The American union. (West Bowersville, Ga.) 1885-1???, August 07, 1886, Image 1

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.American n*,< Vs i In ion. f BOWKRg, Proprietor. ~'EBS. Associate Editor <*r Publisher. THRILLING LEAP. A rOUXG HAN JUMPS FROM THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE, Plunging Headlong Down ISO keel Into the East River* “Stcve v Brcd : e, tin ex-nowaftcy and pe-les trian, jumped from the Brco.dyn Bridge Friday afternoon, tha 2’d, and was taken from the water uninjured. Shortly before ! o’clock an open truck containing three men drove upon the New Yelk roadway of th: bridge and paired fella pUliceman stafoned there unnoticed. The truck waa about 250 feet beyoad that War, at a paint where the bridge is fully 120 feet above tho watar.when Brodie jumped to tha roadway nn.1 ran to¬ ward tha side of the bridge. Only an instant did ho stop to th:ow o f his ccat, and clad, in a red flannel shirt with boots, hat and trousers on, ho climt ei over tha low iron lattice work which srrves to protect the roadway from the dizzy depth below, and with the agi ity of a (at, t lambsred down and hung by his arms from one of the iron girders dri which run along below tho bridge. I he ver of the tru :k and a policeman rushed to the spot The/ were too late to accomplish cohered anything. The jpolicenmu wildly had a printer named Waterman, who •M accompanied hat Brodfe in the tiuck. are you grabbing me for?” cried Waterman. “There's the man who’s trying to this jump,” «nd he pointed to Brodie, who by time Was climbing-down the railing. The poiicsfrau made a dash'.Ur bim, but to catch Brodie it would have bcea nece-sevy to fol¬ low- him, and for this the officer ' had no stomach. as “My he leaned God, he's going the to railing, drop!” wildlv he exclaimed, over brand¬ ishing below his arms toward the man who hung him. Nothing could have been nearer the truth. Brodie hung for a second or two from the girder, until he was sure of his bal an e: then his body shot downward, and, whether for life or cleat ft, the leap was made. A. le w °f Brodie’s friendy were in the secret xrf his intended leap. Three of them—Paul Butler, “Jerry” Kane and “Tim” Brennan y» T ere haul in a rowboat below the bridge, waiting to him out. About thirty other persons stood on one of the piers. They had been watching last they for Brodie’s appearance, and when at saw him suspended in the air far above ;heir head.,they brcaVand —d. Until he was within fiftvfeet of tho water, the foolhardy man frll straight as an arrow, his arms extended above his head. .Ihea ns if by a great effort, like amau who is .’raiiihg Ins himself upon a horizontal bar,he drew arms downward until his clenched fist? “ n « level with his breast. His legs, wbiSi had until now remained straight and stiff; 1 arted and bent at the knees, and he struck rhe water in the position of a man who is seemed gathering impossible his forces to stort tt?* in a race, lt could that in ■ tion - - L water. successfully The-two sustain thl fSSZnijf 01 three 1 w i w wai w eternity!. safety, Yet be came to ibe surfact-iu with an extremely red face, it ls true, but apparently uninjured, and blowing the water from his mouth with a long breath, he edly styuck out to swim on his back as unconcern¬ as if ho had only dived from one of the piers. His friends. in the boat immediately pulled and toward him. He caught sight of theip “Bully greeted boy,” them with tho cheery cry of which under the circumstances *nnst be looked upon as a piece of excusable self-appreciation. managed While “Tim” Brennan the oars, Faul Butler and “Jerry” Kane jumped overboard and swam toward the hero. Butler al nost reached him, but his assistance was not needed, aud Brodie and Kane clambered into the boat and p ulled away for the Bridgi pier, leaving Butt er to liis fate in the water, Once in the boat and in safety, Brodie rather “went to pie "os. ’ His friends, how¬ ever, had a bottle of brandy, and they made liberal applications of the liquid, both inter¬ nally mfllionces and externally. Under these reviving Brodie soon < nme around, and when the pier was reached he climbed out of tha br at and walked about as if jumpiug 120 feet had never kdled anv ODe before. A po ii emati whose attention had been called to th • jum 1 had-rushed madly through the crowd on the Dover sh eet pier, and was ges little liculatiug Fourth like a malman at Brodie. The impossible, Wa-der, realizing that escape was while his friends jumped again back into the water, rowed to rescue the neglected Butler, and swimming across the slip, gave He himself up gracefully to the offi¬ cer. was at once hnrried off tu the Oak Street station, aud Dr. White was summoned from the Chambers Street ... , _ Hospital. By this ... beginning . time Bridie was tc show unmistakable sijns of . inebriation. He was perfectly sober at the time he jumped, but since he had been hauled into the beat a formidab 0 amount of stimu¬ lants had been poured into him, aiid the ex¬ cited condition in which hi was probably rendered the effect of the alcohol more sud¬ den and more strikiug than it would other¬ wise have been. As the doctor was exam¬ ining him, Brodie writhed and shouted as if in g eat agouy, but the' physician finally pronounced him uninjarel, save for a tew bruises on the chest, which were probably made « bile he was clambering into the boat. In the m autimo “Tim”-Brennan arrived at tho station with dry c.’othes tor Brodie, and was Brodie’s p omptiy foolhardy arrest-d act as The an intoxicated accomplice in dividual in¬ lie and his was friend helped into a hustl;d dry suit, and then Tombs Police were off to the This Court. is the second time a man- has lumped from the bridge. A Washington swimmer named Odium attempted the feat some time ago, but was killed in the'attempt. COLLIDED WITH A WHALE. An EigUtyj Foot monster Cut In Twain by a Silenmer’g Hows. Tho Netbprland steamer Waesland, which a-rivecl at/New York from Antwerp a few days since( reports thatat hoon on the second dawont, ftad just after the Waesland left tho channel, a whale was seen floating on th» course. No attempt was made to avo d it. a? tho natural impression wa3 that it would get out of the way of its own ae cord. It declined to move, however, being fast asleep most likely, and the steamer’s sharp iron bows stnmk full and fair about midway There of its length/ perceptible shock to the was a vessel and an immediate checking of her progress. Fassaugers and deck hand? ran forward to see what was the cause of the trouble, an l found that the whale, which was fully 80 feet long, had been cut half in two, and lay dead and fast caught the ship ou the bows. off It was neces¬ sary to stop and back to disengage the carcass, which, when freed, drifted astern. witnessed None of the similar officers of the ship although had ever it is by a unheard occurrence, Ships no means an of one. have o-easions struck sleeping have suffered whales before, damage and from on the several col¬ lision. M ant a man has endeavored to outdo nature only to come out of the arena dis Sgured for life. Nature is something it icein’t do to trifle with. “UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL*’—WasHinG-coS. WEST BOWEESVILLE, GA„ SATtJEBAY, AUGUST 1 , 1880. HEWSY GLEAMS. Onto has■60,500 government pensioner*. “““ People are leaving Kansas for Louisiana to engage agricultural pursuits The Bartholdi statue is booked for cotttple tiou the latter parti of September. and Nea pulsates r Cannelton, Penn. human . the ground breast. heaves just like the The calf crop on the Wyoming ranges this Season is the largest for a number of years. A peat deposit, forty acres in extent and «... ft. a»p, to u. >o..d . >»». by f^^S^Tp^irz&’ESS boiling the cream. Colorado farmers claim that English com- and panies have taken up all the water rights estab.ished a gigantic monopoly. THEUsoof paper has been extented in Vi The camphor laurel, from which the cam phor gum of commerce is obtained, has been successfully introduced into California. It is a native of China. Patents to Southern inventors have dou not one’ of them has established its supe riority. At one point on the Cascade branch of tho Northern Pacific the railroad describes a horseshoe, which is two and a quarter mile? around, and only 1,500 leet across the hill at the open end of it. In the chateau of the late King Louis of Bavaria at Bery have been found coffers filled with diamonds, pearls, rubies and all kinds of jewelry whose value is equal to a magnificent fortune. The Polish Alliance of the United States asserts that there are 1,000,003 Poles in this country, and recently a prominent Wiscoa Bin Bohemian declared that there were 6,003,000 Bohemians here. MUSICAL AUD DRAMATIC. ' *■.% 1 !cnows fo^y-seven , NA AITI operas hv i .iri; cotrdn^i»on rwi in. VII , theatre ’ WlU „ •„ n, haV6 _ Miss Gleason, of San Francis-o, is a ris ing American vocalist now in Paris. Che I stink Nilsson’s age oT tho stag? is fourty-four. She cares not who knows it. Miss Marie Prescott will start next sea son in a repertoire of comedy and tragedy. Jofeiii O. Lennon, p prominont musician and ch rus leader, died recently at Eoston. Mr. McKee Rankin will put on the road “Macbct next sea .” ou Pftypooide a spectacular will production be employed. of Charles E. London,Kas Tinnkt,, the basso of St Paul’s Cathedral in been engaged under to It is reported theatre \hat New/ Ifenry \ ork for Irving intends run a in Sis ofyn four months in the year, anl theatre in London for six mouths, as at present. Miss Helen DauvAay has paid Bronson Howard $(i,C0 ) as an aflvance payment on the new him play $ 10,000 lie for is wi-iti^g 'Cne/jf for Girls.” her. fche gavo cur giirikf comedy written will“protj^oo' V Sardou. T “Marita” at tile L° Union neZ Square Theatric,^fow York, in September. Mrs. LaN otfRY is getting fat, so itis said She took fencing lessons a while, and tbi* started c, fencing rage among the fashionable M-em^fitfnJ J ° nd0n ’ by Whlph <“ eaC1 “ g U 6a Vork*eto^i«Siist been , entertaining W a?d London , ,, hliSrirtfw^o t, society with "hw his witereisms, is engaged to an Indian Princess, the daughter of the late Maharajah of Ninga p0 .',’'„ t.. , 0 dramatis"^' . . gotiating in lading w M. ith Sardou several and eminent M. D’Ennerv, for the purchase of twp or three new plays, which Umted she States. will bring |out next season in the 4 Richard Mansi-iiIld Englilm has introduced in New York the custom of serving ices during a porformaMe, with the differ™ -o that at tbe|Ma lison Squa e be accepts no pay¬ ment. The ices are served 1o lad es only, in very small boxes, with a spoon and a Japan¬ ese nankin attached. PERSONAL MENTION. 1 !#■ Michael Davitt, Irish Homo Rule leader, is about to visit the United States. Colonel Mossy, the ex-Contederate, will be in the lecture field next season. Sardou himself is expected to attend the opening of “Theodora” in New York in the fall. James Russell Lowell, now visiting dukes England, finds himself the constant guest of and earls. Senator Morrill, of Vermont, has been In Congress thirty years, and is twenty years older than Edmunds. Dwight Moody, the evangelist, is spend¬ ing ing the summer at Mount Hermon, instruct¬ 225 young men in the Scriptures. Jules Verne, the French novelist, has not yet entirely recovered from the effects of a nephew pistol shot wound inflicted by his crazy last March. The Rev. Dr. Talmage, wife and family have gone to Ashville, N. C., for the sum mer. He preached an open-air sermon on the Battery Park grounds in that place. Captain Eads, of Mississippi River fame, is described as a little man with white beard and a fringe of white hair around a ball head, and a pale, bloodless complexion. T. B. Aldrich, the editor of tho Atlantic, has written a two-act drama entitled “Mer¬ cedes,” nextsfeason. which Mr. The Lawrence is laid Barrett will essay during scene in France the Napoleonic wars. Among the first installmentof Chinese that went to North Adams, Mass., was Lim Gim Gong. He became converted to Christianity, studied hard, saved money, and is now about to return to his native land as a missionary. The young Emperor of China, Kwang-Su, will assume the reins of government during the first month of the new Chinese year. Tho ministers and Board of Astronomy are now an auspicious engaged in day casting for the the horoscope to find ceremony. Upon her ascension to the throne Queen Victoria appointed a Hebrew, Sir Moses Monteflore. as Sberiff of London, and now at reign, the beginning auother of of the the tribe fiftieth of Judah. year Aider- of her man office. Isaacs, has been appointed to tho same A correspondent writes that Miss Alice Freeman, is herself the President of Wellesley College, what in a glorious example of a woman may become. Small and slight and handsome, only twenty-eight years of age, sbe has mastered thoroughly seven languages, all the sciences, aud won tho right to stand ibeside any professor on earth as President of a college. rERRIBLE RAILROAD WRECK s ™» »■ i» OTHERS WOUNDEDi .— --l - - : _ T T ** ,n -r f m.. th Nnahrlllo and Debnttir o ? «> ® Railroad Collide, With Fnt.il Results. NBtos has just been received of it ter rible collision Utilile north of Duck fever station, Tennessee, on the Nashville and Decatur railroad. A special engine going nortk ™ i.to the Col»„bi. -..t eo5.«“ JN asuville; Engineer Beech, of the spec M; Engineer Lanman and Fireman Rob ert Brown, of the accommodation, and baggage Conductor master, Monroe Wilson. Kidd, of the accommoda tiontrain makes the following statement ° n - He says engine No. 519 ran into him about, One mile south of Dark’s mill while running in the time of his train. Both engines fire a total wreck. One of the ■"«,"* engines was ">'« ^ vb, ° *- bo 0 ^ IC ' telescoped through the baggage killed: car. The following is a list of the accommodatipn; Henry Lanman, engineer of the Rboert Brown, fireman of tbe accommodation; Thad. Beech, on • of f N JNo. ol, p 1 at Ring, flr in ol gmeer email No - 5J ; A - B Robertson passenger ! agent, , formerly ticket agent Louisville and Nashville depot', Monroe Wilson, baggage master; Henry Whittimore. [ There were only two . passengers in i R w™ m. M iu. injeen, RV&n whnwns wno was •S ' the smoking car, was thrown against « i seat, cutting a gash over his right eye, not serious. The other, a colored girl, name h unknown, slightly cut iu the face. a I sharp L C ? lM curvfe, Z 0 making Tr l it -H impossible a de< \w to Wit see , h . each other—hence the collision took place while bothtrainsweregoingatfullspeed. ^ passenger in the accommodation states that he was in the act of looking at his watch they when had the just engines.collided. three minutes to make He sa 3’ s dntion Duck river, showing that the accommo was on time. The sight is most horrible, the bodies being torn to pieces and scalded by the escaping steam. As soon as the terriblt news reached Columbia every available conveyance that could be secured was en i route to the accident. There were 1*? - i WPPn ween fifteen fifteen and and twentv twenty the Wlies coach wh» were [^’tn^BS^vfnlB Engine 510 has been used on the engine Nashville take its S an. ?„iter from to place.’ information shows Tl that / enoine g i 519 exploded, , j throwing • the tender e 150 feet in the opposite direction. Robert son was killed instantly, being disem boweled by a piece of iron. Lanmaa’s body was found on the side of the road. lt is . su PP° and sed **“* injured he jumped internally, from his be- his engine was mg the only Whittimore body not disfigured. found with Henry his wedged was a flag in hand exploded engine between and a cylin ( J cr 0 f the the rock cut - He lived only about ten minutes after he was found. It took” nearly an hour to extricate his body. Robertson got ing on the engine friends at Carter’s creek, with invit one of his to go him. j[j s friend declined, riding informing Robert son of the danger in on an engine. Clif P Kennedy, passenger agent of C. M. and Bt. Paul railroad, who was on the accommodation, says they were running at least forty miles an hour when they me t. A. L. Robertson’s watch was broken in two by showing the shock, that the hands pointing train to 6:22, tho passenger was exactly on time. There are three theories of the accident—first, that Engi¬ neer his watch Beech wrbng; of the second, special train he looked looked at that at his time card wrong; third, and the most probable, that instead of side track¬ arrived ing at Duck at' River, River as was ahead his custom, time and he Duck of . tried to make Dark's Mills, the next sta¬ tion, three miles further on. This is the theory entertained by the railroad offi¬ cials. - & THE NEW TREATY. = the United States and England. extradition What is said treaty to be between th^text’O^f the the Hiiitjid new States and Great published Britain, notv pending in the Senate, is -V ■ The convention extends the provisions of article ten of the treaty of 1842 to four crimes not therein named, as follows: Manslaughter, burglary, embezzlement or larceny involving malicious the injuries amount of *50 or £10, and to property, whereby the life of any person shall be endangerod, if such injuries constitute a crime according to the laws of both coun tries. It is article also provided shall that apply the pro visions of ten to per sons convicted of crimes named in the treaty of 1842 and the new convention, as well as to those changed before trial with the commission of them. The con ventiop is not retoractivc. No surrender is to be demanded for political offense, and no trial is permitted for any other offense than one for which the extradi tion is requested until the person extra dited has had an opportunity to return to the state by which he was surrendered. - ■ HIEBTO WHIP A SCHOOL TEACHER A special dispatch forks from Bamberg, S. I’., says: “In the of the Eilisto Monday, a school teacher named King was assaulted by Thomas Williams and Williams, 33 infliction ?hir s fatal tlicrcjon • shot a --------- ’Tts not because some men fail to make an effort that they do not succeed, but BASE BAIL NOTES. tjsuswr Ten tw, bails **~ flrty *“ c, "° dozen Itjngiifl a par man is tho rate at which they ar& made: New Yotfcsa;ei drawing the best crowds of any club iu ibo country. tfoyvsi* of the' Atbli tier, has led the ebun try with home runs for three season! Dude Bcteuiu: >ok; of the Now Yorks; is consider-;:*! tho fittest third baseman in tho League. &&3XSX%S!aSgBS& had tf ti^Y ^iUh part of the trouble with un l'ire; tnvPrt, lias experienced this season, The Mots lead tho Association iu fielding and tbqjw used es in b ,tt;ng. The Cincin “J? b!l ' J sticml lho K‘ eat0st nuu,ber ° f U ^, Morrili ln „ of I ,, tho with Bosoms, the ***** made the of first Wise tripte ^ playofQio .Cason on tho Washington grounds recently. Bundav, tht favorite yoiing player of tho h i''?f J.‘ 4 Sss,*ssu* p. ,dk “*“ * > “'' j s tbiirc anything in the Western air conI duviveto heavy tatting} in both League ana Association ga ne* of late out there the slug gmg h is been lon-inc. T ,? E Nowarts and BriJreports played a perie. t , holding f ame recently. Not au error, passed ball or wild pitch marred the contest. It was a phenomenal game. , League Sixer; tho organization two of tho Southern been in mly League, triple plays have made that mid both have been “ ado on the Atlanta grounds. Macc,*?( p-oocses that the Southern League Cubs next year engage only professional batteries aul fill out the re t of the teams w th Jpc.il amateur and semiq rofessioual players, Seven home runs have been mttde by the ^e^ thuulLis of°aii o'fei^of^sifkumbrella for every notne run made. Not a member of any of the visiting clubs is carrying 0n3 of those silk umbrellas as yet. In thirty-nine games of ball played July 5, W at the National International, round number?, 115,010 spectators, an avor age of m arly 4,500 at each game. Manager Watkins, of the Detroit Club, sa^s tv.tif Detroit wins the League eba’tv ^ ’i’of ?his ■?/ ions ; Watkins T eedi te that two of season's As location clubs will bo in the Lefigue next year. .T/ie vork of the Chicago team in the recent S'ldes-O! threo gamgu’ on from .Detroit was tJns .bn An- irue hits, and including "William ^k-on JTcffer and Hie 1 ,:.’!, Kyun, "■“* Vi tol ■IS fs. bases. On the In othe fid nWd BPh -.v made 1 ut the Detroits B put (dson 20 * hits, the aud only 1 long fhree-bagger hit. They by was mSSf. 10 errors in the three games. SU] PEERING AMONG INDIANS. A Nt! iryof Extreme ilestitiition in the La¬ brador. Tim Indian guide and government returned from m tcrpi eter, who has just Cape Ohidley, the extreme northwestern twin of Labrador reached by sledges, given a heartrending account of the terri ble destitution and suffering which the Esquimaux and Indian farmers are endur mg along the Labrador coast. On Cape Chid ley two hundred and fifty souls are distributed over an area of several'miles. The entire food supply gave out early in March. The seal catch was very small, As the season wore on the seals tailed to comC near enough to shore to be caught, The cold was intense, and many old peo pie died of exposure and-lack of nourisli the menjt. ^On June stood 12, when at eighteen the guide below left, rmircury for zerc, and had been lower. Ice sevc ral hundred miles was solid for a dep h of 10 to 100 feet, and snow was pile 1 mountain high. At least eighty pers ons have perished Chidley.and since March Mug- 1st beti reen Cape Cape found forc , and only four survivors were in t le rude shanties along the coast. The se accompanied the guide to victims Cape Mu rford. The bodies of ten, wei e found frozen stiff. The clothes had been taken from them, evidently to help keep life in the bodies of the miser¬ able : survivors who, in turn, had died whi le out fishing or after seals. Seven tepji bodies were found along the shore. Tw ;nty-four persons, including! six wo¬ men ^0 and Mugford. three small children, perished at ( ! IN BURNING OIL. v N , Bro wllo Qllarreln wuh tvife Meet* his Doom, Thomas Ballard, a colored miner of Hc ho®fects ^ ua i dj p a-) died Sunday received night week from igopB t of injuries a frequently a quarrel vith his wife. Dalhrd assaulted liis wife, and on the „i g ht of the 16th inst., came home in t ox i cat ed, and commenced abusing her. g bc remonstrated with him, but as hc cv j nccd n0 disposition to desist his ill treatment, she threw a can of carbon oil 5V c r him, and then set fire to his clothing | { ; s crieg broug ht assistance, and the u ames were extinguished, but lie was his so terribly burned that all efforts to save fifo were without avail and he died in ^at a<xony. Mrs. Dullard has not been crested. ' ‘_________ ' \ A FATAL BOILER _____ EXPLOSION. \ J T r, ° Men „ wlundcd. --I „ . A. boiler in the waterworks at Colum bi , S. C exploded Friday afternoon, wound k. ling a colored fireman, fata ly U ; another colored man and seriously n nW^B.Lawrcncc, who in clinc and boiler went to the bottom of liver during the May freshet anil had /tb-erected, that afternoon being the k STEAMER WRECKED. THE “GATE ClTt” RUNS ASHORE IN A FOG. fhe- Uwiiafely and Crew Saved-The Ves sii a Total Wreck. mi Thfc .stcamshir 1 1. - Oate Ch y, f fi,e Savannah line, Captain Darnel Hedge, wfcnt athfirfe 6n Nanshon »M, Maithas Vineyard sound, Bunday n left Ruck fog. The Gate City Thursday evening, ana was afii » Boston Monday morning She had a miscrdhrtu? ous cargo o' cotton tobacco and hide! worth $80,000, and (?P;OO0 watermelons. She earned o3 passengers, ifiwt all m the saloon, the majority being excursion., bound north for a pleasure trip. Mam were ladies, and brought some very hand some wardrobes with them. Nanshon lsliifldj a dangerous place, is just opposite Gay Head, whete the the ill-fated sister ship steamship of the City of. Columbus, with Gate City,- went down w many lives Oincidenee m.iafiflafy, 1869. The This makes a obtained carious jantreulars as he inun eiiect thc that ofhcersandpa^niersareto pleasant weathei 1 ptevaited during the entfre trip till Sunday after noon when the $h?p entered the souad where R ran into a “ Mhilc rhe very nearly ran on Gayhead shoals, where the ; bones Dismaved of the at City his danger, of Columbia Captain now Hedge lie. | , steered the ship off and m so doing crossed 1 the sound, running ashore on the other side. The channel is very deceptive and i a moment after the leadsman reported , -no bottom,” the vessel In struck a ragged hole, eighteen Inches diameter, which stove In her bottom and she made water ; fast. The btMlder that went through from ; held the ship and prevented her slippmg into deep water find drowning all on board. The ship struck (It seven o’clock and m a second every one was on deck They were quieted but refused vojeturn below. First Mate E. R. Tay lori went alter assistance, retuifisd after several hours with a brig, and the Jins sengers were safely landed at New Bed ord and brought direct to Boston. The ladies are greatly dispirited at this mis hap on their pleasure trip, especially as it is combined with an expensive loss of valuable wearing apparel. Wreckers left vessel for full the of water scene The and “Gate ( f^,ort«d PRy the was built by John Roach in 18,and for , M |,„d e t„c L^Uvi., $ th. "All the officers and crew of the steamei Gate City remained on board the vessel when the passengers were taken off by a tug, with the exception of the baggage master, who accompanied the passengers. The shock of the boat was not great, and the passengers were very coo! throughout the five hours they had to wait before the tow boat Brown picked them up and carried them to New Bedford. They could, amused themselves in the best way they conversing, playing the piano, etc. There were 52 passengers in all, most of whom went, to New Bedford. Some twelve or fifteen’, however, did not like to trust themselves in the tow boat, and therefore remained ou board the Gate City. The scene of the wreck is five or six miles nprtheast of Devil’s bridge where the City of Columbus met her fate. There is a report to the effect that local magnetic influence in sometimes Vitfivird demoralize? compasses that part of Sound. An influence that deflected lie compass of ing the southwest, City of Coiumbtti, w” was go so as liavti tq ears; Gate on Dev¬ il’s Bridge, would eajteed City, did. bound northeast, to gqAjinoro where site It is impossible EXTENT yet OE DAAMGE8. t# whMt ^ is the extent of the damages say snstaineff by the cargo of of the vessel. it With the Exception the melons, is Ijkely to prove a total loss. The salt water will not spoil the melons for sometime, and, being -bouy anf, they will easily float as soon as the hatches are removed and thus can lie easily saved. The other merchandise, stuffs, consisting is believed,'as of cotton and general mixed usual, ■ to be fully insured, especially as at this season ma¬ rine insurance rates are low. SAW HIS SON KILLER. John Jones, aged twenty years,, son of Superintendent road Jones, who is building the incline up Lookout mountain, death near Chattanooga, Tuesday. met with a shocking He was on a large tram freight portion of car the coming down the steepest road, when he lost control of the car. It ran down the road at a terrible rate of speed, when suddenly Jones was hurled through the air with • - where »vful force, he falling instantly in front of the car, was killed. His legs, arms, neck and back were broken. Jones’father was standing within twenty feet of the car when his son met his aw fill fate. - 1 - . THE STORM IN NEBRASKA. _ A Chnrch Blown Down and Severn! Pen _ , „ _____ ^"^^’^ery T* Sere Monday’s stem in t>us cotmt^wa cry There was Three mUes south S M)" den the 8t ™ C rman°’for’ _ O e years ^nstantlv and VOL. IT. NO. 32. ALBANY’S BI-CENTENNIAL, Neve York's Capital Cclebrntra J*» Two Hrvmlr.dc ti llirtlulay. Thursday was the bi-centennial of the corporation of Albany, K.A., as a city, and the Albanians gave theinslves up, body to fw"thn-c lias in fkct been in progress ior tone days, iiut Tlmmlay was the anniversary an d dimax. Nobody went to bed that The P r th#t brokc loose at r^. rivaf ^ when the bells mmounced the ar ' of the anniversary jj continued un V . 1[t Mon ‘ )oys am j even women ,^^1 (lown tl;e i principal until Mraete kg; e Rnd si ra0 ,- n Men aad bovs organized them j 8 Into marehing 5 bands and went from n 1 . of th(J cit to miothcr , blowing t t]jree llornstogcther imd stopping and Lotels and private residences „ iyi , impromptu serenade. Small « " their salute^, and bon kerrt1J n the principal streets, and ;' lighted ,^fire’s u« reflected from the ^ r( ltitUiey clow was illjove °ching u paled in the gray P 0 morning. All the noise , ind e nthlls iasm tlfat Albany may have had | ( , lt witlli i. herself for the last two con denied to have suddenly found i Cleveland and his party at minutes after « o’clock in the morning, and found waiting to receive ]lim Burgcss’s'corps, under command of M f ■ Zandt , with the Hattsburg ba( c] at their hea d. Carriages contain . M J Thacber Ex-Mayor Banks and - officials also in waiting, were militia ‘ formed by the wittout the ]ines fiye or si x hundred citizens who . . come to we!comc the President M ‘. Cleveland and his friends weie es , (o tho execut i V e mansion, where , breokfogtc d with Governor Hill „ / g , corps fi then welcomed marc hed the to vet- the 1 lboat lanc ng and organization of the New York Scv ” rrim ent, while other organizations K ° busy time ^ Alb niabtia had a ver y wefcom fo ^, g aud escorting other visiting comman of the Pl . e sident Cleveland spent part Man f in a ca il up0 n Secretary ni , andlater in company with Gov ^ H ; n ftnd stafi and cit y officials, procession, re . d tho magnificent onies hcn the formal ceTem were pro ccedin b „ ’ after a S p e ech by Governor Hill, hc cr 0 wd disp |ampringfor ensed with the. regular A'hr ^ ogtmasahyc “Ckririund.’’ president made a short comratiftec out\. torv Q^OisaHr^fd W cc h. The crowd;then andJWhitngy,^^. calleri te7 iri^£s B w ?p , *.Sa o s5 i i“ of “^nerica” by a chorus and the au ' ’ FOURTEEN KARINES ^ DROWNED | The.CTew of a British War-S'hip Cnnght In a Storm. Nineteen men of the British war-ship Goshawk went ashore at Port Royal, Ja¬ maica,- oil'the 26tli ult., and while there a storm arose, They attempted to re¬ turn to the ship in the storm, and on Hearing the vessel the boat capsized, 'ilte next morning three of the sailors were found in tho bottom of the boat, drifting toward Port Henderson, and two on one of the l-oyal njvy buoys in Port Royal harbor, to which tli^y had swam. The o’lu-.r foiutcpn were drowned. BURIED IN THE SAND. Accident to Three Little Girl*.-A Band Pit la vr a on Them. Tuesday aftemdon Maqd and Cora theft- Da veil npoft and Afflia DdVenport, pit cousin, ningham, were playing in aland sand pit. at cayed Cun¬ in and buried Mo., all when the Anna freed lier three. fielf and dug away the earth above Com, breathe uncovering her face, tiius4illowing The body her to of and saving her life. the other girl she was unable to find and ran to the nearest house for aid. Cora was taken out uniffjbred, but her sister Maud was dead when found. ■ - A CARELESS ENGINEER. Ac EaPItbs Rnm into a Gravel Triton / Loss ol' Life. The 12.40 express'from right New the York heart ran ol into a gravel train in the city of Bridgeport, Conn., on the Ncav York,'New Haven and Hartford railroad Tuesday. The gravel train hail the right of way and proper danger sig¬ nals were set for the express train, anil no explanation is given for the accident. Two Italian laborers were killed instantly, and five others injured, probably fatally. The engineer of the express train was cut about the face, but not seriously hurt, lie was promptly placed under arrest. ILsqnalinej. n . . Attorney for Defense—“Have you formed any opinion in this case?” Juror— 1 “No, Sir.” A. for 1).—“Have you expressed your self concerning it in anyway?” t, fe. J u ' or —“No, sir.” atainst A. for the D.-j-Have defendant?” you any prejudice Juror—“No, A. for D.-“Know sir.” pla : ntiff his the or attorney?” A "for D —ah itn lii/foo-, T iten’t believe I have any wish tb challenge him. (Suddenly to Juror) Do you know any reason why you should not be accepted ?” d< SLK^-“ wc11 ’ no; 1 \«>r "u^r-’ IX WeTi -“Don’t think there is? ^ you see, I ain’t quite mTl '- 1 T,i ' 8 out of the iman^iox Lospita! this morning and--.