kA Eo EE —— L,Y, Te — — - . —-—— i — APPALLING DISASTER. Fatal Collapse of a Building in New York City. Nearly Five Score of People Lose Their Lives. A rickety five-story brick building in Park place, New York City, collapsed dur- ing the noon hour a few days ago, the debris bursting into flames, How many people were buried and burnel in the ruins was not known forty-eight hours after the accident. The number was esti- mated at seventy-five, It may reach one hundred, The collapse was immediately proceeded by an explosion, according to some of thosas within earshot. Others say thers was no explosion, that the walls and floors merely gave way. The fallen buildings comprised Nos. 68, 70, 72and 74 Park place. No. 83 was vacant. Occupying the ground floor of the remain- ing three numbers were Louis Rosenfeld's bronze and gold paint shop, A, W, Tripp's drug store, and Andrew Petersen's restau- rant, Ellis & Macdonald's bookbindery took up the second and third floors of Nos. 70 and od and the South Publishing Company the same floors of No, 74. The fourth and fifth floors throughout were occupied by Liebler & Maass, litho- graphers Careful estimates made the day after the tragedy showed that when the fatal crash came there were thirty men in the pressroom | of Liebler & Maass, who were buried in it: twenty-five men in Petersen's restaurant; twelve men and women in Ellis & MeDon ald's bookbindery; eight men and boys in the South Publishing Company: ten men and women in the paint shop of Louls Rosen. fold: nine men and boys in the drug store of F. W. Trippe, and ten passers-by on the pldewalk—making a total of 104, There is a considerable difference of opin- fon as to the cause of the disaster. People in the wrecked building who escaped say there was no €xplosion, but those who were on the street near the scene say they heard tha re. port of an explosion. It seems probable that the weight of tha rinting presses, which were on the upper oors, together with the vibration caused by their motion, proved too much for the build. ing, and caused the collapse. It was just the noon hour and Petersen's restaurant in the basement was fairly well filled. It accommodated sixty persons. In the windows overhead girls ood men could be seen catching a breath of air as they munched their luncheons There were several people passing in the street, among them a woman with an infant in a baby carriage. Three little children were playing together in front of the druz store, and a horse attached to an ex wagon was standing by the carb, Above the noise of traffic in the street could be Leard the dinof Liebler & Manss's tea big presses on the upper floors. The building vibrated and trembled with every revolution, just as it had done for months before, Then there came a low rumbling sound Bome who beard it say it was accompanied by a heavy report, as of a cannon fired. It was followed by the crash of falling walls and the grating, rasping sound of twisting ms and timbers, A dark cloud of dust filled the air and rose to the height of the housetops, Before it had cleared fire burst from the debris and lapped over to the adjoining buildings to the West, The street was in an uproar in an instant, A dozen or more who had been slightly in. | Jured were helped into adjacent stores. One man was discovered standing to his waist in | the debris. He bad a bad in his head, | He was pulled out and cared for, Another bai rolled down from the summit of the wreck ina big arm-chair. He was | helped to his feet comparatively unhurt. The mother with her baby in the carriaze and the three little children at play could not be seen, Instantly, before the frightened people in the collapsed building could collect them. selves to attempt escape, there rolled the stifling clouds of smoke and the roar ng flames. With one accord the people rushed to the main entrance, on Park place Al ready it was impassable. And then, almos tumbiing over each other, men and women, boys and girls climbed and fell down the fire escape on the Greenwich street side of the building. The firemen quickly had streams playing on the flames from front and rear, while four big hosepipes deluged ths ruins from neighboring roofs, An hour after tha fire men were summoned the fire had been cone quered and the work of digging for the dead began. Just two hours alter the accident the first body was found, [twas in front of where the drug store had been an! about twelve feet from thecurb. The man's face was all that could be seen at first, dinz pinned him down, Wes A heavy scant | When the remains had been disengaged i four policemen carried them to the sidewalk and a rubber blanket covered them The body was that of a laborer, in his shirt sleeves and with a rub ber apron on. He was maimed and bruised from head to foot and his life Lad been literally squeezed out. The fire had not | touched him, It was 4 o'clock when the i dead wagon with its load of plain pine coffins drove up. There were six bodies in waiting for it, Inspector Williams found Louis Gaimo, a Muiberry street man, who said he could Spe ply sixty Italian laborers within a short | tima for the work of rescue. The Insoector said be would pay them if the city did pot. The lights were up in a little while, and Gaime scoured Mulberry street and found his sixty men and marched them down the street and across the park to the fire, [n the tweantime the Inspector had sent a policeman through the crowd with a and asked every a plaintive ory that ssemad to come from beneath them. A men worked for sn hour after and ten foot Shs body of dsugter of Frank space t bi a olf , nine years eagney, the > - 3 : ; | and & was placed ina white pine box andl carried upstairs to the home of the Heagnays. According to tha best information ob tain able it was estimated on the second day after the accident that the total number of killed would be more than a hundred, Up to mid: night of the following day elghtaon bodies had been recoversd from the ruins, The list of missing thon numbered more than a hundred, The gangs of Italians were kept constantly at wos removing the debris, but the ruin was so complete and the mass of bricks und iron was so tangled and together, and 80 pinned by the weight of ponderow printing presses that progrofs was necessa rily slow and uncertain, The Italiam worked under the supervision of the fire men, Two truck companies were kept al work all the time, Of the eighteen recovered dead thirteen have been identified, The flve unidentified bodies were taken to the Morgue. One of the saddest features of this disaster Is that its long list of victims were in the : main the fathers of families who leaned on their support for thy necessaries of life, or sons and daughters with those dependent on their earn ings. A large majority of them were is youth and with few exceptions they were all of the best class of American working peo ple. Nearly every death recorded means the desolation of a howe, DAMAGE BY FLOODS. Bridges, Dams and Tracks Swept Away in Pennsylvania, Great damage was done to property in Pennsylvania by a storm, and much fear was | occasioned, but fortunately no lives were re ported lost. Conternation reigned at the Bowman | Evangelical Camp Meeting near Mohrsvills, | Penn, Lightning struck a number of trees, and some of them falling came dangerously near crashing upon tents. A regular stream | of water rushed through the woods aud car. | ried andy bedding and furniture Near Wernersville, Penn., on the Lebanon | Valley branch of the Reading Railroad, just after the engine of a freight train passosd over a culvert in safety, the culvert was washed away and the entire train of ten cars plunged into the culvert and were car- ried of August Kohn, a tramp stealing a ride, had a leg broken and his arm injured, Over onethird of a mile of track was washed away Another cuivert at Fritztown, Penn., on the Heading and Columbia Raflr ad, between Reading and Lancaster, was washed away. At Mobrsville, Penn., eight dams, each half an acre to an acre in extent, were washed away and the hat factories and mills will be unable to resume until the dams’ bregsts have been rebuilt The bridge and three piers of the Headiug and Southwestern Railroad Company as Hendelton, Penn., were carried aw ay, mile of its track belonging to Daniel Join Mogle and William F. Koller, destroyed by lightning, The loss is £10.00 The breast of the big dam at tha R nia furnace, which furnishes Robesonia, Penn., with water, broke and gardens, fences, vegetables gardens and roads were all washed out and 4 uproote!, Over 300 feet of the Reading Railroad Company's track near Robesouin Station was carried away The storm in Northern Lancaster County, Petun., was the heaviest in MXty years, Seven bridges, a number of buildings, she ls and fences were washed away and many cattle were drowned, At Millway an im- mense oll tank was carried 100 feet Half a LE 0a mile of track of the Reading and Columbia | Railroad at Denver was washed away. —— ——. STARTED OUT TO KILL. Two Men Slain and One Wounded by a Father and Four Sons, Milton Kendall and his four sons—George, | into | Lamar, Popsey and Milton--went Georgetown, Ky., on a recent morning for the purpose of killing ther nearest neighbors, Jolin James and Burrill James They succeaded John A Coroner LV manty The Kendalis went that morning bouse of widow James, which is six miles from Georgetown and with.n half a mile of their own baving robbed their watermelon patch and Montgomery, sid they intended killing the entire James | "As they wars armed the James boys | warrants | for the Kendalls and they were arrested but | family. ran away. John James sware out gave ball to appear that day for trial On the trial morniag the James boys ar. rived in Georgetown first About 10.30 o'clock John James went to a barber shop where Le had left his rifle and secured the weapon. As he stepped out the door young Milton Kendall, who was standing within irty feet, shot him through the right luflg. He was curried into a tack room whither Milton and George Kendall tried to follow him for the purpose of fin- ishing him. The barbers begged them not to shoot any more and they left Burrill James had in the mean time run into John Montgomery's hardware store to get a gun, Lut old man Kendall saw him, and fired, killing Mr. Montgomery. Overtaking Burrill James at the back door, the elder Kendall fatally shot him with his pistol immediately over the heart. He | then joined his sons near the Court House, wther they defiled arrest for half an hour, finally giving up their arms and going to jail. All the parties are well connected. OM man Kendall has been a magistrate, and was for years Chairmau of the Democratic Com mittee of Scott County. EE — a —— STUNG TO DEATH. An Extraordinary Case and the Vie tim Dies In Fitteen Minutes, Wiltlam H. Danley, a young man who carries the mail between the Willlameport and North Branch Raflroad station and the village of Tivoll, Penn. met with a singular and sudden death the other day. Danley was at his work as usual, when an or dinary honey bee buzzed around his head, When he attempesd to ward it off the bee alighted on one of his fingers and stang him. Dan complained of exoruciati in and his 1 at once commenced swell. ng rapidly, and in a fos minutes his whole system was affected, Ten minutes after he. ing stung be fell Into a comatose eondition pe. hefors aid could be summoned he was siclans who iE oulied wore mys UTILIZING A PRESENT, The Sultan of Morocco Uses Vie toria’'s Klephant as an Executioner, The elephant presented by Queen Vietoria to the Sultan of Moroooo fs utilised by that potentate at Fez in trampling the life out on! THE NATIONAL GAME, CHicAGo seems invincible, Tir market for ball players glutted, CHICAGO'S new batsman, SHANXON has taken charge of the Wash ington team, BeNNETT, of the Boston League Club, has been catching since 1876, is becoming piteher, Nicol, is quite + ost man now playing ball, DEXNY, once the king of third basetnon, bas been released by Cleveland, good work to be captain of a team. DAaLRYMrLE, who once led batters, is hitting harder than ever, HaMivrrox, of Philadelphia, leads League in batting and base running. BUrcLirre, the country in batting, of over 400 to have a lame arm Lovis Bixnpaven, Captain baseman of the Pittsburgh asked for his release and second BASEBALL bas taken a strong hold on the Cuban public Clubs in that little island, THERE is trouble in the Now York team and Connor and Glasscock want their re leases. They don't ke Ewing, AxsON, of Chicago, is generally very in killing John, mortally | wounding Burrill, at the rame time killing | of Scott | to the | They accused Burrill James of | Now York.55 & | Ballimore 58 46 | Athletic, . 54 51 | Jucky in his “finds.” His last, Vickery and Shriver, apparently are one of his luckiest, Despite the Rusie-worship of the New Yorkers, John Ewing, when in conditi wn, is the most effective pitcher in the New York , team, Tue New York Chub has signed Plteher | Arthur Clarkson, late of the New Haven { Club. He is a brother of the famous John | Clarkson, | Browsixo, of Cincinnati, has lined ‘em out thls year in great style, and now holds | third highest place in the batting list of “the | National League. | Tux quickest game on record was played { at Albany, N, Y., the other day. It took only twenty-seven minutes. Five innings | were played when rain interferred. Two years ago, three pitchers dick all the | twirling for the New York team, and did it | effoctively, too; but now it has six pitchers and the management is groping after more, Wercn, of the Baltimores, still maintains his reputation as one of the greatest centre. | Beldery ever seen on a bali fleld. Some of the catches made by him in Boston were of a phenomenal character Bosrox's Association toam have now a trig of heavy hitters in Brouthers, Duffy, Fairill, Joyoe, Richardson and Brown that will compare favorably with that of any { ven men in any club of the League or As. sociation Harry Wright, of Philadelphia, has somes anique ideas about handling his pitchers, He makes all of them put the ball over the plate and inveighs against bass on balls He Insists upon speed and makes. a particular point about watching base run- oer, Frexxax, the phenomenal left-hander re | ently signed by the Washingtons, is proba - ly the youngest pitcher in the professional | ranks today, Before he was signed by the | Washington team he had pitched but twenty four games, and had not yet reached his iwentieth year, “Mie” Kerrey of the Boston Assbeintion am, has signed a contract to play with the | Boston League Club the remainder of this and all of next season, This contract calls for a salary of £5000 per annum and an addi - tonal sum in case of the success of the club | Kelly said bo was to receive #22500 from the ue, Or all the players who have talked about juitting only two have made their words good by retiring from the diamond when there was an engagement in sight. They are MeCormick and Sunday, The magnates that frew them away from the diamond differ widely, McCormick went to the race track nd Sunday to the pulpit, NATIONAL LEAGUE RPOORD, Lad | res Won, Tost, =| Wom, Lost, Chicago... 08 40 623 Brooklyn. 48 55 45% Boston....00 42 588 Cleveland 47 55 448 567 Pistaburg. 42 62 404 Philadel... 58 40 520 Cincin'atl. 42 63 4X AMERICAN ASBRHATION RECORD For | len Won Lost, of Won low, =» Boston.... 760 32 _.704!Columbus. 30 50 4% s* Louis. .00 40 853% Milw'kee, 45 61 435 JOS Wash'gtin 25 a5 an 514 Louisville 38 71 34 "PROMINENT PEOPLE. Taz Countess of Dudley was a shop girl, Kamen WiLuxrs is growing a full beard. Tux late Mrs. James K. Polk was a very handsome woman in her youth BUrre, the composer, is seventy -one years old and has celebrated his silver wadding COUNT ALEXANDER GRIGARIEVITCH ST00+ GONOFP, the oldest Genera! in the Russian service, is dead M. v'Exxenry, the French dramatic author, bas written 200 plays. He is ow a cheerful old man of eighty Tur Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in- Clitef of her Ma josty's army, Is knowa as “Umbrella George.’ Eowann Lyrrox Burwen Dicxexs, the Youngest son of the great novelist, has been elected to Parliament in New Mouth Wales _ Tux most prominent of surviving Union Generals are Sehofield, Buell, Rosecrans, Butler, Pope, Banks, Howard and Siocum. Indians, was the man who first conceived the idea of distributing the mail on postal cars. Sexarorn Voorsers, of Indians, at tributes his condnasd il health to the longed night sessions of the Senate winter, Marine Tux oldest living Congressman is Senator Harris, of Tennessee, Ho was born in 1818 and was in the House of Representatives as early as 1840, Miss Mant Procron, daughter of the late Richard A. Proctor, has appeared in the Swinger fleld as a contributor of sole entific articles, Farner Moruisorn, whose miraculous cures at the Troy Hill (Penn) shrine have made hind famous, has accumulated a for. ] IX Boston they think Stricker is the quick IT interferes with most baseball players | the League | the | of the Washingtons, leads | He bas an average GALVIN, of Pittsburg, has been pitching | ball since 1874, and never knew what it was | | growing rapidly. 1 League Club, hay | There are over seventy-five i the Joux Carowrrs, who died recently in | THE LABOR WORLD, CHICAGO has a woman engineer, HARLEM has a woman upholstersr, Rew Youx grocers will build a hall, ITALY'S labor market is overstocked. Laverroor, has 50,000 dock Inborers, BAN Francisco has Chinese coopers. Cirw Yonk laundry hands are fighting NEw Youx compositors will hold a Bato Convention INpiANAPoLIA (Ind) laundry girls average | 80.50 a week, | { NEw Youx has an Italian shoemakers' K, of L. assembly, | A COLORED man is boss over a gang of | New York whites, THe President of the Boston Walters Hance is a colored man, New Yonx Working girls have a society | for sending poor children on vacations. TRAC 10% car conductors in Philadelphia | ive to pay for broken car windows and the ke Ture Boclalist Labor Al- | party of Italy is It has pow over 100,000 members AX association comprising 300 employers has Leen started in San Francisco to resisy the encroachments of trades unions, Tue Paris waiters not only insist upon | their right to wear beards and no uniforms, but also to smoke when not actually serving, Tae production of cloth at Fall River, Mass., bas been curtailed 2 1,000 ploces in the past two weeks, owing to a scarcity of weav. ers Fae Municipal Council of Piacenza, Italy, has granted $1500 annually for five years ta the labor unions in that city for their fred employment bureau. Tre Socialist Workmen's Congress at Brussels, Belgium. bas passed resolutions condemning the sweating system and piece- work BisMARCK recently entertained a trade society of limeburners and brickmakers at Friadrichurube, whom he has extensive Hs NOTWITHSTANDING the fact of the depres sion in the tron and tin plate trade, and the falling off of the demand for coal 10,000 miners in Aberdare District, Bouth Wales, have gone on a strike Ix the Chicago City Directory just pub- lished many names were omitted owing to a refusal of the members of labor organizations to give their names and address bocause ft was printed at a scab printing-house, Tax railroads of the country employ 7, - 000 men, Esch year they loss 2000 of their number in killed, and 20,000 of them are in- jured annually It is estimated that 2000, 00 people depend on these employes for a living Tar South Australian Parliament has set aside #25000 to purchase land near Peters burg for workingmen to bulid on. Ths Fre Education bill, advocated by the labor or ganizations, has also been carried bya two thirds majority. Tne number of cotton mills working in India is 114. Thess mills give employment to over WA 23 persons every day. Out of those 114 mills, eighty two are in the Bombay presidency, of which sixty ars in the town and Island of Bombay. THE raisin crop in Fresno County, Cali. fornia, isthe largest on record. The growers made great offorts to secure white labor, of« ferigg $1.25 per day for grape-pickers, with i and $1.75 without board. They failed to get any adequate supply and were forced to hire Chinese, who have advanced the price fifty cents a day over last year. Fully $00 Chinese are now engage! in the Fresno vineyards ASSESSED VALUATIONS, The Census OMos Bulletin Giving the Taxed Wealth of the Country, The Census Bureau issued from Wash. ington a bulletin on the assessed valuation of real and personal pre perty of the several Btates and Territories shown for the years of 1880 and 1800 exceptions oO M.chigar, is for 158, and oO Delaware, lows, Mississis oo, Washington and We for i880 The bulletin shows sensed value of property has increased from $16, 002 990 543 in 1880. to $24,248,530, « 84 in 1M0-—ay increase during the decades of §7,346,596, 251, an amount equivalent to the true value of all property as returued by the United States census in 1850 87.135, 780, « 23%. Shou d it be found upon the completion of the inquiry in relation to the true valve of all property in the United States that the same relation exists in 1800 between amossed valuation as existed in 1880, the abs solute wealth nf the United States, accord. | ing to the eleventh consus, may be estimated at $62.610,000,000, or nearly $1000 par Sap ii, As against $514 per capita in 1860, 8780 pes capita fu 1870 and $570 per capita in 1580, BAKES are s0 abundant and troublesome in the country about Talcott Mountain in Connecticut that the farmers in the vicinity have clubbed together to hire a man to kil the reptiles. He is paid five counts a head, and manages to od Bo $3 50 85 a day. Thr wine and raisin © in southern | California are the largest or three years, The raisin grapes are loaded with fraft, Ths valaations are with which Arkansas, New Mex which are that the as VINE, ail THE MARKETS. 83 KEW YORK. Mileh Cows, com. to good... Calves, common to prime. ,, 1 | word.” SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL BEPTEMBER ©, Lesson Text: “The True Ohtldren of God,” John vith, 31-47 Golden Text: John 5 12-Commentary, 81. “Then sald Jesus to those Jews which believed on Him, If ye continue in My word then ore ye My disciples indeed.” He fs stil at Jerusalem, teaching in the temples (verse 2), and it is just after the feast of taber nacles. The previous verse says that many believed on Him: #0, also say chapters iv,, 80, 41; x., 42; xi\., 42: but chapter vi,, 66, says that many of His disciples went back end walked no mors with Him, and after | His ascension wo read of the number of the disciples as being only about 120, 82. “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shail make you free.” To know the truth is to know Himself, for He is the Truth (chap. xiv., 6), and to know God and | Jesus Christ is life eternal fchap. xvii, 8. 83, “Th answered Him, We be Abra. ham's phon and were never it bondage to any man. How sayest Thou, ye shall be made free.” Being only natural men, seemed foolishness to them (I Cor, il 14). To bon descendant of Abrabam, and to have was nooessary to entitle them to eternal happiness. (Gen. xv., 3; Rom. 4, 11; x., a, 4. 34. “Jesus answered them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin.” As the Bpirit through Paul bas said, “To whom yo yield your- selves servants to obey, hi= Zarvants ye are whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness.” 5, house forever, but the Son abideth ever ” We cannot become children of God by na- tural birth, nor by any works of the flesh, but only by receiving futo us something of God, even His Bon Jesus Christ as our High. teousness and our Salvation 30, froe, yeshall be free indeed.” The Righteous. ness of God stood before them and was talk. ing to them, but they L“uew Him not. In Him, and in Him only, was there Life and Light and Righteousness: all else apart from Him was only sin, darkness and death, 87. “Iknow that ve are Abraham's send but ye seek to kill Me, because My Word hath Bo Place in you." They were children of Abraham by natural descent, but they were not like Abraban spiritually, for Abra. | bam rejoiced in the Christ (verse 5%, but they wanted to kill Him, Both Cain and Abel were the natural children of Adam and Eve, but spiritually Abel was of God while Cain was of the devil (Heb, xi, 4; I John iii,, 819 85, “I speak that which I have seen with My Father, and vo do that which ye have soon with your father.” As to His Father, He was continually speaking of Him, pro. claiming that the Father sent Him, and that Ho said snd did only what the Father taught Him; that the Father was with Him, and that He always pleased the Father; that to know Him was to know the Father (verses 16, 18 180, 28, 20). His whale aim on this earth was to glorify the Father, and when about to be crucified He prayed the Father would glorify Him that still He might glo. why the Father, 89. “They answered and sald unto Him Abrabam is cur Iather. Jesus saith them, If ye were Abraham's children ve would do the works of Abraham.” They #till cling to the idea of natural descent being sufficient, but Jobn the Baptist had taught them the folly of saying, “We have Abra. unto ham 15 our father” (Math, fi, 9: and on a | had taught at Ca. | pernaum that many would come from east | MT. | Scientific Instrament Company, has de- | vis xd a “cup micrometer” for measuring | the rate of growth of a plant. | is attached to the upper end of the piant previous ocoasion Jesus and west and sit down with Abraham, sane and Jacob in the Kingdom, while many who thought themselves entitled to do so would be cast into outer darkness Matt, viii, 11, 19 40. “But now ye seek to kill Me, a man that hath told you the truth, which I have beard of God, Thisdidnot Abraham.” The true children of Abreabam will walk in the steps of Abraham (Rom, iv., 12). and his great characteristic was that he believed the word of God and acted accordingly. Look. ing for a city which hath foundations be was content to dwell in the promised land BE A 80 JOUrDeT 41. “Ye do the deads of your father said they to Him, We be not born of forni. eation: we have one Father, even God.” In Isa. Ixiii, 16; Ixiv., 8 we find these words “Doubtiess Thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us and larasl ao | = i branc h of a tree or standing on a heap knowledge us not: Thou O Lord art our Father, our Redeemer. Thy name is from everiasting.” “0 Lord, Tiou art our Father, we are the clay, and Thou our pots ter; and we all are the work of Thy hand.” | These are about the only pisces in the Od Testament where God is directly spoken of as Father, but if they had any reference to such words as these the comparison of the clay would condemn them, for they were | bard hearted as rock rather than as clay, which could be fashionsd by the potter 42 ceeded forth and omme from God: neither came [ of Myself, but He sent Me" The Lord bad said through Malachi, A son hon. | | oreth his father and a servant his master: if then I be a father, where is mine honor (Mal, | And in Jobn v., 28, Jesus had said, | rtp bat honoreth mot the San, hanarett | tures, dwells with great emphasis on the i, 6? not the Father which hath sent Him.” These pie profess to be children of Abrabam, t do not his work; they call themssive children ol God, but they hate Him warm | God sent, even His only begotten Son, 43, “Why do you not understand My speech? even because ye cannot hear My “Through faith” is the only way to understand (Heb, xi, 3, and if the disci. pies understood not many things till after "entecost, even though they believed in Him fchanter xii. 16; xiv, #, how could these e understand anything when they had no faith in Him whatever; and here is the | Wheat—No, 2 Red. .....0v.. 1 Rye—8tate.........c.... pro | Barley—Two-rowed State... 8 | IT is reported that the death of the Turk. | we PRIF $0 GOO0. 0 oseses ish Minister of War was the result of wounds | A 00d ues recvived in a duel with the Minister of | Cornel Mixed. .... ? 3 Oats—No, | White. ......vue . 4 | Mixed Western....... 0H i wu EERE EY | (Math. xxiil,, 5%, probabil reason of their blindness, and of the blind. | mess and hardness of heart of all who are like them-~they will not receive the word of God, #4. “Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do.” He had | twice told them that they acted like their | father (verses 38 41), and now He says ainly who their father is. At another time 1s calls them serpants, generation of vipers with reference 30 that old serpent, the devil. and their lik | to him, Skime--ldght,..... hastarn,....... BUFFALO, ssnnsvanvaen 3 0 —roSen “Esse ALAR EE POSTON, EET AR EE EE ERE) = Northern. , ww Clover, Northern... 10 Bay=Pair....... cocovnen lb 0 weLiood to Prime. .....14 0 Be Taraad Prima. ove: is WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE Boel «Dressed CERT ET CensrEan CR AEE EE EE BES RRR = e ETECER sa S48&aa sasssases ses KET. Case x &ses 4% “And because | tell Jou the truth ye believe Me not.” Paul asks, “Am [ there. fore becomes your snsmy becanse 1 tell yon the truth? (Gal iv, 18. Ssuth is to a boart that loves lies like salt to a wound un- healed, or like a strong light to weak eyes. 45, “Which of you convinoeth Me of sin? And if 1 say the truth, why do ye not believe Me." They could not conviet of for there was no sin in Him; He knew sin; He did no sin; He was without sin (I John tii, 8: Il Cor. v., 21; 1 Pat. #1, 20. Even Judas had to confess that He was an innocent man, i 47. “He that is of God heareth God's words: ve therefore hear them not, beoause li i LESSON VOR, | ject being | better direct the fire of his gunners. they | unaerstood not His spiritual sayings, for it | | ase » new machine that { of 300 men in scraping the dirt dumped been circumcised, was in their eyes all that | ' Greenville, { almost phenomenal “And the servant abideth not in the | { 8 diamond “If the Son therefore shall make you | Then | 0 i hel lof Sciences, M. Colin discusses the acticn | considerable cold, “Jesus said unto them, If God were | your father ye would love Me, for I pro | Eo | weather, but the dog and horse are killed BCIENTIFIC AND INDUSYRIAL. A wood-esrving machine is success. ful. Terrorite is more powerful thas dyn- amite, A pound of phosphorus is sufficient to pit 1,000,000 matches. A Swedish cavalry officer has invented & horsestice on which the calks sod clips are changesble, A street railrond to be operated by motors run by fuel oil will soon be in operation near Prague, The Philadelphia mint has installed an Eddy electric motor of twenty-five horse-power, which is run by wires from the street, It is estimated that twenty thousand | horse-power will be required for the | electric lighting plant of the Columbian Exposition, be ob. Observation step-ladders are to used in the Belgian artillery, the to enable a commander to The Michigan Central Railroad has in does the work nlongside of the track to the edges of { the fi'l. discovered jo which contains an of lithium, the famous been H., has N. A spring amount it is said, than spring st Londonderry. Watch crystals are J & Sphere of giass about even more, made by blowing one yard in diam. after which the disks are cut from 2 eer it by weans of a pair of compasses having at the extremity of one leg A device engine has been invented by waich an may be stopped on any floor of a building by simply pressing thus making asa electrical with the governor of the en- s+ button, sonuection gine . A toilet brush is made of two halves h are hinged and are detachable, one half being the brush and the other ball the mirror, while in the space is a comb, 8 tooth brush and a w hic be. tween butt The Munich Poeller Physical and Op- tical Institute have constructed for the enormous micro. the aid of magnifying i n-hook. Chicago Exhibition an scope, manipulated by 1 tncity. t linear perspective and HGS a It is stated that Dr. Lehner, of Auags. burg, Germany, has solved the problem of manufacturing artificial silk. The {auric is said to be superior in lustre to { natural silk, and cannot be distinguished is i from it; and that a limited company is to be constituted to work the invention. If this is true, and found to be thoroughly practicable after a fair trial, it will revolutionize the whole industry of producing and manufacturing raw silk. Mr. H. Darwin, of the Cambridge is A thread and passes over a pulley. To its lower end is fastened a weight, which descends as the plant increases in height. The amount of its descent is a measure of the vertical growth of the plant, sad it is | obtained very exactly by means of the micrometer in question, In a paper read to the French Academy The rabbit endures Adults have lived in ordinary hutches suspended from the of cold on snimals. of snow, and their temperature has oaly | been lowered about one degree in five or six days. when the outside temperature varied from ten to fifteen degrees C. Other individuals have lived in perfect health for two months in cubical hutches, completely open on one side, when the | temperature ranged from ten degrees to twenty-five degroes. Sheep and pigs are also able to live through severe by it. Checking Coughing and Sneezing. Dr. Brown-Sequard, in one of his iec- importance of general knowledge in the matter of checking coughing and soeez- ing. He states that coughing can be stopped by pressing on the nerves of the lips in the neighborhood of the nose, and sneezing may be stopped in the same way. Pressing in the peighbor- hood of the ear, right in front of the ear, may stop coughing. It is so also of hiccoughing, but much less so than for sneezing or coughing. , Pressing very hard on the roof of the mouth is also a means of arresting a cough, and the will itself is often found to be a wonderful preventive. Dr. Brown-Sequard points out that mn addition to the many ordi- nary reasons why people should know these simple facts, there are conditions under which this knowledge may prove of the greatest value. among the hills of Delaware County, N. in a sunken lake oo Eiizeg iH -£ Lh g if EH ah to tt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers