The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 10, 1892, Image 2

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    i
CHASING SWORD FISH.
i
AN EXCITING AND DANGEROUS |
OCCUPATION.
Haunting tue Fish on the New Ingz-
land Coast. — Its Strength and
Agility — A Terror to Other
Fish.
A sword fish, when swimming near tho
surface, usnally allows its dorsal fin and
a portion of its tail to project out ol
water. It is this habit which enables the
fishermen to tell when the game is pres.
ent. The creature moves slowly under
ordinary conditions, and the fishing
schoasnor, with a light breoze, finds no
difficulty inovertaking it. When alarmed,
however, it exhibits enormous strength
and agliity. Sometimes it isseento lop
entirely oat of water. Its long, lithe,
muscular body, with fins snugly fitting |
into grooves, is admirably adapted for |
the most rapid movement through the
water. Prof. Richard Owee, testifying
in an English court respecting its power,
suid:
The sword fish at fall speed strikes
with the accumulated for fifteen
hammers swung with both hands. lis
velocity is equal to that of a swivel shot
and the shock is as dan in its
effects as that of a heavy artillery pro
jectile.”
The sword fish never comes to the sur-
face except in moderate weather, accor 1-
ing to Dr. Gi. Brown Goode. A 1
parsuing them has always aman stationed
at the mast head, where, with the keen
eve which practice has given him, he can
easily descry the tell-tale back fins at a
distance of two or three When
the prey is sighted the watch gives nu
shout and the craft is steered in the d
rection indicated. The skipper takes his
place in a sort of *‘pulpit,” so-called. ut
the end of the bowsprit, armed with a
harpoon which has detachable head. He
holds the pole which forms the handle of
the weapon with both hands, directing
the man at the wheel by voice and gesture
how to steer. There is no diflic
approaching the inte nded victims with a
vessel of some size, although, curiously
enough, they will not suffer a small boai
to come near them.
Although there would be no
in bringing the end of the
directly over the fish, a skillful harpooaer
never waits for this, When the
from 6 to 10 feet in front of the
is struck. The harpoon is never thrown,
the pole being long eno igh to enible the
expert to pun 'h the dart into the back of
the animal close to th fin. When
the dart has thus been to the
fish the line attached to 1
out, the pole being retained the hand
As soon as the rope has
stricken creature will
passed into a small boat
ut the stern. Two
boat and pull upon the
is brought alongside, when it is killed
with a whale lance stuck into the
Then it is lifted ug the de
vessel with tackle.
There are any number of
resenting the ferocity I
h several well
are said to have pies
sels, projecting th
of
rerous
yossol
*p
HIS,
difficulty
powsprit
pr ¥ i%
!
vessol it
i i
DRCK
fastenod
it is allowed tn
in
run as far as the
men amp
line until the
copper she
planks.
ing of sacl
of craft +
the fishes whicl t I
their instruments of offense man
do without them can only be
There does not seem to |
for taking it for gra i
grow others Attacks by
included by ins
sen risks,
Such a large and for:
the sword fish can §
nists. Others
mackerel and sharks are
Doubtless the last ar
1864 there was exhibited to the Boston
Society of Natural History the jaws of a
shark in whose stomach nearly the whole
of a large sword fish was found. It
a tiger shark, the most ferocious of
kind. and ten or twelve wounds in its |
flesh gave some notion of the confict |
1
Dn
184
DeRrs,
its worst foes
wns
its
which must have occurred In 18S a |
small mackerel shark was captured jn |
(3louce ster harbor, and in its nostril was
found the sword. about two inches long
of a young sword fish. When this was
pulled out the blood flowed freely, indi |
cating that the wound was recent. “I're- |
meadous combats have often been wit.
nessed between sharks ani sworl fish,
Sword fish are a terror to
mackerel, blue fish and comparatively
small fry. They rise among the prey, |
striking to right and left with their
swords until they have killed a number, |
which they thereupon proceed to devour,
Sometimes they appear actually
throw the fish inthe air, cutting them in
two as they fall
Although hunting the sword fish is re.
