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THE SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENOER, VOL. XXVI.. NO. 42. T&e grs-laate an! KM in Seattle. wed eye* »u;ieTiOT losnr la Seattle so-* sdja* ed lor all Jefecto ot U>* I**- " _ w«lebr> tbomagbiT deraagaeuswl liSTIC PATTERNS! jl want to Wff* IN p ffitr cut a 4 perfect In fit. UI & OPFENUEIMER jjCO freeoud St., Cor. Spring, Special in Dry Goods THIS COMING WEEK! Sarah Silks Hoc per yard; pillar price 50c, Ifldia Silks 85c per yard; tqplar price 50c. 0 ferial in- — f BLACK DRESS GOODS. SO piece* in all-wool Dreis Goods, 12 .e: regular price $1.25. Tarkish Towels, 10c oath. Extra line Bleached Table Damask, per yard. Turkey Ked Table Linen. 25c yard, (keeked wulte Prea* Uood*. 5c yard, t'raau Toweling. 5e per yard. V> kite Dock Suiting, $1.20 per suit McjlfrQmn? 6^B 711 Second Street. mm OUT SALE THE STOCK OF Tie Seattle Bazaar la hen purchased at public auction by fee Paget Swund National Bank. The same will b« sold Iptllm of Cost Sntil entirely disposed of. This ia a tivaace of a lifetime to get genuine bar pins. The store *ill b« opened for busi ness on Thursday morning. Fixtures, in cluding a very fine burglar Safe, will be •oki at a sacrifice. it. EI'STEIN. Manager. Bope Kinderprteo AND PRIMARY SCHOOLS FOE BUYS AND OIK US. •eilsitw l«c Cat.tn corner of T«mp*raaee sad ■•Hi' mb Straus. North from • h> W * at *!»• Tin >«v»ulh *k, IMB ; :S-J to 4 30 y. ia. hteelpel. Hits Wlntorboaruo I Frwttol Unlaa °* ">• Horn# an>l <'Oi©nl». Training . *** _'««ilrxs. k««l»nd). »ho holds a km* T" 1 * T«w»«r'» r«rU«U'*t», MCMud irste teeaiTta at my tuua. J"* tf«raW« in « tor citaer eeesloel ■ e*r month. per month will bo char««4 for a,ur tli. u«r of «tft» »n.I nioiutcurry. k l ' of t»a> htu/ »r» t»aa*4 on ** *TK w. wtiien i* now t*tnc «al ' **• tif Uto t»<{ ii of ■'**"" «SONS IN • • . French. Munio And German h! iUIHIUIf C E S-K»». i »*l4 c. Uorrotl »t |"*l*»torf; Mr* 1. 1 J. Hunt. \ mxvom, l*ke W*||*r* N 441 j Jag 1919 C 14*- VX? ** * of l"fin«r pupiU lEfSH** *p»»f to th« KN L 71# CUy A Trip to Country. enjoy it thoroughly yon should "*• som# of those dainty books we ••ese.e - ed (or summer reading. and st-c ihtm. KWMAX A HANFORD suiwa'fj i iWtiw c<L, Street, Near Cherry. HOI/X3MB tls m' ,M ' Ophthalmic <*>:.ac«t "***• ltlj g „ ft an d Mtrlsa a Tenant ||ul ***** ¥ »-'snt hc*i»e ff yon fcjvrv f 'X ***• r<»do th.s quick aad at small try a "for real" ad .a tb« COLORED AXD WHITE— WASH v —sFABEICS. Zephyr Ginghams .... At 12>£c, 15c and 20c Henrietta Sateen At::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 15c, 20c, 25c, 30C and 35c India Linons At 10c, 12J<C, 15c, 20c and 25c ! . * Irish Dimities At 30c, 3oC, 40c aild 50c Tennis Flannels At W. P. BOYD & CO. I Front Street and Pioneer Place. w. ML riiutn riMia«Bi. Jo*. w. ruum, n—nff. CAPITAL PAID UP. tOOO.OOO. Sack man - Phillips Investment Comp'y of a«»ui«. Wub. CVJUOKB LITMUDKI Baokors and llaa&elal I[«DU. Oflort special BAILKT BI'ILDIMO. opportunity for U»o toT««lm#at of eapltaL SOME PEOPLE Think becaus# tbejr par a fancy price the article is better. That's a big mistake. Oar Ranch Butter at 37e per brick is fully equal to the fancy-priced kind elsewhere. Try a brick. \ 104 and 10« Commercial St. COOrElt ft LIVf. OM IHX> r boots of VMIM Ave. Wholesale ud Kctail Orooor* SAPOLIO LIKE A GOOD TEMPER SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE. NEW POTATOES, j : . : : i : : ©O CVntjn Per 100 Pounds. SEATTLE TRADING COMPANY, GROCERS. 11l South Second Street. MT HlflT 4? / 1 S~\ »n»c«M«r« W U*r Kfod, 111 Tummerdal • LEVY & CO. ,lr# - T rrr : #, r ImjMtrters and Jobbers of TELEPHONE 287. CIGARS AND TOBACCO, SMOKERS' ARTICLES, ETC. COOL, RIMING SIMMER DRINKS! Hires' Hoot Beer, Monarch Fruit Syrups, Ross* Belfast Uinjfer Ale, and Raspberry Viuegar. LOUCII. AUGUSTINE & CO., 815 Front Street. i a I MiniDg MILLS \i And —- ||| Hydraulic T. A. NOBLE, j Machinery. Corner front and Marion Sta. THE SEATTLE TRANSFER CO. Mala Oflte*. Corn*, of Third aa<S W oiler Itr*«l«. a .ru Cam tie Cmu'lo»rica lntM«»iU 111 ■«•»» Sr i * »«i*a« *■» Da»r*. ITOIAQK AND INIVRANCC AT THI LOWEST RATES The Best Thing in r W Milk Pails I < \ is Pearline. That's the solid truth. You \ r V £ et cleaner, and with less work and \ J fuss, than with anything else you can use. It saves vou so much that it s cheaper than j f /^/ /\ the commonest stuff can he. Proof —the i / f\ \ largest dairies and dealers use Pearline. 1 II Some women are afraid of Pearline. V * J They think that where cleaning is made j so easy, there must be some harm to the washed. But Pearline can't hurt milk pails, anyway. And it can't hurt the finest lace or the softest hands, any more than it hurts milk pails. Not with the imitations —the fact that they are imita- So tors or followers proves a lack of something. j SEATTLE, WASHINGTON'. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 27. 1894 HILL STICK TO IT. Offering: Amendments to the THEY ARE PROMPTLY DEFEATED. Fraternal and Bnildin? and Loan Societies to Be Spared. The Hosss Tassrs the Bill Making Labor Dsy n H»l 4*y sad the defi ciency Appropriation—Carnegis's Su psrlatendeut Cosfleting Himself. WAMISUTOS CITT, Jane 3R.—The senate entered u|on the thirteenth week of the tariff debute today. Alien made another attempt to secure action on his resolution directing the secretary of the treasury to inform me senate of the total number of persons engage I in protected industries whose wages might be affected by the tariff legislation. Gailuiger objected. Morrill moved to refer it to the finance commit, tee. Alien gave notice that as iong at the resolution is not acted upon he wouid ob ject to all legislation by unanimous con sent. Morrill's motion was defeated, 16 to 27. reffergavo notice of an amendment to the tariff bill levying a duty of SM per head on aliens arriving in the United Stales. The senate then resumed consideration of the income tax provision. Hill with drew the amendment be offered Saturday, to strike oat the provision exempting interest on United States bonds from the operation of the tax. His object in oflfr uig the amendment. Hill said, was to call the attention of the country to the fact that (XX),000 of property in government bonds was necessarily exempt from the operation of the tax under the law, al though the ostensible purpose of the in come tax was to reach wealth and equalize taxation. Here was an enormous invest ment of capital which the income tax could not reach. Hill moved to exempt state, county and municipal bonds. He argued that the taxation of state bonds by the Federal government would be a direct attack upon the administration of the states. If the Federal government had the right to di minish the value of staie bonds and securi ties it had the right to destroy them. Vest held that state or municipal bonds could not properly be exempted from tax ation. Chandler expressed the hope that upon reflection the Democratic majority would not place states and municipalities, when they were forced to borrow money, in a worse position than the United States. The Uuited States could now borrow money cheaper than any other country, state. corporatio£or individual, because it occupied this advantage, and the govern ment ehou'.d bear the credit of states and cities by raising their securities. Mitchell, of Oregon, agreed with Hiii that the taxa tion of state and couiitv bonds was of doubtful constitutionality. Sherman also agreed with Hill's poa.tion. Discussion on the constitutionality of a national tax on state or municipal bonds continued for some time, and then a vote was token on Hill's amendment. Lost— -25 to 30. Hill then modified his amendment so as to confine the exemption to state bonds. A long constitutional diacussion of the powers and limitations of Federal taxa tion followed, in which Hoar, Morgan, l'ugh, Lindsay, Caftery and Gray partici pated. Hill's amendment to exempt in terest on state bonds was also lost—27 to 30. Hill then moved to strike out the pro viso for a tax on personal property ac quired by gift or inheritance; lost, 25 to 55. The proviso offered by Vest last week as an amendment to section .15, "that in com puting the income of any persons, cor poration, company or association, there shall not be included any amount re ceived from any corporation, etc., as In terest or dividends upon the bonds or stock of such corporations, etc., if the tax of 2 per cent, had been paid on its net profits by said corporations as required by this act," was agreed to. An amendment of Allen, to permit evi dence in rebuttal before collectors of in ternal revenue as to the amount of in comes, was agreed to, as was the Vest amendment including in the calculation of the incomes of banks, banking institu tions, trust companies, liie, fire and other insurances, railroad, telephone, telegraph and other companies actual operating and business expenses, losses and interest on bonded indebtedness. A committee amendment was made pro viding that the tax shall not apply "to states, counties or municipalities; nor to corporations, companies or associations organized and conducted solely for char itable, religious or educational purposes, including fraternal or beneficial societies or associations operated upon the lodge fcystem and providing for the payment of life, sick, accident or other benefits to the memlwrs of such societies, orders or asso ciations and dependents of such mem bers, nor to the stocks, shares, funds or securities held by any trus tees for charitable, religious or educational purposes; nor to the loans miwle by building and loan associations to their shareholders for the purpose of en abling them to provide homes, nor such savings banks, savings institutions or so cieties as shall have no members or stock holders except depositors and no capital eicept deposit!", or shall not receive de posits to an aggregate amount in any one year of more than f LOOO from the same de positor, or shall not allow an accumula tion or total of deposits by any ouo de positor to exceed 110,000, or that! actually divide and distribute to its depositor* ratably to deposits all the earn ing* over the necessary expenses of such bank, institution or society, except such as shall be applied to surplus, or shall not possess in any form a surplus fund exceed ing 10 per cent, of its aggregate deposits." Allison moved to add to section SB the words, "and nothing he-em shuil apply to any corporation, company or association having a paid-up capital of lesa than SIOO,- COO." Adjourned. Nomination*: Charles De Kay. of New York, consul-general at Berlin ; William Meyer Little, of North Carolina, consul at Teg ucigalpa, Honduras. WASHIXOTOS Crrr. Jnne 36.—1n the house the senate bill making Labor day a legal holiday was passed. The house bill to give the same weight ana effect to the oaths of prisnte and non-commissioned officers in pension cases as to the ualhs of commissioned wffkere was massed. The house went into committee of the whole on t&e dehciency bill. Considerable time was devoted to the paragraph relating to Odious Income Tax. In the House. Indian depredation claim*. The btli «u passed. Adjourned. CLINK CON VIC TING UINSKLF. Arm©r Pl»l» » foo' « ItBMl. W ASHIXFIROS CITY. June 30. Superia* tendea t C.ine, in charge of ibe armor plate press of tbe Carnegie shops st the time of the irregularities in filling government contracts, began his testimony before tbe congress.or.a: investigation committee to. day. He Mid he construe.) the specifica tion* that the plates were to have unitorm treatment to mean that there were to bo □niforra resu'ts. Clinesubmitted abstracts of plates for the purpose of shoving that the changes made were not lor fraudulent purposes. He ma te the changes, he de clared, as the resultot practical expatience. The changes covered prior work d<uie on the plates shown by workmen's figures. Cline charged that Sill'* testimony as to plates had suppressed half tbe entries on these alates. Cummin;;* then drew oat a statement tfiat Cline had destroyed his books, lie did that because tbey contained a lot of stuff be knew nothing about. Representative Money took up the sps cific charge that the armor plate was actually in the furnace eighteen hours, while Cline raised the number of hoars to thirty-six. Representative Talbot asked why this change was made. "To prevent fussing, answered Cline. "This fuss," he itid, "would be made by government offi cers." CRIMINAL NOTK4. City Collector Zieienheim, of St. Louis, has been indicted for embejxement of city funds. While resisting arrest at Chicago Mon day Edward Kgan, a safe blower of national reputation, was latalty shot. Erastus Winian has obtained an order, returnable on Friday next, to show cause why he should not have a stay of proceed iags pending his appeal. The California supreme court decides that ex-Manager W. L, Leonard, of the Bank of Santa Clam, must stand trial on a second charge of embezxlement. Caleb Badley, a mulatto, admitted that he had attempted to assault the wife of his employer, \V. P. Coleman, of Bowling tireen, Ky., and was banged by a mob Monday night. VVtiiiam A. Simsrott. late secretary and treasurer of the switchmen's Mutual Aid Association, and who stale $25,000 from the order, has disappeared from Chic igo. where he was in an inebriate asylum. Edward B. Christopher, of 17 Clinton street, New York city, auditor ol the Pru dential Insurance Co.. has t>eeu arrested on a charge of embezzling 910,000 from the company. He has been employed by the company for the past ten years. At Jackson, Cal., Sunday, Mrs. Mary E. Mushett, a widow, 73 vears old, was mur dered in her garden. It is supposed that somebody, familiar with her Habits, way laid her lor the purpose of robbery and, being recognized, made the attack which resulted in her deatii. She was struck sev eral times with a sharp-edged iron instru ment. * Mrs. Carrie Reid, who was employed as bookkeeper in an othce at Black Hawk street aud Cherry avenue. Chicago, was shot and killed Monday afternoon by Fred Hunt, who immediately afterward shot and killed himself. The murderer ran into the ottioe where Mrs. Keid was at work and, calling his victim outside the office, a short and exciting conversation ensued. The man suddenly bred five shots at Mrs. lleid, killing her instantly, aud then sout two budets into his own brain, falling dead on the woman's body. K petition haa been tiled L«{*re th* M issouri supreme court :or the disbarment of Edward M. Harber. O. A. Knight and W. A. Muilans. Harber was a Cleveland elector in IS9.', and Maj. Muilans is the prospective nominee for jydge of the au> preme court on the Republican ticket. Action against the lawyers grows out of their connection with the defense of a murderer. Harber and Knight are charged with forging and mutUating the records after they were signed by the iudge. Muilans is charged with having knowledge of the mutilated records and of arguing the case before the supreme court on a false record. CONUKNSKII 111 MI'ATCH Kit. Thomas A, Kdison, the electrician, is ill with an acute form of bowel complaint. The Democrats of the Seventeenth Illi nois District hav«» renominated Congress man William M. Springer A resolution will be p. j*ented in con gress extending the present appropriations thirty days, as it is impossible to get anv of the regular appropriation bills through belore July 1. A severe rain,hail and wind storm passed over Kansas Monday night, besides the damage at Keighley, crops were destroyed and windows broken at Oswego; the Santa Fo depot blown down at Oirard, and trees almost entirely stripped of foliage at Pitts burg. The United States court at Los Angelea on Monday decided the case of the United States vs. the Southern Pacific railroad, an action involving about 700,0(10 acres of land in Ventura and Los Angeles counties. The land was claimed by the railroad com pany under grants from the government. The court finds for the government and throws open this vast tract of land to settlers. Col. Breckinridge spoke in Bourbon county, Ky., Monday and abused the Chi cago prea» and the Chicago Union League Club, saying he had Incurred their enmity by voting against the sf\ooo.ooo World's fair appropriation bill. He said the beau tiful flowers sent him by the ladies caused him to forget the rigid sentences he had framed for those who had said hard things about him. Charles Taft, president of the Cincinnati Times-Star Company, has been seriously afflicted for ten day*. On Sunday an operation aas performed. Judge William H. Taft, from the I'm ted States circuit court, a brother of the afflicted man, states that recovery is doubtful. Mr. Taft is a eon of the late Alfonso Taft, formerly United States attorney general and minis ter to Russia. UlSlNfcsS TKOtULKI J. R. Morris Sons, of Houston, one of the oldest hardware tirms in Texas, have assigned. Liabilities, |H*,UJU, assets about the same. I'ath, Mallett A Co., New York ware housemen. have failed as an outcome of the ieven t failures of the Union Warehouse Company and £. H. Bartlett <t (,'a. The nominal assets will he about SIOO,OOO, and the liabilities about double that amount. >oKIHWt:*T SEWS. J. T. Travis, of Colville, has been ap pointed a pension examining surgeon. Thomas Jayne. a tramp, 35 years old, wss run over and killed hy a I nioo I'a cilic train at Winona last Friday. Creditors' A#cll»s Hal* Today at 10.30 a. m., 2\> and 7:30 p. m. 907 Front street, under the tirand hotel. Ladies should start early for the baseball game today, to avoid the crowd. Cut flowers and plants cheap at Wash ington Floral Company, atonwcond street. Hall Davie, Imngenesa batter. New man's, No. 912 Front street. Championship baseball, Stanford S. A. C , today. Admission free. Water lilies at Hopkins', opposite Rial to. Or. Price's Cream Baking Powder Most Perfect Made. THE DEAD PRESIDENT. To Lie in State and Be Buried in the Pantheon Sunday. ELECTJON BY CONGRESS TODAY. Casimir-Perier, Enemy of tbe Social- ists, Seems to Be Ahead. the Rioting Continues at Lyons. I* Spite of 3.000 Arrests- The Italian Consulate at Grenoble W re«ke<l -An archists Jutifjr the Assassination. INkis, June 2li—Enormous crowds of j-eople gathered in front of the Eiysee palace this afternoon, favored ones being allowed to view the boJy of the late presi dent in batches of ten under the super vision of republican guards. Tne funeral train, bearing the remains of the murdered president, arrived at 3:10 a. m. The prefect of the Seine, M. Rubel, and st.itt. the prefect of police, 11. Lose, and staff, railroad officials and Gen. Saus sier. military governor of Fans, with his staff, met the body at the station, which was heavily draped. The ceremonies at the railroad terminus consisted only of formal transferor the remains to the pre fect of the Seine. The casket was placed in a hearse and escorted to the Elysee palace, followed by • five carriages, including a lsndau which was occupied by Mme. Car not and her three sons. Several thousand people gathered about the railroad and stood with uncovered heads until the cortege had passed. At the palace the body was conveyed to the reception room, which had been converted into a mortuary chapel, hung with black cloth and hawing a catafalque in the ceuter, upon which, in silver letters, was the initial "C" over the letters "R. F." (Kepublique Francaisk The widow was overcome with emotion when the casket was placed in the mortu ary chapel. The body is now guarded by four cadets from the military school of St. Cyr. It will be placed upon a catafalque in the courtyard of the Elysce to lie in state un til Sunday, when it will be escorted with much ceremony to the Pantheon and placed beside the remains of the late presi dent's grandfather, Lazare Carnot. Among those who witnessed the arrival of the body of President Carnot at the pa'ace was his coachman, who was so atl'scted that he fell insensible and died from the shock. The commission appointed to conduct the obsequies of the president include# Col. Chamoine, who will represent M. Carnot's family; M. Boujoun, director of the acadeiuy of tine arts; M. Huet, direc tor of public works; Ambrose Thomas. M. and Architects Gamier and OuiUame. STIIKIT TALK IN* PARIS. The Successor in the l*resl<le«cy—Carnot Amnljr Warned. Special cable correspondence of the Associated frees. Parts, Jane 56.—Mine. Carnot returned to Parts from Lyons early thie morning, With the remains of the president coffined in plain oak. The civil and police author ities received her. About 7,000 persons, principally members of the working class, were massed outside the railway station. Midi, Carnot had on the gray mauve trimined silk dress and the bonnet she wore nine, days ago at the Grand Prix race, the last state function she was ever to attend as presidente. When the news of the murderous attempt reached Mine. Carnot Sunday night she had on this same costume and had no time to change it befoie hurrying awav to Lyons. Until she canie back to the Palace Elyfcte she did not doff her dress. About 3,000 persons were in the station at Dijon to salute the remains. The widow was accompanied to Paris by her three sons. The train was awaited at the terminus by a funeral wagon, two landaus and a coupe for the officers who went with the presi dent to Lyons. The party were soon con veyed to the Palace Elysee. The troops were drawn up in the courtyard and saluted the fuueral wagon. On alightlne Mine. Carnot was embraced by her danghter m-law and mother-in-law. Mme. Carnot has not touched food since Sunday night, but today she was able to drink deep draughts of milk flavored with coffee. Her mental and moral vigor sustain her. She spent today ordering mourning, ar ranging for the fune-al. dictating answers to messages from Queen Victoria, Presi dent Cleveland, Emperor William and Empress Augusta, the czar. King Hum bert and others, and receiving the ambas sadors who brought them. Emperor William will send a prince of his own house to attend the funeral. The widow of Marshal sent a feeling tele gram, in which deep sorrow was expressed. Seemingly M. Carnot's fate tames the atubition of those politicians who coveted the presidency. M. Lacour, speaker of the senate, refuses to run for the office. Prime Minister Dupuy seemingly has the best chance, but is less keen than was M. Casimir-Perier. Oct igenarian Arago, the astronomer's ton, is hardly plated, but because he is old and tottering may get in. M. Brtsson. who baa been a Candida's twice already, has some chance. M. Casimir-Perier would just now be danger ous because he is repugnant to the industrial classes. It is on the cards that a large number of of>- portunista may unite with the radicals and socialists on M. Brisson or M. bourgeois, who is an outsider, but so was Carnot in ii&7, under different circumstances, how ever. A presidential election is in the na ture of • Vatican conclave, and is the ob ject of endless bargaining and intriguing. M. Casimir-Perier is the man for the wealthy bourgeois and aristocratic »<* i ety. He is wise in his own conceit, but the responsibilities involved in the presi dency might cure this. In America he might pass for an old-fashioned Whig. Mme. Carnot has pile* of letters threat ening her husband and sons, reoeived be fore aud after the executions of Vaillant and Henri. Not long ago M. Carnot, when walking in the Bois with Gen. Bo nus. chief of bis military household, was shadowed by a sinister-looking fellow, of whom be could only rid himself by re treating to his carnage. He had been warned from Italy to keep well guarded. Other warnings came from Brusseis to beware of the Grand Prix on June 17. In December HOO,OOO francs were voted to increase the po lice force, but M. Carnot was left practically unguarded. During five years the prefecture of police was charged to se cure bis safety, and it did it so well, aj>> pointing the sharpest detectives to watch over him, that under the pretext of economy, this duty was shifted to the ttuuisit <4 ths interior, where, says the EIGHT-PAttE KDITI IN />Ao tit unmentionable intr gnes ,f rv rst>. Tb* official* ;her* were de« to M. Conit»n», between whom and M. I'iraot there was * feud. Wis the change mad« to worry israot m;o •raving the E.ysee by arousing * sense of in—ciarity * Possibly. Whin M. Oar not was gomg to Toulon to visit the Ru»- sian squadron a warning im received from Scotian 1 \ ard, bat no attention was patd to it. On J una dt), the prefect oI ilerauit telegraphed to the minister of the interior that a dangerous Italian an archist named Santo hail arrived at Celt*. Fbis intimation was also ignored, with the Lyons tragvdy for the consequence. ANTI-ITALIAN KIOT9. The Consulate »t UrM»lil* Hacked - Lyons Mob Still Active. t, June 36,—There has been serious rioting here today. The disturb ance was commenced Sunday night by Italian workmen employed on the horse cars, who were drinking In a wineshop. An Italian made a remark which a Frenchman regarded as an insult. A tree tight followed, and a mob of Frenchmen, headed by Hags and armed with sticks, invaded the yards of the horse car com pany and attacked and badly beat tba Italians. Just as the trouble was becom ing more serious the prelect arrived and induced the Frenchmen to retire. AS 'J o'clock Monday afternoon, the Italian cates were attacked. A num ber of Italiau stores were treated in the same manner. The mob marched through the streets shouting, "Down with the Italians." Several Ital ians who were met in the streets were beaten and kicked. The mob was rein forced aud proceeded to the Italian consul ate The police vmnly tried to check the mob. but the leaders procured a ladder, fixed it to the balcony ol the consulate.and several rioters, headed by a drunken car- * penter, entered the consulate, tore up the Italian flag, smashed the escutcheon, broke the furniture, threw the statues upou the tloor and kicked them t» piece*, and seuing upon two Urge handsome oil paintings, representing King Humbertand the queeti of Italy, threw them Into the street. A detatchuient of military was summoned and the soldiers charged upon the mob. After a short conflict Ui« rioters were driven out of the consulate, which was then occupied by the troops, and the prefect made an apology to the Italian consul, lhe riotous crowd spread tiiroughout the city, •etzitig upon all Italian men, women and children, and took them to the prefecture, believing that they were to be expelled from the city. The Italians were guarded by the police until this morning, when the disorder has temporarily subsided. The two lead ers of the attack on the consulate were ar rested today, which caused a renewal of the trouble. Several mobs gathered as soon as the news of the arrest of the lead ers became known, and the prefect was compelled to summon troops. At 11 o'clock this morning the military had occupied all the public squares and boule vards with infantry, cavalry and artillery, and Grenoble was, to all tntenta and pur poses, in a state of siege. Lyons, June 28.—Throughout the night rioters thronged the streets, sacked Italian stores and taverns, and, after throwing their contents into the streets, made bon fires of everything combustible. The police frequently chased the rioters, who always retreated, seeming determined to demon* strut* that they were vindictive against Italians only, and not seeking a conflict with the law authorities. Here and in other towns in France excited by the mur der of President Carnot, Italian sculptors, woodcarvers, grocers aud gilders suffered at the hands of the mob. When force.l out they were beaten and rolled in the gutters and their belongings seized and broken up or burned, and many barely escaped with their lives. A large number of Italians are hopelessly ruined. Some have (led from Lyons. At 7 o'clock this evening a riotous mob inarched upon the Italiau quarter, in the northern part of the city. The rioters at tacked and looted a number of stores. A barrel of petroleum eiploded and burned three rioters to death. Dangerous points about Lyons have been occupied by the military. About 000 people were arrested during the rioting yesterday and a large number were taken into custody today. The mayor of Lyon* has issued a proclamation in which he aaya: "The inaieiactora who, in the guise of patriotism, are rominiting heinous deeds of vandalism and pipage,will be punished as vulvar criminals. The may or appeals to ell honest citisens to assist the authoritiea in repressing rioting." Two thousand arrests were made today in connection with the anti-Italian mani festations. PARIS, June 26 A riot has occurred at Dijon between Italian quarrymen and a number of the reaidenta. Troop* were summoned to keep order. Several factories in the auimrbe have dis charged all foreigner* from their employ. The mayor of Marseilles haa iaaued an address urging the citisena to refrain trom nucleating Italians, but a strong anti- Italian feeling exists. Twenty-five Italians employed in enlarging Ht. Cyr college have been dismissed in deference to the wishes of the other workmen. Heveral building contractors have been warned not to employ Italians. A (alee newspaper ruuior this afternoon that M. ltimot, tbe French ambassador to Italy, had been aaaaasinated in Home, produced an immense sensation here, which threatened for a time to result in riots. The government telegraphed to Home for information, and upon learning the report waa untrue, sent troope and sesed the ofTeuding journal. This action quieted the populace. TiiK kkw raMibißT or rßAncg Carter Shown to Ltsd la the Ropultlloaa l'isc«als{. PiMl, June 38.—At a preliminary meet, ing of the Republican representatives and senators, which was called to decide upon a candidate tor the presidency, the num bers of the two chambers were unable to come to an agreement, and the meeting culminated in an uproar, during whirl* Deputies Berteaux and Hajtet came u» bio*a. The result of the encounter is that both gentlemen have appointed seconds and a duel will shortly be fought. At a preliminary meeting of Republican senators tills afternoon to decide upon a candidate for president the vote resulted: M, Caatmir-T'erier, 144; 51. Dupuy, L 5; scattering, 17. Wince yesterday extraordinary anima tion has reigned at Versailles. The work was simply immense, but everything is now ready for the business of tomorrow's congress, which will be beid for the purpose of electing a new presl> dent. A serious difficulty has been found In installing telegraph wires throughout the place. Bicyclists have been appointed with relays at Vtlte d'Avery, to facilitate the transmission of messages in case of a glut at tbe hastily organised bureaus. M. I,scour, president of the senate, has been blamed for p<Mt» pomng the congress until Wedaewtey, bat he could hardly hare noted otket* Emir Cr\ w roio.