NEWS OF THE WEEK, —Eddie Gallery, 11 years old, was accidentally killed at his home in Chi- cago on the evening of the 14th, While overhauling the drawers of a bureau the lad found his father's pis- tol. The mother grasped the weapon, unfortunately catching held of the trigger. An explosion followed. The bullet loaged just under Eddie's right eye and he died in half an hour, —Captatn Jones, of the schooner Arthur, at Mobile on the 15th from Bay Islands, reports that at Ruatan last month, Rev. Henry Hobson, his wife and her companion, a young girl, all patives of Jamalca, were murdered by Joseph Bures, The family were preparing to leave for Balize and Bures was helping. Discovering that Mrs. Hobson had money, Bures at night entered the house and cut the throats of all three persons. Ie then robbed them of what money and valuables they possessed, including & watch. The next day Bures was found with the watch, was arrested and made a con- fesslon of his guilt, Captain Jones says the butchery of the three persons and the mutilation of the bodies of both women bore strong resemblance to the murders committed by the Whitechapel murderer in England. Marshal Clare and two deputies went on board the shanty boat of D. W, Jones, at Warsaw, Kentucky, on the 14th, to search for stolen goods. Jones resisted and shot Clare in the shoulders. Jones was then shot and killed by the leputies. A lot of stolen goods were recovered. David Lindsay, a farmer, gan, fatally shot ns son on the even- ing of the 13th. - He claims the shoot- ing was accidental. Both were of in- temperate habits, —Two trains on the Delaware and Hudson Railroad collided on the 15th, near Putnam, New York. Sidney Sherman, engineer, was killed. A pas- genger train struck a wagon near Youngstown, Ohio, on the 106ih, com- pletely demolishing 1t, and instantly killing Mrs. David Cramer, one of the occupants. injured. timore and Washington, car ripped a big hole in it, Fortu- nately the passengers in the smoker broken wheel hitting against the car, and had all retreated to the other end The train was stopped as Soon a8 pos- gible, and it was found that no person had been Injured. —Charles Hodges, a fire boss, and passing through an abandoned work in lated gas, and both men were blown to pleces, At New Philadelphia, Ohio, on the 14th, Emma Haney, a young woman, attempted to kindle a fire with coal oil and was burned to death, father was severely burned while try- ing to extinguish the ames, —During a festival in the Alrican M. E. Church, at Greensburg, Penna. on the evening of the 13th, a dispute arose about some change, and a riot ensued in which knives and clubs the disturbance Chief of Police Wol- fendale had an ear almost bitten off, besides sustaining other injuries, and George Tuning, another policeman, was stabbed twice in the back by George the gang. After some difficulty the rioters were captured. —Mrs, John Rammage, of Pittsburg, Pa., committed suicide on the 15th, by drowning. Her husband was killed by son committed suicide. — A terrific thunder storm suddenly burst over Findlay, Ohio, on the 14th, The barn of C. H. Perkins was struck by lightning and badly damaged. The servant girl was so badly injured that she is not expected to recover, and Perking, who was in the garden with a 8 Jess, and did not recover for an hour, A dog in the house was killed, and a team of horses in front of the house ran away, severely injuring the hired man. ~John Williams has been [ound guilty of the murder of Henry Lee, in 21 years’ imprisonment. was one of a mob of **White Caps’? who killed Lee in the presence of his family. —Lieutenant Towne, in charge of the Salvation Army in Newburg, New York, while selling the War Ory on the 15th, entered a grocery store, on Proadway. A trap-door leading to the collar was open and Miss Towne stepped into it, falling to the floor be- low. She was picked up dead, her neck having been broken.JThe body of Mille. Suzanne Falrweather, who disappeared from Columbus, Ohio, in November last, was found on the 15th, in Alum Creek, near that city. She arrived in Columbus from Philadeiphia about three weeks before she disappeared. Joseph Nuse, 60 years of age, fell into the canal at Cumberland, Maryland, on the 15th and was drowned. ~James Henry and Frederick Douglass were arrested in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on the 16th, for attempting to rob the State Bauk. The two men went into the bank when only two em One covered the The shooting was unprovoked, Mrs, Caroline Bruckner was found dead in a half-finished house near Chicago on the morning of the 16th, and by her side was her daughter, aged 11 years, In a dying condition, The mother had taken rat poison and had also given her daughter some. Charles Bruckner, the husband, said that he had a dispute with his wife as to the disposition to be made of the child, who was very wild, He wanted to send her to a reforms- tory Institution, to which she strenu- ously objected, He thinks this may have been the cause of the fatal deed. — Frank Clarke, sole occupant of F. 8. Clarke's banking office, in London, Ontario, was surprised on the afternoon of the 