{ title: 'Norwood news. (Norwood, N.Y.) 1878-1941, June 24, 1890, Page 5, Image 5', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1890-06-24/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1890-06-24/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1890-06-24/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88075693/1890-06-24/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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i I \ /< TOfJf-r- ^ * U ( 1 J' ;i U * r * i» M l3?:E ^^3 JSTOZR/WOOID ISTIES'WS. He. ••••. a LStase j of the Season, we find our Stock of Dress Goods too | r ge It is a11 g° od > clean Stuff > bou Rb-t this Season. >^m Witness the Slaughter Pieces Fine Ohallies ! iregularly 10c. and 12 l-2c. per yard, we cut this week to ic. and 7c. per Yard. An Unprecedented Offer! Stripe Cashmere io PIECES •'iSgS [desirable Goods as the market affords, sold everywhere '•'•% from 28c. to 30c, we mark to close '.'-A 18 c. Per Yard -ALSO- feces DIAGONAL, 10 fcrsted Dress Goods, regular price 19c, will be Closed at r ^im ! shall cutfthein all up at this less than wholesale price. Drive in Jackets! Goods worth $2.25 heretofore, go this week for iods W °RTH $2.75 to $3 at the uniform price of $1.25 each! A rattling bargain in ladies' Jersey Vests Joo'ds are unmatchable in any store in this than 28 cents. vicinitv at less 17c. Our Price ! [lot (but none the less a bargain) Ladies' at 12 1-2 cents each. Chemise to close make things \interesting allToundlhTsTofe 'during this :'••* 1 s»ia we will offer 15 Dozens ,Sale, S» Kffi&asg-'.'l-SA- SSL®..-?W' Large Damask Towels, **flB83 Knotted Fringe, 29c. each, reduced from 50c. Lr Stools, of Carpets Client Condition and they are moving at prices which pact customers. In addition to these especial dnves^ »we have inaugurated a general clearing up sale. . Our motto is to sell goods in their J . season, never to show _- .. , To Customers.' ., .\ \- . • I'iPrice is no object. .JTke Goods have got_toj»eU_ SPORTING. The Cream o f Kveata That Amused the 1'eople the P ast Week. Tlie stallion Counsellor, record was sold at St. Louis fo Peter Jack; nation to John „. ._,!„,,„„„ ,„ r.n„ lllf j 2:25*. i- $22,000. son announces his determi- ul next winter for Australia. L. Sullivan is having a drama him, and will appear as an written for actor. Judge Reecler, at Easton, Pa, rendered adrcwion that Sunday ball playing is not unlawful. v J b In the Middle States tennis tourney, Howard A. Taylor, of Now York, again won the championship. Frank La Rue, who- killed Harry Mo- lh ide in a prize light in San Francisco, lias, been indicted for murder. There is a lull in the baseball war, and •mill leagues are attending to business Instead of to fighting each other. El Rio Rey, the unbeaten trotting stal- lion, who was injured in the Missouri railroad accident, will be retired to the bllld. In Chicago 116,000 more people have attended the rival league baseball games this season than patronized the National League games last season. William Muldoon gives it as his latest opinion that John L. Sullivan can cer- taiid-y defeat any man in the wordin the ring if in good condition. The French Derby, or Grande Prix de Paris, run on Sunday last, was won by Baron de Shickler's bay colt Fitz RoyaL The result was a great surprise. The lishing season is said to be a very Buccessful one. Great catches are being made of black and striped bass, while sea Sans of extraordinary weight are being caught. At the annual run of the bicyclers of New York city, out of 13b' starters, 102 made the run to Philadelphia of 103 miles without a stop. Three ladies were in the party. Lovers of woodcock shooting will be glad 'o hear that reports from sections v, l.ere they breed show that the birds will be numerous this year. The mild winter was favorable to their number and good condition. Ac Union City, Conn., Edward Mc- Donald of Brooklyn, and Jack Russell, of N.-w York, met in a ring, but the pro,-_ eeedings were interrupted by Sheriff S\\ ueiiey and a posse, who broke up the light with drawn pistols, arresting the pugdUts. Mi-readier, calling himself \original 'ieiie,\ is creating a sensation in New \. ork by his aquatic performances. With h .:id.-. and feet tightly tied with ropes, .v \ weighted with heavy dumbhelL. he .MI from the Brooklyn navy yar.l :.• :M-.S th K;vl Ui-. it and down to pier 1!!. Tin ro,'e used to tie him wa^o feet ii. ! ngth. an.I he was -15 minutes in tile viMier, and swam about a mile and a h..'f. Th\ following are the percentages of of the various league and association oiubs up to the t'ir-t of the week: ATLANTIC ASSOCIATION. \\. I.. r'CT W. I.. T>'CT . a; 1:1 .iii',7 Jersey City . 20 111 .!M I. i i KS .liV, WimliiiiBton HI a i .aiM . :;t Vi .SirJ Hartfor d . . 11 :U\ .:«.« . 3 1t .\iiili Wilniintiton 8 :B .11)5 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. R illimol'e. N.'.v Ua\el \\ iii-ci'>U'r Newark . . w. i.. r T tneinnati . 2!) Ill .I'/.m Huston. . . liil'dilpliin i s 15 .tiTillNew York. riKiklyn . . ::\i 17 ..V.i.\>;('!rvi'liuid. Chicago. . . ::•'< in .nikiii'iitsii'irg. l'LAYEKS' I.KAOUE. W. I.. C'l'T'l linston . . . . Si Iti .«*< Chicago. . I'liniklvn . . Si ai- .\>»•\> I'iUaliurpc. v,.«-York. . iiai .StolCleveland, l'hil'delphia i-\~'l .512 Buffalo. . . AMERICAS ASSOCIATION w. i.. e'er AiHIelic ... 27 13 JJ« Columbus. H client er . . :.'i'i 1H .5!H|Tuledo . . . Louisville. . 21 IK .571 Sjracuso . St. Louis. . . 22 21 .r>12|Hrooklyn . w. L. . 2U 2) 111 23 •W. I.. e'OT 21 20 .513 19 22 .Mi . Iti 22 .421 . 12 25 .324 W. L. P'OT 20 2t .155 18 22 ,-150 17 24 .123 14 20 .350 BIG CKUISKKS KACIN'S. Frixa MS OFTsIE \;i\l THE WORLD'S EVENTS GATHER:: IN SMALL COMPASS, The Latest Happenings at Home and Abroac Collected and Presented in Terse and Readable Form. t t T A Fortune in Quarter Knots a s From the Government. Uncle Sam's new big cruiser, the Phil- adelphia, is now being prepared for her uial trip at the yard of the Uramps, 1'liiladelphia, and much interest is felt m the test, not only because of her ex- pected speed, bu t because she will be practically matched against her sister cruiser Baltimore, which, with her record of 20+ knots, made on her trial trip, is the fastest war ship hitherto built in the world. The cour<e will be 40 nautical miles or \ knots '* long. It will begin off the South- ampton life saving station, Long Island, near the eastern end, and will lie in a straight course as far as Block Island. It will be 10 miles off shore, where the water is so deep that no \hang carried by the receding of the water, will retard the speed of the vessel. A speed trial in a deep bay is impossible, because the displaced water hugs a vessel and fol- lows it up usually in a big « ave. It is expected that the Philadelphia will beat the time of the Baltimore. The Cramps have made every effort to attain this end. They have every inducement to do so, as they get a bounty of $50,000 ,for every quarter knot of speed over the contract speed of 19 knots per hour, and will lose $50,000 for every quarter knot loss than 19 knots. There is no danger of their losing anything, however. The trial can only occur on a perfectly quiet and clear day. AHOTHEK MINIE HOKKOR. Sixty-Five by an Ex- Pa., Men Imprisoned ploBion. Dispatches from Connellsville, state that by an explosion of damp gaa hi the coal mime at Hill Farm, near Dun- bar 65 men were iuipri-oned, and it is believed that nearly alfof them will lose their lives. Rescuers set to work a» once and 15 minors we*e rescued in a badly injured condition. The other miners were in the b.wer part of the mine, and but little hope .is entertain** that they wffl lio.taken out alvve. StruckOil In a churchyard. Three months ago the Forest