garded as a profitable pursuit on the
New England coast, employing man)
vessels, it 1s not likely to bring about any |
serious diminuation of the game. One
reason is because their habits are soli. |
tary. [It is said that two are never seen
swimming close together, Although no
namber are apt to be found iu the same
neighborhood, wherever the food they
seek is plentiful, they never run in
schools, Considerable quantities of
sword fish are annually salted in barrels
at New England ports, Being regarded i
a delicacy they are in great demand in |
certain sections, particularly in the Con.
necticut velley, where a barrel full may
be found in almost every grocery stors
The fishermen have u theory to the effect |
that the sword fish ean see nothing direc. |
tly in front of him, owing to the peou-
liar way in which lus eyes are placed,
and it i= stated that these animals are
sometimes approached and killed by
hunters in skillfully mansgel skiffs,
[Washington Star.
Wearing Linen,
i ————
“Ro vou have given up wearing flan.
mel. Why is this?’ asked one Indy of
another. “1 gave it up because 1 found
something so much more comfortable.
1 am going to turn the order Hf undergar.
ments opagAnEry and wear linen in
winter for warmth and wool in summer
for coo'ness if I wear wool at all, which
is somewhat doubtfal. © Why, my dear,
schools of
to
SL ——
do you know that I always take cold
when I leave off my linen housedresses
I had
noticed this for several seasons and fin.
warmer than wool, and so I am going to
fly in the face of tradition and custom
aid woar linen, nnl you will find that my
health will improve. 1 entertain idons
about the healthfulness of garments that
+0Of course we know that n moderate
degree of heat not only dees not destroy
the germs of disouse, but is favorable to
their growth, and it appears to me that
flannels month to
sometimoes from season to season,
only warm baths between
wust, in the nature of things,
late impurities. Suppose there is an ill
ness or exposure to disease, how could
worn from
QoCunIi-
there be more favorable conditions for its
continuance than the flannels as ut pres.
BIG BILLS FOR FOOTWEAR.
What It Costs to Shoe the Women
of New York.
Neat and attractive shoe wear is,
characteristic of New
women, and, it
be believed, they do
leather
their sisters in the second largest city in
the Union.
But the bill that they pay cach year
for boots aud shoes, when the whole thing
‘1 he
York City has
at RM) (KK),
Now, allowing two] boots per vear
for every child, girl it would
’ i ts ir a1 5
give a total of 1,640,000 pair, and aver.
I be-
York
to
much
lieve, a
the common report is
not
in proportion to their number as
UR Os
is summed up, almost staggers one,
female population of New
down, |
been put believe
rs of
and woman,
35 cents
for a cheap pair of g the
£15 pair worn by the fair lady who habits
ut <i ald
in the
It would
nring the cost, which runs from :
baby * boots to
in brown stone
find that we allow
twelve months just £2, 400,006),
be nearer the mark, perhaps, to say that
the ve
Mia paar, we sh
Gir women
our female population wear in ir
from two and a half to three million dol-
lars
It would be interesting to know
worth of shoes!
how
much of this huge sum should be charged
of
he twentiv-<five thous.
to
One of these dames m
to the account
and fashionable w be found in
the city.
her dainty Romeo slippers for the
paid from five to ten
her breakfast
for which she b
nen
ist ave
bath,
for which she has
dollars, and often more;
and room slippers as paid
the same price, tiring of a pair af
has i couple of
3
i i
Ooli-room ana
it 1s not
dollars
worn them EL
slippers
hier to §
sor lyon led
walking.s}
ten doili
has
wes that she can t ge
than irs
ifter she
worn
hor ien-doiiar tennis siu
ever last thr
ii the gr
r Mats, 3
i
her deft riding
fitteen to tweed
i A
wR LO
from
tthe sins oO
1. It would a
than would bu
sper enough te
in New York,
and linen lining enough
P Urposes,
entten
i to clothing to supply a
conple of thoasaud women with chemises
and 20,000 yards of satin.