16th, when one of two men who had entered the office presented a pistol at his head and demanded what funds were on hand. He recovered himself almost immediately, however, and re- plied that he would surrender nothing, at the same time seizing the stranger’s pistol and turning the muzzle away from himself. A struggle ensued, In which all three engaged, and the noise created so alarmed the robbers that they fled. —FEdward Tilden, President of the Drovers’ National Bank at the Unlon Stock Yards, at Chicago, bas been ar- rested on a churge by George Fleming, an ex-school trustee, of attempted bribery. Fleming declares that on April 20th, 1886, Tilden offered Flem- ing $5000 tor his vote and influence in the echool treasurership. Tilden denies the charge and intimates that Flem- ina’s action is for revenge, Tilden having exerted himself at the recent | election to defeat a brother of Fleming. —A verdiet of not gullty has been Carmichael, who was tried in Hillsdale, band. Carmichael 15th, and on his death-bed declared that his wife had poisoned him, Strych- nine was subsequently found in threatened to commit suicide, and the | jury dia not credit hisdying statement. | James Fields was fatally shot by his wife at their home in Butler, a. about 4 o'clock on the morning of the 17th. Mrs, Fields was reading a book and her husband ordered her to come | to bed. She refused to do so, when he { got up and strdck her. She went to a | bureau drawer and took out a revol- ver, telling him if he hit her again | she would shoot him. He then struck | her in the face, when she fired the re- volver, wflicting a fatal wound. De- | fore dying Fields made a sworn state- | ment exonerating his wife, in which he stated that she had fired In self-de- fence, Cororner’s Jury on the 17th rendered a verdict justifying the shooting. John F. Ross, convicted in The | killing George Hughes, and sentenced to five vears' imprisonment, has been granted a new trial on the ground that of the jurors had expressed an opinion on the case before he was sworn, and also on the ground of separation of the jury. — James Wilson and wife were taken | suddeuly sick with syroploms of poison. mg in Maipe City, Michigan, on the evening of the 15th, and are still in a eritical condition, On the morning of { the 18th, Matilda, the 14-year old daughter of Mrs, Williams by a former One charge that she put a tablespoonful of | rat powson in the tea of each. The girl bad cast her fortunes with a cow- | boy combination and was brought there | against ber will. Santa Fe railroad disaster, by which ing gross criminal carelessness against | Conductor Frederick Hughes and Eo- gineer Frank Converse. | The removal of the electric wires | and poles on dixth avenue, New York, | on the morning of the 18th, was at- tended by an accident, Michael Early | and Hugh Reilly were dragged from a | third-story window by a rope attached to a faiiing po'e. Early was killed and | Reilly, it is feared, fatally injured. The men were engaged in staying a | pole that was being cut down when the | accident occurred. When the pole | was chopped off at the bottom the base | slid along the sidewalk, throwing the { top out and pulling both men from the | window. Inspector Roth, under whom ! the men were working, was arrested apd held to await the result of the Coroner's inquest, James Munday, while at work on the suspension bridge at Niagara Falls on the 18th, 200 feet above the Niagara river, suddenly slipped and fell head first into the seething torrent below. The body at ounce sunk from sight. When next seen he was being borne toward the whirlpool, into which he passed before any attempt could be made to save him. It is believed that the body was lifeless when sucked under the pool, and that the shock of the fall killed him. ~A man calling himself B, Simp- son, succeeded In swindling the Sioux City Savings Bank, in Sioux Uity, Iowa, out of $2600 a few days ago. Simpson got that amount on a draft purporting te be made by the National Bank of Tennessee, on the National Bank of the Republie, of New York, for $8000, On the 18th It was discov- ered that the draft is a forgery. A large safe in the | store of Ray- mond Brothers, at Raymilton, near Franklin, Penna., was blown open by burglars on the evening of the 17th. The building was wrecked by the ex- ploston. ye jobbers sscuted $10 in postage mps, overlooking $800 in cash and several thousand in bonds and notes, «At Farmington, Berks county, on the 18th, an ore mine, the shaft of which is 125 feet , eaved in, par- tially burying about 12 men. One of Richard —A despateh from Norfolk, Vir- ginia, says a vessel went ashore on the evening of the 17th near Life Saving Station No. 21, but as all on board were drowned before any assistance could reach them, and the vessel went to pleces shortly after she struck the beach, it has been impossible Lo ascer- tain ber name, destination or cargo. —The locomotive of an express train on the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Rall way jumped the track at Corapolis, Pa,, on the evening of the 17th. The baggage, mall, smoker and three coaches were thrown over a bank, turn. ing two times in the descent. A num- ber of passengers sustained slight injuries, but no one was dangerously hurt, An alteropt was made on the evening of the 17th to wreck a pas- genger train on the Chicago and West Michigan Railroad, Near Grandville, Michignn, an open switch threw the engine and all the cars except the last one from the track. The engine was demolished, but no person was injured, The connecting rod of the switch had been cut and the switch moved half way, #0 that the train would not go on a siding. —A package containing $15,000 in gold has mysteriously disappeared from the office of the Northern Paclic Express Company, In Braloerd, Min- nesota. The mail car on the Lake left Chicago on the evening of the 17th was robbed before It had got beyond the city lim- The thief secured the pouch con- | in an empty freight car | streets when detected by a As the watchman looked the car the man jumped out and then escaped. He had opened contents, ~While Perry Wine was felling a and killed his wife and three says that two boats, with seven and eight men respectfully, were when one of the boats began to sink, | Five men | drowned. The men kad been During a fire In the establishment of dimon Zinn, manufac- New | German, named Vanoen, was suffoca- » i ted, There are now 25 cases of small- appeared in a boarding bouse at Grand Tunnel, three miles from Nanticoke. —A despatch from Wichita, Kansas, says that George Kramer and Charles Herdke, Okiohama boomers, quarreled about a quarter section of lanl, Kra. was killed and Herdke badly wounded. Joseph King, a wealthy | resident of West Farms, a hamlet near Westfield Centre, Mass, was shot and killed on the morning of the 18th by Edgar King, his eldest son. The mur- house, and, | going a short distance away, committed | The cause of the crime is to an unbalanced mind, dissolute habits, He in- PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. BEXNATE, In the Senate on the 10ih, a mes. taining and supplying walter. journed. In the Senate on the 17th, a large pumber of petitions were presented | from Kuights of labor Assembiles asking the passage of the Anti-discrim- ination bill, The House blll, author. izing petroleum companies to purchase the bonds and stocks of patural gas companies, was reported favorably. The following bills passed finally: House bills authorizing appeals from assessmuents of taxes to the courts; Heuse bill providing that at the aver. age attendance at night schools increa- ses additional teachers may bes em- ployed by boards of school directors; appropriating $50,000 to ald in the establishment of a free war library and museum of the Loyal Legion, and to fix the compensation of Supervisors and Street Commissioners at $1.00 per day in boroughs and townships when act- ually employed. The act providing for an annual expenditure of $2,000,000 for public schools was laid over, In the Senate on the 18th, the House bills allowing exceptions to referee’s re- porta, to prevent misappropriation of milk cans, butter tubs, ete, and to fix the compensation of street su isors, wers reported favorably. he Fow License transfer bill was reported with additional sections, one providing that constables shall receive a fee of 25 cents for each saloon and six cents per mile travelled In visiting saloons in his district; and another that minors shall net be employed around saloons, and a third section permits security nies to go on the bonds of licensees as Sa a US ure y: ouse au : writs to be issued on liens filed for work done or materials furnished by the Board of Health or any municipal corporation; House bill req tran. sient clothing merchants to out licenses, giving bicycles and tricycles the same road as wagons and carringes, Ad- HOUSE. In the House cit the 16th bills were passed finally enabling State banks to become National banks; torezuiate the the dlp riers cnt of State banks; authorizing petroleum mining companies to purchase, hold and dispose of stocks of certain other corporations, The blll permitting the sale of pools at horse racees failed on final passage, the yeas being 84, the nays 88, The Fow Liquor License Transfer was amended on second read- | ing so as to provide that the legal rep- | resentatives of the deceased may have | the license transferred or the fee refun- ded. Bills were passed finally, to en- force orders for the payment of cols ins | the several courts by execution pro-| cess, relating to recognizances in the Orphan's Court; allowing exceptions Lo referrees’ reports, Adjourned, In the House on the 17th, the bill | appropriating $200,000 for the lmprove- ment of ths harbor of Philadelphia was reported, with an amendment striking out the Belt Line proviso. The Fow | Liquor License Transfer bill was passed | finally and goes to the Senate. The | following bills passed second reading on special order: Senate bill to prevent i and punish the misappropriation of milk cans, butter tubs and market boxes from the owners thereof, and the mutilation or obliteration of the name | or residence of the owner on such; and | Senate bill fixing 2240 pounds as the | legal weight of a ton of coal after being | amended, by making its application general and pot limited to anthracite | dealers. The following bills passed finally: Making it a criminal offence to misrepresent goods sold on deseription; levying a tax on dogs. Adjourned, In the House on the 18th, bills were | passed finally: Senate bills authorizing executors or trustees to umite with estate of decedents heretofore made under authority of Orphans’ Courts, upon petition of executors or adminis charitable corporations, SHER Experiment Stations bill of | prohibiting publications offering **green Adjourned. FOOD FOR THOUGHT, God sendeth and giveth boll mouth He is the best diviner of dreams who Though olhers {all, no courage lack; brave hearts must ne'er despond. Attack is the reaction. I never think I have hit hard unless it rebounds, The man without honor will swear Ly it just as quickly as anybody eise. Immodest words admit of no defense for want of decency 18 want af sense, it is one thing to take the chances, and quite anotser thing to find them. Whimperiog growling and complain. ing are only meaner ways of swearing. more on trial than in the moment of excessive good fortune. is a little white lamb in to teach men to be gen- One 18 never A daughter the household tiemen, Let cane, TEAs0n. To be prepared for war Is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace, of pothing 1s law that is the not us consider the reason For THE NAME “AMERICAS MM. Jules Native Farther Evidence by Marcon that it is a Word. I —————— Jules Marcon of certain further re. As far back as 1875 he published a paper on the game topic which attracted much atten tion at the time, and Le has since de- voted much labor to an investigation of early historical documents in which the New World is named, The popular notion that America was so called from the Christian pame of Amerigo Vespuccl is, he says, wholly unfounded, and he sums up his conclu- sions in this way: 1. Amerique isthe Indian name of the mountains between Juigalpa and Libertad, in the province of Chontales, which separate Lake Niearagua from the Mosquito coast, The word in the Maya language signi- files ‘the windy country,’ or ‘the country where the wind blows always.’ 2, The was Al- berico in Italian and Spanish, Albericus in Latin, This particular name is gubject to an enormous f Of the name of Vespucel number nomenclature and oh i “4 ses 1 * _ 11a . : calendars of Italian and of the period show; but t fal fr Spans i nowhere aisel wariat BUCH Variation as J Amerigo, any Tigo, none of these is either : France %% % nf § 4 BRI 0 Alli . when Jean yublished the nan in any any pri manuscrij contestable aut! M, Marcon clain a native origi uas been America, is the coat it wears when It goes | Tet death do what it will, there is A woman 18 not to be counted your | ding ring. He drawetls out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his A man may transgress as truly by One test of a book's worth is—Does it enlarge your horizon, and make you wish to read other and greater booka? | There is music in the beauty and Lhe silent note which Cupid strikes far sweeter than the sound of an instru. What ia the good of youlh and strength if it is pot to uphold those who have had more than thelr share of iife’s burdens, A purely selfish sorrow is as much a soll indulgence as a purely selfish joy, and has as little dignity, It dwarfs, | enervates and demoralizes the soul. Our human life is a valley, the gloom | of whose depths would be too terrible | to endure did we not belleve that ils | limits on either mde bordered on the | sky. Many of our ills come from sheer heediessness, We do not take time to reflect, but act upon impulse and frst | suggestions, Mistakes are, thereiore, | inevitable, Sunday 1s the core of our civilizatios, dedicated to thought and reverence. It invites to the noblest solitude, the best society, the loftiest knowledge of truth and duty. Moral courage will always rank high- er than physical. The one 1s a dally necessity, while the other may be re quired only in emergencies, No man has a right to do a work that is unworthy of kim. It degrades himself and robs society. Every man is bound to do his best work, and ace complish his highest influence. The greatest good that comes to man from woman's soclety, is that be bas to think of somebbdy besides himself, 80 to whom he is bound to constantly attentive and respectful. No more fatal error can be cherished than that any character can be com. without the religious element. in character are religion, morality and know, Moderate work, alternating with moderate rest, Rives # brain which, the whole throagh, will ac. the most and the best work of i i is very phy and geographical publications of the Sixteenth centur is not yel conciuds s much disturbed pew process which The printing wot by the discovery of a enables any number taken of the oldest book without setting a line of type. A compound bas been discovered which may be spread upon a page without in the shi way It can be easily re- and there becomes of copies to be or Sy banned ys a WATE ill- juring the paper. moved to a stone, used for printing at once, The anti- quarian will thirst for the blood of this too clever inventor; but practical print. ers are already moving to see whether they cannot save the cost of reselling old editions, and if certain practical difficulties are got over we shall see a change not only in the production of modern books, If will no longer be A proof will be as good as a stereotyped plate. No book will ever really be *‘out of print’ so long as a copy of it remains, It will be nearly as cheap lo reproduce volume passing through the printing machine. Certainly we are progressing, Already watercolor drawing can be so well lithographed as to deceive the very artista, The time is not far now self, We may reasonably hope to find multiplied (rom their own canvases, Justice Should Be for AIL The men of wealth, the men who control these great corporations—these great mills—give millions away in os- tentatious charity, They send mission- aries to foreign lands. They endow schools and universities and allow the men who earned the surplus to die in want. I believe in no charity that is founded ob robbery. 1 have no admir- ation for generous highwaymen or ex- travagant pirates. At the foundation of charity should be justice. Let these whom others have made wealthy give to those who created their fortunes This would be one step in the right di- rection. Do not let 1t be regarded as charity let it be regarded as justion, i A MISS. The sunual income of the ot Suna} ingomme of the population £1,200 ,000,000. i. leness the gutter of all fithy ire who 18 no use to Limsed ts of no HSS ASS AOS seen ts se Western part of the i State seems to have been a little Pennsyls | vanla blizzard constricted the Dakota model, It is a gort of meteoro- | logical surprise party for the Weather {| Bureau. On ei MI A ——— Tue Messrs, Cramps were the lo bidders for the construction of the new armed coast defense vessel, ‘Lhe next lowest bidder was the San Francisco firm, aod smee that Sra 3 nind time in completing the Char it is probable that the work done in Philadelphia. This city undoubtedly have a large = work of constructing our nev No other city can do it so well. west amme—————— AMATEUR photography is one of the ‘fads’ of the day, but teus frequently gets a set-back as happened to a court stenographer recently, A lady on the stand struck a pretty attitude, and the stenographer quitely turned a detective camera upon her, A sensation when her watchful husband snatched the offen- sive instrument and forbade the taking of her photograph, While the dis was condemned tl the ama witness ensued 6 § JAnG’s spiril, ' ourse with its As for the “In he is atlempling 10 } 11 m 3 n 59% 79 } What the French never Le 1 retold; Giiescenee {ye Fegan quiescence gives ise ¢ they have recovered stank Wi attack of mo Tne session of Henry M. Stanley Pasha is supposed to be than half a on dollars, probably yield them a good profit over expenses, after their followers have been rewarded with a here is money to be made in Central Africa by those who have pluck enough go for it and elastic consciences iu their dealings with the natives, but it will probably be a very long while before the country is opened up to settlement by Europeans and made secure to travellers, ivory reporied to worth more 2 Ww ard diila few trfles, € Ww Tue Hydrographic Office at Wash. ington intends to do what it can to les- sen the Joss of life and properly from burricanes on the Pacific Ocean by col- lecting information relating thereto and publishing pilot charts of the North and South Pacific Ocean similar to those now issued for the North Pacifio Ocean. As a preliminary to this work it asks for reilable information about hurricanes in the Pacific, particularly that which destroyed so much properly at Samoa on March 15th and 1Gih, Captains of vessels and others who can aid in this work should send their notes to the Hydrographic Office at Washing- ton, to one of the branch offices, or to any United States Consul, for trans. mission to Washington. ————— AIA AS AX Interesting case of altempted abuse of the laws of marriage and divorce comes from Delaware. A mil- lionaire named McComb has brought suit for divorce from his wife to whom {he was married fifteen years ago. When a young man he fell in love with | the daughter of a Wilmington police- | man. His wealthy family were shocked {at his lack of discretion in selecting (one so fur beneath him socially, and | tried to break the match, He persisted, | however, and married her. He devel- | oped into a respectable citizen of good | habits, with a fortune of a million. His relatives introduced his wile into polite circles, their scquaintances including the Astors, Vanderbilts, etc, but all attempts to make a society lady of her failed and she settled down as a plain woman of domestic habits, The husband’s only weakness is for blooded cattle and fine horses and he 18 abandantly able to gratify his tastes, Nothing can be said against his wife, Yet the ‘social inequalities” have never been overcome, so be is seeking to pul her from him. Whether thecourts will lend themselves to the plan is yet to be wen, The deadinst sla : ten of mo sin, So were Lhe couscions.