{ title: 'Millbrook round table. (Millbrook, N.Y.) 1892-190?, September 24, 1892, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn92061458/1892-09-24/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061458/1892-09-24/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061458/1892-09-24/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061458/1892-09-24/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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M illbrook R ound T able OOISrSTA]NTI_iY DE-VOTTJEX) TO THE I3VTEHESTS OE OElN-TJEt^L OUTCHESS. „ - M VOL. I. MILLBEOOK, Y., SATUE3DAY, SEPTEMBEK 24,1892. m 6 . FRANKLIN AVENUE. W., E. SMITH, General Merchandise. J. J. DONALDSON, President, Bank of Millbrook and Jjand and Improve ment Company, Limited. RICHARD SOOLES. Cashier, Town Clerk, Notary Public. JAMES REARDON, ' -- Stoves, Hardware, Farm Machinery. C. B. REARDON, Furniture, Carpets, Mattings, Trunks, Etc. MRS. J. R. HORTON, Millineiy and F ancy Goods. J. MILTON OSBORNE, Clothing, Hats and Caps. MERRITT & COLVJLL, Stoves, Tinware and Plum b ing, S. VAN VLACK, “ The\ Grocer. CHARLES OLIVET, Shaving and H air-cutting. VALENTIN RICEES, Blacksmith. a I. JACOBUS. M .D., Office Hours until 9 a . M., 13 to 3 and T to 9, HELEN BOYCE, Boarding House. LANDEB AT U8T. Free After Two Long Weeks at Quarantine. The Cholera Situation in London, Paris and Hamburg. A despatch from Camp Low, Sandy Hook, N. J., says: The unfortunates who have been detained on ships and a t Hoffinian Isl and during the last two weeks were landed bey a re passengers from the Hambm'g- Americah Packet Company’s steamers Nor- iuaunia and Rugia, « n d wmeJwJNktoainder- go a third of the required detention in quar antine. The TOO people who were landed an Island came intw o p a rti^o n the steamer William Fletcher.- They pre sented a remarkable congregation of nation alities. Sunburnt Turks jostled phlegmatip Teu tons; Armenians crowded in rosy- cheeked girls and little chU^ren^ A r^h ia^ dressed in their hirls and dresses, Hall and Library. ASA LOVELACE, Watches and Jewelry. W, S. TRIPP, Fresh and Salt Meat. WILLIAM GEMMILL, Boarding Hotiia and Livery Stable. FRONT STREET, N. D. & C. K. R. Freight and Passenger Station, Express •<<•*- and-TWegraph Office. 3E J . TRIPP, Meat and FMi, Fruits and Vegotablea. R, T. MONFORT, Jttftioe of Peace, Hardware and Farm Machinery. B. H. ANDREWS,. Dr ugs, 9o#a W ater, Ice. ________ W. B. THOMP«K)N, Shoemaker. F. W. SW IFT, SandlO-oentGoods. Flnmbing. J. R. HORTON, ' Restaurant, Ice Cream, Oysters. ____ I i I a N BROTHERS, __________ General Merchandise. ______ CHARLES L SWIFT, ________ Contractor and Builder. __ ____ PH ILIP H. MERRITT, Notary Public WASHINCTON AVENUE. S. H. MASTIN, ________ Wagon Maker. SILAS S. MARSHALL, Coach and Carriage Paint H. WOODHOUSE, Contractor and Builder. NORTH AVENUE. MILLBROOK IN lI CO., Millbrook Inn. _____ _____ JOSEPH HOLMES, Harness Maker. _______ W. C. LESTER, _____ Flowers, Trees a n d Plants. ______ W. L. SWIFT, Engineer and Surveyor, MTLLBROOK PRINTING CO., Ronod Table. Job Printing. SWIFT BROTHERS, Lumber, Coal, Lime, Cement. Gates. EBKNEZER EDMONDS, , Grist Mill; Flour and Feed. ’ ^ U N T ^ N PLACE FRANK w e l l i n g , Contractor and Builder. W. J. BEARDSLEY, Architect and Dranghteman. \wtERRITTAVENUE. LEACH & GARDINER, painters. ilL A S ^ . h a r t , Painter and Paper Hanger._ & BALDWIN, Painters. ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE^ A nton D voiuk , the great compos may come to NeW Y ork and teach, poor butcher’s boy i n Bohemia. rerpiece of this g raduate from is his Suite in D. Two voters have registered a t San Fran cisco who are as old o r older than the cen tury—Col, Jonathan Stevenson. ' Who Is ninety-two, and John baggy trousers, ses, pushed of all nations, and for some picturesque 'garb of wide, bright yellow sliirls and red in among a throng of people md for some time one would have imagined Sandy Hook was the inevit able site selected for a modern Tower of GenerarHoSiltoi staff of the cam; furrying the first tdongside the \ ^ ^ rf ________ ,,,.._Jkeddown thegaugw’ay, had been run out. commandant's orderly. Chief Bugler »f the Twenty-second Regiment, N. bod a t his side, and promptly ------ ■ N. Y„ stood a t his side, ai .. a t 13:65 P , M., on the general giv „ order. Camp Low was isolated from the world until the strict q^uarantiue is raised. As the immigrants landed they filed past the staff of interpreters, who stood at a long table and acted as entiy clerks for the com mandant, taking the name, age, place of birth, destination and the name of the ship in which each passenger had come. Just bo- ^ r a the passengers landeti the police-boat ■ol came dowm the bay, having on board or Grant, Health Officer Jenkins, Super- ___ jidout Byrnes, Quarantine Commissioner Alleu^aud Immigrant Commissioner Samuel Immediately after dinner General Hamil ton selected 55 able-bodied men from among the immigrants and p ut them to work on the structure under the direction of the fore man carp'mter. They will bo paid for then* labor and the barrreks will be completed within 34 hours. Nearly all the passengers •& loud in their denunciation of officials the Hamburg-A • - • w.. Jie treatment th steamers. Ei-Poei ford, seld he would have oabto, Imtfe eonUl®®t get a brsnMte®l!»i««**9^^Lolera had appeared alnoe &st Tuesday. They*report that there is no reason . lie»% teo d t a g n ^ o f the attending physL.__ in the case of Peter Callahan (a suspected ‘ ' .olera)to be incorrect, m that death p iving the olera had a lysioian se of choIera)t< a duo to diarrlhmaand • exhaustion, the bacteriologists asto1 merby, a suspected cholera iffect that no sperillium of The report of tl of Mary Com is to the e f f e c . ----- ■a has been discovered. sweetbmds _ ___________ _ ____ aowamany __________ J editors of “Ed Abram,” an Egyptian journal. After honoring the pro prietor in various ways, he has now pom feirod the Chefakat order upon the man’s Miss S abah A. G ove , in who?e house a t Hanipton Falls, N. H., the poet W hittier died, is a descendant of that Edward Gove, who, in 168^ led the armed xevolt .against the British Governor Oranfleld, and was tried for treason. M iss M aby B eownold H amakeb , a na tive of Staunton, Va., who has conle to Berlin to prosecute h er studies on the violin, has been admitted to the conservatory, where the great master Joachim, presides, although but fifteen years of age. G enkeab a . W. G beklv , tbe head o f the United States Signal Corps (though not of the weather bureau, as many people stfil suppose), ridicules the idea of signalling the people of Mars, He regards i t an unreason able assumption to think that planet inhab ited by a race a t all like human beings in in telligence and civilization, E x -K ing M ilan has become _____ ING M ila n has become a Russian subject, this privilege having been granted by the Czar. Milan i-eceivos $3,000 a month In return for the “condeseeiMiipn” from the Czar’s private purse, but on the nnderstand- ; the_______ pension will at once cease if he to Servla without the Czw’s sauc ing the ____ _ __ __________ returns to Servla without the Czw’s J , PiBEPONT MO egan , the Now York banker who bought the steamer Stonington and gave i t to the New York authorities for a quarantine ship, has earned his millions in some memorable achievements. He is the son of Junius S. M( of the phllanthroT 1869Mr.Moi-gante contest for the All lilroad.ili Shortly the New York B a ___ _____ ^ ___________ of the New York branch of t Drexel, Morgan & Co, In 1878 ___ formed a syndicate th a t took $^0,000,000 of governmwnt four-lier cent, bonds, his, firm made 15,000,000 b y the deal, Ha i Vanderbilt’s confidence wh( ir he becanie^t^^ e i^ and he I points and: ovar. lut there are ohari- lany hundreds of money. WORK AND WORKERS. the Old D«BaS«icro m n w iW T iiiEi dinn,esota elevator companies decided to •^thhoid reports of stocks of grain from the c6imn#rcial agencies.