.... - juwqnwl 'l 5 I - . : a " SIGHT PAGES 64 COLUMNS. SSCIl ANTON, PA., MONDAY MORNING, JULY 8, 1893. TWO CENTS A COPY. IFYI NEVER ,1 'iiiiiLii' Boys' Shirt waists to the front. Why, we can hardly tell, unless it is due to the fact that we were too busy with goods that figured Into more money. And -ell Them Freely In fact, our stock runs up into thousands of dozens, and there ' is not a good make or a prominent style of boys' waist on the market that we do not carry. LITTLE Leads all others as a common sense, ' dressy-looking waist. We have it In Whites, Printed materials, etc. Tou can get the same style else where, but you cannot get such a large line to select from, and you cannot get them at the figures we quote. 99 Is the old reliable standby, and for practical thrift and true economy, there's nothing on the market today to surpass it. We have It in all sizes, qualities and materials, and prices for a food, fast color Cambric begin at FITS Is not half told yet, but why pro long it further? If wt can get you to understand that we carry two or three ordinary stocks of shirt waists for boys, and ell them at a big percentage lower than all competitors, we have ac ' compUshed all we desire. ' Common prudence and good sound sens od your part will do the rest. GLOBE Yet We 20c. s 111. WAIST OH JULY STORMS ARRIVE Missouri and Kansas Swept by a flood unci Tornmlo. LOSS OP lllE AXD PROPERTY An Area of 200 Square Miles Affected by kainand W in J - Many Fields of Grain H ere IH. struyed. St. Louis. Sin., July 7. Thursdny morning t-U-Kt':idiU- roports bi-r;in to arrive in this olty of rains at western points. These reports grew In number Kriifciy anil covered u large territory In dicating that the eastern water filed of the Koi-ky Mountains, from the Ne braska and Iowa lines to Texas, was sw pt by a storm. Friday nlnht the severest blow came. Reports of loss of life and destruction of property came with every telegram, and the down pour which was at rlrt regarded as a Westing, grew Into a wave of devasta tion. Fields of grain that promised the most bountiful yield In many ytura are today swept bare- of vegetation. In several Instances the seas of rain were abetted In Choir work of destruction by tornadoes. It Is too early yet to sum up the loss, but the total must be appal ling, and those to whom the angry ele ments spared life have little left to sus tain It. The stories of the storm are so sim ilar that a statistical summary is all there Is left to tell. The storm's focus embraced an area of iOO square miles with 'the southwest ern corner of .Missouri as the center. The greatest lows of life Is reported from Winona. Mo., where eleven corpses have been found, with as many more missing. At Baxter Springs In western Kansas, five were killed and eleven se riously Injured by a cyclone that ac companied the storm. One was drowned at Columbus and two at Ottawa, Kan sas. At Van Buren, Arkansas, a wo man and her child were drowned. A Family Disappears. A family of five were encamped an the banks of Fish cretk Vn i;he Indian territory. Yesterday nothing of them nor their belongings was found except a part of their wagon on a pile of drift wood. At Thomasvllle. Mo., where the rain fall was four Ir.ches in oce hour, five lives were lost. . L'neor.firmed reports are received as ito loss of life as follows: Three at Fay etteville. Ark.; one at Paoli. Kan.; one at Richards. Kan., and six of a hunting party In the Indian territory. This gives a known and probable loss of forty-three lives. This total will be in creased when the receding waters per mit a thorough search. The above summaries gives only a fraction of loss in property. The greatest burden falls upon the farmers, as the season Is too far spent to plant new crops, and suffering must surely follow in. the storm's wake. Details of individual suffering and experiences re call the horrors of tthe Johnstown dis aster. Storms KNewhcre. Chicago, July ".With little warning of its terrific death-dealing force and destructive character, a wind and rain storm, such as Chicago has not seen for years, broke upon the city about 5.30 o'clock this afternoon. The complete result will not be known until tomorrow, but it is kr.ow-in for a certainty tonight that two lives were lost on Lake Michigan by the capsizing of boats. Topeka, Kan., July 7. A htavy wind and rain tornado struck the little town of Canton late this afternoon and near ly demolished It. A score of people were Injured by