APPALLING REPORTS. TERRIBLE DESTRUCTION IN LOUIS- VILLE. FEARFUL LOGS OF LIFE, NEW York, March 28, —The terrif- fie storms West appear to have been of fatal force im the vicinity of Louise ville, Kentucky, although there are no positive or definite reports upon which to base any estimate of the damage, There is not at this hour, 2 o'clock, a. m., por has there been for several hours, any Information whatever from the city of Louisville or vicinity. There have been rumors of alarming loss of life by the force of the cyclone, but everything needs confirmation. The absolute breakdown of all tele- graph facilities causes gieat apprehen- sion and sus; ense, The city of Louls- ville is beyon! a'l reach of the tee. gravh, and is a dead city, so far as wire communication is ¢g: c+ined, The cy- clone must have spent its greatest force the e, A report rece ved here says the chief operator of t'e Western Uulon, at Louisville, lind arrived at Jeflferson- ville, Ind., actos the river from Louls- ville. He reports terrible destruction there, almost the entire western portion of Louisviile being n ruins,’ and 1000 to 1500 supposed to ba killed. This information is sald to come over a rallroad wire between Jeffersonville and Indianapolis. This must only be taken as a rumor, as thereare no means of confirming the reports at prasent, and the statement Is only given in the absence of authentic information, Cricaco, March 27.—A late special says that Metropol's, a small village in Illinois, about 35 miles from Cairo, was destroved by the storm, and sev- eral hundred people were killed and in- jured, LovisviLLE, Ky. March 28 — Shortly after 9 o'clock a tornado swept over this city, wrecking two or three bundred houses and killing 200 people The wind came from the southwest. The Union Depot, atthe foot Seventh street, was lifted from foundbtion and turned over into the raging torrent of the Ohlo river, A traln of cars making up for the Louis. ville Southern Road went over with the building. Falls City Hall, on West Market street, was wrecked, In the hall were over one hundred people, and but few of them escaped alive. Many build- ings, after falling, caught fire and the inmates were burned. All streets are blockaded with debris of fallen buildings or telegraph and electric wires, This despatch is carried around the ¢ity to the bridge and sent by railroad wires, St. Louis, March 28, —A special to the Republic from Cairo, 111, says the storm struck that city at 4.30 P, M, The barometer registered 29.5, the low- est record for years. The wind, while it lasted, blew with great violence, The largest hall ever seen here fell in large quantities. Three houses were blown from their founda- tions at Bird's point. Mill creek, 22 milea porth of here, several houses were blown down and a number of people injured. At Little Prairie, a few miles distant from here, the storm destroyed the residence of William Rhine, and Mr, Rbine wag internally injured and no! expected to live, Two of his children were carried a quarter of a mile to the home of David Smith, They were un- injured, Smith’s house was destroyed, He rushed out with his little girl and a tree fell on them. Neither is expected to live. Fritz Krum’s house was blown away and be apd his wife probably fatally Injured. Henry Taylor and famlly had a like fate. Two wete young ladies, a Miss Moris and Miss Maggie Simmonds — both of whom will dis from their in- juries, All the doctors have gone from this district to attend the injured, There is a Poland settlement directly in the path of the storm which bas not been beard from, and it is feared great loss of life bas occurred there A special to the Republic from Car- bondale, 11, says a disastrous cyclone passed through Jackson county this afternoon. At Grand Tower a coach of the Grand Tower and Carboudale Railroad was blown from the track. A number of houses were leveled to the ground and three lives are reported Jost. Near Murphysboro, Mr, Linsley’s dwelling was litetaliv blown to pieces, his child killed and bis wife dacgerously injured. At Carbondale, the banking house of W, Hi, Wilkes, was unroofed, and several houses more or leas dam- aged st. Louis, March 28 —A special to the Iepulbiic from Coultersville, IIL, says the monotony of this quiet little town was broken to-day by a disas- trous wind storm, accompanied by hail the size of hen’s eggs. The storm struck the town at 3 34 with terrific force, shattering windows and unroofing houses, tearing down av uings and filling the streets with de- of its The storm assumed the Importance of a eyclone south of us, and there are numerous stories of narrow escapes, Wastmisaron, March 27, 1.30 p. m, ~The Signal Officer furnishas the fol- lowing special bulletin to the press: Al 8 o'clock this morning a severe storm was central In Eastern Kansas, with velocliy on the eastein side of U6 miles southeast at St. Louis, on the southern mide of 48 miles west, in Northern Texas; on the western side of 60 miles north, in Colorodo, and on the northern side of 36 miles north, in Nebraska and Sonth Dukota, with a severe blizzard and snow in Nebraska, Warnings were sent out this moro fag for severe local storms in Blates of Ohio, Indians, Ilinole, Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia and Alabama, and for a severe norther ex- tending from Kansas to Northern Texas to-night aud Lo-moOrrow morn- ing. AL poou the storm hac tnoved eastward, so as to cover all lilinots, with high winds, Chileago reporting 40 want and jocreasing. : MixNeArous, Minn,, March 27. A —————— —————— OP A RIO RNA t Minnesota, Dakotaand Iowa show that A general snow storm has prevailed throughout these States during the day, The storm has been most severe in Northern Iowa, where railway traffic has been impeded and stock will suf. fer to some extent, In Dakota the snow is regarded as a great benefit to the crops now being seeded. The tem- perature at all points is little below the freezing point. The snow is very light here, ST. PAUL, Minn, March 27,—A snow storm has been raging in Soulh- ern Minnesota and South Dakota, ac- companied by severe winds, It has not been cold, and the wet snow is considered a cause for rejoicing among the farmers, the ground now being molster than for years at this season, In some places the storm was the worst of the year, At Sioux Falls the wind drove the snow at the rate of eighty miles an hour, MiLwavkee, Wis., March 27,—The weather is comparatively warm, but snow fell heavily and the wind blows flercely., In places drifts are plled so high that the street car lines have had to suspend traflic. Telephone wires scatter the streets and trip up pedes- trians, New Onrreans, March 27.—The Times Democrat's Greenville, Miss, special says: Heavy winds have been blowing all day, causing the levees to wash badly, A terrible storm has been and is now ragiug at Leota and Washington, sev- eral houses and stores baving been blown down, The wind 18 rising here again. Coun- trymen, hitherto confident. believe a terrible disaster imminent. Kaxsas Ciry, March 27 has prevailed throughout Kansas and Southwestern Missouri to-day. Snow is reported from some portions of Western Kansas, The barometer varied In different localities from 28 at Wichita to 20-28 at this point, the lowest reported for years, Tue velocity of the wind was extra- ordinary for such a long continued storm. At Wichita, Kansas, the wind did comsiderable damage. Heavy plate glass windows were smashed in, signs displaced and chimnpeytops blown down. The water works building was partially unroofed and a part of one wall was blown down, falling upon a workman named Willlam Eads and severely injuring bim., lathe northern part of the city, where the wind bad the freest play, several shanties and outhouses were demolished, Telegraph wires are in a bad condition, ~A storm — —— . NEWS OF THE WEEK, ~The Cannon Ball train on the Louisville and Nashville Rallroad ran a misplaced switch at Linck’s Depot, in Nashville, Tennessee, on the 24th, wrecking several cars and killing Alexander Sievenson and Benjamin Daley, both colored, An express train ran into the rear of a freight train on the Pennsylvania Raliroad, near Dris- tol, Penua., on the evening of the 234, and the express was deralled, Engi. neer Kelley had three fingers of his right hand cut off, and his fireman had one leg s0 badly lacerated that it had to amputated, The road was blocked for several hours, It said the collision was caused by the opera- tor s«tiing a white instead of a red sig- nal feyt nto be in ~—A violent storm swept over por- Carolina on the after- noon of the 23d, Many telegraph wires are still down, and satisfactory reports have not yet been received, So far as known the loss of life was small, but a number of houses were damaged, There is po further apprehension of a flood at Cineinaati. worl was recelved on the evening of the 24th of a stationary or falling river in the Obio and all ita tributaries, from Portsmouth ap. The rivers at Pittsburg were receding on the 24th and fears of a flood were over. The tracks of the Pittsburg and West. ern Ratlroad were partially submerged, ~The boiler in a sawmill pear Wickiiffe, Kentucky, exploded on the evening of the 229, demolishing the mill and killing John Dennis and Frank Parker, mill hands, and badly sciding R. J. Jameson, the engineer, who will probably die. William Nance, John McCawley and Willlam Sullivan were sh.ghtly wounded, The cause of the accident is unknown. tions of South - A passenger train on the Northern Pacific Railroad was wrecked near Nixon, Montana, on the 25th, The cars took fire and were burned except two sleepers, Express Messenger Miles is missing, and it is supposed he was burned to aeath, Two emigraut passengers, two lady tourists, one child, the baggagemaster, a postal clerk and porter of the tourists’ sleeper were Injured. At New Harmony, In- diana, on the evening of the 24th, Pro- fessor Richard Owen, an ex-soldier and scientist, and A. N. Tretagot a mer- chant, drank embalming fluid by mis. take for mineral water, Owen died in a few hours and Tretagot is not expec- ted to recover. ~-Michae! Furey was stabbad by William W. Foley in Susquehanna, Fa., on the 26th. It 18 feared that the wounds will prove fatal. Foley es caped. Bud Wheeler, a mulatto, was fatally stabbed in Kansas City, Mis. sourli, by Grant Jones sarly on the morning of the 256th. Thay guarreled over a game of pool, ~ Mary Giles, aged 25 years, was taken to the Presbyterian Hospital, in New York, on the 25th, with her leit tand severed from the wrist, Subse. quently the police found the severed member in the parlor of her residence, She refused to make any statement and the facts of the occurrence could not be Jearned. It 18 supposed the woman, who has been living apart from her husband, became suddenly Sethented and committed the deed her ~A wagon containing John Brown and the three small children of a neighbor, was struek by a train in San Frunciseo, on ihe 25h. Brown snd two of the children were killed and the other child was badly hurt, - | —In Long Island Cily, on the after. noon of the 26th, in presenee of scores of people passing along Borden avenue, John Ropan, an ex-car driver, shot and mortally wounded Alfred Moulton, General Superintendent of the Stein- way and Hunter's Point Railroad, Ronan had a grievance against Moul- ton, who had discharged him some time ago. ~A freight wreck occurred at Shelby’s station, a few miles west of Altoona, Penna, on the evening of the 20th, as the result of a rear end col- lislon. two hotels and a dwelling, The en- gineer of engine No. 885 had his wrist broken in fighting the flames, Travel was delayed from three to four hours, At 11.30 P. M. the fire was still burn. ing, and it was reported that ass'stance had been telegraphed for. ~— During a runaway in Madison, Ip- diana, on the 26th, Captain Henry Tower and Charles Cravens jumped from the carriage, and the former was dangerously hurt, The team ran upon the sidewalk, running over and it is feared fatally Injuring Miss Alice Y ater. ~The levee in front of Skipwith, Issaquena county, Mississippi, about 70 miles above Vicksburg, broke on the morning of the 26th, and by even- Ing the crevasse was 400 feet wide and cutting rapidly. The water In the town was up to the eaves of the hou- ses, and the people were sald to be “swimming for their lives,’ —8, 8. James, of Compton, Penna., walked into the Empire breaker at Wilkesbarre on the 26th to watch the working, and was caught by a loaded coal car and crushed to death, He was 305 years of age, and leaves a wife and four children, that while a funeral procession was crossing a swollen stream over the Tennessee border, and the hearse had water opened the doors of the vehicle, and before it could be prevented the and were lost.” -—A despatch from Sasquehanna, Pa., says that as a freight traln was passing over the high Starrucea duct, at Lanesboro, on the 206th, the wind blew the roof from a car, and it fell upon Patrick Monalen acd Thomas Shaughnessy, track laborers, The former was fatally hurt —Lincoln Shannon, a clerk, was on. the evening of the 25th. He was strolling along Portland stroet when he was suddenly confronted by two women with revolvers, They requested him to hold up his hands ana he promptly complied, when one of the women went through bis pockets and got §7. The women were dressed and heavy veiled, very large and strong aud the other Que was a looking was of medium height, blst CONGRESS.