— ^The ferryboat South after landing eight hundred passengers.- The Nevada silver men endorsed Weaver for president, and Senator Stewart promised to stem p the state for him, ----- Ex-Govemor Thomas H. W atts, of Alabama, died. ----- Serious trouble is again expect^ between i&e„t*ro factions of the Choctaw nation. ----- The two-story brick building a t 135 Imlay Streep Brooklyn, occupied by the Occidental Oil Company, was damaged 140,000 by lire, -s^sbuildiug was UeOd for the manufacture of cotton seed and castor oils. ----- ^The seized American schooner, Hattie Maud, is now in fto hands of Collector of Customs Ruel, who has placed an armed guard on board. Both Collector Ruel and United States Consul Simpson have wired to Ottawa regarding the case, h u t so far neither has received a reply. ----- Samuel A. Moody, living qear Belmont, Me,, shot Miss Fannie B. Nichols and then killed himself. ----- Kentucky, Ohio, Hlinoia and Indiana have made arrangements ,to in- ^spect all west-bound emigrant trains as they 'reach the state lines. ----- A rabid dog on the Dupont farm n ear Wilmington, Del., b it a boy and a dozen dogs. ----- The National League of Republican Clubs decided to hold its next annual meeting a t Louisville. Gen eral Clarkson was re-elected president, and A. B. Humphrey secretary. Wm/ H. Kimball, of Canton, N. Y., been appointed bank examiner for the of New York. ----- The Union Transfer Storage Company’s building in Indianapolis was desti-oyed by fire. ----- The National Con vention of Street Railway Employees has decided to organize independently of the American Federetion of Labor and the Knights of Labor. ----- ^The executive com mittee of the WesteiE Union Telegraph Company recommended that the capital stock be increased by the issue of additional stock of thee total stock ^100,000,000.- voy, a fitoi‘0-keeper a t Viola, Del., while closing his store, was attacked by three men, I tied him to the Gen, Ruger has been authorized by the ‘ xoeffed, a market-house S tr e e tR ^ w a y Employees, in session In In-i as^ ecmductor were killed^ and a Knights of Labor. The strike a t Shoenberger’s Stxteealh street mills, in Pittsburg, has been de clared off by the Amalgamated Aseoclation m d the men will returnto to work a t the i ships o r ___ th a t the cholera sp< feated. ckoleba itgdkks . London.—The Standard’s Hamburg cor- reapondenb says: “The cholera epidemic shows no abate ment. The figures ai-e 703 new cases, 334 deaths and 339 burials. The number of patients in the hospitals is 3,031. The epi demic has increased in the suburbs, Ems- buttel and St. Vauli. The majority of the public schools in Altona will be opened this week. The theatricalpei-foi’maueosandcou- certs are thinly attended.” FITTEKN DEATHS IN ST. PETERSBURG, Forty-one fresh cases of cholera were re ported and fifteen patients have died. Ninety-two persons who have been under treatment were pronounced by tbe physi cians to have rec< itow s a stradj the scourge. NOUE DEATHS IN VIENNA. Vienna.—Four deaths from Asiatic cholera have occurred a t Podgorze. in Austrial Gali cia. It is supposed the infection was intro duced there from villoges on the Russian side of the Vistula. An order has been is sued that all travelers by railway from PodgOrze and Cracow bo subjected to medi cal examination. A BERLIN WAITEE STRICKEN. Berlin .—A waiter w employed as an atte ----------- Hamburg, was stricken with cl Gholeia's 1,60013.' in Europe. S a MBHEG.— The cholera is again increas- ■ ' \'he official figures give two hun- ployer’ste independe _________ work a t the om- ____ !. The work will be operated ipendently of the Amalgamated Associa tion hereafter. The confei president Bx ___ ice in Chicago between Vice Robiniba of the l^n ta Fe and die ice Com ____ 1 terminated the men. An agreement ivi increase of wages and the - leinstat several discharged employes, ters remain to be settled. A ll the 8000 coal miners in trict, of which Pittsburg is the cent mally” struck against the one-halfp , reduction made by the operators, one-third of the mines have been tion, but these are now idle. ^ h e locoi ;tatomenl,of Other n}|t- ' e ^ ^ k who tied him to the floor and ransacked place. ----- ^Tha body of a young i J. H. Meadow^ was found in the woods near Houston, Suwannee county, FJorida, and two men have been arrested charged with the crime. ---- A windstorm did great damage a t PeteiBbnrg, Va, Many houses were un. blown down and Th* ■Washington ke.1 near . Hremair klilsd^ and a Balti- hurt.-— Spiegel & Co., furniture iMteroi of Chicago, conftased judgment for Thalhtbflities, it k said, wiB ex- OMd 1 ^ 0 0 0 ; assets about the same. Dull trade jk the cause given foi‘ the collapse. Detectfvee have caught Alfred Henshaw in. Hatxisonville, Mich. He confeeeed to murdering his partner in Ontario ten years ago. ----- The Dominion Trades Congress, in session a t Toronto, has decided to petition the Dominion government to submit to the people Of Capadafor deckion, hy popuiar vote, the question of tee retention of the colonial status; imperial fed eration independence and am ^ U o n .- sti^ Donald-McRae, one of tl 0l(ii4z4tisen8 of ptekffhiiit busi- Gordon and Pottsville. It is understood til these gatherings are for thepm-pose oid curing the opinions of the men as to whi the rank and tile think is best to be dona i combat the company's po.sition toward labc organizations. Grand Master Wilkinson, of the Order 3 Trainmen; G. W. Newman and D. L. Ceasl Aurora; T. T. Slattery, of Butte, of Moq tana;na; F.. C.. Young,oung, ott Fortort William,illiam, OntJ F C Y o F W ' __ ‘.A . Sheehan, of Galesburg, 111,; R. fc Birdman, of Los Angeles, Cal., all promi nent in i-ailroad labor organizations, met ii Chicago and discussed the pro.->pectivi iory troubles on tho Reading systeir A dispatch from Concord, N ing here. The official figures give t . ^ d r ^ and twenty-two new cases and mnotjr- ^ ^ ^ n ^ im d r ^ 'a n d sixty-eiglit of the new natients were removed to the hospitals, raty-threo bodies of cholera Victims were taken from the hospitals and placed in the children, and has left ^400 orphans. sS S S S S S ® P ams .—There were forty-ouenew cases of cholera and eighteen deaths in Paris and ite G eneral G reelt had three of the sur vivors of bis famous Arctic expedition placed in the Weather Servine, where they ai-6 still employed. Lobg, Connell and Ihodericks, and Lieutenant Brainard, who was pramoted by General Greely’s influence from a sergeantcy, is stationed In New Mex* ica. Brelderbeck, the other survivor, is an inspector in the New York Gustom-house. Wilmington, N .p., Ban, died a t Lindville, N. C, He bad been largely identified vfilh railroad and inanufacturing interests. ----- ^The United ,Gourt of Appeals has decided that all goat’s hair from abroad is dutiable at 131-3 cents a pound.——Brinton Coxe, of Philadelphia, a member of the extensive coal mining firm of Coxe Brothers, died a t Drifton, Pa., aged sixty years. The International Ticket Agent’s Associa tion adjourned in Philadelphia to meet in Atlantic City. ----- Fire destroyed George Meyers’ carriage factory, St. Gabriel's Academy and F. Vogel & Co’s carriage fac t in New York. A general meeting of Richmond Terminal stockholders were hold a t Richmond and a board of directors elected. ----- The Danville Iron and Machine Company, of Danville, Va., made an assignment. ----- ^Mafie R. Towne, widow of John Henry Towne, of Philadelphia philanthropist, died i t Eagle Head, Mass., aged seventy-one years. likely establish quarantine against ail p e r. ions coming from New York. ----- ^Benjamin A theatre is to be erected at Jackson seventy-one years, was M exico will erect n o building a t Jacksoiif fife. The loss is estimated a t park. p),000. ----- Seven men have been reported F oreign interest in the fair is fully jirdered in the Choctaw Nation. ---- -The ised. ; vectors of the Manhattan Elevated Rail- OVER $13,000_in orders have been received ,ily Company declared the regular quarter- ir soavenlr coins. Ifiividend of 11-2 per cent. ----- The Seaside at Rockaway Beach, owned by Rev. John Klindworfch and his son, Luth eran preachers in Illinois, refuse to give the sacrament to Grand Army and Farmers’ A l liance men. ----- James D. Robinson, president of the Grand Rapids Savings Bank and of the F ifth National Bank of Grandl Mich,, died, aged seventy 3 ividow and three children.-— D. A. Mc- Rapids, He leaves Kiidey, the Governor’s brother, Hawaiian consul a t San Francisco, died there,—^T children and thejr dbg were killed by a pi therin \Warsaw Minn. ----- Martin Nbbling’s throat was cut, as he claims, while he was asleep a t his home near Pottsville, Pa. ----- Rose Fisher, a young woman of South Or ange, was found dead in a pond. She is sup* posed to havecommittedsuicide. ----- Alexan der Bergman was tried in Pittsburg for the murder of H. C. Frick, convicted and sen-- tenoed'to'i KILLED W HIEE L A U & H I S t e l A G-irl Stabbed in tbe Back and to DeatS ■ 1 by a Frenzied Lover, ' I :nife by Wesley W a iter, on the South li berton road, near Mount Holly, a few 4 dredfeet east of where the r o ^ joins 1 street, and within a mile and a half of Whh?»| : | her brother, Barclay Peak, now In the sts*» r penitehtiaiy at Trenton, shot and Katie Anderson. Lizide In company with her sistem, J and; B^te, ^nd d three ^ on ^ i 'enty-one years in tho peniten tiary.-^— Chairman Watson, of on, of the il Quarantine Committee, think north Atlantic coasts are adequately' equipped for tho cholera emergency.— “ ■ ‘ the infect! sMpsquarantinedat Camp Low, Sandy Hook. ----- John Knox, a fireman on the There are nowl,05Gporsousfromtl inedatinedat steamsMpsquarant Camp Low, Sandy ‘ \Inox a fireman steamer Nevada, lying a t her dock in New York, died from supposed cholera.— A new patient was removed from tho steamer Bo hemia to Swinburne Island.— Fire a t South Beach, Staten Island, did twenty thousand dollars’ damage to the hotels and other build ings. ----- Fifteen hundred furniture-workers are locked out in Cincinnati. ----- A vast forest fire is raging on the mountains near Kate, a __ lack, Jesse Stroud ajid Thbmas Shinb, 1 Mount Holly, were retnrtdng frbai tee to the Peak homo, a tenant-house ou Qaskillfarm, The party were widking tii. i pau-s, Matlack and Lizde Peak tgriaipiig np> I the rear. As they turned the corner tyoni. Pine street into the South Pemberton road they were singing and laughing. W arM r was lying in wait, and when the first c o u ^ . ., 1 bad passed he suddenly sprang upon j and plunged a long-bladed carvingTmifo ini* ’ her throat, severing a main artery. The ’ || songs and laughter suddenly changed t e shrieks and moans. The men of the party wei-e taken by surprise, and madeno attempt; to save the girl o r cwtiire the murdarev. ’ Mium'e and Katie Peak seized Waraor, b u t be threatened thei ----- ------------------- ^ from their clntchee, ru street toward the town. Here he p Capt. Joseph Biwan, who asked what was the matter, and \Vyamer replied that ha was going for a poUceman. Captain Bryan had her picked np-nnd taken into the house, but in five mirmtes the ■ ’ was dead. ened them with tho knife and brolte sir clutches, ru n n ii^as t o Os Pin# os a national park by the President. where it is said Lizzie Peak has be^l^ivlifp DISASTEKS AND CASUALTIES. g was s w a m ^ at dispatch fi ement bo Cutt I contf! which settles all I lich can be ad- branches. WORLD’S FAIR. A boat named the K in g v ______ Ckipe St. Mary’s, Newfoundland, and board were drowned. T he Marine Hospital Service a t \Washing ton, was advised of the arrival of the ship May a t New Orlean low fever on hoard. T he bark Casket, from Huelva, Spain, for Wilmington, North Carolina, loaded with iron pyrites, was wrecked on Fry Pan Shoala The crew were safely landed by the Cape Pear Life-saving Crew. Three men, Foreman Volanski, Thomas Kane and Edward McNally, perished by suf focation in the receiving basin of a sewer, in Jersey City. Volanski was first overcome, and the others died in trying to save him. Three coaches left tho track and two were overturned. No person was killed, but several passengers were badly injured. Martin Tobin, his nephews, Patrick and and a boy, named Edward Hoyles, engaged in repacking fish near St. Many’s, New foundland, a few days ago, wore swept Ini tee sea t ^ a n immense wave and drowned, TH* reitt'nai-or an* __ tee Pennsylvania Railroad left the track at\ New Brunswick, New Jersey, and fell ag a to t a freight train. John Roeder, a trade walker, was caught between the cars And killed, and Brakeman Henry Allison, of Philadelphia, was badly h u r t No pa*en- gers were hurt. P art of an accommodation train on tho Champaign and Havana Division of the Illi nois Central Railroad was thrown from the track near. Lincoln, Illinois. Twelve per sons were injured, F r a t ' .. ................... John Ritcher and child, anc rick probably fatally, A c ^ iN on the place of J . H. Scarf, near Camilla, Georgiy was burned. Two small Children and their crazy grandmother were in tho yai-d a t the time i t caught fire. The old woman carried the childran into the midst of the flames and left them. They were bnracd to death. A despatch from Alpena, Michigan, says that the tugs Sweepstakes and EUa Smith were forced to let go a raft of 3,900,000 feet of lumber off that port during a severe northwest gale. The Sweepstakes made port, but the Ella Smith has not been heard from. The steamer Pilgrim, of the Fall River Line, ran into the four-masted schooner Benjamin Van Brant, and two hours later the schooner was sunk bv the steamer Provi dence. The schooner, loaded with 1800 tons of coal, was anchored in the channel taken by the Sound steamers running between New York and Fali River. Both steamers were sent to Newport for repairs. The schooner was one year old, and cost $^,000. The collision occurred in a fog. MRS. HARRISON WORSE. The President Cancels His Arrange ments for Going to Hew York City. A dispatch from Lq6n Lake, N. Y., sas^s; Mrs. Harrison’s condition does not impi-ove and the Pr^identw as forced to notify Chair- Hackett, of the New York Republtein State Committee, that the prospect!^ tour through the Northern and central p art 06 the S tate would have to be abandoned. Pres ident Harrison advised Mr. Hackettthat the conclusion bad been reluctantly reached. The condition of Mrs. Harrison has been ivlth him. OQWHIDED IN 'H IS F . r a i f , The Key. Dr. Bridger Had Slandcared, Women of His Congregation. The Rev. Dr. E. A. Bridger, pmstor of tee- Congregational Church, a t Jennings, was chastise W n church by exasperated jpw -, ishiopers. Hie pastor had become unpopular on ao- conntof bis plainspeech on various occasiGw«» t. ^ and matters reached a crisis when he mada rounds of the town last weelc, going from store to store and seeming to take pains to say that tho women of the place wereta*\ chaste and that the whole town (wn was a 1 ispf ■ ad aricod the w but requs tee men to ra teo^inister'sgarm ents t o n Dr, Bridger did n ot flinch under the mm - isbmeBt. PERILS OF ELEOTRIO 0A M . Several PaiJesgers Patally anS0tlei» Seriously Hurt in St. Louis, , , A terrible street railway accident ectwf¥ red in the Southern part of tee city b«twa««i nine and ten o’clock A. M. in white pie were killed and thirteen more in jmwK It appears that while a t r ^ consisting an electric motor and a trailer ear waCa> ramtog down a steep grade on tee IBtete «nfl Snyder street branch of the Union Dwok Line, near tho corner of Ninth and strata, tho motorman lost control of tisaoilair t and th e traia rushed down the decbni./^a which was crowdod wite' derailed and turned over, and all „ gers were hurled to the ground WitiT of thorn were n ot injured a sth# car yrm-tA- I and many of the mmaMa an d ^ fid ren , No one in te » most capsiaed Lake Front i I lOmoiALS of the Bui-eau of Music deny they have made no progress. T he buildings of tb# “ lured for 75 per i A dams and Cobb will haa*|K«)0 whe! chairs in operation neoct yeo# m tho fair. A change in the line of te e intramural railway at Jackson park has been pro- S eats for anjaudiefico Of 100,000 will fee placed in the manufactures building ior the dedication. / vheeled _ ______ listingUi invitations to be Octobei lished visitors bave aceepi present a t the dedicata U, Ub XVOCKAWaj X Lwright a^d Keaisen, was destroyed by Loss 136,000. ---- The Quebec Council will be in-f*%ii*h6d a ten-days’ quarantine for all els from infected ports.——Passengers lie Labrador complain of inadequate ae- lodations and want of the nece.-saries at Grosse M e. ---- The Parkin Lumber bany’s mills, dry kilns, storage sheds leCtric light plant, in Lindsay, O., were Loss $80,000; insurance $13,000.-— tl electric Car accidentia St. Louis resulted the death of six persons, and tho injury of any othei-s.-— The twenty-Iii-st annual [_ Invention of the National Board of Stoam. o r M ^ d ^ r a i S o f b n s i S ^ l o t e s during favigatiott opened in the F ifth AvawioHotel dedication. • , ' \ T he Trtesnry Department has c that foreign exhibitors may bring in liqtf for their own uso free of duty. r York. A resolution endorsing t Nicaragua Canal scheme was adopted.— roMEN’s work j .rd of Lady Mam 18 of Chinese woi P atrick H ickey died in Cincinnati days ago, and his five sons served at/s altai' during the funewd. P. A. N, Koch, a prominent phsiaician Hanover, Pa., died.——The Virginla- prfeanouth Baptist Asiiociation began its jhnual session in Eliiloh Baptist Church, ||ctersburg, Va. ---- A passenger train on the llinols Central, near Lincoln,111.,ivasthrown rom the truck and twelve persons injured. itself, so that her In himself from h er hi VETERANS IN A WRECK. A Bf-umber of Persons Injured in a Eear-end Collision. A rear end collision occurred between two sections of a G. A, R. excursion on the Baltimore and Ohio Road a t Kent, 0 . Two Bleeping cars were badly damaged and sev eral passengers were hurt, though not ser iously. All the injured were taken aboard the train and carried through to 'Wasl .... ‘ ‘ the coU\ • ■asnot MATCHES CAUSED IT ALL. | A Child Patally B-urnt, aiid a Man 8ft* Brely Injured. Children playing with m attees and liW t ' five year old daughteT of Harry J . Freeman, of Atlantic City, N, J . The oM*. a boallitr were the caose of the fata), irning the other afternoon o f May i-itcman, O ju .o-uonui: un»y, rt, o, ’iiss cim*. dren had gone out into tee back yart^ anS. setting fire to a pile of papers a n d ’k in d t e ^ were playing around it, when a- small gKj. inadvertently throw a blazing ---- - i^ r t e n t l y throw a WaziUi| ember very inflammable material, tho teildwaaJBi* mediately in a blaze. H e r screams atteaiW # Alex.Dotcher, a eolorad .. [ealte Inspecto Lewis mm b thaattm i^onof driver and ex-Hi • ^ a n d been located. . /'ashiug- oUision b trying t< le statioi A CA!lf[SH m HIS STOMACH. P. J. of Gilberton, Puzzled tbe Physicians for Weeks, P. J. O'N^lt, of Gilber/ion, Pa., had been ailing for several weeks And complained of severe pains in the stomach and throat. Physicians were puzzled by his case. O’Neill vomited up a catfish five inches in length. How tee fish got into his stomach is a m jn tery. ^ both hands and Arms terril futile efforin to save the chili a t the point Of death. f l m M - I Browm o f teft • uooossiDEiffiDnogr. .Tbe Stetoer Carroll Tbougbt t© M m Po'bnderftd vitb All m Bsard, Steamer Carroll, Captain Broi North Atlantic Bteamship Liui^ tween Halifax imd Bwton, is bsllei have gone down wKte 100 passte«if8. crew numbering forty, left provisioned for Only twro days, i a%hted by tee Britteuis, a t e t e r thh-tymiltewnW of teft-daageroas Light reefs « f l^valfeptla. No- wo*d ImfcftteifefeeeiTed of bar points tee 00*1# ami «* idte twenty-two bmMPs eviM'dnelb k ' ' she h asjB«»4o»»i Sh' ’ vei'yk»ty*!||teifl||c built In 1069 and I