A RAILROAD COLLISION. A FAST FREIGHT CRASHES INTO THE REAR OF A PASSENGER TRAIN DURING A FOG AND DEMOL~ ISIES A PRIVATE CAR. CHICAGO, April 10.—~One of the sad- dest of the mmnumerable railroad disas- ters which have occurred near Chicago took place early this morning at Lo- renzo, lll. The victims are eight in gpumber, including a bride that was to be and her betrothed husband. Lo- renzo, the scene of tiie horror, is a little hamlet, 57 miles out on the Chi- cago, Santa Fe and California Railroad. During a fog an extra freight traln ran into the rear of the regular No. 2 California passenger train, east bound, at 4.23 A. M,, smashing to bitsa private coach, letting not a single one of the occupants escape, Four people were killed and four others seriously in- jured. The killed are: Henry Robert Hartt, the 15-year-old son of J. L, Hartt, of Boston, Massa- chusetts, Miss Alice Winslow, of Brookline, Mass. nieces of J. L. Hartt and the fBancee of Henry W. Lamb, who was seriously injured, Harry Herring (colored), resident of Los Angeles, Cal, Thomas Smith, colored, cook, a resi- dent of Los Angeles, The seriously injured are: J. L. Hartt, of Boston, Director of porter, badly burned about the feet, legs, arms and head. Mrs. J. L. Hartt, the former’s wife, whose injuries are similar, Henry W. Lamb, of Massachusetts, seriously scalded about the arms and head. P. L. Palmer, brakeman freight train, seriously scalded, Henry W. Faulkner, of Detroit, who was a passenger on the wrecked of the at hearing of the death of his be- trothed: *I was in the sleeper ‘Santa Anna,’” said Mr. Faulkner, “when 1 was awakened, doubled up In my berth, and I feel now hike 1 had been broken in two, J could hear a prodl- gious uproar outside and the sound of escaping steam, I dressed as fast as 1 could and got outside. Some of the in the wreck and pulled out a young man, was Lamb. He was groaning pitifully, I got a mattress from the sleeper and we lifted him to it as genlly as we could, “Oh! where is Allie?” gaid he, rising up suddenly. Just then two men passed by with the body of a woman. Lamb canght sight of ber face by the light of a lantern. ‘Oh, God, it is Alite,’ he screamed, and then he dropped back on the mattress la a faint. I was Ino the car with the wounded on our way to the cily, and avery once Lamb, poor fellow, moaning the name of Allie, Allie.” The train bearing the injured came into the Dearborn Station, Chicago, at 9.20. The officials of the railroad bad prepared everything for the reception. An ambulance and three police patrol wagons were at the depot and as tenderly as possible bore the four imured persons who were on the train to the Mercy Hospital, The police with difficulty repressed a crowd of 300 or 400 people who jostled and pushed each other to see the sor- rowful sight of human beings scalded. The diagnosis at the hospital showed that Mr, Hartt’s legs, right arm and face were grievously scalded. Mrs, Hartt’s injuries are almost identical, although she has, in addition, a large burn on the abdomen. Mr, Lamb's legs, face and hands are very badly burned. The injuries of brakemau Palmer are very similar, The other in- ured trainmen were cared for at Loren- 0. Dr. Winfield Hall, of the hospital staff, says the injuries of Mr, and Mrs, Hartt are dangerous, There is he fears that pneumonia, no uncommon sequence of severe scalds, may set in. The cases of Lamb and Palmer are by no means serious, Dr. J.J. Ransom, the Chief of the Medical Department of the Santa Fe Railroad, takes a more hopeful view. He made a thorough examination of Mr. and Mrs, Hartt, and thinks the recovery of both assured unless there be unusual developments pot indicated by present condition. The victims are all under the influence of morphine, and visitors are strictly ex- cluded. Mr. Hartt, when brought to the bospital, was but vaguely aware of the death of his son, not being sufficiently conscious to realize what had happened. He talked incoherently of his boy, and at intervals called bis name, Mrs, Hartt does not know that her son Is dead. Mr, John F. Hartt is a heavy capitalist, and one of the test known directors of the Chicago, Kansas and Western. Mrs, Hartt is a sister of Albert W. Nickerson, the wealthy railroad man of Boston, and director of the Santa Fe, Mr, and Mss, Hartt Started on their Western trip about two months ago. In their party were their son Robert, Mr. Henry W. Lamb, ayoung business of the passenger train car of the @licers Qentral Railroad, No 98, and was occupied by Mr, Hartt and party. All were soundly sleeping when the fatal crash came. The passenger had stopped only a moment at Lorenzo and was pulling out when the freight rushed down upon it, The engine of the freight telescoped the private car and crushed into the rear platform of the Pullman car Santa Anna, just ahead, and wrecked the engine. The engineer and fireman of the treight escaped by jumping from the cab, DBrakeman Palmer, who was riding on the cab, fell beneath it and was badly scalded by escaping steam before he could extri- cate himself through the cab window, Miss Winslow, Robert Hartt, the porter and the cook were Killed out. right. The other three occupants of the sleeping car were thrown from their berths by the collision, but no limbs were broken, as they were fortunate enough to be in the front end of the car, Before they could be extricated, however, they were almost parboiled by the escaping steam of the disabled engine. The wreck of the private car was left at Lorenzo, and the dead and the injured were placed In the sleeper Santa Anna. No medical assistance was attainable at the little station where the accident occurred, and as soon as possible the passenger train hurried on to Joliet, 15 miles distant, with its burden of dead and suffering. The Injuries of the wounded were dressed at Jollet, and opiates administered, which made the terrible pain bearable. The four dead bodies were taken off the train for the Coroner at Jolliet, Dr. Curtis, PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. SENATE, In the Senale on the Oth, the Em- second reading, Mr. Hines, its author, offered an amendment, evlarging tie scope of its provisions, it having been The but finally Hines, giving a workman the nght of aclion *‘and Houss passed i u The wis Border an P'resi- not an employe, resolution ie dent pro tem. of the Senate, instead of to present the resolution, and the claims of Pennsylvania at Adiourned. In the Senate on the 10th the House in relation to travelling clothing dealers was reported with amendments providing that the license fee shall be regulated by ordinance, and shall not $25, nor more than $100, $205, urge visors and Street Commissioners and regulating escheats were reported favorably, The House bill for semi- fragments of wages, the Mechanics’ Lien bill and the Theatre Exit bill were re- negatively, Bills were passed Hines Roberts ported tion companies chartered under the laws of olher States to hold real estate in this State; authorizing the Courts to districts, and Senator Hine's Empioy- ers’ Personal Liability lull. A bill was introduced by Mr. Grady permitting the adoption of any aduil persons as heirs, Adjourned, In the Senate on the 11 the Revenue biil was reported with amendments, Favorable reports were made on the bills placing bicycle riders on the same footing as carriages; lo provide for the recording of exemplifications of wills relating to real estate. The House Leads of departments and members of to. the Bills were passed finally creasing maximum amount allowed the providing for the election of Prothono- Clerks of Court, Registers of Deeds in coun- gation Companies the right to hoid and coroners, Adjourned. BOUSE, In the House, on the Sth, after lis tening to an address by Andrew Car- pegie upon the ‘‘Industries of Penn- sylvania,”” the members proceeded to business. The Senate bill allowing shipbuilding corporations to extend their capital to $5,000,000 was made a special order for second reading on Wednesday and third reading on Thursday, Mr. Wherry succeeded in getting a special order for his Anti- discrimination bill for second reading on Tuesday and third reading on Wed- nesday, the vote on his motion being 88 to 41. Adjourned. In the House on the 10th the Wherry bilis, in relation to the Sinking Fund, were reported favorably. Mr. Har- wick introduced a bill to protect child- ren providing severe penalties for any one leading any child under 10 years astray, or taking them for immoral purposes, or marryiog such children without the consent of their parents, or thelr employment In any dance ball, or similar resort. The bill to regulate the practice of pharmacy was passed finally. The bill to regulate the revo cation of liquor licenses was passed to third reading, with an amendment by Mr, Quigley, providing that a bill of particulars shall be served upon the licenses of names of witnesses, dates and particulars of charges. Adjourned, In the House on the 11th, the Senate fixing 2240 pounds as the legal THE SINKING OF THE PENSACOLA. OF THE WINDS AND WAVES ALONG THE COAST, WasHINGTON, D. O,, April 8,~The following telegram was received at the Navy Department to-day from Com- mandant Brawn, of the Norfolk Nuvy Yard: The heavy northeast gale set in about midnight Saturday, The river rose suddenly and was higher than ever known, being about a foot above the coping of the dry dock, The Pensacola was lifted from the blocks, filled with water through the old and new Kingston valve openings, and settled diagonally across the blocks. The water 18 over the gun- deck combings. The diver reports that there was no Injury to the bottom. Have plugged the holes and expect to pump the ship dry, readjust blocks and dock again. The gale continues and the Simpson dock is flooded. NEWS OF THE WEEK. —Miss Ella White, a music teacher, was arrested in Susquebanna, Pa., on the Sth, on the charge of defrauding various people in Elmira, New York, out of sums aggregating $15,000 on fictitious mining and silk mill stocks and other “pretences. She confessed that she lost the money in an Elmira “bucket shop.” Harry D. Darby, a registry clerk in the post office FURY Pennsylvania Hatl- gerously and Charles Erickesen juries, railroad, was arrested, —~Willlam Kenny, well-known New York, dead at the foot of the his house, on the OLh. had been taken with a fit while ascend- ing + ward, broke his neck. — James Clemmo, employed in caulk- Bath House in Port Huron, Michigan, was over- come by gas on the moroing of the Oth, stephen Porter, a colored attlendant, a come. Dr. Stephenson, the proprietor, ascended a ladder and looked in the vat. He became unconscious almost instantly, but fell outward sustaining painful though not serious injuries Clemmo and Porter died after being taken out. —Mrs, Mary Kline was committed to jail in Bordentown, New Jersey, on S000 placed poison in her husband's coflee, William P. Fox, shot and killed a colored man, named Walls, in Paris, Kentucky, on the Oth, Walls was ciub, on the morning of the 9th, managed to draw his revolver, and fired a shot which struck one of the The officer’s wound is not Lewis Conklin, wound, sland, on the 9th, by They bad quarrelled, and Mrs. Conkiin hit her husband with an ~The house of Robert McBane, an aged farmer, near East Liverpool, on the morning of the Oth, They al- the inmates, They then almost senseless and locked them in a small Mra, McBane was locked in a closet, and Mr. McBane was knocked senseless with a fire shovel, silver. A neighbor, found the mother and almost suffocated in their dead from the loss of blood. a wealthy farmer living There was nobody in the house 80 years old. The robbers burned Mr, Patterson's feet and face in an unsue- cessful effort to make him tell where his money was hidden. Toney then searched the house, and departed after securing $43 in money and Mr. Patterson's gold watch. Two strang- ers visited Daniel Keller, an old farmer, at Shamokin, Penna., on the Oth, and after proposing to buy his farm, en- gaged him in a game of cards, Keller became so interested that be procured $4700 and put it up as stakes. The strangers seized the money and covered Keller with a revolver while they got off with the cash, One of the fellows represented himself to be the son of J. 1. Packer, of Sunbury, an old friend of Keller. A despatch from Sault Ste, Marle, Michigan, says that Wil. liam Kintella, a capitalist, was on the evening of the 8th by foot pads and left for dead, after having been robbed of $600, There were five men in the gang and they all have been arrested, ~Two passenger trains on the At- lantic and Pacific Railroad collided on 7th, gens Peach Springs, Arizona. They ran into each other at a sharp curve on a high embankment. Both and threo cars fell down the bank into a stream below. The engineer was ured and a laborer stealing a —A telegram from Winona, Minne- sota, says that farmers in that vicinity have almost universally completed the seeding of small grain, The ground is in excellent condition, but there is some complaint that seed is germinat- ing slowly on account of cool weather, Preparations are being generally made to plant an unusually large acreage of corn. ~THe Signal Service telegraph cable crossing Bregon Inlet, North Carolina, was swept away during the recent storm. Telegraphic communication with Cape Hatteras Is thus cut off until a new cable is laid. ~Henry Kurtz, a young telegraph operator, of Baltimore, died on the morning of the 10th from an overdose of laudanum, Whether it was taken with suicidal intent or not is unknown. Mrs. Catherine Kinney, who owned property valued at about $60,000, was found dead in the hallway of her resl. dence in Paterson, New Jersey, on the morning of the 10th, Foul play is suspected, although the woman was an hablitual drinker, and was under the influence of liquor on Tuesday night. —Theodore and Jacob Heubler, brothers, were badly cut with knives in Chicago, on the evening of the 9th, while attempting to capture three bakery. The thieves escaped. | German shoemaker, named Laurer, Morning View, Kentucky, on the even- | ing of the 9th. | —A telegram from Hagerstown, | Maryland, says that three large moun- tain fires are now raging on the Soath Mountain, pear Edgemont, i locomotive. | already been destroyed. — Henry Bachman was crushed be- and the heavy cross bar through which | lishment of Smith, Jameson & Keyser, {in Baltimore, on the 10th. | stop it in Uwe, | ~The people of Tyler county, West | Virginia, especially along the railroad, dozens of mad dogs, On the 5th a large dog owned by Captain Hender- son, of Tong Deach, went mad and | attacked und bit every animal within its reach. A general bunt Is in pro- gress and every animal thought to have been bitten wiil be killed, ~For a month past obstructions | have been placed on the track of the | Chicago, Sante Fe and California Bail- road, near the Illinois River. | a track walker was put upon this por- the Sth he was found lying unconscious upon the track with a terrible wound in the back of the bead. He was for- tunately seen by the engineer of the train io time to stop. He had been assaulted, as supposed, by the gang of villains who have been obstructing the track, ~The house of W. P. Ward, In | Robin county, Georgia, was burned on | the evening of the 10th, and his wife | The house Was a small one, with the | chimney and door at one end. | dam, a farmer, | wild parsnip from furrows iu a plowed children died in great agony, the other | is expected tO recover. While pour- | ing a 4000-pound casting in the foundry lof William Tod & Co., in Youngs | town, Ohio, on the evening of the 11th, | it exploded, hurling the molten metal lin every direction. George Iryant, [ Frank Lee, John Anderson, Nick | Carroll and William Kurz were badly | burned. Mra, J. F. Hart, of Brook- line, Massachusetts, who was 80 badly scalded in the accident on the Chicago, Santa Fe and California Rallroad, near | Joliet, Illinois, died in the hopital in | Chicago, on the 11th, Toe other | wounded are recovering. ~The four men who robbed a train | on the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad at Canon Diablo, Anzoua, on March 21st, have been captured after a long chase. ‘I'hey are all undar 30 years of age and are well educated. Train robbery Is a capital offence in Arizona. entered the residence of Thomas Lowrey, in Minpeapolis, Minnesota, on the evening of the 10th and took jew- elry valued at $1000 from a room in which Mrs. Lowrey was asleep. Mr. Lowrey was in the parlor, chatting with a friend, and the house was brilliantly lighted. A. C. Dunbrack’s jewelry store, in Keyser, West Vir- glula, was robbed of jewelry valued at $3000 on the evening of the 10th. The brigantine Addie Benson, from Port Medway, bound for Clenfuegos, is now more than 70 days out, and It is feared that she has been lost, — Russell Harrison was arrested in New York, on the afternoon of the 11th, on the charge of having pub- lished in the Montana Live Stock Jour nal an article taken from a Buffalo paper accusing ex-Governor John Schuyler Crosby, of Montana, with having stolen jewels from a Washing. A LIFE OF SPECULATION. Nerves Shaitered by Gaining $1000 One Hour and Losing It the Next, The following question was recently submitted to the Hon. Stephen Van Cullen White, whose reputation as a financier and Wall street millionaire is of national fame. “What effect in your opinion and has a life of speculation on the mind, body of a man? By speculation or gram upon the floor of the excliange or on the street, or both,” tremely generic, a volume in reply and then haust the subject. who has stock bad a lef that I may know something to in- terest your readers, I will All use and for the use of his family is speculation, and there is an element of {danger of fallure In any | where a man buys more than Le has | ready cash tc pay for. Every mer- chant engaged in general merchandise | business, wholesale or retail, is a speculator, and one who buys credit 18 always in more or less dan. ger of failure in business, Whoever | has a business risk bas anxiety till the prospective outcome has made itself | elear. Then, if prospectively the ven- ture 1s to become successful, what was atl success, and if a loss actual or prospective, the anxiely and care are increased. All mental anxiely tells on the nervous system, If it is great enough to cause sleeplessness it fast. But if the sufferer has digestion, strong and circulation and avoids excess of drinking, he can for a long anxiety, whether It Now, the only dif- stock speculaticn on is developed, Wears good equable “atl- ing and time defy chronic or acule, ference belween the exchange and a country store upon invoice of general merchandise 1s that the amount bought or gold in stocks is generally larger in proportion to capital | employed, and, more important still the stock exchange prices furnish a constant barometer by which that | speculator can constantly measure his | josses or his profits, while constant fluctuations, of which keep him a constant pendulum between smile and a tear, If a merchant goes into busjocess on $10,000 he can | buy from $15,000 to $25,000 worth of if a speculator goes in with $10,000 he can buy £100,000 worth of stocks, The merchant wants two to four months before he can estimate his profit or loss. The stock speculator Onds that in an hour he has a profit of | say $10,000 which be may take; the next hour the profit 1s all gone, the | next he sees a loss of $1,600, and at [night he quits the market full of | anxiety with probably a loss of $500 to { commence the next day's walch of | fluctuations. But added to these daily land normal fluctuations there 1s the | effect of panies, which usually occur lat the end of a protracted season of | prosperity. and the profits of weeks are | hopelessly swept away in an hour, Now I think If I were a medical man | 1 enould not be afraid to express the | belief that quick transition from a Panama sun bath to a Dakota blizzard | would have a tendency to produce | colds and if the victim had weak lungs | it might naturally end in phthisis pul- | monalis, unless death vecurred (rom | the shock and gave a more speedy exit. all he notices, a goods, would always guess that a nervous man would come out of a series of panics with shatlered nerves, This reasoning whom 1 have known within the last twenty-five years. Among the 80 called success’ul men probably the wealth which others covet may have been bought at too dear a cost, even if corroding care can ever be paid for by money. _-— Dyeing of Garments. Pure colors upon garments can be obtained only when the material is first perfectly cleaned. For this purpose brush the stains with a lukewarm strong solution of soda, then work for hall an hout in a solution of mediuta concen: tration, rinse well, and lay down for several hours, preferably over night, in warm water. For bright colors, such as red, bordeaux, ete., boil the goods in water, in order to remove any trace of alkali from them, which Is necessary for a good dye. To neutralize any re maining lye by scids is an erroneous notion, because it dulls the colors shows the fades after dyeing. The acid is used mn dyeing, the better are the fades covered. AAI SAA Life is a long course of mutual edu- eation which ends but with the grave, | i FOOD FGE THOUGHT, es ——— Envy shooteth at others and wounde himself, The prayers of youth are the blessings of old age. There is « woman at the beginning of all things, Sin may be clasped so close we can not ses its face, A blow from a {rying pan smuts if i does not hurt. Children’s virtues bring new wealth to the parents, Jetter three hotlrs too soon than one minute Loo late, Nothing upsets superstition as mucl Love sleeps on thistles for the sake of the flower. Let your tongue tarry until prepares Lhe way. Nothing overcomes passion reason more When there 18 room in the heart there is room in the house. A man who 18 always tapering of geldom comes Lo the point. Excitements may wear, but wearing | is far better than rusting. Let no man value at a little price a virtuous woman’s counsel, Obedience and prosperity are linked together in God's plan, The consciousness of duty performed | gives us music at midnight. | Kpavery is the worst archery, it shoots at its own reputation. The day of judgment will be to saints the great coronation day. A skeptic 1s a man with faith in nothing who believes in himself. the The Master's work may make Weary i feet, but it leaves the spirit glad, A vicious tongue, like a worm in an apple, devours all its surroundings. Pride and drunkenness are the only two vices which will never agree, {nowledge is the destruction of i fool, and the sword of a wise man, All the salve of the devil can heal the wounds of your conscience, Common sense in an uncomm gree is what the world calls wisd( Stick to your purpose {ort 1i1 Jost with will and ¢iil to build over again, A miser cares not for the (ears of the poor, and be thal sprinkies iron shal reap rust, It Is impossible pair who remembers Lh omnipotent. Our grand business is not to see whal jies dimiy at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand. Activity under excitement, on the solitary condition that it be lawful, i wholesome, in doing good to others there is ap enjoyment of which the sordid, selfish man knows nothing. Take heed lest you be flattered; flat- terers generally pat an ass on the back before they take a ride. “he best alarm clock is a frightful dream, it gives one the CONSCIOUSNESS of the coming day. The best way to keep oul vicious thoughts is to have a good dourkeeper a good conscience. Young heads must be put in the fur nace of experience before they can be wrought upon by old age, To endeavor to work upon the vulga with fine sense is like altempling u hew blocks with a razor. The world may owe a man a living, but it 1s always best for him 10 go anc collect it by a little hard work. When the forenoons of life are wast- ed, there is pot much hope of a peace- ful and fruitful evening. Solomon said of laughing: “It ie | pad.” But if a man laughs at his owr folly 1t certainly must be sincere. Drive not nails into rotten timber, neither put your secrets into the mouth of him that cannot contain himself. God endures us when we offend Him jet us endure Him when He tries us; | endurance is one of the names of love, Never fear to bring the sublimest motive into the smallest duty, and the most infinite comfort to the smaliest | trouble. 1 was surprised when I heard of an | ass eating thistles; perbaps it was a | man trying to live on the opinions of i the people. Vital force must be disposed of just | as food must be digested, otherwise, it | is consuming to the organs in which 1 | glows. if we had lost our own chief good, other people’s good would remain, and that is worth trying for, Some can hx happy. It is a great mistake to suppose thal any kind of vital force is conserved by holding back, as you would dam uj waters in a mill pond. Brevity is in writing what charity is to all the other virtues, Righieousnes: is worth nothing without the ope, nor authorship without the other. Every question may be looked al from two directions. When a ©ap hesitates at a call which 1s put to him as a duty, his first question ought tc be, not “Can 1 see my way clear i accept IP” but “Can 1 see my way clear to refuse it?’ He will sometime: find the latter way blocked, when he would have imagived that be saw he former way open. For an evil doer we ought to have pity. For evil itsell wa ought to have bliiorrence. One's evil doing is almo.t sorrow and suffering tc no sad result from not a for that man to des at Lis helper is hil 2 7 i Hi