The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 18, 1894, Image 2

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    THE NEWS,
Fire engine No. 25, which was run down
by a switch engine while going to a fire at
(lenesee street and the New York Central
crossing, in Buffalo, Driver Michael O'Brien
was fatally injured Engineer William Whalen
and Fireman Robert Sands cut and bruised.
O’Brien, whose skull was fractured and both
jegs broken, died later. Tue lire engine was
demolished and the horses killed, —— Fire
destroyed the wholesale house of the Peeble’s
Grocery Company in Chattanooga, Tenn,
causing a loss of 75,000, —— President An.
drews, of Brown University, has telegraphed
to Chicago his unqualified declination of the
offer to become co-president of the univer.
gity there.———Henry Potter, alias ‘‘Colonel”
DEMAND ON HAWAL
A AL HHA A 35
Minister Willis Calls For the
Queen's Restoration.
——————————————— —————— pe wo
A DEFIANT RESPONSE.
The Provislionals Prepared to Offer
Resistance-Britisn Sailors Were
Landed--Quiet Prevalls But
the Storm Is Likely to
Burst at Any Hour,
men in New York, by means of forged checks,
was sentenced by Recorder Smith
jer of the Gate City National Bank
tentiary.——Judge Clayton,
decided that Professor 8. C,
stand trial for the murder of his wife
Mrs. Mary Van Rossum, aged seventy-one
years, was struck by a locomotive and in-
stantly kil ed at the Franklin street crossing
of the Erie Railroad, N. J.
Mre. Jane Shattuck shot and killed Henry
in Chester, Pa,
in Paterson,
pot marry her daughter, ss she requested,
ee LAW Y OF Frodesick H. Teese started from
Neward, N. J., for St. Louis, but
House, in New York, and died there, —
guale Sacco, the keeper of an Italian board-
ing house in Boston, was nssassinated by
rincenzo Carchidi —— While Wm. Loog,
aged twelve years, and Harry Dean, aged
twenty-one, were shooting rats in a
pear Wilmington, Long accidentally shol
and instantiy killed Dean, a bullat a
Flobert rifie passing through his heart. —
Col. Henry M. Porter, for many years
golieitor for the American Bank Note
and a man well known in elubs and in
and it has been
from
chial
Com-
pany,
New York society, is insane,
found necessary to remove him to an asylum,
Mrs. Hiram Paulding, widow of the Iate
lear Admiral Paulding, of the L
pavy, died at her home at West Neck, Hunt-
fngton, IL. L She was eighty-seven years of
age, and bad been In poor hea th for some
time. Her husband was a son of the Pauld-
fog who figured conspicuously in the ecap-
ture of Major Andre.——A fire at Nimiek
station, on the Pan Handle Raliroad, de-
stroyed six dwellings and their contents, and
rendered thirty people homeless, The houses
were all comparatively new.
Colonel Rice, of the Guards,
expressed the opinion tb at
World's Fair grounds was of incendiary ori-
gin ~-Edward H. Duaryee
receiver for the firm of E. Alsdor! & Co.,
Newark, the largest bicycle, plano
ing machine dealers in New Jersey, The ap-
pointment was made by Vice Chancellor
Green, and the bonds were placed at 825,000,
— Herman Serenco and Ida Gatelstein were
arrested in St. Louls on suspicion of being
jeaders of a band of ecounterfeiters.——The
St. Paul and Kassas City express jumped
the track at Missouri Valley, Ia, sad two
coaches rolled over the embankment, Mrs,
¥. M. Hensler was thrown
window, and a coach fell on her, killing ber
fostantly, No others were seriously hurt.
Sherman Waggoner, a goung farmer, shot
and killed his wife with a Winchester rifle at
Lynaville, Ct. The busband’s crusity drove
the wile away and be shot
an aunt,
-Application was made
the United States
Columbian
at the fire
ol
and sew-
from home,
as she was entering the house of
Waggoner escaped.
re Judge Ross,
uit Court, in Los Aaogeles,
bef
Cal, by bond
Fe Railroad for receivers for the Atlantic and
aud Pacifle Railroad.
Cook and Wilson, who
sud their bonds fixed at $30,000 each.
rest. H
threatened trouble, ——
Washiogton, Wis,, O
The Bank
D. Bjourouist & Son,
of
unable to secure sufficient patronage to war
Zoological Garden went foto the hands of an
assignee, The venture was undertaken by
Jeading citizens, and about £75,000 was ex.
pended on grounds and animsis. The as.
aggregating €15,000. —— John C arl Loveason
and Charles O. Davis, boys, were drowned at
Tacona, Wash., while skating Twelve
bands on the steamer State of Kansas were
badly burned at Omega Landing, Alabama,
by sulphuric acid, ——Isaze Bancroft, aged
sixty, was killed by a train at Ladds Mills,
Ct, —Lieutenant Colonel George H. Burton
who bas represented the Secretary of War in
an investigation of the killing of Captain
Hedberg by Lieutenant Maney at Fort Sheri.
dan, has completed his labors at Chleago,
we Mrs. Catherine Blackezby, aged seventy,
died at Danville, Ky., not having tasted food
for twenty-eight days.
I —
CEREAL STATISTICS FOR "93.
Estimates of Area and Product as Com
pleted by the Department,
The estimates of area and product of the
principal cereal crops, potatoes, tobaceo and
Bay for the year 1803, as completed by the
statisticlan of the Department of Agricul
ture, make the aggregate corn aren 72,006,
465 acres, and product 1,619,498, 131 bushels ;
whent ares, 34,629,418 acres, product 396,
181,725 bushels : oats, acres, 27,275,088, pro-
duct 636,864, 850 bushels ; rye, acres, 2,008,
485, product 20,555,446 bushels: barley,
acres, 3,420,371, product 60,869,405 bushels
buckwheat, acres, 815,614, product 12,1382,
811 bushels ; potatoes, acres, 2.6 5,186, pro-
duct 183,004,208 bushels; tobacco, 702,058
sores, product 453,028,968 pounds | bay 49,
613,460 arces, product 65,766,158 tons,
The average yield of corn per acre was
22.5 bushels ; wheat, 11.4 bushels ; oats, 23.4
bushels ; rye, 18 bushels ; barley, 21.7 bush, ;
buckwhest, 14.9 bushels; potatoes, 72.3
bushels; tobacco, 687 pounds; bay 1.38
tons.
The returns of the correspondents of the
department make the acreage of the winter
Wwhiut sown lass Sail 91.3.pur deat of the ates
barvoted in 1803,
The steamer Warrimoo brings advices
from Honolulu to January 1st.
The following Is a summary of the
tion at Honolulu when the Warrimoo
that port :
Minster Willis, in reply to a
| tion from President Dole, demanded
situa
left
communica.
of the
provisional government that it surrender to
the Queen,
{ + President Dole replied,
| gider this demand, A wee
| ensued after the arrival of the revenue cut.
to
k of terrible
refusing con
fears
| ter Corwin,
Minister Wiil s held the
force with the provisional
of
government
menace using
and
! the citizens got in readiness to rush to arms
though it was generally belioved
minister was bluffing.
All is quiet at Honolulu,
govern:
I'he §
ent has a foree of men un
strongly
for o«
was
{ and the palace
g searched neenled On
then
minister re
| were bein arms,
the 16th arm ravived by Dritist
reiving permissi
iain
protecti
io
ernment
Champion {
Capt
! Queen
and
£5
ar
sate
ain Hooke
for pressing yo
To that Min
ister Willis
Leg {’
Dec, 18, i803, ir: | have tu
a that 1 have a communicatic
my governhent which I
the President and Ministers of
form yo
desire 10 submit
your govern-
ment at any hour to-d which it may please
which 1 regard
ny
you to designate, and sin-
cerely respect.”
The jinterview and
lows:
Foreigs
President .
Damon, =
King, minister
Smith, attorney
| Willis, E. E. oad
American,
Mr. Willis said
Myr. President and
fdent of the United
the
it has been
jemand was as
How
d B
inlster of
Dee. 19
Hon
Ho
p Clie
Ranfor Dole,
finance ;
general ;
M. r
States has very
gretted the Hawali
but
it as has ©
due to
delay in
unavoidable. Bo mueh ©
as beer
prod
required
The President
ost assuredly I do, that any
{| crecy should surrounded the
change of views between cur two
| ments, I may say this, however,
erecy thus far observed has been in the
terest and for the safety of all
1 need hardly promise
action on the Hawallan question
{ under the dictates of honor and
urred since my arrival b
certain
compliance, which
was io confer with ¥
regrets, as
conditions, edent
was
yi.
belo
als
wm
so
have inter.
govern
your peo
the President's
bas
duty.
now, and has been from the beginning, abso-
lutely free from prejudice and resentment
and entirely consistent with long established
friendship and treaty ties which have so
closely bound together our redpective gov.
| ernments, The President deemed it his duty
{ to withdraw from the Senate the treaty of
annexation, which had been signed by the
Secretary of State and agents of your gov
ernment, and to dispatch a trusted represen.
tative to Hawali to impartially investigate
the causes of your revolution and to ascer-
tain and report the true situation in these Is.
lands. This information was needed the
better to enable the President to discharge a
delicate and important duly, Upon the facts
embodied in Mr, Blount's report the Presi
dent has arrived at certain conclusions and
determined upon a certain course of action,
with which it becomes my duty to acquaint
you. The provisional government was not
established by the Hawaiian people, nor
with their consent or acquiescene, nor has it
since existed with their consent,
President Dole in his roply sald his gov.
ernment would take the matter under con.
sideration and reply later,
that
been
a
I iiss
DOWN WITH THE BRIDGE.
Beventy~Fire leune Plunged Into
Newtown Creek live Missing,
An improvised btdge over Newiown
Crook, ot Moeelor, Long Island City, Li. L,
ecollnpsed, precipiiatiog a large number of
pedestriana, variously estimated at from 0
to 75, nto the water.
The greater number of them were rescued
succeaded in reaching shore through
their own efforts, some in an jujured cone
dition.
Five persons are reported missing, and it
is belleved they were drowned, The bridge
was 15 feet high, and the water where the
accident cecurred 1s nine feet deep.
—————
Tarn are ramors that the Italian Govern.
ment is attempting to farm out the tobmeco
I
FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS,
Senate,
191m Day.--The Benate devoted nearly
two hours to the discussion of the resolution
offered last weak by Mr, Hoar, eailing on the
Treasury Department for a statement of the
payments made to Mr. Blount as Commis.
sioner to the Hawall Islands, and of the
authority under which such payments wero
made, The resolution was finally referred
to the Committee on Foreign Helations,
Mr. Frye's resolution declaring the sense of
the Senate to be in favor of striet non-inter-
vention between the Queen and the pro-
vislonal government was laid over till Wed-
nesday next.
20rn Day. The House bill for the repeal
of the federal election laws was bought up
in the Benate, postponed till Monday next,
and made the ‘unfinished. business’ after
two o'clock each day until disposed of or
displaced. ‘The resolution offered on Mon-
day by Mr. Chandler, as to the authority of
the appointment of Mr, Blount ‘without
the advice and consent of the Benate,”” wns
withdrawn by him on the representation of
Messrs, Vest and Bherman that the subject
matter was embraced within the scope of
the inquiry now going on before the Com-
mittee on Foreign Relations,
2181 Day. Iu the Senate Mr, Peffer's reso.
lution of
the force in the office of
arohitect of the tressury, was passed
Frye's resolution of January 5,
| against wornl or physical in
| Hawail pending the conclusion of the inves
| tigation in the Senate, was discussed by Mr,
{ Davis, of Minnesota
2ixp Day. ~The Beoste was
| with two speeches op the sub ject of Hawall
The first was Ly Mr. Davis in continuation
{ of that whieh he had commenced yesterday,
and the sec by Mr. Turple. Nir,
| nrgued that the appointment of Br.
| os commissioner to Hawali
i viee and consent of the
{| dential invasion of the privilege ol
I ute.
Mr.
entertaloed
nd
Senate was n
he Beg.
Dax The
{ threo hours, but
passed with open dot
! the time being given 10
executive tn
nominations were
being Director
; dian Agent W
i sion no ©
Ak®D uj
senate
only
was ib
an boar
ZURD
hail
rm, the
the considera
Wis
tion
jsiness, and a inrge nu
jad, KRMOnE
» Mint Preston
During the
any Hnporia
them
id In.
onflrn
atten,
Binney
BEG, 3
intters, the }
rH ray
igh 1
niorest and
§, —
hr AY & noss)
exritement speache
nd ng §¥ +
L * , ge Tr
i Bgal 4 $00 iar
1
358 &%Y0
6 iurn BIE sissies Tre
partisans of h i ys on the floor
gaillerie ; ison opened the
fhe speech
Mr. Bur.
spirited
snd in The
is
Iny &
whieh
iebate
he
f Mi
{ speech agninst the | sppia
{ to the echo, as Mr. Wi been
| other two speeches of the day's sess
made by Mr. Black, of lilinois, for, and Mr.
