Show E D rs s ss T there pigs a Is 10 on a chicago that list ilat i is da described bribed as one of th the moo moa abie able pieces of mechanism ever produced in this or any other country it is called abells weft thread knitting loom and in the opinion of many practical ai havee havel examined it ia Js destined 1 to revolutionize the entire system of woolen cioth cloth manufacturing fact u ring bro james W Curn cummane Cumm ine lne who has just returned new ned from tibe th E og aalf wll wil owe ote ex ekpo expo pe fienco in cloth manufacture entities entitles hi bia hia opinion to weight speaks highly of it the chicago nimes times thum thus describes it t f athis chis V loom is said W have been invented by a il man named abel living jiving somewhere in vermont his bis letters patent being dated daved july 19 1870 but a great number of years w was spent b by the in bringing his machine to tb perfection it is styled the knitting loom probably because of combi nation of weaving and knitting the process producing a very firm compact web of as torkI phing even evon evenness liess iless of texture beauty and ser sen serviceability the loom is quite simple simpie I 1 construction n and is capable of be being ng ablee produce goo 00 yards per pei day of any given weight or texture tbd abd 11 importance pail of this rate of speed can be bel best understood when it is known that the swiftest loom in ordinary use ube cannot turn turri out above twenty five yards a day and that url uil undoubtedly of a quality inferior to that woven b by that of this machine it runs easily without noise cabs cats but bat a small advance 1 on ordinary looms and occupies les ies less is space suil sull in addition to all these addan tigel bo ready to be seized upon and turned to dod doc account count by practical manufacturer dressi dressl dressing hg beaming spooling warping and other preliminary processes necessary with other othel looms are done away with thus effecting fee fec ting an estimated saving of over one halfin haltin haio halt in preparing the yarns while the ratio of production exceeds ten to one 17 jal it J clo lin pres R ed edited cited by col john jobo ay W forney JF orney late secretary of 0 the tho cont contains ainsa a leading article from hib en upon the grant and sumner imbroglio in which he condemns without qualification the treatment which butzner sut But baa has received he says mr badiner stands today to tb day removed for not agreeing with pr president resident grant on ou the ban san domingo question and asks ia is this decent or fa fair I 1 r he thinks president grant is abundantly justified by precedent in repudiating this assault in his hia own name upon the chairman of the committee of foreign affairs in the senate and that if he needed any tiny further suggestions they would be found inthe weakness of james buchanan in giving directions to slaughter stephen ai A douglas more than twelve years ago he adds douglas was as dear to pennsylvania as sumner sumner dumn er in in many an v respects succeeds douglas in thousands of our pennsylvania hearts when douglas was struck from the committee on territories in december of 1858 the outrage wrecked the democratic party panty encouraged revolt against proscription and and ana broke the organization that ena cna era cravenly venly sanctioned luf it at the time that douglas was proscribed by buc bue buchanan h a inan and the senate obeyed hta hia wish by xe moving the illinois bon son senator benator 1 1 tor from his bis position of chairman of or t the h e committee Committe eon on territory Terri terni territories tor les ies coi col forney eorney wrote a letter from washington to his paper jn philadelphia in which he used used very strong language re spee spec specking ting this act and said that the action of the senatorial caucus demanded prompt and signal repudiation and rebuke in this letter he asked ho how w this despotism could be resisted and suggested that it would be well for the people eople men of all parties in the middle le and ind northwestern north western states to assemble and take such ground against this highhanded high handed outrage as it deserved and demanded and closed with the remark that it behooved the people to take the case into their own hands and protect themselves against faithless and infatuated public servants this thid letter twelve years yearb old oid colonel eorney forney Te republishes publishes in his columns on leist leest written M a it was on an the occurrence of it similar ave eventa rit brou brought g bt about by bf a similar cause as that which today to day aay occupies public attention its re production at present ia Is tobay the lea iea least significant and plainly exhibits how feeling ils fis likely to run in pennsylva Penn pennsylvania sylv for there are but few men meik who are aird the equal of col eorney forney in comprehending the sentiment Benti menk ment 11 T twe THE mississippi lacks blacks are not satisfied at being ex excluded ed from the whit white cars they want to ride first class the rail rall railroad ad managers have flatly refused to admit them therm into the hita hite carb cars but proposed sepa separate ratu cars fori for their accommodation equally good as those furni farni furnished shed to the whites from which the whites should be bead as rigidly ei excluded as the blacks c kf were x ov atthe althe palte white cars but th a does doii not kuia sula the colored dignitaries they insist on ow I 1 a perfect equality of the two raees races and the most unrestricted intercourse they T hey evidently like to mix up with the whites and find it more agreeable to them than the associations of their color tolor IN ix bof suntry infested infest indest eji V with thi i venon fous us snakes ibe ifie knowledge 9 0 oran bran a ii effective great importance as their bites are often attended with fatal results if such sueh antidotes be IA existence the knowledge of them is very restricted for it is quite i common to read accounts in the papers of deaths in various ious fous parts of the doun country resulting from the bite of the rattlesnake in tile the east I 1 indies n die dle 8 where the cobra and other deadly snakes are very numerous the deaths of persons through br being ing b bitten ten by them tham frequently number b in many any hund bund hundreds reds in a year the statistics for 1870 show about three thousand deaths fro from this cause alone A statement in connection with this subject appeared recently in the european vail mail which if true ought to be widely circulated in every district where the rattlesnake cobra viper or any other deadly species is known to exist the writer of the statement says says that every species of venomous snake carries an antidote for its 10 poison and th that chatan atan antidote is its gall and so effectual Is inthis this said to be that in fifty cases of the bite of the cobra cobra a repetition of the medicine waa was only needed in two cases the formula is as follows dissolve twenty drops of the thel pure ure gall dissolved dissolve i ed in two hun bun hundred red drops of alcohol five dro drops drons pa of this solution is put in jn half hnit a tumbler of water thoroughly stirred and a tablespoonful tabie fable spoonful of the mixture administered to the bitted person every three or five minutes until the whole is taken whisky has bag been xe recommended commended as an in some cases ces it may have been successful successfully ly used but it has hns to be used so freely that in systems not used to its influence the remedy Is almoite as bad as the disease but efficacious as whisky or the new formula consisting of snake gall and alcohol may be they might be required under circumstances where it would be impossible to procure either or if procured could 11 oabe administered accord accords ing to rule and if a surp remedy could be found easily ob obtainable tai tal nihle nible requiring no special made iee ile of preparation it would be more valuable than either of the above the name of such an antidote antido fe and its method of application has been hor tor forwarded to Us iss bibro by bro joseph W youn young of st george southern utah 1 a gent gentleman e who has had grea greab great t experience in crossing the plains between bety eien tien this city and the missouri river and while doing so has had abundant op opportunities to test its efficacy he says saya noticing in the NEWS an account acco tint of the application of or the mid lidstone stone to anebite the Ahe bite bita of a rattlesnake and in the tho last issue a recipe for beesting bee sting I 1 thought perhaps it was my duty to give the public the benefit of m my experience on these matter matters 9 now I 1 Y always have a at ht hand thatis that is a sure cure for snake bite the sting of scorpions bees ac it is simply a little dry indigo hound bound on aa the wound it is a sure cure if applied in reasonable time I 1 have many inacy times had oxen bitten by rattle snakes when anthe on the plains I 1 used to carry a piece of indigo in my pocket with which I 1 would rub the wound until the hair was well weil blued gyer oyer and the cure was perfect and speedy A swiss man was wag bitten in one of the companies I 1 brought across the plains no report of the accident was made to me until several hours had elapsed and the maal man leg was badly swollen and as 8 spotted aa as the snake that bit him f X had a A little nye uye indigo pulverized and bound changing it in ill about fifteen minutes about three applina i eions were sufficient when I 1 went to the muddy I 1 gound found thal that the scorpion was the dread of everybody I 1 made this remedy as public as r could arid need many teon deon have tried it with perfect success I 1 have been twice stung by this hateful but with no serious effect among anong bees will find it to tire to ile convenient to carry a small smail s piece of the tha indig oln oin the pocket and und when a bee stings jub jab a little on ori the wouna wound and abd in a zw mew few minutes they will forget the accident 1 HB gp the bre fre french transport le rj ran raa raa ran which appeared in i us tj aloie of the tho 21 st uit uil is of the most dap deplorable disasters of i le he kind rind PO pu re cecora eora cora the vessel left calais alais 0 on the St huit bult her destination being eing brest cherbourg Cher bourg and bordeaux at the timeo oj her departure she had bad on board oard a crew of men and 1080 poor fellows been wound edat metz 1 and hud on various battie battle fielde and their privation privations sand tand b enore emr em cm r barking lad ind h ad been most frightful deierl mon pon when i n they arrived in their ciotla were rags ana and they thoy had not a cent of money they were bill billeted red ked at the hilts huts of the poorest orrist fishermen where they elect but during the day had to go to the ca for food which consisted of dry bread and a little greasy water called soup once a EL day and not above half enough of q that bat tiley were momy mostly fhe the he sons bons of kii iii gentlemen aldno and no dou doubt bt their theirl hearts ea arti were gladde gladdened nedi after embarking on oil lc jle cerf at the prospect of speedily reaching their homes again but alas death amid horrors transcending those of the tha battlefield battle field was in store for them the vessel sailed on sunday the ath dinst and on the night of the ath she was wrecked wre aked on the rocks off cape capece de la Is hague and eleven hundred odthe 0 1 twelve hundred and thirty on board board perished THE tilt kanbas kansas my city but Bul bulletin klin of the atil I 1 instant contains an art account of a narrow escape from death by suffocation of a woman and two children named hon der and as its publication may prove a warning we reproduce it in brief th the head bead of the family was a coal hayer heaver and had bad left his home early in the evening to go to work at the coal yards with the understanding that he would would return at midnight mid night their cabin consisted of only one ro omand after the departure other husband mrs honders bonders hilt hift securely barred the door replenished the coal fire and bab eat down to work while her children were playing oatlie on tue hearth th the e room being very warm carmand wAr mand and its ventilation poor its inmates eoon began gan gau to feel fegl inclined for sleep and pre para tlona tiona ns were made for bed before P going g the woman closed the damper of the stove and hung a quilt over the window with an eye to having the place warm and comfortable for her husband ou hib his lila return at midnight this so completely destroyed the ventilation of the cabin that it nearly proved a tomb for the whole family and would certainly have done so had it not happened that the husband returned much muen sooner than he expected for by a stran strange gei gel overruling over ruling of providence he did not go to work at the coal yards when he be reached home he knocked repeatedly but failed in gaining admission and at last weary and somewhat alarmed he burst open the door he spoke to his bis wife bub but received no alls aris answer wen and then shook her but she and the children were insensible from froni the poisonous gases generated by the coa coal laire nire fire in the room mr Honder speedily dily dlly obtained assistance and in a eibe egbe a shorb short orb ort time had mid his fears removed by seeing them all restored to conscious ness this circumstance forcibly illustrates the necessity of good ventilation 7 a thing of paramount importance to health and life especially in sleeping apartments and all who peruse the above should take warning and avoid the fearful danger go so easily incurred by mrs mis Honder and her children |