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- :,-••' .* /.V\. \m* 4 W. D. HOLDEN', Publisher. VOL. III. . m&ycm./£gw!' ^igi^CTir luiwi ISP -iiOT^rasTa. . .' .fIJBifc; IMWW ~'OQ,,.$.-y«,lmmjj^ $1.00 peir Yeiir. , , * : ; •* NQ39. \^ajn nmtmm exam; . fayne L. Collins, P. D> S.» K ESIDJINtP DENTIST, TURIN, N. Y. Oft Thursdays and Fridays maybe found,athli rooms In Port Iieydan. Insurance. Jt«h Agent, Toxin, N.T. ' '\•'•'-;'-• D> E. Kurd, << • TVBTJG0IST, AKD DBAfiBH IN GH00BSRIE9> J^f Stationery, &o. Prescriptions carefully pre- pared,. • -\\\\ W. D. Holclen. J OB BKINTJNa IN ALL ITS BRANCHES' Fhatbla'BBworkatfnk price*. Richard W. Roberts. TnXPREiSS AND FREIGHT FKOM TURIN TO JEi Lyon'8 Falls dally. Teaming work attended to promptly, i i David Diver, W mON MAB;EB AND REPAIBEB, TOEIN N. T. The boat of seasoned lujaber wed and all work warranted. w. H. HILTS, A TuTORSE* AT tkVf AND 6S3SHHAI. IN- JX. wrance Agent, office In Douglass Block, Port Eejden.lT. Y, Special attention paid to collections and drawing all-kinda of papers. . Forge House. B BOWN'S TRACT, N. Y. .SITUATED ON THE Fulton chain of lakes, In the midst of the bant- ing and Ashing. Good board by the day or week. 'OHARKBSrW. BABBETT'& CO., Proprletora. E. H* Gallup. S AW FILER AND GUMMER. HAVING SAD an experience of Blxtcon years, I am prepared to RITO good satisfaction. Shop located at the GUM Mills, about one mite west of Turin village, trie a burrgummer for all fjaws. Dr. J. Carroll House, TYENTIST, LO-WVILLE, N. Y. HOME OFFICE XJ ovorBatoman&MillB' store. Dr. House visits ho following places monthly: First Monday and Tuesday, Fort Leiden: second Monday and Tuos- day, Mnrtinsbargfii third Monday .and Tuesday, Crogliah; fourth Slonday and Tuesday, Glondale and Grolg. Is at his home ofllco the romainlng ijiya of each week. ADVERTISEMENTS. A.T THE TURIN IRON FOUNDRY Toucan get casting of all kinds usually mado at jmoh placpa, Including Stove; Warm'and ShopBelie* Xtotv* AND THE ADJUSTABLE GATE WNGB jtattho thing for farmora. Iron Fences for Cemetery Yards. ROBERT REA, Proprietor. IST3EIW\ ' TUTTT T TTVTT31 TDtT GOODS. A WEEK'S NEWS. Eastern an d Kiddle State* MUNICIPAL elections In Pennsylvania re- sultedinthesuecessiof the Bepuolioancan* didate for mayor in Philadelphia,, Harris- biirg, Pittsburg, Allentowri, Lancaster and Allegheny0%,andof the Doraooratiocan- didate i n Willkmsport, Chester and Soran- toa. Reading elected twentyeignt Demo- crats and twenty-three Republicans to the. common council, B^rra coses of suicide and several sudden deaths were reported the other day in New York city. LAST year's coal product, as reported by the mine inspector of the Pennsylvania mid- dle district>as as follows: Lehigh Valley Ooal company, 64,776,015 tons; Lehigh and Wilkes- barrecompany. 176.116,735 tons; Delaware and. Hudson, 185,781,055 tons; Susquehanna, 111,983,085; Wyoming Valley oompanies, 45,549,600 tons; miscellaneous companies, 884,460,660 tons. The number of persons ac- tually employed in mining coal was 17.838. These figures show an excess of more than 600;<JOO tons and more than 3,000 employes over the previous year. BY an explosion of fire damp in a mine near TTniontown, Penn., nineteen miners were killed, and others had a narrow escape from suffocation. AFTER being twice buried and twice disin- terred, and after 11,000 miles of strantre wan- derings, the bodies of the ten heroes of the lost Joonnette have once more reached the laud from which they went forth to death. Tha steamship Frisla arrived at New York with the remains of Lieutenant Commander George W. DeLong,; Jerome J. Collins, meteorologist of the expedition; Dr. James M. Ambler, surgeon; Walter Lea, George \Washington Boyd, Henry Hansen Knaack, Carl Augustus Gortz, Adolf Dressier ana Nelse Ivorson, seamen, and Ah Sam, oook. The remains of Collins were sent to Cork, Ireland, those of Boyd to Alexandria, Va., and those of Dr. Ambler to Philadelphia. The remains of the others were hurled at Woodlawn cemetery, near ,New Tork. B.ALSII MOBSB, who gained considerable no- toriety in New York some tinvago by stren- uous but unavailing attempts to produce the Passion Play, which depicts the death of Christ, committed suicide in the metropolis by drowning. Mayor Edson rofused to give Mr. Morse a license to peoduca the Passion Play, and a large number of suits for unpaid salaries, brought, by performers whom tho de- ceased had engaged, were pending. At the time of his death n melodrama written by Morso was lieing played at one of the New York theatres. ABOUT 1<!5 gentlomon more or loss promi- nently connected with the Republican party fiiNow York, Penusylvanio, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Maryland met in Now York, oily for the purpose of perfecting an independent Hepublicatt organization having foritaobjbot tho nomination of presidential caiictltlates at' the forthcomine Republican national convention whoiso record would \ warrant onfeirb confldonco in thoir readi- ness to defend tho advancoa already mado toward divorcing tho public sorvioef from g arty politioa.