I Mil IN 111 A Summary of Happenings ai Home and Abroad. THE NEWS CONDENSED. A Review of What Has Tr'anspirec of Public Interest. Little Rock. Ark., .|uue !>.—lt is re ported here that 11 landslide oeeurrec :ii ltoss llollow and burled twenty eight men, all of whojn are supposec to have been killed. New Brunswick, N. .1., June 10.— Fredrick Schlatter, under sentence ol two years instate prison, and John Miller serving thirty days, escaped from the hole in the roof. New York, June o.—Hilly Barrett was knocked out "by Terry MctJovern in the tenth round of what was to have been a 25-round glove contest before the Broadway Athletic Club. Barrett was no match for the Brooklyn lad. Rushville, Ind., June !». Rev. Joseph Angle has resigned as pastor of the Heavenly Recruit Church, lie suc ceeded in getting only SN.2O for four months' services, and lie Iris come to the conclusion that preaching does not pay. Waverly, la., June !).—A veil on the farm of Samuel Johnson three utiles south of here caved in. 1> trying Mr. Johnson who was cleaning the bottom of it, beneath several tons o' earth and stone. Ilis body has nol been re covered. Ashland, Ohio, June 0. The Ilayers ville flouring mill, one of the largest in the county, was mysteriously de stroved by lire. Due thousand two hundred- dollars' worth of uninsured Hour- and wheat was burned. Insur ance on mill, $4,000. Aladison. Wis.. June it.—A severe wind and hail storm passed over this city doing great damage. Hail stones larger than liens' eggs fell in great quantities, knocking fruit off of the trees, ruining crops and shattering hundreds of windows. New York, June o.—Barrow, and his j wife and Carrie Jones, the kidnappers | of Marion Clark, were arraiuged be- ; fore Justice Fursmnn. and hound over i for trial in the sum of sto.oiio each, i The trials will commence next week. I They were remanded to Hie Tombs. Philadelphia. June it. Vincent Me I.aughlin. publisher and editor of the Philadelphia Times, died at ills home here. Mr. MeLoughlin was thirty four years old and suceedded to ihe , ownership of the Times upon the death of iiis father. Frank MeLoughlin ' about eighteen mouths ago. Salina, Kan., June !).—William Mnir. j one of the best known and wealthiest ! farmers of Saline County, was drown- j ed in Hie Smoky Bivcr, near liis home. | eight miles south of Salina. While by ; the river watching the rising of the I stream, the bank gave way. precipitin- I ing him into the water. Washington. li.. Ohio. June :i.- Williani T. ltiiird. of Colchester, ill.. , private secretary of William 1!. White, j the gate manufacturer, of Blooming- ! ton, 111., who has been here on busi- ; ncss for several weeks, was drowned at Culpepper. He could not swim Washington. June !). —The President ; has-approved an amendment to rule] ii of tlie civil service rules ex.-ept- I ing from examination one assistant : postmaster or chief assistant to ihe postmaster at each post otliec. This position had been excepted priot to the i issue of the President's* recent order. ; and was overlooked in the drafting of j the order. Detroit. Mich., June 11.—The body of i Clifford Smith, son of Barton IS. Smith, one of the best known citizens ' of Toledo, was found here by Harbor j Master O'Neil under the dock at Berte j Isle, where he was drowned. Wetstield. N. J.. June 11.—Percy i Cox, a schoolboy of fourteen, hanged j himself in the cellar of his father's little cottage here, and was found dead ; by his mother after she had sat tip ; half the night for him. Valparaiso. Ind., June 11.—The re port sent out from Goshen that small pox existed at. the Normal School here j resulted in an investigation by the ; State authorities and County Boards of Health, and nothing but four cases ! of chiekenpox was found. South Charleston, Ohio. June 11.— ! The City Council has gone into a eon- | tract with the natural gas people to j light the town at $22 per light per | year. The Council hung out for some j weeks between electric and gas light, j but the gas people carried t ie day. English, Ind., June 11. —Klnier Cox \ lias been arrested charged with the j burning of the Richard She:, barn last j week. Young Cox was at Brandon- j burg. Ky., when arrested aid declares I iiis innocence and jwilliiigl; returned | home w'ith tlie officers. Wheeling. W. Va., June 11. The Benwood authorities havi arrested two ttien charged with boii the per sons who robbed the Coon bland Post office. They were selling postage stamps at a discount. They were com mitted by United States Col imissioher but refused to give their names. Laporte, Ind.. June 11. The Lake Shore and Michigan Sontlern Rail road grain elevators at Itolli iir Prairie, this county, were destroye I by tire. Til* elevators were leased by J. B. Rnpel & Co.. of this city, and contain ed 4,000 bushels of corn and :t» m» bus j hols of wheat. Richmond, Ind.. June 11. A storm J struck this city that resembled a genu ine Western tornado. The I of the Quaker City Machine Works was lift ed a hundred feet in the air and car ried n half block. Several houses near at hand were damaged by Hying tim bers, but, strange to relate, no persons were injured. The residence of D. At- Wrecked. Hundreds of trees uprooted Uinson, just. Hearing completion, was infcvarious'parts of the city and fences blown'down; The telegraph and tele phone companies suffered some loss. Stockton, Cal., June 11. —A catama ran, with p, party of twenty-one ex cursionists on board, stink in the San Joaquin'River near here last night. It Is feared all on board were drowned. Egg Harbor City, N. J., June 11.— Fetor iWeiss, who has been boarding in Kopf's Hotel, went 1o sloop on the roof.of the hotel porch, and rolled off, falling to the ground, a distance of fif teen feet. His neck was broken. Toledo, 0., June 11.—Six people were precipitated into Lake Erie by the giv ing way of a portion of the dock at Fut-in-Bay Island. Three of them were rescued by the life survey crew, and the other three were drowned, Akron, Ohio, June 11.—The employes of the 'Akron and . Cuyahoga Falls Rapid Transit Company here, refused to accept the offer of 15 cents an hour made them by the company. They asked for IS cents, and a strike is threatened. Montvale, N. J., June 11.—A swarm of bees caused great consternation in the Reformed Church while the Rev. Joseph 11. Ware was conducting the prayer meeting services. The services were promptly closed in the church and continued in the grove near by. Rochester, June 11.—Rochester paid homage to the memory of Frederick Douglas, the statesman of the colored race and the handsome monument to his memory was unveiled. Governor Roosevelt delivered an address in which he paid a glowing tribute to the deceased statesman. Munch', Ind., June 11.—The big ele phant. Jolly, connected with the Hagenback Trained Animal Show, broke loose on the Midway of the street carnival and'for a time had un disputed control of the place. His Turkish guide had gone up town, leav ing him chained to a pole. Becoming tired of his coniiuenieut lie uprooted the pole, and proceeded to wander slowly about the grounds at his leis. tire. He would allow no one to come near him, and terror reigned until the keeper returned from town. New York, June 12.—The American Federation of Labor has decided to have an exhibit at the Paris Exposition in 1900. Washington. June 12.—John J. Lalor, who fell from the steps of the Treas ury Department on Thursday, died from his injuries and shock at the iOmergency Hospital. Cleveland, 0., .Tunc I J.—Fourteen lines of the Big Consolidated Street Hallway are tied up by a strike, and serious trouble, is anticipated before the differences are settled. Paris. Ky. June 12 The city of Paris has levied on".on barrels of nineteen year-old Bourbon whiskey stored here for $30,000 back taxes. The whiskey is owned by Charles Craves & Son, of Boston. South Norwalk, Conn.. June 12 —John Kului. a Hungarian. 15 years old, who was taken t<> ihe town farm for exam ination as to her sanity, set lire to the small building in which he was con lined and was burned to a crisp. Milwaukee, June 12.—A "Sentinel" special from Menominee, Mich., says: ' i'lie Menominee and St. Paul Railway Company has been organized with a capital of $2,000,000. ii will build a road from this city to St. Paul, a dis tance of 3(H» miles. Xewbttrg. N. V., June 12, W. H. Kelley, a boilerinaker. about 50 years old, dropped dead at a lire here. He was thirty-live years a member of the Washington Steamer Company, and Ihe excitement at the lire is supposed to have caused heart failure. New York Market*. (..RAlN—Wheat: July ranged from !So%c. to NF/fee, closing Quota lions of cash wheat, 112. o. !»., afloat basis, were as follows: No. 2 red. S2%c; No. 1 North Dultith, N2%c. spot and N,Tv. to arrive: No. 2 red,Bo%c. elevator. Corn: The market derived whatever steadiness of undertone it showed from the wheat market. July ranged from :;:p-\c. to <»ats: The market was dull, but fair ly steady. No. 2 oats, No. 3 oats, 30c: No. 2 white. .'!2e.; No. ."> white, 3'ic. I!ye: Market steady. No. 2 Western, '<4!l>c.. and No. 1 Western. OTic., botfi 112. o. b. afloat: State rye, s!(e. c. i. 112. Xew York, ear lots. Barley: Market steady. Feeding, ".Tc. c. i. 112. P.ufi'alo, and malting. 05c. delivered. Butter: Creamery. Western, per lb., Isi ! Jn is :i ,c; do., firsts, nyjkilXliv.: do., thirds to seconds, 15®17c.: do.. State, extras, ISi-ifif IS»ijc.; do., firsts, 1 "(illSc.; do.. thirds to seconds. 15(<,,'17e.,: do., State dairy. 11:11 f-lirki ii lit is, fancy, ITc.: do., firsts, bVi/ld'.jO. Cheese: State, full cream, large, white, fancy, per lti.. 7"\io.; d v V. good to prime, 7fa7>ic.: do., large, colored, fancy, 7V&C.; do., good to irime. '(<( 7> |C.; do., common to fair, Ur/O'.jc. Eggs: Jersey and nearby, white leg horn. fancy, per dozen, 17fiJ1.Sc.: do., mixed, fancy, selected. It*-.; State, Pennsylvania and nearby, average prime. 15(ill0c.; Western, selected, at mark, 14(ii,15c.; do., loss off. 11 1 yii 15 I ;I c. Hay and Straw: Hay. prin e. per 100 lbs., • si o(('iS2 l jc..; do., mixed. No. to No. 1. 55(iiN.25C(/$4.75 per 100 lbs.; culls at $2.00fd52.05; fiitr yearlings. $5.35; common to prime Southern lambs. $O.l HKr/ $8.50. Dressed mutton. s7(itoc. Hogs: Steady :tt $4.20( , «54.30 per 100 lbs. for fair to prime hogs. mi fin ill Claimed That Texas Floods Have Destroyed Property to This Amount. THE WATERS RECEDING. Great Amount of Damage Wrought Between Austin and the Month of Colorado River. Crop LoHeH In the Valley of I lie Colorado and Its Tributaries Very Heavy —The Shores of l.ake McDonald I'lled lllgli Wltli Wrecked lti'llding*. Trunk* of Trees and Head Stoe.k. Austin, Tex., .June I.'!.—The waters of the Colorado Hlver here are reced ing slowly, but reports have been re ceived that late heavy rains have caused another big rise along its upper course. Although the i-rop losses ill the valley of the Colorado and its trib utaries northwest of here are heavy, 1 hoy are small compared with ihi* dam age wrought between litis city and iis mouth, where it empties into Mata gorda Hay. Lake McDonald, which is formed here by the great dam. is slowly get ting back to its normal water level. Its Shores are piled high with debris. Trunks of trees, cotton gin machinery, dead slock of all kinds, wrecks of houses and other kinds of wreckage cover the many miles of shore. Trust worthy calculations show that the number of miles covered by the Mood in the Colorado ltiver in its crooked course front the Pan Handle to Mata gorda Hay is fully U.IHHI. The number of acres of cultivated laud thai was flooded cannot be estimated accurately. As nearly an accurate list as can be obtained shows that the loss of life along the Mood district is considerably greater than was lirst reported. Il is now known positively that eighty-six persons in all have been drowned. There has also been about 2,'HMJ bead of liogs. 4.mnll|>«<\ Si\ir». Ilenetveil. l'all ltiver. Mass.. .llllie 12.—Tile smallpox scare that agitated the city two weeks ago and that ilieii out a few days ago lias been renewed. Last Wednesday the last of the patients were removed from the North Mud to the pestliotise and ilic qiiuriutiuc on the infected region was removed. On Friday night new cases were ««i 1 rei». Sing Sing, .little l'J. -lolin Howard, who lias proved himself one of the most valuable convicts ever incarcer ated in Sing .Sing Prison, lias been re leased. bis ten-year sentence having been commuted by the Coventor to four years, which has now expired. Howard is the man who built the two line organs for he Protestant and Ho inaii Catholic chapels. Eighty Day* o< f l.'otigiit ui ( it|»e C'«ml. Hyannis. Mass.. .Mine 12. The wood tires on Cape Cod continue, although they are kept from doing serious dam age by the tire lighters, who are con stantly on the willch. This is the eightieth day since rain fell, and there is no sign of relief. It will be Impossi ble to extinguish the tire until rain falls, and the residents of the cape are almost in despair. Ct\l»:iti* A n Moo* 1 i Mnjty. Ilnvmin. .lime 12. Atlvh'es from Na guny says that Captain Hafferty is paying the Cuban soldiers liiuid great enthusiasm. Many of the troops are anxious to receive the moiiej'. as they are suffering for lack of implements to begin the cultivation of the land. Say Mill \Vn«* I !>v S. Chicago, .lime 12. —The r< lling mill of Norton I trot hers' tin can factory in May wood, where l.lioo workmen are out on strike, was burned. (,oss. $lO,- (KM>. The factory otlicials claim the lire was started by strikers. Tliirty f«»r Ilurrlsburg. Pa.. June 12. -The indi cations are that the State Democratic Convention, to lie held in this city Wednesday, will be an unusual politi cal event. There are no less than thirty candidates for Judge of the Supreme Court, and at least a dozen of the as pirants have hopes of securing the honor. sum! U'nti-v <'oi»t.ra«» Let. Louisvillo. 111.. .I'siio 12.—The City Council has voted to contract with Messrs. Heed and • tirrels. of Chicago, to putin an electric light and water works plant for this city, the same to cost Slo.fioo. Jerusalem Is now nothing but a shadow of the magnificent city of an cient times. It is about three miles in circumference and is situated ou a rocky mountain. Hi'iilli «112 €?«!. ( •«> N. I Mvrv Atlantic City. N. .!., June .". Colonel George N. Terry, the lirst proprietor of the Hoffman House. New York, and who was prominent In financial circles of that city, died here at the home of a friend. He was sixtv-oue years old and unmarried. THE NEWS. IN BRIEF. Telegraphic Gleanings From All Parts of the World. Fifty sheep were killed by lightning at I'ernardsville, N. J. Mrs. Itussell Bradford, of Cambridge, Muss, is it Hi years old. Antonio tiarcia. a bandit chief, has been lynched at llolqitiii, Cuba. Increasing number of cases of the plague are reported from Egypt. The new Herman steamer Bridgavia has arrived at Queeiisfown disabled. Bellamy Storer. I'nited States Minis ter to Spain, lias arrived at Madrid. The body of an unldentiMed man was found on the tracks at Franklin Park, N. J. Mark Twain added u» bis laurels at the banquet of the Savage Club in London. Japan Is the only country that lias objected to the cessation of the Caro line Islands to (iermany. The Montreal Street Hallway Com pany lias given its employes accident insurance free of charge. James Woods, of IMS Bergen street, Brooklyn, was run over and killed by a train at Moiiiuoiilli Junction. Henry Dawson, a convict at the Columbus, 0., penitentiary, unsuccess fully tried to commit suicide by taking concentrated lye. I". .1 Myers, a switchman employed by the Pennsylvania Huilroad Com pany at Toledo, 0.. was run over and fatally injured. The Orrville, o„ Council has award ed the contract for the paving of Main street, one mile lolig. The amount of estimated cost will be !)!2!»,7:(4.24. otto Barker stole a bicycle at Ander son. I ml., ami in 24 hours had been convicted, sentenced and placed in Hie JeffersonviHe Heformatory. An aleiiiation suit bus been tiled at Princeton. Intl.. in which Charles Col vln. a saloon keeper, asks fin,imhi from Samuel Anderson, a farmer. At New Albany. Iml., John Heagon and Win. Henry were squirrel hunt ing. when licugoii was shot in the right side, and li is feared that he will die. David Davis, under indictment for 1 lie alleged robbing of cars on the Luke Division of the Pittsburg ami Western Huilroad .lias been captured by War ren. i ollicers. Alonzo Hoot, aged P.), employed to run the elevator at the Madison Hotel, Toledo, i)., got his head caught be tween the elevator and the floor while ascending, lie cannot live. Joseph Tole at Madison. 1 ml.. was sentenced to the State Hcformatory for from 2 to 14 years for stealing a horse. Five hundred chickens were stolen from three farmers at New Pittsburg, Ind.. in one night. Hubert I'itzslmmons was dethroned from the heavyweight championship of the world by James J. Jeffries, of California, who knocked him out in the eleventh round of what was to have been a Iwetity-tive-roind contest before the Coney Island Athletic Club. 'The tight was for the world's heavy weight championship and a side wager of itiln.immi, I'itzsiuiinous's share of the gate receipts was S2">.imm», while Jef fries. the winner, only received SI.\»MHI. Jeffries has accepted Tom Sharkey's challenge, ami these two will settle their differences in the ring some time in September of the present year. Havana < abmen have gone on strike, demanding regular salaries. The largest hole in the strauded liner Paris measures It! by 12 feet. Spain has offered to sell to Hcrmany the island of Fernando I'o, west of Africa. Archbishop Hiordau, of San Francis co. has been sued by a priest for "ji.'iO.lMNt, The large coal pockets of Kahrs & Co.. at Mount Vernon. N. Y., were de stroyed by lire. A turtle weighing 1,200 pounds has been captured off Asbury I'ark, N. J. Ten thousand miners-are on strike at Dubois. Pa. No news has been received of the cruiser Newark, now some days over due ai Valparaiso. Secretary Long says lie has no fear for her safety. It was stated in Washington that tariff retaliation would he resorted to it Canada refused to agree to the mo dus vivendi on the Alaskan boundary. fhe French Covernineut *has taken steps to extradite Ksterhazy from Eng land in order to prosecute him for the pari lie played in falsely convicting < apt. Dreyfus of treason. At Spokane, Wash., Chaplain C. C. Hatcmaii. I . s. A., is under arrest at the army post. Captain Batchelor. of Company N. Twenty-fourth infantrv, ordered the Chaplain to his head quarters and put him under nrrest. The nature of the charge is not made public. At llurtvillc. Mo., Jacob Fagley a fanner, formerly a justice of *tlie peace, chairman of the Populist Coun ty Committee and minister of the gos pel. was found guilty of complicity in the robbery of the lvausas City, Fort Scott and Memphis train at Ma comb lust January, and sentenced to twelve years in the penitentiary. John J. Lalor. a translator, in tho ofttce of the Director of the Mint, lost his balance and fell from flie second Moor in the Treasury Department to day down the shaft to the basement, probably receiving fatal injuries. Mr. Lalor is a well known writer on po litical economy and is the author of an encyclopedia on that subject. 1 lie Mammoth Cave of Kentucky, which lias held the record heretofore as the world's greatest cave, must hereafter, it is believed, give preced ence to a cave in New Zealand, dis- in Horace Johnstone, near Port \\ aikato aud but ten or twelve miles from the city of Wellington. Johnstone explored the cave for miles but found no end. Mrs. Alary Edgar is dead and Mrs. .1. Elleu wood ami Joseph Morrissey are dangerously ill from drinking l>eer in Silver city, a suburb of Milwaukee. It is believed that the beer was poison ed. ,\ little girl was sent to a neigh boring saloon with a pall for beer and It is said another nail of simitar ap pearance was subAiituteil by an ac quaintance of the tiiree. AUSTRAL! AN TRAMPS AN IDEAL COUNTRY FOR "WEARY WILLIES." The "Suudowur" aud Hit Mod* telic«-A. a Rule He in Wall lAfdrmed and Fairly Moral—lie Will WorkatTlmM lint l.ove* His Kent. Australia is an ideal country for tramps because of its universal hospi tality and delightful climate. There are no hardships of weather, no dangerous wild beasts to contend with, very few clothes required, and there is seldom a night, up-country at least, that a man may not roll himself In his blanket and sleep in comfort. The sundowner, so called because he invariably claims the hospitality of a "station" (ranch) at sundown—an hour when he knows he will not be turned away empty-handed—is the white tramp of Australia. He has so long been recognized as a necessary evil that at most stations a "travelers' hut" is now provided for his special accom modation; and a regular ration, usually a pannikin of flour and a pound of meat, is served out to every applicant. In other places, more democratic, the sundowner takes his seat at the table in the men's quarters. He can always depend upon his supper, bed, and breakfast at any station; and ho usually steals or begs from the cook sufficient to make a hearty midday meal. If the distances between sta tions are too far to be traveled in a single day, the sw.igsnian rolls himself In his blanket and camps by the road side. If the distance be but a few miles, he revels in a genuine holiday, picnics for the day. perhaps, under the shade of a giant gun tree and arrives at the station homestead, with all the appearance of a long day's walk, just as the sun is setting. The Australian tramp is of a type wholly different from the ignorant, low-bred scum of humanity that one meets in some countries, and from the whining, professional beggar of Europe and America. As a class these tramps are well in formed. fairly moril, and. as the world goes, honest. The sundowner stands apart from the real of his kind, inas much as he never Ltgs for money. He will ask for .. pipeful of tobacco or a drink, a meai or a bunk, but for the coin of the reuim he does not pe tition. He is a contented philosopher, with all the instincts of a nobleman; born, of course, un.ier an unlucky star. Removed ! to my new store in the GAREY BLOK where I will be pleased to meet all of my old pat rons and many new ones. We lit the young and old of all nationalities and color with Boots, Shoes, R libbers, Fine Assortment at Popular Prices. CALL OUST TTS Remember ' GAREY'S BLOCK, the Place, DUSHORE. DUSHORE. J. S. HARRINGTON. 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