THE NEWS Michael Vacquiraila fatally Marie Penzille in Cleveland, —e—An explosion pecurred at Somerford’s saw mill at Nava sota, Tex. The dead are: Jim Winzers, Ben Johnson, William Henry; Ned Johuson was fataily scalded while Frank Somerford, M, Henry and Ned Henry were seriously hurt The explosion was caused by the water In the boiler getting to low. Johu Webraska farmer, set fire to straw about him, and then shot himself. At Montpelier, Idaho, three masked men held up the bank officials and stole $10,000, The and drug store of D, W, Bonueli at Hubbard six miles north of Youngstown, ()., was glarized. The thieves secured §400 in elry and medals by Bonnell, a bieyele rider, the perpetrators Alice Varney Ellsworth were killed Vt. Kozak, residence bur naw WW. Ww There is no clue t and Ma cros-ing In 8 won his son, at a Johusbury, George quarry near Berea, O, ten and George and Isaac Ferguson, aged eight years respectively, were drowned while wading in the swift Wallkill River at Mid dietown, N. J. Their father was swim and saw both of them drown, the bodies was recovered, Four men unable to were suffocated by sulphuric acid gas while work at the chemical wi yn the of Camden, N. Wagner frota the effec and poisoned rss her husband himself, men at Sandusky, ed and another probably collision between two Trunk freight Fifty Hungarians, empl stick & Sons, pr Montville, N. J.. tion | The what money was due them, return. ——The management of Bros. Pulp Mill, of Pledmor Ya , notified the men of & cut in wages from $1.40 to $1.20 per day. work and the plant will probably be compell- train at prietors « meg and n their wages, Davis, have quit The men ed to close, Harry Allen Fielder and V, Joss (al, Eleven perso: turning of Illinois drowned trolley Of Railway in ple struck the house of ( Lancaster, Pa , | and injured f ville, W, Va , tearing dos one end of the | Sanu Franoisco, Kanawha near Whee with a party of friend Coal and Iron Compan: ing business in Belmon gone into the Irving Marks, the charge of that he was impli mond robbery prisoned in a Ii — dence, R. I, Rabber with Kirkhait uanus ashore a] : go. Ind. b Coal an Col $950 000, Freehlil, murder in the se ity, E ut Barber, Dlamons ch Company, closed a bi tract w [ Austria, The operators ant W Lynn, Mass, went out on a sympathe ptrike, ——Herbert Wii Btaunton, Mass, on ing Fred M. Strange, Morse, of New Haven, has & charge of Mullen, of Crip; ly suspended by the Dus ot a wife murderer, was hanged Utah. made war on ery oreaker at was de A iramp, and eso © Ayn abeth, ras was Arrests sndiarian e Creek, ha ity €« itrages committe Charles Thiede, at Sait Lake, 1 elle ~ bp . In Polk « inly, r¥., the whites inh any w the colored Three TOTS, and Foot of the latter were killed ae Alfred] Utiea, NK. Y., having monds from M CL Evansville, Va, it is Edward s Martha Sua Charles De Hart was assassin ers George eution in died in jail. Pittston, I Se WORK AND WORKERS. The Midland Steel Works and the Indians Iron Works, in Muneie, Ind., resumed oper. ations with nearly 500 hands in each mill The American Foundry Company plant at Granite City, Missouri, was closed owing to lack of orders. About 400 work men are thrown out of employment, The striking tatlors in New York now have sixty-eight co Stoel operative shops in operation Twelve hundred hands are ewploved., It stated that 245 contractors have signed the Brotherhood agreemen.t The Miners’ Convention, in session in Co- lumbus, O., has ordered all mines which are operated on the lease or contract system, in which the wages paid are below the seale agreement, closed on Auguat 20, The strike or lock-out at the Brown Hoist ing Works, in Cleveland, Ohio, is practically at an end. Of the 800 men who went oat on strike 500 are now engaged in other employ. ment. The Brown Co. has 385 men at work, and have refused twenty-five applicants for employment. The Snead & Co. Tron Works in Loulsville Ky., employing 200 men, have given notice of a ten per cent, reduction in wages, owing to the depressed condition of business, re sulting from the agitation of the money ques tion The announcement is made that wages wiil no doubt be restored should the gold standard trinmph, i RI 555k The noted Greek scholar, Professor T. 1. Timayenis, who holds the chair of that lan guage at Harvard University, is big and broadshouldered, dark as to hair and eyes, and wears a short, stubby blask beard, i stration in Madison Square Garden, N.Y. Coinage Was the Leading Toplc of the Evening's Speeches —~Nebraska Orater’'s Ordeal ~~ Although He Captured His Audi ence by HisElo Hoarse, quence, Neither heat nor humidity could dampen New York, and Garden, witness the notification of Bryan as standard-bearers, [hey wanted to see the young orator who the § West, and to see him when gauntiet in the lair o the and she received an « Mrs the first of party or the vast hall, it it from Bryan was was nothing to the roar 20,000 throats when tt 1 DIA -shaven n atform , Groverno of the we are i F byt rel mindfel of the importance stro in which ying for success upon the rightecuane we shall defend with all possibile vigor positions taken by our party. We surprised that some of our opponents, in the absence of better argument, resort to abas ive epithets, but they may reat assured that aa of our cause, ihe & nose are no language, however violent, no invectives, however vehement, iead us to depart a single hair's breadth from the course marked out by the national convention. The citizen, either pubile private, who nassails character and the patriotism of the delegates assembled in the Chicago ron- vention assalls the character and questions the patriotism of the millicus who have ar- raved themselves under the banner ralsed, will the or questions there The Chicago Platform, It has been charged by men staan Jing hgh in business and political circles that our plattora is a menace to private security and public safety, and it has been asserted that those whom 1 have the honor for the time being to represent not only meditate an at. tack up the rights of property, but are the foes of social order and moral honor Those who stand upon the Chieago plat. form are prepared to make known aod to defend every motive which inficences them every purpose which asnimates them and every hope which inspires them. They un. derstand the genins of our institutions, they ars staunch supporters of the form of gov ernment under which we live and they build their faith upon foundations laid by the fathers. Rights and Common People, that property rights, as ure snfe ln the hands Abraham Congress In Property I assert well na the rights of pursons, of the common people, Lincoln, in his message sont to Deewin- ber, 1861, said “No men living trusted than those who toll up from poverty nugut I vs approval are more worthy to be none less inclined to take or touch which they have not honestly earned.” pent his language with unqualified and join with him in the added, namely: ‘Let rendering a political warning which he them beware of sur power which they al ready possess, and which power, if surren. dered, will surely be used to close the doors of advancement against such as they, and to fix new disabilities and burdens upon them til} all of Hberty shall be Jost As to Government Favoritism We Agninst us arrayed of rend are not surprised to find those who are the beaeficiaries } government favoritism. They have our platform. Nor are we surprised to learn that tility of tage in advoe we must in this campaign face the hos find a doctrine those wh Ati ferences when great vation are trespassing upon the rights « We wel Us iighest ome Tax Not wit! i New, ne-inx are in 1 We may ex avils 8 gold efalliam as a system. are bending their ther hand, they toward the permasent establish. ydard under o ver of a ieclaration in favor of international bimet- alilam, I am justified in suggesting that hon eat money cannot be expected at the hands of thoee who deal dishonestly with the Amer enn propia, Monometallism and Bimetallism. It cannot be successfully claimed that mopometallism or bimetaliism, or any other system, gives an absolutely just standard of vane, Under both monometailism and bi- metaliism the government fixes the weight and of the dollar, invests it with lgal-tender qualities apd then opens the mints to its unrestricted coinage, leaving the purchesing pSwer of the dollar to be deter. mined by the number of doliacs. Bimetailism is Letter than moaometallism, not beoauss it gives us a perfect dollar-—that is, a dollar ab sojutely unvaryisg in its general purchasing power but because i makes a nearer ap proach to stability, to honesty, to justice than a gold standard possibly can. Demonetization of Silver. Our opponents sometimes admit that it was a mistake to demonetize sliver, but ina'st that we should submit to present conditions rather than return to the bimetallic system. They err in supposing that we have reached the end of the evil results of a gold standard we have not reached the end. The injury is a contisuing one, and no person can say how long the world Is to suffer from the at- tempt to makes gold the only stundard money, The same Influences which are now operating to destroy silver in the United States, will, If successful here, be turned against other sliver-using countries, and cach new convert to the gold standard will finenena add to the general distress, Bo long as the sernmble for gold continues prices must full, and a gepural fall in prices Is Lut another dellnition of hard times, Our opponents distoterostednoss for the while claiming entire themsaives, have appeniod to peillshness of nearly every class of soclety, Recogulz- fog the disposition of the individual voter to the Ingislution upon to the policy form, consider effect of any proposed himsels, we present the the Chie bellaving that it will financial pint result American people outilned In neo in to the the greatest good greatest number, 1 he farmers are of because they have yosed to the gold standard I felt its effects. Bince they sell at wholesale and buy at retall they have gained thi they xed charges have not lost more than they have besides by falling prices, and, have found that certain fl fallen at ull Taxes have not been perceptibly de. creased, although it re julres mi 1 wylucts now than formerly to ney with which to pay taxes, piard. To the Citizens of New York. x ing ler ing % n i rats more rent ® a Pr vor-ahad owing w, made 5 vailin yaition preva the demand fi our existing moneiary system. Our party, and, we belisve, 4 greal major ity of the American people are convinced that the legislation of "73 demonetizing silver was a wrong inflicted our country which should and must be righted. We believe that the single gold standard has so parrowad the base of our monetary girticture that it is unstable and unsafe; and so dwarfed it, in its development and in ia power to furnish the necessary financial blood to the nation, that commercial and in- dustrial paralysis has followed We believe that we need, and must have, the broad and expanding foundation of both goldfand silver to support a monelary sys- tem strong and staple, capable of meeting the demands of a growing country and an industrious, energetic and enterprising peo- ple, a system that will not be weakened acd panicatricken by every foreign draft upon us; a system that will maintain a parity of just values and the nation’s money and pro- tect us from the frequent fluctuations of to- day, 80 disastrous to every business and in- dustry of the land We demand the free colnage of silver, the opening of our mints to both money metals without discrimination, the return to the money of our fathers, the money of the con- stitution--gold silver, The demonetization of silver has thrown the whole primary money function on gold, appreciating ita value and purchasing pow- or. Restore the money function to silver and silver will appreciate and its purchasing power increase, We shall then have a broad and uailmited foundation for a monetary system, rommen- surate with our country’s needs and future development, not the unsafe basis of today upon meet ans reduced by hall by the removal of sliver and continually undermined by foreigners earry- lug from us our gold This is the reform to which we nre pledged, the reform the people demand, the retura to the monetery system of over elghty years of our national existence, Mr, Chelrman, unequivocally and through sincere convietion, I indorse the platiorm on which I have been nominated, I accept the nomination, aud with the pec ple’'s confirmation, every effort of which God shall render me eapable, will be exerted in support of the principles involved iran aI TRIED TO HOLD UP THE BAKKE. my ” ihe Paying Te An ineffectual up the payis that ba Arkansas in oy 4 Northern oxXas have seriously i by hot winds in pv Southern portions of Missouri ing from Nebraska, and 11 drought. Generali bas not made fay ut in the great corn Slates and Northwest, the most favor able ennditions, The general condition of tobacco is prom ising, although ripesing too rapidly in por- tions of Kentucky and Tennessee, The crop ts much in advance of the season, and cut. ting Is now in progress in Ohio, Pennsylvania and New England, Considerable plowing for Fall seeding haa been done, but the extremely warm weather has interrupted this work. DEATH OF LADY TENNYSON. The Widow of the Great Poet Passes Away st Hor Bome in Boglazd Lady Emily Teanyson, widow of the late ford Allred Tennyson, the poet, died at her residence, at Aldworth, London, from con ostion of the lungs. Lady Tennyson was the daughter of Henry Bellwood, of Berkshire, and was a niece of Rir John Franklin. She was married to Al fred Tennyson June 13, 1850, and her life with the poet was even and happy, although she herssif deveioped no activity in litera ture. Her older son, Hallam, Is now Lord Tennyson, hating succesded to the Vitie at his father's death, October 6, 1802 Lady Teanyson has lived In retirement since ber widowhood, chiefly at the old Surrey home of her husband, The other home of the Ten nysons is Farsing: ord, at Freshwater, Isle of Wight, THREE VERDICTS, Findings by the Coroner's Jury in Atlantic City Disaster. ENGINEER FARR BLAMED. Hauser and Engineer Also The Entire Jury Unable Towerman Creiner Coneured to Agrees ona Direct Finding A despatch from Atlantie City Coroner McLaughlin's inqus {eadow disaster was practi taking of the The Verdicts roner. r¢ will thelr services, the [ree-bed wae chant ternil a hurricane, argest droit and Detroit River four drowned, ing and ea The i War Bento peo Yan and ther fxtalitios were Harbor. In the known to have been doven miss 5 iF are no jess than & Dail ing. Corsair capsized on Belle Isic, and one of the drowned Harbor Mader Mellen, who was searching for a body, was imprisoned in the cabin of a yacht which was overturned by the gale and bad a narrow escape from death. A boat containing three people was swamped by the high waves off Windmill Point, and only one escaped. At Boston Harbor, four men were drowned while atiempting to swim ashore, and all up slong the coast line mre reports of casualties on the walter, apd the number of deaths wili pass twenty The property damaged by the four storms, the last of which occurred late in the after noon, will be over a quarter of a million. At fonia, the big ear shops of the Detroit Lansing & Northern were blown down and £50.00) damage resulted. The freight house of the same company was set on fire by Hghtoing and burned to the grouad, while the roof of the big Halwerstump! brewery Was blown off, easing a loss of §508 At Sag- foaw and vielnity the storm broke in full fury at 2 o'clock a m., with the wind aver- aging fifty miles an hour. Towers were blown off churches, small bulldings blown down, electric light towers rendersd useless, and the big Palmerton wooden ware {actory was demolished. The loss in Detroit alone will approximate 100,000. Reports from tho various small towns through the State ghow great losses, Miles of telegraph wire and poles are fat. Barns and farm houses have been blown down and several people strack by lightning, The yacht Crew Was