Lump Jaw,
I'he results of a special investigation
made by Dr. Simon J. J. Harger and Dr
Robert Formad, of the University ol
sehool, were presented at a
meeting of the Philadelphia Society of
Veterinary Medicine. The investigation
was on the subject of actinomyecosis, or
lump jaw, common in cuttie, an i which
has beon declared to render the meat of
The investigators find, iret, that
disease ix a local vue, being rarely found
outside of the head sud neck ; and second,
the
case has been transmitted to man by eat.
the meat. The disease
comes from a vegetal funczus, found on
many plants, but especially in the husk
of bariey and the germ probably finds a
lodgment in the jaw o. the animal
through a broken tooth or a slight oat
in the gums,
Tie e me ution at
and Formud arrived
disease
which Drs. Harger
t= therefore, that
Or Tans
pron.
are found not to be affected, it is
use the ment, the head and
casses: and they see no reason why such
be after proper inspection,
Thess conclusions agree substantially
with those of Drs, Uruikshanks ot
don, Norcard of Paris and
sold
meat fron
eattie affecte | with lump jaw only in the
head is invariably sold. N w doans
Times. Democrat,
A Story of Greal Herolsm,
———————
I recall to mind a story of an officer in
a fortress, Their number was small,
and n relieving army was coming up,
It was of immense moment that they
should know how long the fortress could
hold put. If it must capitulate for want
of supplies within a week they could
stuy and win the eampaign for the Em.
peror, A young Japanese nobleman
volunteered to go into the fortress and
ascertuin how long they could hold out,
He disguised himself, and in passing
learned that they had food and water for
only two duys more,
As he was going out with this proci-
enemy said to him: **Weo ure going to
ono condition-—that you go to the wall
and tell your people that wo have sup-
He eaid: “Very
well.” und went to the wall, His wife
and children in the besiegers’ camp saw
Loh! up both his hands and e vid to them:
“There are supplies for bus two days,
Continue the siege and vou will tuke the
place.” He died by a hundred
points, but he had done his duty
general. — Sir Edwin Arnold,
sper
to his
A Woman Rauchers
Out on 6 ranch in the Bruneau Valley,
Idaho, lives Miss Kittie V. Wilkins, who
is in partnership with her father and two
brothers in the business of raising horses
and cattle, It is a country where few
would care to live, But Miss
indicate that she is not as mach of a wo-
man as upy of her sex that live down on
8 ane the fashionable avenues ol
Chicago. Thero nothing
about her manner, She
Hors .
ment of all that is noble
0,
is masculine
1% guil- poss sued
are the embodi-
to her, but
a horse trade.
and practical,
y slo
seldom gets the worst of
When she is at home she spends hes
time in mounting spirits d horses, and un-
attended er the
she is apt to
she gallops away os
prairies, stopping wherever
find a herd of horses that suits her fancy.
The i
nia
and her
herders dealers all know her
Judgment on a horse is law ana
gospel, Fhien she rides howe, dismoan
without
canrger,
any assistance, ungirths
and calls her partners abou
to tell thein what she has done, mt
attend to the rest
When the season comes for shippi
she le the
mre Wil
stock.
is
wves the ranch in charge of
For the most part they
known as wild hb I'he care
such SUOUNGs genoraily gives man ail
he can'do, but this vouug womas.fmakes
troubde with
derstand
RUS,
no compinint. She has no
her Fhey seem to
Jhiat they are under the care of 4 woman,
and act
DoOrses
Arrangements havo
the !
of these animals from a certain point on
he railroad.
leaving the
with her stock. The train pulls out
Miss Wilkins is in the
railroad men know her, and no one could
be treated more considerately than this
No
gocording. vy
been made in advance for
sl
She has mapped out before
|
cities she proposes to
Caboose,
indy who is traveling sloue
gs for her
wi the ranch
or in t
is alwavs treated
I'he rounder
where the tratls
hats to
vOUnoe
Young
:
or on the cor
he centres whe
consideration
when they mes
station ha for hot
0
wot Chica
hen
the
anole
or
a person is thinking hard
Sve rooms irom one ob
and the hand
Fhe
the «
are moving more
hardest. workin
taking mn
3
busiest,
wniry insists on MOvn
eral times a
fore dropping off into one of these n
tary naps 8 Just be.
is
the eve to fis itaelf
thus
head and
Then the
These little
fF Beyer
more than twenty seconds long, and
the mind commands
tipon ohisct and
insuring the of the
every part of the body quiet,
some one stav,
holding
mind naps or flashes of rest me
be
vet they have been discoversd to do the
mind a wonderfal amount of
I'yey never come fo the derange Jd mind
Lewy i.
and it has also been discovered that the
supposedly sound mind which does not
tnke them is on the verge of juscnity,
Sitomania,
The most rare ax well as the most in-
teresting food abnormality, or intemper-
ance, fiom a psychological point of
is that which for want of a better
name | shall call sitomania. Some such
definition nas the following may be ap-
plied to it: “A mania occarring period-
ically, characterized by loss of volition
and an overwhelming desire to partake
view,
by remorse, depression, and tendency to
suicide.” In many respects this form of
disease resembles the now well known
In both
there are intervals, often prolonged,
during which an entirely normal state
prevails; there is no undue desire in the
one ense for excess of food, in the other
Then, often suddenly,
there ensues a wholly uncontrollable de-
sire in the one case for a food gorge. in
the other for a drink excess: in both the
ecasence of the disease is the secretive
ness with which the orgy is conducted;
in over, the same feeling of intense des
pression and remorse, aud in some cases
u tendency tosuicide. The sitomaniac
adopts much the same means of gratify-
ing his desires as those adopted by the
dipsomaniae. When the attack is im-
will rob his best friends, indulge in pett
silfering, even sell the clothes off h
ack, and reduce himself to absolute
poverty to find means for this morbid is-
ulfence in food.—{The Lancet,
an A ———
Summer serge will be worn trimmed
with rows of narrow gold or silver braid,
jn which a thread the color of the goods
8 woven.
NOTES AND COMMENTS,
Tun statistician of the Delaware and
Hudson Canal Co. R. R. points with
wide to the remarkable fuet that on the
Pe Res veais branch of this railroad not
i single pussengor has been killed since
the road went info operation, twenty
yours ngo. It is also n matter for con-
gratulation,’”’ he says, “that during that
that division-~two
twins.” All four are alive, and
them is an employee of the company.
Ax
of them
one of
French sinti sian
nukes o clever and graphic presentation
of the thrift of the French people. He
says that a duplicate of the Eiffei Tower,
which weichs 7,000,000 and
8,000,000 kilogrammes, built of
silver,
and with two additional
eminent
hetween
added,
stories
netaal
. . ' ts :
i renci peopie deposited in
i
banks, The kilo-
gramme is 2 pounds 3.26 ounces,
BV
ings of the
Tue new Reading terminal station in
Philadelphia is to boast the largest train-
What is termed the
work of the great arch has al
house in the world.
false
been begun.
ti
from the 120
feat
and height ground
The
length
feet in le
truin-house is ¢ Ohl
he st
wrth, making the terminal
in
tion proper
build
fect long. I'he train house
be laid out with thirieen tracks the
Market Street end, which will be redased
by switches to nine tracks ot the
Street end. The roof will be constructed
yf iron, & and
ing 663
ut
PPT, WO
i
Tur turning of the bed of the Feather
River at Oro for the
. po
as woul
of astonishing piece ©
thie
{hagres River and convert
make an estimate on cost
the
ing its bed into a canal channel, with the
aid of five locks. The theory
be that Fre
in American skill may
Frank Mc Laughlin, the
intor
“Xa. i
Wl nou
turning
ReGms 1o
snaineering failed
i at Col
Rive:
and mo tai (Hf , has
thank
what
sehond
New Yous
would, had he
old
f Clarence,
ha i those
that have not
with English sovers
turies, As Edward
the seventh of that name, Fdward
having followed Henry VII, bu
Clarence he have been the first of
Dukeo
king
reviveaq
gus
He Woille
wonid
hut name to red nrences never
avi reached tl Ir . Now
brother
*
t
i the
i
{
father was the
tigorge 111. the
1. Mary, Dues
back through
pots to WN
wan attend
Weare {tee |
tinhorn
ROO
1 £1 2
remarkable from the
§ 3
ur town nas no mune
ment, and the rales of
lately bed
the camp have bat
not known
are
and
of
i adopted,
i
fo a large number I he
our people
saloons and gambling -bhonses are orderly
the State can
i ence
a higher degree of
and manhood than characterize the peo.
and quiet, Nov « anp in
§
boast © intelli
been pushed into prominence more rapid.
Iv or systematically as the result of
such intelligend
Propanty no city in the United
is a0 well known to army officers as St
Louis, As carly as 1826 Jeff. reson
vous for tr be ordered to the West,
During the war armies were recruited
and equipped for the field there.
the war, and Sherman for many years
after it. Sheridan left St. Louis asa
captain of infantry under General
mo.. in 1861. General John M. Scho.
Generals Grant, Han
cock, and Eugene A.
Louis belles, In short, our army officers
have many pleasant as well as tarbulent
memories of St. Louis. Bat when de-
partment headquarters were remov ed
from the city last autumn, St. Louis's
ing-depots for the army, and the only
garrison left is a single company. A
reeraitiog office is still maintained. The
quarters ut the barracks are old, and in
some cases dismantied. But the reser.
vation on which the barracks stand is
one of the most beautiful in the possess.
fon of the Government, consisting of
1,200 acres of grass and park.
Tur people of Cochise County, Ariz,
Of tha da islature the county asked
but one thing that a company of ran-
gers be organized to’ protect settlers. A
Lill omjwwesing the Governor to issue a
call and equip a company, when, in his
opinion, its services were needed, was
; but, although several murders
ave been committed by the Apaches
since the adjournment of the Legislature,
Governor Irwin has done nothing. The
citizens have now taken the matter up
themselves in grim earnest. Four blood:
hounds have been imported from the
Tosas penitentiary at Huntsville, and it
in nroposed to track the Indians and ex-
terminate them with the aid of these
dogs. The hounds are to be taken into
the Chiricabun Mountains in Arizona,
where Masse and Kid, the leaders of the
band of murderers, have their head.
quarters. At iotervals they sally out,
swoop down on unprotected settlers, kill
them, seize their stock, and return to the
mountain fastnesses, If hard pressed,
the Apaches sometimes cross the border
Moxico und make for the wilder
Madres The bloodhounds se.
lected by the Cochise citize
with fox hounds, an l their
to be superior to thint of the pure
hound, Irwin
nsked to eo-operate in the work of ester
mination by
into
Sierra
nu are cressed
snid
blood.
be
wo qrt 1s
BUHL 18
(sovernor will now
organizi
rangers.
LINCOLN’S DEATH BIER.
A Dilanidated Relic
Crypt at the Capital,
in a Secret
hich the
lias been
An interesting national relic w
World's Fair will probably want
preserved in Washington, writes a corres.
pondent of the Pittsburgh Dispatch, for
many vears in an unusually carious hid-
It is the bier itafalque
sted me they
he Capital
irty red
ing place,
El or ¢
in state in the rotunda of t
remains of th tion m
Thaddeus Stevens,
, »
coln's Secretary
ard Chief
Sumner
Wilson
niterw
Ci
Hy
aries
ury
1
design by B. B
sioner of Pabiie
of a pla
with fine black broad:
tastelal
iH these 1
od at the sides with
When not in
#ix years since it
bier has been kept i
or tomb inside Gown
snder ground in ti : af the
building, remote from all sc f legis.
i This
d in the
funeral trim
enty-
the
i stone erypt
oe
awny
intive
{ subloeree
strife anc
NnEan ory
first vear of thi
nagus Guinn
Washington, u
early
to receive a 8arcdap
remains of (roorye nder
resolution of LETTER "passed
T ution of HETeRs paseo
ie 1d
i as i
him i the
2a. 3 . 2 1.4
tol and accord his du
INK wu to 1
h
of
' sronosed
4 i
s
waaiid
statu rotunda of the Capi
ulture underneath
sed
never
Martha W
presents a
‘oth covering
Liroadg
bry
braid remains stro nd
Bat Architect Clark, who
has custody if the treas ired relic, now
| keeps it ander strictest lock and key in
| its narrow cell.
| Allow three pairs of laces for each pair
the 1,600,000 shoes, and set the length
of ouch lace at two feet; then tie these
| together, and you have a string
3. 50 miles long. or just doable the length
of the first Atlantic cable. Take the
sost of the laces alone, putting it at three
| cents a pair, and you find it is very near
noth, and ons
«
Hin nr 11 one ©
and one sido.
of
§
will
Aft thousand dollars. The cost of bution-
hooks for the same time will not run
less than sixty thousand dollars,
Gaiters or ‘spats,’ as they are
the old country, are in the very fever
fashion now, especially the dead black
| or navy blue. Indeed, from all that 1
| can learn, over half the women that
| make any pretensions to “'sty le” or
fashion wear them; so that we may pot
| down the total number these worn
here in the year at one hundred thousand,
| costing about two hundred and fifty to
three hundred thousand dollars; so that
| the total for outside foot-wear aliogether
| somes close to 83,400,000; perhaps the
full three and a halt millions, 1 need
hapdly add that but a small proportion
of “kid” boots are genuine —{Unce a
Week.
callea
in
of
of
A Disastrous Yawn.
I ——
One of the most pecalinr misadven-
tures on record recently befell William
Davis of San Francisco. Ouse morning
he awoke after a very sound night's
slumber, und was seized with an uncon-
trollable impulse to yawn and streich
himself. He had stretched his arms out
to their fall length when snddenly he
felt something suap, and discovered that
he was unable to restore his left arm to
its natural position. He groaned with
anguish and friends came to his nesis-
tanoe, bundled him up and took him to
the receiving hospital, wheve it was found
that Davis while stretching himself had
dislocated his left shoulder. Dir. Somers
alled the joint back into its socket.
he doctor says he has frequently heard
of jaws being dislocated in excossive
yawning, but this is the first cnso re.
corded, so far as io knows, of a shoulder
beiog yawned out of joint. Ho thinks
it would have been impossible but for
the fact that Davis’ shoulder had been
dislocated before, some years ago.
PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS, :
EPITOME OF NEWS GLEANED FROM
VARIOUS PARTS OF THE STATE,
Jacon Priskry, a Fayette county farmer,
was swindled out of #2 (00 by a stranger who
bosrded a few days with him and represented
that he was employed by a railroad company.
The stranger (old the farmer that be dreamed
repentedly that a quantity of silver was buried
tree. Upon investigation
near the root of a
the silver, to the amount of £4,000, was found
which the two men equally divided, Then
the stranger exchanged the silver witl Prin~
key with greenbachs, and departed,
Prinkey
afterward found that the coin we
organization of iron and stock
Ti
manufacturers proposed 10 take a firm stand
new
workmen.
i be
Assotintion
i the question of the wages of the
Changes in the seale of wages wij resisted
by the Amalgamated and a big
hit is probable in the Pittsburg section,
AT
Big Mountain colliery,
Centralis, Frank Chesus!, 8 miner, at
while walking al
he breaker slipped and fell headiong to
bottom, a distance of 300 feet.
TH strike at the Springdale Colliery, New
settled by the operators,
%
fiaen what WHI®S are Cue
them, and pouncing that
they will con-
tinue to pay sen monthly sx before,
DerisG aquarre]l Edward Posthill, flagman
on a pu Killed
Michael Niland,
near Sol
Wiis
engine, snot anaQ instaniy
fireman on the same en ©
erset.
r
retur eral at frie.
fensburg, near Head) rae aitsehed
{08 Carrisge contains
Sehiwariz, took fright snd
foot embankment into |
a canal,
of the carriage escaped,
Tig residents of Pricebarg, ne
the
Lhe
ar Scranton
pxeiled over a Hungarian
grant fron
alr alipox.
