.w.-..m!-,iea 'flic Somerset Herald. Born tin l! i:!i. ;.n and Dciito-: craiic Conventions of Blair county - " have nominated lion. John IVan . EMYAIU) KXtt. EJiU and YT.ic?..r. f()f j;,-,,,,. JUS.. j-j,,, P:UIH, ;u -'" "- " - - 'tioa wj. tafct-a in t fu Huntlrvrdun : ountv conventions. t i.i.iN(;s, Ir is well known that many Ann ricau rattle are ; nt abroad, but it is not . so will known ilmt the l.ijcr arc -cnt bark to Ann rica to c tanned. Tanning bark i.s growing f-pt-r-,l T 7 T-'!. REPUBLCAN JUDICIARY TICKET rouriHiK! uv jhhn ckssna. r nMi.mi. r-)B ASKOCIATI JI IHJICft : WILLIAM (ViLLtNS, of Somer-rt. SAMI'l!!. f-XYIl"i:, .f S..m. rv.-t Tv.. BEPDBLICAK CfllTNTY TICKET. rv.B rOTBOoTv : S. r. TPKXT, .f Sii.er-el. rC HBFKIfT: .l-'iIIX J. .-I'AX'.LKn.of S..n..-t--t Tttj.. rnu r.Ki.,n:it si i:r.itiKE : A. A. -TfTZMAV, of Stonynwl; TV).. 1 At the elections in Kentucky re- e career every year in Europe, cently Mrs. Minerva Brashcars was costs from .-MS to 87( a ton in Eng- j i chosen Clerk ot Ixtcher county, and ; lan1, while American hemlock bark i ' Mrs. Ktmiin Smith Clerk i.f laurel ! i worth in this country only 3 1 county, l iny were tin- vu'dows of " r ton. Eor many years Amer clciks who had ditnl in office. i'-an hemlock-tanned sole leather jllls keen exported to Kuropcan . Thk Brooklyn Kyle, the ablest ;countrios and tlic t.X,ort!i now rcarh ; Democratic paper in -New ork, L JaimM (Iolhrg The exports of credits President ( Jarfield with j ,ivc caU,c from Npw Vork m 2i. qualities entitling Lira to he held!-)0l)in s75 :om j ,s77? mm) in everlasting memory .as a type ofjin ;n js7n, iind .S3,4X .what is best and bravest in t',c ! in iss) j American character." I ; i j Tin: intense desire which exists Tn i:uk was no appreciable change iiat t. President may recover does ! in the condition of the President not j,',,. from thinking people the j during the last week. .Still, the j Jan-ers still to be met and overcome, j longer his life is prolonged the more j They cannot do less than fear when 'hope l-tcre is for his ultimate recov-, ,jiev n,ai r ,;g jtr0Ptrato condition, ory. There is a strom; public conn-j w;tj, j,,,. bounding at lu to 115; deuce that all will yet end well. ;l lastly Wound unhealed twelve inches deep, and a ragged edged l.ullct loose and rattling i around amor." vital parts in the cavity of the Inxly. Hoping for the jr'i A CURIOUS STORM. whrnt farm - the largcftin Dakota, i !but (lure arc other! of hiiimnise Mri: Axn ruortmTV: i eizc. The first crop was harvested j by 1 :in in 137-1, when the entire; The liisuMcts in South Carolina and i wheat product of the Territory was i J"..Kia, nntl rvtrs of Vessels - ' anu .... , .. . ,. Tlie Droulli in tbe WchI. Mmiiue with I'IhioI. Sliiry ofa Tinicl.T lifu-nxryy. I onlv '2Km bushels. i-el Ai-cioi-iil. Ii! in (he. Storm Ciiii;.(iO. Atiirtirt HI. A fic'cials ('in'vat. Sentemlt f.r 2. Henry to the 'Huh i trout Eldorado, 111., iV. Na), a gnx-erV c.'ei k, from Troy, tiaicj iugti::i L'?, t-.iy '. : "It t5- nine weekri hiiiutf rain lias fallen l.ete , and iu eonscqucne.e, the crops uiu nearly a failure. Thedtist isalioogt ! imbearal'Ic. Iu some, parts of the county there is ' much sulRrin! for want of water, and a irreat deal of .sickness of a typhus form is prevaii iiiig From the Iut4 iiil'..iiu;il.ion, wheal will not average over lour or ii Ni.m v.'.r, P. 1.. August :,.:. . jjVAU s. (.'., An; ;u-l l.,vii i .... 1. ..... t ..... 1 i. . H ..- . a 1 i 1 1 . I noon Lieutenant 15. hong Kdges, of .service i,Jed over this place lt ke Som onHhir i T .V Washington, and Lieutenant Ly-j Saturday and was ceed'ng!rrio-'j ? wU l i Jlmoln n U., were .planting mines, lor. pel the ferryman, and the tassen-i ,vr; nrt(. ,i,.m,.. K , . I - .1- 17 j .v..-...,. . ... hi.- .null ereu in uic jerry jiouse 10 i Mr. Lnn.ow, the Prohibition can- j Ulidate for (lovernor in Ohio, has, encountered what may be called a set-back. He is an enterprising manufacturer of cider mills and roC TKEADl REG: Ji HX II. WKIMKIl, of S-omir-t. fob roxmwioMsu.: A HAM S. SltAFFKR, of Jnnor Twi. JOSFPIT TfoHVKR. nf S.)mer. t Tvj. best, there are yet grave fears for the ' A -i .1 1 A I. 1 1 wine presses, and the extreme tern- j Iulure araonS l,1W0 lmei w peranee peoj.le cannot reconcile this UU(1oe- Tut re il P"r.t soon to be with his prohibition enthusiasm. rcaciieu wnen we must near, u ever, inc welcome news inai nc is oui 01 mi rooR not se nmixTroi:: IUXIF.L KIMMEL, of SoiiiorM'! Tu p. pun ai tmtors: JoHS T. K1IOAHS, of Swim ix t Twj. LUAKL KMKUK'K.of S.utlianiplnn Twp. Tin: President jiassed through last week barely holding his own, but without any visible "improve ment The much-dreaded Saturday went by without the usual relapse, ut late in that night and early on Sunday morning he vomited twice, creating considerable apprehension ; subsequently he slept well and pass- Ai.l the Western railroads are re ceiving proposals for plans to insure cheap clearing oif the snow on rail road tracks. It cost the Chicago & Northwestern road ?2V00 to do this work last winter. The idea is to .-stimulate inventive genius to produce a this work. machine which will Tin: authorities ul Washington have taken very decided steps to prevent any attempts on the part of i powerless to suppress the horrible a mob to take IJnitcrm, the Presi-'outgrowth of Pnmnistn. Murder danger. Until that time there will be anxiety and painful suspense. Straxok stories are told by an Englishman of distinction, w ho late ly made a West India tour, of the prevalence of Voudouism in Hayti. He asserts that of the 70,J inhab itants only i'Oj'VnI do not openly be long to "Voudou,"' and that the Catholic religion, nominally the es tablished worship of the people, is dent's assassin, from the jail. One company of regulars is inside the and cannibalism are parts of the Voudou horrors, and the butchery prison and one company pickets the of children marks the great Voudou outside while eight companies are ; feasts three times a year. Of course all ready for duty at a moment's j these horrible rites were imported 1 . ! notice. frora Africa bv slaves from the the annual experiments which take place belore the examining Hoard. These are what is known as circuit closers, and when the buoys of these are struck an explosion of torpedoes takes place. The buoys were acci dentally struck, and EJgcs and Spaulding were blown into atoms. The torpedo was to be exploded by the breaking of the electric circuit. Edges had the deadly missile, in his lap while Spaulding was rowing the launch. The tide was low and the torpedo Avas planted in about three fathoms of water. Nearby was a steam launch with the remainder of the class under instruction on board. Admiral Porter ('apt. Sel fridge and oflicers of the torpedo station were on Government Island where the torpedo station is located for the purpose of witnessing the experiment. Edges leaned forward to arrange the apparatus in the wa ter when a loud noise, and the ex plosion Mas heard, and the two un fortunate men were seen in the air. It was a terrrible sight. Admiral Porter and the classmates and offi cers stood appalled at the siht of the bodies Wingiittcrally blown to farcrments. They went in the air gath await the abatement of the storm. While crowded in there the house was carried away by the high tide. Seven bodies were recovered yester day. The number actually drowned is uncertain, but it is rumored varies from twenty to forty. One washer and one dredge of the Coosaw Min ing Company in Coosaw river gunk. No lives were lost. Considerable damage was done to tho wharves and lighters of the company. Vessels arriving at Charleoton re port the g:ilo extremely violent olf the port A light-ship in liattle snake Shoals broke from her moor ings during the irale,and Is anchored in six fathoms of water southeast of Fort Sumter, three miles nearer Charleston than tier former position. The sea buoy off Charleston drifted off Jelley Llaud. The other bar buoy was lost and the middle buoy dragged out of position about a quarter of a mile to the eastward. Saturday night the storm reached Savannah, Georgia, whero it tore off the roof of the Signal Service build ing and destroyed the instruments. A portion of the roof of the Mtirnina Xcu i oilicc was blown off and the buildinsr flooded. The Citv Ex- some thirty-fiv? feet, and w ith. ! change was badly damaged. A thorn the debris of the boat. Work-j number of firms "on the "bay lost men employed on the station wad.- j heavily by damage to goods. Alout ed into the water as soon as possi- fifty private dwellings were more or .7irf l7 nV n IH-,ic injured, rneus in me new praM1 is nU .lriecl up and .lead, and were torn from the trunk and split i line were blown entirely down. . - 1 -J Several Hour and rice mills were un rooted and the contents flooded. A worms will yield a crop of hay. Tobacco is a failure; the late pota toes almost a failure, and the ap ples almost worthless. The pastures nre all dried up. and no ground is broken for wheat. The people of iiamsburg are hauling water from the creek to use. The farmeis 'are disposing of all they can possibly spare." " Wakasii. Ind.. August .".1. The weather st ill continue dry, and the farmers are unable to put in their wheat. Corn is being ruined, and unless rain comes soon no corn will be gathered nt all. This is the long est term of drouth ever know in this section. Milwai'kkk, August .'il. Mr. W. F. Dalryirple, the "Wheat King of Dakota," arrived here to-day, anil in an interview, stated that the threshing upon his farm had begun, and that the yield is eighteen bush els per acre, or JO per cent, lighter than last year. The quality, howev er, i.s excellent. The decrease in the yield he attributed to the heavy rains of the early part of the season, low tract3 being entirely drowned out. He says that the yield in the I ted Itiver valley will be fully eighteen I bushels per acre. ! P.ATTI.K CllKKK, Ml 11., AllgUst ."1. ; It is now over ix weeks since i there lias been any rain to amount l to anything in this vicinity. The On hut S.iturl.iy tnpr'i' , ( ! t,. i'p-.-iduiit wy:-. id his '-fort ;u- ueii- l'iuIM lv ail hope of r""'IV had ;":-.; t u j, .: , tfJlainiUou lingruluf'.erthe morn-' ti i j : ,:t , . e ' a I - . I ! ' , mg ure.351.ig or me wouii-i. .irnj j uiii-jjy made the uncov; rv tn.ii. t.:! yoim Y. livin" jit .. ! South t. lark etreet, while! suffering from delirium tremens, this morning, nhot five nun. two of them fit. dir. He re tired last night with a cook named of egg which had formed part ot th I'Von. but awoke his bedfellow : cnaimiU administered to the yell, crying, "Get up and help me, had not been assimihiting thor Mih- I 'an.' I':.!.. ft-.. Only t'.V'iiv savi.d in i'H', Jlri'.Mi i-orvi! . . . . . . - , i - I .1.... .....I.. about nine ocloel; with a terruie . tieru i-r w;-.-iai m.m.i piewo :, , w, .,ti-,. ton arrived n (',,, -V p rot ci I my wife and children ; l- -j ly, il at all. ani were poi-oH,.n ute . i:m. .'.,:!.;,.,. ; ,. , lore I agin had tune to move, Uie ; system, uuii'hh w.uum- 10 ;m.:k.- c:i,aiK - ).... madman jdaced a revolver against j know hi disco'. cry or t. "i.-iilt ' (.ioen-de,! ,i ).,'. 1 ' ' his ( Fogan's ) left ch-k and tired.) with imy of hii asswiates, h" -fixed j j;:,y ,U, ,,,)., .. l Neal then dashed down stairs', and j his hat and rushed out to a drug ! U near Alg.,;i l;, i meeiing nigni waienman in. him-, im'-n; u. j.i. n.i.-. .i .-i .reioi;- r,.,.. Snrin"cold on his way ui caimht ! .-t ' iowdered charcoal. 1 le returned M amer. . f ." .. i . . . " i i I . '. .1 l I : ' i.im dv me snouiiier. il rneo nimiouickiv ami immediately ad minis- round, and shot him directly U'-itered an cuem:ik containing a be tween the shoulder blades, j proportion of the chareo sl. The The watchman, a man ol fifty-1 effect was apparent almost irnmedi- seven years, fell heavily to the floor ately, and the incident marked the and the murderer jumped over his ; turning point in the President's con- body, fairly falling down to the last flight of stairs. Reaching the street he turned north on Clark street, and saw a company of colored men on the corner. He rushed up to them, held Wpi. Johnson tirmlv with his a I dition. Then,- is scarce Iv nnv doubt that the presence of this undi"f KoM.-.;. ilnrtii desp states that 1 cut';, u.id on I'-.'i lr, the i- , ' and a crew ,. ' ' i -ves-1 struck on a r I';' ! on, anil v.::.i ; t'.,,. ., . - I'U.L- ed m.-i.-J was the cause oi giaieiuiari affection which sonearly tenuimtted j life of the President, lins ex-! the lift- of trn plains Dr. Hamilton's liope!';t!ni-j. left hrn.il, and shot liim in the left ,auJ il i. easy to gatln-r from ittiiejonr breast. The wounded man's com-1 rnson lor his unwillingness to en'er ick to port wi..-n jonty o! tljose ,,. Ml ol the ,,!! I.loVU ers -.v.-r.. correct. i own savi thr-e ho-, jianions were too amazed to prevent the shooting or secure the madman, w ho, with another terrible y 11, fled to Polk street, ami turnintr west, halted at the Pock Island "freight house, where he demanded admit tance of two men whom he found sitting on the steps. lU ing refused, he drew the revolver and again fir ed twice, each bullet taking effect, one in Thomas Flynn, a flagman, and the other in a young night clerk named Wolf. As he turned to run he was confronted by Officer llooth, with whom he had a terrible strug gle, and was only quieted after the oflicer had fired three shots at him, one taking effect in the maniac's neck. He attempted to shoot the officer but the revolver was empty. into di tail when a with correspond' nts he- penrie- Hamil- f Which f..Hr,,l..r ,l' and the i'non-t.i'.vi . iwemy-ti.re.. ,,r t!. Ja:-serigers. the -4c.'iii:? r, arrived at : TH,f ieii. ked tor t.n- grouin'.s ot lief There have been whi of this thin:.' evr -inee Dr. ton h lL Washington, but no one ex cept possibly Dr. Hamilton's associ ates, seemed to have all the facts. It was only known that forae de- attention of ( n-ral velor.ment bad been made which failed to various gave e.vcellt nt reason for b leivir.g ciajly in Western tliat tho most threatening tea-iurc oi nvriomg ire'j'ient v-,?.-t!; President's illness had been j to Vice Presi.h.r.t A ; sucees.-tuuv met. i xmns Wlttl tn ;rr. ; lain j I.on; J!i: .. n .. ... . (;r;,. mi. A New Vi.rk Keinli!i aii Suite vi'iil ion 1 ; tio: land other public I to political coi.tia-i j lngton. ( Si ix ral .rai.t , .announei'iin-nt t!,;;: .i. i '.nun in anv or i;:n . a comparalivtl' comfortable condi tion, although with an accelerated pulse and temperature. The con- in two. Spaulding's feet were blown off, and while his boots were found in good order not a trace of his feet was discovered. The class imme diately returned to the Island, and an officer was detailed to co to Nar ratransett Pier and break the news to Edges' wife, who had gone there this morning for a few day's visit. She had resided here all summer with her husband and two children. She belongs to Washington. Snaul- r - i ! rn:irn tail it .-iiinfvjrj thof in eii ed through Sunday and Monday in ! kxatou sessions, oi .New i one, i 7 - . !- .n-.n .leteete.l n nltrmn nr to 1 1"1--uu," "as uikvu urnn.i loot in bribe fellow members to vote against f!here. If these , dng who was unmarncl, resides 111 'be facts, civilised nations should 1 ne uiniiTD 1111 ui-si Diouittiliu the corn crop is ruined. The wheat crop has small heads, which have prematurely ripened, and the farm i ers are cutting it up for fodder. The larire portion of the citv is under i, !...,., i. .;.! ...'1 .. water. Several barns of tne Central I ,o ; ...;u .1.. i:m , . . . 1 v. lain v vinv n m iwii j i, 11 111 vtt 1 1 ill U or no crooii. 1 ho fanners are Laving r : luiiKiii;?, was ueieaieu lor rt-mma- , - - t nation in Chatauoua county, last ! mite to ""PPnss these crimes in the : . e.. i :....! ti.. i..,n i. ..., interest oi Humanity. I vii uoii iiaiiiii; .ti. mfi iukuu uii hitk. i ne naji-Lireciis nnu ust-u upon his physicians that in his re moval . from .Washington lay his only chance for life, it was agreed n.pon in consultation to take that 8tep, and accordingly on Tuesda)' morning at an early hour, he was placed upon a car and started for Iiong Pranch, where it is hepod the cooler atmosphere and balmy sea breezes may benefit him. It cannot be disguised that there is great dan ger in this step, and that the fatigue of the journey may be too much for him in his present debilitated state, but its justification is that there was greater danger in leaving him where he was. The following dispatches relative to the Presidents journey were re ceived up to the time of our going lo press : President left White House at .":50 a. m., arrived at depot at C-.lo, left on special train at ti:"(l. As he him nnd profited by his villainy are Cincinnati is about to inaugurate now, that he is floored, vigorously j ;i new and important rule in the jumping up and down m his pros-'public schools, viz.: Abolishing trntc cr.rcass. . grammar and its senseless rules, and suosmuting tncreior elementary les sons in the best English. Cincin- Tme long-continued water famine has caused the Pensylvania Railroad Company considerable difficulty in keeping up the supply of water for its engines. Trains of tanks are nati educators deserve an acknowl edgment of thanks. Many of the best teachers in the land have for You can just bov to be a me- ent points where cisterns are located, i , , . " . . , , . . , t., ,...., , . i Uiach him to swim before going into 1 he water is obtained from streams , , , the water, as you can teacn mm to use elegant English by a set of rules Tiik subscriptions so far made to and exceptions learned parrot-like. the fund for Mrs. Garfield, have j Years of the life of every boy and ,.:,.! !.: lieinT run eom;f')rilv' f.ir h. mir. 1 . 'e " .1 'i:.r. i as easily teach a nose ui uisu njuinif; wa.er ai uiuer along the road. been invested in V. S. 4 per cent, registered bonds amounting to $12-V (XH), on which the interest is S.OW per annum. The certificate for these bonds has been placed in the hands of Mrs. Garfield. The inter est will be paid to her during her life and at her death the principal will be divided among her surviving children. i'ju-: State Itevenue Commission left Whit House he raised his handi hold a session in Philadelphia last to the inmates who were watching him off. The removal had no bad effect on the President, otherwise than that the excitement caused a rise in his pulse. P.Al.riMoiiiu Presidential train passed Union Depot without stop ping at SK)1 x m. Lamokix. Pa. Presidential train girl are thrown away in pushing them into abstruse science, when the- should be learning to spell and storing the mind with valuable and practical facts of geography, history, etc. A grammar should not be placed in the hands of a child until he is w"H advanced, and the mind in a lair sense matured. hitrr- A niM'iHT-i.ooKi.v; little boy made his appearance at the police station of Erie, Px, and told a pitiful tale of distress. The officers cave him food and prepared him a led, but before lie retired he was heard pray ing in a very loud tone of voice, ak- week. It instructed its Secretan- to obtain from the State Treasurer and have printed for its use, a list of the receipts and expenditures of the State from Decemlier Cist, 1873, to the present time, together with an ! ig the Heavenly Father to direct account of the revenue provisions the steps of a poor orphan boy to now in force. Ex-Senator Pueka- i kind friends and a comfortable lew, Treasurer Putler, and Senator j home. This prayer awakened the Jllerr were appointed a business sympathies of the police officers, the il t-.ovt ca.G irot into the and Ihft ri- made run from A llmington to Lam-: . . ,., f. on Kttl,. r,, Ww trMn,1 no if sideration. jthcy were treating an angel una- wares, until his indignant father, 'reading the pathetic story in the j T)iiat h, visited the police station, okin, 1 1 miles, in 14 minutes, then stopped for coa.'. Men arc engaged in tremor coal in iimcklv Slio w.-i ! 0 i .- - - - ...... ! and lammed the little fraud until h e At the PKrks County Dennwratic ! Convention, held in Ponilin" on 7 minutes coaling and left at 121 Irr. i r 1 1 r n x ..i ifuegjay 0f last week, one of the candidates for County Commissioner, !cricJ in earnest. It was developed I'iiil' a Presidential trr.in passi-d , Cyrus I-van by name, was taken j that the boy had been reading in here at 1 " a. m. into custody on the charge of having cijme novels, published in the covers ' violated the election law enacted by of Sunday-school book . descriptions Tuk National debt was reduced the late Legislature. The informa- Lfhow well little orphan bovs who 1 m .1 i . . ,1 . ... a veruiei 10 me cueci mai j Aiges and Spaulding met their death by thcnccidentalexplofion ofa torpe do, which would not havehapitcned had they followed instructions. No one at the torpedo station is to blame. This exculpates Lieut. Caldwell, one of the instructors, who in doing his daty in closing the circuit, made possible the acci dent, for Edes depended upon him keeping this circuit open, though he failed to inform Caldwell of his intentions. The remains will be forwarded to their respective desti nations at once. Iolh men had just been detailed. ltailroad wharves are badly dam aged. The public parks arc shorn of some of the finest trees and other wise injured. The destruction of shade trees is very great. The Georgia infirmary was wrecked and the patients barely escaped. A number Were bruised by the falling of brick and plaster. The German brig, Maria Louise, Captain Kinke, had her stern badly mashed, and her rudder, bowsprit, and jib boom broken. Her sides were also injur ed. The pilot boat Maid of the Mist came in collision with a schoo ner and sunk. Several other tug boats were injured. The steamer City of P.ridges had a hole punched in her side. A house was swept down the river and three of the oc cupants, Mrs. Stokes and her two children drowned. Mr. Stokes bare ly escaped. Engineer Richard Fitz- genua, oi the it. li. riant, was a hard time of it this year in this vi cinity. To day is the third day the mercury has registered !" degrees in the shade. II!) I'er-oiis Uiu-iieil in a I'ain. Some days ago Russian letters re ported that 110 persons had been burned in a barn. Naturally, the stor- was received with incredulity, but the St. Petersburg ioli).i declares that it is only too true. According to this journal, 11'.) women and girls employed on a large turnip farm in the district of Putinal, in the Gov ernment of Koursk (Southern Rus- isia), wire very much dissatisfied with the bread supplied by the farm steward, alleging that it was not fit for food, and threatened to leave off work. , After their dinner they all withdrew to a barn to rest durin irowned. The loss of life among i the hottest period of the afternoon. 'I he K il I'liS'i' f K.-ili-Ii I 'ai inei-M. The Hurricane ofS.it un! ly. Sav.nnaii, C.a,. Aug.3 Tho hur ricane which visited this city on Saturday evening was very de structive. The rain fell in torrents. Houses were unroofed and sluced, stores and warehouses flooded, and the streets littered with debris and prostrated tress. The shipping, on the river was torn loose and thrown on the banks and there were innu merable collisions. Vessels are ashore all down the river to Tybee. At Tybee great de struction was wrought The ( icean the colored people occupying little huts on the rice plantations and along the river was very groat. On Tybee Island the house of Henry Solomon was blown down, and the ruins caught fire. Three persons perished. The family of David Rowers, colored,' comprising seven persons, were all drowned. , All the people on Shad Island were drown ed. Several other persons arc known to have pcris'ied. At Fort Pulaski the officers' quarters are flooded. Telegraph lines to Savannah are all down. Notwithstanding the warn ings of the approaching storm, some vessels along the coast have suffered and news of disasters will be receiv ed during the week. The storm has been very severe, and particularly ir l i t . . . nouse cscaoeu. nui most oi me col- .i :. i . i . a" .t. . t, ' , . . , nuiimuua io esseis, nom me iswa tages were blown down or injured. that th(; winJ MLcd frC( u v'. .,i!u-ht7-1 Mrs' L and blew .vith equal severity from Falk her little girl and her young the nortl fclst northeast, northwest brother, Joshua talk, were burned !ni .r, 4 .1.-.' 'im l e ... i a. ..um tsu inc. :ir. mm tramway A dispatcli from Macon savs of Jtic sojourners on iti, ...,r,,,ni, . '11 i..iL-i.,.u. iai.imuu. VCTil : In a lew minutes the city was in darkness, and the parks, streets and The steward locked them in and went away; ! ;: four farm laborers came and set lire to the barn. The lire spread rapidly through the building, which v: i- like tinder, and soon the whole bur; i was inflames. The shrieks of the ui. fortunate pris oners soon brought Home people to the spot. They could not help them because the doors opened inward, and already the mass of frantic wo men so jammed the doors from within as to make any effort to open them fruitless. Five women were taken out alive, but so burned that they died immediately. All the re maining 114 died on the spot. no of the incendiaries went oil' and drowned himself straight away ; the other throe are in prison. i.-nnhm Tims. Con mil) Train It.iliheis. A cablegram to the New York World, dated London, August -Jl, says 'It is still raining. This is now the third week of this calami tous storm, and ail hope of h.-df a harvest has been abandoned, ..me authorities say the crop will te less than that of 17'.), and nearly all agree that we shall 1? compelled to import as much this year as we did then. The storms have cleared the grouse moors of spostsmen, and partridge shooting, which begins to morrow, i.s also likely to lie a failure. The farmers' clubs in Nor folk and Suffolk report that the cut grain is now worthless and the standing grain reduced to pulp. In the East Riding of Yorkshire and the south of Scotland the 'stouks" are in many places floating in the fields. In Devonshire the destruc tion i.s complete. In Cheshire (J" per cent, of the wheat has not been housed, and most of it is now worth less. In Lincolnshire the fields are flooded nnd mildew is eating up the grain. In the midland and southern connties the cut grain has sprouted, and grave fears are felt for the root crops, which are literally under water. At Darlington, in Durham, it ts estimated that the rainfall of the past eighteen hours has been equal to l-"0 tons per acre. Oats and barley were mostly housed in the south before the rains set in, but in the midland and northern counties they are almost destroyed." Mutilate. I Coin. to death. were destroyed. Tvbee Island were in terrible all night long. No estimate can as vet be ed ot damage m tins city A num-' by lallin trets aDll ,(OU5CS E ber of accidents occurred some of i wire leaJi out of lhc dt u ' them fatal 1 he steamship Dos- j trat(xl full one llUnuml "Wiling song, wnicn icit, nere iiiursaay lor , C,M or,,i ...,...-. New-York, returned last evening in theirroofs and many had their walls j fronted by a man with a shotgun, San 'Kraxcisi'o. September The overland train of two engines and one car of the cast-bound oyer land express were thrown from the track about 11:47 Wednesday night at Cape Horn Mills, by two rails having been removed by high waymen. When the engine first left the track. Fireman ryd, upon lumping to tne grouna, was con in. (;ne house containing six persons was blown into the river cinitv of Tvbee, Later It is estimated that over PX) lives have been lost in this there more during the month of August $14, IKl.'il'l .12. j lion was sworn to by Henry A. Ls-j prayed were treated, and thought jtc-rly, a candidate for Recorder. ; he, would try the scheme himself. . . , The charge is that trees for winter! The next orphaa who makes his M.NisTKnlo-TfKwnteshomethatVood and a considerable quantity j abearance in Erie will be subject ltc wheat crop of Russia will be the . of graiu wai J(roni;s,u to two Dcm to a aminat;on largest ever product in that eoun- loeratic voters to use their influence j try. f to procure votes for LevnnVdele-j A wayixh wheat lieM of thirty w,,,1T , i gates to the Convention. . "lonsanu acres reaay lor tlie reap u KI...HT, a e : ,,' . i ..i... l-i iu; maroon; iiiunt uc u SUiClimu a uisaoieu conouion. ine revenue ),low n cutter Routwell is in the marsh back ! of l ort Pulaski, and a number of anJ fivc le Csm.ne The tot;ll other vessels are ashore in the vi- los3 of ,i!b far reported is thirty- five, and wounded. Cinitvbythe galc. between tvi.-nty j sunk anJ a ,ar mi'mher of them and thirty inquests have already j Jaraa(.j been held. With the exception ofi '(t,.i' . u.,,i . 1. ...i seven all the bodies are those ot n.s j Cascy iglanJ nearJv cyerv hotfe grocs washed o;rthcplantation9. - v,..s Mown awav. Oe hnn.-e tnr.t Every arrival continues to bring if, f..., :f (-:,u r. , . i . i , -' lb iVll, VUli-JUIUIUi: iL(), accounts ot disasters by storm 1 he J (jeor?ic WoICb. her child and her itu1 , ew i or, HtUc brother. Other dreadful scenes which arrived to-day broke down are rc,)ortt.a at various river rcgorLs- ttVA n i I lnst-1,hheIn Savannah the depots, wharves, brought the crew of schooner Han- ok.vator f(R(1 h huilj;,., ,ufrered nah M.Solhs, bound from Jackson- t ,,asn Thc SaVBn'na!l ycu.,t vi le to New York vuU. lumoer. ,luiIJi uuroofed auJ tIiC ilil.ll cue WJu Kill Oil IIIU OLII rrii-t..r who ordered mm to stand, not to move or give alarm. At the same timt a man presented a gun as the ! express mcsse'nger opened the door tof the express car, and ordered him eportcd IPO liilnw ,n d.a r;,-;.r ui,. ro surrenuer. apoui tins time tne IIox. IIexdiuck P. well-known Democratic politician of nrMii'U iti.. .t.tM" J In I n .ii. ! c? ii-rK i ....... 1... 1 . r T . 1 W;il.. t i.i:j.i.. j iii.,&aiu iiFi"iii it-. m i iniav iasu in an editorial in his paper, i rymple owns such a field in the Ited TniiRC are on the rolls of the Pennsylvania Pailroad Company jetple who receive every month -hecks for their salaries or w:ge. Ix central Indiana and Illinois cattle are suffering greatly for want of water. Near Warren, Ohio, sheep arc dying by hundreds from the drought. the Daily Herald : 4i We believe Cui- j Itiver country, in Dakota Territory. Uautobe just as honorable as tlie He will have this year about six man lie hot, and a mighty b -l.t' hundred thousand bushels of wheat less dangerous to the country at an average of twenty bushels to large.' Whereupon a number of j the acre and will also harvest I'O, his fellow citizens without d'lttinc- It) bushels of oats, for the eight tion of party, har.ged and burned ; hundred horses and mules required him in effigy. In his next issue he attempted to create sympathy by denouncing them as a Iiepublican mob. which assertion was met by -r tlie young men concerned in the to do his woik. He sends three train loads of wheat a day to Dululh over the Northern Pacific Railroad, and every two days loads a vessel at that place for P.uffalo. He user two Tm- Tnuv.Mi t- r- , i matter by the publication of the j hundred sell-binding harvesters and 'dtienworiH limtv. winch's n . j i !.i- . . . . ought t that tlJ I foJowi-S t-"S -ardf to winch all j thirty Bteam tlirosher the harvest- corn crop of Kansas pnimjces Z mt? VCK ! cutting an average of two thous- icr gi en m , of tll(? t. moj, an(j ieave lhe pUiylc J tjie threshers turning out about thir- ine caj)tam oi me schooner was lost overboard. James (!. Harris, mate of schoon er Mary (. Fisher, which sailed from Phiadelphia for Wihniugton, N. C, laden with coal, was picked up at sea on the 2!th by the team- er Santioga do uha, and brought tIie fl)rco of thc hurrie; printers set up the paper in six inches of water. Tlie beautiful trees for w hich the city is noted, are great ly damaged and Bonaventure is in a sad plight. Business is paralyzed and over $l,K.Ki.(K.l) loss has been incurred. Of the few spectators who braved to tins port He was on a piece fall at Charleston was Thomas C. of cabin of schooner, and wrs UeHOn , lwt.nty.tircc a son of naked and delirious when pick- fn,.,.ti, r it. ........... t -XtT 9 t T v URfl1Te1!from the Battery sea wall by tne on the 21th inst. off Irving Pan i .lmi i.i.. i.,.; Shoals, and all hands were lost ex cept Hams. Injured by a I'ullinx Klrvator. as was laige a yield lhe Sti ' to judge as to whether this is the Tin (Jubernatorial campaign in i material that usually constitutes a Ohio is lagging. Neither party has ! mou anl whether a mob usi.ally tLe heart to enter into the contest, ' refrains from violence, profanity, while tlie life of tlx President is in an fifhte, but quietly goes to work, the balance. ignoring a few drunken reprobates. j and performs a little harmless exe- Laxoastkk, August "0 A fiiglit ful accidept .qccured at Kendig's to bacco warehouse, corner of Jicmon and Market streets, about noon to day. Eleven workmen were coming down in the elevator for the purpose! 01 going 10 omner, ami wnen at tue third iloor landing the iron cable slipel off the pulley,and the eleva- ! swimmer, he succeeded in keeping j afloat long enough to. grasp a rope tnrown to him by his companions, but at the critical moment the rope broke and he disappeared in the darkness, IJis body has not been: . 1 r r I'.-iovercu. ... highwaymen, supposed to be some five or six in number, became alarmed and started to run in the brush, leaving lanterns, masks, twenty-four cartridge-i, Hercules powder, fuse, axes, sledge, pick and other tools. No one was injured. Thc train was detained but eight hour-. tiiMane l'amilv. Shoots His Kttt iter. Cnit Aoo, August 31. A special to the Times from Dubuque. Iowa. August 3o, says : "A family has become insane in this county through grief and death. Mary McMahon, the daughter of a farmer, entered a convent two weeks ago and became insane. She was sent to the asylum at Independence for treatment. Tho mother visited hfr and also lecaine insane. The daughter died last Monday, which so affected the mother that she died to-day. The remains of both moth er and daughter were sent home for burial. Arriving at Farley, near which place the McMahons live, a son and daughter at home became insane at the sight of their mother and sister being brought home dead and the father is now stricken with grief bordering upon insanity." A Woman's K.vi-i lcm e. Wash inn. ton', August 31. Numer ous letters have been received at the Treasury Department asking wheth er I niled States coins with holes punched in them, or otherwise muti lated, are thereby diminished in value, and if so, how much. Secre tary Windom to-day decided "that there is no law or regulation authorizing the redemption or ex change b' this department of any coins of the United States on account of their being mutilated, but mutila ted silver coins wul be purchased as bullion by any mint of tlie United States, and it is presumed that hold ers of such coins can also dispose of tiiem to broKers or to dealers in bullion in like manner, in which cases, of course, their value will va ry according to the amount of metal in the pieces and the current price of silver bullion. The Department can suggest no other relief to hold ers of such mutilated coins. Public officers are not expected or required to receive any coins so mutilated as to be unfit for circulation except by purchase at tho Mint, a before stated." Ni:w You::, August 31. The c.ill i ' ... 1 iiir 11 . L.iL. 1 (in. riiLiuii i.rr;.. 1 i' lii. . . 1, ii- 1 . .- ,. -., 1 1 .a 1 Peen l.re-ciit ;-f ,, ... Pepnhli.-an Executive ( oiiiunttee 1 ,, ' . ' ' ,1 , . -1 1 , . 1 - i and knew ol 11. .1.,. q. tins morning state : A he .unp-i ' -i t 1 i 1 , seen .1 n. Artl.'.ir i.i.. . . " " .... . . held the city of New York on Wednt-s-d.-iv. oLh of Oet(,h -r. at 1 1 o.clock a .r .... !,.. i,,,!-... f w.ri,in.ltir..l ' ....'II.' .li.. 1... III. i.ut 1...-- ... vi. ...... ... i . j . . ... , . . candidates tor state oliicers and for f l'' ' ''' l" i...: v ti , . . i.i... , . i one, ine t.etuni UUMIUJ.-. J o.; . i l.tit -i;i.-- Oer.cral Arthur as eliairman of the icmpi oil :;ie 1 bri. l' ra in.ing !.;. ...i ....... ;.' i lii i 'i:i' executive commit! ?. The E-raiwn CumiuiTcial says or the ru t tii.g of the committee: ''The test vote I tween the Half-breed.- and Stalwarts occTirred on Sji-.kt r Sliarf e"? mo tion to fix the dnte cf holding the convention on September 2'-'th. By the defection of Mr. Pea body, from the Eleventh district, the St-.lwrt vote wa- one less than had been ex pected. But for all that they had a good working majority, the vote standing : Stalwarts E" Half-bri-d.-11. Three districts were n-t reriiP-sented. il- one, -bowed a mn.-'- p; cere sorrow for t!.. a:.:. -, .',..., . . !' General Crant jthat there had U I tior.s of the- elij-i,. 'tween lieneral . jlitieal friends, 'could have r.o I would intrude -u I hint, itnd h rti.ur ji, ' '!.' r ' is ?!,i- w .iil'l Uotint I'tiiii! h in irxn.i;.. Tlirealciiiiiy laiva I'roni M:mi:t f.osi. B:i nv-'Ni', S, j't. i. ,. ; drouth is ;-t:I! i : r. r -I : !. so colitiuue until ti:.- ;., i tresing:i?H-ct i r? -: r : ; ; r Vi.-roKiA, B. C August 31. An I U climax in a arrival from Honolu'.u-repjrN that tMa uf tbf tall cr..... la the Wand of Hilt.,. Sandwidi Is- j its effects have !.:. lands, was in tl.mgr-r of being over- sprcail am. rum"::--. In in ! t. I ;:. as in dangf-r of being whtimed ry lava trorn the volcano ties ti.e corn n: Mauua I.oa. The lava wa moving I burned up, at the rate of a Fifteenth of a mile ; preventing ini..: daily and was slowiv atlvanciiig oni'-in- farmers t the 'town of Hi'o." which would I -''tting water ev shortly ho overwi.eline.'.. There j The James river is tow was great consternation aaiong the heen for ft Ay years. , people, who were fleeing f'oni :i proaclmig destruction, i 1 i no. the vre..:i. h r t;.- eroi will pro.; tljo failure. The du.-t in!-:- tnreateneii town sUn.Is on l.yrun j Bay, an inlet on the oa.-t coar-t ' the island of Hawaii. It is the sec-j oml town in . tne king.lom in si.e, having a jiopulation of about t"M, and is a place of great beauty, its harbor is spaciou- and generally secure.! -imply y'earfui. and the tisfressingl v a !a rn.ir g. Tlti Di-onlit in reiinsylvania. PiiiLADEi.ruiA, August 21. Des patches to the Pre-at from all sections of Pennsylvania show that great damage is being caused by the long urouglit. in some quarters the rivers are lower than ever before, while springs and wells are almost dried up. lhe corn crop is iniured beyond recovery, and there will be harefy a halt crop ol wheat. The fields in some of the counties are yellow and parched, with no scoond crop of hay and no plovviLg. L'p in the lumber regions nearly all the grist mills have been compelled to shut down, und great ularm is set ting in throughout the valley. The price of butter and milk is being raised by thc dealers in many sec tions, while water is being carried in oil tanks to the farmers in others. The loss in this state will run into millions of dollars. 'en. ('rant Ieeliies a Ile-.-i: imt. The following is the letter sent by (en. 'rant to the committee hav ing charge of the reception that was to have taked place on Thursday evening at A-bury Park, N. J. ; "'It would at nil times afford me pleasure to meet the members of your association and thr residents of Ocean ("rove and Asbury Park, but at this time, when th' country is in despair rove i" the prostrate body of the chief magistrate, w hose life seems to hang by a single thread, I am not willing to accept the com pliment implied by the announce ment which I have read in the paper.. erv triu v. yours. C.S. CCANT.'' Tlie Hottr-I Ai5iit "vi!.." 1C W.vsmxtiTox. Sepier?:' r:l eording to the metem-- m.ary of the ohs.-rv.-r r.t ;h'.". for the month -tn ki-1 ': the hottest Augot in since 1ST 2. Last month !,- tenifM-mture was 7"'.4: i:i A.. 172, the' av.-rage was '''-. rainfall la-t montit oiiiy ' I.i 7 inches-ie-s than :! X during the t.a-t d.-ade. T'. a dry August in ls71. "i:t t!v f.di amounted to l.-"! ir.' '' ' that month. .i. .1 her i n. A IU.mxIv Trneti. u.-t 31. M. killed, one P11.A.-KI, Tenn., Auj P. Esell was shot ami mile south cf thi-j place, last night. by Fletcher Hargrove. Esell was aecompanir.g Dr. McKnight. who had just l.ccn married to Hargrove's sister, after an c-Tcpemtnt. Har- ;rove overtook the arty, and an nouncing his purpose to ki Me- ic men TI A iMrge FjtploNlon. Bloomi-iki-p, Iowa, . August 31. Hiram Brooks, aged eighteen, shot and killed his father at Florin, j in this (Davis) count), last night. ; The elder Brooks was beating his wife with a club. The boy interfer- nv,. --,,,1 foot broken, and Edward Booth, c4.?n- Uie , ku,0T, tuftI on him 1 1 arKers lunger ionic, winch seems , ' from a bjow on the head, was ren-1 JJ'i11 'Illb -nJ Ureatcned his to build up my- system and drive "t0-10" Il-dcrcd unconscious for a considerable i ire; ,Thc 1m' retreated to thc wall j away miu ap,; rj-olancholy with perintend-1 length of time The W of i!m;i!!!l1- 10 n lit ihe Itfti WOJUh'iful certainty. Several of my Mothers and Daughters should feel alarmed when the feeling of weariness and languor too constant ly oppresses them. ' "If I am cross and fretful from the exhaustion of vital powers and the color is fading from my face, I always find imme diate reiiei in that excellent remedy, Parker's (linger Tonic, which seems It is estimated that there is now , cution, to make an open ina-rifL'sta- j,!W(MXK) bushels of coal in boats' tion of public sentiment toward a' -..V ui, tiourgij, awaiting a man who says a beastly villain as- with the rn.cn assigned bin) by Mr, m -ue nvers, mr Mnpment, and , ssin is more honorable than the ! Dalrvniple. Tltf pc(4 of product av-1 . 1 . . . 1 -. . 1 . . ... ...... - . ; hk- au,uni is oauy increasing. tor, with its immense weight of hu tV thousand bushels dlirinr IliA : m.m freinrht .. fill u-ith n r r-uVi nlt o", TI... .!.:.... 1 l.vtlc iinil Pni-irl llir,lr -,.ti l..l lt itll il clul), acres arc tlivided into fi parts of 6ix thousand acres vision bavin'' its own Ktinerinfen. !i,.(t. im. ' : 'e .1. . and shot tho old man ii1 ihn left 1 wc o - -. . ...v, iv-iiiu u wiiu:. iiit? it sl or iiihi .... - . ' - 1 : 1 -t 1 .... . . - .- party were more or less bruised and tu-?-P.le wltSl fatal resi,It- Tlie y,)UnS Inwls have experiencetl the same shaken up, but the only seriou jn. , man w in jail at this place awaiting ; benefit from its use." A Buffalo juries were those named. , a preliminary examination on Mon- j lady. ,"ay. ent, who again divides his domain into three parts of two thousand acres. Each of the five superintend ents plants his crop and liar vesta it pamage to (he Ori. A Southern Crime. How 10 Get Sii-1;. rresiucnt ot tfie L nitcd Stak-s. e ; erages $ 7 an acre, w Licit i therefore submit our names, assur- amount to two hundred an ing the Herald man that he needn't thousand dollars, while the wheat tremble. W e won't hurt him. We , sold at an average net price of ! wouldn't touch him personally with ; dollar t 1.iisw.1 Th an annual fbipment of from be-! a ten-foot pole. But we are not .a! for nfMr iwmi.'-tmt. tween 12 .(,rr and WX(m(w .',7.7.v,. n liv-t.i m, . ...... . . , , ' 'i '"' - !. ( m-riioii tor mis year wm oe inree nunarea It is btliercdhj'"gooT judges that the exportation of American w heat may be permanently estimated at Pakis, Kv., August.'!!. On Mon-. ' day James F. Olfult was killed bv I JXJN'POX. AUL'USt 31. lienor! . would i . , , 8 V . 0 ,M ron"w!Mr ' ' ,,t "ti'i'amll. fuwntat Nott'fi cross I suaie mai neavy rams nave done im-, - V ' . " " r " ! -J' f 1 -;oads. Current and Offult were broth-! 1 ten i munoi inA ,-. e . r. work too luiru without rest : doctor .. .. . . : " " ' ,OOU11-' H ; an ,. ti, ,-, n1f the Vile ro I crs-in law. Jiotn were armed with is the cut crops have already he-run tn au l"P llule ... w? 21 r-o&- , . . lIf w. . Af . , one sprout Clreat apprehensions trums advertised: ind then you will V:"r -nl lushrs. of party. ; and ninety thousand dollars more i-M . 1 -. - it'll . r. 1 1 n.ik 1. ill. i.viiiri... itfr.i v .1 . r'iJ-4i.t r.i. i want to mow -ti-r. -v ."- rv n-inuf mi; tiattiDi tn iri'tanu omg ; . ............ ling Her liusuand so excited Mrs. to the continuous rain throughout, to i;kt vk-.l. i Current that shp was thrown into the country. Corn w much danj j which is answered in three words j spasms, and from tho efieets of aged and potatoes are showing signa I Take Hop Bitters ! See other col- f these, coupled with sicknoss attend of extensive disease. umn. Erpre. j ing permature child birth, she died New Havk.v, Angus 3l Short ly after two yesterday afternoon an explosion occurred in the loading room of the V inchester Repeating Arms Company. U was caused bv an accident to the machine used in loading cartridges with fulminate. One end of the one-story building was blown out and both " side walls fell in in but fortunately few. people were in that portion of the room. P. Dwarner was badly burned by powder and cut in the 'head; by tho falling walls. lie may not wiover. William Weias was bauly burned over the entire ImmIv by powder and by hli- clothing taking' fire. Hiram Davidson and daughter were both burned. )thers injured by the pow der, were Charles E. Allen, Edward Broderick, Daniel Seaton and,U.' young gins. Mart ini. Mlw-l.lt-r on the Itail. Sklma, Ai.a, August 3H Some malicious person opened the switch on Sunday night at I'nmsitole. an'. a freight train fn the Alabitva 'Cen-! tra divfctani nf fcast IVr.nessiee. Vir-' ginta HiHt iicoriia KaiUKiaU Mil into the construction sido track. The enghio wa wrecked and some cars of the freight train thrown from the track. Charles Crane, engineer, and his fireman were fatally injured. Knight, began firinc jumped from tho wagon. McKnight was wounded and Ksc!l was sliot dead. Ti:e horses becoming fright ened, ran away seriously injuring Mr-. McKnight. AVute- in att Art.-l.in Velt. Nkw YortK, Auge-t .' ' -ician named ls;ue R--;'.i'i charged with insanit" in ti.i Market rmlice court this ;; -. He was under th" M"::r. ri had prescribed medicine i-r " dent Carfieki and that ti.'- ing physicians and scr.-'-:-failed tt adrninist. r ti tai sick man. He wa '; tombs physicians for wl: -.: arnination. ."I Coloretl Man with a J'.i-p-the Heads of all Anii-t;:tri! Wash in .ton, policemen have :vt-t A i hist ;;;:. oilier "crank at tne w:.:.i gate. UwasapiMir vh? manifestly insane. He w.: upon .a mission of kii'i:, man who was no; a Nirt;r and had .a large tin can i:" he roprsed to pl:tc ihf:r He was arrested without r-: Va.nktox, D. T.. August -".!. At four hundred and sixty feet depth the Yankton artesian "well struck flowing water: in a linu formation, which flows onebundri dA fiftv ted ious pt r minute through a six inch ! ??P??V? pile. In the same pipe water was carried fifty feet above the surface of tho iroundV Tliis is the first well iii ualiotamd as it is a clival suc cess, anotlur will probably be bored here inimcdiately. Tho Vt'tll Com pany will lay pipe j to supply the city with STlesian water. Ti-uinps in Canada. Speaking of ( Governors the mention of an ite:n f ed from Mr. Henry A. K:.o;'-' man at Chas. Waters t',:l ernor and Valve W.vks. N": M.as. : I have r.stl St. 5,.VC.s :tn.inr.u. ! it never fails to cure tut-1-' delighted with the wor.iur'.'K ' ci tbo Oil. as it has i-:nvi ta;;' (bruises, burns, etc. V1" 1 1st I w-S''a,t( la r 1 Orr.WA, Out., August 31 Mrs. Pdanehet, wife ot Mr. B!an?het. of the iMt ollico department in this city, left her sister's house in Pres cott, on Friday to take a train for Ottowa. Nothing has been, seen of bur since, and it is fewd. tlvai ih.; has been kidnapped v tramps, a desperate gang of whom" have late ly been committing serious depre uaticus H,i vicinity of Preseott. Cholera llavajjes. lviiS of Cholera. :U.A EoNPoN, Aug. 31. j!-ivate let ter lrom Bangkok. Siam. 9, says: "Asiatic cholera W ragiit"" here. It is vari.CUiiv estimated that rom a h'.v,.i'rred to three hun dred rr.;ives are dying daily. Very aw loreigners have died, but severa'l have fled to Singapore and Hon" iNong. i-.yory one feels as if y,. were living in a graveyard j I j j t iimm i i ' a v vti Cu. xk; Pa., August 31. t lea yy forest fires caused by the winter berry picker? nr .w,c.ii;.,. 1 v ( - v uv, . ' tumii ine lumher region of Carbon I.oiv V'tnst 1 , l :iuiu i ..iii;nv.i. ....... -- says : --Asiatic chciiri is rac" It is variously estiwatl tas H ) to : . ) n.Ui'es are ilyia?" 'erv feu foreigners havedi-1': eral' h.-vj rivd to Sing:i".,rr!, I long K T.g. Eyery.'ne though h-- were hvi.ig i"1 yard." . in- :t ' 1 En ;k: terrible A Terrioie Tr''-0"- iKr.i, S. C...iig"- trage.h occurred ten miles fijin here today, i w t-,. I o.d his sen t . ii. tiii..i.'. t , . W. Zimmerman, in -vhi'11 'Jl man killed Puward in-hn wounded lite son vr, .t, weapons were tloulJ barn-i No lV.i7lo7TTire " rteraix' Si 1 1 vt.iv Pa.. Sei ..... . i . . .1.:. .w.tio.r) IS Mie urougni in ii"- irt Mvcrc ever f xiierientf 1 1 lit-r thirty-'1 Iliver It I.'w not. rained H ,lo,' Tlie r.nek:wanna very nearly dry. All the . rr leing burnl P- II u impossible for a tronv g county, a tlithful course !v' v(Vrii- w untated that SIO.XI worth of Lydia E. Pmkhatn s :, 'Jgs in thc White Bock ridge and pound, to continue W Kinder township are destroyed, weakness of the "Iitus. r--;,.hJ,,. Hundreds of men nr.i . c..i.'; .imntu Mis. I.vdia r.. , - i ....r. .!' . II"' il..l.l l.ifv 1 t-llllTl til ., -- uu. iiLi.iiiit: I .'." ... tiieitre. William Oetzhas already j:53 Western Avenue, lost $3,000 worth of hgs. " for her pamphlets.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers