisions of
The bill to enforce the
and morals, Gossiping and
tattling often end in scandal and what
is more abominable than a scandal in a
What is more
that fly through the air, and then, all
at once, pounce down upon the head of
some unsuspecting victim, To be com-
death strikes all—the
the impure, How little the unsuspect-
engage in any business not named In
their charters was reported
amendments,
ported
committed. The bills to create in-
Bills passed third reading to
of women
incorporation and govern-
ment of street rallways. Adjourned.
HOUSE.
In the Iouse on the
railroad companies to
25th,
was reported favorably.
You may have escaped
thus far, but you know not what a day
Your sensitive na-
ture may be shocked to-morrow by
put in circulation about you, An old
woman or a young lady may do the
confidentially tells her
the astonishing secret, with a
reminder to be sure to keep it to her-
self, but to tell every one that she
Ho one else, and then, the
begins to fly through the air,
suddenly, and unexpectedly you
yourscif its victim. Young
and
|
ach
in the scl
cales issued to
be valid licenses 10
branches of the junior
Mr, Coray, to prohibit the
heating of railroad cars by stoves; by
Mr. Connell, providing for a naval bat-
of National
shall
senior classes
leach tLe
In the House on the 20th the bills to
place the Lunacy Committee of the
state Board of Charities under the
giving the comm tlee exciusl
were reported
Flag bill was
of wife-beaters,
The School
ment
ing 73, and the nays 100. The act for
the improvement of the harbor
Philadelphia passed finally; also, the
to give preference of appointment
and employment to ex-soldlers and
BRLIOTA,
on the Prohibition amendment on June
15th passed second reading, with some
amendments, Adjourned,
~Jn the House, on the 27th uil., a
of corruption in connection
the defeat of the Anli-Dressed
bill, The Revenue bill was re.
with important amendments,
the bills reported
that appropriating $300,000 to
assist in the purchase of the islands in
the Delaware river at Philadelphia.
Prohibition Election bill
passed finslly and sent to the Senate,
Adjourned,
--In the House, on the 28th ult,
bills were favorably reported, among
others, providing for compulsory edu-
for a naval
Meat
ported
pew buildings ; for a naval battalion,
widows, orphans and mothers of such
Bills were introduced by
Mr. Talbot, to prevent the unlawful
use of milk cans, butter tubs or mar-
ket boxes, and also to preveni gam-
bling in stocks ; and by Mr, Messimer,
The bill for the removal of the House
of Refuge trom Philadelphia to Dela-
ware county was passed finally.
———
but recently imported into
uents,
The revolution of eclipses was eal
The
Egyptians asserted that they bad ob-
of the moon before the time of Llex-
ander who died 323 B, C,
THE MARKYIS
PROVISIONS
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FOIE Mess. .o0 convrrvnvsnsscs 1B 00
Prime Mess, DOW. ..oonseeesid BO
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BIDOKOA BO sree ss errs anarsnsss 10
Lard Western bis
Lard CREAR ann RR ERE Ra i
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POLY covversserivennnaren 4 0
sxesensaniansnnsens § 50
BL WR crnicenanunsais 5 5
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is think not you can escape.
Among your intimate friends there are
some who feel it in their bones that
are to be entangled in the
Ohl how they
pity you in the light of thelr own sad
experience, T gentleman in whom
have pl sur affections, does not
! ion
of
i
reciprocate
thivmn, and vou
it 18 Wo
inded and vor
not heed it,
when you do
ng oo, and will n«
evil bas been done.
Gossip » waves, rumors float
i
through the air, and hou yon
yoy
are
profoundly ignor-
ant of them, until suddenly and unex-
ily you learn by an acc.dental
+» and confidential
name soneverybody’s
about a matier,
bs business, is
did pot wish made pub-
It is po pleasant experience to be
wd by the hot tongues of women
up to goss ping and tatt-
readers beware of them!
them: “And with all
He, wandering about
se, and nut « uly idle,
. and busybodies,
hich they ouglt pol. ”’
Facos,
Fria LF
word
fri
lips, and
A &1
CIE Lal §
LOO.
thicugh DOGY'S
sud $00 8 .
just what vou
BOOT
Who are givel
ear
SAVES
Paul
Us
Long
va
g:00u:y
ery we © accep-
own account, and
mity.,
Yi 73 Sarak
lig poss
because
Xe it 18
that a man should
he is devoutl; as if nis
table (0 God ©
Lappines
A
fn off gh frat }
8 Al olience agaiuss nis uig
BAYE
ret
modern wiiler
“74 unbelief among
displeased wilh
, aud so they think
. ashamed and afraid to
Wie 18 84 Be
% 13% oo :
ALOU CITA
en
These
WW anyul
people of whom Tom
Hood says: “They think they’re pious
when bilious.” A good
man is almost always a cheerful one,
It is fit that bad men should scowl,
look Llue and melancholy, but be who
Go of approbation upon
id show its radiance in his
Dr. Jobson said he
villain in hus life that
an unhappy
wy re OLiy
has i's smile
ance.
never hbew a
was on the whole,
dog.”
But an the man with a
good hin enjoy his
sleep and bis dinner, and Jove his wife
of hie children, and
show a beaming face 10 lus neighbor,
Surely, there is no worse theology than
has
at
viist
not,
honest an
nscieuce—iel
that, having been filled with gladness,
we ought te give the lie to His good-
ness by wearing faces beclouded with
woe and furrowed by pretended unhap-
piness,
— — ———
- i i —
she Loved the Kid,
“That is the sirangest attachment 1
with cireuses, man and boy, for foriy-
gix years,” said Ilarry Piegee, the
veteran in charge of Greiner's wild
beasts, in the winter quarters of the
menagerie at the corner of Randolph
and Ann sitreeis, Chicago. He refer
red to a white Burmese cow and a
white kid, which were made fast, close
by another, toa wheel of lhe great
cage in which was the hippopolamus.
“Why, sir,” said Pierce, approaching
close to the animals with the Ileraid
reporter, “we dare not separate them,
even for a few moments, lest the cow
go into Ots, She will cry, moan and
take on like a human beng if it Is out
of her sight for a moment. She is
evidently under the deltsion that it is
her calf. She will lick 1%, close by
its side, Insist upon ils the
choice of all food and fight for it, i