~y& " V «. > **: DOHDEHSEa j * *4***-**/wy ' ̂ y*. • v. jr. V . •• ..~Jr> ^ •"«•«' -flWi»*«T. Oftpt, Webb vm found rtrw near Lewtahm, IE. I ft eat oa hi* bead, evidently ft geek at the entrance to the /,b .. Withintfcf • audi daft 4n the Oowt OmvglKH 1WW% perhahf .ImplT white^SS'iS eredwtth emblems of rani life. JS IfWIM- •f VilUgas aad Pwrohwit IpimftheViotims. «» Minion. ttsolf death. eufflcleat The re- eeub W 0UWIWU« waww la at praeent reaadinfr.... do Barca,U»e Spaaieb Minister n. chot himself through the im at the Albemarle Betel, rortc. Financial tnwblea led so terrible act Benor Barcawaa •A American Minister in 1881.... eiondlrarata in the region of the re of the Allegheny river prodnoed rfae in the etxeam that proved nwm fllaartiinn than any flood idnee 186L Seven acres of boarda and ttmber were cent ftdtift down the Ohio. earning a loea of folly «t,«tt,ooa Thb Coroner's inquest on the body of <Oh«t Webh, who was lost in the Niagara Trhlri|y*' rapids, tendered a verdict at i from an unknown cause, the doctors usable to agree whether death ro- I from drowning, a blow on the head «r tke foxoe of the water in the rapids. The Ootenert Jury thought best not to venture SB tflrtnwm Mm Webb and lb. Kyle were at the funeral, but Sere were no religious services.*., fee btiming of John D. & Charles King's hide-mill, at Johnstown, Fulton county, *¥., caused a km of #M,0U>... John Wal ters oilcloth factory, at Albany, N. Y., was consumed by fire. Loss, 975,000; in- ear ;v#- Two fbkioht trains on the Troy tod Boston road collided between Petersburg Junction and Pownal, Vt Eight men were killed and a number injured. The collision Was caused by the neglect of the telegraph operator at Petersburg" Junction to rvey orders to the train dispatcher stop the train at his station.... Dexter's hat factory at Danbury, Ct, was homed with its contents. The loss is nearly 9100,000... .The failure is announced of the Laneawtor (Ta.) Watch Comnany. The Di- . rectOTS any the suspension is only temporary. ... .Charles H. Ward A Co., shoe manufact urers of Boston, have made an assignment • SSielr liabilities are about 1730,000. A salute of thirty-two guns was fired fll the public square at Syracuse, N. Y., tender the auspices of the Celtic society, to celebrate the assassination of James Carey. Two artillery-men were seriously injured by ft premature explosion... .The failure is announoed of F.T. ft J. D. Phinney,!manu facture: a of boot and shoe counters, Boston, .with liabilities of •400,000. They had ln- yjftOiaod Shaw ft Bros1 paper to thai amount. THE WKST. Skldox has the city of Chicago seen ftn assemblage of men mere representative iff the highest form of citizenship than the congregation which gathered to attend the fftftecal services of the Hon. Thomas Hoyne, who lost his life by a railroad accident in Mow York. Mr. Hoyne was one of the most honored citizens of Chicago, a dis tinguished lawyer, a man of wealth, and waa conspicuous for his love of trnth and fair-dealing in everything.... Ibe Salt and Lumber Company's mill at Ocooda, Mich., was destroyed by fire. Loea #00,000... .E. 8. Todd's commission and but- aer-packing house. Des Koinec, Iowa, was burned Lots on building UiM iui--ligiliuu into the fteta of HOI, at a COmm. «of flfcugn. tcistWnl that JMt; swasftyon mo ofrportnnily to Md on hydxaulioelevatorB.for hm CUoage torn Houaa, and tlhat Mr. HOI paid tar fm^stedMMrto^What thoee used in the Ixtouma Bxvknvk Ooxmssioxn Etuis, haa'decided that bitters and various atoohcAte compounds of alleged medicinal worth were bevanm.«d ahould be taaed as such under rthe law. Hereafter all per- eons selling any <of these aloohoUo tonioS without special payment therefor will be subject to arrest and Una In addition to this these tonics will be tested the same a< whisky and other liquors. Foiaowikg is the regular monthly statement of the public'debt issued on the .t 829,450,500 Interest bearing debfc-- Three and one-half per cents . Fear and one-half per cents.,.. Fosr per cents ....... Three per cent* 804,211 J»0 Refnnfinff eertifloataa....̂ . ........ HZ'iJ? pension fund. 14,000^>00 •VMslJnterast-bearing debt *1,338,282,000 ... T.367,765 _ 9U,TU,n» ̂ 11,410,009 172,723,451 ... S.9&V241 debt. Legal-tender notes. Certtftcatea of depoait Gold and silver oertilicstes. Pactional currency... VaSal srtthont interest.. in Iters del Oreco The tMigiiflMi of safety." At At fff a wtftHwn of O'Donnell, at Port IwhoU ̂Q--y% sen tsaHflsrt that the priaowir Md lil father had boen on friendly frequently 1 msasiiMis . of •otrfoiais coonected with the Phosnlx Brfrk muader trials have tWBWiMMdialnlwl Eijbtxm tboobavd dearths from ohole- ra have oocunod in ggypt 4aoe theont- toeakof theepMeaAa The disease is raging at ijhttandrift, hut is saMdtoat Cairo, ealy for the waaAe< laterlal A party of Kngllsfa physiciaas has reaohsd Alexandria. Cholera has been deeiewrt nnMimlc in Bom- bay. Thi oarrespondent of the London Daily Jfem, at Cape Hewn, aajyn 01XKauell,th« murderer of Carey, ia an Amattoaa <oitixen •ad ft native of Ohio....A fund ia feeing raised in London for the --list--na at the of the late Capt Webb. , ; •S3»^7a,61S $J, 884,872. "83 8,«B4,57S 381.536^45 Tetal debt (principal) Totaliatenst Total cMh in tre««tirv I>eb^ Jess cash in tnasnr> JLUagW.^H Decreaae dnrtns Jnly ^co.sio Df rrr aaii M debt rinoe JunetO. Mil f^xw.sro Cnrrent liabilities-- Intenatdne and tuipaid............f Debt on which Interest has oesssd.. 1>I7,7M Interest thereon MUll Gold snd rilvar oertificates lt2.7S3.451 U. 6. notes held for redemption at certificates af deposit. 13.8l0vSSP Casti bklanoe available Aug. 1 155,717,145 tS51,S3«,345 361/83.546 Total. Available i Oaah Bonds issued to Paciflcrailway com panies, interest payable by United States-- Princteal outstanding $ Interest accrued, not yet paid. 823,117 Interest paid by United States BBt223,Q9S Interest repaid by companies-- By transportation service. $ M,777,380 By cash payments, 6 per cent, net earnings.. (XJll Balanoe of interest^paid by United States 4I.TW.6U The accumulation of ailver dollars, •ays a Washington dispatch, has become so great that it is now quite a serious question now to dispose of taem. All the storage capacity of the various vaults and sub-treas- unos throughout the country is already overtaxed, and the additional vaults built recently are also fall A prompt and unqualified denial ia given by the United States Treasury Cattle Commission to the charges recently made in the British Parliament that American shippers send out animals affiicted with dangerous contagious diseases. Not only this, but the commission declsres that no case of the infection has been found at any prominent marketing or shipping point in the country. POLITICAL. The Democratic Stale Convention of Pennsylvania, met at Harrinburg. When the roll was called it was announced that for the first time in many years there were no contested seats. Robert E. James was elected Permanent President Jacob . „ and contents, (11,000; insurance small Morgan's iron foundry, near Belleville, HL, was destroyed •y fire. Loss, #75,000; insured for 940,000. ^ ^ _ . . _ . , , Ziegler, of Butler county, was nominated A XOBTOAOK for $16,000,000 has just J fcr gtato Auditor, and Joseph Powell, been recorded at ^dngfield, HI Cyrus C. of Bradford county, for State Treasurer. Hines, of Indiana, and the Union Trust Cootnany of Mew York lent the money to tt«(too»ad MltajaslppiRailroad Company. JML the borrowers thereby regained control ' « Wr- f: •im j&(L th^(r property, ^wb|ect to ; BUMBrnKHX ImCt and party arrived Hb Chieago on the evening of the Sdinst, •nd were accorded an enthusiastic recep tion. The President was accompanicd by Secretary of the Treasury Falser. Secretary §f War linooln. Postmaster General Gzee- Aam, jQdge D. Q. Bawllns, of New York, an old-talme blend of the President, and Col Jsweson. of the United States Bailway |teil Service. All along the route to Chicago, crowds gathered lit the railway' station?, and were rewarded ttthe sight of the Chief Magistrate, who Invariably came upon the platform, hat in •mm, ind made the regulation bow to the aasembied people, and, m a few capes, mak ing vary brief remarfca. Airiving at Chi cago, the distinguished guest was feceived by a committee of prominent waa held After remaining in Chicago .'hours, the Chief Maglstrafe left DV i Korthweatern road for Omaha and the YeUowstone country. ^ A hack team became frightened and gunged into the river at Polk street bridge, Chicago. Mr. James Bezey, who was m- Mc, jumped out and escaped, but three of Ml children, two daughters and a son, were drowned. The driver went over too. but was saved.... W. W. Johnson, belonging in P/'i ' AIM bow. " He wintered at Ogden, Utah, and is now following the line of the Bock bland road to Chicago.... Charlie Ford, whose brother killed Jesse James, was arrested ajfc Kansas City, the other day. on an old indictment for the Blue Cut teain-robbery and murder The Commer cial Flouring-Milis of Detroit, owned by Hepkell ft Voorhees, valued at 175,030, were Wiped on£by€re. the sotrni= Marsh T. Polk, the recreant official •*' ' "'-'ifto robbed the Tennewee state treasury of ^5-,." ' I -i «sm«*al hundred thousands of dollars, was '̂.'i/ ftoakvieted at Nashville for emhesziement, *ui\ - - **d the sentence fixed at twenty years in F * « V the penitentiary, the full extent of the law. the fine assessed was «36&54ai0. the , .. fmount of his stealings. ^ >in r A A VE88KL eluded -the authorities at 3 ' ^ t Baltimore and entered the port with four v ?AaMS of yellow fever on board and irith a Mdgrshowingfour deaths at sea. The vessel V/aa vrTr'̂ fraa at race towed out of the harbor. A i> ^ r jlianlo suooeeded the discovery Ex-Treas- . j , rnrer Polk, Of Tennessee, was sentenced at ., ̂ jhrthvilla to twenty years in the peniteu l . ^ . tiary and to pay a fine of #880,000. Theeage ' was q^pealed to the Supreme Court under v V fceod of •460,000, a motion for a new trial s Ibeing overruled. .,~j , A posse in Arkansas pursuing the T ^ "lOatiaws tf^ai Montgomery, Yell and Gar- . . Hattd oountfes, came up with the Daniels / .^^bMWhen in the mountainsof Berry oounty. -• . the fight which ensued, two of the pur- --fw. were killed and the desperadoes es- ThK Sheriff's posse which was routed %gr * band of outlaws they were hunting in Tall county, Ark., with the lot* of two i killed, caught and hanged a farmer ~ Ooker, who led them into the deadly David Hall, manager of the tele- i ottee at Galveston, had two striking I before the Becorder for , bat waa oompelled to pay the costs r the decision he was fined ; to Jail for one day. He then te, and the tentenoe refusing to take off tttfed dose, and was aent to Cotton Compress and m., were burned, to- 1400 bales of cotton and a urge gay and grain. Losa $05,000; the stand, thmAy the i.i oar In motion all department ^n SontiMHm JExpoaition at Louis- by President Ar ! with great escorted the to tfie~JbBP<witicn build i crowd sent «p a cheer. 1 toe Chief of the eooatey. Who spoke !• ho closed hiscttnaiks he reached the deafenfaur Cheers of the "• silken oord which dangled the throt- , engine, fpttMBM. The platform advocates an honest civil- service system; condemns unnecessary tax ation; demands a tariff that will encourage productions and industries at home, and afford Jnct compensation to labor, but which will not create or foster monopoly; denounces the Bepablioan party for raising a surplus tax to be divided among the Statea; recommends that the surplus Se ap plied to the extinguishment of the public debt; calls for the abolition of the present internal system, and insists that public lands be held for actual settlers; that every legit imate effort of labor to better Itself com mands sympathy; that the "vested rights of capital" shall be recognised, and tha: legal arbitration is a proper means of settling dis putes between employers and employed. The Democrats of Minnesota aa sembied in convention at St Paul and nom inated W. W. McNair for Governor, B. L Frazee for lieutenant Governor, J. J. Green for Secretary of State, John Ludwig for Treasurer, and J. W. Willis for Attorney General Resolutions opposing prohibition and favoring a tariff for revenue only were paracA Avtxb a contest lasting forty-three days, the Legislature of New Hampshire has elected Austin F. Pike (Republican) United States Senator for six years, beginning March 4, 1884. The balloting commenced title £0th of June. Mr. Pike's name did not then figure in the list of candidates. After twenty days of unsuccef sful effort on the part of the Legislature, Senator Rollins withdrew his name, and the Secretary of the Navy. William E. Chandler, became a prominent contestant for thft honor. Mr Pike, the "lucky man," is 63 years old, and has been to Congress. His election has been prophesied of late. GENERAL. C. W. Copeland & Co., shoe manu facturers, of Boston, with liabilities of $i50,- 000, suspended. They had factories in Broc- ton, Natlck, Medway and North Abington. Their branch house in New York, under the name of Stedman ft Co.. has also closed its doors. "Boffhelmer f t Son, of Norfolk, Ya, &rsd W. N. Teller ft Co.. of Baltimore, both engaged in the shoe trade, were involved with Ccpeland ft Co., and were forced to suspend. Next came the " collapse of F. Shaw ft Brothers, the heaviest tannners in the world, owning a dozen or more leather factories and mill- ] ions of acres of land. Copeland ft Co.. owed them •40,000. The liabilities of the Shews '; are 93,E0t\Q00. Joseph Pratt, a wholesale dea'er in leather at Chicago, was also caught in the wreck, and went down, owing #60,- 000. The President previous to his de parture for the West received an invitation to be present at the ceremonies of driving th ̂last Siike in the Northern Pacific rail road.. Owing to his previous engagement with Gen. Bheridan to explore the Yellow stone Park he will be unable to be present, but he has requested Secretary Teller to represent him on that occasion. The inter esting event will take place about the first week in September. The story ia revived that the Con federate Government, when it "went up," had #11,003,COO in cash deposited in Euro pean banks and dedicated specifically to the payment of the July interest on Rebel securities. The present deaire of the Brit ishers to buy these "bonds" is represented to be simply for the purpose of securing the July coupon attached to them... TFellx Lynch, of Rochester, N. a member of the Irish National League, went to Quebec to finieh the career of James Carey, who was reported as having arrived in that city. He volunteers the information that thelurquis of Landadowne has not long to live. IORHGN. Thb play at the theater in Casamicci- ola, on the evening of the terrible disaster, was a burlesque, which, strangely enough, opened with a scene representing an earth quake. Eye-witnesses describe the scene when the real earthquake occurred as an awful one The curtain had Just risen when a tremendous chock was felt. A fearful roar followed, and the ground rocked like the sea in a storm. A great cry of terror arose from the audienoe, who were thrown in a heap, and a large number burled beneath the timbers of the building, which fell on them. Two more shocks occurred. All who could rushed outside the theater, and hundreds clambered into the trees in the vicinity for safety. Most of the people, how ever, escaped to the shore, where bonfires were lighted as signals of distress. Hun dreds of halt naked men and women, wild with terror and grief, ran to and fro among the ruins in Casamicciola with torches during the night searching for missing fr iends. AKa- plesdispatch savs "the latest estimate places the number of deaths at between 4,0u0 and ^ ADDITIONAL SEW$ .. , A charter for the St. Louis, ISmpoiSa and Denver railway has been filed at Tepeka. Kan. The road is to be 1,000 miles long. The capital stock is #30.000,(^0. Amoag the Directors are Gov. Foster and Congressman Towntend, of Ohio, and Senator Miller and Congressman Nichol, of New York....Of ficers of the Santa Fe road estimate the average yield of wheat in Kansas at twentv bushel* per acsfa Many fields of oat-i have exceeded ninety bushels per acra A laige gain will be made on the corn crop of last year. The business failures throughout the the country during the week ending Aug. 4, as reported to Dun's Agency at New York, numbered 183, as against 190 the preceding week The New England States had thirty- three; Middle States, thiity-three; Western, forty; Southern, thirty; Pacific States, 11; Ctmadt, twenty-five, and New York City, ten The Postal Telegraph Company an nounces thatlts lines between New York city and Chi-ago are now working satisfactorily, and that messages will be transmitted with promptness for 25 cents for twenty words and lu cents for ten words or less additional A dispatch from Cape Town, South Africa, says that at the final examination of O'Donnell a box was produced belonging to the prisoner, labeled Cape Town, and con taining a wood-cut of Carey and a paper of Ameiican citizenship, dated November, J876. Carey's son testified that his father was smiling and talking to O'Donnell when he (witness) saw the latter draw a revolver and lire one shot. He (witness) then ran to fetch his father's revolver. His mother was holding his father when the third shot was fired O'Donnell declared Carey drew a revolver which he (ODonnell) seized and fired at Carey in self-defence. He described himself as Patrick O'Donnell, aged 45, native of Good- sail, County Donegal, a laborer, and for merly a butler. The prisoner was com mitted for trial on a charge of wilful murder. In the ordinary course of events, he will be tried at the Port Elizabeth Assizes, in October..... The trial of ten Jews at Nyiregyhyaza, Hun gary, charged with murdering Esther Soly- mosi, a Christian girl in the synagogue at Tisza Esslar, in order to procure her blood to mix in passover bread, has been con cluded, and a verdict of not guilty returned Three informers in the Phoenix Park murder trials were prohibited from landing from a steamer at Melbourne, Australia The British Minister to Morocco has been instructed to make an earnest appeal to the Sultan of that country for the abolition of slavery The negotiations between France and China in regard to the Tonquin question are at a standstill, v and a peaceful solution of the difficulties la con sidered impossible The first bale of hops to reach the New York market waa grown in Oneida county, and commanded So cents per pound Charles Henby Lee, colored, was hanged at Richmond, Ya, for the murder of Daniel Miller, colored, in February of thia year. Entertaining His Sifter's Bmii. Little Tommy was entertaining one of his sister's callers until she ap peared: " Don't yon come to see my sister?" he inquired. "Yes, Tommy, that's what I come for." "Ton like her ft good deal don't you?" " Of course, I admire her very much. Don't jrou think Bhe is nice?" "Well, I reckon I have to, 'cause she's my sister, but she thumps me pretty tough sometimes. But say, les see you open your mouth once. Now shut it real tight till I count ten. There, I knowed you could do it." " Why, Tommy, who said I couldn't?" . i./' Oh, nobody much, but sister." '"•What did she say?* ; ~ " Well, she said you hadn't sense enough to keep your mouth shut, and I bet her two big oranges you had, and you have, ain't you, and you'll make her duff up the oranges, won't you?" The young man didn't wait to see whether she would "duff up" or not.-- Drummer. There are only eight cases of suicide mentioned in nie Bible--Abimelecb, Samson, Saul, his armor-bearer, Ahith- ophef, Zimri, Razis and Judas Iscariot* THE MARKER NEW YOBK. $ 4.09 «.50 Bkevbs Ho. 18 Flouk--K*pcrfln2 Wheat--N... l White No. i Red.... Cons--\o. a... Oats--No. a..; POBK--MOM LABD. CHICAGO. Besves--Good to Fancv Steam.. Cows and Haters Medium to Fair liOOS.; Fi>oue--Fate/ White Winter Ex. Goou to Choice Sur'itEx. WHEAT--No. a S|>riiig No. *2 Iiei Winter.-.-.... Coax--No. 2 Oats--No. 2 1;te--No. 2 Babley--No. a Buitee--Cuoice Creamer/. 8.H5 @ 6.2S & 6. B0 (4 4.40 i.OH.'i® 1.09 i.i6 m i.i6* .CO & .61 .41 .41 1*.87V-^16.0U . » 6.00 & 6.40 >.75 «J> 6.00 <t$ 6.60 (4 6.80 & 6.76 C4 6.2". l.«0^(3J 1.01 1.05 !«(<*; l.OJ •WINK'S .to1*, .27 .273* M>4<& .66>3 • .03 .63 .19 <$ .20 .16 & .16J4 IS.60 @13.«!2>* . 6.20 6.20 6.60 6.00 Boos-- FrcnX Pouu--Mens Labd..... „ MILWAUKEE. Wheat--No. a Corn--Xo.2 . Oats--No ItXL-No. 2 i u r u s t - N . * . . . . . . . . . . .X.i. rous--Mesa............... Labd „ ST. LOU 18. Wheat--No. a Bed co»»-iii«d...: Oats--No. a. Rye Pobr--Men Labd „T ̂ CINCINNATI. Wheat--No. a ted Cjb* Oats Po.tK--Mew... Labd, TOLEDO. Whkat--No. 2 Bed COKW Oats--No. 3 _ DET&OJ&. PIXHTB Wheat-.no. 1 WMte.. Cobm--No. a OATS--Mixed. Pobk-- Mesa INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat-No. a Bea l.0734<a",Lfce Corn-No. 2 .« Oats--Mixea 26}6® .vt EAST LIBERTY, PA. Cattle Best 6.«s <3 6.86 Fair 6.16 C9 6.60 . Common 4.;o c4 6.00 Hoos..... 6.tO & 6.26 HHXMP 3.60 Ht 6.60 r^ble Dtepatoti (Jmly M) tran Naple^lMr.l Threethooaand inhaMtintsd thsialMA of Tsnhia ware killed by an eaxthqarik* The pndaottf* part of the island was r«> ined, and vineyards, (anas, ainea, baths rsaidenoes by the hundred Aboftt MO o'clock Saturday night, aoon after the majority of the inhabitants of the town eg OMsmlociola, a watering place of about 8,500 inhabitants, had Wtlxedto nit, shooks of earthquake began to be Mt Xany of the dtlttni of the upper elaeses were at the thsfttsr at the tine. The first trembling of tha buildings swofee those who were sleeping, and oaused tte thester-goers to be flllea with alarm. In an Instant a mot* violent shock came. Tbe people in the theater rushed wildly out of doors. The fourth shock leveled most of the houses of the town. Xanjr of the citizens were resting in their beda These burled under the toppling walla SODUMllft I The Hotel Ptooolft SenthMUft Sank into the earth and burned with many of It* inmates. Some of the inhabitants escaped to the sea dt«Ut, and mftde their wmhko Naples with ihe eteWr dt 'the eala&nity. The ground opened in many plaoe«, while in other plaoea there was no movement Water gushed out or the springs Several boilers in the bathing-honseslrarst The theater, a wooden structure, was MteraUy torn open, allowing the audience to e*capet A gentleman who was staying at the H<xel Piooola Sentinella, and who escaped with his life, relates that he only had time to secure come oandies for ute in the darkness and ruins before the collapse of the building oc curred. A person who lived near the now ruined bathing establishmentsajs he escaped from the place amid falling walls and bal conies, terrified people snouting, "to the sea" The chock come with irresistible violence, ond was acoompanied by a deafening noise. The oenfusion in the theater was fearful. Lights were overthrown and set lire to the buldlng, and ft dense cloud of dust filled the air. Cries of pain and terror were heard on all Kidea. On hearing shouts of "to the sea," a general rush was made toward the shore. Every boat and floating teing was taken by assault The whole island is in a condition of in tense terror, snfflerlng snd helplessness Al though all toe steam vessels' within reach have been endeavoring ta aid the people, and have removed many thousands of the injured to the main land, the thousands of injured cannot be estimated The destruction was most complete at Gaaamiccio'a, the famous pleasure re ort, with its hot springs and baths, the Saratoga of Italy. Of its populace of 4,000. and its summer visitors to an equal number, few escaped death or injury, and the losses deeply affect erery j ortion o" Italy, as the guesta were drawn from the wealthy and oristo^ratlO districts of the entire kingdom. Several mftnbers of the National Ascembly and the Senate a e miss ng and unaccounted for, while tha earth opened and buried for ever a number of Roman families who had visited the island on a pleasure excursion. Mony hundreds were killed at Ischia, the capital of the island and the seaport nearest to the mainland, among them being the pre fect, Florentine As soon as the news reached Borne and Naples, assistance of every available rort wss forwarded Among the first to leave for the scene was Admiral Acton, the Minister of Marine, and Bignoz Berti, the Minister of Trade, who were not content to issue their commands from Borne Details of several hundred roldisis and ma rines, whose terriers could be utilized ai sapper*, or In the temporary hospital, oi kindred work, were also taken to the island Thar improvised stretchers and carried hun dreds of the wounded to the steamers, which took them is we'l as numbers of the home less, to Hafts* afen X ^OBITUARY. Death of Montgomery Blair, Lin coln's Postmaster General. Ills Carser as a Politician and TBarrisSsr-- The Later Tears of Ills Life. The Hon Montgomery Blair, of Maryland, died recently at his residenoe near Silver Springs, Montgomery County, Md. Be was a son of Francis Preston Blair, Sr., and a brother of Gen Frank P. Blair, who ran on the Democratic National ticket with Sey mour in 18G8. His father was born at Abingdon, Va, in 1190. He resided for come years in Kentucky, and in 1850 began to edit the Washington Olobey and became the friend and confidential adv ser of Jackson. His mother was the tiaught3r of Nathaniel Gist, a companion of Washington on the Duquesne expedition Montgomery Blair was born in i-'rankiin county, Kv., May 10, 1813, and was educated at West- Point, graduating in 1835. He served in the artil lery ia Florida during the Seminole war, and resigned iiis commission in the army May ft), 18.J0. He began the prac tice of law at St Louis, ana soon attained jrondflence tfifere. In Iftftfille vats ap-. pointed United States District Attorney for Missouri, and from 1843 to 1649 he was a Judge of the St Louis Court of Common Pleas. In 18.*2 he removed to Montgomery oounty, Md In 1855 he was appointed Solicitor of the United States in the Court of Claims. Previons to the re port of the Missouri Compromise he acted with the Democratic party. Afterward he became a Republican, and wju, in conse quence, removed from his office by Presi dent Buchanan in 1850k In 1857 he acted as counsel fcr the plaintiff in the celebrated Dred Scott case. In 1600 he presided over the Republican Convention of Maryland Appointed by Lincoln as Postmaster General )t in 1801, Blair remained in office until 184H, when he resigned, having become disratls- lied with the policy of the party in power. His prominence in the effoit mad ; to set a'-ide as fraudulent the election of Mr. Haye?, brought him conspicuously before the public in 1878. His father, Francis Preston Blair, was a well-known politician, at one time a friend of Henry C.ay, and one of the r rganlzers of the Republican party. The Pjstmaster-Geneml ordered, as a mark of respect to the deceased, that the Poetoftice Department building be draped in m.oui ning for a period of thirty days; that tbe tlag on the building in Washington t o placed at half-mast until af ,er the burial, and that the department be closed Monday. l.oo'4@ i.oo« .90 ,co>4 •:a © .S2H ' .S4!4«r« .stfc •62 & .64 .•Ja.70 «£ia.75 , .. • . 9 .. 1.04*@ 1.09 .. .46 3m At .. .23VS .16 .. .47 .. u.m m*.si . . •)* 1.04 VM LOT .10 . .» .M5^<S5 M 16.26 ^16.60 . . S K LOS l4® 1.08H •WW,® M\k .33>4<£» .SSH 6.60 @5.76 1.08 @ 1.0854 .61 .62 •4i m .iiH 13.76 @ltN ABLE LIES AND LIARS. DAiOELsmuE, Ga, boasts of a three eared PV. P. T. BABxuif,the greatest, eta. Is 70 year# old. CBAwroRrisvrrxE. Go., claims to have a chicken with two well-developed heads. Tom Ochiltjiee, the Texas Congressman! 1 astonishing the Londoners with his whop pers about life in the Southwett. A Chk ai.o woman, according to the Tri bune, of this city, astonished her neighbors, startled the medical fraternity, and un nerved her husbandry giving birth to two healthy children--an interval of eleven days separating the advent of tbe youthful Strangers. In answering a correspondent the St Louis ro*t-lH*paUh says: The real name of "Eli Perkins* i* Melville D. London He has been connected with various journals in the He writes alleged humorous art ice • and delivers alleged funny lectures. He is celebrated chiefly for ms penurioueness when dealing out facts. . IJJ^nethe top of Mount Washington the other day, Barnum telegraphed that the "tlle second-greatest show on Sv ̂ When he heard of the death of Tom niumb, the neat showman telegraphed to 18 asranch apartof the divine p!aa as birth. The Heavenly Father finally overcome^all evil with good" 1M-' has entered the lists ^lThomMvi!}f (0lL > man- The fol- ( e *tory:, J,Th: e« mules out of a team of six were killed by ligbtnivg. The ^erf attached to a t mber wagon t̂ d e n}' a?d t h e l ightning t t ruck the leader, missed the next, struck the third COOile DtafiaMi fttsn LmdsftJ ' waspvodnoed in the Booss of Oommoasby an oflleial annonucsm--I that lanm Osxey, tke Irish Iftfsmsr, hsd been shot tmA MM by • assmber ct tke <Msr of OuMf had ooossoted to low Mi ttMMp tmH the Govanunent had stipulated that it weald seenrs bis safe transportstton to any part it the world aslsetod by him as the plaoeef .A^ter Carey leftDub: ootta oonvinoed that his whereabouts were known to the invlnottileo, had appealed to the Golrernment tor protection, and bad been New^4 jau Tor sat^. The Government that Oarey was fast losing his waaon, being hanated with the oonsdooa- nessthaihe w«s closely followed by Msh and was in constant danger of on. Tbe Governmentatthis time undertook to smuggle Ostey awsywlthsnch sec6recy that none out those actually having the undertaking under their personal charge ahould know what became of him, excludlngeven the most prominent Govern ment officials People were cautioned against believing any future ftorles about mat informer, upo3| the ground that it would be -abi^tttlf UDpoaiufl for. but two -<Ck three persons to ssoertain anything abort him, and that suoh stories as mMit happen to gain currency would undoubtedly turn out to be inventions to confuse the trail. Nothing more was heszd of Gszer until the Parliamentary announcement nineteen other peneas whs killed In ft rail way wreck near Oarlyon station. A freight- car had been blown upon the main track of theBossft, Wftteitownsaa Clgdenaburg rail- waybythefieroe wind. MM0 o'clock tke steamboat iaqpteaa, rumtag tothafhoussnd bles, dadMdat full speed into the freight car. The train was going twenty miles an tout The heftd engfesr saw the ob it passed the atatkm, iped from the sovtk.aaa sae secood to turned over on thejr sides, and that, from the official information given by the Government, it appears that who killed Carey is named O'DonnelL 11m Government had often reoelved private in formation oonoernlng meditated attacks noon Carey, and hsd many suspected Invla- cibles under survelllanoe, but the officers have no knowledge about any person answering G'Donneirs description. Carey, it turns out, was bound for i-ort Elizabeth, Africa. He had regained a good deal of hie former self-possesuon and spirit, and was pretty well convinced that h» identity and destination were unknown. He was apss- senger on the Melrose Castle, owned by Don ald Currie There ia no reason to suppose that any one ab ard when the ship left Lon don knew anything about Carey. When the vessel was made fast to the dock at Port Elizabeth, in a rather jubilant manner the informer supervised the landing of his baggage. He then boarded the gang-plank and walked down to the wharf. The mo ment he stepped upon the wharf a man stepped up to him, placed a pistol close to his breast, over his heart, ana fired. Carey staggered and fell, but before he lost his footing his assailant fired another ball into his btaln. The assassin was for a moment supposed to be a madman, but when he flourished his weapon and cried out, "That ia Jamet Carey, his soul," the officers of the Melrose Castle at once realized the situation, over- £owered the speaker and placed him i chains. The murderer was soon identi fied aa a stranger who had boarded the Mel rose Castle at Cape Town, and booked him self for Natal No one knew his businesa and on board fee Melrose Castle he had shown no interest in the man he killed. He loitered about until Carey went ashore, and then walked after him and shot him dead upon the dock. Ihe priscnor, O'Donne'l, refures to make any statement Investigation here shows that a man answering O'Donnell'e descrip tion booked from London to Cape Town aboard the ship' Kintauns Castle, another vessel of the Donald Currie Line which left London reveral days before the Melrose Castle did. The Kinfauns Castle wss adver tised to make a connection at Cape Town with the Melrose Castle for tyrtaL it puzzles the officials how O'Donnell ever learned that Carey was to leave for Cape Town by the Melrose Castle. He seems to have teen to completely informed and so absolutely determined that he chose to go ahead and wait at Cape Town rather than risk the govern ment s keen inspection of the persons who bearded the Melrose Castle at London. The ministry appear to be somewhat dased at the' completeness of the information nos> jessed by the Invincibles, of whloh this assassination furnishes complete proof. Carey was traveling under the name of Power. His family were with him. Oarey embarked at Dartmouth. From Madeira ho wrote a letter t'o the authorities, in which he described the voysge, andsald ho had ahsrod in conversation in which Invincibles snd the miscreant Carey were especially denounced. He said he.lntended to forget Ireland ever existed. Bzeltemmt in Itatolln. A Dublin dispatch cays: "The city is In a fnrore over the news trom Cape Town, and the people, who fill the Btreets, are madly- exultant, shouting and cheering and oaua> ing the police much troub'a The officials both hero and at London seem stupefied with surprise at the extent of Information possessed by the Invincibles, which was much greater than that poesesEed by the heads of departments here. They are amazed that anybody should have known Carey's whereabouts, and they were much mere inclined to believe he bad gone to Canada or America than to Africa." Carey's Record. James Carey, who was about 60 years of aget was a member of the Dublin Municipal ity and a man <St wealth and prominence. He was a master-builder and did a large business In that line, basides having an in terest in the largest dry-goods house in Dub lin. He bore the character of being a chrewd, cautious, reticent man of temperate habits, though passionate when angered Carey gaye his testimony in the preliminary hearing in the Phoenix Park murder cases at Dublin on Feh. 17. Mis first appearance created a profound sen^ati( n. He depoced that he Joined the Fenian Brotherhood in He deposed tha he wa^always Treas urer of the Fen an Brotherhood. The names of four persons had been submitted to the organization in London as capable of need ing the organisation in Dublin. Among those names was his own. W alsh had sworn him in, each holding a knife in his hands. The oath bound Carey to obey all orders transmitted to him by the Irish Invincibles under tbe penalty of death. A few days afterward Walsh, McCaffrey and James Mul- lett told him that they were to torm a Board of Directors of a new organization of In vincibles in Dublin, who were not to exceed 2E0 members for the whole kingdom He then proceeded to give the details of the whole conspiracy which resulted in the murders, and, through his testimony prin cipally, five men were hanged Carey was a member of the Dublin Municipality and ft man of means and prominenoei WESTERN NOTES. is entitled to the forestry prise. The growth of her timber keeps ahead of the wood-chopped. Th* Montana definition of "a Sabbath- days Journey," la the distance to the nearest good fishing-ground. Im the town of Traer. Iowa, the City Coun cil poats a list of drunkards in every saloon, ana orders the keepers to sell no drinks to them. ' At Santa Fe, New Mexico, day'"gods" of the Zuni and other Puebla Indians,are pur-; chsseable by the hundred or leas, at 90 cents apiece. Thb new time-table of the Union and Cen tral Pacific enables West-bound passengers to cross the Sierres by daylight, Instead of during the night as under the old schedule. Tax nroprietors of the Iowa City distillery, without the fear of prohibition before their eyes, expect to "make mashes" again in the fatter part of October. '> Momtaka is getting ready to seek admission into the Union of States. The question of a convention to prepare a constitution for adoption by the people Is being agitated, kid the gathering will be held in Helena pis fall Justice in Minnesota sometimes operates oueerly. A man at MoPherson bought a re volver and was going to kill his family. His wife took the weapon from him ana gave film a licking, ana a country Justice fined per #25 for it. . A rjTTTKB was returned the other day to a (ady in Napa, CaL, which had been on its travels for sixteen veara It was written by per husband to a friend in San Franolso, failed to reach him, finally brought up In the Dead-Letter Ofhce at Washington, ajud menoe returned to Napa. wounded. Rom tin ruins of the ears white hsnds of ladies and limbs of children erotruded ts such a manner as tTiSE b"Mrest turn pale. Fortunately, 5°"* «* «•» eaught fira. Fireman •<»*es«»d engine, was found crushed.beneath the heavy tew. Bia engl- *gpP**r. ^MjPETspelded.but recovered from the debria, they were taken ¥action, from whence ail but eleven dead bodies were taken to their homca It is impossible to determine the number of the wounded, for several who were alirhtly hurt left for their homes or to continue their Journey. Those of tbe dead who have been identified are: Hon. Thomas Hoyne, of Chicago :Mra Jane CarL of Lansing, Mich.; ProtG V. Stone, Battle Creek,^Mich.; Late J. trances, Oswego, N. Y.: Willie Lefevre, Bay City, liich.; Ashley tfyler, Camden, N. Y.; Thomas Stalls, Waiertown, N. Y.: Mrs. Lefevre, Buy City. Mich.; J. B. Sehenck, Cleveland, Ohio; Thomas Dixon, Cleveland, Ohio; two ladies, one of them thought to be Mra Booth, of Bay City, Mich.; J. J. Worthey, idlne, Mich.; Henry McOormlck. Benton, llioh.: L J. Booth, Bay City, Mich.; Elizabeth J. Core, Meriden, Mich.; Mra Louis J. Boos, Philadelphia; Louis J. Boos, Philadelphia; Mra Brooks, Philadelphia; the colored porter, name unknown; Archi bald Taylor, baggageman, Watertown, N. Y. ; Miss Troob t add that she was on her way to Montreal with hbr grandfather, who was killed. They were In a sleeper. She waa thrown into the aisle, and escaped from the wreck comparatively uninjured. Alexander Tower said that he was sitting in a coaoh facing his sister, Mra Ellzabetu J. Corl, who was crushed under a seat As soon as he recovered from the shock of the accident he undertook to extricate her, but found her lifeless. The wife of the Rev. E. & Gould, of Carthage. Ma, thus describes her impres sions of the casualty: "The first I knew I felt a sudden shock that shivered the globes of the lamps The lights went out, leaving the oar In total darkness. I grasped the seat with both hands and lowered my head to avoid flying micelles, some of which had already hit me. I did not lore consciousness, snd when tl}e crash ended found myself In the middle of a heap of rubbish. As soon as I could get out 1 found that my husband had been thrown half through a broken window. He was un conscious. I pulled him out and had him carried to a neighboring house. Four ladiei opposite me escaped comparatively tmhnrt Cf the others in the coach I know nothing." -- THE BEYEUES. Commissioner Evans' Annual Report of Internal-Revenue Collections Presented. BUp|| Heftds the List with ^MOO,000 Oat of a Total $144,000,000. o . - Iiis Commissioner of Intenial Bevenue, iays a Washington telegram, has made bis formal report of the collections during the last fisoal year. They reach a grand total of fl44,5B8,808,ML The collection of this vast sum cost the Government about 95,- 180,000, a percentage of 3%, and the money waa disbursed without any loss to the United Statea "It gives me great pleasure," savs Mr. Evan*, "to stste that the reports of the .Collectors and Internal-Revenue Agents m- di:ate not only a very aatiafactory condition of the service as respects efficiency, but also that no eomblnations exist to de .raud the Government of its Internal revenue, nor is it believed that any important: efforrg are making for the illicit manufacture of wins- ky. tobacco or cigars." The estimated ag gregate reduction of receipts for the fiscal year is |48,lXK),W>, The total col'.ecttous in Illinois amounted to 125,{*77.525.3% As pre viously stated in these dispatches, Peoria is the banner district ol the country. The amounts collected by districts In Illinois were: First, Joel D. Harvv, Collector $ 9,119,191.79 Second, Luden D. Crocker SM,233.33 Third, Albert Woodcock 101,093.49 Fourth, Richard Bowett.l 772,861.95 Fifth, Howard Knowlcs Seventh, John W. Hill. 139<W,620.60 MO. 731.27 J,11<1,93«.8» 183,629.73 444,232.40 collections by districts in Indiana Eighth, Jonathan M«;rlara...... Thirteenth. Jonathan C. Wills... Fourteenth, Charles W. Pavey. The Were: First, James C. Veach, Collector $ 209,502.62 Fourth,Will Cumback 2,765,266.46 Sixth, n-ed Bargs 68,447.06 Sixth, Horace McKay - 662,808.03 Seventh, Delos W. Menshall l,S38,t66.80 Seventh, WilliamW. Carter.... .... S97.781.99 Tenth, George Moore 166,68^46 Eleventh. John F. \Vildman 60,376.34 Eleventh, Thomas M. Kirkpatrick.. 30,496.23 Total.. 16.692,719.86 In Wisconsin the collections were: Firet, Tr.-ing M. Bean, Collector $193,820.09 Second, Henry Hai d 278,864.03 Third, Howard M. Kutjliin.......... 190,050.1* klxth. Leonard LottridgJ.... 2,535,264.87 Total (8,197,499.12 In Iowa the collections were: Second, J. W. Green, Collector U9?,178.77 Thir I, James E. Simpson..... 299.130.67 Fourth, Jchi Council 147,513.93 Fifth, fc'ampson P. Sherman 8^22,#13.70 Total $4,062,720.07 The quantities of distilled spirits, fer mented liquors, manufacture! tobacoo, enutf, cigars and cigurette3, on which tax was paid, were as follows: TRODUOTS TAXED. Fiscal years ending June 30. 1882. Gal's *ptrlts| c.lstTd f.om fiuit ..... Gal's spirits dlet'l'd from pain. etc.... No. of cigars.* No. cigarettes. No. pounds snuff... No. pounds tobacoo No. . bends • fmt'dl'q're. tjinsso 70,761,54 Increase this y*r. 1,268,178 76,608,788 3,040,9<A,3V6 8,<K7,i9*,047 654,144,186 6WY>2X,653 4,866,568 1C6,C8XJ 16,»*Of« *,284,872 165,677,186 I7.f5T.836 86,488 4,719,237 36/18,642 85.477,467 417,804 8,619,153 ' 808,801 FREAKS OF LIGHTNING. Wdxuc Mra Haynes, of Isle Piquant, La, was throwing clothes over a wire line the was instantly killed by lightning. AT a pinio party in Caton, N. Y., twenty persona wore struck by l ghtning. Four were badly burned, snd one lady had her shoes torn from her feet. LtoHTNWa struck a pine on the river bank near where Henry Boyetto, of Ocean Pond, Ga, was fishing in a boat, and. Jumping from the tree, siruck Boyette on the neck, singeing him down to his feet. In going from a hayfleld, with a pitchfork on his shoulder, William Warner of J«»ey- vi le, N. J., was killed by * stroke of light n'.ng! The bolt struck the fork, shattering it to atoms, and tearing Warner • c.otho.i completely from his body. LIGHTNING struck a losnst tree near t*ie house of the Rev. Mr. Perry, of Le\ingt< n, Ky., passed into the house through a win dow, wrecking the room, and then follow d the iron-work completely around theh^u c None of the inmates were huit. the walla bang ftnders,* 4oor Utty years ago in tte 4mm forego ot^ the eastern border ol theooanfev, or- trophies of innrs innnnl fti|iwlife<iiift aoross tbe Blue Badge to tbe wild tant~-- '• ing-groonds of the Allegbeniea. Sna- . pended from these hang old shoi-flftsk* . and powder-horns that have served the* General snd bia generation In day* gon by, before trouMe fell upon the land. In tbe corner stand* the Jem Man ton; and tbe long Kentaoky rifle that five- and-twenty years ago were the ons of the Southern Sqnire in i and in forest respectively. Hero, oi another wall, ft younger genrntion ol nepliews from Richmond or Baltimore* who look on the home of their fathers* . . as a happy hunting-ground toe antomik holidays, have hung their "Oreeners" - and their cartridge belts. The remain- ̂ der of the wall is relieved by a map ol!f •'? the county, a picture of the Univeraity of Virginia, the capitol at Bichmond» and several illustrated and framed cer tificates of prizes taken by the Generaf! 5 at agricnltural shows. It is in the draw- ̂r. ing-room, however, that the treftsureau of the family are collected. Here againc! ;o»k wainscoting and whitewash '̂ with carved chimney-pieces clambering"' ap toward the tSeiling, silently "pro-M# ̂ test against your conventional ideasH ; iabout America; and here, too, the floor --for the winter carpets have not beeix, laid down--shines with polish and ia*-'. treacherous to walk upon. Brass dog^ 'v) irons of ponderous build, and as old safe" • the house, shine against the warm briok|; hearth, waiting for the logs that the* cool October nights will soon heap upon, ; them. Old-fashioned tables, that sug-^ * gest all kinds of grandmotherly skill in / • silk and worsted, cluster in the corners** . . jof the room. Upon the walls hang then celebrities that the good Virginian de lights to honor. Here Washington, ; .V:, surrounded by the notable? of his time,, 1 both men and women, is holding hisp first reception. Here Mr. Jefferson, looks down upon an old cabinet con-, taining bundles of his private letters to« the General's grandfather, full of thoi :• price of wheat and the improvement of" the county road, dashed now and then with allusions to the advantage which, the young republic would gain from,, sympathy with France rather than with her unnatural parent, Great Britain. Here, too, Patrick Henry, the greatest* popular orator America ever produced,, with his long face and eagle eye, hangs., above an arm-chair which a family- legend treasures as having rested tlie^ old man, groaning under the ingrati- • tude of his countrymen, upon his last- */ political campaign. There engraviegsi. ; of the Vienna Congress, of Queen;. Victoria, and of the famous royalist, Col. Tarleton, after Sir Joshua' Rey nolds, remind you that blood, after all, ^« is thicker than water. Two or threes » ladies in the costume of the first*. George, and as many gentlemen in. wigs and swords, could tell you, if they could speak, of the big square mansion', of English bricks, upon the Chesapeake* " ~ shore, which they still looked upon as. the home of their race, and there, too,, in the post of honor in the high chim ney-piece, is the General's uncle, the Senator, who, as every one in America, knows, was Minister to France in* 183--. ^ Our Alien Population. The Bureau of Statistics protest# • the following figures, showing the nam- ber of immigrants arriving in the United &tatas from 18GQ to ltfSd: Year en-lod Sept. 30. I183J 500,877' 1830.. 2:ym 1S5G. 300.0)6 183 1 22,633 ;i8S7 '.>G0,KS2: 1832.. 63,179,1888. 122,872 QuartertndelDe^.ai. |18.W. m,075 183 2 7,303 1880. 163,118. Year endel Dee. 81. |i8«l 91,822. 18J3..........i. *V101S62. , 01,826' 1834 »5,SC5 1 G3r . U..V ' 176,214 1 *J8 *.vm'18M „,., 193 416• 18>6,.... 76,242 1805 218.111 l«t7 ~ ' " 1H3S --to, 18W....« 1840. 1811 1842. •y'ioisca. »5,:;C51 G3r *•*••.*741864 76,242 1805 7'.i,:!4'i| Jan. l to June o0 $8,914 1886 167.757 Year ended June ̂ o. #t,06tt|lH67 S0.I.C44 "•" * 2H8,(I88 S63,074 4'l?,920 342,009 42'2,'»78 473,141 SW.919 244. 32 110,991 1A5/I19 157,779 I:l7,9!i4 80,288 IM68.. 104,5C5 IS S3. Jaa. l to Hept. ao. |is70. 1843 82,4:61871 Year ended Koxt 30. |ih72. 1841 78,615 1878 1845 114,371:1874 .a, 1816. 154,410 1875 1817 2E4^loHjl87«........... 18«;ii «6.527|W»7. 1849 . ii97,024ils7lfc 1850 . S10,(041S79. Qvartor ended Dec. 31.lis*. 484,196- 185 0 69,976|l881 69-»,163- Year ended Des. 31. |1882. IV... • si«-, »72 185 1 373,466 1898. 640,101 1852.. 871,6031 ' . 18--3..-.... .v.... 868,645 Total..... X .lM^MS 1854.....,'..̂ ,... 427,8331 Answered. That style of oratory which current slang speaks of as "highfalutin," or "spread-eagle," is dangerous to the ; orator. A word m,av tumble him and hWspeech into a laughing-st.ck. A short time before the civil war broke out, Judge Gridley, a quaint- speaking man, was holding court in' Western New York. One day a divorce suit was being tried, and it was alleged that the husband had abandoned and deserted his wife. The counsel for the injured woman, while indulging in Bun- dry feats of rhetoric, turned from the jury, and, addressing the Court, said: "What would your Honor do, I would like to know, if a portion of the States of this glorious Union should 'shoot madly from their spheres,' and attempt the destruction of the nation ?" "What would 'I dew?" asked the auaint Judge, "Why, I'd try to shute tiem back." It was with great difficulty that tha rhetorical counsel resumed his addcesft to the jury. ^ An Example of Boston Thrlfk A New York jeweler, a native of ft Maine village, was one day stopped in the street by a tired and panting indi vidual, whom he soon recognized as a former schoolmate. He unbuttoned first his coat, then his vest, etc., till he finally reached his undershirt, from be tween two buttons of which he pulled ' out/about an inch of gold chain. "I bought *his," he said, holding the pre cious bit between thumb and fore finger, "some time ago, an* have had my doubts--though twaa warranted--till I thought o' you as the one man I could depend on when I came to New York. Now tell me true, is that pure gold ?'* After his doubts had been allayed and he turned to depart, he swung around once again with the query: "I say, I slept night afore lsat in the Marlboro', in Boston, 'n' forgot my nightcap there, 'n' took a terrible cold oomin' on. Now, do you suppose they'll save that fur me till I git back?" "No, sir!" shouted his bored listener, "Boston's BO thrifty a town that, before you get there, they'll have converted it into a pudding-bag to cook Maine blueberries!" -- Boston Transcript. MATTCH CHUNK, is pronounced Mock Chunk, Tucson ia Toos'n and Manitoba Manneyto-bah. a-