HcHICWHT PLAINDEVLER 4. VAN SLYKE, Editor and Pub. ILLINOIS 1PPLED IN A GALE. STEAMER CITY OF TURNS BACK. PARIS IJner Forced to Turn Back mad Anchor Off the Irish CoMt-Shi Hu MA Passengers Aboard Boond fwr the United State*. All H*niU S«(«. ' :'f Yaft'&ntKFican Line steame* Bttis, v." |taptain Handle, which sailed from jBouthampton for New York, was ; 0|l|lightod early Friday mornirg lying'at t|#v|Michor off Roche's point, at the en trance to Queenstown harbor. Shortly lifter daylight the Paris set signals f; ' §hat her ruuder was disabled. It "was later learned that the Paris had $.ot been able to use her rudder at all, £nd that she had used her twin i, screws as steering apt aratus on her . ireturn. The accident is reported to ;'V.";>ave occurred when the steamer was 786 miles west of Queen-town. The ,• JParis has 84 fir. t and lOti sscond class jpa^enger.7. On Monday a heavy sea •truck the rudder of the Paris, snaj>- ying the post off in the trunk. The Ifteamer held her westward course un- K "til Tuesday afternoon, when it was de- . $ided to j.ut her about. One of her ? angines was stepped and little diffi culty was experienced in turning her •round. , *1 i' He Pays the Penalty. ; , L_ WILLIAM LEONABD was hanged at ^Frederick. Md., Friday, for the killing Of Jesse Anderson, a railway trackman, /.^ISept. 5 last, at Lime Kiln, Frederick t County. Leonard at the time of the ifaurder was drinking heavily. He re.- ; y^eatedly admitted the killing and said §n extenuation that he was crazed by > v drink at the time of what he always epoke of as "This sad affair." Ander- , aon had offended Leonard by telling Khe latter's brother-in-law of his Arunken condition. The murderer Claimed to have had four wives and , \ aeventeen children scattered in differ- . • ^-«nt parts of the world. Btf Fire in Detroit. FLAMES were discovered Friday Ainorning issuing from the third stOry ^ ." «f the wholesale drug house of Far- ' , *and, Williams & (. lark, Detroit. Ow- • tog to huge snow drifts in the streets And the large number of telegraph and t- .trolley wires, the fire derartment was ' ?:"|pBriously delayed in* getting to work And the flames gained great heid.vay, • «nd rapidly spread to the entire five Tories before thiy were got under K^pontrol. The drug*firm estimate their f i iilDss on stoci at Si40,000. which is in ured for about $120,009. Lo.ss on t building, $30,000; insurance, $25,000. lies. One of tho?e lost his wifeoidya mni? WAHQT' TTll VI? A US month ago, and four little children aIIJSi ifUHOX JJJi I survive them. CoMequenttg^g*'^K children on the world's thirty-six charit pWESTERN^ TTFT*. Board of Trade, was destroyed by fire. Loss, about $100,000. Frozen hydrants handicapped the firemen. DUBUQUE, Iowa, breweries and liq uor dealers appointed a ccmmitte^ to wcrk with the Legislature tor favora ble legislation. MILWAUKEE lake front watchers shouted for joy when they found tho twenty-two men at the crib had weath ered the storm. THE American Tube and Iron Works at Youngstown, Ohio, started up, with 400 men. The works had been idle for several months. - JOHN MILLIGAN has been convicted at Oklahoma City of the murder of Gibbs Clarke and his wife, and will be sentenced to death. HENRY DRIDEN, teller of the "Citi zens' National Bank at Charleston, W. Va.. has committed suicide. No reason is known for the act. DELEGATES from all United States territory west of the Mississipi River and of the portion of Louisiana lying east of that river assembled at San Francisco in the sixth annual ses sion of the Transmississippi Com mercial Congress. The object of the congress is to consider questions relating to irrigation, arid lands, the silver issue, mining lands, matters re lating to tho department of the in terior and to the Pacific and Gulf coasts, as well as the question of the Nicaragua Canal. Over twenty States, were represented. W. J. McConnell, of Boise City, Idaho, was the President •jf the Congress. ' ' HOWLING BLIZZARD SWEEPS THE COUNTRY. , « CJS iK.«M,Q«lnb» flu -VSJJ9CR Stotta eae of tfee Worn* in HnBOry- roads Blockaded and Many Train • Aban doned la the Snowdrift*--Many Persona Ytoteh to Oklahoma. _u. , from Wany-fciNrtu,, " Boreas emulated the belated camel of . Wreck and Kill. Two MEN men wer3 killed and, an- Other badly wounded by three de per- -- Indices who held up the Southern Pacific iiverland train at Roseoe, California, at *'12 o'clock Thursday night. The dead «-*re Fireman Aithur Masters and a ramp named Granger. He was riding . an the pilot of the engine. Engineer David Thomas was badly wounded and , '> Hook to the bush, leaving a trail of |>lood behind him. The amount of ' ->|>coty obtained by the robbers is un- » 4» Certain, but it is said that they escaped , Kith several sacks of gold dust. ' v** • ' .w:,-<V%s4 ' Kearmrge Doomed Forever. %! ? /, THE authorities at Washington have , %>cen in communication with Admiral i ' Stanton, recently in command of the • •<?, .wrecked cruiser Kearsarge, a? tithe f v^lP0"'.8-^ ity of saving the hull of that his- * \ to: ic craft. It is understood that Ad 's 1 . miral Stanton and the officers of the V, '** Kear^arge have expressed the opinion 4*i M'that there is little or no chance of ever ^floating the Kearsaage again. Rejected Peckhsm. ' PBCKHAM's nomination to the Su- < 7reme ben«Ji was rejected by the Sen- <te, the vote being 32 t» 41 against. BREVITIES. . A /. SOUTHERN. JACX PRINCE, bicyclist, beat a horse in a ten-mile race at Jacksonville, Fla. HENRY MCCRAY, nogro, was taken from a train by a mob and hanged near Knoxville, Tenn. Two WEST VIRGINIA brothers are said to have lived at Acme for forty years on charity. HENRY BRUCE and Charles and Rob ert Plunkett were lynched in Arkansas for the murder of an aged couple. PLANTERS of the Lower Mississip pi Valley will import German labor to supplant the negroes, who are unreli-, able. SHERIFF MAGEE has written an ex planation of why he failed to re Jiang Purvis at Jackson, Miss., when the rope broke. J. CLAYTON, living in Cumberland robbers until he revealed where his money was hidden. - ©OV. MATTHEWS, of Indiana, is seri- Ously but not critically ill. ALBERT SEAVER murdered Miner Winlock in a drunken quarrel at Scotte- ; f ville- Ky- ' .A, ANARCHIST manifestoes circulated in Paris contain threats to assassinate ~J': President Carnot. JAMES E. STONE, murderer of the 1 ,/ / Wratten family, Washington, Ind., Hi was hanged at midnight at Jefferson- /. . ',4 ville prison. U- ' WM. O. DIMOCK, agent of the Mer- / chants Dispatch at Buffalo, N. Y., shot <f? and killed himself while suffering • f. . from the grip. ^ THE Supreme Court of Missouri re- f f 1 fused to reopen the case of Jacob \f, Broun, a negro sentsnoed to be hanged » V ' f t March 15 for murder. * FROM Colquitt County, Georgia, I' * comes news of a double tragedy. Frank Bird, an employe of a man named >, Brice, while burning over a tract of , „ L jlland was assaulted by John Cooper, who f ^also claiirei the land. Cooper drew a revelver^and Bird struck him with a Kt'"" 3^club. As he fell Cooler shot Bird. ^|j Cooper is dead and Bird dying. OBITUARY: At Boston, General Ed- n 'f • ward F. Hincks. At San Francisco, h. , ., Colonel J. D. Stevenson, aged ninety- % four. At Washington, Fassed Assist- « Surgeon James F. Keenan. At Abington, Mass., .Banker Daniel B. »4 >A Dyer, aged eighty-two. At Charlotte- •town, Vl E. I., Lieutenant Governor J. •i:' S. ̂ Carroll, aged eighty-one. THE Harvard College Observatory will start an expedition to Arizona to establish a new observatory. SEVEN freshmen at Rutgers College V- wero suspended for two weeks and or dered to leave town for hazin°" a stu dent. ° FIRE broke out in Shingawa, Japan, and before it was extinguished 315 nouses were totally destroyed, includ ing the police station and city hall, Three women were burned to death and several others injured. „ EASTERN. * history Monday morning. He got a hump on himself. And the hump? It broke all records for many a year. The whole country has been swept by a blizzard. Across the entire continent the whooping, howling monster made an impartial and indiscriminate tour, but the storm was most severe after the Pacific air column was re-enforced by another column in Illinois. Starting away out beyond the Missouri River it laid embargo on the railway travel in Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota and the Northwest generally. It sent the visitors in the big Hot Springs ho tels huddling about the steam radi ators, and made the teeth of the Texas cowboys chatter. Its course eastward was marked by snowed-up trains and tangled telegraph wires far into the Middle States. Its center passed along the Ohio Valley, and its terrible force was felt in all the areas within a few hundred miles of that line. The earliest reports came from the large cities. These were strug gling ' in snowdrifts, while the smaller towns were almost completely snow bound. Luckily, save for the inevitable in convenience to the public and the buffer ing which every storm entails upon the poor, it dees not seem that any very painful harm has been inflicted. The wind did the pnly mischief. Both the snowfall in the northern half of the belt and the rainfall further touth will bs beneficial rather than injurious, unless the following cold winds from the nOt'th destroy vegetation in the more southern section. .It will be some time before the full story of de layed trains, snowed-in villages and general discomfiture is known, but the Associated Press dispatches tell enough to enable the reader's imagination to do the rest. Wild Day *«* IlftfltoU. T ^ ̂ CHICAGO.--Snow--whirled the% air by a.Vfiale of Wind which blew .eighty-four miles an hour--buried Chi cago*, buried it §odeeply that business of -wery k:"nl was paralysed. The storm broke upon the city before day light, and untii the cominer of night raged with a fury not equaled since the memorable blizzard which swept down upon Chicago just nine years County, Kentucky, was tortured by a£°- . Street car transit during tlie , a morning and early part of the after noon Tfra* almost a matter of luck, and the railroads practically threw up their hands and waited for the storm to quit. Trains which should have left iri the afterno :n commenced pulling out at jnidnight. The Illinois Central made a brave fight to keep its Suburban service going, but one by one the tracks at 2;d street were frozen up by the water and ice swept inland by the gale and at night it had only three sets of rails left, and they were studded with snowbanks. Business houses were deserted the day long, the big down-town stores sending their clerks home long before the usual closing hour. The monetary lo.-s to storekeepers is placed at $1.50.000. Life was imperiled on land and water. Many accidents occurred to pedestrians wh,o,were not able to contend against the wind and uncertain footing caused by the snow and ice-covered walks. Out at the €8th fetreet crib the lives of seventy men were hanging in the bal ance while the tempest was howling. QUINCY.--The public s 'hools were closed on account of the snow. BELVIDERE.--Not in ten years has this section of the country experienced such a terrible blizzard. JOLIETT.--The roads through the county are blockaded by the worst storm ever seen hereabouts. CARTHAGE.--A Wabash " passenger train, from Clayton to Keokuk, was stuck in the snow at this point. AURORA.--Business has been prac tically suspended, the street cars stopped, trains late, and the schools closed. DECATUR. --The worst blizzard known here in five years. The enow is eight to ten inohes on a level and drifted hip deep in places. CHAMPAIGN.--This section of central Illinois has been in the toils of a bliz zard, the ea ual of which has not been experienced for a decade. CHESTER.--Small buildings were damaged, lumber piles overturned and a fleet of thirteen steamboats in this harbor were in a precarious cordition. BI.OOMINGTON.--The wind was blow ing almost a tornado and the cold was severe, the mercury being down to zero. Great snowdrifts lie everywhere. PEORIA.--The storm was one of the worst in the history of the city. The snow was fine and dry and was accom panied by a heavy wind, causing it to drift badly. SPRINGFIELD.--The snowstorm pre vailed nearly all day. The ground is covered to a depth of eight or ten inches. Street car traffic was suspend ed and the schools closed. WASHINGTON. CONGRRSSMAN G. W. HouK dropped dead while making a call in Washing ton. He was 69 years old. CONGRESSIONAL action is urged as necessary to bring about a uniform, bill of lading and classification. THE President has commuted the sentence of S. E. Kennedy, convictad of falsifying the records of the Omaha National Bank, to two years and six moatlw. ';&&& ^FOREIGN, r JOHN REDMOND thinks if Parliament were at once dissolved the Liberals would sweep the ensuing English elec tions. THE British steamer Primrose and the German steamer Adolph Wald- mann have been wrecked. Their crews were saved. THE vessel reported 'aground at St. Quentin, France, was the American ship Willie Reed. Twenty-one of the crew were saved. 1 ADMIRAL SALDANHA DA GAMA, the Brazilian rebel commander, who was wounded in the neck and arm during the battle of Armacao, is in a critical condition. It was at first supposed that the Admiral s wounds were insig nificant, but now it i< said that he is so seriously injured that he may die. Every effort is being made to save the Admirals life. IN GENE: AMERICAN ar d Mexican <&pitalistk have organized a syndicate to unit4 the two Americas by a telegraph line. A MOVEMENT is said to be on foot to consolidate the United States Oil Com pany and the Producers and Refiner^ Pipe Line Company. Capital of the two concerns is about $2,0(J0,000. A VERY sad occurrence is reported from the Upper Gila, Mexico. A Mexi can woman named Sisto Wesley, who had lost a little child a short time since, went to the graveyard to mourn over the grave of her little one, and while there two bears sat upon her and devoured her. MARKET REPORTS. mi J EIGHTH annual convention of the Na tion, Association of Builders met in Bteton, Mass. THE Supreme Court of New Jersey may be called upon to settle the Legis lative muddle in that State. NEW YORK police think the placard ing of millionaires' houses was the Work of a joker or a crank. ; THIRTEEN lives were lost in a mine at Plymouth, Pa. The men were 9»ught in a cave-in. All the victims, pith tlie exception of two, have fami CHICAGO. CATTLE--Common to Prime..., Hoos--Shipping Grades SHEEP--Fair to Choice WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 2 BUTTKB--Choice Creamery EGGS--Freeh POTATOES--Per bu INDIANAPOLIS. CATTLE--Shipping Hoos--Choice Light SHEEP--Common to Prime WHEAT--No. 2 Red COBN--No. 2 White OATS--No. 2 White ST. LOUia CATTI,* Hons WHEAT--Mo. i Bed COHN--No. 2, OATS--No. i... PORK--Mesa CINCINNATL CATTLE..., HOGS... WHEAT -NO.' 2 Bed'.".'.! "7.7." CORN--No. 2 OATS-NO. 3 Mixed RYE--NO. 2 . DETROIT. CATTI,® HOGS BHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 Red COBN--NO. 2 Yellow OATH--No. 2 White TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2 Red COBN--No. 3 Yillovr OATS--No. 2 White BYE--No. 2...* BUFFALO. WHEAT--No. 1 Herd.... COBN--No. a Yellow OATB-NO. 2 White RYE-NO. 2 _ MILWAUKEE. WHEAT-NO. 2 BURIN* CORN--No. 3. * , . OATS--No, 2 White.'.'.".;!.'.'! RYE--No. l . BARLEY--No. A PORK--lieo... CATTLE..... NEWYdiuL" Hoc® BHEEP WHEAT-NO. 2Red!!.;.':;::!*!!! COBS--No. 2 Oiia-white weeteri! BUTTEB--Choice j POBE--Ke«« " & 6 SO !S> 5 60 (31 4 on @ 5 00 & 6 SO (4 3 5( «« 56 & :«s & 32 13 00 &1* 00 S 00 @ 4 7J 8 00 @ 6 SO 2 00 0 3 60 67)i<3 68>4 ® 87 S 8 2 62 75 & 6 60 @3 50 & 69 & 87 Ot 82 SO n »*> 3 0* 8 00 2 00 IS a #T *3 81 4» i 10X4 XS w a 67H 82 61 71H 41 86 66 M 0 . 38 9 34 » 0 80 « 0 47 48 0 so 12 U 012 75 *0* • « i)r 3 75 <3 « 0D' 3 00 A * 2i « & 64 433* WA 37 * 42 13 TO Sl4 M Mlcbigau Storm Swept. GRAND RAPIDS.--It was the wildest storm of the season. COLDWATER.--The worst st rm that ever prevailed in 1 his vicinity KALAMAZOO.--The worst "storm in thirty years. Drifts on the main streets are ten feet deep. ; JACKSON.--The worst blizzard expe rienced here in twenty years. All pas* senger trains pulled with one and even two extra engines. *LANSINO.--'At nosn'I the schools of the city were closed on account of the severity of the storm. Nothing like it has been known since the famous storm of March, 1886. Business almost at a standstill. ».<. '• • • JKrjNwcoix -- Loggirg operations have been tempjrarily suspended, as thoi snow in the woods is FO deep that' it is itftt&esib'e to make any progress. SAGINAW.--One of the mcst severe blizzards ever experienced in the Sag inaw Valley. It grew bitterly cold and huge drifts, in some places four feet high, blockaded sidewalks. DETROIT.--Michigan i« storm twept. Not since April, 188t5, has so much snow fallen nor has the wind howled with such unrelenting vigor. Before noon traffic on many of the fetreets in Detroit was practically stopped. Plows drawn by four team; went over the routes, but by the time one end of the line was reached the drifts had -piled ,up on the other. The. only way the electric lines were kept going was to send two motcr card along together. Business in tho city has been stag nated. Reports from all over the State show the storm to have been un usually severe, although the damage slight : .w Unequaled In Fury in WlaetaMjfo. BELOIT.--A fe%fful blizzard hte pre vailed all day. GREEN BAY.--The several stages running into the city are delayed and --It was the Wort disa- day of the winter^ and very fo ventured out. Every snow plow", scraper atd available maa was put to work. Along the lake front the storm raged furiously, throwing the ice and spray a rod or more inland. The storm caught none of the steamers doing business on the lake outside. RACINE.--The most severe storm known in this vicinity for fifteen years. The wind from the northeast reached a velocity of sixty-five miles an hour and was accompanied by a wet and blinding snowstorm. Streetcar traffic completely paialyzed. John Jan- schauck fell at the street corner, and when found was covered with snow and died in an hour. f Kain, Sleet, and Snow In IndUnai PORTLAND.--A terrible blizzard has been raging here, the worst for years. Fourteen inches of snow has fallen and all outdoor work is stopped. CROWN POINT.--Country roads are blockaded in all directions, and it will doubtless to two or three days before farmers can find their way in to town. EL WOOD.--The worat blizzard known in this country since 1863. A drop of 20 degrees in temrerature caused much suffering among the stock. The east wind blew a hurricane and the air was a perfect mass of flying snow. INDIANAPOLIS.--The heaviest storm of sleet and snow which has visited Indiana in a number of years besan early in the morning and continued without intwnitsion during the day. Outside of the inconvenienoe which resulted from impaded traffic on the railroad lines and ihe difficulties under which business was transactgd in this city the damage of the storm was not material. In many sections the snow drifted so as to make the roads impas sable, and throughout the northern part of the State the drifts interfered with travel. South and southeast the storm consisted of rain until early nwet morning, when it began to snow, but the fall is not large. Southern Iowa Feele It the Most BRIGHTON.--Snow has fallen to the depth of about a fo >t, and has drifted badly. Railway traffic is much im peded. DUBUQUE.--The storm at and north west of Dubuque was comparatively light, and trains from Chicago and St. Louis only were delayed. WASHINGTON.--A fearful blizzard has been raging here for twenty hours. All trains on the Rock Island have been abandoned and general business is at a standstill. GRINNELL.--A blizzard has been raging here for twenty-four hours, with the snow drifting badly. Trains on the north and south roads are ten hours behind time. BURLINGTON.--Snowdrifts are piled high everywhere. Street car tra|fio is at a standstill and no effort will.be made to clear the tracks untii the storm is over. All trains are late. CEDAR RAPIDS.--Snow lies on the ground to the depth of six or seven inches, and as a high wind prevailed the railroads are badly blockaded, es pecially tho£o from the western part oi the State. DES MOINES. -- The storm abater during the day and was practically ove in eye evening. The minimum temper ature reported was zero at Ottumwa and at other points the thermomete stood a little higher. The storm wa most severe in the southern part o, the State, where a foot of snow fell The snowfall in Des Moines was sevei inches and at Fonda, in the north o the State, ens inch. KEOKUK.--Railroad traffic is seriout ly interrupted and business in the cit is at a standstill. On several lines o railroad all freights are discontinuec and passenger trains gotten througl with great difficulty. The Wabash, i fast in a drift at Carthage, 111. Sleet-fall for the Buckeye State. MASSILLON.--The storm tied up th electric street railways in a short time It was followed by rain. FINDLAY.--A violent snow-storm be gan at six o'clock this morning and has continued all day without cessation. COLUMBUS.--A sevei e sleet storm prevailed here. The wiresftre covered with ice. Business is delayed accord ingly. CINCINNATI.--A sleet storm reached this locality after midnight, with a high northeast wim$? but by noon the ice was nearly melted and rain was falling. CLEVELAND.--The blizzard reached this city at 7 o'clock in the morning. A fierce gale, accompanied by a heavy fall of fine, cutting enow, is in prog ress. The street car service is demor alized, only an occasional car managing to get through the heavy snow drifts. TOLEDO.--The bli/.zard struck this city at 5:30 this morning, and at 7:30 every street car in the city was aban doned. The "wind blew the water up the river from Maumea bay, and the docks and Water street are inundated. Business is at a standstill. A blinding snowstorm filled the streets with drifts, and all trains are behind time. Death In the Storm. GUTHRIE, Ok.--It has been terribly cold during tne storm, and stories of awful suffering are coming in from various points. Twenty persons have been found frozen to death. A report comes from the northern part of the Territory that six pet-sons of one family were murdered by the father to pre vent their suffering while dying with cold. The seven bodies were found in one house with their throats cut. In the house was found a note signed by the father, who left word that he had killed his wife and children to fave them from freezing. Nebraska Snowed Under. , 1 OMAHA.--As a result of the blizzard, most trains have been abandoned in the Interior, and those running have been pulled by two and three engines. Stock in Nebraska is really in danger, and stockmen are apprehensive of great loss. Drifts in some placcs are piled ten to twenty feet high, and in the valleys cattle are perishing for want of water and food. Loss in this direction will ba enormous, it is feared. Kannas Under » White Mantle. ATCHISON.--All trains are tied up. EL DORADO.--Railrc ads are all block aded. EMPORIA.--Wagon roads are impass able. and trains have been abandoned. FORT SCOTTT.--The heaviest snow in Southeast Kansas for many years lies upon the ground. Trains are late and many are laid out. LEAVENWORTH.--The snow is six teen inches deep on the level and in many places hay drifted to a depth ol from five to ten feet. TOPEKA.--Reports from all parts of Kansas are that It was the heaviest snowstorm on record, and was espe cially severe in the western part of the State. A strong north wind carried the snow into drifts. The thermome ter dropped to 4 degrees. • BliEEtrd Rftichm the Eaat. NEW YORK.-The blizzard scheduled by weather prophets arrived on time. The streets are covered with a mantle of snow several inches deep. All traffic is impeded. The railroad trains are behind time and mails from all parts of the country are delayed. The street railways are opeiat.d with difficulty1 and traffic on the river has been great ly impeded. BEAUTIFUL children never grow in loveless homes. ."HIRTEEN MEN PROBABLY DEAD M -)? lit * MINI. ; HEROISM IS FOL- »»OWeO BY OWE RESULTS. lVorkm<.n tta<T Con* Into Old frokia** . to Make Repair* and VTer® Suddenly Overwhelmed " Wlvee and Children. Most of the Victims Had Result of a Blr ^ ' Plymouth, Pa., was Tuesday thi scene of the worst mine accident that has occurred in the anthracite region in eight years. In December, 1885, twenty-two men perished in No.> 1 mine in Nanticoke by a cave-in. Thir teen men met their death in the same manner in Gaylord slope in the King ston Coal Company's mine Tuesday morning. The men, who were all ex pert miners, entered the mine to prop up the roof, which was falling in. It was dangerous work, but big wages were offered, and in these slack times ther9 were plenty men of who were will ing to take the risk. In propping the roof timbers about four feet in length are used. The men had just begun work when a terrific crash was heard. In an instant the men must have scat tered like rats, but they were too late. The roof covering an area of 500 yards had crashed in. The supposition is that the men were caught in the fall and manglad out bf recogn tion. At first there was great hope that they might be alive, but there is little now. This h( pe is based on the fast that the roof where tha men were at work is still intact and that they are hemmed in by the debris which fell oa all bides of them. But even if they did escape injury the chances are that they will never be rescued alive and starvation must be their fat-j. Tib me diately alter tho dis-a tsr cciurred a rescuing party made up of expert miner8 wa-j organize! and they de scended the sha.t at once. In the fate of death the rescuei s worked n' bly to clear the main gangway in ordel1 to make a passageway to reach the spot where the thirteen man were at work. Every minute the noise of falling rock could bo heaid throughout the mine, but thi rascuers kept b. avely at work. Shortly before noon a loud, rumblirg noise wa? heard and another big sec tion of the roof caved in right in front of the rescuers., The lattar wore then compelled to flee for their lives. The Gaylord mine, where the acci dent occurred, his not teen operated for years. The old pillars supporting the f*oof had become weakened. This caused the surfaca to press down, and when the rock and ccal overhead was disturbed the least it began to "squeese" and then finally tall in. The accident int«k38 eleven widows and thirty-one orphans. Inside Superin tendent Ficton, whose son was in charge* of the missing party, says he will not give up hepe until the dead botUss aje brought cut ^ A RELIGIOUS WAV*. Almost Unparalleled In It* Extent, Sweep ing the Southwest. The fact has often been noticed and commented upon that a religious wave of * greater or les s degree of p jwer al ways follows a pericd of financial de pression. This winter furnishes no ex ception to the rule. The reports since the close of summer, a'though coming from widely separated points and scat tered over several months of time, have nevertheless shown that a lelig- ious revival, almost unparalleled in its extent and force, has been and is now sweeping over the country. In order to ascertain the effect of this revival in what is usually considered St. Louis territory, a leading newspaper of St. Louis recently directed a number of its correspondents in the States of Mis souri, Illinois, Kansas, Arkansas and Texas to report the number and results of religious revivals in the evangelical churches of their respective counties since the first of last September. The results of this inquiry, although not as complete as was desired, owing to the inability of a great many corre spondents to get reports from the ' country districts, 'the unwillingness of some of the ministers to furnish infor mation and other causes, the object is i nevertheless fully attained in the in teresting reports which follow. These show that in 177 counties of the States named there have been during the past five months 53,991 conversions and 49,010 accessions ta the churches. Of the total, (51 counties in Missouri report 20,216 conversions and 17,071 additions to the churches: 51 counties in Illinois, 15,852 conversions and 14,247 additions; 32 counties in Kansas, 8,574 conversions and 8,227 additions; 23 counties in Texas, 7,100 conversions and 7,345 ad ditions; 10 counties in Arkansas, 2,249 conversions and 2,120 additions. The average per county is in the neighbor- . hood of 3 )0 in all of the States. I The denominations which have bene- ' fited the most by means of these re-, vivals report th® following accessions: Methodist, 2^,840; Baptist, 7,577; Christians, 6,90ix Presbyterians, 2,900.. The miscellaneous additions are 3,231; unclassified, t',510. A SOCIALIST VILLAGE One la In the Mow Being Established Btafr of Mlohlar<in. A village is being established on a tract of laid not far from Grand Blanc, Mich., which will be governed on pure ly socialistic principles. The members will every one engage in labor, the proceeds of which will, at the end of each year, be divided according to the necessity of each. No one will ever be in want of wo /k, as industry is one of the first requisite* for members of the community. In religious or political opinions each member can satisfy him self B§ long as he complies with the usages of enlightened people generally. The pecuniary qualification necep- earv for joining the community is the payment of $100 into the common fund Dy each head of a family. At present this membership numbers 211 families. The fund amounts to $21,000. Four hundred and fifteen acres are now owned by the community. A basket factory has been already established, and a broom factorv ani large dairy are now being built. From all over the country applications have been made for membership, and it is believed that many more will yet join the com munity. Every care is taken, of course, to enroll only ^respectable and worthy persons; if others, by chance, should be taken in they will be dismissed after proof is given of their unsuitabil- ity. The community is being formed by S. S. Gibson, to whose father the large estate thus used originally belonged. The place will be called Gibsonville and promise*, in return, to become a large and successful expositor of social istic 'doctrine. iJwird Donnelly Saves a Life Almost at. the Cost of His Own--After Scars of Suffering He Is Restored to Health--JH1» ' Story M Told to ft Reports* of th* '< Aabnrn Bulletin. ••V-. ' fAabnrn (V. Y.) Bulletin.] IF is on record that upon a chilly April day; a few years ago, an eight- year-old boy fell into the East River at the fcot of East Eighth street, New York, and when a 1 effort* t_> rescue him had failed, Edward Donnelly, at risk of his own life, plunged into the water and, when himself nearly ex hausted, saved tho boy from drowning. It was a humane ana eclt-sacrificing deed, and received deserved commenda tion in all the newspai ers. There is a sequel to this accident, however, which thus far has not been published. It is to the effect that Don nelly was paralyzed ts a re ult of tho cold plunge ana came near dying. Au burn people haVe known the family since bis wife was Amanda Grantman and his sister Mrs. S. D. Corry, of 21 Moravia street. Donnelly himself de scribes the rescue'a id the result: "I was general foreman ef the F. A. Mulgrew Saw Mills, foat of Eighth 6treet, New York, on the East River. It was cn the 20th of April, 1889, that the boy fell into the ri\ or, and I res cued him from drowning. At that time I was in the water so long that I was taken with a deathly chill, and soon became so btiffened up and weak that I could neither work nor walk. For some time I was under treatment of Dr. George McDonald, who said I nad Locomotor Ataxia, He finally gave me up, and on the 1st of June, lo92, my wife and I came up to Auburn. "When the disease first came upon me the numbness began in my heels, and soon the whole of both my feet be- .came affected. There was a cold feel ing across the small of my back and downward, and a sense of soreness and a tight pressure on the chest. The numbness gradually extended up both legs and into the lower part of my body. I felt that death was creeping up to my vitals. I was still taking the medicine ('It was Iodide of Potassium,' said his wife), and was being rubbed and having piasters put all over my body, but with no benefit. "1 sent to the Chas. H. Sagar Com pany, the popular Auburn druggists and chemists, at 109 and 111 Genesee street, and got three boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pill and began taking them. In three Weeks' timo I was so improved that from being helpless, I was able to help myself and to get up and go to work, and to walk every day from No. 74 Walnut street, where 1 then lived, to Osborne's New Twine Factory, Seymour and Cottage streets --more then a mile--where I was then employed, but all the while I was tak ing Pink Pills. = "Then Dr. Patchen, of Wisconsin, uncle of my wife, and who was here on jb visit, began to poo-hoo at me for tak ing Pink Pills, and finally persuaded me to stop taking them and lot him treat me. When he returned to the West he left a prescription with Dr. Hyatt, of Autvrn> who also treated me. But their treatment did me no good, and after a while the old trouble returned and I was getting bad again. Then I began to take Pink Pills; nave taken them ever since, am taking them now; have taken in all nearly 20 boxes at an entire cost of less than $10 00 (my other treatment cost me a pile of money), and a^aln I am well and able to work. "If I was able I would at my own ex pense publish the virtues of Dr. Williitms' Pink Pills to the whole world, and espe cially in Niw York City, where I am much better known than I am her& " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People without doubt ir.ark the beginning of a more healthful era. They were first com pounded by an eminent practitioner, and used as a prescription for many years in Keneral practice with almost incredible success. They are now iriven to fhe public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness aris ing from a watery condition of the blood or shattered nerves, two fruitful causes of almost ev«>ry ill that flesh is heir to. These pills arc also a specific for the troubles pe culiar to females, such as suppressions, all forms of weakness, chronic constipation, bearing down puins, etc.. and in the case of men will give speedy relief and effect a permanent cure in all cases arising' from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt oi price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for J2.50--tbev are never sold iu bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams Medicine Co,. Schenectady, N. Y., or Brockviii^i On- tario. * V- Fanning the Frost. \ Electricity has come to the aid cf storekeepers whose wirdow dressings are hidden by the heavy frrst, which makes plate glass opaque. Various de vices,'have been used with more or less suc(ps8 to insuie clear windows in cold weafther. Holes are bored in the win dow casing, so that the temperature "Inside will be the gams a ̂ that outside. This necessitated the building of a partition at the rear of the window re cess. Others coated the inside of the windows with glycerine. But no de vice equals the little electric fan for keeping Jack Frost away from the store windows. The fan is so placed that moving air is constantly playing on the face of the window. Air in motion picks up moisture, and it is frozen moisture which coats windows, so that the electric fan keeps the windows dry auod therefore clear.--Chicago Record. Mlicellsncoas IT certainly takes very Utile lo make vain people nappy. A FOOL is a great man WHO can raise a tempest in a teapot. THE crank methods are naturally more or less revolutionary. ENVY is one of the most expensive exeroises one can indulge in. The Salesman's, Trick. Some retail silk salesmen have a clever sleight-of-hand trick that de ceives many purchasers. The little £ame is to snatch up a sample of silk in the presence of a customer, pretend with violent gestures to twist it into a rope, and then, with a sudden flout, to shake it free of folds and creases. Anv woman knows that silk such as will un dergo treatment of that sort is dura ble, but the woman who buys the sijk and tries the experiment at home meets with grievous disappointment. The salesman's twisting process has Ixjen a clever make-believe.--New York Sun. A Shorthandod Committee. Of the twelve railroad men who con stituted the committee of tha fctrikers during ths recent conflict between the Scotch railroad companies and their employes no less than nine were more or less maimed. Two had lost fingers, two bad only one leg apiece, two had lost an entire hand, another a foot, an other half a hand, while one had been so badly crushed as permanently to af fect his health. THE greatest structure reared by human hands is the pyramid of Cheops. Its height is 450 feet, about as high as Pilot Kn )b Mountain in Missouri, and each side is 764 feet long. The base covers about thirteen acres, and there are 89,000,000 cubic feet of ma?onry. It is supposed by some antiquaries that the stones composing it were brought from Arabia, where extensive quarries of the same kind of stone have been "found, and were transported by land and water, a distance of 700 miles. "TOm nasturtium came from Para. W»l •i V| SENATE AND HOUSE OT.It6l»IHg^ V yNTATIVSS. Oar "National law-Makers and Wh«| Are Doing for the Good of tlie "s Yarton* » -d Aeted Ppon. ' Do!n|* of Cwgiwi. ".31 The Ilotase adjourned Saturday almost • *: immediately after the reading of the jour* nal out of respect for the memory of Representative Houk, of Ohio. Mr. Ooth- W»it2,«,qf Ohio, Announced the death of Mn Houk to the House and requested th* £• appoWitoent of a committee to accompany ^ vj the remains to Ohio. Appropriate resold* , tions were ndopied and the Bouse Journed till Monday. I "*,* The Hawaiian controversy occa principal time of the Senate on Senator Gray of Delaware opening fell gument in defense of the policy of dent Cleveland. Enrly In the session *£>: interesting incident occurred in the prfcs* eillation by Senator Cullom of a petition sisned by 30,000 wool growers ot th* West protesting against the wool ached* ule in the nriw tariff bill. The speed* •'••••fir of Senator Gray In the Hawaiian mat-> a j ter was devoted principally to an attempt' ;,Sf to prove the complicity of Minister StevetWi with the revolutionists A mesgage VfaM received from tlie House announcing tfyk • death of Congressman Houk, of Obi#' Senator Brice offered a resolution of r*w ftret and condolence, and the Seuate ad» joumed. In tho House, after tlie tran$ad»; . tioa of some minor business, by special order the remainder of the day was edit* ' ~ sumed in paying appropriate tribute to thjS , -J. memory of the laie Senator Stanford, ef ' 'i! California. At the conclusion of the eulo* jries, as a further mark of respect, the .-...fj House at 4:15 o'clock adjourned. v.'- ^ The Hawaiian resolution Wa# *Kafa the subject of discussion in ttA £en*te j Tuesday. Senator Gray resumed h» | argument in support of President ^ Cleveland's policy and reiterated his charges that the revolutionists were dependent upon the United States minister'"' and the tjpited States forces for support of their movement. The Houis spent the day in debate on the Blstrfi§. seismiorage bill, the principal speeches be*, Ing those by Mr. Culberson of Texas in fa*- vot of the measure and Mr. Coombs of Ne*r. York In opposition. Mr. Warner, a Demo>» '/ crat from New York, who concluded the' debate for the day. announced himself in favor of permitting the Government to cola and issue all kinds of money. j The entire time of the Senate Wednesdajr ' was consumed in Ihe discussion of tllp* House bill to compel the Bock Island Railway Company to stop it" trains at this new towns of Enid and Rjmnd Pond, in Indian Territory. Thf whi*ky tait and the position ot the Woman's Christian. Temperance Union on the question was brought up by Senator Fry<i. Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, present* ed a resolution, which was adopted, call* • lng on the Secretary of the Treasury fee the record In the case of the Investigation of the Boston custom house. Senator Palmer spoke in favo»Qf the Rock Island bill. Senators Cralsr, of Wyoming, and Martin, of Kansas, opposed, while Peffeiv of Kansas, advocated it. The day in this House was given up to the discussion of . - Bland's setsrnlorage bill. The debate wae , , - without incident • * Vice President Stevenson cam© to the rescue of the Oklahoma town-site bill Itt " ^ the Senate Thursday, and by his votfe - broke the tie and passed the bill compel- J ling the Rock Island Railroad Company to ; j stop its trains at the new towns of Enttl and Round Pound. The measure on the I final vote stood 27 to 27, and the Vies .•> President promptly exercised his preroga tive by castln? the deciding vote in favoir of the bllL The debate on the Bland seignorage bill In the House was character* Ized by several strong Democratic speeches against the measure. . The Senate adjourned a few minutes ; past 4 o'clock Friday afternoon after spending the better part of two days con- j jlderlng the nomination of W. H. Peckham * of New York to be Associate Justice of . • the Supreme Court The vote had just been • taken oa a motfen to confirm thcnomU-' nation, and the result. Which was re- jection by a vote of 32 to 41. was knowq. In the House Mr. Bland began his coe*- . . ? clve tactics to compel a vote on tho silver seigniorage bill Most ot the Republicans and the Democratic opponents of the measure started a filibuster with tho in-- J* tentlon of forcing him to produce a quorum J ' of the advocates of the bill to pass it, aotd the entire dav was consumed in roll calls. At 4 o'clock Mr. Bland abandoned any further attempt to secure a quorum* and after having passed a resolution in structing the sergeant-at-arms to tele- graph for absentees a recess was taken un- t*y til 8 o'clock, the evening session being de» - ; voted to the consideration of private pea* • r slon bills. Mr. Kilgore of Texas blockei all proceedings. ' t* J J w '•'X ' Terrible Cruelty. . " \ A cue of fiendish cruelty has discovered at Bollefonte, Pa., and Mfp ton Harman and his wife are now in the county jail. They are charged with inhumanly beating the latter s 10- year-old child. The boy was found ly ing in a bedroom with bread just out of roach. He had been starved and beaten times without number, and hfa emaciated little form was covered with bruises, sores, cuts and burns. Part of his upper lip had been torn away by the father. ... His arms and chest were coverea with cuts, which had been inflictejft with a butcher knife. Across the abdomen was a horrible burn which the father had made with a red-hot poker. One ear had been lopped off with a corn-cutter, dipped in tar and then stuck back on the head. The boy had been deprived of food so long tha* he had gnawed his finger ends to the second joints. He is a hopeless cripple. One of his legs was broken several years ago and, his mother denied nim medical attendance, the fractur® was never reduced. The child was completely covered with filth, and the police who found him were amazed and horrified at the sight. He Will Not Joke Any More. . ' There is one less fool on earth. Fred* erick Leads, of Toledo, Ohio, was * practical joker, but his last joke was a fatal one and he himself was the vi* tim When his wife returned from church Sunday she found him dead in the pantry- He had fastened one end of a string about his neck, its other end being tied to a nail. Then it Is supposed that he sat down to await his wife's return with the intention Ot scaring her. But in some manner his chair Sipped from under him and hit* neck was broken. w- • 1 ^ 't ^ i tf 4-.?* V '"V This slid That YARN is made of leather scraps., C0tX)RAD0 has 3,000,000 acres irri* gated. ' •' * MEXICO'S biggest gold nugget weighed 14$ pounds. Ju THE new bridge over the Missouri - = River at Omaha has been opened. ; ?n, j. A NEW gold field, twenty miles square, has been discovered near Hart* , ^ zel, Colo. THE purer the water the more active it is in corroding and pitting Iron or '"-y steel plates. WHEN oxygen is in a liquid state it Is strongly attracted by a powerful v> electromagnet. ENGLAND makes 100,000,000 needle* a' year, while the ^nited States tutt; "l out over 80,000,000. IT is proposed by a Maine man TFL make hoops for orange boxes out of pfr per. Why not fcr barrels, too? ABOUT 10.000,000 bushels of bitumin* ous coal will be floated down the Ohjk> from Western Pennsylvania on til present flood. \ ' AN electrical engineer : wants Ihrow advertisements by electric ligjbt •Against the falling aheet of water a£ . Niagara Falls. _ .. ' 1st • m