IXGDOX County
for President
Supreme Court,
x
eral Harrison
Dean for the The anti-Quay
peopie
Tm 3
begun ut Harrisburg,
5
nto the Leading deal
what
wes
No malier may
w the outomne of this investigation the Eg.
preme Court will be called upon to pass on
the legnlity of the combinaton,
A meeting of the Executive (
ymmitiee of
m the World's Fair was
:
The
he State Cor
held at Harrisbur meeting was visited
by the Joint Special Committee of the Philae
delp in Lounciia. i
of who
by making a prophesy
Macoiy BEADLING, Backeville,
created a sensation
while in s trance, which came true, will
shortly marcy Ambrose Metler, a graduste of
Michigan College irl claims that she
paw the face of Metier while in the trance,
W. A. Love, of ri, filed a bill in
equity at Pittsburg of
mpany, 8 Westmoreland
charging the officers
the Saltsburg Coal (
County concern, with fraud, and asking that
sinted, B. K. Jamison, of
the
a receiver be app
Philadelphia, is presides COmpany.
The allegations are denied by an officer of the
company in this city.
Press nc tin plate manufacturers say that
8 s ark
the wages of the workmen must come down,
EK
It is thought that the Amalgamated Associa
tion will not agree to the proposed reduction
without a struggle.
h Church (
¢ Evangelical yi ference at
Bishop Bowman ssid there
be peace in
ade
y puiting
MAN presched
i
i at
Norristown
{ newiy ordained ministers. In an
timated that the Dubs faction
» 10 sue for pesce if they wanted to
mise the existing diffienities in the
relion]l Chuarelu
is said that the vacant place on the Lan.
Her
wwernor but
raster County i y was tendered to
A
the ofier wes declis
Tur Willinmsport Lumbermen's Exchange
has app inted a comp
ry
y visit Washing.
ton end protest against the proposed removal
of the tarifl on Inmber.
maich sf
Wilson shot Francis
The injury may prove
Wilson claims thet the shooting wae
WniLe returning from a pigeon
M1, Piessan!, Thomas
Kilrain in the back.
fatal
accidental
Lizzie Josue of Miner's Milp near Wilkes
Barre, attended a ball the other night. On her
return she fell into a sleep from which she has
pot awakened. Doctors are puzzied by the
CRSP.
A KECRET meeting of the employees of the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company was held at
Harrisburg to discuss certain grievances relia.
tive to the hours work, Representatives
from the Brotherhoods of Locomotive Engin.
Couductors, and Firemen
of
pers, Traine,
were present.
Tne Trinity Reformed Church,
pleted at Potteville, was dedvoated
church has a senting capacity of G00,
JORNSTOWX people held a mass meeting to
protest against the granting of anmerous
1 quor licenses,
AT Shenandoah during a fight between
Hons end railrosd wen several persons were
just coms
The new
TV. Powprrry forwarded a letter to
Mr. Powderly
present furnish 1o affidavit about the come
bine. lle did not think that he was not
bound to appear before the Attorney General}
Mr. Hensel replied that the General Master
given further opportunity to do so.
Joux Ih Donoxey was elected chairman of
Harrisburg’s Democratic City Committee.
Tig Cambeo- Amerion League, of Schuyl.
kil county held a basquet at Mahonoy City
in honor of 81. David's Dad,
Heavy rain and snow storms were reported
from Williamsport, Pottsville, Reading,
State. Telegraph and telephone wires were
broken and considerable damage was done, |
Tas Siste Tressury statement shows the
fund to contain $6,703 286.80, as
against $5,566,023. 54 a month ago, The Sink*
fing Fund has $525,080.04, os against §761,.
308.54 on Vebruary 1. The total amount
of the Febowary, 1 loan outstanding is
$140,000,
Ex. Mayon Janes G. Wymax, of Alles
gheny City, who was recently convicted
extorton, was refused a new trial,
>