I, 0. F. LEWIS, Editor A Newspaper for the Familv and Fireside. TormvSi-00. in Advance, VOL. XII. REIDSVILLE, N. C., NOVEMBER 4, 1887. NUMBER 32. htem I'. '.Pi '"lnw ' ln.lv" re tbi In w 'llWtti i It M , v, 'r i ai it j Kxi i an ful i-ivilt,,. way J itly r., T.utlu-I nil lit I ,u inurk 'J mm no Ui III U) tl Bifm,, re. J r. "t th 1 to t, J. hud "7. .Ml 1H l, JiavUil K It ttlfy, 'I liter! "f. ly.ll am l"Klcal tour 1 J! trifle, clawK'J icg. York.' eth. bf-ati Water jitlCB, rrews. J'og, T revels , beau ron 3WS, i Dirt erlonc- i.al. Ml ns cm I n both edhavr v frcn lire ti e . Tic i h (.ot Dutiful er pvt yCfly. Conni rpitts. SI 'v II tbl n r J k t ATI" rwnr IMPS :. Ntj; v. -I.-..1 t otnt"! ticrm'l with "' h Knell1 I ?... i:rn "'' itndT e H"(U r Vorli- lout an smedr' ii a'-. ;lonPi 50, rll iiiy. est reef coat iTrttUr 1 "IT- i ml Kt iff IWV (I. Ruiw St. icdo. LE ex,H-n' krUl-,.l r ff"! DR. TALMAGli. 'ut, BROOKLYN DIVINE'S T DAY SEU3IOX. SUN- Defense of Young Men." "In'! f Aord opentd the eye of Tk thi' "('' '"J IMImn a vounir theoloari- 1 ; r ', t i .lit, W!t ared by finding himself and t, upon whom he waited. , Ml - 1 ... i,.. lm r.l'"!"1 r,l 'mi.. 1 j .....,i.iiii M y hole army of enemies. But ....!..U.1 Eirsh.t was not scared at ail, be mo:intai!is full of defense I mils' o or h ;'' i" ,,,! s made out of fire, wheels ut fire and cushions of fire, with nostrils of fire, ami lim-nchesof fire, and hosts ural appearance that cou-d !! ,' natural eye. So the old t,f fir ii.i' l.v l.or-H rtl rn- ii -lilt I'l.K tint the younir minii-ter ami the prayer was an- .nl oiaKied the eyes of the ,UI g Ili.'Ul lli'l mo ulso saw the fiery proces- !0ll. i'"' ''-' ''"'V cwii it, ; suppose, liKe the j'liron lavi h or tmiil'.l1 i'' .i!eil'l( ho A legrames in this au- o. men, starri ni among tne nst tr i'ii'i:loim real ties, have their eyes I y closed. Mav Co l grant l.ni: -hut or t-nl ii timi. inv s.-niKni hiriy i.jien wide your eje-iio Ji.tV YOU optMn t'.ir.ity and your des- tmv. , inihty 'itai Jl'-ij e.. do f-nse for' a young man is a ne of my hearer.-, look hack with tcmler sati faction to their early home, en rudu and rustic, hidden aii'l architect or ui-li' Isterer r.ado ii ed it. , Hut all the i y Walls never looked so en- thos'! ..rough hewn rafters. It may have I union' t'. e hills Haver 'lanri'i I res.-o on prmci firing 'i yo.u Yon ch ii tfniik r it'j park, or aruor or trees i.laiited on (uyl uojial'k (MJiitiv-;e2t to at- lia' ti- as th," ot Hi'- oM far ffi'.n brook that ran in front i ihous -s and sans under th'- we pinj; v. il !mv:;. No barred catewav. it li.r'i'' I with si itue of bronze, anil swung fiiK-lf I'V ol:siiit ip.-s ixirter in lull dres;. has lalf Hie hlf''7 ? I be swing gate. Many of nd dwelling place, your at also is sacred fore'er. v.iii Imve fl ! s.l'il.tc.l ho:ne.. t I'lv If V 'H 1 ii i It. ie first family altar. The re ow ciiii'iroii were i rn. All those tree.5 .you l'ianl' ' That re; oiii is s.Heinii. becau.se once !l! it, "V.-! of i!i'ft!h: voiir w.'t! ih.? i: (rhk-r t pillow, Hupped tho wing tU.it loot' you expect when to lie down and die. You is doml tiv ivitli in l till! lll.'KV :i v rtJ.s to t ll the excellency nit, yon fail. There is onlv one word in the lanulige that can describe vour Inei'tlin. ll is 1 1 1 : i xr.v, '(iai'i. that a young: man is com - Hit'itm-lv s i c oo .-8 out into the w orld llii;uxni him. The mem -ilicitudn, watching, plan will be to him a shiel 1 and know a man faithful both i opted ho.no, who at the en over to any gross form icko bi' ss. lie who r ee's fly, frcm outside associa- wi.Ui a di inn iit; ory . "t J M''',:i!;ii liiti.: am 1 (l o vi up;, u.: hi llt r. 1 ncvel to Ii s 'early aii'i ;i :(,( t.ino was ii. .'ii-Miat :nii or ji'.s i ii J yiiii-iii clii t:"n. iviilicr ihaii lll)!('S:!l!l.'llg pit' lioin the more ouiet and uu.es of which I have pecte 1 to be on the broad siKiX.'ii. ma v lie Mel mail to rHiii. I.'m.s, and you Absalom ilespjsed his father's kno v his h.siorv of sin nnd lusciatn (i Mis.rr.LV 1, you wc.hi . unneccs-MnlviMili'.t'-'l froin your kin-li ed and former nH inti s, is there! not Rome room tint you Mil i all Y..nr own Into it gather books and Vi'UiivsHinl a harp. Have a portrait over ttw nwntej. ALi ka ungodly mirth stand back Ir-vm Uv- 'hres'hold . Consccrats some spot v.'iththekii( e of prayer. By the memorv of slifrne. Ii you iithviltys, a father's counsel and a mother's "'Cain a hiAte.r 9 con ldnnce. call it. Immo !!nflicr defeiiHci for a vonno- m.in iu imlnc - l.4y young mm,, In starting lien hie in th.s ase, exiiect to make their isnhrougli tho world by the use ot their iu ...ther than tho toil of their hands. A l'i' !l now good to the city and fails t.wic )"!. r. as oi I as Ins father was when ho the Spires Of tllB PIV.il: town Kif tirt s i , Jiiik't. soin.; oill.v ivntcd at Jl.OOJ a year w ij Mailing for the bank to declare its civi il.Ml, -r ,...s into the market expecting b--hw ii'glit to be m.Wle rich by the rushing uo "J thf st."t ks. But fuck seemn 1 so dull he re "ih.'l on somo othJ-r tack. JJerhaps he bor i"s fro.,, his eeijVoyer's money drawer, aim I'.rg.'ts to put it back, or tor merely the I'm - s of nnproviiig his iienmanship makes u mi,, v . i-'tc of ,-. m-rcliant's signature. Never nil .s riht in trade. In some dark mh heiv may conic m his dreams a vision f l hiekwHI s IsInn.l,or of Sing King, but t s)(.i vnm.shes. I a short time he will 1 1 W ,v,;iri f!'?m tl10 busy world, ' ls 4nd herds culture the M'.,.Nt. virp,. Tlion tlKa young man m V ..net w.ro !,i, scfioolmat, and knew no n to r"gejn honest work, will n i , h '!'ox t'ms to draw him logs on w ,(, .,,,. ltiml han,l3 he, heave u h.s -la v life T T ", auvy fk'ture- Jt is-every-s I. , .f ?lu,u1'1 not wonder if there were liu.'& !? boautiful palace. Unit., tl ii "lie RlCKIteSStS snouirt " t; tlnough the youne man. or if r.ort ni'l imnr int.o Viij y.t.. .i , that wo ,ld thr I h V. 'Should not. nnnL if l.i.. .'-! j . f 7. . 13 cnuuren snouia '"'OHIO to mm n ltvnirf L- "mij a ret aud a disgrace. I should not woinl.T if he go..s to a miserable grave, and "fvoinl it into the imashiner of tPMi Tha oi uie ungoiiyl shall perish. "hi r-tk.i- i -,r udu'ji Mii worn to Iinerfor ,.K 'ri, lii , . lhe him, t 1 1,10 awier, waicuing IMltl;' from n ... .. i , - . . ? Iiw... .. v""-mmi ana seoing tnat ll!sb(ll Was Tint u-. i-.i , . . ? .. inv ,i i, . i i ,e 1 U11U "uiu gain tne (; i W . 1 ,1, that this day be his with at u, Voung man, fight your own 1 nJ tLlSh and you Wl haveth Tw ' wort n nfinnng. - '"arehs of o)d fousht a duel 'Charles ....... 1. 1. 1 1(- n. 1 I - ,u , ; iiuii i ne suiKes were King- J . ll;m ;nuI Burgundy. You fight with -'n nn.i tin- stakes are heaven and hell. i o not-jret the fatal itloa that you ere a nis. tuul that therefore there is no need J,,h npplication. It is here where multi-s-nnwii'1- 1 he great curse of this ace is tho .tk, ' n"n Wlt" enormous self coucoitand aaoTVn,''an,lnotliineels3. I had rather be Useful a,ai1 eagle if plain, Rnd plodding.aud nothinJ"1! r Ul:m lZh Ay'.npC aud e5 for t.!imarill'1,lry capaiity without use isextra iTsnn i :l!la,'- There is no hoj for that" his w t , ''ins his life resolvett to live by ""'i rraiicis i . i , , . any. ij l"' mo probability is he has not unlaid Mas not !-ae for Adam, oven in his "H w st;l'",, "J DHVe nthing to do, to tu 'fore. Cod commanded him Hh . farmer and horticulturist. ffD it ..i ,,u dress the jrarden ana divn 'i,,V n,T1 In nhd his wife obeyed tho "guM n,.i u 'Kn nTl l)Wn at work, they t.o.s.I"a, ''"strov.-i ; in"ing after that fruit which ,T ,t,ve fo. 'n aiul thir iirvtrit v - l-irotif rail -otRt, ' 111V. ' il tJ V X.- V I iness are sure to g- t Wi K'n,t- ldo hot fm"i'Lr,,pfure woikld . HI L-nnw tlmt. the itrtvd- 'moi u" ' "oiiiki ever nave neen re 4Mcm.w,i, n,,K' ven tip his idle habits rint.,-.. I . r ,0th"nt !. tMl.K Hine tor a living. "Go Hh? "0,I s.l?aard; consider her way's ?Bi,k ir.C:", ''''M having no overseer or i ainrniehammRP. TI hom -weTon-. I But woe to that If w in "on meets with his 'at ,,u l-OCKKli l)o cinlvT ,toil always be not demand elegant, and -'int. . -'"w-v iaere is .i-iam uutnf ,uue mere is a i JWi iS' Pur occupation. i o must ti 1 f t 'yn.v 1 Rom : hU"." mea recreative ,lv fan .1.. . " :Mciallv U h i?Tfl ' 1 k r notion 0f - -. : m new u invtitnti .L. V. ."ramea retorm ler. "or. tii "iHionsned 'Jlh'l,m..l. "" WK.ll- at the bogiri- 'nious hVTi fl l an l noral law., - ts.ibatm uitbewot ... ,..K inenus, mere w no way to genu Cu orT ,7f'p.t t,urouSh toil either of the At I tho battle of Crecy in : iviVA0. ok Wales, finding himself Uit,r;t, -: '"nierTond in the summer and ,vIh. n!l ,ne-at iu tu harvest. " Tho f busvv tuf ofu1 attack the man who ei. nJ :'e aiJ tiie book, and thi 11 tf tii t ho , 1 rTlX!Ct ror he Psabtiath five ap,;n:yo,-S fan n powerful prcsS-v-N.,,;!.":1 eviL (Sod has thnirt.? i L akbVI inn as often as that, or they will run down. Failure must come sooner or later to the man ' wno oreaics me oawratix Inspiration has ailed it the Lord's day. and he who devotes it to the world is puilty of robbery. God Will not let the sin go unpunished, either in this world or the world to come. While the divine frown must rest upon him who tramples npon this statute, God's special favor will be upon that young msn who sertrptt ously observes it This day properly observed, will throw s hallowed in fluence over all the week. The sonar and ser mon and sanctuary will hold bacit from pre sumptuous sins. That yoaug man who begins the duties of life with either secret or open disrespect of the holy day, I venture to prophesy, will mett with no permanent surv cfsses. God's curss will fall upon his ship, his store, his office, his studio, his body and his soul. The wav of the wicked he turneth upside down. In one of the old fables it was said that a wonderful child was bora in Bag dad and a magician could hear his footsteps CO X) miles away. But I can heir in the footr step of that young man, on his way to the house of worship this morning, step not only of a lifetime of . usefulness, but the coming step of eternal joys of -heaven yet millions of miles away. There are magnificent possibilities before eacn oi you young men of the stout heart. and tne buoyant steo and th Bpirit. 1 would marshal vou for ei-and achievement. GoJ now provides for you the fifet and the armor and the fortifications Who is on the Lord's side? The captain of the zouaves in ancient times, to encourage them against the tmmense odd.s on tho tide of their enemies, said: "Come, my men, look thess ellows in the face. They are 6,000, you are :S00. Surely the match is even " T at speech gave them the victory. Be not my hearer, dismayed at any tune by what stem's an immense odds against you. Is fortune, is wans 01 education, are men, ore devi's against you? Though the multitudes of earth and hell confro.it you, si and up to the charge. With l.OO.'.OOO against you ithe match is just even. Nay, you have a decided advantage. If God be for us, .who can bo against us? Thus protected, you need not 6pend much time in answering your assail ants. Many years ago word came to me that two impost )rs, as temperance lecturers, had been speaking in Ohio in vaiious places and giv ing their experience, aud they told their audience that they had long been intimate with me and had become drunkards by dinin" at my table, where I always had liquors of all sorts. Indignant to the last degree I went down to Patrick Campbell, chief of Brooklyn police, saying I was going to start that night to Ohio to have- these vil lians arrested, and I wanlel' him to tell mo how to make the arrest. He smiled and said: "Do not waste your time by chas ing these men. Go home and do j'our work, and they can do you no harm." I took his counsel and all was well. Long ago I made up my mind that if one will put his trust in God and be faithful to duty he netid nt fear any evil. Have God oa your side, young rn ui, and a'.l f ie combined forces of earth und hell can do no damage. And this leads nie to say that the mightiest of all defense for a young man is the posses sion of thorough religious principle, nothing can take the place of it. lie may have man-tiors- that wou'd put to shame tho graceful ness and courtesy of a I ord Ches' erfield. For-ei-jfii la tguages may dio; from his tongue. II m 'My he ablo to discuss literatures and laws and foreign custoiii.7 He may wield n lien of imequaled polish a,nd power. His quick ness and tact may qualify him for the high est salary of the couuting housa. He nuy.be ns sharp a 3 Herod and as strong as rairson, with as line locks as those which hurt? Absa lom, f-till he is not sate from contamina tion. Tho more e'egmt his manner, and the mire fascinating his dress, the more peril. , t'-Htan does not earn maeh for the aP.eeriance of a coward end illiterate being. He cannot bring him intn efficient service, Bnt he loves to st jrm that castle of character which has in it the most s pods and treasures. Jt wr.s ,-r.ot bo no crazy craft creeping along the const wnri a va. unless cargo that the pir.to at tack d, b it the ship, lull winie'.l tmd flagged, ply n? between great peris, carrying its million of s-,;ccic. The more your natural aifl acqu:rod accomplishments, the more neo I of the religion of Jesus. That does not cut in upon or back up any smoothness of disposition or behavior. It gives symmetry it arrests that in the. soul which ought to be arrested, and propels that which ouzht ti be propelled. It fills up the gulleys. "It elevates and transforms. When th" Holy Spirit impresses the imago of God on the heart he does not spoil the canvas. If in a'l the multitudes of young men upon whom re ligion has acted you could find on3 nature that hatl been the least damaged, I would yield thL;, proposition, "Vou may now have enough strength of character to repel the various "temptations to gross wick-dness which ass 'til you. but I do not know in what r.trait you may be thrust at some future time. Nothing short of the grace of tha cross may then be able to deliver you from the lions. You are not meeker than Mo.se?, nor holier than David, nor more pa tient than Job, and you ought not to consider yourself invulnerable. You may have some weak point of character that you have never discovered, and in some hour when you are assaulted tho Philistines will be upon thxs. Samson. Trust not in your go.xl habit", or your early training, or your pride of chara?tor; nothing short of the arm of Almighty God will bi sufficient to uphold you. You look forward to the world sometimes with a chilling despondency. Cheer up! I will tell you how you all may make a fortune, "esk first the kingdom of God and his righteousness an i all other things will lie added unto you." I know you do not want to be mean in this matter. Give God the freshness of your life. You will not have i 10 heart to drink down tho brimming cup of life and then por the dreg's on God's n't ir. To a Saviour so infinitely generous you have not the heart to act like that. That is not brave, that is not honorable, that is not rmnly. Your greatest want ia all t'ue world is a new heart. In God's name 1 tell you that. And the Blesso.1 Spirit jre-s?s through the rolemnities and privi iees of t his holy hour. Tut the cup of life tsinal to your thirsty lips. Thrust it not back. Mercy o!Ten it; bleeding mercy, long suffering '.mercy. Reject all other friend ships; be ungrateful for all other kindness prove recreant to all other bargains, but despise God s love for your immortal soul lou't you do that. 1 would like to S3e some of you this h"ur pre-s out of th ranks of the world aud lay vour conquered spirit at the ' feet of Jesus. This hour is no wandering vagabond stagger ing over the earth; it is a winged messtnger of the skies whispering mercy to thy eouI.I life is smxith now, but a'ter a while "it may be rough, wild and precipitate," Thsra comes a crisis in the history of every man. We seldom understand that turning point uutil it is far past. Tha road of life is forked and I rend on two 'signboards: " This is the way to happiness,'" "This is the way to ruin." How apt are we to piss the forks of the road withoutr thinking whether it com 9 out at the ducr of b'.iss or the srates of dirkneis. M-iy years ago I stood on the anniversary p'atfena wit'u a rnin stcr of Christ who made th:'s romirkable statement:; " Thirty years ago two' young men started out in the evening to attend the i'ark Theatre, "New York, where a p'ay was to be acti in which the cans? of religion was to bo placed in a ridiculous and hypocritical light. They eatue to the steps.--The conscience" ' of both smote thf-m. One started to go home, but returned again to tha door, and yet . bad not courare to ener, and finally der p ir ted. Bat tbe other young man entered, the pit of the theatre. It was tUe turning point in the history of those two young men. i ha man who entered was caught in the whirl of temptation. He sank deeper and 1 e?per in infamy. He wa lest. The other voting man was saved, and Le now stands iiefore you to bles. God that for twenty year" he has be?n permitted to preach tbe Gospel. "Ke'oice, 0 voung man, in thy youth, and lot thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth; but know thou that for all' these things God willbrinj thee into judgment." , Thk late King of Oude ruled with abso lute sway the 7.000 ret liner - w.tain the domain 0: his palace. De--pit i the $ 1 paid to him annually by the Anglo-Indian Government, he was always deeply w wdw PERISHED IN THE LiKE.! NORTH MICHIGAN PIlOPELiIiER C03IPLETELY AY RECK ED. i Passing Steamship Sees men Cling ing to Rafts But is Unable Owing to the Rough Weather, to Reach Them Upwaitl of a Score Drowned. The 6tcamship Superior, arrivirg at Mil waukee, Wis., brought the first news of the-j aiamtowoo, Wis. That thj wreck is that of i thi propeller Vernon, of the Northern i Michigan line, is established almost beyor d a doubt Sh, was due, and from the descrip- 1 tionof fPmnf. rw i Superior, her owners consider her identify: fully established. She had on board' a crew of twenty:two men and several passengers, the exact number not being known, and it is supposed that all han Is perished. Captain Moran, of the Superior, saw three or four rafts with men clinging to them, and also a sailboat containing a women and three men. Although he made an effort to rescue them, the high sea prevented the rendering of any assistance, the Superior being herself dis abled, and requiring the crew's best efforts. It was about tc-n o'clock in the morning when the fii st signs of the wreck in the shape of floating cargo and furniture were seen. About an hour later tho rafts were sighted. On some the occupants were almost gone, while others signalled! the Superior. J P. J. Klein, of Klein & Kirk, who charter ed the Vernon to replace the Champlain, burned early in the season, received the first information from a reporter. After heann the account as reported by Captain Moran, no reit sure that tne vessel was the Vernon. He did not know what passengers were on board, and of the crew could give only the following names: Captain George Thorpe, of Ogdensburg, N. Y , master. Captain Collins, mate, who formerly sailed the schooner Golden West. Captain Higgins, second mate, who. sailo 1 the barge Leland last year. F. W. Burk, clerk, the old est son of Mr. Burk, one ot the owners of the vessel. Charles Marcau, first engineer. Frank M. Hall, second engineer, a brother of Ed Hall of Chicago. Martin Beau, steward. The Vernon was owned by A. Booth, of Chicago and was value I at 75,0!X). She was a year old, and was insured for37,0C0. She ran between Chicago and Mackinaw, and picked up freight at the ports where she touched, carrying it at the risk of the own ers. Captain Moran, of the steamship Superior, said: "To pass one man on a raft appealing for our te'p, another dying from exposure, and a small boat in which we could se.i one women and three men, the latter hailing with a coat stuck upon his oar, all being tossed about in a terrible sea, without our being able to render them any assistance, was heartrending in tne extreme." "We were also fighting for our lives, our stetmer having become disabled in the sea. With the exception of the cooks, our entire crew of sixteen men, even the engineer were down below, some' of them steering the vessel with a temporary tackle. With this we kept onr vessel out of the trough of tho sea and tept her before the gale. if the Vernoir foundered in the gale and no one is left to tell the story of the disaster there will bo many who will attribute her loss to overloading. Without cargo she was a deeper draft vessel than any on the lakes, and it was impossible to load her with profit to her owners without making her unsei worthy. In order to obtain great speed, her builder sacrificed buoyancy and stab lity, and every experienced vessleman who saw ithe Vernon after she was launched, predict ed that she would sooner or later meet with disaster. - j MODERN CRUSOES. Castaways Living Four Months on an Uninhabited Island. On March 20th last, the iron bark Derry Castle, belonging to Limerick, Ireland, left Geelong for Falmouth with wheat. No trace of her could lie found at any port, and she was posted at Lloyds as missing. On Sep tiaiber 22 eight survivor. of the Derry Castle's crew reached Melbourne on the sealer Awara. They state! that the missing bark had been cast away on Enderby Island, one of the Aukland group, eight days after commencing the homeward voyage. The Cantain. both mates, and twelve seamen were drowned in trying to reach the reef. Seven of the crew and the only passenger, James McGhie, endured for five months a series of privations and ad ventures which seldom occur in real life. The scene of the wreck is rare ly visited by vessels. The survivors had 110 food except shell fish, which were ver y scarce, and they had but little cov ering. The island was explored, and the party was much cheered by finding on the other side of tlu harbor a small hut, which, it appears, was formerly used as a depot for stores for shipwrecked seamen. The place was o?ned with tha ex pectation of fimlnr food, but it was a terrib'e disappointmo it to find that all it con tained was a pint bottle of salt. Tho New Zealand Government had maintainel four depots for relief of castaways, but lately dispensjd with all but one on the mainland at Port Ross. To Port Ross, which was in- sight. the survivors strained their eyes in hopeless yearning to. reach it, but they had no means of making a boat. Fire was finally obtained by discharging a cartridge fount in jane of the men's pockets. life was maintained by parching wheat which wa? washed a-shore from the cargo of a wrecked bark. On the ninety-second day an old a-rehead was discovered in the sand. By its means efforts were made to con struct a boat or oblong box, Calking was done wit h odds and ends of rope, and yarn was driv en into the seams with a piece of hoop iron. The boat was eventually launched. Two of the party pushed off from the shore in hope of reaching Port Ross. Tbe effort was suoccssfu", and soon signal fires at Port Ross toll that help was at hand. On July W the shipwrecked men were transferred to the mainland and their sufferings were at an end. KILLED BY AN ACCIDENT. Charles E. Mayer, a Patent Attorney Shot in a Friend s Office A distressing case of accidental killing oc curred at Washington. Chail s R Mayer, of the firm of Abraham ani & Mayer, patent attorneys, went to the Corcoran Building to take deposition"? of parties in a patent case. Mr. Jordan M. Israel, a well-known lawyer and boon companion of Mayer, accompin:eJ tbe latter. The stenographer engaged faded to appear at tbe of ice oa account of 6uddcn illness, and the business could not be tran sacted, and the jrentlemea, left for their homes. Maver wnt with Israel to the lat ter's office. "There the men got to talking, and Mayer, having occasio J to open a drawer of bis desk to get o Jt some papers f ulied out a thirty-eight caliber double action reyo ver. which, bis friend a inuring asked to loot at it In returning the weapoa it exploded in some unaeconat ble way the boiet eut r ing the heart of Mayer. Daath was ins.au- taueous. Israel was arrested and locke4uj and in his cell he was so crazed with grief ih.t . wnth hi to in kextercr m iwi parties are well known. HORRORS OF DIVE. Glory of Another YoungCiil WIiv.as AbdneUHl from Chicago Blanche- Bonneville, the fifteen-year old girl who has been a prisoner in the Wixons n dives for more than a year, reached her home, at Chicago. ODicer were sent to rescue her and bring her a a witness against the Cassidy woman, ho is Vj I e trie 1 for V ductiou. '"Beforw the . officers reached Marinette, however, Mike Leahy, the keeper of the dive, got word from Mrs. Cassidy that there was trouble ahead, ir!oi?d hr dive and released his prisoners. Blanche is still prew., r 7 ; she suffcred iu tbe d-w .bhe t!,edaaf f a resitab e carpter.,Hi? says she bdttcted in July WhU. bhe was out on the street in front of her father s kouse when a woman, who she afterwards found out was Florence Ripley an alleged procuress, earn by w.th a p tcher and asked Blanche where she could buy some milk. Blanche showed her and the woman struck up a conversation. She found out that Blanches father was poor and T,he girl anxious to earn her own living. Then?-she said she. kept an intel.i genco office and could get her a place where she would earn $12 a week and her' board. She was to work at a hotel table at Green Bay, Wis. Blanche got her father's consent to go. Instead of taking her to Green Bay the Ripley woman carried her to Marinette, where she was taken in a close carriage to Ix'aby's place. She has been a close prisoner ever since. She has been moved around from one dive to snother, but always under close guard. Her father never knew What had become of her, and believed she was dead until the Howden woman escaped the other day aud told her s ory of the horrors of tbe place. Blanche says that while she was at Marinette, the Ripley woman brought there two innocent girls from Chicago, named Lizzie Wilson and Katie Holland, who had been decoyed in a similar way. They were beaten, starved and -threatened with the bloodhounds if they did not' yield to the de mands of their jailer. While she was at Florence. Wis., two vounjr eirls named Annie Perry and Aunie Howard, whom the Cassidy woman had kidnapped and brought there, tried to escape. 1 he keeper 01 tne dive turned the bloodhounds loose upon tn ni. The dogs caught them and tore and mangled ! them so frightfully that Blanche thought ! they were dead when they were brought back. Three weeks ago she was takcu back to Leahy's at Marinette. In a few days the Cassidy woman appeared with a little girl named Blanche. She did not seem to be more than thirteen years old. She cried all the time for her mother and all the beatings that Leahy could give her could not make her yield to the life he wanted her to lead. She was locked up it a garret and only fed on scraps every other day. The Cassidy woman and others of her kind were contin ually bringing young girls to the dives. Most of them had been kidnapped from re spectable homes. The lives they were forced to lead killed most of them in a year or two. A CONFLICT AVERTED. Troops Withdrawn in California Pending a Decision by the Courts. The threatened conflict between the civil aud military forces at the Round Valley (Cal.) reservation, has been averted, by in structions sent by the Secretary of War to General Howard, to withdraw the United States troops now oa the reservation, pend ing a judical settleimnt of the matter. It is learned at the War departm nt that a com pany of soldiers, under command of Captain Shaw, was ordered to eject a number of squatters from the reservation, at the request of the Interior Department. An injunction was obtained by the squatters from a stat j court, and as the captain of the United States forces refused to obey it, the state militia was called upon to enforce the courts order. At this juncture, the attorney gen eral appealed the case to the United States Court, and at his suggestion Captain Shaw was directed to discoutinue further proceed ings. It was while this appeal was pending that the sheriff began his movement looking to the arrest of the military force. The or der sent to General Howard to withdraw the military force" is expected o prevent an immediate conflict, but the question of juris diction involved is regarded at the depart ment as one of the gravest importance. It has cropped out in one shape or. another in all of the Indian outbreaks of the last few years, whenever the state or territorial authorities have attempted to make arrests on Indian or military reservations, and a final settlement of the conflicting rights of state and federal authority s over govern ment reservations is earnestly desired by military officers. AN EDITOR KILLED. A Man's Revenge For an Alleged ILibel Against His Brother. W, H. Reynolds, editor of the Times, at Ashlind, Ohio, was shot and- killed in Orange township, Ashland county, by James Mason, a brother of C. D. Mason, of Ash land, who is plaintiff in a libel suit against Reynolds. The alleged libel was the publica tion of a statement concerning the hailing of 50 to an Ashlaud farmer named JLutz by j C. D. Mason an.l aa undue severity of process J adopted by Mason to e' force the collection 1 of a note. Following the institution of the I suit Reynolds published an article criticising C. D. ilason ana nis Droiner james. Reynolds was in Orange township collect ing evidence against the plaintiff in the libel case, when James Mason met him. An al tercation occurred, and Mason shot him twice, killing him instantly. Mason is uuder arrest. The community is considerably excited over the affair. Public opinion is divided : the people of Ashland seem to favor Reynolds, and the general verdict is that it was a cold-blooded murder Reynolds was 43 years old and a cr.pple from wounds re ceived during the war. - AT A COLORED CAMP. Whiskey Cans-rs Fight ing and the Death of One Man. The negroes of Hampton county have been holding a tamp-meeting near Brighton, S. C. lleligious exercises have been going on all tae week, and the greatest excitement pre1 vailed. Thnrsday night a barrel of whiskey was brought to the ground and drinking became general. When preaching began drunken men in tha congregation wanted to talk as mnch as the preacher In the pulpit. The meeting w soon turned into a scene of confusion. When the preacher attempted to ej force order a free fight ensued, in wo ch Eistols, razors and pine poles were used, lood flowed -in streams, and as the lights were extinguished foe could not be distin-g-uistied from friend. When peace was restored in wa found that Jacob Jackson, an elder in the church, bad been killed by a pistol shot, and that six others were so badly wcuuded tat death will result. About twenty-fire persons were tadiy woaaled and rnt in t ie Crht. The camp-meeting, without j ceremony, adjourned. COWHIDED IN HIS OFFICE A Woman Vigorously Resents an At- Iegetl Sw indle and Slander. There was a sensational episode oa Third street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Join C. Hanover, a real-estate agent, bnt formerly a teacher of dressmaking by a system of charts, was horsewhipped in his office inlthe Masonic Temple, at Third and Walnut streets, by Mrs. Jennie Moody, also a dressmaker. Mrs. Moody was accompanied by her brother, C W. Carroll, who was a'so armed with a horsewhip, and they supprised Mr. Hanover in his office alone, W hen they entered Hanover sprang to his feet. "Do you know met' rrsked Mrs. Moody. "My God! I do,", replied Hanover. He would have left theofiici, but his visitors rained the blows ou him before he could es cape. When they had finished tbecowh diug Carroll gave Hanover several blows with the whlpfHe fell against his desk . nd cnt Lis head fearfully. There he lay on the floor ia a pool of blood, his face bloody and his hair and mustache soaked and clotted. Then Mrs. Moo iy and her brother left. Just as she went oit site turned and said: "Every time you slander me I will come and repeat the dose." All around tho building men were standing rubbing their hands with flee. No one seemed to care what became of Hanover, and there was a general feoiing l hat well-merited punishment had been meted out to him. Hanover is an old man, who has, it is said, been slandering Mrs. Moody in the West. Mi's. Moody found that she could get no legal rodress, so she took the law into her owu hands. Sho has had many trials of , late years.and most of them,she says, were caused by Hauover. Mr. Carroll tried to obtain legal redress, but it was impossible. Hanover and Mrs. Moody are proprietor of rival dressmaking establishments, and this is the culmination of a long series of grievances on Mrs. Mooiy's part. A few years ago Hanover's-wife gave h;m a dress ing dovm that wou! i quiet almost any man. The origin of the trouble seems to bo that Hanover, somo eais ago, sold some property in Chicago to Mrs. Moody's husband for f 10,XJ0, wuich was supposed to be 50 by 150 feet in extent, but ou inspection turned out to be 50 by 150 inches only. This alleged iraua, Mrs. iuooay says, cost $.5,1 jiU her money lief ore it was righted, and over since, she siys, Hanover has been abusing her." Hanover, it is sa d, has complained to the police of Mrs. Moody's action. GLEANINGS. A residkxt of Brooklyn, N, Y.. has collection of 16,000 buttertlits. The seventh International Congress of Hy giene will be held in London in 18U1. The enrolled school population of the South has increased 300 per cent, since 1870. Dr. Wm. A. Hammoxo says 'that there are 500 doctors in New York city more than are needed. Ose Florida county expects to pay this year from $ 1,000 to $l,.0 for wildcat and bear scalps. Tb:e petroleum refiners of the United Stat3s consume about 11,000,000 pounds of sulphuric acid per month. Thehe are 181 Medical Colleges in the United States, with an aggregate attendance of 1,00.) students Tn"E total djnited States crop of peanuts this5 reason will equal 2,825,000 bushels, against 490,000 bushels in 1373. Moxtaita. paid during the present year in bounties for the killing of squirrels, wolves, prairie dogs, bears and coyotes, ?00,625. 10. Therk are now 1,000 fewer Irish soldiers in the British army than there were twetity years ago. Englishmen have taken their places. '-- A mastodon tusk, four feet long, has recently bsen placed in the public museum in Milwaukee. It was found at Dover, Wis consin. The chestnut crop this year- is good, and about ten or fifteen per ceut. larger than last years which was somewhat short, but there is no surplus. A restaurant has been opened in London for the exclusive patronage of people who are afneted with corpulent, the food being entirely anti-fat. Another bicycler has wheeled across the continent to San Francisco, one Oray, who left New York in Jane, and arrived in the Golden Gate City early in October. ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. The Duchess of Sutherland is an enthusias tic co! lector of bird's eggs. Evaxgeust Moody is about to begin re vival meetings in Louisville, Ky. - .X-fEXATOB JOJfES. OI t lor 1(1.1, 13 Still in Detroit, and is suffering from brain trouble. General Simox Cameiiox has a steer that weighs 2, 100 pounds, and nieas ires over eight feet arouul the body. I he ri.-hest clergyman in the Unitarian church is slid to be the Rev. Dr. C. A. Bar- tol, of Boston, Massachusetts. The Rev. C. K. Spureon is said to have declined aa otter of i'.-KOtM for one hundred lectures, to,b3 delivered in thi country. Sevex Unite 1 State Senators visited Eu rope the past summer: Palmer, Stockbridze, Hale, Frye, Spooner, Aldrich and Hawley. Two sons of Chaiie Dickens, Alfred Ten nyson ani Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickens, are settled as real estate agents and brokers in Australia. Secretary Bayard is reported to be en gaged to Miss Sophie D. Markoe, a lady about forty years old. and an employe of tha State Iepart:iieut, t Washington. The names of Abraham Lincoln and Gro ver Cleveland are on documents relating to the transfers or a certain pie of lanl in Fairmont, 11L Lincoln'ssignatura was writ ten in lHTxian 1 Cleveland's in !7t, Joax R, Stethojt. a Pbila I-lphia hatm ker. employ yx) men, womm and children, and has a Sunday-school of 1,500 scholars in conection with his factory. The chapel where the school meets cost 140,000. Amid a brilliant display of diamonds at tlie Rothschild wedding, in Pari, lately, the Grand Rabbi of Indii outdazzle.i everyone else present w.th a4 o it a half pint of first water gems that be had stuck about bis turban. RIOT IN A THEATRE Roaehs Kick cp a'Distnrbanoo and Wreck a Dramatic Venture. The actors of Lewis & Otter's star combl nationjiecame the victims of a mob at Wyan" dotte, in Wayne county, Mich. Between tbe second and third acts a disturbance started in tbe gallery, which the manager attempted to quiet. This maddened tbe crowd, a&d tbe roughs started for the stage deter mined to smash things. They iuaiped ut oa tbe stage and drove the terrified members of tbe company oat into tbe street in their stag costumes. They destroyed all the propertiea of tbe show end then started after the mem bers f th company. A policeman who interfered was hurled into a dit- h. and ex-Mayor Evans, who also tried to reason with the mob. was roturhly handled. Finaly tho company men admitted Into the railroid depot and the doors were locked. It will cost $000 o repair the damaga to fchahaU. v - died; IN A PULLMAN car. A Young Lrftdy, V till Merrily Con versing with Friend, Suddenly - j Iv pi it a. A pathetic story was related by the rull man conductor of tbe Pan Handle liraitM from Cincinnati. A beautiful atd refine! young lady, travelling aloue from Cincinnati to her home at Xenia, O., had suddenly died during the nigh V A few minutes before the train left Cincinnati she, with a bevy f young ; ladies, came to the train. She l-.vi been on a visit there for. several weeks an I her friends exprcs ed regret at a?dng her leave. 1 They kissed her farewell and wished her a safe and pleasant journey l. me, al' promising to return her visit in a short time. The Jady was provided with a at in owe ot the parlor, cars. She sst reading a magazine for an hour and then engaged in a cui versa tion with a number of th lady occupants of the car. hue . was so handsome aud so pleasant and attractive in her manner that 6he soon drew the attention of almost evert person in the car, and her journey was being made a verv pleasant hip. "It was a jolly crowd. Everybody seemed In a good humor, remarked the conductor "and when I, last 1 tossed - through tlie car noticed tint the young lady was haviug,a gay time. A moment later she threw up her arms, gave a slight shudder and wa dead. Her body fell from the chair before her fellow-passengers could realize what had happened. The scene of gavety wus sud denly changed j to one of mourning. Tho la aes cried bitterly, some of them fainted, and' the gentlemen wiixnl the tears fsm their eyes. (The train sped on and the body of the young lady was not cold when we ar rived at Xenia. , 'The youug lady's father was at the s'ation to meet her. One by ono he watched the passengers stepping from the train, expect ing to see fais daughter next He then stepped up and asked if his daughter was aboard, giving her description. "I told the old gentleman that her lody was in the car; that she had died while en route," said the Conductor. "The old father was horror-stricken anil so prostrate l by grief that he had to be assisted into the sta tion. The body was removed and ourtiei i pulled out. name." I could not learn the lady's ANARCHISTS INTERVIEWED. "Capitalists and Their Courts Demand I)lood,and They May Have It." un.ji nave grown almost indifferent tej the result,' remarked Anarchist A. IL Parsons to ex-Justice Barker, who talked with the condemned men at Chicago. "Hope and fear halve almost worn thems.dves out and I have become callous. "So haveil," murmered Mrs. Tarsons, whone" wJr j I 4r si m nun was byjhis side, "Tho capitalists and their courts demanded blood, ami they will no doubt have It on Nov. II." 'The! workingmen nnd their friends wilK demand blbol for b'ood, and they will, nog Qouui nave it arter-.varos," continued Parsons. i "Blood for blood," whispered Mrs. Parsons. "What hope is there from a United States Supreme Co! urt that sends for State officers and consults with them an to the question of 3 jurisdiction f mat is what o;ir Supreme Court has done in th-3 case. Did it ever do 4 so in any otuer case f llio judges, w ith their 4 solemn j mummery, are put there to decide i questions for themselves. But, bah!" and, with a wave of his hand, Parsons signi fied that the interview was at an entL "Do you think the Supremo Court will interfere in the Anarchists' case' a World reporter inquired of one of the mont promi nent attorneys in the city this morning. "I do not. -Everything indicates that the judges have found nothing to warrant them in sending the case back. Had it been at all clear or probable that tbe court would find cause to interfere, Justice Harlan would have heard the application for the writ of error without hesitation. It has never han- iieiioi uuii uucu iwiuiB duab Lilt; lull Xeiicn has heard an application of this kind. 1 Y...A, . A i . I . . n. uwiv 1.1 j me tni uiuuiivu I in HUUjeCb 3 ot anarcny was put upon tne market some time ago. Parsons today announces that he has just finished a bojk on the same subjec t. 1 UNCLE SAM $10,000 SHORT. A Paying Teller of N-w York's Huh-; Treasury Gone to Canada. ' I " ' : The sub treasury at New York has nowjj Its representative in Canada, in the person of Henry Jackson, its paying teller. Ho hat gone; with exactly flO.m) of Uncle Sain" money, but there is this satisfaction for thc Treasury official, that-Jackson might havt taken more. He ditl not. however, have act cess to the vaults, aa more stringent ruhj eoncernine admission to tin vault werebi mrde under the present assistant trraturer.a Jackson took tlie money, oi Assista it Treas-d urer Canda, said on Saturday, the day of 3 hi deoarture. i ills ca -ih was carefully exaro- ined on the day previou. and foun t to b3 correct. Oa Monday morning th? discovery was made aud measures taken to intercept nim, awceiau metmwBiu ing n - "Vr "'V "rjA that tellers takin, mitted Jackson and was irecominended b by most Infldontial m -n in the city. 1 ") previously in the National currency Lank dons occopyins and other financial instituti a smaller salaried position. When lie wa first appointed ihe wa roinoted sucee9S vely until he risacbed the positioii ot paying teller at .'1,000 Jr aimum under the prcent assis - tout treasurer. He was mll-pcmmmet am a caw man." , . , jacuun wis not. unuer w.'ini,mj ut.vauoa will have to bear I be low. Mr. Cauda spoke of tbe default of ? 145,000 under toe Assistant Treasurer Millbouse of several years ago. i ckn inrr ihmt tkim ia nnt 1,A firvt st tt tlu H kind to the treasurer. BUSINESS MEN UP IN ARMS. An Act of Florida's Leiriatnre Sfakeal - - Thebu inen of Jacksonville, are nP in arm against a creation of tbe lost Jiiva ture, and will probly combine all orer the State and flghi it. The legislature placed licences of from ?5 to f;V) on biwrit.- In every profewaoo or occupatin in tlie Ktsite. Failure to procure lufnes was nuule a. misdemeanor. During tha j-ast week the tax payers have been not fied -of this txx. Some paid and other did not. The tax eo! lector furnished the solicitor with a list of all who Lad procured licsnslat, show in a lirge number of deli qnentswbo bad no jtlvnse to cvry on buih- after Oct. 1. Tbnraiay over 575 warrant were issued nas oeen oeviseti io preTeiu iw imvina .;,(- . .,t ,.f in banks or other ihtitutio s from wi,h ' g part or the money nw-essaniy c m-i n wieLim .ti t-...-i j r,j.,..v .inrii '4--.-- -... acrrru ui by th Cnruinal Court, aud Friday a number Fl-jTmloyeV protjetive Asociation and the of tbosa arretted piearl in court. , Butdiff llland Erewinir Cotnpanj for inciting f.-'" c vo w sujtu iouu.1T ucetttea; taey oebnod to pay and ?avs notice ot conUMtv Xnineci wumwl w twen engaged. Tb dealers throogbout the ' ... "J " 7 and is is very promote it wui cau mucti diatturLaxtce ux lnusmes cu-cics U:ire tf u settkd. -"i .. -J ,..."' SHEEP AND WOOL DEYELOrMOT OF SHEEP RllSINd ASD WOOLEN MANUFACTURES, i Interesting Figures Front the Bnreaa : ' i ' of Statistics. ' - ,;; " - ( , The printed report of Colonel W. P. Switiler, Chief of the Unite I States Burem of Statistics, on wool aiid mtnufaetun of wool is now rraly for distribution, and ii consi lemi by the Bureau to be one of the most' valuiUe do-ummU it hai ever put forth, j Tbe report makes with its appendix a volume of Uu Tiundrl pa$cw. It give a history of ths d-jve'.opmenfof sheep raitdug and wool uinufa -turing in this coun try. The report shows that the number of sheep In the Unit! Statoi row from 13.00J, 000 in'IMO to 51,w In !f4, but declined to 4.0uO,rO In !i7. This marked decline, ocninvd milnlr ia the Southern and West era Statas, notably ia Texa. nn i attributed iu grmt part t tlie deehiu iirthe price of v" wool since , - Great Britain, being the leiding wool market of the world, ha alwaya-heen, the re not t my!, the principal market for pur chaser of wool. Turkey aud -Russia hava also been important source of direct supply, but tlie Argentine Republic i" now, i next to Great Brit tin. , tho foreign source of supply, followed by Aus tralasia. The import of wool roe from !, 715,K pounds in 123 to U 4,rtJH,tKJ0 pound ing IXS7. The increase ia wool import hi about kept lvo with the growth of Amern can wool-'vrodncts, lfh having about doubled M nee 11. A seriei of table illustrate the lnoreasj in product and in irupn-tatlona and tlie 1 elation between the two, as forexampe, from 1S04 to 1, ll. trKKUOO pound wera prod U"xl and 4:i,ou,0 imported; from IS74 to 1S78, rji.OOO.OW pro duced and 4i,f 0,000 imported; from lU to !, 42J",O0.O(K) were iiroiu.'el ani irJ.uOd, 030 imported. From 1322 to lM tlie annual imports of wool in manufactures average! over f'.),O00,0JO in value, or more than seventy-one ernts per capita; whiUt from 4U to to 111. they reached over 14,OO0,OOO, or eighty four cents jr capita, fit value of the United State tvoohm prodact of ISjO was 2.yW0,i)t in round numbers, ami of import t KMXiO.OJO. In the product hut grown to tlOl.O W.OiW, and Imports were valued at fJi,v.w,wi , iw- IWce i'l til iihi gm rti t rk i Thus, while the product of woolens in Uii AJnited States has increased since 10 nearly Lseven-fold, the imports have more! about sixty-two per cent, out 111a couMimpwou per capita has doubled, which lh 'Statistician says Indicates in a striking manner tbe ad-; vancemcnt of wealth anil comfort iu the styto of living among the people of this country. The statistics of import. and 1 export of voolen In the trade of foreign countries shoty that the United Kingdom is foremost in the foreiicn trade In woolens, the Import I during 185 aruouning io value to l'J,00J,000 f' 1 . A A.tJ tfWh'b. u ....... ..m and (tie exports 10 suo,u.',,w rrwigownini next with imports of $49,000,000 and export -f net. I wi amounting to f8,ujj,ooo; uermany next. I with imnorb of $'25.000.0,10. and exioHs of $51,000,00(1 There has been a large decline in the woolen trada of Urea Britain since 1974. This decline, the Roysl Commission on the Depression of , Trada attributes in part to. the high foreign tariffs which, it is claimed, shut out the nisnufao tureis ot Great Britain f rom foreign mai kotu. LAWLESSNESS IN THE WtST.i Texas Terrorised hy naiidit-Out rnRes by Ilenegaile Mexleant. Governor Ross, of Texas, received a letter f from tho county judge of 'Starr county stat- 1!J . iLi, .1... . t ... 1. Uvn.loil ltf flAllll L!H tout 11111b Muni. " ,,.'.. j fof bandits and cutthroat, and that the local pofHeers were powerlcK. Numerous lnKtin; tor atrocious crime wire iikwh'mm-i. b judge further staUl that the authorities on Pi. tie Morii-nri Kli lo are readv and willing to do ?verything in their power to rid the county . Eof tfiesd characters, and are o ily waiting tfor cction to lie taken by the uniiea kvw nr !iv 'reran (!i.i-..rnnr UiiiH reolLl kl follows: "Prior fto tlu receipt of your communication, which t n n,n . Kt one i . hhin mo from an official . ... ... .t source, 1 liad ordered a ruuger ivi relief of your people. .Rest awure-i that the full jiower of the State government will l exercised in your behalf.'!' Advices from the Mexican frontier dec! ire that the outrages committed near Iak u rnan ami Corvaiitis were not doiw by Indian . i. . , a?nH.. ,v S-.A 4 hut. t.w reneaile Mexicans dlsruis a. mo cf rrwle of the Aiwches have len so disastrous in times pasc tnat a rriwri. i - again out deters ranching iwrties from pur-, stiing cattle thieves and smugglers, giving such 'outlaws opportunity for escape with their lKMity. The agcriU of the Ap w ho res ervations rcjxirt no Indians aUont without leave. I FRIGHTENED TO DEATH. The Fearful Itesult of a M intake hy an Intoxicaiel Farm Iabrer. A ciise of literal frightening to death oo cured in the towu of Hodu, X Y.f and ba since hfjen the tojuc ot conversation. A farm laborer, Jarn-a Van Wicklin, while intoxlca." tl at Hodu village started to walk to his tliotneotia form several mile distant. At hUit UinifUt t. i. i.tM.. ot Mis.l Kflea Ketebum, whkh be tliougbt wasms own. Ilie woman was nervous awl age, and lived ented, deroanleI tlien liegan to f attackel by bandits, and gnwim ,n ta A SWiMm m in. airs. Aeienuiu mouni i r noue wns 1 was fouiwl by her tbe middle of lr room. When daylight arncared afnh tan WtckliuLad recovere-i from his .debauch t Lft lhe farn)i tU gramljn hat;n-d for 1 Mt. tte woman mnaintyl uneo&iiHoas for a,veral hour and died from tho effect of f tbe fright. LABOR NOTES. iT CH'. AliOS local M.-aiu . . v . - 1 the KnigbU of Labor. . , T M . . 1 I I W1 fVKl H A IJR'tOKI.TJ lacvory soav,'" v'-'ir-" of lictiri' w last yeir to a tobaeeu nrm. ' GRApE-rifTticahvle cettJns as high i if 3 a day in tha Napa Valley, Cabforoia P! repon, . . - . :. - . . rr . . A n . . I. ( I'oilrovl Braketnen was held rwvntly in iLt.oi Li A 13 r, t(sy-'l nat ion - 7 m P tiv Kngioeer ha l'it bklHwemy-" 1 1 nnnal ivkn in Chicago. P CAuronxia fruit canners find it ImpW Fble toMiMT the Eastern detnand for their Egooht, though they ran both day and wsm. f I u Mtlimtte l that a mlottiwi of one boar 2fn tlx, .lay's la'r in Great Brit!ii wou" ln nh w nrk for ;o yJ0 additional perwmi. I ! THE UfaM Of tliS? prtvl action is fast locr I'.'TH' production fc wbore remunerative pnc ar reu.7 tained for ail pro i act of the poultry-yard. . a . tv n .'iiMt Ttnvin. (Vrniniir. f i.i v V )mi ttfwrtm a suit for t$ 100.000 damages against the Ale an I Jorter j- a strike among m enipoyca f mlnin th. ,witr of Bessemer. f -t: ,JZ.Z meMvad no wnei tr roontlis i 71!? lantli Irreat drStJtJ- I t ,.-, ,.rvi' ntnonr trrL iWT Miepmw i ;'-'' ...i. rt tiO.UO) on wx f "a mloiiu prcpert for their due.