G*ov« Presbvterian Church at Chartiers, Pa., wa , a \modest little afiait with a debt and a meager\ attendance. Some of the eld- ers after a hwrd light, succeeded in get- tftiK a permit t o drill an oil well on the 0 uses Oil was found in abundance, an 1 S t r hy 11 e 1,ttic *\* soW ou * I o Uj to tl c fotandaiid OH Oowvpany for $9,i 000 cabh. DomeRtle Siiminary. Welsh Presbyterians in session at Mil- waukee indorsed the Benuett law. Illinois is t o have a special election July 15 to fill vacancies in the legislature'. An English syndicate is said to bo ne- gotiating for all the tobacco warehouses in Louisville, Ky. Considerable excitement was caused in Wall street by the sending of $1,000,000 in gold to London. The actual time of George Francis Train's trip around the world is given by himself at 61 days. The famous Astor House, New York, came near bein.; destroyed by fire last week. Loss, $12,000. Heavy rains in Illinois and \Wisconsin caused damage to the extent of hundreds of thousands of dollars. The dynamite cruiser Vesuvius has been ordered to be fitted out for saa at the Brooklyn navy yard. Incoming steamers from Europe still continue to report passing immense fields of icebergs in the North Atlantic. Between sunrise and sunset on Monday 7 bodies of unknown dead were taken out of the rivers surrounding New York. city. By the derailing of a mail train on the Richmond and Danville road, near Mar- shal, N. C, 10 persons were seriously in- jured. ' • At Elmira, N. Y.,'.Herbert Warren, a boy 16 years old, shot and killed his father with a revolver during a domestic quarrel. Congressman William L. Wilson, off West -Virginia, has been tendered the presidency of the State University of Missouri Governor Buckner, of Kentucky, will make up from his private fortune a de- ficit in the State treasury of $50,000, due to the recent defalcation of the State treasurer. The United States ship Constellation has left the Chesapeake for her summer cruise, loaded with naval cadets from Annapolis. Some hoodlumish school boys have girdled several fine large birches in Riverside Park, New York, to get the bark to chow. Large quantities of ice from Lake Chainplnin and Lake George arrived in New York this week, forcing prices down to §8 per ton. The legislative committee, on the prop- osition to submit the Louisiana lottery question t o a vote of the people, has re- ported favorably. The troops are closing in on the-Chey- eunes in Montana, who are said to be badly scared. The danger of bloodshed is said to be over. The new torpedo boat Cushing, in a trial on the Potomac with the Secretary of Navy on board, ran a measured mile in 2 minutes and 3 seconds. Captiin Clarence M. Clarke, a well known civil engineer of Washington, committed suicide as a result of over- work during the late heated spell. The Pennsylva ua Railroad Company voluntarily advanced the wages of all its employees on the Southwestern Pennsyl- vania branch from 10 to 15 per cent. Colonel Dan Lament ha-; secured con- trol of the Broadway Railroad, and will soon supply it with cab : e or electric cars. He represents the Whitney-Elkins syn- dicate. The Johnstown lawyers having the case in hand have decided not to prose- cute the South Fork Fishing Club inc m- nection with the great flood disaster to that city. < Judge Cowing, in the court of general sessions, New York, rendered his decis- ion dismissing the indictments against John Kenan and Boodle Alderman Henry L. Sayles. A dispatch from the Crty of Mexico states that it is rumored that agents of the Louisiana Lottery have made a prop- osition to establish a lottery in the State of Tabasco. The Sargent prize, the chief honor at Harvard Universitv, was won this year by Miss Helen Leah Reed, a m 'inber oE the Harvard Annex, and daughter of a Boston physician. Baron Zedintz. of Germany, and M ; ss Caldwell, of Baltimore, were wedded in Washington this week. The bride i-- a sister of the Miss Caldwell who rjcently refused Prince Marat, ot France. Isaac Sampson, colored, of I'hilad-'l- phia, slashed his wife terribly with a razor, and held a crowd at bay with , n.; same weapon, until ho was kno •:. '.I down by a well aimed brick and sec-ir '.'. Hon. Francis W. Hill, Democrati.- c • i- didato fo. Governor of Maine, die i s ;.l- denly at Bangor on Sunday -l-a-st. De.i :i resulted from a cold contracted at ii.u- Harbor a week ago. , The steamship Columbia, of the Hany burg American Packet Company, arri-./l at New York from Southampton iiftj days, 16 hours, and 28 minutes, beating all previous records. The Westiughouse Electric Company will apply for a w,rit of replevin to un- cover the three dynamos now in t.io State pi'isons of New York for the execu- tion.of convicted murderers. Hon. Worth Dickerson was nominated to succeed John G. Carlisle io. the IIouso of Repre..e;iia ives from the Sixth Ken- tucky district. The fight was long and hard, a decision not being made until the 207th ballot. While the news dispatches have been recording the triumphs of women in edu- cational institutions, it is announced thijfc two femaje prisoners escaped fKOjn the Marion County (Ind.) jail by cuttingtha iron bars ot their windo'ws with cabe knives and letting tfemseLve3 t o th* ground with uopes made • £ aheate. k Cincinnati census enumerator was compelled to call on the court to d cida the nationality of a child of a Chinaman by a negro wife, and the judicial mind is still wrestling with the problem. C. C. Hale, who shot Eugene H. Cowles, at Montreal, has been released on bail. Cowles will recover, and has resigned all claim to the ohild whoso kidnapping by him was the cause of the trouble. Much excitement exists in Boston in consequence of • facts developed before a Senate committee showing that 10 mem- bers of the legislature were bribed for §100,000 in connection witli the elevated railroad bills. Judge ; Caldwell, of the United States court at Leavenworth, KauB., has ren-. dered a decision in an original package case which releases U prisoners under arrest for violation of the State prohibi- tion law, they beiug agents of Missouri liquor dealers. The Grant and Lee Monument Associa- tion has been organized in Kentucky. Seventeen thousand dollars have been already subscribed for a monument to the two great generals, showing them in the attitude oE shaking hands after the surrender at Appomattox. Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett, with her son Lionel, who is supposed to be the prototype of \Little Lord Fauntleroy,\ will sail for Europe this week, to seek her son's restoration to health in Ger- many. He is suffering from lung trouble, as a result of the grip. Five tons of nitroglycerine exploded in Casterline & Co.'s works near Find- 'ay, Ohio. The shock was felt for -10 miles, and resembled an earthquake. An immense hole was the only sign left of where the factory stood. As n o one was in the building no los» of life oc- curred. At Cleveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, while 200 persons were crowded on a bridge, watching a man who was advertised to jump into th e river from a cable, the bridge gave way, and the whole crowd were precipitated into a gulley 60 feet deep. About 40 persons were injured, 10 of them seriously. John Williams, Napoleon McDaniel, a.id James Radclilf\ have been arrested charged with beiug the men who com- muted the recent train robliery near Texarkana, Ark. The arrests caused great excitement, as tne men are well known, and have hitherto borne good reputations. Williams is a well known detective and McDaniel an-ex-policeman' Are making prices on Goods to suit the times regardless oT the price of eggs. <.\* 'Mm - ';,wff v •-'WL ; m %-i-*. \ y t % All Sizes 50c. former prices $ 1.00. Foreign. Princess Victoria, of Prussia, has been bethrothed to the Prince of Anhalt-Des- a sau. The Emperor William will attend the Austrian military maneuvers in Tran- sylvania. Cholera has broken out in Spain, and 14 deaths have occurred in the province of Valencia. It is expected that Prince Bismarck will stand for .(.ho reichstag in the -lib, district of Potsdam. The elections in British Columbia re- sulted in the government being sustained by a large majority. It is now stated that Emperor William will visit the Czar of Russia, at St. Peters- burg, on August.2d. The Count iff Paris made a royalistic speech in Paris, but even the royan'st papers admit that it had no effect. The Newfoundland authorities are having trouble in preventing the smug- gling of bait to the French fishing ves- sels. The government of Mexico has author- ized the building of a new railroad from the capital t o the Pacific coast via Cuer- navaca. _*. William O'Brien, the Irish leader, member of parliament for Cork, has married the daughter of a Parisian banker. A complete set of proofs of Henry M. Stanley's new book have been stolen. His publishers have issued a circular warning all persons against publishing the work. A Slexican dispatch says that President Diaz will demand of the United States that the Americans who are known to have taken part in the t California filibus- tering conspiracy shall tie .subjected to punishment for what he justly considers a flagrant offense. Confiscation of American Cattle. A dispatch from Sonora. Mexico, states that the proposed tax of A10 per head on Mexican cattle is leading to serious com- plications. The Mexican authorities re- fuse to allow American stockmen to re- turn cattle \\ hich may »' ray into Mexico, and have ordered all American cattle hereafter found across the line to be taken u p Mid sold. There are many thottauds of head of \merican cattle which straj from the G.dfof Cala to the Rio Grande, which will ]>c confiscated unless the order is revok 'd. 'llhe Ameri- can cattlemen are much alarmed. lived Ninety-Six Days Without Food. Tommy Sutton, after living 96 days without solid food, died at Dubuque, Iowa. During all his fast his only sus- tenance was soda wi'.er. Previous to ifficWith of the boy a council of physi- 'cians was held, and all united in pro- nouncing it a case of paralysis of the sti \ach and bowels. Some years ago the lad suffered a fall, and he was never in perfect health thereafter. Ninety-six days agp-his stomach refused all solid foods, ftnd-Hoda.wator was the only liquid he could retain. Physicians pronounced the case one of the most remarkable on record. Missouri Negroes t o Go to Afrioa. A St. Louis dispatch states that Rov. George Was lington Brown, a proacher of the African Bap'i-.t Church, is organ- izing a colony of negroes to settle in Africa. . Mr. Brown is a native of Cairo, Egypt. Forl#-nine hi all have joined the society. »ow«terly'8 Knight* t o Meet I n Denver. At the meeting of the general execu- tive board of the Knights 'of Labor-in Jfyw Yorkjhis week, it was formally de ; ci'ded tl a t Cho gen i A' -wse nbly of lh<) Older be hold in ttenve Col be&iun ug ^orembei 11 \VSTOOIL CH ALLIES 12 1-2 O. Former price 25c. Large Line White Goodg, 8c. to $1.50 per \vcL- ALL SILK JVdC I T \T S All Colors at 15c. pr yd. r— Fair Assortment of x f (•i Left which will be closed out at closing out prices A Few Beaded Warps ^J Cheap. Special Prices Ginghams to close. on ,-GOOD LIKE^ UTINC CLOTHS. Big Drives .II -i ^i '*. •^. -IN- Crash and Linen Table CLOTH I Ladies' Jersey VESTS lOcts. Ladies Jersey Vests, Good. Two for 25c. to close, they are offering a few styles of the Celebrated Reynolds •Shoes at HALF Former Price. New Stock AG AW AM FLANNELS. • t. '*? J< *fl i *\ .i '>.». t *«i • L R. & B. ASHLE1 m I l £• n in f* V* ,J f. ^i Aii i4t & t •*• r v*j» ^*-i*--!^*i*mti)M,