! Hopkins, of fillnos, against the bill,
Speeches Wore n ade at the evening session
i Hi Hawaiian
nection with a report
of the Naval Absire
offered by Mr
ary
the pw
yesterday,
jowed with a
and was
son had
nag
The
Has
the
in
uy
intr Day the
patter came in con
inde by the Chairman
ommittes on a resolution
utelle, ealling the Secre
! Navy for any iaformation in
{ of the Dep relative to
| matter. The com amended the
lution by
i March 4,
ae
on
rime
mitten
Hing for information
instead of 1883, The discus
{| sion gave two litt ne with Mr.
| Tracey, of New York, and the ¢ the r with Mr.
| MoMiilin, of Tenn alter which the
House went into co {f the whole i
! consider the Tariff Mr. His
Tennesse in the
TER.
a from
Ri
ris £ © ils,
a
mitlee ¢
i, with
ohair
artlt deb
the sp
Day. The nie
in the He
Breckinridge, Richar
Doill Harter &
also an even!
i 22ND
i tinued
i Mowers,
{ Springer,
here wan
ne Day i
Wise oOD
ing
is Iviogiey
3d Bros)
ny session
ver
us
be Hogee entry ved I~
i self into « ities of the whole
| Richardson in the chair. Mr
| cluded the speech be was
: a recess on Thursday
in turn by Representatives
. Pens 4 sion, Payne, Simpson,
well und Meisleiohn,
res
Me sh
i Danie ie,
| DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES
diteh at Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Jacor Krinoy, of Tuscumbia, Alabama,
| went to bed drunk with a pipe in his mouth,
He and two of his children were burned to
death,
Two miners, named Peter Leavitz and
John Zinka, both Polanders, were killed
in the Twin Shaft, at Pittston, Fa., by a fall
of conl and rock.
Florence Mullaly, aged 21 years; Meriz
Moore, aged 60, and Florence Deegan, 2'¢
years, were suffocated by smoke from a fire
in their house in New York City.
Tuos. Garoo, aged 20 years was willedand
two other workmen were injured by an ex-
plosion in the works of the New York Oxygen
Company in New York City.
A Prexsyivaxia conl train and a Lebigh
Valley passenger train were in collision on
the Mahony Division of the latter road be-
tween Buck Mountain and Delano. Both en-
gineers were seriously injured.
Aworkman ina quarry in the Roxbury
distriet, Boston, fell while enrrying a keg of
forcite. An explosion followed and Thomas
Black, Patrick Huse and Thomas Hardeman
were killed, and Cornelius Leary was proba
bly fatally injured. Two other men were
injured, though less seriously.
By a rear-end collision between a Rock Ise
land freight train and a mixed train on the
Union Pacifie, at Linkwood, Kansas, two
men were killed and elevon injured-<two of
them fatally. Two stockmen are missing,
aud it is feared they were burned inthe
wreck. One of the men known to be dead,
J, H. Atwood, the conductor, Jost his life in
the effort to warn the other men on thetrain
of thelr peril
simi —————————
OVER 500 PRISONERS,
Fifig=Two of Them in Chicago's Jail
Are Charged With Murder.
Fifty-two prisoners are now in the Cook
County jail charged with murder. Besides
this large number of men who are to be tried
Jon thes Hues, UYeE G06 ouhute prisoners are
WHITECITY ABLAZE
Three World's Fair Buildings
Now in Ruins,
THE WORK OF TWO TRAMPS
Fromthe Casino the Fire Rushes
Along the Peristyle, the Gigantic
Statues Tumbling One by
One into the Waters of
Lake Michigan.
from
A despatch
started in the Casino,
Chicazo, says: Fire
the great Hestaurant
t the water entrance of the World's
5.40
building n
Fair g
P.M.
A park policeman saw a glow of lig
rrounds, io Jackson Park, about
shit in a
second story window of the Casino Building.
He ran to
71, which bas the fireboat Fire Queen, and is
locsted but a short distanes from the
Bef
urniog structure
the house of engine company NO.
asino,
the
bisziog
re n lead of bose was earried to
the Casino was a
Every nook and corner seemed 10 be
turned on,
the roof to a distance of thirty feet
west end fell, and from the pace thus o
the ot up to the
The flames spread rapidly
ablaze, and belore a strenn was
from the
pened
flames st! BLY.
and soon had
nthe Co
completed the work of destruction
fiding. It was but ashort leap for
the fiames to the n Perisiyle
the row of jolt
tig the water cotrance to
agnif Aan
mus and statuary fos Ln.
the World's Fair
smu alter
coi
grounds was column,
made of “stall
appearance «
1, but baving the
xii before ti
the «
lestroyed Lrou
ing lew
iiding
aiding
m ibe u
from the n
within
Hall, 4
hie
Hae
one hundred
of the biazing usic crowd
the destruction
1,575.00), but
that this
watched
in pi
for believing
igh
said of the estimate on the goods in
The and Music
2il burned to the ground
stood and
The total joss aced at
reason esti
and that the same may be
the cases,
Casino, Peristyle Hall were
THE PUILDISGR BURSED
the music hall and Ca-
was the most
‘orid’s Falr visitor
lake Michi-
The Peristyle, with
s 51 either end, fm posing
as he
¢
Ars irom
ana forming the walter gate
s senire
to the grand court of honor was the Colum
surmounted by French & Polter's
“Tri
Lus portie
3, representing the
[ Columbus
si O04
: 1wo
ue in
$
a Bon ¥ | ne
eroie figure it
At b
four horses each
aw
chariot drawn by
which wero led by
ibe seuipture was
f the most O15)
mah.
called by eminent critics
ginal and
siptured
Hone one < the
most
modern times”
Musie Hall,
delightful sc noeptions of
was 20 feet long by 100 wide,
rebestra of 300,
It was richly decorated lo white and gold,
was three stories bigh, sad itsstyie of archi
tecture was Roman renaissance,
The Casino was 250 Jeet long by 120
wide and three stories high, During the life
of the Fair it was fitted up on a grand scale
foot
lie Comiort
taurant with a seating capacity of 1500. The
third floor contained a gentlemen's cafe and
the kitchen.
IMPORTANT NOMINATIONS
A Big Batch of Them Sent to the
Senate for Confirmation,
The President sent to the Senate a large
patel of nominations for offices in the var
fous departments, including United States
marshals, United States attorneys, receivers
of public moneys, collectors of customs, sur-
veyors, appraisers and postmasters. Among
the more important nominations, were the
following :
John M. B. Sill, of Michigan, minister
resident and consul general of the United
States to Corea,
Albert A. Wilson, United States marshal
for the District of Columbia.
Samuel A. Merritt, chief justices of the
Supreme Court of Utah.
A. G, Curtin Bierer, of Oklahoma, asso-
ciate justice of the Supreme Court of Okla-
homa.
Collector of Customs Wesley G. Andrews,
Petersburg, Va
Lieut. Col Amos Stickney, Corps of En-
gineers to be member of the Mississippi
Riv: r Commission.
Maj. Charles J. Allen, Corps of Engineers,
member of the Missouri River Commission.
Rev. James Wilson Hillman, of New York,
10 be chaplain.
Henry J. Reilly, Filth
Artillery, to be capiair,
Lieutenant Oscar J. Straub, First Artillery,
Second Lieutenant Lawrence FH. Moses,
United States Marine Corps, to bo first lieu:
tenant.
Lieutenant (Juntor grade) James HM, Glen:
TWO MEN HANGED.
Ben Hill and Daniel Gilchrist Both
Colored, Execuied for Murder,
There were two legal executions in North
Carolina, Friday, The first was at Ply-
mouth, snd the victim of the gallows was
Ben Hill, evlored, who murdered James
Andrews last summer. This execution was
it. The drop fell at nooa sharp, and Hill's
peck was instantly broken, He spoke to no
one save Bheriff Levi Blount, whom he bade
farewell,
At Rockingham, Daniel Glichrist, colored,
murder
his father-in-law,
used was bulit for
Tony Rogers last year, but
the execution of
tion. Gillehrist’s crime was disbolieal,
In bis band was an nxe,
them to give up their ‘possum hunt and go
i him, telling them he
In ou little while McKay
came along the path, Glichrist
and gave him a crushing blow on the head,
and siruek
smashing the skull to
erer and the heartless
it,
before day,
under a log.
felled him, him twice
The
men with him
but Gilchrist and Pearsall returned
dragged the body off and bid it
After two days p
pieces,
assed
nd shiptut |
and Gilehrist led this
He
the house of
to {asten sus
t Eli proved bis innocence
and then Gilehrist began
His wile
He was
sud
was first to flad blood spots at
Ell Andrews anc
picion on
i endeavored
him. bu
to be sus.
pected, gave the fret intimation
{
oO
his guilt, arrested (en days after the
murder, inst September was tried and
i, the chief witness
Penis:
mupreine
vf air
01 against
him belog McRhay 8 sons and
christ appealed 10 the
afirmed judgment and Govern
the death warrant,
nessed the exe
statement in whict
that thi
us and that the
bim and
bo fic
ted the
Lim =»
Gilchrist wus a moan a
and had i
jail. He
dle, Gilliehrist
the last,
the physicians
CABLE § SPARKS,
Muon suffering bas
Rome by
weather pow prev ailing
Admiral Da Gama has
been caused
the extremely
there,
the poor of cold
manifesto
an-
ed a
iseq
intended to counteract the monarchist mw
flesto Issued by him a month ago.
ratified the
loumanian-German commercial greatly al.
by the German Belchstag.
Prime Minister Crispi has issued a cireu-
lar to prelects of provinces urging
Freuch
Tux Roumanian Bepate has
in Italy
them to prevent the hoiding of aati
meetings
ernment ever the situation in Sicily, ana
on the island.
increase the
by redu
using siuminum whe
Tux result of
French police in search of
considered satisfactory,
marching streugth of
welght ol ac
its s0l-
outro.
rever possible,
diers ‘a
ing the
ments,
anarchists is not
No exple
found and most of the persons arrested were
Tex commanders of foreign vessels now
at Rio Janeiro have addressed
cation to Admiral Da Gama requesting bim
vot to bombard the city unless beis frst at-
tacked by the Government forces on shore.
Tux Duchess Mariborough,
of New York, bas
for twenty-one year® the Deepdeene
Hope, at Dorking, in
London.
of
Surrey,
of The
A rerimios signed by a
the trans-Atlantic trade was presented to
Gladstone urging that Great Britian
WORK AND WORKERS.
Tax Greenwood Cotton Company, Winsted,
Conn., employing 1,700 hands, has shut
down indefinitely.
Tux Camden (N.J.) Iron Works started
up, after an idleness of several weeks The
mtablishment employs 1,500 hands.
Tur weavers, both male and female, in the
employ of BR. & H. Adams, Paterson, N. ¥.,
went on & strike against a reduction of 50
sents a week,
Ary danger of a strike on the Ohio River
Railroad is now considered to be at an end,
the men having acoepted the reduction on
the adviee of Chiefs Arthur and Sargent,
Tux Western Automatic Machine Berew
Company, of Eiyria, Ohio, sre running
twenty-four bours a day. A large influx of
bleyecle work is the cause of the rush,
Tue Ensign Car Works, at Huntington, W.
Va, announces that they will resume work at
onoe, after an idleness of over seven monthe,
The works employ between 1,200 and 1,600
hands.
Tux Columbus, Hocking Valley and Tolede
Rallway has announced a 10 per cent. re
duction in the wages of all employes recely-
Ing more than $50 a month, to go into effect
January 15. The men will not strike,
ATux Cleveland (0.) street raliway lines
pxnounced a out of from 10 to 30 per cent. in
the salaries of officers and wages of shop
men receiving mote than $1.50 per day.
The reason given is a falling off in receipis
on all lines of $25,000 per month,
Aout one-half the coal mines in the Bel.
PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS,
Epitome of News Gleaned from Various
Parts of the Btate
Bovowmos Unperauer was lodged fn jail at
Harrisburg, charged with inhudgnly
treating his wite that she died,
Bamorr Waren and Fzra Baker Were
killed by a fall of siate in a lime quarry near
Bomerset,
Puoresson BR.
at New Castle, charged with attempting to
murder Alda and Maggie Robinson,
80
Corvecron Fuipay reports that the inter.
nal revenue collecticns for the Ninth Dis
trict of Pennsylvania anmounted to $1.6 5 -
084.06 for the past year, a decrease of $285 -
873.28 as compared with 1892,
Tue Reading & Bouthwesterns Electric
Ballway will be extended to Adamstown.
Jena Livisosros at Laseaster® dismissed
all objections to the auditor's report on the
ale Thaddeus Bleveps' estate,
Cona Dowmay, a woman abowm
suicide
try taking
aid saved her,
young
22 years of attempted
sage,
near Stewart's Station,
Prompt medi al
morning she procured
her ame,
Next
shot herself in the
fi revolver ar
breast, aud it
now that she will die
by her Ic
Twn
she
had been jiited
wer,
Poles and a Hungarian, names un.
in
antly killed,
east track, and
were
Known, were rus down by
tunnel at Greensburg and just
They were walking on the
train the
ing aside for a
i2 pa
poor farm
fredpbt sirock by
ssenger., The bo
for
of them was
lies were taken ic
burial, The only thing
Lid s Hungarisy
Bible,
CEAZED the
his son and himself at 8 m
Med found mu
grip John Thomas killed
it Grove.
wy
OY Was rdered near
RAMU
Peose's Mills and bis waliel ay empty
side him,
A New do
9 000 ne
syndicate has secured oor
af Ohio
BE
cannel and b
itsburg railroad
trol of Tes
tneco Growers
vit out soainat tb
protest against the
od and anoths
bridge nes
ded 4
nt agai
Ore On
» mecordingly
.
je Lutheran
the majority
belongs,
al fight in Cherrvil
obably result in
J. W, Reitz
{lentown Conference
eh lew.
withdrawing {rom the A
ws which the pastor has been suspended,
and uniting with Emmanuel Conference, an
independent body. The minority wili or
ganize and build a new church. Petersville
congregation, which is associated with the
Cherryville charge, will probably remsis
, yw Conference,
Tux will of Charies J. W admitted to
Lancaster, surviving
ve the interest of bis estate during iife
nd then bequeaths it entireto the city of Lan-
caster in trust for the purpose of buying® tal
for the poor of the ¢ ty. The estate f+ about
Lancaster city at present has a coal
fund of over £20,000, bequeat hed by ex-Presi-
nes Buchasan, General James Rey-
poids and Patrick MaEvoy.
A COMMITTER tom the
of the Wyoming Division
fe
loyal to the Allenty
hite,
ate at gives a
proba
reiatl
(30,
of the 1. ehigh Vai-
submitted grievanoes
to Superintendent Mitchell, but he stated he
was powerless
wl
ley Raliroad Company.
fo act, and the
President Wi
ael Foreman was seri
com iaints
i be ber,
Mick vusly wounded
at Wilkes-Barre while preventing the elope
young miner and a married
presse pled to
womag,
AT a conference of window glass manufac.
it was decided to
plants indefluitely on February 10,
Robert Price, a miner in the No. 8 slope of
Pittston Coal Company, Wilkes-Barre,
euflered a horrible death, He was walking
up the siope 10 the head when four ears, be
ing towered, broke away from the rope and
dashed down upon him. He heard them
coming, but could not escape them, although
close
the
could, and was caught by the fiying cars and
wae alive when exivicated from the
Harry L. Mitchell, of Harrisburg, a brake
of the Dennsylvania Railroad, was
fouad lying along the track at the Mount.
vilie bridge dead. He i believed (0 have
been struck Ly an abutment of the bridge
and buried to the track, death being in-
stantaneous,
Michael Chery, of Springfield, was io
stantly killed by a fail of coal while working
at Big Mouutain Colliery, and William
Crengler sustained fatal injuries by a fall 0
eoal at the Bernside Mine,
UNCLE SAM RESPONSIBLE.
It Is Supported That Restitution Will
Bs Made to Forsigners by Cingress.
Members of Congress are confidently look
ing at an early day for ademand from foreign
governments for restitution for any losses
by the fire at the World's Fair buildings
The were brought to Chicago in respon se 10
an invitation from our Government and our,
Government will be held responsible for
losses rosulting from lack of care onthe part
of the Fair nuthorition, After the New Ore
leans exposition several years ago Cong
passed » bill appropriating a conside
wum of money to repay forelen ‘exhibitors
for losses caused by no fault of thelrown. It
¥