CONDENSED: y : 5 a letter to Bdferd of Health WM sead, stating that the disposal of the dwitoiM was plaoed in the bands of Thorns J. Harsh, Jr., from Oct is<, 1*78, to Oct. L 1882, and that there were delivered to medical colleges-tP* ad alt and thirty-nix ekildiea'a bodiea The whole amount paid by the colleges for the service connected with this was fS.8^7, of which amount only 9000 found its way m m - M e t h e S t a t e T r e a s u a r y A n E r i e ( P a . ) telegram says: "MieeZoe Vandyke, whose iî ed miraculous cure from a huge tumor ous cyst caused such a sensation list fall, and which evoked so much skepticism among the surgeons, many of whom pub licly denied Che possibility of a tumor being removed by prayer, has returned to Erie from Chicago, and submitted herself to the knife. After removal the tumor weighed seventy pounds." Mayor Araott. of El- nrira, N. Y., took a gang of laborers and ton up the trick of the Lackawanna road, recently laid aaroaa Fifth street, tor which hp was arrested for malicious trespass ( William H. Seaman, believed to betftsane, * tolled his slater Fanny at Throgff'a Neck, 1 * & Y., and then himaolt The murdecerwas f Styeus old and his victim 88 Fire de nt thirty ki'{ . • m * •* •' • a* -»'iJ '-:i !« ,'W-l HV 31 $t *s-H *' Bev.OUl daaal JL t subject to the oontarol of the 8ta or the Federal Government, and de mands an investigation by Congress of the ooet of railways and transportation. It urges the establishment of, aixytal tele graph, postal saving baî Vj£i&urt& alsMfetevsty one, reveal r affairs. Tliere are aovoafy vra income tax, and amendment of the s i s». ̂ 1*4%! swayed the Dauphin County Almshouse at ^Bartlsbuxg, Pa. Some of the insane re- . '.i '... Med removal, but all the inmates were saved. Hie loss is *200,000. Tl lawyer of is known that HEXBY WICKES; aa > * Albany, has disappeared, ft is known that for ten yearn he has embezzled moneys eol- >»!-•»! 'Tt, 1 lected for Mrs. VaniJensselaer.of Greenbush, y v . the aggregate being e^OOGl I. ,*< - ' A HEAVY storm at Dover, N„ H,, h» -to1 v w !tiH caused the bursting Of a sewer; which 'S* *'iJ ' flooded the Cocheco Print Works, damaging * f ; prints ready for shipment and other stock «htj J to the extent of $50,0110. Seven persons ? " were struck by lightnings and three persons h« killed... .The mill of Bleakie A-Co., atAmes- ' • V. «<! ) > - •>; w& fVi> Vi"' V"" Wih * J T hi J barr, Masa, valued at #103,000, was struck by Qghtning and burned to the ground. JOHN AHMOY KNOX, of the Texas t-h'*' Siftingt, and oneD. B. Sheahan, said to be a ' - sculptor, quarreled about politics at a wine • supper in New York, the matter culminat- <? ing in a duel across the river, in New Jersey. ' i This combatants were placed twenty paces |. J < apart At the second tire Knox felt nis left .j .„i; arm twitched, and found that Sheahan's -j?" .ballet had passed through his coat and cT1 shirt, slightly grazing the skin. Sheahan " ' " - was untouched 'Die pair then shook hands, ' and the proceedings were over. xmwmn. J. H. SIXES, a negro, who almost killed Miss Kate Maguire in the outskirts of toulniana, Ma, having been partially identi- i : W' "• fled by hia victim, was taken from the jail ,V >* • at Bowling Green, by a party of eight men, ' J' * and hanged to a tree by rOpe halters, fie f|4! < < made a nail conferaion of his crime, and ad- I , ' sdtted thai he had served four years in the penitentiary for a aiailar offense at SL ® , C&arlea... .On the Western Indiana track at A ' atPbrty-flrst street, Chicago, a Wabash train •"** £ oibM A Stock Tarda street-car into frag. i'.Vmente. Twelve persons w«re seriously in- ,%l * •, r Jured, three or more of them fatally. Skr- 'ti "f IN the soburba of Cincinnati the Jhunderbolt expresss on the New York, p'i»,<"'ii/J « Ohio road, which WM run- ; . niag nq^dly to make up lost time, struck a '« • i j .. huckater's wagon oontaining Reven persons, $: ;J:. s.'SS, "Sd-Srfe, ̂ 1S^HeM5, "1'.̂ -1 „ - I ' '-s**- l!. f('f OA, i f* U# -in 4 is denounced as'betnff wholly mthe tut*!**. of monopolies. wiamratoi PRESIDENT ARTHUR has made the fol lowing appointments: CoL Holabird, Quartermaster General, to succeed Gen. In- galte, retired; William J. Galbraith, Associ. ate Justice of the Supreme Court. Montana; Samuel J. Kirfcwood of Iowa, Silas B. Dutcher of New York, and Anthony Gilkeson of New York, a commission to examine sixty-five miles of railroad and telegraph line constructed by the Oregon and Califor nia Railroad Company southwardly from the City of Roseburg, Ore; Morgan D. Tracy, Receiver of Public Moneys at Lews ton, Idaho John Roach is the lowest bidder on all of the new cruisers which Congress or dered built, and Secretary Chandler has no alternative except to accept the bids. Mr. Boach's bids are $674,000 less than the estimates of the board, which were #3,114,- 000, and they are #200,000 less than the next lowest bidder The annual report of the Chief of the Mail Division of we Pension Office shows the receipt during the fiscal year of 53,411 applications for pensions, an increase over the previous year of 36,(505. Seventeen thousand letters were received from Congressmen. FOLLOWING is a recapitulation of the debt statement issued on the 1st inst: Interest bearing debt-- Three and one-half per cents $ Four ana one-half pa cento Four per cents Three per cents Refunding certificates Navy pension fond 33,082,600 980,000.000 137,686.900 304,204,350 3S&.900 14,000,000 Total interest-bearing debt $1,338,229,160 Matured debt 7,831,415 * * Debt bearing: no interest-- Legal-tender note*. 116,740,001 Certificates of deposit 13,376,000 Gold and silver certificates 1T0,996,471 Fractional currency 7,000,690 •» Total without interest: $B38.m,l62 Total debt (principal) $1,884,171,728 Total interest 12,303,382 Total cash in treasury 346,389,902 Debt, less cash in treasury. MS1,091,90? Decrease during June / 18,098,201 Decrease of debt since JunTsot 1882. 137.823,263 Current liabilities- Interest due and unpaid $ 3,702,846 Debt on which interest has oeaaed.. 7,831,416 Interest thereon 306,824 Gold and silver certificates 110.995,471 U. 8. notes held for redemption of " 'deposit.. 13,375,000 Total Available assets Cash m treasury.. $346,389,902 346,382,902 ̂ - shockingly mutilated, and the locomotive " was sprinkled with flour to hide the blood .... A masked mob in Grand county, ahot tour Commissioners and the Clerk. Mr. Mills and Harvey Day killed £ P. Webber and D.J. The citizens . called on the Governor for military it:. .«K-y protection... .The suit of E. J. Lehman vs. iteChicago Herald Company was deeded latter. The Jury awarded f >5,- the amount asked for. Leh- tsa laading merchant, and the paper " living formerly been a r • =st <yi/4Hh ? • r>$i s* I f. • f , ^ trtftP'A - > t • •V '«•» ft,; J fU «• ,*&*H i Fiu um i- AN outbreak in the penitentiary at Salem, Ore, resulted in the death of three convicts, the fatal shooting of three, and the escape of eight.... A fire at Astoria, Ore., swept away property of the UBlliliaUiil value of $225,000. lbs oom mission house of Whitcomb A Kendall. of Chicago, has been cleeed on an attachment by Philip D. Armour The lia bilities of the bankrupt* are about $100,0cct --Wood's Opera House at St Paul, Minn., was destroyed by fire... .Twenty-six build ings at EvangviHe, Minn., were burned, en tailing a loss of tl.r0,000. IT appears that Commissioner Mills, of Grand county, Col, was one of the three men who assassinated the other Commis sioners and the County Clerk. The whole ahrjpows out of the removal of the eoun- niBotm A RICHMOND (Va.) telegram says: "Elam, the wounded duelist, is in a critical condition. The ball struck near the right - . v, t < hip and passed inward and downward, al- :'-1' ' most grating the bladder. Pyaemia and %rj>. « filouglmig are greatly feared" V ,> MASTIK JOSES, a negro, who mnr- 'mM ,t deied Mrs. Ambacher at Skipwith, Mis&, was hanged by a mob a short distance from the town On returning- from a night session of court at Jefferson, Texas, Judge Haughn was fa'rly perforated with buck shot by some unknown person, and died in his saddle THE boiler of J. F. Kelley's saw-mill at Hunteville, Texas, exploded, killing four- men instantly, and severely wounding four or five othars A bale of new middling cotton, weighing 333 pounds, was sold at Albany, Ga., of '£>}4 cents per pound. Six negroes, four men and two women, " were drowned in Columbus county, N. C. i,! On reaching a bridge that spanned a swollen ̂stream, they found that a por tion had been washed away. Deter- , mined to cross the stream, however, ̂* they looked for a boat, and, being unable to Bonds issued to Pacificrailwayoom- gurijts înterest payable by United Princtoal outstanding $ $M39i£13 Interest accrued, not yet mid. 1,938,706 Interest paid by United States *7,283,388 By I repaid by companlee-- nrattm service.. .:iiHtW* I **t mn S I«. • 't'\ ; t' ii • % if. i f 41 i K * find one, wade a raft of togs and grapevines, and on this they attempted to cross. 'When the middle of tne river was reached the raft went to pteces, and the whole party six found a watery grave - w • POLITIGAI* "WASHINGTON telegram: "Tlie state ment made at the Internal Revenue Bureau as to the complaint in Iowa as to the re moval of Collector Sherman is that Sherman was not physically capable to perform the duties of lus office, and that he would have soon been compelled to retire on the around •fill-health." Gov. BEN BUTLER has sent to the Massachusetts House a veto of the bill to levy a State tax of $2,000,000. He does not believe in raising money before it is needed and lettkig it lie in bonds at 3 per cent, while poor people who pay taxes must bor row at not legs than 5 per cent, to pay taxes with. He reviews the finance of the past four years, and says a tax of $2,000,000 is un necessary and unreasonable. He regards $1,COO,000 ss a sufficient tax, and $1.500,OUO as ample THE National Anti-Monopoly Conven tion. with 325 delegates in attendance, as sembled in Chicago, the 4th of July Hon. Allen W. Root, of Nebraska, was called to the chair. After a hot debate of an hour, Dennis Kearney was ruled?out by a vote of 118 to 74, and took his departure John F. Henry, of Brooklyn, was elected Permanent Chairman, and C. C. Post, of Indiana, Secre tary. At the evening session, principles were discussed by Cant. Stickle, of Nebras ka; B. V. Snively, of Indiana; Mrs. Todd, of SanFraaeisco; a farmer named Dean, from the Pennsylvania oil region, and J. C. Magie, QIH. CHALMERS' Independent State ' Convention was held at Jackson, Miss., with Reuben Davis, a Confederate Brigadier and $ 16,777,380 By cash payments, 6 per cent, net earning*. MU9$ Balance of interest paid by United States.. 30,860,809 ATTORNEY GENERAL BREWSTER has rendered an opinion to the Secretary of the Treasury that the exportation of bond ed whisky to Bermuda with a view to its reimportation, for the purpose of evading or delaying payment of the tax, is not an exportation within the meaning of the law. The Attorney General holds, however, that the tax due upon spirits at the time of importation is collectable upon its return to this Country. 1 GENERAL, THESE is deep feeling among mem bers of the Masonic order in Canada on ac count of the decision that under the laws the acts of the Grand Lodge of Quebec are illegal and that all who have united with it can bp subjected to heavy penalties. The question will pass into the Dominion court" and then be appealed to the law Lords of England By the capsizing of a boat off Prince Edward Island, one *"»» and five women were drowned. INCIDENTS and accidents of the Fourth: Henry C. Bowen's annual celebra tion at Woodstock, Ct», was a great success. Butherford B. Hayes delivered the chief ad dress, and MTB. Hayes was forced to step to the front of the platform and receive a round of cheers. Bishop Coxe, of Buffalo, spoke on national topics, and was followed by Senators Aldrich and Blair. A poem writ ten for the occasion by JohnG. Wnittier was read by Clarence Bowen. Nearly 8,0.0 persons assembled at the cemetery on the farm of the late Gov. Williams, of Indiana, to witness the unveiling of a suitable monument All the State officers were present, and addresses were delivered by ex-Kenator McDonald and Senatois Voorhees and Harrison. At Erie, Pa„ Albert Kuhn and several com panions, who were somewhat intoxicated, fired from the windows of a street-car in which they were riding. Mary Steiner, who was on the Bidewaik, wes shot through the heart, and Kuhn was arrested for murder. Two hours later Kuhn's brother was found in a cellar, where he had hanged himself. Prince L. Moody, of Streator, Li., after as sisting to fire a cannon, early Wednesday morning, sat in a window to get cooled, and fell at-leep. His wife called out to him in warning, and he awoke BO suddenly as to fall into the street and break his neck.' While 2,000 citizens of Goodland, Ind., stood1 in the park listening to the Fourth of Juljk oration, a liberty pole M beside them was shivered to fragments by light ning, but no one was injured. Hon. David Davis presided over an old- fashioned celebration at Bloomington. 111., where John H. Oberlv was the oratpr of the day. Michael Davitt addressed a mass- meeting at Inniehowen in celebration of the anniversary of American independence. The people of Portland, Me., celebrated the 2EKth anniversary of its settlement by dedicating a monument and placing memorial tablets at various historic spota. H. Ludlum made a balloon ascension at tvee enough to tw»«y the dead m mtmM between Lake Menaalen and take ...t8ir William Gull, an emfcuint Englfah nhytfeian, does not believe the cholera wfu spread to Europe--While the coast-trading steamer Daphne was being launched at Renfrew. Scotland, she capsized when rite struck the water, and of a arge number, of persons on board 160 were drowned Tne ill-fated craft had all her machinery on hoard, and her hull retards navigation in the Clyde. THE cable announces the death of John Winston Spencer Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, at the age of 01. In Parlia ment he distinguished himself for his efforts in behalf of the Established Church. In 1878 he was nominated to the Vioeroyalty of Ireland. He was a Prince of the Holy Bo- man Empire, and enjoyed a pension of £5,030per annum....A man named Griffey was shot at Ennis, Ireland, for taking a lace from which the former tenants had ited. v >. 1 fi tatt broaching coal-train. The passenger-car vaa WfU filled, and the destruction of ADDITIONAL NEWS. THREE men, one holding ft large bucket of boiling-hot pitch, were standing on a sky-light in Atlanta, when the glass gave way, precipitating the men fifty feet, the black fluid pouring on them after their fall: Although the victims were all fear fully bruised and their bruises scalded with pitch, yet none of them will die Joseph Brewster, a soldier, guilty of criminally as saulting Mr& Davis, at Pert Davis, was hanged at Ysleta, Texas. He made no confession, but delivered a speech of twentj- minutes, during which he took two big drinks of whisky, his religious adviser taking the bottle from him once The knot was tied in a bungling way. and after the fall Brewster writhed and twitched terribly. Then the rope slipped and he was hauled up from the trap and upon the platform. The rope was replaced and the man was then rehung... John Cone, colored, was hanged at Houston, Texas, for a criminal assault on Mr& Effie M. Scott. He made a speech from the scaffold asserting his innocence. THE raftsmen, upon whose confes sions so much depended to convict the Jews of Tiza-Eszlar, Hungary, now declare that their statements were obtained by torture. Their receital of the cruelties practiced upon them by the authorities reads like a chapter from Fox's "Book of Martyrs.".... A detachment of British troops in India accompanied a political agent to bring a refractory village into subjection. A band of 500 natives made an attack, and were repulsed with a loss of fifty Irish Catholic Bishops condemn State-aided immigration, maintaining large tracts of uncultivated land, if tilled, would support the surplus population....In the British House of Commons a motion by a Liberal member in favor of female suffrage was re jected by a vote of 130 to 114 The London Tiuifx reports that James Carey, the in former, has quitted Ireland in disguise. GOY. BARSTOW, of Vermont, ordered out four companies of militia to quell a labor disturbanoe at Ely, in the Green Mountain State. Three hundred miners, armed with pistols and knives, took pos session of the mine explosives, threatened to destroy the mine and burn the town unless they received their pay, which is long over due, owing to the mining company being financially embarrassed Griml'ey, an aeronaut* who ascended from Honesdale, Pa, in a balloon, landed in the Catskills, and had a terrible experience. KANSAS sends the first car-load of winter wheat to Chicago. It inspected No. 2, and weighed fifty-nine and a half pounds to the measured bushel... .Nelson Howard, colored, killed an official of the Wabash road, named John Kane, on an excursion train near Mound City, 111., on the Fourth of July, and tied t> the woods On being captured he was jailed at Mound City, where a mob saved the county the cost of a trial and execption by lynching him. Two GRAND TRUNK freight trains collided near Port Hope, Ont, the loco motives and twelve cars being demolished and a brakeman fatally injurecL The loss is placed at $'̂ 00,000. from Bradford, faJ y d'olock this morning a coal tain, -car attached, on the Boch- Pittsburgh railroad, broke in two whOt goteg up a steep grade pear Baaselas, efewinaM south of Kivkoa Yiaduet The covered section, consisting of seven haavily- loaded coal-cars and a passenger-ooaoh, im mediately started down the steep grade, and, whits going at the frightful speed of forty miles an hour, collided with an ap- P was life and limb was appalling, seven hav ing already died from injuries, and others fatally hurt A relief-train with three surgeons and a number of em ployes of the company on board was dis patched to the scene at 5 o'clock this even ing. The killed and Injured were brought to this city, and a? far as can be learned their names are as follows: & N. Talles, aged 34, conductor, residing at Bradford; terribly mangled, died in stantly. David Ford, brakeman, of Bradford, had both legs broken, and fatally Injured in ternally. Mike Downs, brakeman, of Bradford, had both feet out off. and fatally injured; died at 4 o'clock this afternoon George Qnlnn, of Bradford, traveling sales man, wed on the relief train. Augelo Odone, an Italian laborer, was in stantly killed. W. A Davis, of Olean, Pa, received a ter rible gash on the head, and is supposed to be fatally hurt. L L McKee, of Bradford, leg broken and Injured about the abdomen, died at noon while being carried into his house. Robert demons, of Bradford, neck broken and body badly crushed. Killed outright. .Tames O'Connell, of Altoona, dangerously iniured Joseph Bavella, of Altoona, badly hurt, andwfllprobablynot recover. Mra W. H. McCurdy and baby, of Brad ford. slightly cut about the head and arms; child braised. John Collins, of limestone, N. Y., badly hurt on the head. J. Bosway had several ribs broken and severe contusions about the head J. Cosmillo, an Italian, leg broken in two placea R Cofmillo, a brother of the above, rib Etove in and condition critical. "Pop" Downs, engineer of the second train, was tne only one hurt in his crew. He saw the severed section approaching, and, after reversing his engine, jumped, escaping with slight bruises. Mrs. McCurdy, who was only slightly in jured, has made a statement in which she sars that the conductor and both brakemen, who were in the car with her, were asleep It is not yet known to whom blame is most to be attached. 4k NOVEL RACE! . A Boat vs. Horse Race Won by the Former After an Exciting Contest. Where the Lawyers All Go. A bright, young lawyer of this city thinking to improve his opportunity by taking Horace Greely's advice, packed his briefless reticule and emigrated to the far-famed Dakota. One bright morning found liim in Huron casting about in a "prospecting" way for »u eligible location. The first man that he accosted was a lawyer, who referred him to a brother attorney, and on he went from one limb of the law to an other until he had called upon some seventy-five of these legal gentlemen all new residents. Addressing the last acquaintance he asked if there were any more lawyers in there that he had not met. "Yes, there are more than eighty that you have not met yet." "Do you suppose I could find a peac- able and respectable person in this city that is not a lawyer ?" "That would be hard to do, sir, but you could not sling your hat thirty feet without hitting some fool lawyer in the face." The new emigrant took the next train for home, fully sated with the prairie fastnesses of the wild wierd West.-- Chicago Cheek. THE MARKER NEW YO&K. BEEVB $ 5.60 0 #.72 HOGS 6.85 & 7.12& FLOUB--Sapwriftne 8.40 & 4.25 WJUUT--No. X White l.u%@ 1.16 No. a Bed:.. 1.17 1.17ft COBH--No. 2 61 .02 OATS--No. 2 IOLUS i'oi:K--Mesa 17.76 #17.87)6 * . 8%(& . an Congressman, in ttu to the platform is for a The fkwii plank, free ballot and a Montrose, Pa. At a height of forty feot the trapeze rope caught on a tree, and the aeronaut was hurled to the ground, fractur ing his skull The feature of the celebra tion at Quincy, 111., was the unveiling of a bronze statue of the late Gov. John Wood, the first white settler of that city. Ex- Kenator Oglesby delivered the oration. In New York the Continental Guards of Charleston helped the veterans of 1H12 to raise the stars and stripes at the Battery. The cadets of the Military Institute of Vir ginia were received by President Arthur at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and returned a flag captured from the One Hundred and Sixty- fourth New York regiment. BISHOP MCMULLEN, of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Davenport, died at Davenport, Iowa, on the evening of the 4th of July. Bishop Pinckney, of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland, died in Baltimore at about the same hour. The venerable Arch bishop Purcell also died on the morning of Independence day, near Cincinnati. FOREIGN. IN the House of Commons the other day, Mr. Gladstone said the Government was opposed to the annexation of the New Guinea bv Queensland; that itwas an illegal step, and that he believed no other power wished to take possession of the island..... The Rev. Thomas N. Burke, the Irish priest, orator and lecturer, is dead. AN Alexandria dispatch of the 3d inst says: There were 141 deaths from oholera at Damietta yesterday. There were fourteen deaths at Mansourah and live at Port Said from the came disease. Spain has imposed ten days' quarantine upoa all vessels arriving at Spanish ports which left Egypt since June 22, and a fortnight's qusr- antine upon vessels with sickness on board rrUegram ftom New York ogHT*] A steel-gray horse and a skeleton wagon In which sat a determined-looking man wearing a linen duster, with a straw hat tied under his chin, sped away from the corner of Madison avenue and Twenty-seventh street at 5 o'clock this morning. Simultane ously a catamaran sail-boat scudded into the East river from the foot of Twenty-fourth street The race between Ezra Daggett's horse, Boston, and Frederick Hugher cata maran, Jesse, to Stony Creek, Ct, ninety miles awav, for $l,0ty a side, had begun. Trainer Schenek followed Daggett in a square-box buggy. When the trainer putted r# on bis tired nag in front of the Huguenot Hotel in New Rochelle at 7:80 o'clock in the morning, he had the pleasure of seeing Mr. Dag gett hop nimbly up behind Boston and whirl away. The owner ha~ in half an hour refctedfhls horse and refinshed him- aefc The groom saM that Boston had not turned a hair th his jaunt of eighteen miles. At 7:5S o'clock a crowd on the shore of the sound saw Jesse sail by. Two minutes later, Mr. Schenck, with a fresh horse, was pur suing Boston. New Bochelle was excited. It had bet $2,500 variously on the race. At 1 :<W p. m. a reporter who had gone to Bridge port by ra l saw Boston approaching in a cloud of dust Half of the dust belonged to Mr. gchenck's horse. Boston had oome the forty-four mile3 from New Rochelle in six hours and three minutes. The distance of twenty-three miles between Stamford and Bridgeport was trotted in two and a quarter hour a It was a race nearly all the way. A great crowd gathered at the stable. The wind had shifted to the Bouth since 10 o'clock, and was now favoring the boat. At 1:46 o'clock the horses turned their heads toward New Haven. The sun was blazing down. They were soon covered with foam, but the road was fine, and they got over eight miles to Milford in thirty- eight minutes. City folks in the summer residences, who knew the New York horse was to pass their way, were out looking for it Beiore the travelers reached New Haven they were almost certain that the boat was ahead of them. A steady southerly breeze had been bio w ing for live hours, and must have carried the boat beyond New Haven, barring au ac cident, but they urged the horses on. It was (.i:30 p. m. when Boston trotted through Water street. New Haven, past the railroad station, with ten miles yet to go to Stony Creek. He was going about tix miles an hour. Here Mr. Daggett got word that he had lost the race. The catamaran had passed New Haven at 2:80. Ctosslng Tom- linscn's bridgre, the cool breeze from the harbor struck Hoston and chilled him to the bone. He dropped into a walk, and lb*. Daggett halted under a clump of trees and rubbed him down and poured a few drops .of spirits down his throats He rallied and spun over another mile to the Four Corners House,reaching it a little after 4:80. A telephone message announcing ths arrival of tne catamaran at Stony Creek, greeted Mr. Daggett, here, and he rested his h )rse until 7, and then drove leisurely to Stony Creek, arrivimr there at 8:45. Time for ninety miles, lifteen hours and forty-five minutes 'Ihe horse was in goad condition, and was treated to a feed of hay and bran mash. To-night he thows no signs of having covered nil, ety miles since morning. G.00 4.60 5.40 5.70 6.00 5.50 0 6. OS & 5.10 (<9 6.76 & 6.35 <£« 6.23 <d 6.75 .'JbHfS .SW 1.06 <£$ 1.06'i AO'/M -6ofc .'HH& -33 .r.5!4(& .65 li « .08 (4 .70 .21 & .22 .14'$C4 .15 15.87 ;2@ie. oo J0K& . tf'4 •96 Ji .51% .OHbj .60% Labd. CHICAGO, BEEVES--Good to Fancy Steera.. Cows and Hoifera Medium to Fair Hons. FIROUB--Fancy White Winter Ex. Good to Cboice Spr'g Ex. WHEAT--No. 2 Hpnnjt No. 2 lied Winter; COBN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 KYE--.\O 2 RAKLKY--NO. 2 BITTTEI;--Choice Creamery. EGOS--Frenh PORK--Meae f.mn MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--NA 9...., CORN--NO. 2 OATS--No. 2 KIE--No. 2.... UABIJSY--No. 2 POBK--Mem LAUD ST. LODlh. WHEAT--No. 2 Bed Conn--Mixed OATS--No. 2 Kyk FORK--Mesa. ........... I .inn CINCINNATI. WHEAT--No. 2 Red. COS* OATS. .>»*, RT*. PORK--Meas LABD. ToLEDa WHEAT--NA S Bed COBK OAT»--NO. I........ bETROIT. Floub WHEAT--No. L White COBH--No. 2 OATS--Mixed POBK--Meas INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--NA 2Red 1.02 © 1.02& COBN--No. 2 .48 & .48% OA3»--Mixed ^2^® .32>6 EAST LIBERTY, PA. PERSONAL. .96 74 <(• .3'2'u® .52»4® .66'4<$ 15.90 010.60 .9% 1.06140 1.08 .44 & .44 ̂ .33 <S> .34H .47 ̂ .47Vi 17.40 @17.50 .9 & .334 1.06 0 1.06!4 .62 & .S2>4 .3C9* .57 >£(01 .58 . 17.00 @17.00 . 9 & .95< 1.06*0 1.06)6 .63^(9 .63)6 .8394CS .34 4.28 1.12 •AS .45 20.60 @ 4.50 © 1.14 & .56 & .46 @21.00 Vstic«a>-MAssist- AQ Bnrepels becoming alarmed si the threatening character of the cholera and the rapidity of thespresd. Notwithstanding the international quarantine, which waa in tended to prevent it from getting into Eu rope by the gatewcy of the Bass canal, it has reached the northern entrance and ap pears to have fastened itself permanently at Port SSId,Damietta, Mansnrahand Boaetta, to Egypt, whioh are aH in olose proximity to the entrance. Thence it has reaohed Alex andria to the westward and Cairo to the aonth, entering the latter place, as usual, while the doctors are disputing about it terrible d« The march of +*»<• terrible destroyer not alone threatens the health of Europe, but it is laying an embargo upon its oommerce. It has closed Port Said and the Sue* canal tighter than any Government or any quaran tine could do it already. The great canal is now ahut against commerce, and that means a cessation of the trade between Europeand Asia or its compulsory diversion from the short oat of the canal into the Mediterranean to the old. lour, and tedious route round Africa ' The Seott In Ohio. 80 much has been said about the 'Seott liquor law, and the probable action of the Supreme Court upon the question of its con stitutionality. says the Chicago Nevm, that it has become a subject of interest to the pub lic. It is well known that the constitution of Ohio prohibits the licensing of Baloons, and the olause waa ratified by the temper ance people in the expectation that its adop tion would put an end to the liquor traffic in that Stttbe. Such waB not, however, the case, as under the organic law of the»i?tate there was no power to restrain the sola of liquor, and it ran t riot In April last the State passed what was known as the Scott law, which authorizes an annual assessment upon fS business of liquor sell ing. A oase was nde up and carried to the Supreme Court ran the view of testing its constitutionality ̂The other day the court rendered its decision, all of the Judges ex cept one declaring the law to be constitu tional The opinion seems to be that the effect of the decision will be to strengthen the Republicans, as that party championed the law while their opponents opposed it As two of the members of the Supreme Court are on the Republican State ticket the Democrats charge that they were guided as much by their political prospects as by a strict construction of the law In the case. The Czar and the Vatican. An understanding has been arrived at between the heads of the respective churches of Greece and Home The two churches were formerly a unit, but as early as 482 A. D. dogmatical differences sprung up between them, which gradually threw them more and more apart, until July 16,1054, when the Schism was completed Various proposals nave since then been proposed and rejected for a union of the two churches again, the last being that of Pius IX,, when, in 1848, he invited, oy an encyclical letter, the entire Greek church to a corporate union with Borne, which proposition was rejected with acorn. There is, however, in the Greek church a faction that hopes and prays for such a union, which embraces home of the nobility and societies of the Greek Church. That a modut vivendum has been agreed upon by the heads of the East ern and Western churches is, in view of their past histories, very significant Under t&ls concordat the Russian Government re tains the right of Inspecting seminaries, supervision in the appointment of teachers, and the education or Catholic children in the Russian language, history and literature, and abrogates the harsh measures declared against the Catholics in 1864. For the first time in many centuries, the chasm between the Eastern and Western churches seems to be closing. Assisted Emigration. Our Government has at last taken decided action to prevent Great Britain from un loading her paupers in this country. Having tried every possible means, except those of humanity and justice, to restore peace to Ireland under her tyranny, Great Britain began some hftmths agtf Urahip the pdorof that country to this, in the hope that by re ducing the population there would be less demand for land, fewer paupers to support, and an element of political disquietude banished from the island. In May last sev eral vessel loads of pauper-Irish landed in Boston. Gov. Butler called the attention of the Secretary of State to the matter, and quietly since then has it been investigated. The result is that enough proof has been procured to sustain the charge that Great Britain is paying the passage of emigrants from Ireland to this country. The subject was brought up for consideration at a meeting of the Cabinet on Tuesday, and under the direction of the President Secre tary Folger instructed the Collector of Cus toms in New York to prevent the landing of all immigrants found to be paupers within the meaning of the law. Some of those who have been donated to us are taken from the workhouse and are usually persons well along in years, with large families, which have been and are the subjects of public charity. On the same day tnat this action was taken by the President the telegraph Informs us that there were then waiting transportation from Queenstown to the United States 100 persons from the Linnford Union, most of Vhom have been taken from the workhouse. While it is true that we have always prided ourselves that our land waa-the asylum for the oppressed of all nations, we have never favored compulsory immigration, although the voluntary- immigrant, rich or poor, has iilways been welcome. Our Government has once before had to adopt similar re strictions iik^he case of Italy, which began sending us her paupers and criminals. The return of a ship-load or two put an end to the trouble, and such will be the case of Great Britain Let her deluge her dominion of Canada with these people if the depopu lation of Ireland is necessary to the tneser- vation of the United Kingdoms. CASS&a--Best Fair Common... Hoos 0.10 6.83 IS 3.80 O 6.25 «S T ' .OO (fit 5.75 0 6.70 • 6.60 TUPPEE, the poet, is a spiritualist MAGGIE MITCHEIX IS the fourth land-owner at Long Branch. IT is said that Hanlan has made #88,000 in the last six years by rowing. OLE BUI L'R widow is occupying Minister Swell's re-idence at Cambridge, Main. A FAUMER in Vermont is named Haydn Mozart Handel, but can't even play the jews- harp. JOHN M COOK, head of the "personally- conducted" tourist firm, haa been decorated with the Medjidieh by the Khedive BARON ROTHSCHILD'S carriage is illuminated by electric lipht He doesn t wantto have a wheel taken off by a cab or a sleeping po liceman. ONE of the children of Cbarlea Dickens' sister, the musical Mrs. Burnett, was the original of Paul Dombey, who is perhaps the quaintest child in fiction. EDMUND ( I.AHENCE STEDHAN, the broker critic, ha* just entered his.'0 h year. His hair is silvering, but he wa'.krf erect and rapidly, with a powerful stride. THE New York M<>r»irif) Journal says that Senator Beck, of Kentucky, can play tbe bagpipe, but he prefers to use his wind in discussing the political situation. JANE GHEY SWISKHELM is growing very red as to the nose, and, though a strictly tem perate person, she is continually subjected to the suspicion of being a gin drinker. J. I* CORBIN. of Cape Town, South Africa, a reporter of twenty-five years' experience, can report in short-hand accuratelv in five different languages--Latin, French, Spanish, Italian and English. Miss ISAHELUS BEWICK, youngest and only surviving daughter of Thomas Bewick, the famous wood-engraver, has just died at Gateshead, England, at the age of 91 It is understood that she leaves a rich and valu able collection of her father's works. Her eldest sister died three years ago, aged OS. BT A BOT HUSBAJOJ. Mrs. Ague. Wynne Foolishly Dares ths Rage of Her Drunken Master. ' [New York Telegram.] Eighteen months ago Agnes Wynne, aged 18, was married to James H. Wynne, aged 17. For some time they had lived unhappily, and Wynne says he had Intended separating. He had been drinking heavily and had gone home to-day, when a quarrel took place. He threatened to Bhoot her, and she answered: "I dare you to do it" At the time she was lying on A bed with the baby beside her. The boy husband drew a revolver and fired. The bullet en tered his wife's breast He went for a phy sician, but subsequently Mrs Wynne was taken to the hospital The wound was pro nounced fatal and the young wife died to night. Wynne was arrested. Two play mates of Mrs. Wynne witnessed the crime. A '-'-months old child was orphaned by the drunken father's shot. FASHION NOTES. ; GRAT IS steadily Increasing in popularity. DEEP collar and cuffs of velvet adorn many of the new Jerseys. THE fans shown as the new importations are quite equal in size to those of last sea son. ̂ CUT-JET nail-heads are used with very good effect as trimming for black woolen cos tumes. Scrrs of terra ootta are fast losing their popularity, and no strictly new ones are to be seen. CORSAGE bouquets may be worn either di rectly in front or on the left side, as fancy dictates. CAT'S heads are beooming so Widely fash ionable as to be carried out in the figures on some of tbe new foulard silk a GOLB and pink in combination on small capotes is one of the new departures in the millinery line and is remarkably effective. THISTLES of dull gold and wheat-heads of either gold or silver may be mentioned among the many other fashionable hat orna- ments. NARBOW black velvet bands elosely en circling the throat are worn with many thin summer suits, and are usually found very beoomtng. WayB at ftlMgow. Number •# t>«opl» Prowind. teem Glasgow, Soottead, my the steamship Daphne tipped ovsron her site, oapalaed apd sans in nilililisani while being launched in ths Clyde. About 100 persons perished. The vessel, with up ward of 900 workmen aboard, left the ways at a very rapid rate. As she gained the water she rolled from side to side When opposite Renfrew, about live miles above this city, the human freight was seen rush ing to and fro. The ship gave a furious lurch, rose elear above the water and disap peared as if by magic. Those who luklolung to floating pieces of the wreck did their utmost to save their drowning comrades Eye-witnesses saw a great number struggling and shrieking for help. Many were bruised and covered with blood, having been struck by the debris. Boats were pulled hard to aid in resetting the unfortunates; many wore thus saved. A number of mm. at the ship's yard, on the opposite side of the river, witnessed the disaster, but were unable to render any as- siatance. They immediately set to work saving the people struggling in the water. They say some of the men on the steamer jumned overboard and others were thrown overboard and that a quantity of loose fit tings fell from the deck and crushed many unfortunates struggling in the water. A number of swimmers were visible directly after the ship capslxed, but many of them were afterward seen to sink. Six men were eeen clinging together. Four endeavored to climb upon the steamer as she was sink ing, but were forced to desist by rush of steam from the port-hole. Some climbed upon the keel just before the ship was sub merged Many who were dashed into the water swam ashore Several of those picked up were so exhausted that it was found neces sary to remove them to hospitals. According to the stories of witnesses and survivors, the vessel left the slip too rapid ly, causing her stern, which entered first; to sink deeply in the water. She was then caught by the strong current of the river, by which, aa well as her topweight, she was caused to keel over so far that the water entered her port. She had all her machin ery aboard when launched. She is now completely under water. She was con structed for coast trading, and was of 500 tons burden. Crowds of stricken relatives lined the quays all day. Whenever a dead body was taken out and recognised heartrending cries drowned the splash of busy oars. A later despatch says: A diver reports that the bodies in the hold of the Daphne are so closely packed that he was unable to move them. Preparations are being made to raise the vessel Fifty-two bodies have been re covered. It is now estimated that 150 per sons were drowned by the sinking of the Daphne MEXICAN RAILWAYS. Nearly Twenty-five Hundred Miles Com pleted. The Mexican Financier give the following list from official sources of the railroads completed in Mexieo up to the < Tlascala railroad Orlzaba-Insenlo N oetla-Tlasciaoo San Andres Tlalmanaloo Pueblo and Matamotas linear San Martin Tehuacan-Esperansa Tehuanteuec Sinaloaand Durango... , Vera Cruz-MedeUn.. Hidalgo railroad... Pueblo San Marcos Yucatan lines Mexioo-Tlalpulalpam Sonora railway, Guaymas to Nogales . Interoeeanic, Mexico to Cuantia and branches Mexican National, Mexioo toAcam- baro 178.00 Laredo aouthward 308.00 Branches 87.00 Mexican Central, Mexico to Lagos. .811.00 Paso del Norte to Chihuahua. 30X00 Tamplco to San Luis Potosl 62.50 of April: Miles. 3.80 8.00 8.75 7.00 •.00 18.00 33.00 81.00 81.00 86.00 99.00 56.00 67.00 68.00 75.00 .384.00 183.00 473.00 Mexican railway, Vera Cruz to - Mexioo ;.n Pueblo and Jalapa branches 1 675.60 LOO 9.50 353.80 Total 2,379.35 The table foots up 3,831^ miles, although the Financier gives the total completed road at 2,437 miles. The Mexican National, the Interoceanic, the Hidalgo, and the Yuca tan lines are narrow-gauge, the rest stand ard gauge. A number of the shorter lines given above are worked by horse-power, and some of them have been in existence a long time ^ THINGS CURIOUS AND NOTABLE. B. D. BARNES, of Wilson county, N. C., is the possessor of a well-developed pig that has horns similar to a lamb's, one over each eye. * A QUEEB and an easy method of shoemak- lng is practiced by the dwellers on tbe island of St. Helena. It consists of wrapping around the foot tbe soft, warm skin of the pot-fish, which, in drying, retains the shape of the foot. FOB twenty-nine years there has been a Tow Society connected with the Baptist church at Hemel, East Prussia It buys worn-out cables and ropes of vessels, picks cnem to pieces and sells the tow 10 ship-rs» pairers for calking purposes. Thousand* of dollars has been received la chls way. THE Glasgow Laity Mail is responsible for tbe statement that, while two miners were at work taking' down the coal in the splint seam at the Ferniegare colliery, at a depth of nearly 100 fathoms from the surface, a frcg leaped from the face of the coal in quite a lively state. The coal, which was very hard, showed a cavity that had been the singular abode of the frog. The animal at the time of writing was still alive but much attenuated. It measured eight inches in length. PERSONAL. DOM PEDBO, of Brazil, wears white silk «hd white satin when he sics on his throne, a necklace of immense diamonds and emer alds, and a rich lace cravat A NINETV-VEAK-OIJ> rennsylvanian, who never smoked, never drank, never fell 1 n love, and never went out of his native town, has just starred on his first journey. He went in a hearse OLIVE LOGAN has discovered a Scotch girl to whom the l'rince of Wales sent a nose gay, which terrified her parents to such a degree that the Caledonian lamb was promptly shipped to the North of Tweed RICHAKD HENRY STODDARD has set his son to learning the publishing business. One poet in the family is enough- In the Stod dard family there are two, Mia Stoddard being very felicitous in the use of blank verse. GEM. SHEBMAX'S idea of Washington recalls one of Horace Greeley's letters: "There is so much villainy going on in this place," he wrote in 18oti, "that I am almcst afraid to look in the glass lest I shall see the face of a rogue." RICHAKD ROWLEY, the hero, who, in the memorable light of the Kearsarge with the Alabama, picked up a 100-pound shed from the Kearsage's deck, while the fuse was burning, and threw it overboard, was up before the Bangor Municipal Court last week on a charge of drunkenness. FISH TALES. A JEJRSEYMAN caught an eel in a small creek and found inside of it a sleeve-button which he had lost some years before THERE is in Lake Tahoe an immense fish which jumps up out of the water, seizes the bowsprit of vessels in its mouth, snaps them oft, and disappears. FISH are so plentiful in the Hackensaak river that they appear to be crowded for room. It is not an uncommon sight to see them swim up alongside of boats and mute ly plead to be taken in. A LONG ISLAND angler threw in his line the other day, and fastening it to a stake went home to dinner. When he returned the weight was so great that he was compelled to call for assistance. Hauling up the catch he was surprised to find that there was only one immense catfish, but on cutting it open he discovered another fish which, when dis- •wallowed tbe hook. 7; v; * nt 5 were, on to exactly UM people take him to ba, butthat he always gives value reeeived, and in ex- change farsKTlMSeefei • dose of quinine, or a mtwtftatofor aHir nine, into jwur system at the moment that lie taps yarn epidermis for a straight drink. Perhaps there is a grain of truth in this interesting and sensational state ment. We know for a fact thtil th* favorite luumts of the mosquito are usually located in swampy, malarial districts, where stalk the ghostly chills, dumb yet eloquent agues, indolent livers and torpid spleens. We know that, because we have been there- ourselves and have sampled them. And the mosquitoes sampled us at the time, but we didn't have the least ide». in the world that we were swapping-" blood for quinine, although we didM notice that in these localities, sur rounded with such malign and depress- ing influences, the average mosquit<>- waxed fat and monumental in avoirdu pois. The man, woman or child caught- prowling in this vicinity, and a long- way from a regular, practicing physi cian, with a sheep-skin diploma, saddle-* bags and a cross-cut saw, is in moment ary danger of being seized with a con gestive chill, and suddenly ushered intoi the dim, uncertain hence without benefit of clergy or the prompt and expensive services of a red-nosed doctor, or even a journeyman medical sharp who has a* large and lucrative practice--to get. In such an emergency the philanthropic; mosquito comes to the rescue, antL while you are stamping^slapping, fight ing and swearing, the medical mosquito- is busily engaged in saving your life with liis little hypodermic injections of quinine, and you never once thank liim, or ask him to call again in the morning- and see how you are getting along. One of the chief peculiarities of the. whole business is that the medical mos quito settles his bill before he prescribes. That's where he is sharp--sharper than, a serpent's tooth, for he would ever have* a thankless patient, even if he got away without being busted up in 'the medica'L Srofession. Of course, this practice of leeding is no new tiling in medical science, but we doubt if any of the- numerous schools of medicine have ever adopted the practice of injecting quinines at the moment of the removal of the* blood. But, after all, there are other and rather more seductive ways of taking- quinine than through the mosquite. , Up in Arkansas, for instance, they have* a happy faculty of compounding thf* disagreeable drug with another an<t jnore powerful stimulant, renowned* throughout the country for its sudden- oecs in effecting surprising results, and hailed from the Rio Grande to Moose- head lake under the assumed names of "Parole," "Old Crow," "Sour Mash," "Liquid Crime," "Calamity Sirup," "Sheep Dip," "Snake Cordial," etc.* and as a disguise for quinine it beats • Mr. Mosquito, M. D., clear out of sight. ' --Texas Sifting An Indian Preaching to Indian Women* There was a curious practice among" the Indians on Puget Sound in the early days. It was the lecture or ser mon that,, at stated periods, was de livered exclusively to the Indian women.. An important member of the tribe, the* big chief or the medicine man, would select a promontory or island remoter Mil) the mainland, and paddle there, solitary and alone, on a line*day. Soon all the squaws would be seea following him, paddling vigorously to-,, ward the common point. No bucks were among them; they all remained, on the mainland. The preacher, in structor, exhorter, or whatever he was,, often stood in the water up to his knees- for a full hour or more while he deliv ered his discourse; but the squaws and Indian maidens gathered as close> around him as their canoes would per mit, so as to catch every word that fell from his lips. Savonarola was never more in earnest than this dusky preach er; his face and action showed he- realized the importance of his word. He was supposed to be instructing the- women as to their proper duties in. their savage life; but whatever he said, they were eager to hear it all. There" was no noise save the occasional chafing of one canoe against another as they moved with the slight swell of the< • water. It was an exciting spectacle to- see dusky women, when the service Vras over, s :art in an emulative race for the mainland, their dark sinewy arms plying the flashing paddle as the white canoe cut swiftly the placid waters of the sound until with laughing banter the prows touched the shore and they rejoined the bucks, who were idly awaiting them. Too grateful for the blessitag lent Of simple taates and mind content. , --G. E. Barnes, in San Francisco ~ Call Gen. Sherman's Remarkable Dream. Gen. Sherman denounces as false the* Story of his having once seated himself beneath the umbrageous shadow of a. Weeping willow and combed cannon balls out of his hair while a fierce bat-f tie was raging. One night, however, ^ he took refuge in an old farm-house- near Milledgeville, Ga., and had fallen. Jato a*deep sleep when he was visited , by an exciting dream. He thought the house in which he slept was surrounded by a band of guerillas, that dug a hole*' beneath the wall next which he lay, filled the hole with powder and touched^ ; it off. The explosion that followed was. terrible, and the General thought he> saw himself flying through the air in ^ sections. With a howl he sprang out; of bed, rubbed his eyes and hastily . dressing himself went down the staits. To his surprise his body-guard was no- where to be seen. The inmates of the house were apparently asleep, but the* • General felt that something was wrong, and slipping quietly out of the back, door he walked cautiously to the barn.. Had no sooner got there than a lurid. \ flame shot into the air, followed by a terrific explosion. Turning to see the* , cause the General was astounded to- find the side of the house he had just- left blown completely away, and con gratulated himself that he had not been blown away with it. Since that time* the General says he has been a firm believer in dreams.--New York Jour nal. LOOK not mournfully into the past, it cannot come back again; wisely im4-' prove the present, it is thine; go forth to meet the shadowy future without , fear and with a manly heart.--Long fellow. A SHEEP pasture in Dimmit and,; Webb counties, Texas, comprises 300,-1 000 acres and feeds 300,000 sheep. It is believed to be the largest in tb#' Wufld. ^ J -1 •* , J