\ Upon motion of Carl charz a committee was appointed to perfeot an organization covering all the States and to take such other action ai may bo deemed oxpodlont. TmisvBS onterod a jewelry store in Troy, K,Y^, blewbr»n the safe and carried away properly valued 1 at $45;QOO. Y»!SSKi.a arriving, at Boston report pass- ing immense iceborgs and ico packs. Somo ioebergfl wore from a half to neai'ly three milo3 long, and from 100 to 800 feet high, WMhluittan. THE seofetary of war reoeivod nuifterous tfelegramf allowing most satisfactory prog- r sslh the work of relief to tile flood suf- ferers along the Ohio river and its tribu- taries. TOE President nominated C. S. Falinor, of Vermont, to be assoomte v ]'ustice jof the su- preirie court of Baltotai| Max Weber, of New York, to be consul of the United States' at Nantes j H. B. Ti'ist, of the District of Columbia, t o bo.consut of the United States at.Mozanibique. SENATOR DAWBB lias been authorized by the Senate committee on Indian affairs to favorably report a bill providing: for the g unishiment of trespassers on Indian lands y imprisonment for one year or S500 fine, or both. This is specially intended to keep Payne and his followers out of the Oklahamo lands, * , • SENATOR Plumb has reported t o the Sen- ate an original bill from the committeo on agrioulture, maiding the department of ag- riculture an ejceeutlve department, whose chief officer shall be the secretary of agricul- ture, _ TUB Senate has passed a bill making an annual appropriation to provide arms for the militia. The bill appropriates $609,000. , THE House has passed a joint resolution appropriating $150,000 to be expended among the Indians for educational purposes. SBUBETAHY FOLUISU has issued the I36th call for bonds. The call is for the redemp- tion of $10,000,000 in bonds of the three per cent, loan of 1883. THE agripultural appropriation bill, as completed by the House committee on agri- culture, appropriates $430,500—an.increase of about $M,(00 over the lost appropriation. The bill makes an appropriation of $3,000 fur the propagation of the tea plant. AT a meeting of tho Democratic National committeo in the Arlington hotel, Washing- ton, held for the purposo of naming tha time and place to bold the national conven- tion for tho nomination of candidates, for President and Vice-President, etfery Stato was represented either by a mem. ber of the committeo or a proxy. W. H. Barnum, of Conneotiout,preslded,and Fredorio O, Prince, of Massaohusotta, was secretary. A motion was adoptod that tho Democrats of each organized Territory and of the Distriot of Columbia be invited t« send two delegates to the national conven- tion. Upon the third ballot Chicago was so. looted as the place to hold the national con- vention, that city receiving twonty-ono votes to seventeen for St. Louis. Th» dato for the convention is July 8. After issuing the call for tho convention tho conunittoo adjourned to meet next in Chioago on July 7.- Tun National Groonbaok I-abor party boi issued a call for a natlonalnbonventlon to b» held in Indianapolis. °>» Wednesday, May 88, 1884, At a State convention of the .Mans Grooiibnrkftrs in Indianapolis u full tiruot, headed by TT. O: ^Leonard for governor, wiu nominated, and twonty-tnroo resolutions af- firming tho principles of tho Greenback Labor party wore adopted as a platform. ^^•Vf Y '*****+*& V Latest Styles in Hats and Bonnets. a Hoods for Ladies, Misses and Chil- dren, Ear for Cloak Trimmings. Complete and full assortment of Worsteds, Saxony Wool, Midnight yarn'and German Knitting Yarn. * Call and examine the New Goods. Mrs. A- CROFOOT TOBIH, N. Y.\ Jan. 1,1884. THE GAZETTE, PlraLtSHKD WEEKLY AT 51.60 a Year in Advan Mde&enaeHt in Everything. Neu- tral in stothintr. The Jobbing Department Ts In complbto order, and all work, entrusted to ua till bo executed with taste and accuracy. for the working class. Send 10 cents for poatagoahd we will mail .ypn/VM, a royal valuable box of sample goods that will put yon in the, way of makingftftre.money In a ftw~AlyB than you ev*> thodght po«»lble afcany biuu\'; iVCapltal not required. Wd will atart you.^4 ^M work arithetlinoorTn spare time only. The warkla universally adapted to both sexca, young ana old. Youcahoasi)ycam«ft cents ib js evcry_eTonlhg. TMtatl \who-want work may test tho busipeBB, wo .jBake.thlJunparaUedoffBr; to 411 who are not well aallMed wo will send $1 to pay for, the trouble of Writing n». Full pnrtlcnlars, atrootionfl, etc., sent free, Fortnnea will bb made by those who givo tholrwholfttimotothework. Groat Bucoeai,abso- lutely aure. Don't delay. Start now. Address 8tln«on & Co., Portland, Slnlne. r ^ 26 CENTS, POSTPAID. A Treatise on the Horse and Bis Diseases, _ -,_—^..*»n Index of DIMMOB, whloh.gim thy SyiaMoms, Oi«BfandihoBi!»t'ftca*mbntof o««hj A Tjiffft^it St*l!:*hS:r»»ipiil drtW ««ed for the Hot»», ItU<the-8i'dlii«f> &k<>, eB&bt* afld ant liota »heaa , — ' ~ L, o'witU»OvS!b«t*TW»OM*i<»Jo».'i«» i , , . k ... , „ ,-ltA/rafc ftithWeaKCtellln* tttoaga, ATlUuiMeoollootoSof Bweohita »n**>uoh otor™^ la IW UiiltaaVBtatds or OinadaTor!» Sent: Own 1UI»S. - Frta 06pl(nr. «1.00j Ton Ooplw, K'.'Si TfBtiitirOopJed. »».«), (inn Hundred Ooplaa, »M.WiOn», TYCO and TbrecCwt Stump, ntwirad. BORBS BOOK COMPANY., „ ^ . ^..„ 1M XftOwndJtt,, HawJToj*^. t' Sonib. imd Went A TREIGHT train left the traok near New Pliiladolphia, Ohio, on account of a mis- E laced Bvvitoh, and a second section follow- lg ran nto its rear, demolishing twonty- two cars and two engines, and killing four persona HEAVY snowstorms have prevailed in Da feota and Southern llinnerota, and the rail. roads have been blockaded, A CYCLONE which struck Amberson's, Ala., demolished nearly every house in town. Fourteen persons wore reported killed. THE South has been visited by a tornado which destroyed thousands of houses and killed hundreds of people in Georgia. Ala- bama, North and South Carolina, Louisiana and Mississippi. THE breaking of a dam on the Los Angeles river produced the most disastrous flood ever i experienced, in California. Tho lower part ' of Los Angeles was completely inundated, and forty buildings were swept away. Hun- dreds of famines were obliged to abandon thoir homes and seek shelter on the hills. The loss amounts to $150,000. Prom Los Angeles to Mojave, a distance of 100 miles, hardly a mile of the Southern Faoifio \track rornnfns in place, and east to San Gorgonio, eighty miles, the devastation Is equally great. The CaUforniaSoutbem road from Colton to San Diego is also washed out. Travel in all direction? is suspended. It will probably be two months before com- munication can be properly established. Re- ports received from towns in the Southern portion of the San Joaquin valley announoed the heaviest floods ever known. Tnro colored men in jail at Lebanon, Ky., |for assaulting a woman, were taken out by turious mob and hanged; B. F. BARNES; a prominent citizen of Booehe, Wis., killed his wife and out his own throat Protracted illness iu the family is assigned as the cause. FrtrBponyrstealing Piegan Indians had a pitched battle in Montana with their pursu- ers—four Grow Indians and seven white men. Four Piegans and two white men wero Mfed and two otlier whites wounded. A FIRE at Jackson, Mich., dostroved the Unioh hotel block, occupied by a. hotel, theatre, savings bank and other business houses, One man was biirned.to death, and four* persons were fatally and one seriously injured. The peouniary lossisabout $175,- 000. _ PART of ah expres.rtra.in fell through a bridge on the Hannjltal and St. Joseph rail- reed in Missouri. Several persons were killed ondabput twenty-five injured. W. B. GASH, son of Colonel Cash, the duel 1st who lolled Coloiiel Shannon a few years ago; entered Cheraw, S, ,G., and, after drink- ing heiivily got fato a difflcuity with Town Marshal Richards, who was roughly handled. Cosli then left town, but returned the folio w- itig afternoon and approaching Marshal Richards drew arevolver and rapidly flrad three shots.. The first ball struok an inno- cent bystander riamedCowarb and the second hit R-ichdrds, both shots causing mortal wounds. Cash then mounted his, horse and rode rapidly away. THE cabin of Beverly Taylor, a colorod manliving hear Cincinnati, was burned to the ground at night, and it •was at first thought thatthe owner, withnis wife and a gvawchlldi had perished In the fiarnosi, later, however, the bodies of all three were dfeoovered in tbrj building of the Ohio M^4i'•• cal college, whither they had been carried fordissodtloh. Allen Ingalls, a noted nogro, bddyisnaticner, wa9 aifested, and confessed lhathe and Ben Johnson had entered the cabin and killed the throe inmates, taken the bodies to a waiting waeon, driven by B. B. Dickson, and conveyed them to the Cincin- nati medioal institution, where they sold tha corpses. Beside the throe negroes mentioned, | two othors were arrested for comptioity in i the terrible orimo. i Poraitfn, G.I./I.DSTONSS has boon sustninod In tlw British house uf cqmmbna, tlie motion to cert- lunithegovornmont for its Mloy in Esypt being defeated after debate b y a voto of 311 nays to 269ycas. ADVIOBS froin Tokar stato that 300 of tha Egyptian garrison made a sortie, nttuokod tho enerjiy and killed and woundod several of therri, Tlioy also captured a number of cat- tle aiid camels. An expedition of troops for the-relief of Toltor was sent out, well provis- ioned and heavily armed, under command of General Graham. BnADi,AU(3n, who has given tho British parliament so much troublo by refusing to take the proscribed oath of ofllco, for wluoh he was rofused his seat, has again been elect- ed—for the fourth time—a member of tho houso of commons from Northampton, re- ceiving 4,031 votes to 3,665 for his opponsnt A DISPATCH from Borua asserts that naturalized German-American oitizons who return to Germany aro again being rigorously subjected to military duty. It says, too, that the German fprelgri office ignores United States Minister- Sargont, and' conducts all negotiations direotly with Washington. THE London Times, in on article on tho Laskor incident, implies that djslike of tho country which deprives Gormany of thou- sands of conscripts is ffiff basis of Bismarck's notion, and that Mr. Sargent's resignation would strain the relations of Gormany and the Unted States. Ansa holding out for weeks against tho ftttaoks of El Mohdl's forces the town of Toknr surrendered to El Mahdl's rebels bo- fore it could bo relloved by General Gra- ham's expedition. The news was brought to Suakiui by five soldiers who had escaped from Toknr. It was stated that only the soldiers at Tokar who had' families had sur- rendered, while, the others attempted to reach Suakim. Upon reception of tho news in London great excitement ensued and a special cabinet meeting was called. El Mahdi appointed his brother, Ali Yussnf, governor of Barfouf, and ordored him.to levy 7;000 men, and march to KordotorLto reinforce the main body of El MalMl's troops. Gr.NEnAi, GORDON announced that after restoring order in Khartoum he would pro- reed to Kordofan, to intorview the Falsa Prophet. OSMAN DIQMA, the loader of the rebels in the vioinity of Suakim is exciting hiB'fbllow- ers by quoting the JKoron, saying that El Mahdi, the False Prophet, .Is divinoly inspired, and requires Httlo food and clothing. Nma sailors belonging to the British' bark Ada Barton,.from St. John, N. B.. abandoned at sea in a waterlogged condition; were \drowned. BISSIAROK'S action mreturning the Lasker resolutions of synriiaihy to the Anierioah Congress has excited inlicb discusiion among the papers of Gel-many, thogoviimmerit or. cans praising and the opposition press eon- dornning tho Germah chancellor's course. Mr. Sargent, the American represontative-at Berlin, is lilso\ bitterly attacked and vehe- mently defended by Ger-man papSrs for the fort which: he has taken in the matter. NoTwrrHSTANDiNQ ijTeprossiblo Mr. Brad- laugh's reielectibii' to the British house of commons, aiid his wiUingness'to take the pre- seribed«atb of office, the motion denying hitri his seat was reaffirmed by a vote or 380 to 167. AN association of Kngitiah authors hasboeh formed t o aid in securing nil English-Ameri- can copyright law. AN Indianuprising has occurred in Mani- toba, British America, and twelve mounted police sent id quell thb distur.bmioe die re- ported to have been massacred. SIR HENMIY- BRANJOJ wholias resigned .the speakefsbip of the British house of com- mons on account of sickness, has declined a peerage, THE three mefi who inurdored Count Von Mojlath, preBideirt of the court of cassation at Ofer. Hungary, lost Mnroh, ;have been harigedln Poath. A great crowd collected aboutthe prison andcheered the oondemnecL WHBA* in Kansas is said to havo boon so- ribusly affected by the variable weather. Alternately freeing and thawing, causing the groutto: to swell; haB injUi^ed the foots of tho p'ant, aiid in some countios it is feared tho crop will bd a total failure. GfKpBaB T^naiAMGtfBTis has a«i#jbtfti- the invitation ofthe Boston aity government tp defivef the eulogy On Wendell PWBips, '. ah4 Uas^eleoted ApiftillS as the time fop its delivery. *wo Denver (Ooli) lodging houses oeou\ piedbyrailroadlaboroi's weredesfcroyed,by Are and four inmates were.bumpd toVojath. NTOIBBOUS colored men's oivil \riWlits leagues are being organized in the W\eat THH Bev Thomas G. Thurston and his daughter, aged sixteen years, wore diwraaod while attempting to ford the Catawba river, near Taylorsviile, N. C. s THB state department lias reoeivod by ^ble iutelllgence of the suicide of Jamos R. Parti-idge, formerly minister to Brazil and other South American States, at AJicanto, Spain. Continued illness is assigned\ as the cause. Mr Partridge was appointed as wliujstor plenipotentiary and envoy oxtraqrdinaiy to Peru on April 5, 1S8S. He was one of thoagost distinguished oitizons of Baltimore, and and been identified with tho dlplbmatlo sorvdeo of tho government for tho post twenty jears. dSim President has nominated Horace C. Burohard, of Illinois, t o ba director of tho mint, and Commodore William. G. Temple to be a rear admiral of tho navy. THE boiler of the steamor Kotsai,from Hong Kong to Macao, exploded. Sevoufceen passengers—eight of whom were Europeans, tho rest natives—were killed, SEVEN THOUSAND Arabs have reinforced, the insurgent army of Osman Digma In tho Soudan. Ho has altogether 18,000 men against 5,000 British troops. EMPEBOB WH-UAM, of Gormany, and tlw czar of Russia are t o ha vo a meeting In tho spring. MAssEs-of stono fell upon and kfltal five laborers in a quarry ot Bienne, Switzerlajid. EL MAIIDI'S emissaries are busy through- out tho wholo of Egypt. Thoy go from vil- lago to villago^earing the slmplo messstgo: \I am coming. \ Bo ready I\ This passss on from mouth to /mouth, and tho situation i» becoming soriols. SHORTLV nftfor 1 o'oloclt, A. it., a toiriblo oxploslon occurred in a cigak-roora at the. Victoria railway etafcion lii lidndon,' The -ox- plosivo agont was undoubtedly dynaralto. A hutro portion of tho roaf was blown all and nearly all thoiglas) wurlt i n tho station was destroyed. Sovon men wero sent to tho bos- pita! with tiovoro Injuries. Extensive dam\ ogo was done to surrounding property, A RUSSIAN government o6reunitte» whdeh has been, oramihlwr tho adraintstrnvtlbrt of Turkestan has discovered a dodclenoy of 100,000,000 roubles (about $T0,O00,00O) In tho last fourteen years, mmmtlmim'\. i 1 - ' •\\ VtATtm CONORCSSIOIVAI, NEWS. TORNADO. Hunnio. Mr. Ransom offered in the Senate ehis morning a joint resolution t o npproprEato «lOO,000 for the roliof of tho sufferers, by *ho rocent tornado In tho Southern States, He said that over 500 people were killed, aaad many thousands woundod. Mr. Harris ss|id he would not voto a dollar out of the treas- ury for any such purpose, and Mr. Morgan said he thought the new lino of polfoy dangerous, Mr. Voorhees believed tho im- mediate supply of food, clothing, and skel- ter In a case of sroat public calamity such as tho recent floods in tho West peomoil in. dispensable in tho onnso of humanity. The resolution was referred to tho committeo on appropriations—The curronoy bill, 'after dobato, was passed. . license. Mr. Springer introduced a proposed con- stitutional amendment making the presi- dential rorra six years, and rondoring tlio President ineligible to re-eloction for feho noxt succeeding term. It provides for a direct vote for Pi-esidont in eaoh State, and abol- ishes the electoral oollego Bills wore intro- duced: By Mr. Bcaeh, of New York-Au thorizlng tho controller of the currenry to rlmngo the names of National banks; by Mr. Dowd, of North Carolina-Appropriating $50,000 for tho relief of the suflfe'-ora by t&o late cyclones in North Carolina; by 0, 3D. Wise, of Virginia—For the complotionof tfto monument to the mother of Washlngtwn at Frederioksburg, Va....By Mr. Dunn, of Ar- kansas—Appropriating $500,000 for tho re- lief of tho porsons rendered destitute by t3b6 overflow of the Mississippi river and Its tributories,.... Mr. Ellis, of Louisiana, xoso to a questioriof priviloje-nnd domed a reooixt- ly publlphed statement that G. P. Brdfct gave him a fee for servjoea fn securing Star roato contracts on the Donaldsoh route, Mr. Ellis Offered a resolution, which was adopted,,cU. reoting tho committee onpostofBcosto Inves- tigate the charges <refiootiug upon him in (onhebtion with Star route frauds. S.ILSMITH RDSSEI.1. has anew play, caltel, \The Editor.\ T. C. Soot.TOO», the colored trageillajB started on bis Southern tour, • MMB. MODJESKI raadis agrcat hit in «.'Nad- jesda,\brbugbtoi^t r in New York. SEVENTY different oporas were given at the Vionna Opera house during 1883, dONNENTOAX; the foremost leading man in Gerhaauy has been engaged tor-an Amiefloan tour. - \ . ' .'\':' CHARLOTTE 'WALKER, tho eopratio, wtt\. organize an English opei-a company fox! noact season. \* t .>'' LrFTtu Eva French; Hie chlld-adtress, liais' been taken froni tho profession and Bant to schooil. TEKEBERIA TUA, the young violinist, t-omes to America next October for 100 concerts; price, SlOjODO. • ' , MME. RrsTofti will make her appcairance in thisojuntry at the Star theatre, Now York, October (J. t MMB. MARIH DHJUKD, the Amerlcau ln*y who fronted Buob a suoceas abroad iiituo opora \Gioconda will soon return homo. DURINO Mwin Booth'surst) visit to KD*- land he was suppartM; by a Mauoliestdr sties company, awon|t whom was Henry Irving. TEN combinations have gone to pioc^a recently on tho. W«wternolrou(t, and from all acnottiws tho aifinftfc Will iJiotftlJi; b64piyrt>I,tidU Great Loss of Ijife m Five Southern States, Thousands of Houses Destroyed-Hun- dreds of People Killed* LAST SAD EITEa' The gtatesof Georgia, Alabama, North and South Carolina and Louisiana have been vis- ited b y one of the moat destructive storms ever -seen in the South. Thousands of houses were destroyed in an instant, hundreds of personslost their lives, and many moro wore injured. Thetqrnado was particularly se- vere in Georgia and Alabama. An Atlanta (Ga.) dispatch saysi OnemiBion dollars 1 worth of property, 5,000 houses, and 300 to 400 lives are the forfeit paid to tho terrible, storm, Forming in the valley of the Pbattahooehe, it spread into a fan shape in Columbus, one- arm ruh- 0 ihto Alabama, until interrupted by the mountains, thence across to Cave Springs, Ttorae, an'd Canton, and, deOecting a little southerly, to Athens, it deinoP ishod. property in Banks, Jaok* son and Mpdisbn countfeg. Another ar?h shot thrcngh Carrol and Chattahopqhee counties, killing many people, and another arm crossing the State from Columbus to Columbia, passed through tho td\yn of Ninety -six/ S. C, and thence to tha ocean. , From all tfaroe arni3 many smaller tornadoes formed, which ran up the volleys, corrviiig with them death and des- olation. Oxmore' lost ten to fift[fen lives. Six porsons wore Wrfed at Leeds. In Rome / and its vicinity the calamity was distressing. The storm began at about 1:80 o'clock, and con- tinued at intervals until Broad street, for sovoral squares, 'Was completely flooded. Signs and awnings flew in all directions. Tho ralnf aH was tremendous, and there was a heavy fall of haiL In East Rome the frame residence of W. S. Crane was completely demolished, and about 1.000 residences wore destroyed in the county. A number of small frame houses in the up- per portion of tho city wero demolished. Advices reoeivod from Covo Spring report a great loss of life. Mr. Gillfard and his son woro killed by falling boams. Two negroes '.woro also ItiUodT. Mrs. Hoko, was seriously iuiured. Tho family Mr. Ford wero all' seriously hurt sevoral wilt die. One the lino of East Tonnesseo railroad below Cayo Si great loss of life la also reported. Bvery- whero fences, bairns and outhouses woro uo- molUshod. In Cherokee and Jasper counties), far re- moved from communication, tho disaster was frightful. Within a space of two miles twenty twu persons woi-oJulloaondtwonty- flvo woundoil, mariy of whom will die, i3ovoh rriilci abpys. Canton, a swhopl baf boon dismissed oh account- of tho threatening? asooot of tho weather. Somo of the eftliaren on their Way homo stoptied ni * how»0 to as- «ipo*;he rain. Tlio storm struric tho house, ; blowing it down and killing ton oliildron and woundhig a nuriobor ofothorj. No- one cart jferitt any idea of tho extent <* tiio; do- struotidn thatthe storm has wrought in tho mountain counties Of Georgia. It swops ovor a ^vide true-It, and left a pathway of ruin behind it, A strip cf timber four miles across was completely leveled, making it look as though an immense mowing mnriilno bad been run through.it . Trees that had stood for nearly a hundred years, the largest caks and hiokories. wero snapped off! liko straws or pulled out by the roots. Everything that was high enough to catch tho force of the wind was twisted off. and immense trunks and branches of trees aro piled heltor skelter ovoi- the face of tho earth. The storm struck tho traok at Tates, and extended from thero to Kasper, a distance of about three mites. I t had boon raining all day, and 'at about S r. is. tho rain came down in torronts and washed off tho wholo j live within' face of the country. Attar that there came | other, and of and the Tlio I'uucral of tho Moxoc* of the Jfoauuetfo. Tho dead heroes of tho Jeannetto were borno from tho steamship at Jersey City to New York and thence to the navy yard in Brooklyn with military pomp and civil dis. play. The route ot the processlo n was lined by sympathizing thousandt^and many houses were draped in mourning, while the Sags on the shipping in the harbor and every where jn tho city woro at half Imast. Ton hearses were used in convoying tho'remains. The hearse boarnig the body of Seaman Heinwch H. Knnnok was first;. Three sallow and three boya of the sehoolahip St. Mary wero on eaoh side. After it in order came heaises.bearing Machinist Walter Leo, Coal Heaver Nelse lyerson, Seaman Adolph DressIOr, Ffcemao Goprgo W. Boyd, Sottman Carl 4* Gorteahd SoamanAhSom, The hearse of Jeronjo 3, Collins came next, fthdasijiu bearers he had twenty friends, -mostly newspaper men. The body of Sur- geon Ambler fottowea, with ton surgeons as • pallbearers. The memorial catafalque of Lieutenant Chipi) (rad tho tinrecovered dead followed, and was the mbgt noticeable .object to th*» lino. I t was covered with large floral do- signs. On thetopwaSadosIgnof thoJean- natto, fjolly six feeslong. The hull was mode ; of Ivy leaves,\ dhdflio masts wero hung with vines. Efflos Were scattered oil over R, and the boats on the davits woro filled with vio- lets. This wa? from the city ot Brooklyn* Tho, body of Ueutosant^wmtt>andor, l Bo Long, was in the last hearse, TwetV4 Men,-- tenanfc0mmondefs acted-as his pall beaiv; er%. Onm^conmwwawroathofMav^chal. Niel roses and laurel, which had been;*** by tho American Geographical society, Tho'little hand \of man who followed on - foot wero tho center of muOh interest. These were the survivors of the Jeanriette-*- Chiof Engineer Melville, iLieuteiianfi Danen* hower, Mr, Nowcoinb, tho natnralut, avnd •: Nindermah, Noros, Wilson, Tori Sing, and t Bartlett, seamen. With them WalkettLieu- { tenants Berry and Hunt, of the Rodgors re- lief expedition, '•••.'«.'•* Following the survivor* of tho, Jeannetto . wasa lonelmo of carriages ocoupWbyM«s t . De brigand the relatives of the other men As these passed the Twenty-third aha Sixty' ninthreglmoritsahdtheregttlarawnybattal; ion feU to behind. Their bands playoddead marches, and they marched, slowly. ^Wnj?,' versed arms. Thei. flosis.woro tied, with, crape andthohUte of tho offlcots' swowbj wei¥ hung,with crapo. Carriage* with invited giios^follSwed. , , ; ; • .. Thoromainadf Mr; donins were taken fop, burial to C^rk, Ireland. , Sursoon Am- bler's body was taken, to hte homo in Kan* orutor cdnnty, V*,, and tba,fe of- K'irema.n Boyd to Philadelphia. Tho remains, of the others wore, burled in Woodlawn oemo-. tery,How\5Tork A ViVia , JCormaffoScei«.6*-S|x»*««liaiI Three Wouiifled I n Otto W««i»*V Adispatoli from jasper, Oa., ctesorlbihg tho terrible effect* of the tornado, «aya th*t it came in sight seven jnttett.tp therlkitof thai town, \it worst ovor the mountains and out of sight eight mile* from Jaspe?. It waslnsighlflvo minutes. Tho devastated' route was from half a mjlo tp ftrcomilw acres?.}. • ' 4 \In its five minuto$' trip ovor that flfteou miles strip of country twenty persons wero killed. The scona that^ tho tornado loft Jn ita track are beyond desenptioni OnO needs to stand in the midst of tho demolished, forests and see'the destruction of life arid' property to form an idea of tho extent of tho damage. Near %horo tha cyclona #os< first seen from Jasper threo brothers have lived for years. Their names are John, -Peter arid Levi Cogla, Thoy are nil prosperous farm- ers, owning -good lands; and-running an, extensive government distillery. They a stone's throw of pach have _ good, «omfortablo a calm, and everything was quiet and peace . houses- Levi Coglo lived in a large two* ful Suddenly the people of Tates heard a story house, sitting upon tho cre^t of deep, rumbliug sound, like distant thimdor a hill overlooking tho yalloy. Southwest-^ or an immonno waterfall. Quick as a ward frorii his house was an oponuig. No ffnQl, nvir? Tvi^l.niit: n CAnnrif?'. -Wa^nlntT t^MAnnnu l-tll.^wiMrnth&^inn « flash, aiid without a second's warning, I'treea or hills were in the way, and the rosl- tho storm struck. Tlio trees donbo stood right In. tho pathWay.of tho tor- swayed, snapped, and went crashing to the nodo. In thehousa Wero his Wifa and Ave, ground; houses went over, and in a half children nndthreehirod riien—•'William Bro' minutes' tim* tho quiet littlo town of 'fates, Ivor,\ Wflliarii Herren and Alonzri Wright, with its half do7on families, had not a houso J The tornado whisked,over the mountain arid loft stand'ng, Tho inhabitants wore thrown out into the storm, and their household furniture, bods, clothing, papers, etc., Wont flying through tho air. In Franklin one negro was killed and sevoral other negroes and whites have been, badly wounded. Many houses woro blown down, and tho trees and fOnces have com- pletoly blockaded the roads. Other white into the valley, where it paused to gather its forces. Then, sottlingdoWnuit whizzed to- ward the hbuso of Xevi Gogle, aiid literally torn it into a million plocesk JEfiSr>swa9 a crash and a clatter, aiid tho/an* wasXilled, with flying timbers, Paris, fiij org* born; wheat, bedding, \ fact, everything that tho Coglo was at tho resid tore, ekens, and, in i hold, Mr. ... his brother orm, andwhen families living on the farm of F. S. Mooi'o ' just outside tho fury of MWtorm, antt woen are all missing, and all buildings of every I he saw tlw tornadd cominc ho Btairtod to- kinil on tho pio.ee were blown away, Tho J ward Ms house. BatoroSherbachadithe wp^. hail a t Newnah, Go., was severe, somo of forced to cling to the underbrush to keep the stones: insasuring two and a half and ' from blowing away. A-saxmastlio torria,- i w^_- s_.^^^ ,j. J,—,»-_ A „ _»_J flo j^ a( j ^ 0 ^ fa ^Bnt tO#hor6 ariibaent be> lore, hishbuso Btbodiarid a haartretidtag sp^taclomot'hisgazei His wife aiid two ohildrari wero found one hundred varus aWay, dead. Furtheron thwootherchlldrori, one a baby eighteen months olds woro-piekad up in an almost dying condition. Two; of tharii had been blowii , three hundred yards. Scattered . about in tho woods wero the threa- niter* Groyer, Horreti aud Wright—all dead.ontt with a huge tree ijcrosshis Ijodyt ThuVJn a momont in that houso six persons wero killed arid three others qirigerouslyihrared* Tho? distrossed husband and father, in the Motet of his demolished homo, arid dead and dying- family, was Wild with gribft The dead bodies and the injured children, ware takori to the housb of Mr. Wesley ©>guvaudottb raossonger went for ahrpudsfor«tx,aridan- • other wont fbis surgeon* for three. Such a visitation rarely falls to thaloiof one inanV ' ' - • i 'ram - • -i- ,-,: three inches in diambter. All window panes that were exposed were shattered. The) tornado passed over Haddocks, bh $ho Maooa' and Brunswick railroad, about *:30 p. M, Eleven persons woro billed and a number wounded, and thero was/great de- struction of property- Tw6 are reported killed in Norwood. WaiTohtbh narrowly escaped, Tho tornado passed around tho town, aiid was alarmiflg to all whoaaw it. It played havoo about a mile orifeida It tore Kenzie's place:to joieces, oven breaking all his furniture, and loft nbt a veetlgeof his houso. Mrs. Keuzio's collar bono was broken arid her shoulder dislocated. A litUofurther on towaM Coinack it tbre Mr. Ayeyy'S Jionse, On widow Jbnesn' Jace, all to jplebes, killed oria ohild, cari'ied nriothor child 100 yards, arid loft Mr. and Mrs* AvOry urihjrihod. At Indian Snrings, Ga., there was thb heaviesthaUstbrmoverkpowhi and fbrhrilf an hour stonai fell as thiol; a) rain drops un- til tha grouiid wasporfebtly whito with thom. The first ten minutes the' hafiatohos were snioll, but they continued to indrcase in staj iintil thoy memw-ed nine inohes in oirbttmfer- enco by actual measuromo\it, Tha stonce W«re In shapes of fultblown rosos, dahlias, and orystals. The damage doatio was very great, Mariy persons were injured, holes \vore made in roofs, liihbs of trees were torn off, and glass was shattered. tofjho vicinity of Charlotte, N» 0„ tho tor* nodo destroyed property and canted death. in; every direotion. A settlbriiont of twerity- flvo, houses was rn«ed to tha ground, ahu bleven persons-f-throo whito and eight colored hwbre killed, A Wilmihgtott (^ C.) dis* pateli says that tho storm passoa through four o(Sunties,oauBing loss of life ahdigi'eat detojptidn^fAbjperry« . Chester, 0. G.y was visitdd bjr„tho storm, andHUe i-oofs'6Btt'8%huildhtgs4bmoff, anoV s.BV*r4l butldiijgs wholly or partially do- ^troybcli . • v A Birjutagham (Ala.) dispfttch says that a ittvio number of peraoiw in the Catawba valley were filled and imuionso damagowjw dono to property. At least tan jp^rMns ware known to have lost their lives, aMmanyof those injured wero not oxpbbtbd to,r%pcov8r. Much damage was dona by the tornado in, and abotttClintoh, la. Tiws a»a toacos for niilos wero blown down, and ono loaari was killed by a ttUingtroe. FOCR'TMiW wttAtONS 1 worth of diamonds w«»expx>rteafroniSouth Africalastybar., •' ' ' A' ' •. *••'. -— »,s^. f BOYNTOS.—Baul Boynton, tho swimoiBr, was niarrlod recently to Maggie Goririauy a t Clnoago. .\- . • BR0wN»-^trniW'8l»tvs^nBtor$!«nm, oi Georgia, has fottr iron mines in the northern partbf that Stateim which to onMoysHcariy 1,000 han#. . , • i - G-RAOT.^-Judge James tjfrattt, ft .Bavbti- port, Io#*, Wbsideat ot *M 3S^»»\*»** tingassoofaKon, say? th&t.tfiore ttre intiha association &;0(»ho*s«$ trotting bolbw3,80« BSKOSSft.-*^ eitpebteathfttMr, BeeeJ|8r , wittteotoEuropa on a leoMi'lnjttottl'Iftttt*! spring or early Bflmtnar, Itis;.pv»t twenw years slnco Mr* Bo60hor *^w ik Erigiattai whe«i M matte mahy MdrssseSttpori^he w«*» BARNOM.WP, T» JBarriBin being irivJtaPho otltef day to leftrirabaforo^tarjapoiaaftBa «J» clot? ih New T«frk Wrote laj-eplyt <« I hav* flntehedleoWftng forevor in this. warluV 1 Mr. Bar mm, to a frequent visitor to the Bridge' port, Conn., jail, and often addresses tha prtoohoi«. Cox^^aahlngtoucoM-e^padeatsjaiototh sprtnkljtog'or gray in Congressman S, $, Cox? hair. Though ona of tha yottrig*st m«mWr* in topearniiOe, ho ia Mty-nW«/»«r* : 4tmt and has been in Coiigfess ids a loBk|r mm. . tliats aw demofiratte Strietobbft mSm, '•« Pentisylvahji*, enhp excoeds hint on Ufa'*** pttbMC*ri^d*|ft'U%th;'iotJ)0^*j\»;.. ;' • • ' v. • /\Jh;.I:'^^'^:^>v'':':^v> ;; : : M 4? i\