SHOT H Kit TWICE. A Colored Denpnrado Ml DcrryTritii to Mur der Hi* Wire. (iKEBHBBUitG, Pa., July 24.—This morn ing about uine o'clock Jim Lewis, a noto rious colored barber at Deny, shot his wife twice. The first ball lodged in Iter arm and the second shot took effect in the groin. Neither of the wounds, it is thought, will prov > fatal. Lewis is a tough customer who Iras fig ured in several cutting scrapes, and at one time shot Conductor Bell, for which he served a term in the penitentiary. The couple have not been living together as amicably as they should, and this morn ing they had the usual racket with the above result. Lewis is well known here, wtiere his parents reside. He has been several times convicted of robbery, and lias always been regarded as a very dangerous man. He was nrrested, and, if not lynched by the citizens, /who are in a terrible state of excitement, will be brought here and odged in jail. WAT W A HI) BKI.LK ALLISON. An Indiniui County indications that the metro politan force has improved either in d /H i tmm (im m i I A COURT IN W.HITECHAPF.L. smartness or manners since the deposi tion of the military chief. It is generally believed that the hito crime is only the beginning of a fresli series, and Whitoehapel is being and will lie closely watched by the newspapers Natural Electricity. An extraordinary tale comes from Bur nish. Mr. Kounld H. King, an electri cian well known to the Burmese, while on a prospecting and sheading expedition 11 the island of LabuaiiHs said to have •-covered a mineral from which olee rieity can be obtained without appa ratus of any kind whatever. lie mineral, says the "Electrical llo ov," is described as being in the form i a black stone, of excessive hardness i,nl very great spocifie gravity, being i.-aily as heavy as platinum. A small ..lock in the shape of an irregular cube, ;r."iisuring 4.J inches one way, and, on .11 aging it into tlic testing room, a i rung effect was noticed upon the gal vanometer. At lirst it was thought that the mineral was an ordinary loadstone, but on teats being made it was found that the force was more akin to that of an electro-inagnet, and that a strong current would flow when the mineral was connected in a circuit. Further tests revealed that a difference of potential of forty-seven volts could be detected at the extremities, the iutornal resistance of the mass being twenty oluns. The block appears to waste away very slightly, leaving a slight gray pow der upon the surface when connected up for some timo. The electrician now uses the block to light a couple of in candescent lamps in his laboratory. A Rare Confederate Knvelope. ' Judge J. D. Hammock, of Crawfords ville, who has held some one or two oounty ofllces of Taliaferro county, OR., shows a rare envelope. It is an old con federate euvelopo of a bluish color and isfcllned with cloth. It was sent to the judge in the fall of 1863, containing $47.1 in confederate bills lssuod bv the Stale of Georgia. The money was sent by Sec retary Campbell to bo issued out to the needy families of the soldiers of the oMnty.—Atlanta Journal. NATIONAL WONT OF SPAIN. evowrrtng of Jon ZaMllo fat (ho CHy* Uronote. It Is years since any event In Spain not oonnscted with politic* ban awakened •< general and warm an lnterost as the' J crowning of Jo< gjf. Zorilla as n 11 on a 1 poet—t JSB ceremony whlcl was performed ii vrrl the city of Gran sly uda, June 22d. y The act was ac 1 companied with all that pomp anc lnHfes.festivity whlcl [WpwyW ho Spaniard; jmlW/} delight to throu jyvy./ around their pub yy(/[ He spectacles; •y / endless banquets / and processions, orations and poems, musica' and literary tour- JOSE ZORINNA. naments, and ot oourso bull-fighting without sllut leading up to and following the central event. The personal representative of the Queen llogent, the Brazilian ambassador bear ing an autograph letter of congratulation from bom Pedro, many representatives fi:oiu Spanish America and the Spanish colonies, delegates from the leading lit erary societies of Spain, scholars, jour nalists, and politicians, school children and workingmen's societies, all united with tho greatest enthusiasm in the trib ute to tho aged poet. The object of all this adoring honor, Zorilla himself, was born in IHI7 in the city of Valladolid. Dostined by his pa rents for the law, he spent two years in legal studies, and then, disgusted with the profession chosen for him, and filled j with an impetuous longing to embark in i tho career of literature to which he felt j bimsclf Inwurdly drawn, ho went to Ma- | drid, at the cost of a rupture with his family, to tost his fortune In tho metrop olis. His first volume of poems appeared when he was but 20, and for eight years afterward he poured out poetical and diamatio productions with true Spanish fecundity. No loss than ten volumes of verse and thirty dramas aro to be assigned to this period. But his literary activity brought him more famo than money. His father having died unreconciled to tho disobedient son, the latter was left to his own resources. Ho went to Paris, and there begun publishing his longest and most famous poem "Granada"—a sort of epic, into which he wove some of the proudest traditions and most cher ished legends of the southern kingdom. It was to this poem that was duo the initiative taken by tho Llceo of Granuda to proposing his crowning, it being thought eminently fitting that the prov ince and city whose glories he had sung should take lead 1 n doing him honor. But even from this work Zorilla derived no profit—what with a bankrupt agent, pirated editions, and the difficulty of making collections from American book sellers the poet became discouraged, and left his epic unfinished, though it had already extended through two vol umes. Noxt came twelve years passed In Mex ico, lost to poetry, though filled with pleasant experiences, and marked by the temporary advantage of tho patronage of the mushroom emperor, Maximilian. Upon the fall of the latter, Zorilla re turned to Spain to begin life anew. It was a hard struggle. Hack-work was for a long time his prinoipal contribution to literature. Finally, Amadeus ap pointed him a sort'of roving commissioner to examine Italian libraries and arch ives, but his salary on this soore ran for less than two years. Then he had u period of successful lecturing, and at last, tiirough the eloquent advocacy of Castelar, was granted a pension by the government. Since then he has been living a retired life in Valladolid, to be called forth at the end of his days to re ceive, in memory of his former literary labors, the nation's tribute of affection and honor.—Harper's Weekly. A Desperate Case of Suicide. The Palmer House, of Chicago, has been very unfortunate In the number of tragic deaths. It is thirteen years ago that one of the most sensational and carefully planned suicides in the history of self-destruction occurred at the hotel. Frederick Addison Jeffrey was the vic tim. Ho was said to have boon a mem ber of the firm of Wyekhoff & Jeffrey, of Peoria. He ocoupied a parlor room on the eastern oxtension of tho corridor. Early on the sth of July his body was found suspended over tho bathtub in his suite. Tl>£ tub was filled with warm water and contained tho charred frag ments of combustibles ignited by Jeffrey just beforo killing himself. When dis covered a stiletto was found plunged into his left breast, his throat was cut l'lomoar and ear, a pistol hung by a cord within easy reach, beside it a peari handlcd razor. His body hung by a stout cord fastened to tho ceiling. Ho had saturated his clothing with kerosene so it would bo easily ignited from the combustibles in the tub. Ho turned on the water as he wrote a letter and when the rope ho was hanging by would bo burned through ho would fall into tho tub and burn to a crisp. The coroner's jury was unable to tell which killed him.—Chicago Times. A Revolution In Amateur Photography. Gcorgo Eastman, of Rochester, an nounees an invention that takes a first place among scientific achievements. It is a substitute for gas as a support for the sensitive film of a photographic plate. Rapid and partially satisfactory ■ I'itdoor work has been douo hitherto by the aid of a 111 m which is stripped from tlio paper upon which it is exposed and thou placed upon a glass plato to form the negative. But this transfer is a dolicato and diffi cult process. Mr. Eastman has devised a plate of a modified celluloid, four one thousandths of an inch thick. This com bined product is flexible, can bo made of any size, and would upon a roller like tho paper film. Photographs are printed from it direct without anything like stripping, or other transfer of film. If the invention proves to be what Mr. Eastmau claims for it, it will work a rev olution in amateur photography, as every operator of ordinary skill will lie able to develop and print from his own negatives. The Manchester Ship Canal. Any one unconvinced by a sight of the canal itself that the task of making it is a serious one would assuredly be con verted if he saw the plant and muchinerv at work. Though the canal is only thirty-ilvo miles long, there aro about 200 miles of railway line laid Ucwn on or near its banks, und 150 locomotives are at work upon them to remove the soil dug out by 15,000 human and eighty steam navvies. Ono of these latter hus been known boforo now to foed 650 rail way wagons, holding four cubic yards aploco, iu the course of a day. But when there are 50,000,000 oubic yards to be excavated 2,000 is a tnero flea bite. In all, the plant on the ground at pres ent is valued at upward of £700,000, Murray's Magazine. "While thus engaged on work so fine, Where skill and patience must combine, How oft the thought must pain the heart, That after all your care and art. The handsome work that charms the eye Ere long must soiled and ruined lie." "Oh, no; you make a great mistake, As no such thought our rest can break; For should there come a soil or stain. No ruin follows in their train; However deep or dark they show. The IVORY SOAP can make them go, And all the brilliancy restore And perfect beauty as before." A WORD OF WARNING. There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the ' Ivory';" they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting it. Copyright 1886, by Procter & Gamble. I^o§er\bd.vin^(S Nos. 510, 512, 514 Market St., and 27 Fifth Ave. PITTSBURGH. The Leading Millinery AND FURNISHING GOODS HOUSE Offer the following line of SPRING and SUMMER GOODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES IN THE CITY: Ladies' and Children's Straw Hats, Fancy Drapery Silks, with Fringes Ladies' and Children's Trimmed to match, Hats, Ladies' and Gents' UnderweM-, Ladies' and Children's Wraps and Dress Shirts, Woolen Shirts, at all Jackets, prices, Ladies' and Children's Corsets of all Hosiery, over 800 styles, including kinds, the guaranteed fast blacks, from Lace Curtains and Portieres, 15c. to 75c. a pair, Parasols and Umbrellas, 600 styles, Silk Underwear, Silk Hosiery, Silk Mitts and Gloves, 19c. to SI, 1,500 doz. Ladies' Ribbed Vests, 13c. Kid Gloves, 41e. to $2 a pair, 15c., 18c., 2'2e., 25c., the great- Dress Trimmings, Notions, Jewelry, est bargains ever offered any- White Goods of all kinds, where. Our Motto—Best Goods; Lowest Prices. imu-'iMim Danziger S^Shoenterg. SPECIAL and Important Announcement. eWe are now offering more tlian ordinary inducements to purchasers breach of our seventy-live departments, attention being particularly di eted to our SILKS, DRESS GOODS, WASH FABRICS, COTTONS, LINENS, LACE CURTAINS AND UPHOLSTERY GOODS, GENTS' FURNISHINGS, CORSETS, GLOVES, HOS IERY AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS. Our enormous sales in these departments require us to add large lines daily, and as the same goods can be purchased now lower than they were much earlier in the season, we are enabled to offer our recent pur chases at a corresponding reduction. We are the money-saving house for the people. OUR ENORMOUS SALES ATTEST TO THIS FACT. We extend a cordial invitation to all out of town visitors to come and see us. Mail orders receive prompt and careful attention. Samples sent on application. DANZIGE & SHOENBEG, Suocessorsto Moiuus H. DANZIGEK, PIXTII STREET AND PENN AVE., PITTSBURGH, PA,