~=First Session, EENATE. In the United States Senate, on the 25; bills were introduced by Mr, Mor- rill to establish an educational fuod from the proceeds of public lands, and by Mr. Farwell, giving a pension of $2,000 & year to the widow of General Crook. Mr, George introduced a joint resolution to amend the Constitution 80 48 to give Congress power for the suppression of “combinations in re- straint of trade or production.” and *"to prevent transactions that creale a WOonopoly or Increase or depress the prices of commodities that are or may become subjects of commerce among the States or with foreign nations.” The Anti-Trust bili was discussed, and a motion by Mr. George for the refer- ence of the bill and amendments Lo the Judiciary Committee was rejected, Pending action on amendments the Senate adjourned In the U, 8 Seaate, on the 26th, Mr, Sherman, from the Commities on For. eign Relations, reported a substitute for the first section of the Mest lo- spection bill, which, be said, intended to meet the objections packers and dealers in pork. Mr, Me. Pherson, from the Committees and to purchase a site for and to erect A naval magazine at {and appropriating $71,000 for the par- pose). Mr. Hiscock moved to amend by appropriating a further sum $75,000, to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to improve Ellis Island for immigration pucposes. The smend- ment was agreed to and the joint reso- lution was passed. Adjourned, ln the U. 8, SBenate, on the 27th, the House bill for the pnrchuse of 2000 teuts for the Mississippl flood suflerers was passed, A bill was passed sas pending for one year the statutes re- quiring steamers to te supplied with certain life-saving spphances. The Dependent Pension bili was considered. The House bul for the admission of Wyoming as a State was laid on the table and ordered to ba printed. Ad. journed, HOUSE, In the House, on the 24th, a confer~ ence was agreed to on the Urgent Deficiency bill, After some time spent in conmaering District of Columbia business, the House adjourned. In the House, on the 25th, the World’s Fair blll was taken up, and several amendments were adopted, among them one postponing the time for holding the Fair until 1803, The bill, as amended, was passed by a vote of 202 to 49, the negatives being those members who were from the frst to the holding of any World's Fair, Adjourned, In the House, on the 26th, the en. tire session was coupled with discus. sion of the bill for the admission of Wyoming us a State, Iu the House, on the 27th, the bill for the admission of Wyoming as a — 183 197. Appropriation’ Sn" wes | CLAIR, NEW JERSEY. VILLAIRY OF A RESI'ECTADLE CITIZEN, MonrdLrair, N. J.. March 25 Ope of the most respectable and re- spected citizens of this town has been James Tuthill, a boss mason. He came here from Port Jervis five years ago. He found plenty of work, and soon after he took up bis residence here, He married and went to live in 8 cosy home on Bloomfleld avenve, He and bis wife joined the Mont Clair Congre- gational Church, and won the respect and esteem of their neighbors. Tuthill became very popular with his fellow townsmen, Ile joined Excel. sior Hose Company, No, 2, and sev. eral social clubs, and every one who knew him liked him. He never drank nor swore, was ever ready to help any one in need, and counted his friends by the score, To-day all this is changed, Tuthill is a prisoner in the Haymond Street Jail, Brooklyn, his wife 18 locked up in jail at Newark, and their names ex- week ago were proud to be seen on the streets with them. The emivently respectable Mr, Tat. hill has been found out to be the reck- has been robbing the homes of the wealthy in Mont Clair, Glen Ridge, Bloomfield, Orange and surrounding towns, and his wife is suspected of be- ing his accomplice, Shortly after Tuthill came here to ive several bold burglaries were com- nitted io rapid succession. The bur- rglar was fearless, He selected the | uest residences in which to find his plunder. As the burglar was always | masked, no one could ever give a de i scription of him, Tuthill started a movement to bring Viokerton detec tives here to chase down Lhe thief, This was done, but the criminal had {| apparently sought other felds, for nothing was heard of him while the detectives were in the vicinity. Mr. Tuthiil’s house was never entered, and, { while he was loud and devoul nn his i thanks to the Almighty, who spared him such a visitation, he was aclive in | counselling those who had suffered by { the depredations of the midnight in- truder. A week ago last Monday night the residence of George Douth, | mason and personal friend of Tuthill, was entered by the burglar, Hab. | ertson, who is thinking of moving Ww Montclair, was Mr, Boot%'s guest that night, As the village clock was tolling 12 be was aroused by his bedroom win- “ ts lightly jumped into the room from Lhe veranda, Mr. Robertson watched him and saw him coolly strike a match on the wall and look about, Then he ftly ab- i stracted Mr. lobertson’s gold walch { from his vest and Lhe malch went out { The thief was striking another match when Mr. Robertson jumped out of bed and grappled with hum, The cold | muzzie of a pistol made quickly, and he fell back on The burglar laughed swung himself out of the window got away. Mr. Robertson