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^^^VBLISnED AUGUST 24, 1852. WHEELING, WEST VA., FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 4,1SS5. VOLUME XXXIV.?NCTMUEIt] 1. | ? " ?r ^ & UnMli^mx: <?0lc?s Sot. 25 anil 27 Fourtoculh Street, tTTkici; will be few tears shed over tl small onion crop. W'kks cholera struck filthy Marseilh it w?s in for a rich harvest. No city ca aJbnl to tfo dirty. At last the "youngest soldier" que tiou ia settled in favor of an Ohio wai Jt ba3 too much elasticity to stay settle* Matinkk in the U. s. District Court bi jrlus at 10 o'clock this morning. The ove; turo will bo played by the State adminij tratioc. Tita I'rMideiit is on his way to Wasl Mcooil'hiuid hash house injw" uroalrtaJy gorged in anticipation of lii arrival. _ ___ Uksti v. *ks who nro waiting to giv tliel'rcsident a whirl on'the Wheel in ptttoflice are cordially invited topreaer thmstlvea at tho White House not late than Monday, September 7. Tiio bac door is always open. Vinoi.viA Kei'Uulicanh are pushing th tariii issue. No State in the Union ha more to expect fro in a protective tariff o Ja? front a policv of free trade. Wtst Vii jjinia is in a like case, but some of he people don't realize it. if?.WiL*PKK no Italian j'ournalist is to b allowed to hold a government position Allah bo praiaeJ, we arc not likely t have any of that reform in tbiseouutrj The postotlice will continue to be ran us iianpleuient to the party newspaper. Tiis Ohio Wool Growero' A&Bociatioi declares that tho wool industry eanno thrive withont the tariff of 18G7. Thi means that the wool industry lias nothin to expect from tho Democratic partj which has its knife out for the tariff. Tiik person who went to inform Senato Morgan of the mishap to his sou, put i this way: ''.Senator, I have bad nows fe you. Your eou is drowned." There i nothing like agentle breaking of sad new Seme people do everything with the lei hand. tiiat ia a good thing on Secretar Manainj, hut wo doubt whether ho saiii "Grand Army be d?d." It is more probi l)l?; that some one has drawn on a fertil imagination. Fo expert a politician a Mr. Manning is not likely to give himsel atwy without sufficient canse. Tumi) Auditou Williams endeavor*' to b.* down hard on ex-Pension A gen iSorriff, ol Philadelphia, and got up harde with a pointer in bis duster. Instead c Noma bein;? dtrelict he has shown tbn tho Third Auditor was merely lookin around for n little party capital. I'aukkll has Bet the English press cm with bis bcJd utterances. They Jinothat though Ireland cannot achievo In dependence by force of arms she is stron enough to maintain a state of turmoil an< unsettle the peace of the United King dotn. They know that if the Irish wii aland by Parneil England will be force ti consult her own welfare by negotiatln lot a treaty of peace. