The Somerset Herald W&DXE.SDAT - July IT, ls. STATE TICKET tSOYKKM'K: HENRY M. 1IOYT, Of Lt ZF.BNE COI-.NTV. Ul tt TEN AM 1UYEKX.'R : CHARLES W STONE. OF WABREN COl'NY. Sia'liFTARY OK INTERNAL, AFFAIKS: AARON K. PUNK EL, F rtl!t.AIFI.IHI A. .1 I IK3 E OF TH L SI I'KEME OOlKT: JAMES P. STERRETT, (F ALLEGHENY CDl XTY. COUNTY TICKET. 0)NOSE?S: JACOB M. CAMPBELL, OF CAMERlA COUNTY, Juijwt t" tlic docisl-m of the Kirtrlrt ConfBrrnoe. SEX ATE: ENOCH I. YUTZV, 5at'joct to '.lie derision of Hie lil'lrM Conference. ASSEMBLY: AN PRE W J. COLRORN. EPWARP M. SC1I ROCK. FKOTIIUNOTAKY: HENRY F. SCIIELL. SHEKJFF: EPGAR KYLE. KK'JLSTtT. AX1 KKCMIRPKK: WILLIAM B. IREASE. TREASURER : HENRY F. KNEPPER M).MiIISSIONLItS: PENXIS COOK. JACOB CRITCIIFIELP. IHKtH HOUSE DIRECTOR : GILLIAN KOONTZ. AUDITORS : JACOB M. BAKER. Ill RAM P. McCOY. Tin country is waiting anxiously for that immense bomb which the Potter Committee promised eoon to explode. Pity if it should be a lizzie. Bradford, McKean county, this Slate, has shot up like a rocket A year ago it was an idle village of 50 people, but now its 10,000 are projecting an opera house, churches, high ecbool building and Cne resi dences. Stores rent at from $1,500 f 1.S00 upon its business 6treets, and building lots bring fancy prices. Its wells are 6afe and profitable, yielding from 12,000 to 20,000 barrels a day. and a railroad is now in process of construction which Bradford relies on to make it the greatest centre in the whole oil region. The estate of Pr. J. C. Aver, of Lowell, Mass , w hose death has been lately announced, is said to bo worth over fifteen million dollars. This money was mainly made by vending patent medicines, and the vast amount of it represents an equivalent of pur gation Burh as no other citizen of Massachusetts will be credited with in this world or the next We do not remember ever to have heard or read of a medicine man so prosperous. Pr. Ayer was a believer in the vir tues ol printer's ink. lie advertised bis nostrums the world over. Hence his millions. The Labor party carried Luzerne County last year, and ns a conse quence elected W. II Stanton, its candidate for Judge. Having secur ed the position, Stanton, who was, aud is, a wool-dyed Pemocrat like the sow that returned to her wallow ing, is now attempting to transfer the labor rote to the Pemocratic party. He, who claims to be a leader of the labor party, and lives in a region where tens of thousands of laboring men hare been thrown out employment by the destruction of business, in faca of the fact that the Pemocrats in the last Congress pro posed to reduce the tariff and open the ports c.f this country to the manu factures of Great Britain aad Belgium, which would have been certain death to the coal and iron interests of this State, coolly advises the labor party of LoEerne County and of the country to vote the Pemoiratic party into power, and actually asks it to aban don its own ticket and support that of the Pemocratic party fir State offices. The bistery of the country is full of just snch incidents, w here the laboring men have been deluded into joining "independent" political organizations, only to Cad them selves sold out and cheated by Pemocratic demagogues who have used them ia the interests of their' own party. This trick of Stanton's is an old one. the object being to seduce the Pemocratic portion of the party from the support of their State ticket, leaving the Republican por tion to do that kind of voting, and thereby secure the State to the Pem ocracy, re-elect the old Congressional delegation, and in that event pass the Wood tariff at the next session, which every intelligent laboring man in the State ought to know, would almost ruin otir Lome manufacturers, and compel them to Bospcnd opera tion unless wages are reduced to uch a low point as to enable tLcm to compete with the cheap labor oi foreign countries. Undoubtedly the object of Stanton and other Pemo cratic demagogues is to cheat the Republicans who have Joined this organization, and they a? eano men i have mt one Connie left to pnr.-u if the v wish to nromote their own iu- tercst, sad thai h to ret am O their i :Own partj and not permit themselves to be made the dupes of tie Doms- crane tricksters who joined the labor 'party noMy for the purpose of cn : trolling and profiting by it, aad w ho to a roan wi.I vole the entire Porno rra'.ic ticket ia the fall. The JoLastowa Democrat this week contains a communication given the prominence of a placa in its first editorial column, terribly denunciatory cf Hon. A. II. CofiYoth, charging him with compromising his Pomccracy w hen in Congress, and urging tie Cambria county cci:ftTce to oppote his nomination. j A conr.EeroxiiEXT cf the New i York Wvrld wants to isow if tie j Randall that made the speech bt the Manhattan Club on Tuesday night is 'the seme Randall who spoke in Phil adelphia on Monday night The New YorK person spoke cf the free dom of individual enterprise and of the folly of laws intended to tbackle industry for the special benefit of a favored few. The Philadelphia per son said "he always set down a man who talked to hira cf free trade as being either ignorant or a deceiver." It is to be hoped that the Manhattan Club h3 not been imposed upon. Such sentiments as arc ascribed to Mr. Randall in New York he is nev er known to u;ter in Philadelphia. Here he is esteemed an excellent sort of protectionist, worthy to fit at the feet of Carey and at the side of Kcl lcv. When" a couple years ticco, Singer, the sewing machine man died, it was discovered that he left no less than 5vc wives and twenty-Svc children, as claimants to his immense estate. Instead of squandering the money ia fruitless litigation, the various wo men who supposed they were bis wives, have appaiently been well ad vised, and the matter has been amicably adjusted and the estate divided among his victims and their children. The Chicago IrJcr-O-vaii an nounces the result as follows : All contests against the will of Isaac M. Singer in this country have been disposed of, all claims against the estate have been settled, and more than $9,300,000 distributed to the twenty-five persons named in the will. This has been accomplished within two years, aad the surviving executor has gone to England to settle up the estate of $3,000,000 in that country. It will be remembered that five women called Mr. Singer hut-band, and twenty-five children called him father. The will divided the proper ty in America, valued at about $9,000,000, into sixty portions, these including bequests to all his children, illegitimate as well as legitimate, and to bis last wife. To the children of his first wife wife he gave $10,;';oO ; to the eight surviving children oi Miss Sponsler who was known as his wife when he turned his atten tion to inventions, he gave $1,750, 000; to the five children of Mary McGarigal, who liv-d with him as Mrs. Matthews, he Jgavo the same amount; to the child of Mary E. Walter, who lived with him as Mrs. Merritt. he gave portions valued at 400,000, to Lis last wile tie gave $700,000, and to her 6ix children portions valued at $5,300,000. Mary Ann Sponsler, or, Mrs. Foster, claimed to be the lawful wid ow of Mr. Singer, and contested the will, but the decision was against her, the court holding that Isabella E. Singer, of England, was the wid ow. The executors compromised with Mr?. Foster, paying her $73,000. The children all claimed their por tions, and all the property ia America has been distributed. The property ia England was set tled on Mrs. Singer and her children. There was a qoeer complication in this case, as Mrs. Singer, whose maiden name wa3 Lover, was mar ried under the name of Summerville. Before Lis death Mr. Singer made a trust deed, conveying this property to his wife, and signed a will giving the property in England exclusively to her. Mrs. Catherine M. Singer, the Erst wife, is living with her children in Brooklyn; Miss Sponsler, now Mrs. Foster, is living with her husband in New York; Miss McGarigal, other wise Mrs. Matthews, is in Europe ; Miss Walter, or Mrs. Merritt, is liv ing in Europe. All the romance and sad experience of the women came out in the contested will case. But now that all complications have been arranged, aud all claims paid, this "celebrated caso" will cease to in terest the people. Mrs. Singer, the last wife, lives oo the country eeat in Paignton, Eng land, where her husband bad planned to erect a residence that was to out shine all of the old baronial castles. This was to bo called the "Wigwam," was to have a private theater and reading-room, conservatories, ban quet halls, and all the modern appli ances and improvements. This was put under contract, but was not com pleted at the time of Mr. Singer's death. Mr. Pavid Hawley, execu tor of the Singer will, left New York on Saturday for Paignton to complete arrangements for placing the English estate in the control of Mrs. Singer. The woman who took up with an adventure in Francer, and who sev eral years after, as Mrs, Singer, was snubbed by Xew York society, will then be worth nearly $C,000,000. i Paring the war a laborer got what he called two dollars a day for work. It took the product of one day's labor to purchase eight yards of common calico. Now he rets one dollar a day, and can purchase with that sum sixteen yards of calico. lie then paid thirty and forty cents a yard for cotton cloth, that he can cow pur chase for eight cents. It then took the product of a day's labor to pur chase six yards of cotton goods. Now he can purchase twelve yards with the product cf his day's labor. Then it took ail he could earn in fif teen days to buy a moderate suit of clothes; now be can purchase an equally good suit with what he can earn in ten or twelve days. These are only specimens of the changes that have occurred. Grant's death alone can prevent bis renominatton to a third term. This is true, not bscause any man or set of men is working to put htm forward but because tbe people will it. - i Cleveland Jjcadcr (Rep.). One result, hieb will Infallibly at- tCDJ " arqmsutoo con, ice w trol cf the Government bv the Pemo cratic party w ill be the payment of Southern war claims. At the recent) session sixty-five Pemocrats voted in favor of that course, and should the party obtain greater power it will do velop far more strength in this direc tion. The Southern element Las al ways controlled the party action, and it will b? ablo to bring into line the necessary cumber of Northern men to effect its purposes. Tbe objacts Southern I democrat a now have in view are bestowing pensions on men disabled in the Rebel army, the se curing of payment for everything ta ken or consumed in the Sonth by tbe Union army during the war, and ul timately full compensation for tbe emancipated slaves. As power is ac quired tho intentions come more clearly into the light They can be defeated by timing a majority of Republican members to the next House ; and it this fails, by the choice of a Republican President of firm-j ness and courage two years hence. It is the fear of Southern domination in the Government, through the Pem ocratic party, that already brings General Grant into prominence as the next Republican candidate. Doyle town Lileilviencer. Hot Tariff I'roleetion MrarOI Aarl- culture. Benefits accrue through a series of advancing and cultivative influences, as follows : 1. By multiplying the mechanic r.rts so that the p.-ople employed therein become regular and liberal consumers of food, without compel- inj in its production, thus enlarging the farmer's homo production. 2. By reducing tLe distance be tween producer and consumer, with the effect of diminishing cost of transportation between the two; dis pensing with a portion ot the former middlemen, and increasing tbe num ber of exchanges. 3. By diversifying agriculture and providing for a rotation of crops, since the farmer who depends on ex portation is limited constantly to the few growths for which there is a for eign demand, whereas tbe domestic requirement is both steadier and more varie.l. 4. By relieving the perplexities and evils of a slavish reliance upon the foreign market ; for tho quanti ties taken abroad, from year to year, are so uncertain and changeable as to frustrate every attempt made, at the date of sowing the crop, to esti mate and to anticipate the amount that will be wanted, so that there is qnite as great liability to produce too much as too little; but the home consumption can be reasonably esti mated. 5. By establishing a multitude of manufacturing centres, from which goes forth miles arennd a profitable demand for those minor crops, such as pumpkins, turnips, melons, and the like, which the earth produces by tbe ton, while it yields the cereals by the bushel, yet which will not bear tbe expense of a long transpor tation. 6. By retaining in the country and near tbe field an increasing propor tion of the waste of agricultural con sumption, thereby enabling the farm er to return to ihe soil, in the shape of manure, the fertilizing constituents withdrawn by tbe processes of vege tation, and preventing the exhaustion of the land. 7. By more and more promoting the division of agriculture into dis tinct branches, as sheep husbandry, the raising of flax for fiber and seed, fruit orchards, vegetable gardens, dai ries, cheese factories, bee culture, and the like, with the result of reducing agricultural competition. 8. By improving and multiplying roads, bridges, and ferries, and by cheapening all the facilities of trans portation, in consequence of tbe rapid growth and larger needs of internal commerce. 9. By augmenting the value of land and tbe prices of agricultural produce, through the greatly increas ed demand for both. 10. By expanding the supply, im proving the quality, and diminishing the pi ices of manufactured articles, through tbe multiplication of mana fdcturers and tbe growing competi tion among them ior the sale of their products in the same markets. 11. Bv stimulating the inventive genius of our countrymen to devise many labor-saving machines and better implements, whereby much of the former drudgery or larm labor is transferred to muscles of wood and metal, tbe power tilling the land vastlv enhanced, and the cost of agricultural production wonderfully decreased. 12. By ultimately briaging the manufacturer to the side of the farmer and the planter everywhere, thus de stroying tho onerous tax of transpor tation, and abolishing tho interven tion of supernumerary and expensive middlemen, as the effects of direct exchanges an increasing tendency toward wbicn result is now seen in tbe growth of manufacturing estab lishments ia the rural districts of the West, and in the progressive erection of cotton-mills ia the immediate neighborhood of the cotton fields of tbe South. And, 13. By finally transforming the cultivation of the soil from an igno rant waste of the fertilizing elements into a scientific agriculture, whereup on it enters upoa a bouadless and permanent career of prosperity. i be more Irequent tbe tanll pro tection is weakened, the oftener will these effects be interrupted; the more completelr tbat tinn protection is withdrawn, tbe more widely will these effects ba arrested, turned back, and destroyed ; tbe more thoroughly and steadily that tariff protection is bestowed, the more actively and fruitfully will these effects come into existence, and tbe more permanent will they be. It is utterly impossible io protect tbe farmer without protect ing the manufacturer ; for ice pro tection of the former follows as an inevitable corollary from tbe protec tion of the latter. Inter-Ocean. The fall of the Republican Parly. Fruin the lluriingtoa Uavkrye. An excited journalist out in Floyd countv, locking through a pair of Pemocratic spectacles of great mag nifying power, "sees the Republican party tottering to its fall." Ob, he does, decs he ? Then he had better stand from under, for when it does come down, it will come like thous and of brick. This won't be the first time it has "tottered to its fall," and it has always made a success of it heretofore. It tottered to its fall once, and fell upon Breckinridge, and for nearly five years it tottered around on tbe Pemocratic party and nearly trampled it entirely off the Pemo cratic slate. It fell upon Greeley, and hVtened him out badly. It fell up on one General McCIcllan, and a party by the name of Sevmour. More recently it fell upon Sammy Tilden, and made him think he was trespas- eg on a landslide. becever it r a falls, we notice whoever stands in the way gets hurt lac Ureal Xerd ftTfhc llaar. From (lie CLUngo later Ocn. New party movements not based on great principles represent that sort of activity and animation seen ia the idiot who spends hoars trying to put a square block into a round hole. There is abundance of exercise ex pended on a misdirected effort, and that is all there is of it. Republi cans should remember that the great need of the hour is a Republican Congress, and there should be no loose experiments for tbe mere sake of exercise. Tbe Maa aad Platform la 1S0. From tbe Cleveland L'uulcr. The Graphic only depicts what is in tho air when u portrays among the fireworks of Independence day tbe figure of tbe man with a cigar o horseback. It nothing occurs to turn the tide of public sentiment from its present course, the work of the Convention ia 1380 will be easy an brief. It will nominate the silent man as he was nominated in 1372 unanimously, because there will be no otber candidate. Then if tbe Convention is wise, it will eschew all trimming and concocting of elab orate resolutions and adopt for th Republican platform of 1880 the nai cause ot l resident Urant s sec ond message to Congress, as follows the policy of tue administration "In conclusion, I would sum u the policy of the Administration to be a thorough enforcement of every law, a faithful collection of the tax provided for ; economy ia the dis bursement of the same, a prompt payment of every debt of tbe nation a reduction of taxes as rapidlr as tb requirements of the nation will ad mit, reduction of taxation and tari to be arranged as to afford the great est relief to the greatest number honest and fair dealing with all oth er people, to the end, tbat war, with all its blighting consequences, may be averted, but without surrendering any right or obligation due to U3 ; reform in the treatment of Indians, and the whole civil servico of the country ; and firmness ia securing pure, untrampled ballot, at which ev ery man entitled to cast a vote may do so ju3t once at each election, with out fear of molestation or proscnp tion on account of his political faitb nativity or color. (Signed) U. S. Grant. "Executive Mansion, Pecember 1870." There are not Pemocrats enough in tbe United States to beat the hero of Yicksburg and Appomattax upon platform like tbat. lend-Harkt. Peadwood. Pakota. July 11. Tbe lime this evening contains an account of a cloud-burst at Rapid City, about 40 miles from Peadwood It says a water-spout struck Rapid Yallev on Tuesday evening, and played havoc with life and property The river at Rapid City rose 15 feet in one hour and a half, deluging farms and gardens, carrying away bridges, damaging freight in transit to the hills, and drowning a man by the came of Billings. The flood came up so rapidly that a camp of freighters on tho bottom, across the river from Rapid City, was sep awav. Uae ot tbe lreighters was drowned, and at last accounts Lis body had not been recovered. X large bull-train, belonging to Pratt A Ferris, of Sidney, was caught in tbe Hood, and it is thought that muc of the freight has been destroyed. tiyell llonklt Nurtler. Norwich, July 11. Oa June Charles II. Cobb, City Collector, died suddenly and in a manner that aroused suspicion. A post-mortem disclosed no reason for his death, and his stomach was scat to Prof. Pore mu3 for analysis. The Protessor found in it arsenic enough to cause death, and so reported. Suspicion at once fell on Wesley W. Bishop, a neighbor, who was arrested, it was then concluded to have an examina tion of the body of Bishop's wife who also di?d with suspicious symp toms last Febiuary. Her body wasac cordingly disinterred, and parts of it were submitted to Prof. Poremus At to-day's session of the "Coroner's mry the Professor testified to nod ing in bcr vitals weigbablo quanti ties of arsenic and traces of copper Other testimony was submitted, and tbe jury returned a verd.ct tbat their opinion Mr. Cobb came to bis death from poison, administered by his wife. Katie M. Cobb, aided and abetted by Wesley W. Bishop. Up on the rendering of the verdict Mrs. Cobb was placed under arrest The examination of tbe case is set down for Monday next. A ! pirate Prisoner. Chatham Villaue, N. Y., July 10. Two of the Troy burglars were captured to-day near North Adams, Mass. Officers Walden, Thomas Quinn and citizen E. J. Cary started for Albany with them. YV ben ap proaching the State line one of the prisoners asked permission to take off his coat. When freed he drew a revolver and commenced firing. Four chambers were discharged. Ooina received two balls, one in the hand and one in the lower part of the ab domen. Tbe prisoners were finally bound by those ia charge after a des perate struggle. Tbey had just pre viously offered $100 and a gold watch for their release. Ouiun was taken off at this station. The doctor thinks his life cm be saved. A Wile Hnrdercr Sentenced. Hakrisvurg. Jaly 10 Htzekiaii Shaffer, convicted for the murder of bis wife ia Franklin county, will be handed oa the 17tb of August, the Governor to-dav having issued warrant for bis execution on tbat day. Shaffer first administered poison to hia wifrt and afterward beat her in a most brutal manner. She was found dead at the foot of the stairs in the hou.se in which they lived, with oyer a dozen wounds ia her head, which were inflicted by an ax. The mur derer tried to make it appear that tbe womaa was killed by falling dowo stairs. Tbe crime was com mitted to enable Sbaffjr to press his amours more sitisfactorily with another womaa. Hot Weather. Cincinnati, July 12 Six cases of sunstroke were reported to-day, two o( which resulted fatally. The heat has been etccssire. St. Loi is, July 12 The weatber has been intensely warm here this week, the mercury having ranged from 95 to 102 in tbe shade during tbe day, and from SO to 90 at night Numerous cases of rons'.roke cave been reported at tbe City Pispensa ry, between thirty and forty in all, perhaps eight of which have died up to this evening. Besides these cases many other persons have been over come by beat, and been obliged to seek relief and rest from business or labor. There are no present indica tions of tbe heated term breaking. THE INDIAN WAR Howard Fights a Battle. Tbe Indiana Defeated Alter Sharp Fight I.oxfceM of the Troops. Washington, July w. Tbe fol- lowing telegram was received at tbe War Office at an early hour this morning Tresidio, San Francisco, July 9. General Sherman, Washington D. C: Tho following despatch, received from General Howard, dated head of Birch Creek, July 8,h, at Pilot Rock : "I formed junction with the troops. Whoatoa had been ordered to meet me under Throckmorton. It being uncertain from conflicting reports whether the main body cf the hos tiles was near the head cf Butler Creek or near the Columbia crossing, I sent two excellent 6couts to place their camp, and at sunrise moved two colums, one under Throckmorton, consisting of two companies of artil lery, one of infantry and a few vol unteers, which proceeded by the stage road directly t Butler Creek poatoflics. Tbe other columns, con futing of seven companies of the First Cavalry as a battalion, under Bernard, and severally comauded by M. Grego, Whipple, Bendire, Win ters, Parncll, Ward and Bonius, with about twenty of Robins' scouts and a Galling gua. I accompanied Ber nard's columa. "We had proceeded some three miles toward tbo head of Butler Creek when we met tho two scouts, who reported the Indians in force on a height about three miles from us. Bernard, taking the trot, moved quickly into position over those troublesome foothills, the least of which is fenced by a canyon and over a mile in the ascent Tho cav alry sped from hill to hill till in the vicinity of the caemy, strongly post ed on a rocky crest. All the om panics, except M. Grego's, with tbe jack train, were deployed and used during the engagement. Tbe ad vance was made along several ap proaches ia a handsome manner, not a man falling out of the ranks. The different sides of the hill were steep er than Missionary Ridge; still, tbo foops, though encountering a severe fire tbat emptied some saddles and killed many horses, did not waver, but skirmished to the very top, the enemy abandoning this ' posi.ion and running to the next height in the rear, slightly higher, and crowned with natural defences of lava rock. Ia twenty minutes tbe height was charged from different side3 and ta ken. Then commenced a rapid pur suit of the flying Indians, who aban doned their spare borses that were on the field, perhaps two hundred, most of them jaded and worthless. Tbey also abandoned their provis ions, ammunition and camp material. Tbe bostiles struck for the thick pines which crest tbe blue ridge, and again made a stand, usicg tbe trees for defence. Again tbe cavalry pressed them in trout tnd on tbe tliok, and in a few moments dis lodged them a third lime and push ed mem four or five miles further in tbe mountains. The rough country and the great exhaustion of horses and mon caused a cessation ot tho pursuit for to-day. In the battle live enlisted menwwero wounded, ana probably twenty horses killed. Tbe enemy's loss in killed and wounded is difficult to tell. Their women and children and best horses were well out of the wav before the battle be gan, seemingly towards the Grande Roude. The flight is in that direc- .-. Im 1 . 1 J tion. i-aptain uernaru is eniuieu 10 soecial credit for this engagement; indeed, for the entire campaign, and his officers and men Lave none as well as brave and true men can do. Could you know the difficulties of this wilderness, you could then appreci iite their loyal services." (Signed) McDowell, Major General. (leneral 1'rtss Dilute :i. San Francisco, July 10 Pis- patebes received at Army Headquar ters here, from General Howard yes terday, dated "at the head of Birch Creek," state tbat General Howard left Pilot Rock, a place about twen ty miles directly south of Pendleton n Northeastern Oregon, at t a. m, July 8, going toward Willow Springs. Scouts soon repor'ed tbat there was a body ot Indians at or near Willow Springs, aud General How ard pushed forward to meet tbem. The line of march from Piolet Rock must have been westwardiy across tbe vallevs of two or three small streams which run north aud empty into the Umatilla River, and tbea northerly, the column Ekirtiog a great mountain ridge which lifts its bead here above tbe surrounding valleys, about twenty-five miles etuthwest of Pendleton. Along tbe none i-ido oi the foot hiils of this ridge tuls the Lmatilla River. Along the cast side runs Birch Creek, which runs north wardly and empties into the Lmatil la. Along the west side runs But ler Creek, the ttream rising among the foot h lis of the mountain. Gen. Howard fouud tbe Indians ia force near the head of Butler Creek. Howard advanced ia two columns one under Throckmorton, contt ng of two -companies of artillery, one f infantrv, and a few volunteers; and the other under Bernard, con sisting of seven companies cf caval ry and twenty cf Robins scouts, General Howard accoropauviug the latter column. Bernard's scouts in formed him of tha viciuity of the bos tile Indians, when the cavalry mov ed forward at a trot over three foot bills, each over a mile in ascent The Indians were strongly posted on a rockv crest. One company was eft with the pick traiu. Tbe others deployed aud advanced handsomely under a heavy Dre. The a: cent is described as steeper than that ot Missionary Ridge, but no man broke ranks, though several saddles were emptied and many horses killed. Tbe enemy Was driven from the position to another height in the rear, of greater elevation and crowned who natural defences of lava rocks. In twenty minutes this pot-ition was al so stormed from ditrent sides at once, and a r pia pursuit oi me ny- usf Indians oegan. fue navagf.- abandoned their horse, provisions mmonilion and pamp material, and pushed for a thick limber crowuiog Blue Ridge, where tbey made an- ber stand. They were again dis- lcd'td and pushed four or five miles further into the mouLtaips. The ongh country and the great exhaus tion of tbe men caused a ceseatiou of the pursuit for the day. In this engagement 0e enlisted men were wounded and about twen ty bores killed. It is impossible to state tbe loss of tbe enemy. Their women and children and best horses were moved before the fight began, apparently in tbe direction of Grande Ronde, and the Indians fled in that direction. About 400 head of stuck were captured. Officers and men behaved in the best possible manner throughout the entire affair. General Howard's o flic i hi report to General McPowci! adds I i tile to the above sccouni of tha battle. It says, however, that Ixing nacerthio from conflicting rer s whether tbe main body i l tbe hostile Indians was Lear tbe beau ot liuiler Creek r ; nearer the Columbia Cro--i;ig, -, ( General sent two excellent sc m's t place their camp and at sunrise mov ed two columns, one under Throck morton, consisting of two companies of artillery, one of infantry, and a lew volnnteers, which proceeded by the fctsge road directly to Butler Cretk post cfiice. Tho other col umn consisted of seven companies 1st Cavalry, as a battalion, under Bernard, and severally commanded by McGregor, Whipple, Beadive, Winters, Parnell, Ward and Barnes, with about twenty of Robins' scsuts and a Catling gun. They met tbe Indians after a six mile march. The cavalry sped from bill to hill, till in the vicinity of tbe enemy, strongly posted on a rocky crest. All the companies, except McGregor's with the jack traio, were deployed, and used during the engagement Gen. Howard says: "Captain Bernard is entitled to special credit for tbe en gagement, as indeed for tbe entire campaign, and his officers and men did as well as brave and true men only can d- Could you know tbe difficulties of this wilderness, you would then appreciate their loyal services." THE WILLOW SPBIN'tTS FK1IIT.. San Francisco, July 8 A Dis patch from Portland, Oregon, ves- terday, says: "Governor Chad wick. who is now at Umatilla, telegraph here under date of the 7ih as follow "The volunteers under Captai S perry, fifty strong, were defeated at W lllow Springs, thirty miles south of Pendleton, yesterday. Sperry killed, and nearly ail of his comman killed or wounded. We can hear o but seven left' " A Umatilla courier, from Port land, reports the following dispatch es addressed to Governor Chadwick "We are in great danger here from Indians. Our troops went to the front from here fifty strong, were at tacked to-day at Willow Springs, an from tho reports of those who got in there must be half, if not two-third killed. Of those who are in, three men are wounded, and they report several others wounded before they got out We have abont three bun dred men here, and not one half them are armed. A hundred sol diers left here at 7 p. m. to the relief of our men." ANOTHER FHillT miners and TLEP.S MURDERED. !-ET Helena, Mon.; July 13. Two Miners, named John Myers and Job uyncn, were emeu last wees, on Elk creik. The Indiaas aro believ ed to have commitud the deed. El creek is on tbe line of the Cadott pass, near where two men were p:e vicusly reported to have been killed Considerable sppreheusiun is felt by rtcchers and stock men oo tbe road from here to Benton. Governor Potts has just returned from a visit to Tenderi, Chief of the Banaocks, at L?m'ii Agency. He reports the Bannock Indians to be peaceably disposed. A Baker City, Or:gou, dispatch says: Hostiles have made their ap pearance on the Clover creek tnbu tary of North Powder river. Cat Yivian's company of Egbert's com mana, uniie scouting vesteraav in that direction, captured eeven Indi aLS, eight iqua ws and some children and twecty bead cf corses, after vigorous pursuit. Thirty or more of the hottiles escaped. Scouts from Meat-ham's report a largo trail through the Blue Mountains passing toward Snake nvec made early yes terday morning. Egbert's command has been ordered to tbe Piute ccua try, to watch for returning hostiles who art evidently niowng north to wards Idaho and tbe baitnon river country a3 fast as possible. Sauford's command has been ordered to fly valley, near Paly ranch, then follow on the trail tf the Indiana north. A Portland dispatch sajs tbe fi l low iog startling news is just receiv ed here frcm Pendleton, under date of the 12.b, from J. B Keeny. The dispatch was directed to Governor Chadwick : "Yours just received ; will try and get an escort for a wagon lu the morning. We have been having ex citing times here to-doy. Hostile In dians are ia force on the reservation George Coggan, of Portland, and Al Bunker, cf LeGracde, were shot this afternoon, about six miles from here, on tne stage road to Cay use. Co, gan was killed. Bunker is supposed to be mortally wounded. I-red los- ter was with tbem, and only got awav b Iuck. Bunker rede with him for about two miles after he was shot, and he was compelled to leave bin). Fester gave os the news, and we started a team with fourteen men as an escort to go for Bunker. Tbey got as far as Chief Wincuraonoai's farm, when they were attacked and compelled to return, after rxebang iog a number of shots. Tbe Indians, are about 150 ttrong. Tbe Umatil las are undoubtedly fighting with them. Major Connoyer was with tbe party attacked. T ey think tbey killed oue Indian, as he was seen to fall from his horse. Cay use's house was pillaged and burned. Our stage station was not burned at dark. "Captaia Miles' command wili n ach t be agency to-night His sol diers are all very much exhausted. and should they go into the agency tbiLkiug that the Umatilla are all right, thev may get tbe wortt of it. Our families are at the mill and Court House, and the town is well guarded " Gov. Chadwick has Issued a call for 300 volunteers. The f..lloiog letter is just relieved at Umatilla by Governor Chad wick by a courier form Pendleton : "Tbe t roups uuder Captain Miles are now bgbticg about two miles abive the Agencv with Indians, aad have been fighting for tbe last two hours. Tbe Indians are oa tbe river near tbeir general camping place. Almost a' tbe Umitillas are supposed to be in the fight Al B.-iuker ha-i just got in. Coggan has not been found vet. Should tbe ludiats get the best of Captain Miles we will all, uodobted ly, have to fight There are over one hundred n)en here who have qo arms of aqy kind." 4 Tr rifle Mala Mra, Liscissati, July 10. A speoial dispatch from Russell, on the Clove land, Tuscarawas and Wheeling rail, way, state that a terrific rain storm there swept away five hundred feet of the track. Several bridges and email building were also destroyed. Loss, $10,000 to $20,000. THE CHINESE FAME. Five Million Persons Fall Victim- to It. Tue t'rljCSiiral l'analali Front It. Reoalllnft- New York. July 8 The London Spectator, cf June 22d, which hasp just b-'en re?eived, says: Tbe ofli- I -i;l ues received from Shanghai i.t. i. i . i. ..t I'ji.s iti'ira, nit? luiii vi April, records the details of a famine such as our horrible famines in India have never yet approached. It is something to know tbat rain baa fall en since this information was sent off, and that ia four or five months' time if anything can be doae to abate the horrors in the interval the agony of the suffering may be over. But tbe raia itself can product no result till the crops which it renders possiblo are reaped, and ia tbe tneaa time all the frightful incidents which we hear of in these coldly accurate Chinese Blue Books must go on, ex cept so far as they are prevented by Chinese or foreigners' exertions. What these incidents are it would be almost needlessly etartliog to ex plain, were it not for tbe fact tbat, if we are rightly informed, every 1 which this country can send may prevent a murder of tbe moat hideous kind a murder of relatives by rela tives, to b followed by protracted cauuibalisru. Every il received from Englaod, say t.be missionaries on the spot, may save a life. But to save a life is nothing in comparisou with saving a parent from killing bis children or a child from killing his parents for tbe same purpose f..r which they would kill sheep or oxen namely, in order to use them f r meat Tbe mere suggestion is cne which revolts the very bedy almost as much as it revolts the soul. Yet the dry oiucial report says : "In tbe earlier period of distress, the living fed upon the bodies of the dead: next, the strong devoured tbe weak, and now tbe general destitution has ar rived at such a climax mat men de vour those of their flesh and blood History contains no record of so ter rible and distressing a state of things, and if prompt measures of relief be not instituted tbe whole region must become depopulated." The Chinese authorities themselves assert that 5,000,000 of the people had died either of the famine or of tbe violence of those who wanted to avoid starv ation for themselves. Tbe Roman Catholic Bishop of Shansi, Mgr. Mon ogatta, completely confirms this frightful intelligence. And the gbast liness of this diabolic feast will not end with itself. What sort of memo ries will tbe population which basj committed such horrors have in tho time to come, when they are no long er necessary ? And money can do so much just now, not merely in preventing death, or crime that is worse than death, out in opening np tbe new comraun cations, tne aosence ot wbicb is re sponsible for a great deal of the worst horror. The worst famine in Shansi, to which the nearest poia available for steamers is Tientsin, the point on tbe Peisho becupied by our troops when we were under tbe ne cessity of overawing the Government in the neighboring capital of I tk rrom lientsin to Tal luea.the ceo tre of the worst of tbe famine dis tricts, the distance is about only tw hundred miles not further probably than from London to Leeds, but th roads are so bad and go over moun tains so bigb, that tbe relief party sent to help the famine struck district took fifteen days to traverse tbem Of course nothing but beasts of bur den can bo used at present over thes rough roads, across mountains of from 4,000 to 5,000 feet in height and yet mis is tbe best avenue ap parently, by which food can reac the depopulated district " For a long time the Chinese Government have been t-pendiag all tbeir ppare money on Krupp gurs, instead of on making these most neeeesarv roads: but if little Eurcpean help could be obtain ed, the Government mi git now per haps be shamed into making the roads necessary for taking the for eigners' relief from tbe ports of tbe empire to the wretches who so terri bly need it 1 here are distinct tra ces of shame in tbe manifesto of tbe Emperor on this awful famine. In an edict of tbe 22d of March be sayc "He, whose duty it is to watch over tLe millions of our people with fos tering care, feel tbat the loss cf one ot our sunjects is the result oi our misdoing ;" and yet not only one, but 9,000,000, are said to bave perished already. Nlrurk by Lightning oa a Spire. When Pr. Hall's old church, cor ner of r ihh-avenue and Nineteenth street, was torn down to make way for au extension of tbe large dry goods establishment in Nineteenth- street, tbe material was sold for tbe erection of another church of the Presbyterian denomination. This burcb i located in r ifty -seventh treet, between Broadway and Sev- entb-avenue, and cow nearly com piet", services oeing ceia uoucr me irection of Rev. Dr. YV ilson. The steeple is yet to be built, and men re at work upjn it. Yesterday uring tbe progress of the thunder storm, Edward White, aged 30 years. bricklayer, boarding at Tenth treet and North avenue, and Bsr- ard Grav, 39 years of age, living ut No. 41C Second avenue, were at woik upon the spire Ecaffdding, Whi.e bting outside tbe steeple and Gray on the interior. Tbe cburcb is some bat isolated fr.jin other huild- ngi, and suddenly, at 4:35 o'cl.-ck, both men were struck bv ligbti-iog. The electric fluid killed Whi e in stantly, and be tell backward from tbe platf rm and plunged headlong to the ground, a distance ot CO feet Tbe fluid struck Gray in tbe chesr, and tbeu diverged, running up bnh arms, down the abdomen, and along both thighs. It scarred bis body, leavings plainly visible purple streak to mark i's course. Several neigh bor witnessed tbe accident, and notified the Pole, who summoned an ambulance, aud removed Gray to tbe Roosevelt Hospital, while the body of White was transferred to tbe Twenty recoud precinct Stu'i n. where aa autopsy was niad by Pop uty Coroner (Jold.-'chiedt. The Doc tor wa uaable to Cud any injury on the body beyond a sligh: scratch on the forehead. White ha.i relatives in Mornsauia, who will take charge of the body for burial. The phvsician who at'euded Gray at the hospital, expressed the opinion tha. the p.-uicut might recover, although hi iniunes are severe. A' )r- Timf. of July 1 1 Indlrlrd for lie pi a a Had Baatl. Pottsyili.e, July 10. Wro Kine, supervisor of the Center turnpike company, was indicted io the' crimi nal court here for neglecting to keep the road in repair. The jury to-day returned a verdict of guilty. The President Removes i Arthur and Cornell from Their Positions in the New York Custom House. The Main Object of the Chan ges Believed to Be to Se cure Senator Conk ling's Defeat. Wasuinutun, Joue 11 Tu Pm idem to day took advaiUge of the' absence of the Senate, and m.-iJe tbe chun es ia tho New York Coilom if .k- u V 1 . - , r ed by Cockling' exertions ia the .euaie. lo-aay Ueneral Merrill wa appointed Collector and Colonel Burt naval Officer. The former is at pres ent Surveyor of tbe Port, having . i i c i . .l mated and confirmed at the -.i r.:.. ... . been nom time K"tevelt and rnuce were nom inated and defeated for Collector aa I Naval Officer, respectively. Tbe re moval of Arthur and Cornell, who now hold those Offices, is cosidered by the Senator's friends a very mean attack oa him, as the President bad several months in which to make the change after Roosevelt and Prince where rejected, wheu the Senator would have been able to do something effectivo for his friends Arthur's term cf office does not expire until next spring, and Cornell's at a late' day. The main object of tbe Presi dent in removing Conkliug's friends at this time is mdersiooj .o preveat the use of their ollieal influence ia the election of members of tbe Legis lature, who will be Conkling men when the Legislature comes to vote for Senator. Cookling's friends, however, claim tbat be will bo re elected, and signiGcantly point to the fact that tbe (Jreeaback men have a chace of holding the balance of power, aud that Conkling refrained from i ppeakiog on the final question of the ! Cleveland, O , July 9. Mrs. Pr. Ute session, when all of tbe hard-, Ally in Maynard, committed suicide money men indulged ia tirades on the j yesterday afternoon, by saturaiiag greenback cause. Burt, who is made i her clothes wiih c ial oil and then set Naval Officer, bu for uiaay year ! liog tiro to them. For abmt eigh been Chief Peputy in that office. The j teea months hhe had been mi! jt-ct to promotion, for suea it is, of Merritt, will necessitate the immediate ap - the pointmcnt of a Survevor of tort The commissions cf the new cfficials! to her bed for months Tbe di-.:a-e wheref rwared by mail to night It j left her with a sound bit'y Lut a-i is now learned that Secretary Sher- j impaired brain, man's visit to New York was ia She returned h-me; soon after ar connectioo with the changes wbicb I riving was seized i.b an idea that bave been made. The President, j she must take her Iifo ia such a way Secretary Evarts and Secretary SUr- i as not to disfigure her persou. tlie maa decided some time ag i to make! was placed ia several asylua.3, and the changes, but have bceo waiting j the treatment of the most t-killful to fix thing so that there would be pbysioio secured, but there was no trouble ia consumniati.i? ihe ! little or no change for tbe btter change. When Secretary Sherman j Tbe husband finally brought Ler went to New York he held several borne again and secured two experi consultations with leading R?publtc- ! enced uurse to wotch and care f..r ans to secure influence to do what the administration was so desirous to accomplish. Secretary Sberraan will now select some one to succeed Merritt as Surveyor of the Port A Miner lalMI,4-0 'rrt. The Yirginia fXev.) Unit oftheSJinat savs: "At 1 o'il tk yesterdiy afternoon, C. F. Germnua, a shift boss at the Caledonia Mice. ""IT fell to the bottom of the shaft, a dis- j tance ot l,4oU teet, and was torn to shreds. R. W. McKay, Germaan, and another man. had been dowu tj the 700 foot station to change a pump clack Having completed this work, tbey ran the cage down lo the 1,900 level. At that point tbe as sistant was landed, and McKay aud Germann started for ihe surface. Tho tools which had been used in chang iog tbe clack were on the cage, and Germann ha I in bis had a pieco of plank some six feet in length, wbicb he was taking to the surface. He bad the plank under one arm and held t me crossbar of the cage wiih i ne baud. Mr. McKay was holding to the crossbar, and all weot smooth ly until the cage was within loO feet of the top of the shaft. The cage then gave a sudden bound, throwing Mr. McK.tr up against tbe biunet. ir-juring bia bio aad side. When he bad eollecte I hi senses and looked aboct Mr. McKay found tbat Ger maaa was g me, and knew that be bad fallen to toe liottom of tbe f-baft. The plauk Germann nad beeo car ry iag wa alsi gone. Undoubtedly tbe end of the pUnk caught ucder the wall plate of tbe shaft and threw Germann IT. In falling to the bot tom f the i-ha!t Germann' bodr appear to buve bonaded from side to side-, srnkiDg against ihe timbers. and wa thus torn to fragments The bead vva-t torn iff, also tbe hand and fteiaudibe arms and leg were whipped to pieces, leaving portion of the fl ;sb and fragment of bone along down the shaft and scattered about at the bottom. The trunk w as It ft a shapeless pulpy mass. The remain were rolled up in a blanket and when brought to tbe surface lav a a heap tbat bore very little resem blance to tbe body of a human being. Tbe bodies of men who fall such a distance are generally terribly man gled, but in this instance the dis memberment and rending to pieces were much greater than is usually seen, lbe deceased was a native of Pelafielt', Waukesha county. Wis. and aged 31 years. He was aa old resident here, and a good, careful miner. He was married a year ago last April, aad lived oa Petatuma treet, near the cemeteries. He eaves many friends and a w ife and oue small child." Indigestion. The maifi cauie of nervousness i udigcstiou, and that i caused bv weakoes of the stomach. No one can bave s mod nerve and ul health wi'.boii'. u.-iag Hop B iters t strengthen the stomacl., purify ih? blood, and to keep the liver and kid neys active, to carry eU all the it i- non aud waste matter of tbe sys tem. See other column. Private Neerelnry ItMlger. Washington, Joly 10 Col. W. R'idgers, the private secretary of the Presiden', for some weeks ba been confined to hi room by a severe pulmonary aff. cti. n When he ac cepted the p ibiiion he now holds bis tend were apprehensive tha: he would be unequal to its arduous la bor. Not wiihittaudiwg the declining state uf hi health he ba stood at i post until recentlr. TodaTbis ndition is Regarded a alarming. KfVMff for Tcaalny Worcester, Mass, July 1Q This! morniug James Murphy, a workman t at tbe Central Mil!, Uxbridge, struck Peter Cullen over tbe bead with an Labe, 21 year or age, ana aaniaei iron pipe, cutting twj gashes and j Yenabie, 15 years old. A scnflle en fracitiriog the skull. Tbe injuries sued, and while La wshe bad Vena are believed to lie fatal. Cullen bad I ble on the ground, Carl Mitchell, a I jag bad the habit ot teasing Yor- b y sixteen years old, and a friend, phy, alth ugb warned against it by! of Vecable, struck Lawshe two ter- emD ove and tbe priest. I bis, morning hi taunts provoked Mnr- pby's probably fatal blows. J DROWNED. I I M El. ANi'Ilol. Y FATB OF TWil :RAE j 8)LDIFR.S ! Chicauo, July 13 The fallowing jdirpatch was received at Geuerai Sheridan a headquarters ihU uiwruio: l'r Srrri.T, A T. Juijr ii IJ-oL !:K-k,-r wlr"irTicl atHul 1 o ! reslepijy evtrnur. m a li-prrattir nm.H- frnl rruuu-st erf..rt to rv.ue I LR-iuriunt m nly irom 4oth. Th mm$ rs ;)hiI :woi mi! an-J a hali 1h(h(, a.;(r j llirvt hfHir lti'lffiiUc:ille MMrrii. all tlia tr.'ii ' an-t In It ttta t:ilitnir p irt. Kra.-it.itt'iii w.m tin;. 1 0it-te. ifcuh .-kill .1 n! tletrra:ucl ircniMii ni : -! t'iltoi ihpHiuti the entire niltt. .-u:. : llnlv- Nrtly Iim )ut liven rwvtri-l. 1 -n-l the fin iiiih tfl Ifolh nti at ouvf. I rclr.uu tru j I irr.!Knir me itt-ws ! weu-ri k-r. -n-lm u U j i.u iD(va1. itrwin Larue. Hentv i I citnn-t ivitily tbi-tn. WiSclirsTKH. tleatoiMnt Omnnainiiiii;. i ue ucum ui lueso i j voung o! I be death of these two vounn. f. . i nccrs will bring grief and sadness to many beart9. Lieutenant John A. Rucker was the eldest son of General P. II. Rucker, cf the United S:a:tvi Army, and tbe brother cf Mrs. G-.-n-cral Phil Sheridan, cf this eitv i Lieuteuat Ileuly wai a graJm'e of ,.,,-, , J , , . , . llDe Military Academy cf the c s of Is i2. The two officers hid been classmate sod were iatiuia;u person al friends, and no two officers of tLtir age stood bil er as succeful Indian fighters in the Western countrv. Lieutenant Rucker had bca iu command of the Apache ludi.-in scouts for the past two year.', aad had won great distinction in several brilliant engagements. la April, 1S75, Lieutenant Ilenly attacked and defeated with great slaughter a " i . t i . . iour uniss ni nuiu- ucr iu oou,u western rvansa. rcceiv jiug tbe thanks of the Department j Commander ia general orders for his persistent pursuit aad heroic cm duct Bath officers were well kaown iu iuis i-uy, caving spent a porum of their leave here in l5"7f, when un der treatment for wounds. Tbo s-r-row-r tricken Iriend-i of thi dead he roes have the sympathy of tin-c lll muniiy in their affliction. C owl Oil .trrlilrnt. I melancholy and insanity. N ot far , irom two years ago, while traveling j iu Italy with her husband, she was I stricken with fever and was or fin il care her. To do this better, the insane woman was taken to the bouse oa Hough avenue, of the principal nurse, Mrs. Jackson. Here the husband also took op bis quarters. At times Mrs. Maynard would ap; ear much improv ed and once or twice her condition was such that she was left alone, but ..L.. - .- : i ... ! " u? , UUD? SDe '0U11 lTJ !t0j -T' . . PP"D e ,hu9 dPI"d. nun was gjuc u:i ia.e si oiot oeiore found. Yesterday the deed' appear ed rather more cheerful than usual ; obe was sitting iu her chair, pppar ently asleep, when both nurse left her ia the room. They returned in a couple of minutes, to tiod her wrap ped in a sheet of flames, and appa rently endavoring to drink in the fire. This was soon extinguished, but not till Mrs. Maynard was so badly burn ed tbat she died ia fiftjen min utes. Tbe deceased was forty-two year old, wn a nttive of Clevelaod'and, till her f -reign illness, wa one of the m.i.-t iiiteiligeut ladies in the city. Sae wa.-t highly educated, and a meiu'urof un9 of tbe first faruilie h re. rapar.tllrletl Birbarlly. LiiM.ON, July 10. A Constantino ple dispatch to the Time says: Mr. Fawcett ha returned from Lagos, and report tbat intense suffering ex its among tbe population south ot tbe Rhodope mountaios. He enumerate the horrors perpetrated by tbe Bul garians and Cossacks, aud" sometime by regular Russian soldiers, whose desigus seem to be tbe extcrni n itioii or utter dispersion of Miis.selruans and Cbri.staius unfavorable to them io the Pomoda district Fifty-three villages bave been plundered aud burned by tbe Rusniau and Bulgarian troop within the last two month. Twenty-three village bave been equally laid waste and burned iu tbo district cf Haskiev, and in the I'billi popoli district twelve vil!ag bave . been burned. In numerous village there ha been wanton dentrue:ion. attended bv deed of unheard-of bar barity Case of men and women deliberately burnt alive have been frequent. The violation of the yiuag ha been very frequent Nothing more horrible than the particular of tbi report can be imagined. Its ve racity rests on tbe official authority of one of tbe m t respected of Her Majesty 'a servauts, and of men em ployed by him upon hi conviction ot their p:rfeci trustwortbioes. Mr. Fawcett iutend to lay hi report be for tbe Eoglisb, Austrian and French Ambassad rs, with a view to send ing out a commission of ioquiry t the spot, to endeavor to put au end to these ixcesses, wbicb disgrace hti maui v " A uia rarltir HiMarrt Lo.NiHiN, July 11. A telegram to S. W. Silver tt Co, Army, Navy, and C -liinial agents here, from Svd ner, New South Wales, dated July 1 1, s'a e tbat two tribes of native have risen against the Government on the Island of New-Caledonia and massacred 12. white, including men nad children. Tbey have caj.tored two military station. Hilled la a llarrleaae. wo- also A mstebiiam, N. Y., July 10 A tiriuiin fiL-t-irv nearly completed wa d -ui I'-h'-il hv the hurricane which sep- : he-Mia thi village tbi af er noo'i. Nil workmen were buried iu t'ie ruiux R jbert Bcrgea, Frank Mart and Patrick Kaa. of Amster dam, were fatally and tbe rest. fverly injured. Several other build ings were damaged, Total Jo?, $ I1. una Hilled Wllh a Baa. Ball Rat, Atlanta, G a., July 10 Purla a game 1 f ba.-e ba I on Monday an altereaiion occurred between William ribie blows oa tbe beau un a oat. Lawshe died yesterday, and ell was arrested. Mitch-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers