(ILLZ or? JJLI JMJtx iyJiyi o 1 UPWARD AXD 0 2TWARD. VOL. 1. HERTFORD, PERQUIMANS CO., N. C. JULY 24, 1895. NO. 26. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED Washington Item. ThP Secretary of the Interior issued an or der debarring Mrs. Mary E. Hansee, an at torney of Ellenviile, N. Y.. from practising before the Interior Department because of unlawful conduct in the execution" of pen sion vouchers. Th coinage for the la3t fiscal year was: Gold, $43,933,475; silver. $9,069,430; minor coin.s, $712,594. Total, $53,715,549. The Interstate Commerce Commission has decided to extend the time" for equipping railroad cars with grabirons. General Superintendent Kimball has se lected sites for two new life saving stations. One is on Rocky Point, near Orient, and the other about half way between Far Roc ka way and Long Beach. It was reported in Washington that Spain's Ministers havo agreed to pay the long stand ing Mora claim of $1,500,000. The annual settlements at the Philadel phia. San Francisco and New Orleans Mints have been completed. Bids fcr the construction of the six new gunboats ordered by the last Congress have been asked for. Benjamin Harrison Milliken, Private Secretary to Senator Harris, of Tennessee, was indicted by the Grand Jury of the Dis trict of Columbia on the charge of feloniously entering the dwelling of Samuel F. Phillips, in Washington. Caesar Celso Moreno, once Prime Minister of Hawaii, was arrested in - Washington charged with criminally" libelling Baron Fava, the Italian Ambassabor. Domestic. EECOBD 07 THB XJSAGtCK Per ct. .607 CLU3. Per Club. Won. Tsnt. ct. Brooklyn.. 37 30 .552 Philadel. . .35 29 New York. 33 32 Wash'nK'nA 36 St. Louis. .24 47 Louisville. 12 53 .547 .508 .400 .338 .185 were Clubs. Won. Los Baltimore 37 24 PittcKii, Al OS KQQ Boston... ..36 126 .581 CIeveland..41 31 .569 Cincinnati.33 29 .567 Chicago... 41 33 .554 In a riot at Learned, Miss. . two men Killed and several injured. President Roosevelt, of the Police Board, Save out statistics, showing that crime had not increased in New York City, but had de creased recently. Tho United States Grand Jury presentment on the escape in New York City of the Post office robbers blames Sheriff Tamsen, says the management of Ludlow Street Jail was ludicrous and censures ex-Warden Raabe for cupidity and ex-Keepers Schneer and Shoen fur stupidity and carelessness. Mrs. Mary Spivey was arrested at Mont gomery. Ala., charged with having poi soned her husband. W. H. Spivey. Mr. Spivey had $7i 00 life insurance in favor of his wife, for $5000 of which she paid pre miums without his knowledge. The Rev. Arthur Brooks. D. D.. brother of the late Phillips Brooks, died on the steam ship Fuda on her voyage to New York. At La Plata, Md.. Mrs. Belle Farrell wa? .acquitted by the jury which tried her on the charge of poisoning her husband. The jury was- ut only an hour, and arrived at a verdict after but little discussion. Deaf mutes celebrated in New York City the golden wedding anniversary of Dr. Gal" 1'iudet, their benefactor. Five thousand miners voted to go on strike at Ishpeming, Mich. Mary Taylor, efcht years, granddaughter " General John P. Taylor, was ored to death by a mad bull at. Reedsville, Penn. Jaob Rothschild was instantly killed at Memphis. Tftnn hv Fir John Tt Whitp n. leading physician. The tragedy occurred in Main street, in front of the music store in which Rothschild was chief salesman. Jealousy was the cause. Congressman Frederick Remann, of the - Illth Illinois District, died at Vandalia. The Defender and the Visrilant had a short trial -race-off Newport, R. L, in which the f armer proved her superiority. VDeimng, ew Mexico, reports the heaviest rams for years. Much damage has been done railroads by washouts. At Fort Smith, Ark., rain fell steadily for three days. West cm Texas was also deluged. G..v.-rnor Hastings, of Pennsylvania, is- v.e l a proclamation calling on ail citizens to raish their full quota toward the Stated presentation at the Atlanta Exposition. ' nn Hoch shot and killed Minnie Inger near Utiea, N. Y., because she would Vt avept his attentions. It was his second .-uuir onence '-rst offence. 'Daniel He was pardoned for the Aekerman. a on the railroad track v J . and cut his own thrc laborer, killed his at Smith's Hi U. hroat. Jealousy was the inspiring cause of the crime." " - Cashier C. O. Davis, of Peru, Iowa, Is missing with $10,000 in cash. Zimmerman made a mile on a bicycle in 1.57 4-5 at Asbury Park, N. J.f breaking the record. The entire Spanish Legation was trans ferred from Washington to Boston to be near President Cleveland and Secretary Olney. In New York City Michael McGowan lay in wait for his sweetheart. Rosie Finn, who had rejected him, and shot her dead. Z. T. Lewis, a banker and broker at An sonia, Ohio, disappeared; he was accused of forging bonds to the amount of $120,000. The Schuetzenfest at Glendale Park, -Long Island. N. Y.t came to an end and F. C. Ross, of Williamsburg, was crowned "snooting king." California peaches are selling for $20 a ton in the orchards. Foreign Notes. The People's Bank, of Montreal, Canada, decided to suspend payment, and many large institutions in that city are likely to be wrecked. Five million dollars are involved in the suspension. General Arminara defeated a combination of rebel leaders in Vista Hermosa, Cuba, and the insurgents met with a heavy loss. The insurgents burned" the town of Clara, Cuba. -In one part of the island a provisional gov ernment has been established. The 106th anniversary of the fall of the Bastile was celebrated in Paris, France, with more than usual fervor. English election results showed Conserva tive gains. Sir William Harcourt was de feated at Derby. A disastrous conflagration occurred at Brotterode, a village in Hesse Nassau, Ger many. Three hundred and flft y houses were destroyed and ten of the villagers were killed. Two thousand persons were made homeless. . -- In the final heat at Henley, England, for the Grand Challenge Cup, the Trinity Hall (Cambridge) Rowing Club crew, whiCh de feated Cornell, beat the New College (Ox ford) Boat Club crew, and thus captured the trophy representing the blue ribbon of aquatics. The bodies of Nellie and Alice Pitezel, an alleged body of whose father, Benjamin Pite zel, was palmed off on an insurance com pany by Herman Mudgett, were found in Toronto,Canada. In a collision which has occurred between two immigrant trains at San Pablo, Province of Corrientes, Argentina, tlfteen persons were killed and thirty injured. Tomas Palma was officially declared Presi dent of the Cuban revolutionary party in America, and Manuel Sanguiliy the home President. - Nicolas Pierola, head of the revolutionary party in Peru, has been elected President of the Republic. Spain asked for a disavowal of the Ambas sador Eustis alleged interview, in which he was reported to say that the United States favored the cause of the Cuban insurgents, and a denial was officially made by Minister Taylor at Madrid. TRAPPED COINERS FIGHT. " - -" N. A Girl With Them Tackles the Detectives Furiously. The United States Secret Service men made four arrests in New York City which they re gard as important, as the three men and one woman whom they took into custody have been engaged in counterfeiting United States silver coin for nine months past at the rate "of $50 per day. u Bella Carr, a good-looking girl, twenty-live years old, and three more Of the coiners gave five of the Secret Service agents the liveliest flzht that they have had in a long time. The fight was on the stairs and in a little room on the third floor in the apartment house at. 95 Fourth avenue. Carr, one of the counter feiters, broke both legs trying to escape. All were captured, but it wasn't the girl s fault. She has red hair, is about five feet four inches tall, and is slender but wiry. The prisoners were the girl, Frank, alias Conkey Carr. aid to be the girl's husband; lbert Brown, alias Bill the Brute, andTIarry kintrden, twenty-two years old. The latter said he was a bartender of 1867 Third ave nue The Secret Sen-ice men believed he gave an assumed name. They say that his father is well to do. i A complete counterfeiting plant was seized. The fifty silver counterfeit dollars found by the Secret Service men are almost a perfect imitation of the-genuine coins. 4 WSm D THE EAST Swept Destructively Over New Jersey Harlem and Long Island. SEVERAL VILLAGES WRECKED.' Many Casualties in the Wake of the Storm' Three Lives Lost in Cherry Hill, N.' J., and One in Woodhaven, I. I.' Long Island and Hudson River Towns in the Path of the Cyclone. i I A tornado that, it seems, originated in New Jersey, east of Trenton, passed over the upper part of New York City at 4 p." .mi,1 swept over Long Island, passing through the town of Woodhaven, and then went out into the sea via Jamaica Bay. It car ried death and destruction in its path.' The first fatal result of the terrific windstorm was the almost total destruction' df the town of Cherry Hill, near Hackensack,' N. J. Three persons were killed there, and the homes of twenty families blown into f kindling wood. At Asbury Park, Long (Branch and other seaside .resorts the effects of the storm were disastrous. In the Harlem part of New York City no fatalities occurred. The air was black and thick. Hailstones as large as walnuts fell, smashing- many panes of glass, and the wind blew away awninga and signs. Bicyclists were blown from theii 'machines, and a panic prevailed arcing tha women. Horses took to flight, and trees that had stood for years were uprooted by the blast. The tornado visited Long Island, scattering destruction in many places, but worst of all at Woodhaven, where fifty houses were demolished. One woman was killed and twenty persons were injured. The force of the wind then passed out to sea,- and its last manifestation was a waterspout in Jamaica Bay. About twenty minutes elapsed from the time when the tornado made its ap pearance until it went out to sea. The tornado first visited Cherry Hill, N. J., a small village two miles north of Hack ensack, and it was almost completely oblit-' erated. Not an entire building remained standing after the storm had spent its fury. At this place three persons were killed and twenty badly hurt by flying timbers, crash ing houses or uprooted trees. The wind currents were violent enough to raise1 huge houses and carry them some distance. One man was drawn through a window and hurled to the ground, and the railroad sta tion, with the agent in it, was moved one hundred feet up the track. Its inmate was uninjured. Many aver that the cloud was funnel shaped -mothers add inter esting variations in the way of red spots flickering like jack o' lanterns in the centre of it. Still others say that it was a simple blow, and that there was nothine cyolonio about it. However it was, the result is the same. The killed in Cherry Hill were Baby Ahrens, eight months old, torn from its mother's arms and found dead in the road; killed by the hail and the flying debris of wrecked buildings. Conrad Friedman, hotel keeper, drawn by the wind from a secondnstory win dow; he fell on his head, fracturing his skull and died almost instantly. Anton Boleski, employed as a hostler by August Mund, crushed to death when the barn in which he was at work collapsed. The most seriously Injured are: Eugene Chinook, skull ractured and otherwise injured; Charles Cole, of Paterspn,- N. J., se verely wounded "on the head, and eyes so badly hurt by hail that he will probably lose the sight of one eye. William Ely, 8quireof the village; several ribs fractured. Anto nio Hosfman, several ribs fractured and in ternally injured. William Suttle, nose, arm and one leg broken and Injured internally. Andrew Santel, one arm, leg and nose broken. Between forty and fifty thousand persons visited the scene of the ruin and devastation at Cherry Hill on the day after the storm. Some of the unfortunate people whose homes were wrecked sat around during the day wondering what was in store for them. Nearly every visitor contributed toward the relief fund and several thousand dollars were raised. Hackensack and the other towns responded promptly to the call for aid. At Cherry Hill the Rev. A. Duryea, pasto of the Reformed Church, conducted servioes in th9 lot back of the damage! church. He used the ruins of the rear porch aFlhe puP pit platform. Three thousand people were present. The choir was seated under an apple tree. An organ had Deen obtained and a young lady played it. i After the tornado had completed Its work? at Cherry Hill it swept on toward the Hudj son River. Fenoes and crops were out down for three miles more until Teaneck, the) magnificent estate of Willian Walter Phelps;i was struck. A hundred trees were blown down and part of the greenhouses wrecked,' but none of the buildings was damaged.' The tornado sailed over the Palisades and ?assed above Harlem, just touohing New4 brk City with its lower stratum. f In the northern part of New York City.next visited by the storm, considerable damage resulted from the fierce shower of hall, andi a number of accidents were reported. . The, hailstone feature of it was so severe that it is difficult to remember a worse one. The damage it caused will run into many thouJ sands of dollars. Considerable damage wad done tojthe upper end of Central Park and neighboring streets. - J Leaving Harlem, straight over Cypress Hill, Long Island, swept the storm, wreck ing the numberless gravestones In the cem etery and tearing down trees by the dozen; At Crescent street the fury of the gale seem to veer along Jamaica avenue for half mile or so, and I in this distance the: were but few telephone, telegraph, an trolley wires left standing. Persons, fright ened out of their wits, ran hither and thither, shrieking! and seeking plaoes of shelter. Two oars of the Brooklyn and But urban Railroad were derailed. They werf filled with passengers at the time, but no body was seriously hurt. The ears wer saved from the full, fury of the gale by th surrounding houses. Woodhaven. Long Island, was directly in the path of the tempest, and here a greaf deal of damage was done to houses. Many were badly tipped and twisted, and hen again the scene of fright and confusion, were re-enacted. I A heavy hallfall added to the general dismay. The approxi mate dimensions of the cloud at this tlmt; was about that of . two city blocks. Th wind did not seem to have a whirl, as i the case with true cyclones, but hit right straight out in the direction it was traveling; Many residents of Woodhaven and its Tioin lty were injured by flying missiles and fall ing objects. The air was full of them, ang almost ' everybody j caught in the blow BUS tained a bruise or contusion. The only per, son killed at Woodhaven was Mrs: Louisa Petroguien. Seventeen persons were badly injured. j The storm sweptjwith terrible force over a strip of country about twelve miles wide la the tobacco-growing region of Connecticut.) The hail riddled the plants ahd the entire) crop of the Suffleld region is reported ruined,1 causing a loss to Connecticut farmers of not less than $200,000. i , At Asbury Park, N. J.. the race track was flooded and drenched with hail,' and the bicycle j races were abandoned.! The storm evidently spent a great deal of. its force before it j struck Sandy Hook. It( seems to have traveled directly along the coast, taking in everything from Atlantic Highlands to Cape, May. After practically wrecking Woodhaven, the cyclone turned off toward the southern coast of Long Island, where it passed out to sea. A FAMILY OF FIVE DROWNED. One Child In the Mother' Arms and Ona Entangled In a Toy Boat. Perry Tuffts, iorty-flve years old, thai owner of a smalj vineyard near Gibson's Landing, his wifej and three children were drowned near Sanderson's dock on Bluff Point, Lake Kenka, N. Y. Two of the chiN iMin vwava tin 1 a a v r nil waM nnrf a. fan tr a. wn of age. xuuus scaneu oui in a smau Doac witn nia family at 9 o'clock a. m. He intended to go to Bluff Point topick currants and take a day's outing. The boat had a small sail, which probably was too heavy for it in the high wind. Nobody witnessed th accident, which is supposed to have occurred at about 11 o'clock, as Tuffts's watch stopped at that hour. People near Sanderson's dock noticed In the water an object which proved to be the toy boat that one of the children had been towing. The string of the boat was soon seen to be tangled round the body of the child. A boat was procured, and the bod ies of the family were taken from the water. One of the children was in the mother's arms. j The water was about "sixteen feet deen where the bodies Were found. The boat waa, found afterward floating bottom up