————————————————————————————————"" aA. The war cloud in Europe Is darkening : aac Big railway companies are now the order of the day. or po ee Mr. Gladstone is confident that the Church of England will be disestab- Eiliea. The Atlanta Constitution declares that the greatest men this country has pro- duced had the advantage of starting poor. Fred Douglass, the United States | Minister to the Haytian Republic, says that the people of Hayti are black French. | men. { Chow Fa England is profiting to the amount of $300,000,000 annually by the decline in the price of food products. The people of England are said to be very enthusiastic over the marriage of the | Prince of Wales's oldest daughter to an | Englishman. An English Admiral contends that the big guns of over thirty tons are prac- i tically useless in action. Twenty rounds | will finish them. 1" ai The firms who have been doing busi- mess in Philadelphia for 100 years and over have organized an association called | the Centenary Firms of Philadelphia. The duck is to China what the codfish | ds to the rest of the world. They eat duck raw, cooked, boiled, fried, baked mnd every other way, and they worry over the duck crop the same as we de over wheat, A census of horses is being taken in Paris in order to give the authorities some idea of the animals available for ‘military purposes should need arise. Ad $e last census Paris contained 98,080 orses and S38 mules. 3 Missouri is down on trusts, according | to the New York Voice. passed making every agreement or under- | standing to fix prices or restrict produc. gion a conspimcy punishable by heavy fines and forfeiture of franchises. A law has been R. P. McGregor, of Ohio, the deat mute orator who made the address at the mnveiling of the Gallaudet statue ‘Washington, was accompanied at by so geader, and the effect of this simuitane- jous delivery was extremely striking. The senior class, graduated from Har. jvard University this year, numbered 217 members. tof Veterinary Doctors of show a great gain in the number of grad. Five men were made Doctors and seventeen These figures Medicine Dentistry. juates in these departments. : : Noiseless powder is said to be finding favor with military authorities abroad. That will tend to make war much more generally popular, observes the Washing: “on Star, for raw soldiers report that, | mext to being killed by a gun, the most idisagreeable thing is to be frightened to ideath by the noise, John K. Moore claims half of the city | of San Francisco, or $300,000,000, “No | jmatter how just his claim may be,” as merts the Atlanta Constitution, ‘‘he will | mever get what he sues for. Defendants in possession of $800,000,000 worth of | property can keep the plaintiff out until Joomsday. Money talks.” 4 ’ During the Arthur and Cleveland ad- | aninistrations the room in the White | House where Garfield spent long days of agony before he was carried to Elberon | twas kept closed and unoccupied. The demands of the present and enlarged Presidential household have, however, brought the apartment into use again, ! Bays the New York Commercial Adver- jtiser: **The admission of colored men to jthe jury in the McDow murder trial at Charleston, 8. C., is a fact worthy of note. As a rule, colored prisoners pre fer to be tried by white juries, but jt is wery unusual for a white man to allow Blacks to sit as his judges without a chal. lenge or protest.” eye hf a Strange to say, there are but two pure Jy amateur athletic field sports which have become popular in this country. "They are lacrosse and tennis. The first, Bays the Kansas City Times: ‘Minis. ter Child sends us from Siam a copy of the Bangkok 7%mes, in which a graceful compliment is paid to Postmaster-General Somdetch Phra Cow Nong Ya Thoe Bhanurangsi Swangwongse Krome Phra Bhanubhandhawongse Vara- dej. We renew assurances of esteem to Som and hope he may live as long as his name." From the Bureau of Labor Statistics of Ilinois we learn that the mortgage in- debtedness of Illinois farmers for bor- rowed money has increased twenty-three per cent, since 1880, and that this is | " : . . 2 . | property. and raining the crops for many more than twice the ratio of increase in { property ! y | miles, the value of farm lands upon which the In 1870 the total of mortgages rest, | mortgages on farm lands was 805,721,000; in 1880 it £103,565,287, and in 1888 it was $123,783,008, wns Goodall's Sun asserts that ‘‘Northern jronworkers dare not place prices up for | i logs, | several fleets, | with | below: Keever & Co. Jost four barges of coal; | Miller three rafts and 2000 ties: Taylor one iron without consulting the iron men of the South. The lumbermen Michigan and Wisconsin cannot advance prices of lumber without taking into account the movements and opinions of the lumber | operators in Arkansas, Mississippi and Georgia. There is a centralizing process on one hand and a decentralizing process on the other. No one centre exercises the same controling influence that it did a few years ago.” Mr. William Walter Phelps, one of the recent American commissioners to the Samoan conference in Berlin, has con- firmed the report that the proceedings of that « conducted in the onference were although heretofore all English tongue, important matters of the sort have been the the medium of the the Mr. further says that the treaty itself through Aran oe Arranged French speech, which is accepted Phelps writs language of diplomacy. is hence- ten in English. He believes that forth English, lostead of French, will be the language of diplomacy. From the Louisville Courier-Journal it is learned that Colonel Jesse E, Peyton, of | Haddonfield, N. J., is the veteran pro- moter and founder of all the patriotic | efforts to commemorate the noted events itutionsal Gov- Colonel Peyton conceived the great Cs ntennial at *hiladelphia in 1876, the the Bunker Hill Centennial of 1875, the Yorktown Centennial at Yorktown, Va. in 1881, and the recent Washington In He erecting is of the first century of Con ernment in the United States, celebration sugurstion Centennial in New York. also fathered the idea of “hiladeiphia a memorial of the fired century of American independence, and is now laboring hard to see that effori s other crowned with the success all hi patriotic moves have attained. Chic AZO Can now take the plac © of Washington as the city of ‘magnificent distances.” By the election held recently f Chica limits of a large number of the suburbs o go voted to be taken into the that city. The 1,100,000 population and an The result gives Chicago area 174 1-4 square miles, suburban i towns to be incorporated with Chicago are Hyde Park, Lake View, Cicero and Jef- ferson. These towns have a population of nearly 200,000 The St. Louis Post-Dispatch comments on the envious matter in this manner: large section of northern Illinois Chicago has increased her area to 170 square miles. | The territory now included within her | corporation limits is twenty-four miles | long on the lake shore and from four to eight and one-half miles wide, and the Agricultural Department will hereafter have to credit Chicago with more farm products and a larger farmer population than any other city in the Union.” a ai iii While two nations, France and Ameri. ca, were striving with each other in bid- | it © A party of em {| ary line from the Bou ding for the “Angelus” of Millet, re. cently sold at auction in Paris, and of fered almost fabulous prices for the paint. ing, the artist's widow was living in ex. treme poverty at Barbizon. The Paris Louvre pays $110,600 for the canvas, more than poor Millet received for all his works, perhaps, and his widow starves while a nation trembles with patriotic ex. ultation over one painting. Of the ‘An. gelus” the Boston Transeript relates the following story: ‘‘A wealthy Bostonian, hearing that such men as Mr, Brimmer and Mr. Shaw were likely to buy many of Millet's pictures, betook himself to the studio at Brabizon, France, and gave the painter an order. ‘The Little Potato Diggers’ was the result, but when the patron came to seo the picture he was disappointed. He had expected some. thing wholly different. The coraposition was novel and did not altogether please him ~~ flat horizon with two figures standing upright in the centre of a rather large can. FURIOUS ELEMENTS. Morristown, W. Va., Destroyed by a Cloudburst, Rain and Thunder Storms Over a Wide Area. A dispatch from Parkersburg, W. Va, mys: The greatest disaster which ever befel Little Kanawha came during the night in the shape of a terrible clondburst which has com- | ries from bank to | worst flood within recollection of the oldest pletely flooded the country, destroying many lives, carrying off thousands of dollars in The deluge fell about dusk and con- tinued to fall in torrents, doing much dam- age in the city. The worst of the storm struck the lower ede of the Kanawha, filling small tributa- bank and ending in the inhabitants In three hours the Kanawha rose six feet, and ran out with such velocity that it carried everything before it, At this point thousands of loge and a all | | Kiger, | and child | Canal, of | “By annexing a number of boats went out or were sunk Little Kanawha Lumber Company lost 2000 West's mill ten rafts, Harringer W. P. Padden flve barges ties, several of which were caught fleet of timber, Charles Wells four barges. In one hour 500 logs went Mrs. Isaac H. Tucker, Martin Lawless and an unknown man were drowned, Above the destruction was still greater, Big Tygart Valley in «x rained, The big mill near its mouth went out and took the Tygart bridge with it. In the val- ley all the fences, croms, and much live stock was lost At Chesterville town about ten miles above | dences were carried off bodily corn fields, In Clay district and three dwellings we The steamer Oneida ha sunk at Enterprise above CC. Martin was sunk ot The Little Tygnrt is a ruined Heastherington's store, Captain Bpencer's residence, C P. Cooper's residence, and that of J. W ith are ox molished The worst story of town, a small village Creek, wheres the 0 trated in ll its fury down in the village about midnd totally destroy. ing it, together with many of its people The first repo t gave the loss at eleven but later news fx loss at a greater num ber. The houses of the citizens wore said to kave been picked up and hurled against each other in such short space of time that no chance escape was given the people Among those lost at Morristown wore Jake his brothers Joseph and Thomas, wife ont impletely “ew mpletaly de- fre m Morrie of Tucker all « near the head dburet CHTON CONOR ~ ithe to aman named Balley, Orville West hild. The body of a man believed to be another Morristown victim was found tichardson Farm, At Pill Brosh all bridges and cylverts were washed away A family boat ining three or four persons went out the night, and all Th of them was when em were lost | a woman held up a child in her arms and beckoned for asdetance as the boat disap- peared in the flood A frefeht train on the Ohio River Railroad broke through a trestle at Harrid's Ferry, mpletely wrecking the train and fatally injuring Wiliam Neptune, an wr ye, The wreck was cansed by a heavy wash-out Lock 1, above the city on the Little Kann wha, has given way before the flood A dispatch from Bismarck, Dakota, says A wild terrorizing scone was witnessed near the Standing Rock Agency late in the allies goon, when a fteryibic thunderstorm was at its height The lightning darting hither and thither, striking in numer. ous spots near by, and the Indians rushed en masse howling and whooping in abject fright and superstition to the shelter of their wig. wane, Al last a blinding fash of lig scoompanied by a deafening thunder, came from the hmaven actually shook the earth The ping struck a wigwam a few rode below the agency in which were huddled five terrifiad Indians, instantly killing White Horse and Black Eagle and stunning another fatally The other two were unconscious for many hours and were restored after bard labor by friends A flerce rainstorm, sccompanied by thus. der and lightning swept over Cincinnati, Ohio, early in the morning. It flooded the Miami ’ which hroke its banks and worked great havoo in the vicinity of York street and Central avenue, causing a loss of about §50,000 Several families were driven from their homes while the blinding storm was raging The firms sustaining the greatest logs are Mate & Co. joedenlers, and Maescher, pork- packer A cloudburst was reported at Lancaster, Ohio, which caused s big washout on the Co. lnmbus, Hocking Valley £ Toledo Railway At Logan, Oto, a heavy rain caused much da wo tocrops Lightning struck a house in the little wil. wns | were THE NEWS EPITOMIZED, Eastern and Middle States, Two Bwedes were killed by 2 locomotive at a crossing in Asbury Park, N, J. Tug diver who examined the foundations of the stone bridge at Johnstown, Peoan., for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, says that the bottom of the Conemaugh River, near the bridge, is full of dead bodies, and that probably hundreds are lying there, one upon another, held down by tons of wire, MicHARL Borax has been banged in the ail at Belvidere, N. J., for the murder of fchael Bollinshire, Tuy large stable of the Lowell Mass.) | Street Railroad, was burned with 120 horses, | sbout thirty cars, four carlonds of hay and | one carloand of straw, #0 bushels of oats, be sides tools and other materials, Loss $200,000, Two running cars collided with a passen- | ger train near Shamokin, Penn. John Roush, | married, and Aaron Shipe, single were killed and seventeen passengers injured A sUupEn of persons have died suddenly | at Path Valley, near Chambersburg, Penn, | napure | through drinking water from an well, News was brought nventor Peter Campbell's airship Americs, which made an ascension and trial trip from | LEO i he with its navigator, Professor Edward | Brooklyn bas been lost far out at sem, Hogan, of Jackson, Mich, South and West, Wine out sailing at Portsmouth, Ohio, William Bickle, Philip Herlst and his son drowned by the capsizing of the | boat, Nean Booneville, 2 railway collision. Both engines were de molished and twenty cars were destroyed, Lows, $40,000 The engagement of Emmons Recretary Blaine and Mis of Chicago, H. McCormick, pounced, She will have a fortu millions or more in her own right Jous Frrzratrick, of New Orlesns, was referee in the Bullivan-Kilrain fight, has surrendered to the Misdeippi suthorities Mr. Rich, owner of the mill where the fight took place, and Mr. Jamison, who hed charge of the guards st the ring side, have been rested. Steps have been taken to sharter of the New Orleans and wn Railroad Mrs Earesnoven and lerad by John Gilman, on b quills City, Oregon. Ti the murderer, whos wanted which they refused fo d pired. Mas. Terry attempted to Balt Lake Utah, with coal loston cocurred, and the burning oll caused the death of herself and a thirteen-year-old daughter A viorxxr wind storm accompanied by nr forfeit the Northeast child were mur is farm near Coe tenants of them 10 leave, until their lease ex- ¢y Were heavy rains swept over portions of Oblo, In- | diana. lows, Kansas, Ilinols, Wisconsin and Texas. The damage to bouses and crops was immense Tox Connon, who murdered Jack Riley, has been hanged at Nashville, Tenn. Con dor was forty-three years cid and bad been a Mormon for years Rosey Darrox, fatally shot in Oklabome, Ran, by Lee West, a desperado, was the third United Btates Deputy Marshal killed within two weeks in that city After ro- ceiving his mortal wound the officer fired at West, killing his instantly Tee United Btates gomboat Petrel turned to Baltimore from ber trial which was very satidfactory to Lieutenant Commander Bainbridge Hoff, who was in charges for the Government Tus Mississippi Democrats have nominated ex Governor J. M. Stone for Governor Joux E. Barron, known as the G Iron King during the Wisconsin mining craze two years ago, has ma io an assignment; liabilities, $825,000 Saees, Rook, lowa, has been tolally stroyed by fire Tur cotton crop in the vicinity of Colum. bus, Tessas has been damaged io the extent of £50,000 hy a freshet along the Colorado River Ar Brewton, Alx. a man named Gaston committed suicide by throwing binself on a circular saw. He wz: cut in Swain Tue Virginia State Prohibition Conven- tion in session at Lynchburg nominated a ticket as follows: For Governor, Thomas E Taylor; Lieutenant-Governor, W, J. Shel. burn; Attorney-General, Judge J. M. Quar los. Te trip, gebio - de Taner farmers have been killed by light | ning at Grand Forks, Dakota Ar Batler, Ind. fire almost entirely de stroyed the extensive our shops of the Kel River Division of the Wabash road. Los 0. Over 100 men are thrown out of Jerrenson Kixo, Albert Doltar and Fred | Beiffle, wore killed and about a dozen injured by a boiler explosion at a planing mill in Chicago. lage of Georgesville, in Franklin County, and | it on fire and burned half the town At Marysville, Ohio, great damage was FIGHTING FAMINE, tiers Living on Rats and Horses, | died. The c ARSENIC was placed in the food of the four children of Joseph Hunter, a planter, living pear Star City, Ark, and three of them have inal and his motive are un- | known, in Columbus, Ohio, owned by the heirs of the | Breyfogle estate, was destroyed by fire, caus Dry, hot winds in portions of the extreme | phers, ete, for subsistence, The crop in the Canadian Northwest will ts at the bound- Country, said they had traveled three hundred miles through a well settled coun on the Canadian side without seeing a fair crop, and sa many settlers are leaving their their cattle to timber ide, Some of the families looked famine stricken had eaten nothing but potatoes and tur. some months, They were afflicted th scurvy and were sacrificing themselves save their cattle, At one ve, north. Turtle Mountain; a family who were travelling killed and were DEATH TRAPS BURNED. Snow Sheds That Cracked Brake men's Skulls Destroyed, Within the past six months six Union Pa- { to rive | country on this | # . i alos of over $200,000, Pakota and Canadian Northwest Set. | ing “ Tus accounts of Auditor Graham, of Leb- to to be £80 000 Tue United States gunboat Petrel, on her | trip off Baltimore, failed | Suvelop fot four hotiry tha 1160 horas plies i second official trial made. and Houth slayer of Captain Daw- Charleston 8. C) Nous to New York city by flot boats that tended strongly to prove that | Mo. 150 head of cattle | belonging to Chicago parties were killed in have the contract. A new test will be | PagsioEnT AND Mus, HARRISOX returned to Washington from Deer Park, Md. Bin Jurian Pauxorvore, British Minister to the United States, vivited the State Dé. artment et Washington and bade adieu to o officials for a season. He has sailed for England, He will return to Washington in October, bringing his family with him, Foreign, A covtston occurred at Grenoble, France, between a passenger train and » goods train on the Paris, Lyons and Mediters ranean Rallrosd. Tesnty persons wen, killed. Ma, Lincorx, the United Btates Minister to England, and his wife and Russell B. Har. rison, son of President Harrison, dined with Queen Victoria at Windsor Palace, Manver Lovez, British Governor of the Bay Islands, in the Bay of Honduras, South America, is dead Tur International opened in Paris, Tux session of the Frensh Parliament was closed in Paris smid some excitement A wom has taken at Voerto del Socialist Congres pasa Agua, State of Nuevo Leon, Mexico, between | a party of thirty smugglers and a force of custom house guards, in which two guards and three muugglers were killed A WATEREPOUT destroyed the Chilapa, State of Guerrero, Mexico town of Tux Chinese Emperor has issued an edict | Srdecing the immediate building of the pro- jected Tung Chow railway, and has ap pointed Marquis Tseng general director of all ralways in China, Euvenor Dox Propo, of Brazil, was fired st as he was leaving the theater in Rio de Janeiro, The shot was fired by a Forty guese, The Emperor was not hit by the bullet, The would-be essessin was immedi ately seized by guards and attendants, Two musunred houses were destroyed by fire st Const inople, Turkey. A mrigy of terror prevails in the little town of Leoben, in Styria, where the whol population is on strike. All the small trades men amd even the clvie fire brigade have made ox 1 with the striking miners, and all commerce and industry are suspended IDIBOn CRUE fix lumbermen were drowned while at. tempting to shoot Roches Rapids, near Of tawa, Canada, with a raft. Tar Manitoba and Northwest wheat croy iz a failure beyond a doubt, The damage is the direct result of drouth, Tox Bundem Bwitzeriand) bas post. ored the time for holding the International Kabor Congress atl Berne anti] next spring. Geseaat Guexrzr, of the Eoglish army, tas assumed command of the Egyptian troops now fighting the Dervishes Tux wheat crop in Hungary is below the average and is in poor condition owing Ww the shrinking of the grain in the ear. The rye crop is poor and the barley crop is very bad Cormisin g condition e vine yards make an excellent showing. Te Manitobs and Canadian northwest wheat crop isa failure, The total yield will be little loss than balf lest year's crop, and the disnster ie so widespread and serious that there are thousands of acres that will not be cutatall, T iamage is the direct resul! of the drought, a | PROMINENT PEOPLE. RD, the composer, is seventy four. gx Vicromia is an enthusiast in gar Govenson Fi roel GeExERAL T Yoars oul # nAXER is a graduate of DHERNAN is sixty-nine Une is ten pines w Predident’s favored amusements Juries Guevy, the French statesnan, is elhlivone Praxce Bravanck’s de away his pipe Mus, Ganrizrd, widow of the President, will spend next winter in Washington wior has again taken Tou Empress Augusta Victoria, of Ger many, has embraced the Catholic faith Tax Emporor of Japan is allowed $2 500,- 000 a your for his household de partasent Araxxr Brisnaxe, in his eightieth year, has just finished an exploring tour in Africa Prorzsson Maraxe, of Amberst College, has been in the service of that institution for thirty years Tux Duchess of Marlborough, accompanied by her husband, is coming 0 America some me this fall Tir best dressed and ‘Lest groomed” man in the British House of Commons is said to be Joseph Chamberlain Sin Spewcen St. Joux, British Minister to Mexico, bas returned to London after an ab. sence of forty-one years Tux Earl of Zetland, the new Viceroy of Ireland, enjoys an income, salary included, of about $375,000 per year. Sin Cranes Russxii, the great English crompexaminer, bas a hard voice, coal-black whiskers and heavy eyebrows, Roperr Hawwzniino, whose death is an- pounced at Gratz, wes fifty-seven years of | age. He was Austria's greatest living poet. Harr of a four-story stone business block ng Tar English Government has granted to the widow of Professor R. A. Proctor a pen- sion of $500 in consideration of his scientific | services. Cravs Seagcxers has already made $30,- 000,000 growing cane sod producing sugar | in Hawii and importing and refining sugar in the United States. Hisava Iwasax: a student of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, is a son of the rich- est man in Japan. He bas gone home to be presented to Mikado. Tax fortune of John Jacob Astor, of New York, the richest man in the country, is now estimated st $I00000000, He is about soventy yours of age sna a widower, Burraro Bing is living in in a suit of ie deal | of it. k— LATER NEWS, ’ Tur New Jersey Prohibitionists have nominated George La Monte for Governor, Tarr children of Mrs. Michael Stein, aged nine, six snd three years, were burned to death by an explosion of kerosene st Lewistown, Penn, Marry Prewen and William Bolle were suffocated in a fermenting tank at a Banta Loma (Cal) winery. m— A Ss Sr —— Arner Burow hes been hanged at Little Valle, Minn, for the murder of Franklin Eich, This Is the first to take place under the new law providing that crimainals shall be executed in the sirictest privacy and that no newspaper men shall be Thirteen persons witness the exer execution present, caution, AxrTa AXD Moa Boogos, maiden sisters, living in Jackson Va. committed suicide by taking arsenic, They left a letter, signed jointly, savisg that there was noth ing in life for old malds, and they were tired They were in good circumstances. County, Tox Sipsox, Deputy Sheriff Morgan and | J. B. Howton were killed near Birmingham, Ala, during a fanily feud Puesipext Haumsox hes sent through the | State Department s despatch to Dom Pedro, | Emperor of Brazil, congratulating him upon kis escape from the assassin's Dullet, Coroxer Wrisnr, the Commissdoner of Labor. ha 1 notice of his appointment on the permanent commission having for its 1 the purposes of cheap habitas received object the earrying the Intern tions for the poor Roswell G. Hoar Mickizan, has written L 7 t Harrison declin out of ational Congress for ‘ongressman from letter to President accept the Consulship i, to which he was ro nt has accepted the proposal that an increased allowance 10 th him to provide for his children, be subwth wel special Prince of Wales, enabling Be por taonys grants who = Oo laughter the has been created title of Marry a Duke by 1} taken the of Fils o Queen, and Duke Geszral Boriasces has issusd a mani festo announcing aatl he will stand as mndidate for the Chamber of Deputies in F o at the coming eleo eighty cantons in ¥ ra tions OLD FRANCES and a boy named Kimes { a separator at by the bursting « Creamery, three miles from an out in the livery and board- wes Well in New York city, r suffocated to destroved Tho » and essential oil ty, NJ. w s about $250,000, as 0. dwelling house bael MeGrath fir The charred wife were found in the ruins Ter Oklabome Territorial Convention de. cided to partition the Territory into twelve counties, The of the © for two Cleve. namds reoominended Harrison and land. { the five colored men who mur Red River Junction, were lynched at the Three dered Tratorion, Ark. a few monis soene of the m Ricoand Lysax aged twenty Bertha Head, apad twenty Kenosha, Wie, ng bathing. Ex GovERson Dewey, one of Wisconsin's early Governors, has just died at . aged seventy-five years, three, and were drowned at while gol NELsox Cassville, Wi A racuack of forty registered letters, con- taining about $10,000, was stolen from the registry department of the Milwaukee (Wis) postoffice, Tiix seamer 81 Nicholas, with 500 col ored excurdonistd ran into tee closed draw bridge over 8t. Augustine Creek, four miles south of Savannah, Ga, demolishing the for- ward part of the steamer, killing two women snd injuring twenty-eight men and women, some of thom fatally . J.P. Svesxincn and wife, of Rockford, 11. committed suicide together by drowning. They wore both sevonty years of age and in | good circumstances Tug President, accompaniod by Mre. Har- | vison and Private Secretary Halford, left Washington for Deer Park, Nd, to spond a short vacation. Foun arxpags houses and public buildings were destroved by fire in the town of Paks, Hungary. Many children were roported to be missing. Hundrads of people were ren { dered homeless by the fire, md the greatest | distress prevails. Tur freedom of the sity of Edinburgh, | Scotland, was conferred upon Mr, Parnell. In reply to the address accompanying the presentation Mr. Parnell said that the Irish people would accept the tribute as another proof of the near triumph of their legitimate aspirations for freedom. Tus Vaudel paper mills, sear Pontariier, France, were burned. The los isenormonus, Tax jury in the ones of Mr, William O'Brien against Lord Salisbury for damages for dander, has returned a verdict in favor of Lord Salisbury. Bevirat, cotton warehonsss in Liverpool, BEagland, have been destroyed Ly fire, loss is $300,000. DOUBLE MURDER, Two Boys Saspected of Killing Their Parents Because of a Grudge, de BR Fon orn on in ; a County, Towa, : Eikinds second son, a boy of shaven, vies ba
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers