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JgiSfc CK&fjefJ PITTSTON. PA.. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1882. D PRICE TWO CENTO I !#4.S0 Per Annum. VOLUME I., NUMBER 97 D Weekly Established 1850 \ SECOND EDITION Iiavo lots of trouble yet. It was nearly uiorn ing before the convention adjourned. FIRST EDITION. partnicnt is endeavoring to stop the practice of a large number of postmasters using money from the sales of stamps in their c wn business, while reporting to the Department they have stamps on hand. One postmaster ordered §1,300 iu stamps and sold almost immediately $900 Worth, but reported ho had only sold $200. Eventually all this money is turned NO MORE OF "TUG." to 1884. Th« appointment was authorized of a committee of experts and military riflemen to consider the question of rilies, ammunition and organization, of a team for the coming military match in Great Britain in 1883, and Col. John liodiuo was again selected captain of that team. Tho secretary was instructed to notify Sir llenry llalford that the tiguro Fortuna given tho British team was a gift and not a trophy, and was to bo used by them iu whatever manner they saw fit. HE PLAYS FOX A SHABBY TRICK RICE CULTURE IN JAPAN. 5 O'CLOCK I'. M. Primitive ,MC ihoda of Ctillurr Which nr« 3 O'CLOCK. P. 31. Wilson Won't be Back—An English Unknown to Fight Solllrnn—Tlie American Sharpshooters in Council— Vanderbllt's Fast Team. •Hiult tu \ Irht (.Odd llenull*. NEWS BY WIRE. THE VERY LATEST. So:ur account ha« 1 DeCDn heretofore given •in these columns of tho food (or foods) of Ui* Japanese, and of the extraordinary |D *rt which rice, millet, and other grains play in their living, meat being no scarce that tlio food of fish is remarkably common ;vul varied, the masses is still more tlrtn ninetenths vegetable. Koine a.vomit of mode* of rice-cult tiro may be interesting. Japan lm« no farms and farmers— of very few—tliO country being chiefly mountain land, mostly rngged and precipitous; instead, it is IfiiA out into gardens, the mountain side* being terraced up to the tops, so that the general aspect of J.ipau is, nevertheless, ou'ft 6f lii£h culture. Tho farms, if one Rhottld call 'ttieirt so, are only little half-aere patches; the .1 vffc anese farmer is bered'tary ; he is merely the thousandth repetition of the loug ago tenant, and ho works with the same tools and methods as did his em host ancestor, substantial?. The plow is of the scriptural pattern, drawn by a single bnllocL, the animal being led by a rope attached to its nose-ring, horses being few in Japau: aud although improved hand implements of the light and effectivo Americr.n pattern, which arc unequaled anywhere else in the world, may bj introduced ill course of time, the conformation of the country excludes reapers and sncli machines drawn by animal power. It'oe is still the chief article of vegetable food ; it was once the standard of exchangeable values, or the practical money; tax 's were paid in it, and the public treasury watherefore only a big granary of rice. Tho rise lands are without fences, there being no live stock which over to the Government, but postmasters manage to get tho use of the funds for their private business for a greater part of the year. Special agents aro now hunting up such cases. CRIMES AND INCIDENTS OF A DAY -ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES '.The Ftro Bwnrtl—Tlie Pope not Shot at —-The teredivc Deals out the Bon■ors—Wiiteau's Poisoned Boquet -—The Egyptian War, A-c. C.uuo, Oct. 3.—A separate building is being fitted up for tho reception of tho prisoners to be tried by court-martial, including Arabi Pasha and Toulba Pasha. Tho court will sit Arabi's Trials. MR. BLAINE ILL. Two Women Commit Suicide by Brownlug—A Man Crushed in a Belt—A Colored Rascal Lynched — A FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Two l*l)ysician*i Called In — The Crisis Passed oil Sunday Night-The Patient Better. Stock Keport. Large Factory Burned. Reported lDy Carpenter & Bodsier, Rooms 6 and 0 Club House, Franklin street. Wilkcs-Barre. on tho saino premises as that in which the prisoners aro confined, in order to obviate the necessity of conveying them to and fro. Portsmouth, N. H., Oct. 3.—Ex-Secretary Blaine, who lias for some thne lieen the guest of Mrs. J. Bigelow Lawrence at York JI arbor, Maine, was considerably indisposed after rc- To-Morrow's Weather Indications. ClosiiiK Kid N. V. C'll, St.Louis HDt, Wabash pref.. . Oct. 4—3:00 p. m Supposed Suicide by Drowning. For tho Middle Atlantic States, fair weather: winds shifting to east and south; lower barometer; slight changes in tempcra- * do. pref 81J4 O. & M., com... 31/* Permit K.H «W| do. pref Phil. & lieuit'g Sljj H. C£ St. Jo. com 40 Lehigh Valley uu'-t do. pref.. liiU LehlKli Nav Union Pacific... P., 'ntusv. & ti M., K. & T Northern Pac. com ''.,C. A I. (I The lower classes fail to realize the defeat of Arabi Pasha and tho national cause. Amongst the commercial section and the middle class, a bettor feeling prevails. In influential native circles it is not expected that the respect for tho Khedive can be restored. By telegraph to the Gazette. turning on Friday lust from ft visit to this city. On Sfturday, Doctor llawkcs. of York, was called in, and Doctor Wentwortli, of Kittcry, was summoned on the day following. The crisis was considered passed on Sunday night, and yesterday the distinguished patient was more comfortable. This morning lie was much bettor, and it is expected that lie will be out in a few days. Mr. Blaine telegraphed to Mrs. Blaine to-night that he had been suffering from fever, which ho ascribed to malaria, but that ho was better and expected to reach Reading, l'a., Oct. 4.—The body of t'onrad Pattcnweiser has been found in a mill dam at Wernersville. It is thought that lie committed suicido on account of financial difficulties. The body has been a week in tho water. turn. A Hotel Destroyed by Fire. do pref... D. L. ft W... Texas Pacific.. Del. & Hudson N. J. Central.. DoV.i St. Paul, com.. 330U do pref. 4ft *4 D. A Rio G 113 Illinois Central 7l;-| Met'n. Elev 1095-4 121 iOVi 18!) By telegraph to the Gazette. Philadelphia, Oct. 4.—The three-story brick building ou Germantown Avenue, below Rising Sun Lane, owned and occupied as a hotel by August llech, was destroyed by lire, which broke out in some mysterious manner shortly before two o'clock this morning. The loss on the contents is $5,000 ; no insurance. Loss on the building, $0,000; fully insured. West'n Union •a Omaha, com " TUG •» WILSON'S BACKER MAD. Caught in a Belt Pigeon Shooting Tour Pacific Mail.... Erie, com....... do. pref. Manhattan Elev X. Y. Central.. do. pref.. 42'4 Rrek Island — Ohio Central... B.-»U Mobile &O L'ville N'viile The Englishman Will Not Return to Tills nament. Country to Figlit. By telegraph to the Goiette. Sutro Tunnel New York, October 3.—Richard K. Fox was ready to-day to post the second installment of his stake on Tug Wilson for Wilson's prize-light with James Elliott, when ho received the following dispatch from Loudon: Rbadix.O, Pa., Oct. 4.—Isaac K. Robinson, an eniployoo of tlic Reading hardware works, was caught in tho belting at tlio works this morning and instantly kilted. His body was Mich. Central North West, coin. 141*4 Rich Cfc Dan. Robinson 105 ;"D5 Vi do pref Wabash, com.... Hit Rich. & JD. Ter 36 Central Pacific home this wock. August Ifacht, lire-proprietor, and his family consisting of his wife ntnl tww children, together with two domestics, were asleep when the lire hroko out, and narrowly escaped with their lives. They were all lowered by ropes OIL MARKET. horribly mangled Crude oil closed at 94 Oil City, Oct. 4—2:00 p. uj. " Wilson not rotlunin(f. Atkinson, n.ado Mr. Fox mad. " I liavo posted $.100, lie paid, with William McCoy, who is the stakeholder, and now I lose it and Elliott takes it. To-day 1 was to have posted $1,000 more. 1 rather think I won't. I brought Wilson over here, and paid liini $50 a week all the lime hu was hero and helped liiin to make a This The ftandard Will Have No Hivals. A number of sporting men are in tho city to-dav for i1kD purpose wf participating in a tlireo clays' pigeon tournament under the On. City, Oct. —The sale of tho Union By telegraph to the Gazette Philadelphia Markets. Refinery to the Standard Oil Company creates auspices of tho Reading shooting club. jjvm the window FLOUR—' lie market \vt super ; super $2. Pennn family $4.75® $5.00. Pmi.ADEr.PITIA. Oct. t as dull but stwuly .75 ; extra $2.75(Tj,3.uO: much talk. The refinery was a paying institution. It cost two years ago $18,000 and in three months paid for itself, and since then has paid its owners a dividend and paid $75,000 for enlarged facilities from its profits Owing to the fact that the father of one of the proprietors, Brumlred, was a man prominent in railroad circles and that two of the other owners were largo oil producers, the Standard found it impossible to squeeze them out. The success of the Union gave backbono to other outside refiners of the neighborhood and this moral support being withdrawn teen hundred pigeons are to be shot at The Delaware ElecUor.s. !The Report of the Shooting: of the Pope Denied. RYE FLOUR—$1.2; NYIiKAT—The market whs firm and unchanged'; Del.& Penna. red f.l.W@iil.03; do. amber |i.'0@ 1 $4.37. By telegraph to the Gazette range, aud are separated only by wuter. courses, tho water indispensable for rioo. growing having long ago been provided by a systftin of canals aud sluices, the mountain s'reams being tapped and carried through ditches to the plains, and the high-level lakes being similarly drawn down through paved conduits. Work begins in March, the plow making a furrow four inches deep and six wid ■, but hand labor is more generally used, the tool being a clumsy thing shaped like an "A." Water to a depth of several inches is next turned on, and, after several days, tho rooted seed is transplanted in bunches in rows a few inches apart, the sowing and sprouting having previously been done on a smaller piece of ground. After two mouths of generous flooding the plants are allowed to dry, and tha gathering cornea in October. Being first out with an old-style reaping-hook, tho plants are " packed " into the bam, where women aud children beat the grain out by striking tho straw against a row of wooden teeth fareuough apart to catch the rice-lieads but not the straw. The straw is u '.ed somewhat for fodder and largely for thatching and for making into bags. The nee, beaten with sticks and sifted, is run through a husk mill, which consists of two bottomless bamboo baskets tilled with bamboo splints a foot long. The upper basket, resting on the lower, is turned by hand by a handle fastened on one side, and the splints, which are charred on one eud and stand vertically in the two baskets, Iming hel l in place by a cement of mortar, operate as teeth. Time being reckoned the cheapent of commodities, this ru le contrivance answora its purpose. Tho cleaned rice is packed in 120-pouud Straw bags, and is ready for market, but it ha* trD be pounded by hand in a mortar to finally cl*f\r the husks. The aver, ago price of rice iu Japan is $2. 40 to $2. SO per picul of 133D) pouuds. The entire ric« 3rop of the country is about i)l,CHH,7:tU kokn, equivalent to ponuili. valued at $80TD,744,1"D8. This quantity is 117 tiuics the rice crop of this country iu 1S70. The export from Japan is 1), 10".',778 pouuds only, valued at approxim.T»ely.By telegraph to the Gazette. Tins is tho result \Vi».uiN«T0N, Del., OcS. 4.—Complete returns of yesterday's elections show that tho London, Oct 4.—Renter's Telegram from Home says tho report that the Pope was shot at is wholly without foundation. CORN-The market was firmer demand. fair local "Do you know why he does not return? OATS--The market was firmer, with more demand: No. 1 white 45c: No. 2 do. 48c; Mo. 3 do. 40c; No. '-i mixed 34^j@3oc. RYE—Nominal; C8(^,700 "Well, you seo, ho went homo with a nice littlo pile of money and he felt satisfied, lie don't care how much lie embarrasses his friends as long as lie is comfortable. Tho live' thousand dollars that ho got out of his meeting with Sullivan at the Madison Square Garden was a big thing for him and he has probably started a public house on the other side Stato has given a Democratic majority of on the Inspectors' ticket, and a Republican majority of 113 on the Assessors' tickot. Tho Democrats elect a majority of inspector* in all tho counties, thus controlling the canvassing Dealing: Out the Honors. PROVISIONS—The market was firm, with good jobbing demand. LARD—The market was firm. By telegraph to the Gazette BUTTER—The markot was active with choice lotj will sold ; creamery extra 31 @ 32c.; do. good to choice 27(&30c.; Bradford county ii8c; New York extra 2Hc. ("a mo, Oct. 4.—Tho Khedive has decided to have modhIs struck for the British expedi- boards. ECJUS—The market was dull; Penna. 27®2Sc.; Western 20C§*2flc. CHEESE—The market was firmer. PETROLEUM—'The market was firm; refined 8c. tionary fana. TD.crumbles have voted to present swords rfOiouo: to Gen. Wolseley, Admiral Soymdur luiid JVwry Lowe. may provo disastrous to some of them. Tho president of tho Union says tho prices paid fully indemnities them for loss of rovenue, and in that ease the prico paid must bo enormous. By telegraph to the Gazette. The Connecticut Democrats. " Did you have any suspicion that ho would with it." Hahtfouii, Ct., Oct 4.—Tho Democratic WHISKEY—81.22. play you false?" Convontion was organized ltfre to-day, and aftor tho appointment of committees a recoss New York Markets. By telegraph to the Gazette. " When I went to Philadelphia to see him off I begun to have a suspicion. I offered him $1,500 to stay in this country, but he refused and promised faithfully to come back. I put tho money on him, and now you see whero I am. I have never heurd a word from him since ho left. He owes money hero and he'll never coine back. I havo been badly used by Wilson, but I'm going to bring an English unknown to meet Sullivan, lie is s x feet high, weighs 220 pounds and is tweuty:livo years old. He is a bigger man The Tariff in New South Wales. New York, Oct. 4. LATE NEWS. was taken. lBy telegraph to the Gazette. 'Sydney, New South Wales, Oct. 4.—In lParliamcnt a motion favorable to tho revision • of tho tariff in the direction of protection has iljceu negatived by an immense majority. BEEF—Tne market was dull and unchanged; new plain mess new extra do $H.OO. POKK—The market was quiet; held strong; spot new mess. #'JJ.2Tj©$-2.50. LARD—The market was higher and firm; sales 20 tierces ; steam reudered $13.10. The Georgia Election. Gleaned and Condensed from this Horn- By telegraph to tho Gazette. F. D. Tcppan was yesterday elected Prcsi dent of tlie New York Clearing House Association. The year's t ran sac '.ions were $48,- 147-,816,000. lnc'a Papers. Atlanta, G»., Oct. 4 —Tho election is progressing quietly. Tlie election of Mr. Stevens is conceded by all parties. Archbishop Gould's Enemy. Pittgtou Wholesale Markets. .$0.00 6.00® 6.50 1 By telegraph to the Gazette. Flour— patent Flour, straight brands MelboVKKE, Sept. 7.—O'Farrell.whotireilat Archbishop Gould, has been committed for • trial. The Archbishop's injuries are very slight O'Farrell has long cherished bitteri ness against the prelate. Oats, new Corn Tho receipts for tolls on the canals of New York State for the fourth week in September are reported to bo $22,440, against $23,262 for tlie same week last year. A Brute Lynched Cheese, new nutter iirC&28 Ufa 13 By telegraph to tho Gazette. Potatoes new, per bu, (.'hop and Feed Meal Salt, coarse, per sack. C:o®75 1D0 1 so 1.60 than Sullivan. P11O8PKCT, Tenn., Oct. 4.—Henry Halloway (colored), had a hearing yesterday and was found guilty of brutally outraging Miss liodgers on Saturday night. lle was then seized by the crowd and hanged from a bridge n?ar by. TROTTING AT BELMONT. J. W. Johnson, of Sheldon, Ills., who was a candidate for Minister to Sweden, has been arrested for forging notes and mortgages by which he cleared $5,000. Salt, fine, per sack Salt, per bbl Hay 44 Bailed Rye Straw Turnips, per bu.. Onions. " 44 Tomatoes, per basket Cabbage, per hundred, good 3.00©G.00 " 44 fair to middling 0.00© 10 00 1.65 1.60 10.00 18.00 12.00 iBy telegraph to the Gazette. Yellow Fever. Edward Thorne Iteatx His Own Record of 2:19. Pensacola, Fill., Oct. 4.—Tho yellow fever irecord yesterday gives, new eases 55, deaths 5. Philadelphia, October :i.—Two thousanil people attended the first day's races of the fall trotting meeting at Bolmoiit Park yesterday. The weather was fine nr.d the track in excellent condition. Three races were trotted. A 2:40 class, a 2:2:t class and a 2:17 class, Word was rcceivod in New York yesterday that "Tug" Wilson, the pugilist, will not return to this country. James lilliott accordingly takes the $1,000 forfeit money. 00© 1.20 50 Ex President Hayes la New York. THE GUITEAU POISONED BOUQUET* By tolepraph to tlie Gazette Apples, per bu Sweet potatoes Pears, per bbl I't aches, per basket Miss Helen McMaster, the youngest daughter of James A. McMaster, editor of tho Catholic freeman's Journal, New York, was received yesterday morning into tho Carmiltc Convent, Baltimore. Nf.w York, Oct. 4.—Among those prosert at the meeting of tho trustees of the Pcalwly Educational Fund to-day, at the Fifth Ave. Hotel, was Ex-President Hayea. .Report of tlie Chemical Examination- One Jluil Contained Vive Grains of Arsenic. J.i 0fCD ti.l il . ,r.s4#i.2j Washington, Oct. 1.—Prof. Tilden subnutted to the District Attorney the report of Alio clieaiicjil examination of the poisoned ,bouquet pivon Gnitean by Mrs. bcoville the day before the execution. A largo bud contained over live grains of white arsenic. This tho laltor race in which tho important feature of tho day's sport, Kdwin Thorne, Pickard and Santa Clans wero to trot, but the last two having been injured at Boston last weok, Edwin Thorno trotted three heats against time. The purse offered LYSANDER WITH EARLY ROSE. Suicide Under Temporary Abaration. By telegraph to the Gazette. Mr. Yumlerhllt's Appearance Interrupts a The National RiHc Association appointed a committee of experts and military riliemen to consider the question of rities,ammunition and the organization of a team for an international match in (iront Britain in 1883. Bodine was again selected as captain of the team. Veteran's Interesting Talk. Norfolk, Va, Oct. 4.—Mrs. Wm. M. Hannon, wife of a well-known business man of Norfolk, committed suicide last evening by jumping from a steamer whilo on her way home from Baltimore. TemiDorary liberation of mind is tho cause. She leaves several uvus not only sufficient to cause death to any •human being had it boen swallowed, but At the mooting of trotting-horso breeders at Fleetwood Purk on Snturdiiy ii veteran "lie's an was $2,000. An extra purse of $800 was added for Kdwin Thome if ho would beat his record of 2:19. Ho was warmly received when he appeared on the track, for he is reputed to be the best trotter since the days of Goldsmith Moid. Ho was sent away with a running horse at his side, reached *ho quarter post in thirty-four seconds, the lialf mile in ouo minute and seven aud three-quarter sec- horseman said to a San reporter owing probably to ignorance, was so largely 5n excess of a fatal dose that the intent of Alio person who prepared tho llowcrs could jhsvc been defeated lDv emetics. The original unlucky man—Vandcrbilt, Tho London polico now believe the murderers of Cavendish and Burke numbered ten, and are still in Ireland, but unless the aid of an informer can be secured the crime cannot be brought homo to tho guilty persons. llow do von make that out Over 5000 Druggists '•Well, he's ambitious, and he's lucky enough in his stock operations, but with his children. .amount of arsenii greater than found, as trottini stock luck has gone against him. Large Manufactoiy Burned' ithe petals of the liowers failed to retain in a idry state some which adhered when moist. Mr. Corkhill is trying to discover who poisoned tho flowers, and if discovered tho party \Wlll bo held to answer. With all liis scouring tho country for a team v in llic world, lie 1ms not succeeded. tly telegraph to thr Gazette. tu riv onds. and finished the milo in uvo minutes mid nineteen and threes-quarter seconds; but lie left his mato in tlD« roar and therefore was Two hundred and lifty persons prepared to burn at tho stake a negro charged with as- Bhipgf.pokt, Ct., Oct. 4.—The machine room of tho Watson Iron Works caught (Ire last night, and the tiro gained headway so Work t he fastest team. nulling a white girl at Gonzales, Texas ilr. Yanderbilt lias driven Ilia team Aiding Dse in 2:22, said the reporter was rescued by Stato troops. quickly that tho whole factory, a wooden structure, was burned to tlie ground, 'lhe Haines then spread to tho factory of tlie Craighead & Klwell Manufacturing Co., also ol wood, and comprising live or six buildings. These were all destroyed. Loss 011 Watson's "Tlml plied. ' goes for nothing Mr. Yaudcrbilt has bo; the veteran 10 MR. GLADSTONE'S SPEECH. urlit mi}' mim I n t he sccond heat Thome was accompanied by a running mute, and went away grandly, Touching the quarter post in tlio half mile Sketching the D«mocracy. AND The War in Egypt Carried out for Love •s at high prices, and what From Senator Harrison's Speech In Cincinna'l The Democratic party lma been seoliling jiho.it this and about that for twenty years, and then after a thing lias been finally debated and settled in the law and in the minds of the Physicians of Peace shape are they in now? tritied with I sunder in 2:20 to a top wagon, Willium H., who 10 and finished tho inilo in 2:2IV£ London, Oct. 3.—Mr. Gladstone, replying is 'oilhis famous mure Muud S., is fractious .lie third heat Thorne was puahed hard place is about. $20,000, and Craighead's place S3,500. About 225 hands aro thus thrown to an address at Penmuen Maur to day, referred to the question of proceeduro iu the 11 oiiso of Commons, and said the House could and reached tlio quarter in :UA. the half inilo in 1:07 J, and completed tlio mile amid cheers in 2:18}, thus beating his record at Hartford, time, and will not trot fast doubli in any cir (Dcuple, then Democrats eomo along and say, Slow tlml i* all right. You were right about that, but you are wrong about this. After the forests are felled, the clearings made, the land out of work Have Signed or Endorsed the Following Remarkable Document: never meet the tremendous calls upon its eiunstances. Now he li'is just new team, Karly Hose and Aldiue, and Aldiue lit thin where ho wou the $10,000 purse Fall of a Stand- Serious Injury of Occu- ergies unless it could shake off nil timidity and fear of cam phrases and sot itself resolutely lias »;ot a bad quarter crack which will lay her pant* to the task of bringing proceed tire into liar up foi some tunc liy Jove! speak of a man AMERICAN RIFLEMEN'S DEFEAT. drained, the houses built and the pioneers have settled down to enjoy the first fruits of their toil, 1 have seen coming up the dusty By telegraph to the Gazette Messrs. Seabury 8c Johnson, Manufacturing Chemists, 81 Flatt St., How York: Gentlemen: -Tor tho past few years we have sold various brands of Porous Plasters. Physicians and the Publio prefer Benson's Capcine Porous Plaster to oil mony with the calls upon it. lie thanked tlod for the success of the British in l'*gypt. lie thanked the army and its skillful general. The war proved the army was composed of men as brave as their forefathers. lie is sure to appear! Attributed to Inferior Gunw anil Insuftl- St. Lot'is, Oct. 1 As a procession was Mr. Vaudorbilt just then il'ove up to the cient Practice at Long llangc road on a sunny day a wagon. It is being drawn by a pair of horses whose discouraging cars hang down to blind their oyes. Their lean necks rattle in their collars, and their C:timd gave way, precipitating a number of spectators to the ground, twenty feet below. down Washington avenue last night, a club house, and when the crowd saw that he had lviilv lioso and Lysander hitched to Xew York, Oct .—Tho directors of the Everywhere ;reat surprise, everybody National Hi Ho Association mot to-day and A dozen persons, including men, women and children, were more or less hurt, soino having the war had been carried out from love of peace, lie trusted Kgypt would again be liap- waitt to know what is the matter with passed a resolution enacting that futuro winners of the Wimbledon cup will bo required to give $5110 bonds for its safe-keeping. Colo- others. We consider them ono of the very Aldiii' hips stand up like mountains on a rugged plain. The harness is made out of rope e ds their limbs broken. No one was killed. fow reliable household remedies worthy of confidence. They aro superior to all other Porouo Plasters or Liniments for pv and prosperous. The speech was received with prolonged cheers. Weakness in the 'Jil Market, uel !Iodine, captain of the late team in tho ill and the wheels of tho wagon Wabble like nowlegged men in a walking match, hooking Democratic Convention at Hazleton 1 'i rrsi: A tight"money inarkc Lernnlional military match, mado a report, in Tho Fourth District Democratic conven Union of German Liberals, •eiida: ;cd, among otiier things, that the from under a tattered-covered wagon i re a tiou met at llazletou yesterday were six candidates, and tho attempt of the There external use. Beulix, Oct. .—An important resolution cxel The 11 lark -t ypened weak futuro captain of tho team bo relieved of the man and two tallow-faced women. In tho rear is a cow that needs luilk given her rather than giving it, a ml last of all, a pair of yaller dogs that would disgrace a tanyard. laughter.] This team is tho Democratic pirty. [Laughter.] Thcso people endorso tho work tho pioneers have done, and aro willing to share tho lienedu of other people's work. They aro, doubtless, honest in this, but it would have been much greater to their credit if they had helped do tlDe work Mint brought these results about rival aspirants to control tho orjani/atioi Benson's Capcine Plaster iB a genuine was adopted at tho Clotha yesterday by tho laadors of the throe great sectious of tho Liberal party. The national Liberals joined the ig tho dav declined U duly of choosing tho men to form it, and referred to tlio fact that tho gins used by the British were superior to those used by tho Americans, lie drew two deductions from the recent defeat of his team, one that the gun they used was defective and the other resulted in a general tow. A rump con rarmaceutical product, of tho highest order of merit, and so recognised by physicians and druggists. ire tl .Sales were ventiou was set up by a number who withdrew, but they finally got together again, and after a struggle which continued all day, they effected an organization at •! p. m.. by a little »lmVp practice on the part of tho friend i of .las. A. Sweeney, of Kbervale. The committee on credentials did not report until n.V-night. Sweeney sueceedtd in making tl.e nomination on the ninth ballot, but lio will Secessionists and Progressists in declaring tl.at Lilierals should nnito in a moro closely organized association agaiust all other political parties, without prejudice to minor differences separating the party. largo and tho excitement gives no signs of When other remedies toll to* *■ Bencon's CapoiaD Plaster. HUH IT IX that our best military shots needed much moro experience at long range. In viovv of the difficulty or getting the proper gun and tho short tuuo our men had to practice, he suggested tho advisibility of postponing the return match Jacob Loeekman, '274 Clinton Street, liulfalo, N. Y.. says ho has been using Thom as' Ivci.ec- THIf Oil. for rheumatism, llo had sueh a lame back that he could do nothing; but one bottle You will bi disappointed if you use cheap Piasters, T.inimmiU, Pads or Electrical Magnetic toys. Postmasters Using Government Money- li SHUE AT ISSr. Prtoe A HEAD'S Mettle/ id COHN »d BUNION PLASTEi. Washington, Oc'. 3, —Tho Posloflico Do- entirely cured* 1 nn
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Volume 1 Number 97, October 04, 1882 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 97 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1882-10-04 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Volume 1 Number 97, October 04, 1882 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 97 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1882-10-04 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18821004_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | JgiSfc CK&fjefJ PITTSTON. PA.. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1882. D PRICE TWO CENTO I !#4.S0 Per Annum. VOLUME I., NUMBER 97 D Weekly Established 1850 \ SECOND EDITION Iiavo lots of trouble yet. It was nearly uiorn ing before the convention adjourned. FIRST EDITION. partnicnt is endeavoring to stop the practice of a large number of postmasters using money from the sales of stamps in their c wn business, while reporting to the Department they have stamps on hand. One postmaster ordered §1,300 iu stamps and sold almost immediately $900 Worth, but reported ho had only sold $200. Eventually all this money is turned NO MORE OF "TUG." to 1884. Th« appointment was authorized of a committee of experts and military riflemen to consider the question of rilies, ammunition and organization, of a team for the coming military match in Great Britain in 1883, and Col. John liodiuo was again selected captain of that team. Tho secretary was instructed to notify Sir llenry llalford that the tiguro Fortuna given tho British team was a gift and not a trophy, and was to bo used by them iu whatever manner they saw fit. HE PLAYS FOX A SHABBY TRICK RICE CULTURE IN JAPAN. 5 O'CLOCK I'. M. Primitive ,MC ihoda of Ctillurr Which nr« 3 O'CLOCK. P. 31. Wilson Won't be Back—An English Unknown to Fight Solllrnn—Tlie American Sharpshooters in Council— Vanderbllt's Fast Team. •Hiult tu \ Irht (.Odd llenull*. NEWS BY WIRE. THE VERY LATEST. So:ur account ha« 1 DeCDn heretofore given •in these columns of tho food (or foods) of Ui* Japanese, and of the extraordinary |D *rt which rice, millet, and other grains play in their living, meat being no scarce that tlio food of fish is remarkably common ;vul varied, the masses is still more tlrtn ninetenths vegetable. Koine a.vomit of mode* of rice-cult tiro may be interesting. Japan lm« no farms and farmers— of very few—tliO country being chiefly mountain land, mostly rngged and precipitous; instead, it is IfiiA out into gardens, the mountain side* being terraced up to the tops, so that the general aspect of J.ipau is, nevertheless, ou'ft 6f lii£h culture. Tho farms, if one Rhottld call 'ttieirt so, are only little half-aere patches; the .1 vffc anese farmer is bered'tary ; he is merely the thousandth repetition of the loug ago tenant, and ho works with the same tools and methods as did his em host ancestor, substantial?. The plow is of the scriptural pattern, drawn by a single bnllocL, the animal being led by a rope attached to its nose-ring, horses being few in Japau: aud although improved hand implements of the light and effectivo Americr.n pattern, which arc unequaled anywhere else in the world, may bj introduced ill course of time, the conformation of the country excludes reapers and sncli machines drawn by animal power. It'oe is still the chief article of vegetable food ; it was once the standard of exchangeable values, or the practical money; tax 's were paid in it, and the public treasury watherefore only a big granary of rice. Tho rise lands are without fences, there being no live stock which over to the Government, but postmasters manage to get tho use of the funds for their private business for a greater part of the year. Special agents aro now hunting up such cases. CRIMES AND INCIDENTS OF A DAY -ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES '.The Ftro Bwnrtl—Tlie Pope not Shot at —-The teredivc Deals out the Bon■ors—Wiiteau's Poisoned Boquet -—The Egyptian War, A-c. C.uuo, Oct. 3.—A separate building is being fitted up for tho reception of tho prisoners to be tried by court-martial, including Arabi Pasha and Toulba Pasha. Tho court will sit Arabi's Trials. MR. BLAINE ILL. Two Women Commit Suicide by Brownlug—A Man Crushed in a Belt—A Colored Rascal Lynched — A FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Two l*l)ysician*i Called In — The Crisis Passed oil Sunday Night-The Patient Better. Stock Keport. Large Factory Burned. Reported lDy Carpenter & Bodsier, Rooms 6 and 0 Club House, Franklin street. Wilkcs-Barre. on tho saino premises as that in which the prisoners aro confined, in order to obviate the necessity of conveying them to and fro. Portsmouth, N. H., Oct. 3.—Ex-Secretary Blaine, who lias for some thne lieen the guest of Mrs. J. Bigelow Lawrence at York JI arbor, Maine, was considerably indisposed after rc- To-Morrow's Weather Indications. ClosiiiK Kid N. V. C'll, St.Louis HDt, Wabash pref.. . Oct. 4—3:00 p. m Supposed Suicide by Drowning. For tho Middle Atlantic States, fair weather: winds shifting to east and south; lower barometer; slight changes in tempcra- * do. pref 81J4 O. & M., com... 31/* Permit K.H «W| do. pref Phil. & lieuit'g Sljj H. C£ St. Jo. com 40 Lehigh Valley uu'-t do. pref.. liiU LehlKli Nav Union Pacific... P., 'ntusv. & ti M., K. & T Northern Pac. com ''.,C. A I. (I The lower classes fail to realize the defeat of Arabi Pasha and tho national cause. Amongst the commercial section and the middle class, a bettor feeling prevails. In influential native circles it is not expected that the respect for tho Khedive can be restored. By telegraph to the Gazette. turning on Friday lust from ft visit to this city. On Sfturday, Doctor llawkcs. of York, was called in, and Doctor Wentwortli, of Kittcry, was summoned on the day following. The crisis was considered passed on Sunday night, and yesterday the distinguished patient was more comfortable. This morning lie was much bettor, and it is expected that lie will be out in a few days. Mr. Blaine telegraphed to Mrs. Blaine to-night that he had been suffering from fever, which ho ascribed to malaria, but that ho was better and expected to reach Reading, l'a., Oct. 4.—The body of t'onrad Pattcnweiser has been found in a mill dam at Wernersville. It is thought that lie committed suicido on account of financial difficulties. The body has been a week in tho water. turn. A Hotel Destroyed by Fire. do pref... D. L. ft W... Texas Pacific.. Del. & Hudson N. J. Central.. DoV.i St. Paul, com.. 330U do pref. 4ft *4 D. A Rio G 113 Illinois Central 7l;-| Met'n. Elev 1095-4 121 iOVi 18!) By telegraph to the Gazette. Philadelphia, Oct. 4.—The three-story brick building ou Germantown Avenue, below Rising Sun Lane, owned and occupied as a hotel by August llech, was destroyed by lire, which broke out in some mysterious manner shortly before two o'clock this morning. The loss on the contents is $5,000 ; no insurance. Loss on the building, $0,000; fully insured. West'n Union •a Omaha, com " TUG •» WILSON'S BACKER MAD. Caught in a Belt Pigeon Shooting Tour Pacific Mail.... Erie, com....... do. pref. Manhattan Elev X. Y. Central.. do. pref.. 42'4 Rrek Island — Ohio Central... B.-»U Mobile &O L'ville N'viile The Englishman Will Not Return to Tills nament. Country to Figlit. By telegraph to the Goiette. Sutro Tunnel New York, October 3.—Richard K. Fox was ready to-day to post the second installment of his stake on Tug Wilson for Wilson's prize-light with James Elliott, when ho received the following dispatch from Loudon: Rbadix.O, Pa., Oct. 4.—Isaac K. Robinson, an eniployoo of tlic Reading hardware works, was caught in tho belting at tlio works this morning and instantly kilted. His body was Mich. Central North West, coin. 141*4 Rich Cfc Dan. Robinson 105 ;"D5 Vi do pref Wabash, com.... Hit Rich. & JD. Ter 36 Central Pacific home this wock. August Ifacht, lire-proprietor, and his family consisting of his wife ntnl tww children, together with two domestics, were asleep when the lire hroko out, and narrowly escaped with their lives. They were all lowered by ropes OIL MARKET. horribly mangled Crude oil closed at 94 Oil City, Oct. 4—2:00 p. uj. " Wilson not rotlunin(f. Atkinson, n.ado Mr. Fox mad. " I liavo posted $.100, lie paid, with William McCoy, who is the stakeholder, and now I lose it and Elliott takes it. To-day 1 was to have posted $1,000 more. 1 rather think I won't. I brought Wilson over here, and paid liini $50 a week all the lime hu was hero and helped liiin to make a This The ftandard Will Have No Hivals. A number of sporting men are in tho city to-dav for i1kD purpose wf participating in a tlireo clays' pigeon tournament under the On. City, Oct. —The sale of tho Union By telegraph to the Gazette Philadelphia Markets. Refinery to the Standard Oil Company creates auspices of tho Reading shooting club. jjvm the window FLOUR—' lie market \vt super ; super $2. Pennn family $4.75® $5.00. Pmi.ADEr.PITIA. Oct. t as dull but stwuly .75 ; extra $2.75(Tj,3.uO: much talk. The refinery was a paying institution. It cost two years ago $18,000 and in three months paid for itself, and since then has paid its owners a dividend and paid $75,000 for enlarged facilities from its profits Owing to the fact that the father of one of the proprietors, Brumlred, was a man prominent in railroad circles and that two of the other owners were largo oil producers, the Standard found it impossible to squeeze them out. The success of the Union gave backbono to other outside refiners of the neighborhood and this moral support being withdrawn teen hundred pigeons are to be shot at The Delaware ElecUor.s. !The Report of the Shooting: of the Pope Denied. RYE FLOUR—$1.2; NYIiKAT—The market whs firm and unchanged'; Del.& Penna. red f.l.W@iil.03; do. amber |i.'0@ 1 $4.37. By telegraph to the Gazette range, aud are separated only by wuter. courses, tho water indispensable for rioo. growing having long ago been provided by a systftin of canals aud sluices, the mountain s'reams being tapped and carried through ditches to the plains, and the high-level lakes being similarly drawn down through paved conduits. Work begins in March, the plow making a furrow four inches deep and six wid ■, but hand labor is more generally used, the tool being a clumsy thing shaped like an "A." Water to a depth of several inches is next turned on, and, after several days, tho rooted seed is transplanted in bunches in rows a few inches apart, the sowing and sprouting having previously been done on a smaller piece of ground. After two mouths of generous flooding the plants are allowed to dry, and tha gathering cornea in October. Being first out with an old-style reaping-hook, tho plants are " packed " into the bam, where women aud children beat the grain out by striking tho straw against a row of wooden teeth fareuough apart to catch the rice-lieads but not the straw. The straw is u '.ed somewhat for fodder and largely for thatching and for making into bags. The nee, beaten with sticks and sifted, is run through a husk mill, which consists of two bottomless bamboo baskets tilled with bamboo splints a foot long. The upper basket, resting on the lower, is turned by hand by a handle fastened on one side, and the splints, which are charred on one eud and stand vertically in the two baskets, Iming hel l in place by a cement of mortar, operate as teeth. Time being reckoned the cheapent of commodities, this ru le contrivance answora its purpose. Tho cleaned rice is packed in 120-pouud Straw bags, and is ready for market, but it ha* trD be pounded by hand in a mortar to finally cl*f\r the husks. The aver, ago price of rice iu Japan is $2. 40 to $2. SO per picul of 133D) pouuds. The entire ric« 3rop of the country is about i)l,CHH,7:tU kokn, equivalent to ponuili. valued at $80TD,744,1"D8. This quantity is 117 tiuics the rice crop of this country iu 1S70. The export from Japan is 1), 10".',778 pouuds only, valued at approxim.T»ely.By telegraph to the Gazette. Tins is tho result \Vi».uiN«T0N, Del., OcS. 4.—Complete returns of yesterday's elections show that tho London, Oct 4.—Renter's Telegram from Home says tho report that the Pope was shot at is wholly without foundation. CORN-The market was firmer demand. fair local "Do you know why he does not return? OATS--The market was firmer, with more demand: No. 1 white 45c: No. 2 do. 48c; Mo. 3 do. 40c; No. '-i mixed 34^j@3oc. RYE—Nominal; C8(^,700 "Well, you seo, ho went homo with a nice littlo pile of money and he felt satisfied, lie don't care how much lie embarrasses his friends as long as lie is comfortable. Tho live' thousand dollars that ho got out of his meeting with Sullivan at the Madison Square Garden was a big thing for him and he has probably started a public house on the other side Stato has given a Democratic majority of on the Inspectors' ticket, and a Republican majority of 113 on the Assessors' tickot. Tho Democrats elect a majority of inspector* in all tho counties, thus controlling the canvassing Dealing: Out the Honors. PROVISIONS—The market was firm, with good jobbing demand. LARD—The market was firm. By telegraph to the Gazette BUTTER—The markot was active with choice lotj will sold ; creamery extra 31 @ 32c.; do. good to choice 27(&30c.; Bradford county ii8c; New York extra 2Hc. ("a mo, Oct. 4.—Tho Khedive has decided to have modhIs struck for the British expedi- boards. ECJUS—The market was dull; Penna. 27®2Sc.; Western 20C§*2flc. CHEESE—The market was firmer. PETROLEUM—'The market was firm; refined 8c. tionary fana. TD.crumbles have voted to present swords rfOiouo: to Gen. Wolseley, Admiral Soymdur luiid JVwry Lowe. may provo disastrous to some of them. Tho president of tho Union says tho prices paid fully indemnities them for loss of rovenue, and in that ease the prico paid must bo enormous. By telegraph to the Gazette. The Connecticut Democrats. " Did you have any suspicion that ho would with it." Hahtfouii, Ct., Oct 4.—Tho Democratic WHISKEY—81.22. play you false?" Convontion was organized ltfre to-day, and aftor tho appointment of committees a recoss New York Markets. By telegraph to the Gazette. " When I went to Philadelphia to see him off I begun to have a suspicion. I offered him $1,500 to stay in this country, but he refused and promised faithfully to come back. I put tho money on him, and now you see whero I am. I have never heurd a word from him since ho left. He owes money hero and he'll never coine back. I havo been badly used by Wilson, but I'm going to bring an English unknown to meet Sullivan, lie is s x feet high, weighs 220 pounds and is tweuty:livo years old. He is a bigger man The Tariff in New South Wales. New York, Oct. 4. LATE NEWS. was taken. lBy telegraph to the Gazette. 'Sydney, New South Wales, Oct. 4.—In lParliamcnt a motion favorable to tho revision • of tho tariff in the direction of protection has iljceu negatived by an immense majority. BEEF—Tne market was dull and unchanged; new plain mess new extra do $H.OO. POKK—The market was quiet; held strong; spot new mess. #'JJ.2Tj©$-2.50. LARD—The market was higher and firm; sales 20 tierces ; steam reudered $13.10. The Georgia Election. Gleaned and Condensed from this Horn- By telegraph to tho Gazette. F. D. Tcppan was yesterday elected Prcsi dent of tlie New York Clearing House Association. The year's t ran sac '.ions were $48,- 147-,816,000. lnc'a Papers. Atlanta, G»., Oct. 4 —Tho election is progressing quietly. Tlie election of Mr. Stevens is conceded by all parties. Archbishop Gould's Enemy. Pittgtou Wholesale Markets. .$0.00 6.00® 6.50 1 By telegraph to the Gazette. Flour— patent Flour, straight brands MelboVKKE, Sept. 7.—O'Farrell.whotireilat Archbishop Gould, has been committed for • trial. The Archbishop's injuries are very slight O'Farrell has long cherished bitteri ness against the prelate. Oats, new Corn Tho receipts for tolls on the canals of New York State for the fourth week in September are reported to bo $22,440, against $23,262 for tlie same week last year. A Brute Lynched Cheese, new nutter iirC&28 Ufa 13 By telegraph to tho Gazette. Potatoes new, per bu, (.'hop and Feed Meal Salt, coarse, per sack. C:o®75 1D0 1 so 1.60 than Sullivan. P11O8PKCT, Tenn., Oct. 4.—Henry Halloway (colored), had a hearing yesterday and was found guilty of brutally outraging Miss liodgers on Saturday night. lle was then seized by the crowd and hanged from a bridge n?ar by. TROTTING AT BELMONT. J. W. Johnson, of Sheldon, Ills., who was a candidate for Minister to Sweden, has been arrested for forging notes and mortgages by which he cleared $5,000. Salt, fine, per sack Salt, per bbl Hay 44 Bailed Rye Straw Turnips, per bu.. Onions. " 44 Tomatoes, per basket Cabbage, per hundred, good 3.00©G.00 " 44 fair to middling 0.00© 10 00 1.65 1.60 10.00 18.00 12.00 iBy telegraph to the Gazette. Yellow Fever. Edward Thorne Iteatx His Own Record of 2:19. Pensacola, Fill., Oct. 4.—Tho yellow fever irecord yesterday gives, new eases 55, deaths 5. Philadelphia, October :i.—Two thousanil people attended the first day's races of the fall trotting meeting at Bolmoiit Park yesterday. The weather was fine nr.d the track in excellent condition. Three races were trotted. A 2:40 class, a 2:2:t class and a 2:17 class, Word was rcceivod in New York yesterday that "Tug" Wilson, the pugilist, will not return to this country. James lilliott accordingly takes the $1,000 forfeit money. 00© 1.20 50 Ex President Hayes la New York. THE GUITEAU POISONED BOUQUET* By tolepraph to tlie Gazette Apples, per bu Sweet potatoes Pears, per bbl I't aches, per basket Miss Helen McMaster, the youngest daughter of James A. McMaster, editor of tho Catholic freeman's Journal, New York, was received yesterday morning into tho Carmiltc Convent, Baltimore. Nf.w York, Oct. 4.—Among those prosert at the meeting of tho trustees of the Pcalwly Educational Fund to-day, at the Fifth Ave. Hotel, was Ex-President Hayea. .Report of tlie Chemical Examination- One Jluil Contained Vive Grains of Arsenic. J.i 0fCD ti.l il . ,r.s4#i.2j Washington, Oct. 1.—Prof. Tilden subnutted to the District Attorney the report of Alio clieaiicjil examination of the poisoned ,bouquet pivon Gnitean by Mrs. bcoville the day before the execution. A largo bud contained over live grains of white arsenic. This tho laltor race in which tho important feature of tho day's sport, Kdwin Thorne, Pickard and Santa Clans wero to trot, but the last two having been injured at Boston last weok, Edwin Thorno trotted three heats against time. The purse offered LYSANDER WITH EARLY ROSE. Suicide Under Temporary Abaration. By telegraph to the Gazette. Mr. Yumlerhllt's Appearance Interrupts a The National RiHc Association appointed a committee of experts and military riliemen to consider the question of rities,ammunition and the organization of a team for an international match in (iront Britain in 1883. Bodine was again selected as captain of the team. Veteran's Interesting Talk. Norfolk, Va, Oct. 4.—Mrs. Wm. M. Hannon, wife of a well-known business man of Norfolk, committed suicide last evening by jumping from a steamer whilo on her way home from Baltimore. TemiDorary liberation of mind is tho cause. She leaves several uvus not only sufficient to cause death to any •human being had it boen swallowed, but At the mooting of trotting-horso breeders at Fleetwood Purk on Snturdiiy ii veteran "lie's an was $2,000. An extra purse of $800 was added for Kdwin Thome if ho would beat his record of 2:19. Ho was warmly received when he appeared on the track, for he is reputed to be the best trotter since the days of Goldsmith Moid. Ho was sent away with a running horse at his side, reached *ho quarter post in thirty-four seconds, the lialf mile in ouo minute and seven aud three-quarter sec- horseman said to a San reporter owing probably to ignorance, was so largely 5n excess of a fatal dose that the intent of Alio person who prepared tho llowcrs could jhsvc been defeated lDv emetics. The original unlucky man—Vandcrbilt, Tho London polico now believe the murderers of Cavendish and Burke numbered ten, and are still in Ireland, but unless the aid of an informer can be secured the crime cannot be brought homo to tho guilty persons. llow do von make that out Over 5000 Druggists '•Well, he's ambitious, and he's lucky enough in his stock operations, but with his children. .amount of arsenii greater than found, as trottini stock luck has gone against him. Large Manufactoiy Burned' ithe petals of the liowers failed to retain in a idry state some which adhered when moist. Mr. Corkhill is trying to discover who poisoned tho flowers, and if discovered tho party \Wlll bo held to answer. With all liis scouring tho country for a team v in llic world, lie 1ms not succeeded. tly telegraph to thr Gazette. tu riv onds. and finished the milo in uvo minutes mid nineteen and threes-quarter seconds; but lie left his mato in tlD« roar and therefore was Two hundred and lifty persons prepared to burn at tho stake a negro charged with as- Bhipgf.pokt, Ct., Oct. 4.—The machine room of tho Watson Iron Works caught (Ire last night, and the tiro gained headway so Work t he fastest team. nulling a white girl at Gonzales, Texas ilr. Yanderbilt lias driven Ilia team Aiding Dse in 2:22, said the reporter was rescued by Stato troops. quickly that tho whole factory, a wooden structure, was burned to tlie ground, 'lhe Haines then spread to tho factory of tlie Craighead & Klwell Manufacturing Co., also ol wood, and comprising live or six buildings. These were all destroyed. Loss 011 Watson's "Tlml plied. ' goes for nothing Mr. Yaudcrbilt has bo; the veteran 10 MR. GLADSTONE'S SPEECH. urlit mi}' mim I n t he sccond heat Thome was accompanied by a running mute, and went away grandly, Touching the quarter post in tlio half mile Sketching the D«mocracy. AND The War in Egypt Carried out for Love •s at high prices, and what From Senator Harrison's Speech In Cincinna'l The Democratic party lma been seoliling jiho.it this and about that for twenty years, and then after a thing lias been finally debated and settled in the law and in the minds of the Physicians of Peace shape are they in now? tritied with I sunder in 2:20 to a top wagon, Willium H., who 10 and finished tho inilo in 2:2IV£ London, Oct. 3.—Mr. Gladstone, replying is 'oilhis famous mure Muud S., is fractious .lie third heat Thorne was puahed hard place is about. $20,000, and Craighead's place S3,500. About 225 hands aro thus thrown to an address at Penmuen Maur to day, referred to the question of proceeduro iu the 11 oiiso of Commons, and said the House could and reached tlio quarter in :UA. the half inilo in 1:07 J, and completed tlio mile amid cheers in 2:18}, thus beating his record at Hartford, time, and will not trot fast doubli in any cir (Dcuple, then Democrats eomo along and say, Slow tlml i* all right. You were right about that, but you are wrong about this. After the forests are felled, the clearings made, the land out of work Have Signed or Endorsed the Following Remarkable Document: never meet the tremendous calls upon its eiunstances. Now he li'is just new team, Karly Hose and Aldiue, and Aldiue lit thin where ho wou the $10,000 purse Fall of a Stand- Serious Injury of Occu- ergies unless it could shake off nil timidity and fear of cam phrases and sot itself resolutely lias »;ot a bad quarter crack which will lay her pant* to the task of bringing proceed tire into liar up foi some tunc liy Jove! speak of a man AMERICAN RIFLEMEN'S DEFEAT. drained, the houses built and the pioneers have settled down to enjoy the first fruits of their toil, 1 have seen coming up the dusty By telegraph to the Gazette Messrs. Seabury 8c Johnson, Manufacturing Chemists, 81 Flatt St., How York: Gentlemen: -Tor tho past few years we have sold various brands of Porous Plasters. Physicians and the Publio prefer Benson's Capcine Porous Plaster to oil mony with the calls upon it. lie thanked tlod for the success of the British in l'*gypt. lie thanked the army and its skillful general. The war proved the army was composed of men as brave as their forefathers. lie is sure to appear! Attributed to Inferior Gunw anil Insuftl- St. Lot'is, Oct. 1 As a procession was Mr. Vaudorbilt just then il'ove up to the cient Practice at Long llangc road on a sunny day a wagon. It is being drawn by a pair of horses whose discouraging cars hang down to blind their oyes. Their lean necks rattle in their collars, and their C:timd gave way, precipitating a number of spectators to the ground, twenty feet below. down Washington avenue last night, a club house, and when the crowd saw that he had lviilv lioso and Lysander hitched to Xew York, Oct .—Tho directors of the Everywhere ;reat surprise, everybody National Hi Ho Association mot to-day and A dozen persons, including men, women and children, were more or less hurt, soino having the war had been carried out from love of peace, lie trusted Kgypt would again be liap- waitt to know what is the matter with passed a resolution enacting that futuro winners of the Wimbledon cup will bo required to give $5110 bonds for its safe-keeping. Colo- others. We consider them ono of the very Aldiii' hips stand up like mountains on a rugged plain. The harness is made out of rope e ds their limbs broken. No one was killed. fow reliable household remedies worthy of confidence. They aro superior to all other Porouo Plasters or Liniments for pv and prosperous. The speech was received with prolonged cheers. Weakness in the 'Jil Market, uel !Iodine, captain of the late team in tho ill and the wheels of tho wagon Wabble like nowlegged men in a walking match, hooking Democratic Convention at Hazleton 1 'i rrsi: A tight"money inarkc Lernnlional military match, mado a report, in Tho Fourth District Democratic conven Union of German Liberals, •eiida: ;cd, among otiier things, that the from under a tattered-covered wagon i re a tiou met at llazletou yesterday were six candidates, and tho attempt of the There external use. Beulix, Oct. .—An important resolution cxel The 11 lark -t ypened weak futuro captain of tho team bo relieved of the man and two tallow-faced women. In tho rear is a cow that needs luilk given her rather than giving it, a ml last of all, a pair of yaller dogs that would disgrace a tanyard. laughter.] This team is tho Democratic pirty. [Laughter.] Thcso people endorso tho work tho pioneers have done, and aro willing to share tho lienedu of other people's work. They aro, doubtless, honest in this, but it would have been much greater to their credit if they had helped do tlDe work Mint brought these results about rival aspirants to control tho orjani/atioi Benson's Capcine Plaster iB a genuine was adopted at tho Clotha yesterday by tho laadors of the throe great sectious of tho Liberal party. The national Liberals joined the ig tho dav declined U duly of choosing tho men to form it, and referred to tlio fact that tho gins used by the British were superior to those used by tho Americans, lie drew two deductions from the recent defeat of his team, one that the gun they used was defective and the other resulted in a general tow. A rump con rarmaceutical product, of tho highest order of merit, and so recognised by physicians and druggists. ire tl .Sales were ventiou was set up by a number who withdrew, but they finally got together again, and after a struggle which continued all day, they effected an organization at •! p. m.. by a little »lmVp practice on the part of tho friend i of .las. A. Sweeney, of Kbervale. The committee on credentials did not report until n.V-night. Sweeney sueceedtd in making tl.e nomination on the ninth ballot, but lio will Secessionists and Progressists in declaring tl.at Lilierals should nnito in a moro closely organized association agaiust all other political parties, without prejudice to minor differences separating the party. largo and tho excitement gives no signs of When other remedies toll to* *■ Bencon's CapoiaD Plaster. HUH IT IX that our best military shots needed much moro experience at long range. In viovv of the difficulty or getting the proper gun and tho short tuuo our men had to practice, he suggested tho advisibility of postponing the return match Jacob Loeekman, '274 Clinton Street, liulfalo, N. Y.. says ho has been using Thom as' Ivci.ec- THIf Oil. for rheumatism, llo had sueh a lame back that he could do nothing; but one bottle You will bi disappointed if you use cheap Piasters, T.inimmiU, Pads or Electrical Magnetic toys. Postmasters Using Government Money- li SHUE AT ISSr. Prtoe A HEAD'S Mettle/ id COHN »d BUNION PLASTEi. Washington, Oc'. 3, —Tho Posloflico Do- entirely cured* 1 nn |
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