awoke Lhe { household, While he was telling his {experience the burglar was Jess than a {| block away, getting into the residenec i of John Manuel, apother mason, warm friend of the good Mr. de v him let go the bed, CARLY, ALG farcast and lar got into his gave him battle on though plazza, root, the . and Mr. Manual could | his senses, for the face iroke The latter 1 ‘gold and diamond mine. Buried | the party wall ana thrown in conceal i ed crevices were rings, walcher, dia monds, pocket-books, money, bracelets, | breastpins, eai-rings, walch and every kind of jewelry, representing toany thovsaonds of dollmis, and some { which were stolen years ago. The burglar had jumped on his horse and ridden furiously to Bloomfield, where he tock an express to Hoboken. Constable Allworth traced him to New York, to Brooklyn, and foally to | Greenpoint, where he arrested him yesterday, He was taken to Raymond | his guilt, lleve that he is the captain of a robber (band, and that his wife is his ttusted lleutenant, She was arrested, arraigned before Justice Morris, who committed ber to jail at Newark. It Is said, she has made a fall confession. Requisition papers bave been applied for, and as soon as they are obtained Tuthill will be brought back here and committed to the Newark jall with hus wife, to await trial, ~There has been an epidemic of diphtieria in Bain, New Foundland, There is no doctor in the district, and the soffarers were attended by Rev, Father Walsh, who, with his own bunds, clesned out the throats of the vietima, Of 40 cases that the priest attended only ove proved fatal, The priest took the disease blmesell, and died after a few days’ illness, ~At Sweelzer, Indiana, on the after. noon of the 23d. Roy Pritchett and William Speece found a can of nitro. giycerine In the woods, and tried to explode it by heaping leaves over it and setting them on fire, The can not exploding Pritchett began to punch it with a burning stick. Saddenly the explosion occurred, blowing out both his eyes and tearing off both his armas, causing death In a few moments Clarence Moneys boy we. Wag passe lug, was severely injured a fly Pritchett leaves a wife bin BROWNING'S ENERQY. Was Due the Poet's Success, The energy of action in Browning's | appeal to his contemporaries. Energy { tells at all times, but in a century re- markable for its vigor, in ceaseless un- rest, seeking outlets for its life in every direction, excited by its more constant acquinted with the history of the past, and wide-reaching vhilanthrophy and sympathy, & poet who infuses his work with vitality and seems to prize it for ita sake breathes the times. It is said that the | tie in own mir purest artis- pleasure lies kind, more strennous. | latter sensibility, aroused through sym pathy with the doing of a deed, rather | then to the former, which involves dis- interestednes disengagement of Browning himself, in many 4 and the mind, exculpatory verses, sets forth his claim | to the praising force for its own sake, in the ; he nest piteh., virtue of strength; ho is ever vein of Carly likes to exin others at its hig wiih this spirit, Age EYIDPA 1 - TT 5 1 § }, finds it more native itself than the which 1s the art. Br nforced even fi ing, however, had re powerful attraction by presenting lif but WOrks force, He le field of hist , brings his with great vital wn the broadest scale. in up the wh reading in forgotten books to bear, az crowds the e with diverse gaths ring of RB arveion 5 Lig great and ot men, of artists Arab and Greek, of of and Aracters whieh its owners i | piante of rare ture sav th i in this branch ne fine fine roots worth S50 are held i rarity, the diffi nave al even Their ulty they are propagated, the quisite delicacy, strange forms and blo n for these Before the mont street florist, not Street Church, yesterday, of SROInE Are the extraordinary w fre give ralues winds far a throng hic) | lowers which just now occupy so high a place in the popular mind. Strange in form, of a whiteness, daintily lined with pink or delicate pearly, waxy {| rity and their costliness -——— Beauty Only Skin Deep. A few days ago a young girl, beau- tiful in form, feature and dress, sat in a Madison avenue car, says the New York Evening Sun. Directly opposite sat a poor child of about the same age, shabbily clothed, with a shambling body, slightly deformed as to the shoul- ders, and an exceedingly plain face which bore the lines of suffering and want. Her eager eyes were fixed on the face and figure opposite her with a devouring, pathetio Jook that showed how keenly alive she was to exceeding beauty of a body. The object of the gaze began to grow uneasy under its intentness and fixity, and finally, looking the girl eoldly in the face, she leaned partly across the nisle and said: “Well, Miss Im- pertinence, if vou have looked at me long enongh, will yon be kind enough to look somewhere else. I'm tired of it.” Ths poor child grew first red and then white. A look of keen pain came eame mito her eyes, and then tears, and as she turned away she said softly: “I was only thinking how beautiful you are.” the beautiful nears MAA LONDON isto havea Cenorship of music bull songs, all performers in such places belog required to submit to a censor coples’ and descriptions of the tongs, sketches and dances that they propose to give. This may be a good thing for the public, but even London could hardly afford to pay a fair sajary to a man required to endure such an awful lofliction as will fall pon that censor. CE ET RSE TN a TN - A STRIKE in the Nashua (N. H.) ills appears to be particularly bitter, The operating company issued an ulti- not return to work, shut down the mill in- The operatives, on part proved just as stubborn, and their left would of Such behavior bad slate do not gre Men give up their homes under at provocs tion, except A A NEw YORK's representatives are rather hard on Chicago in the matter of the World's Fair. They are seek- to compel the Windy City to do what New York could have done, gS And a guarantee fund of $10,000,000. It was not supposed at the time the vole was taken on the site that Chicago was as well off inthis respectas New Y ork, and victory for the Western city was in spite of admitied advantages New Y¢ it not fair, therefore, to demand that Chicago all, in advance of the passage of the bill, show that she has a site and such a fund, t $5,000, 000—guarantesd won vi ib. in by 8 large guarantee Half the amount —or would cess of Li be sufficient to insure the & enterprise, a THE the stables, ac Bang ol dof t ing great public schools, cause of ti vernacular the he would-be w comic Yo men of a yd u or » of Pp je v Jrevily rity uiga: may be 12 neither soul able brevities as ‘vel’ “exams’’ for pub’? for public house mpositor, Saturday ¥ poplar concerts, lie RT Tn INCL A Crardens, i logical perquisites, ‘*thou® for thousand, for “bizz"’ CHTIINIDS BS wo citizen, "ad" for advertisement such Ameri and “he goes out for business, ri nights and TES Inornings. ovement, Ces ¢ Bas WO 8DO 3 conaill tional strike, vertyv-stricken mn needed; other pe 1 prevail without coal.” i8 31.6 ners know that coal is a necessity, but 101 the conmdera- n that settles dispute wages or hours of lal to be ansettied leved party renew re- the hundred million dol ired for pensions next year. The Chalrman of the Pension Committee estimates that, under sxist. the number of peusioners reach the maximum about July when there would be 750,000 LY One laws, 2.000000. But the propositions now before Congress, if adopted, would the number of sioners and the aggregate amount of their pensions. The decrease in the pensions should” be very great, however, before long. The larger pensions are paid to men very greatly increase pele nT Ok badly have now survived the war twenty-five years, In the course of nature they cannot be expected to The great body of pensioners are now probably fifty years of age or more. The pensions to widows, however, help to swell the appropriations, as they are reduced by the deaths of veterans, so that it will be many years before the pension list ceases $0 be a heavy burden. It could be cheerfully borne, however, if there were not so many fraudulent cases on the rolls, i ———— Dures of the Louisiana Lotiery may learn from the lberality of the com- pay what enormous profits are made out of the r weekly contributions, and, consequeniyy, how remote their chances are of getting any return. What the company may spend In trying to cor rupt the Legislature of North Dakota or Louisiana is, of course, secret. but the gift of $50,000 to the city of New Orleans for the repair of the levees, and the offer of $100,000 additional to the Governor of tue State for the same purpose, were made openly, and were, no doubt, intended aus indirect bribes, Governor Nicholls returned the check sent to him, because the company is about to ask an extension of its char ter from the State, and the latter must not, under the circumstances, be put under obligations to the lottery com- pany. Governor Nicholls is understood 0 be opposed to the lottery businoss, and the company cannot get its char. ter extended unless it can control enongh members of the Legislature to overcome his probable veto. That is the reason for seeking a charter in North Dakota. But the thing for lot tery ticket buyers to note is the ex: reme liberality of the company with the money they have aoutributed,