flying timber. A num ber of farmhouses that lay in the path of the storm were destroyed, and great damage was done to crops. ' Lake Geneva, Wis., July 7. Six per sons were drowned by the sudden cap sizing of a pleasure boat on Lake Gene va this afternoon. A furious tornado struck the town at 4.39. Buildings were unroofed, trees uprooted and several buildings moved from their founda tions. A few minutes before the storm broke, ithe steam launch Dispatch was chartered by Father Hogan and Miss Hogan, of Harvard, Ills., and a man thought to be Dr. Franz, his wife and child. A heavy nea. struck the little craft and It suddenly went down with Its six occupants. The body of Miss Hogan has been recovered. DISSOLUTION JULY 21. The )ncen Will Havs Nothing to Say on Proroguing parliament. London, July 7. -Parliament will be prorogued on July 24. There will be no queen's speech. The Marquis of Salisbury, In the house of lords, replied to ithe speech which Lord Hosebery recently delivered before the Eighty club, and in which he attacked the house of lords. The premier traversed Lord IRosebery's statement that the house of lords had legislative preponderance. On ithe con trary, he asserted, the house of lords had no share in. the votes by which governments were displaced nor in the provision of funds for the public ser vices. Continuing, the Marquis of Salisbury asked what the lords had done to In duce Lord Rosebery to submit a pro posal which had not been heard within parliament for 250 years. The house of lords merely rejected the evicted ten ants' bill, which h asserted, was Im practicable In the shape presented. SCARED AWAY BY A BELL. Mrs. Callahan, of Nowbiirg, Discovers a Now and F.ffeetlvo Itnrglar Alarm. Jfewburg, N. T., July 7. Mrs. M. L, Callahan, who conducts a boarding house In this city, adopted a novel and effective plan to get rid of a burglar ii&t night.1 A thief entered her house, ait No,, 4' Washington place, by forcing open a rear window with a, "Jimmy." He ransacked bureau drawers, and had Ithe contents piled up on the floor. ' V .li. II . It, . n ...... 1. .... ...1 I... AL UM IB. LtllKIMU VT irClim Iff 1117 nolae. She arose and looked in her room and saiw the was unarmed, but soo pon." Mrs. Callah the hall and pickeV Urge -dinner bell' , mttu, arlih -alt' iom room wJiere the thief was. He became paralyzed, and Jumjied out of the open window, a distance of fifteen feet. He and a man he had left on guard in the yurd then tied. The thli-f took nothing but two pocket books, which, he dropped In the yard, lie left his "Jimmy" be hind. CURRENCY PLANK, IGNORED. Alubnma lHipullMs Wont to I'nite with I he Kcruhtieunt. Birmingham, Ala., July 7. A call has been issued by Chairman Adams, of the People's party for a meeting In Bir mingham July "4. it lit understood the plan is to arrange' for a fusion with the Republicans and the opening of the approaching spring campaign. A plat form ignoring the money question. It Is said, will be prepared and only state issues will ! considered. Atlanta. Sa.. July 7. About fifty people nsseniliU-d In 'the county court house here last nlsht in .response to a call Issued by the silver leaders to select delegates to the free silver con vention to be belli at Cirlllln on July IS. Thlrty-itwo delegates to the Urlttln gathering were selected. BRAVE KKKMl iHlN SAILOR. Joe -alius Sails with His Family on a Fishing llont- Kef uses to lion r J a Pig Ship-After Twenty-One Days of Hard ship, the Plucky Sailor Refuses to Toko Passage on Another llont. but Fioats on to tils Destination. New York. July ".The steamer I'gyptlan Prince arrived ut quarantine this morning from Santos. Itlo Janeiro, and other South American ports, and was detained by Health Officer lKty for disinfection. Steamer Bellarden. from Santos and Rio Janeiro, which arrived at quaran tine this morning, was also detained for t!v usual cleansing and disinfection. On Friday last the lookout of the Bel larden reported a small sailing craft dead ahead. On approaching the little vessel It was seen tha t she was unman ageable and had four occupants a man, a woman, a boy of 7 years and an Infant. All were in a very weak condi tion. Joe Pallas, a native of Bermuda, em barked on board of his vessel, the Kosie. a small fishing boat about 20 fe?t long, not exceeding four tons bur den, to change his residence from one part of the Island of Bermuda to an other. He took on board all his house hold effects, his wife and boy and nurs ing infant. After embarking the little vessel was blown off her course, and, after twenty-one days of hardship and privation, the Bellarden appeared. Mr. Dallas said that his provisions had been exhausted for many days, but they had only been out of water for forty-eight houis. Captain Davidson urged Dallas to come on board the Bellardon with his family, offering to tow the Rosle to New York, but Dallas refused, saying that the Rosle contained all he had In the world, and that he thought he would get along all right. They were supplied with provisions and water from the stores of the Bellarden and given the course for Bermuda. The Bellarden then proceeded on her voy age, leaving the plucky Bermudlan to again face the perils of the ocean When the Bellarden parted from the Rosle. she was about 100 miles southeast of Capes of Delaware. ELKS IN SESSION. The Thirty-first Annual Conclnvo at At lantic rltv. Atlantic City, N. J.. July 7. The thirty-first con-clove of the United Order of Elks will begin its session hore on Tuesday. One of the Important sub jects me convention Is to consider will be the settlement of it.he controversy at preserrtixltlng In the order. Meade Detweik-r, who was elected grand ex alted ruler by the Jamestown faction at Buffalo some time ago, is here, It Is understood, to offer a proposition of peace for the settlement of the differ ence of the order. Grand Kxalted Ruler E. S. Hay, of Washington, expects that there will be at least 10,000 In attendance during the conclave. LIL TO MARRY A COUNT. Hawaiian Are Alarmed at the Increase of Japanese Residents. Tacoma, Wash., July 7. The Morning Union has received private advices from Honolulu to the effect that ex Queen Lllioukalnnl and her following are plotting to form n alliance with Japan by hen marriage to a Japanese count. The Japanese have 30,000 resl dents on the I Hand, and with this new alliance, it is claimed the Hawalln re public could be overthrown. The officials of the republic are alarmed at the number of Japanese and have recently brought in two ship loads of Italians, numbering 1,600, from the Azores. Mrs. Gllkennn IHcs. Bristol, Pa.,, July 7. Mrs. Helen Ollke son, wife of Republican State Chairman F. B. Uilkeson, died today after an Illness of two months from nervous prostration. Mrs. (lllk.son was born here In 1818 and leaves two children. George Clymer Dvud. Reading. Pa., July 7. George K. Cly mer, aged 6T yewrs, brother of the late Congressman Hlester Clymer, and at one time prominently Identified with the Iron business, died hers today from the effects of a sunstroke. Another llnhy Cleveland. Buzxard's Hay, July 7. At Gray Gables, the quiet and picturesque summer home of President Cleveland, at 4.30 this after noon, a little girl was born unto Mrs. Cleveland. FROM WASHINGTON. Our Mexican minister. General Ran som, has so Improved in health that he will not resign. Colonel William Wlnthrop, assistant Judge advocate general of the army, will be retired on Aug. 3. . The new Portuguese minister to Wash ington, Benor. de Bagulra Thadieu, says his country Is now In a flourishing condi tion. Attorney General Harmon expects to carry to the supreme court the govern ment's suit to recover' $15,000,009 from the land Btanford estate. asletant Secretary of the Navy Mc- to declined to testify against Com ber Ide on Admiral Meade's charges, at of bis official position, . MARGARET HAVS STORY She Talks L'orcscrvedly of Her Dam iiye Suit. HEK LETTER 1'liKB SAKCASM The Pretty Nurse Claims That She lies Been Uronnly Misrepreneated-She Kays Thai Dr. Palen W rote Love Letters. Huntingdon. Pa.. July 4. Miss Mar garet May Thompson of this city, who bus Instituted legal proceedings agulust Dr. Gilbert J. Palen, of Philadelphia, a nei-hi w of the lute Jay Gould, for broach of promise of marriage, claim ing 15,000 damages. Is now at her par ents' home, here, and today spoke un reservedly of her case. Miss Thomp son, who has Just entered upon her twenty-lirwt year, Is a professional nurse and enjoys the highest public es teem here for tier charming personality. "In the Hint place." said the pretty nurse, "Dr. Palen did not attend me professionally when 1 was 111 In Phila delphia, as he has said ho did. Ir. Palen was deeply interesay In my re covery, and to my father tie Said that we were engaged to be married, but that he did not want his father to learn of our engagement until after his graduation. "When I wasatihome, here. In March last. Dr. Palen wrote to me, saying that he was coining to see me; and on March 8 lie did com?. My parents, be ing aware of his coming and knowing of our marriage engagement, naturally accorded him a very hearty weloome. 'p to this time he had not told mo of his relationship to the Gould family, nor of his financial standing. These facts, had I known of them, would have had no influence whatever on me In Inducing me to give him a favorable answer to his proposal. Doctor ttrofu l.ottcrs. "After my return home for a brief rest from my duties at the Philadel phia Lying-in charity. I received almost dully letters from Dr. Palen, each ex pressive of the warmest sentiments. "The tenor of my letter, which was written to Dr. Palen after his marriage, a brief extract of which his lawyer has made public, has been grossly misrep resented. "Aflter his marriage I wrote to him, asking that he return my picture, and Ironically congratulated him on his marriage. 1 intended this expression of felicity to be accepted In the light of sarcasm, pure and simple, and in no sense as Indicative of my heart's honest desire. 'Dr. Palen has basely deceived me." Miss Thompson said the understand ing between the doctor and herself was thRt Immediately after he had com pleted his studies abroad, 'they were to be married. Miss Thompson left tonight for Phila delphia. - SOLDIERS' GEORGIA HOME. Progress of the Project-Nearly 12,000 Families .Move from Indiana. Indianapolis, July 7. P. H. Fitzger ald, of this city, will start next week for Georgia, when he will begin the pur chase of lands for his old soldiers' colony near Tifton. He says the colony company, of which he Is general man ager and treasurer, haBaf.lready re ceived from shareholders $125,000, with which the purchase of lands will be begun. The capital of the company will amount to $500,000. The amount al ready on hand, It is expected, will be largely augmented by the receipts of next Monday. Mr. Fitzgerald says the titles to the lands to be purchased have all been examined and the deeds pre pared for delivery upon his trip to Georgia next Week. Kx-Govemor Northen, of Georgia, Is acting as agent for the sellers, and Is also a shareholder In the colony asso ciation, and has arranged with the sell ers to be in Abbeyvllle, Ga., ready to perfect the deal for the land. The funds In hand will not purchase all of the land the association expects to nc quire, but with It the purchase will be begun. The buying and selling will be gin in the center of the tract, and the subsequent purchases will 'be made along the edge of the tract acquired. Fitzgerald says that 11.700 heads of families, representing 65,000 persons, are Interested In the colonization scheme. The olid Drew farm, on which Jefferson Davis was captured, lies three and a half mile southwert of the col ony. Mr. Fitzgerald says It Is the In tention to purchase this farm. RIOTERS HELD IN CHECK. Lawless Italians In Jcffersonvllle May et Mnnoy to Leave. Jeffersonvllle, Ind., July 7. The Ital ian laborers at Rockporl, Ind., are still rioting. Yesterday they were piling brush under the bridges and trestles to burn ithem. Father Urundt, of St. Henry's, has" partially quieted them by promising them transportation to Chi cago, and the citizens have petitioned the county commissioners to make an allowance of JG00, the amount necessary to transport them. The sheriff and citizen deputies are rtll I on guard, ready to fire at any mo ment. Should the county .refuse the Italians transportation, serious trouble Is sure to follow. The railroad con tractors, who owe them money, have fled. It looks as If the Chicago, Indian apolis and Rockport road would not be Completed. e SOME ONE TAKE BABY. A Seaside Hotel Man Finds It Like en Lie phnnt on His Hands. Atlantic City, N. J., July 1. The flaxen-haired baby of Mrs. Mabel Ruellf, the young woman who was ar rested yesterday a she stepped from the ferry house In Philadelphia upon a charge of passing worthless checks among business men there, Is causing William Hood, proprietor of the Penn hurst .hotel, uneasiness of mind. Mrs. RoeUfs child was left at the hotel while she left there for a visit to Philadel phia, Intending; to return In time for upper the following afternoon, when he was detained. Upon learning of Mrs. Roelirs arrest, Mr. Hood was distressed. He reported the baby's presence to Chief of Police BlOriage, xpeotittf that . toe would take charge, but that official declined custodianship. He next telegraphed to Huerlntendent of Police Linden, of I'hlludflphta, to help htm, but the reply was discouraging and threw Mr. Hood Into a sta'te of nervousness. The wires tonight have been hot with message to friends of .Mrs. Roellf, but all seem disinclined ito come ito the rescue of Mr. Hood. The baby Is receiving the best of rare. On Monday an appeal will lie made to Mis. Roellf's guardian, who ha charge of her estate, which is tied up in litigation and is said to be val ued at 10.000. ALTGELD FOR LABOR. Governor Orders That State Work Mast io to I'nion Contractors. Springfield. 111., July 7. At the lnnt meeting of the board of trustees of the Southern Illinois Asylum for the In sane of Anna, III., to open bid for the erection of the main 'building, which was burned last winter, Governor Alt geld told the trustees and bidders that when the contract was let It must go only to contractors who would employ none but union labor. The 'trustees awarded the contract to James U. Diver Sc. Co., of Chester, III., and Keokuk, la., better known as the Youngstown Bridge company of Youngstown. O., fir,J14,800. The low est bid was Anderson Bros.', of St. Louis. Mo., for $143,000. but 1t failed to agree to employ only union labor. SHOT BY MEXICANS. An American Cltlien Put to Death With out Formalities of a Trial for Crlrao of Which Mo Was Accused. Phoenix, Arizona, July 7. Albert Trlbolet returned yesterday from Fronteras, Mexico, where he has been to Investigate the shooting of his broth er, Robert, June 26. Trlbolet was taken from prison wherein he toad been In carcerated on the charge of complicity In the murder of Stage Driver Moreno, two weeks before, and without the for malities of a trial was Stat to death by Mexican soldiers. No relatives or friends were allowed to be with him during his brief confinement, though the prisoner vainly attempted to show his Innocence and that he -was in his Meld at home on the day of the rob bery. , Ills brother met with scant courtesy at the hands of the Mexican authori ties and was informed by Captain Men des, who had been both Judge and exe cutioner, that Robert had been shot because a horse ridden by one of the robbers had upon it the Trlbolet blanket. Deceased was an American citizen, and his death leaves his large family almost destitute. His brother will ap peal to the state department at Wash ington for redress. KERR'S GAME CHECKED. Choc taws Ask the Clerk of the House's Firm to Get Out. South McAlester. I. T. Jnlv 7 George S. Good and James Kerr, clerk or tne nouse or representatives at Washington, composing the firm Good & Co., have been declared intruders by Indian Agent Wisdom and ordered from Wie Choctaw Nation in five days, and in tttie event of the failure tt nv loyalty to the Choutaw Nation for gooas snipped in and sold. Good & Co. are railroad contractors, and have had the contract of building the extension of the Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulk railway. They are charged with Introducing and selling merchandise to citizens and non-citizens, and refusing to puy roy alty of 1 per cent, as required by United States law. SHORTAGE IN HAY. A Light Crop Is Ucpnrted In the I'nltcd States. CanJoJrie. N. Y., July 7. The Hay Trade Journal, with reports from nil parts of the United Staites and Canada, today says that all states east of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio will not produce 50 per cent, of an average crop. In the province of Quebec nnd east ern Ontario indication; promise a full crop. England has a short yield, and that country has buyers In Canada now, and will divert the supply which would naturally come to the Statu from that country. Mnric Hod No Evidence. Ban Franclsce. July 7. Judge Troutt has denied the application of MhHo Riirroughs, the actress, for a divorce, from her hus band, Louis Massen. Miss Uurroughs al leged livtlilellty as the reason for her suit, but the Judge decided that she had not produced sutllclent evidence. Tho Knot Cnpsined. City tstand, N. Y., July 7.-Arthtir Korff, an architect, of MorrlsanJa, was drowned here today by the capsizing of a email boat. His fiancee. Miss Julia Andrea, who accompanied him, was taken from the water unconscious, but was resuscitated. Quiet In Strlko Region. Charleston, W. Va July 7. Governor McCorkle has been In receipt of several messages from the strike region today, all of which state that everything is quiet, and that there Is no probability of trouble at present. SPARKS FROM THE WIRES. The steamer Merrlmac, loaded with llvo stock, has gone ashore on Isle Roude, op posite Montreal. For robbing a farmer of II. M0, Theodore Puckett, a negro, was lynched at Pela hachla Station, Miss. The skeleton of a man Inclosed In a cage of Iron bars was unearthed by workmen In Fredericksburg, Va. The Newfoundland legislature has been prorogued, tho governor agreeing to sJI bills passed except the reduction of sal aries. The Minnesota supreme court has de- ddVd that Kristlan Kortgard, the wrecker of the Stato- Rank of Minnesota, must serve his term In prison. Two electric cars crashed Into each other at Columbus, O., and, Miss Sarah Richardson will die of her Injuries. A number of other passengers were hurt. John Case and three Pool brothers have been arrested at Canyonvllle, Ore., for the robbery of the Southern Pacific ex press at the mouth of Cow Creek Canyon. The circling of a great mass of sea gulls over a particular spot In Ixmg Island Bound led to the discovery of the body of the 10-year-old son of Captain James P. Smith, of New London, who was drowned a week ago. NEW YORK WAS VERY DRY At All Hotels One Was Obliged to Eat , Hearty. OK NO DRINK WAS FORTHCOMING No Attempt Wan Made to Bluff at the Law llowery Was Practicably Ucscrted Miaistore Lxtol the Crussdo. New York, July 7. This city today hud somewhat the upiieurance of a Maine Prohibition town. There were less saloons doing business than on luHt Sunday. President Roosevelt had convinced the saloonkeepers that there would be no "bluff" In enforcing the law, so most of them declOi-dmot to take any nances. A few, however, kept open today, but as im last Sunday, they would not admit anyone unknown to them. Heretofore, on Sundays, In the ho-tel cafes small plutes of cheese and crackers were placed on every table, and any one who presented a respect able appearance could take a seat, uud by eutlng or pretending to eat some of the cheese or crackers, could get what ever they called for to drink. This was changed today at all of 'the hotels. Patrons were handed a menu and re quired to order something to eat before anything to drink was served to them. The famous "tenderloin" district was no exception to -the "dryness" prevail ing in other parts of the city, and the Howery was practically deserted. In many churches today the ministers delivered sermons extolling the cru sade against the opening of saloouis on Sunday. JAIL BREAKERS FOILED. Deputy Sheriff's Discovery of n .Msn on the Roof. Cleveland, Ohio, July 7. A daring at tempt at Jail delivery was made here at 12.45 this murning. At that hour Deputy Sheriff Mi-Mullen and Jailor Patterson left the Jail for lunch. The Jail is sit uated on-the corner of the public square and Temple alley. As theofllcers emerged from the Jail door Patterson hap pened to glance toward the roof of the annex and saw a man standing on the roof. "What do you want there?" de manded Deputy MoMullcn of the stranger. The man ducked his head, ns If ex pecting a ehot from the offlcers. His actions betrayed his character and Just at the time the above query was pro pounded, another man jumped from the shadow of the annex and started on a run. Taking in the situation the offi cers opened lire on the fleeing man, but the darkness shielded him and he made his escape. Going to the roof of the an nex, McMullen and Patterson found a rope and a complete set of Jail break ing tools which, but for the timely dis covery, would have been effective in opening the windows In the main jail building, near that portion where the three notorious Chicago diamond thieves Kd Carney, Francis Emerson and James Malone are confined. The man discovered on the roof also made his escape. SILVER CRAZE RAGES. Democratic State Convention Has De clared in I svorof Mcl.snrln. Jacksonv Mls July 7. Several coun ties held primary elections or mass meetings yesterday to select delegates to th Democratic sta'te convention, which meets In this city Aug. 7. All of them, so far its Jieard from, have de clared Senator A. J. AleLaurin the ehalce for governor. The unanimity with which the sev eral counties have endorsed Senator McLaurln for governor show that the silver craze still rages. The "sound money" candidates for governor Hnd United Slates si na tor, II. G. MciAbee, of Vlcksburg, and Governor Stone, of this city, respectively, have not se cured a delegate eo far. and the hand writing on the wall Is to Hie effect that they will n.rt. State questions, and home nffalrs have not been thought of or discussed during the canvass, but every candidate, from constable up, has) been forced to declare his opinion on the great question of finance. DAINTIEST OF ALL REPTILES. Prohibition Mate Turns Out tho Snake Story of the Season. Topeka, Kan.. July 7.-J. V. (Miller, a farmer of Harvey county, ha lost eight cows during" the past six weeks as tho result of the strange freaks f bull strokes. iMr. Miller was at a los to account for this ptaiteof affairs, and after he had lost eight cows he spent a day with, the animals to watch devel opments. He was rewarded with the strangyst Right he had ever witnessed. A mounter bull make, eight feet in length, appeared In the pasture, nnd raMniff Itself to the udder of the cnw. grasped the teat with Its mouth and sucked out the milk. When It had sat isfied Ms) hunger it dropped off. .Mr. Miller killed tlvls arid five other large bull snakes which he found in bis pas ture, and since that itlinc his cows have not been troubled. STRIKE A RICH LEAD. Ore Running IOO Ounces to Ton Found In Concepelon Mine. Mexico City, July 7. A great silver strike Is announced from the famous Concepelon mine, In tho state of San Luis Potosl, Rich ore land, giving nn average of 160 ounces to the ton, has been encountered at a depth of 1,000 feet. This mine has In a single year yielded over $:tl.000.000. Another rich ellver ore body has been truck at the Vllladama mines. In Uuevo Leon, the property of a Philadel phia company. FINDS A GOLD MINE. Poor Man Near Duluth Strikes a Fortuno While Digging n Well. Duluth, Minn., July 7. Joseph Bou chare, a poor market gardener living on the old Hermantown rond, seven miles from Duluth, was so poor that he tiurd ly knew where tho next meal was com ing from. Today he Is a rich man, with gold in plenty. Bouchare was digging k well on his place the other morning, bewailing his hard fate the while, when ddenly his pick struck a vein of sold ore so rich that the precious metal could be extracted with a knife. An examination has been made of the property by competent mining experts, and the vein Is announced one of the richest ever opened In this state. ESCAPED LYNCHING. An Italian Murderer Finds Refuge ia a Jail. Allentown, Pa., July 7. The coroner's Jury in the case of Vlncenzo Vlt'.ro, who was shot and killed last night by Vlto t'ortesl, found a verdict holding Cortesl for murder. Uruno Sopollni, who was shot In the face by Cortesl in effecting IiIh capture, has prosecuted him for assault and ba-ttery with in tent to kill. Five of their companions are In Jail as wltneBtg. Cortel would have been lynched by the murdered man's brother and his companions had not their employer re slraiiied them. As it was he was se verely cuffed and kicked before being landed In prison. S1IH KXLW IT WAS LOADED. Whllo F.ndcavorlng to F.mpty a Revolver In Order to Prevent Accident, Cussie Connell Kills Mrs. Kelly. Special to the Scranton Tribune. PKt.st-Hi, July 7. Mrs. Catherine Kel ley, who for tome years h is lived with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Kate Kelley, on Correll Htrett, was Instantly killed to day by a bullit fi-orn a revolver In the hand of Caissle Oonnell. who lives wV.h hi-r widowed mother, Mrs. Jamea Connell, No. 74 the same street. The accident occurred In tlv" early hours of the morning whu the Connell fam ily, wi'th the- exception of Cusslo and a younger brother, were attending early mass. Mis. Kelley was preparing her self to go to church whi-n she met her oVath. Oish-le's 18-yt ar-old hi other was the post-'essor of a 2'J-calib:-e revolver, which h-? had l.rt on a table on retl-Ing Saturday might. Casie, who was up early, found th- gun, and on. examina tion ascertained that It was loaded, and fearing lest some accident Fhould occur by his hand, thought she would fire off the remaining cartridges. She Flopped on the back porch an j fired the pistol at the fence. Tho first bullot struck the fnce, but at the s-cond shot the revolver was raised and the bullett strmk Mrs. Kelley In the left breast, near the htuit, as sh? was leaving an out building, which was at least l"i0 feet distance from the porch on which the' Council girl was standing. The womin was removed to the house and tlv? girl gave h.?rf?lf to Constable Pen der, who took her to Wllkrs-Barre un til further investigation could be made. The girl's mo;her and sister, who are prostrated with grief, were very close friends to the murdered woman and her slater. CAssie is employed as a winder In the Luzerne Knlttlnir mill. Were. Pi-rtfton, and was much thought of by her many acquaintances as a kind, (thoughtful and industrious girl. The dad trtiman moved here some time f!nce from Dunmore and took up ber residence with her sIMer-in-law, Mrs. Kate Kelley. widow of James Kel ley. The women's names being tho fame 1. due to their having been mar ried to brothers. The murdered woman la survived by three daughters and one son. Deputy Coroner Gibbons em paneled a Jury. The body was viewed by them, and nn Inquest will be held tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. FORTUNE AWAITS AN OWNER. San Francisco Pnnk Searching for t'.to Uenuino Kato Welch. Sah Francisco, July 7. Kate Welch, an Inmate of the asylum at Heno, Jfev., ha $10,201 deposited in the Hlbernla l.'ivnk in this city, which has remained uncalled for for twenity-one years. In ilhe meantime the hank officials have traced every woman of that name on the Pacific coast, and several eastern states, only to find the real owner of the tiny fortune in a f.vble old woman of shattered Intellect conlined in n state institution. A popsible h'ir has also been found in a man named John lluekley, of St. Tuls, who cHl.ms to be her son. It is believed that Buckley may be able to establish Ms kinship. KILLED BY THE EXPRESS. Fate of Two Vonng Men W ho Were Over taken at Rnehcllc. Mount Vernon, X. Y.,.July 7. Two unknown young men were struck at Hast New Rociielle last night by an express train on the New York. New Haven and Hartford railroad. One died almost Instantly and the other died shortly after. There Is no clue to the Identity of tho former, but a letter was found In the pocket of the latter addressed to William Ferguson, Paterson, N. J. The letter was evidently from the man's sister. Hoth men were dressed In light colored summer suits and wore straw huts. SUICIDE OF STEVENSON. Ex-tiovcrnnrof Idaho Takes l.nndannm with F.frcetivo Itcsiilts. San Luis Obispo, Cnl., July 7. Ex Governor Stevenson, of Idaho, commit ted suicide yesterday by taking lauda num. Governor Stevenson arrived at Pnlrso Springs June 5. He was afflict ed with Fcla.tlta and was In a helpless condition, hut had been gradually Im proving, and lately was getting able lo walK a little. He was expented to entirely recover, lie did not have .tvls room for the laRt three days and appeared very despond ent. Frnnkie Drops n Plum. Philadelphia, July 7. Frank Willing Leach, real estate deputy sheriff, sprung a surprise today by restgnlng his W.000 a year ofllce. Mr. Leach in his leitter of resignation gave as his reason forW-eslgn-Ing thnt he was a follower of Senator Quay ami I that, as the sheriff was not In sym pathy with Mr. Quay, ho considered it his duty to rcelgn. Missing llos DlscovcreJ. Fort Scott, Kan.,' July 7.-T!ie five miss Ing boys who went fishing on Thursday afternoon, were found yesterday by searching pnrtles and brought home un harmed. They were water bound on an Island between two Hooded creeks for two days and two nights. WEATHER REPORT. For eastern Pennsylvania, fair; followed by showers Monday night. . , Yf Special Sale SCOTCH 0 ING HA Our reputation p Scotch Ginghams t questioned ana it Is known fact that for ity and assortmen stock cannot be ma this side of New Yor: As we never care to over goods from one se to another, we will the balance cf our st about 150 pieces, att 1 per yard. 7 his is an opportunity buy the genuine article a price generally asked i aomesxic makes sola t Scotch and French good: 30 pjeces tine Clan Pla; Silk Ginghams, specially1 suitable tor waists " anj children's wear and abso lutely fasi colors. About 35 DressPatternr, extra choice, lace strip; and printed brocade Trilby Silks, ail light ground ani 27 Inches wide; 12 yards to a pattern; have bVen 55c, Price to close, 39c. per yard or $4,68 a Drt&j Pattern. A very nttractivcRne c? fine Irish Dimities, FreiictT Corded Piques and Organ" dies, White Persian Lawn.-, and White and Cdoretl Dotted Swisses. French Linen Batiste in natural color with em broideries to'match. LACKAWANNA AVENUp V' - - - 1 EL A. KINGSBURY, Agent for Charles A. Scr.jeren & Co.'s Leather Beltiai! The Very Best. 313 Spruce St., Scranton.' ' HOE Sale Begins Today. 111 AXD 110 WYOMING AVE. LEWISJIHLLY& DAVES Just A beautiful line of E: . gagement and We i- ding Rings. Also a fine line of ' 4 v In Sterling Silver, Dorf Jinger's Cut Qfcss, and Porcelain C'!:r w. j. Weir r 4os spy V '1 Vt.-v--'. . Vt '-' I,t- :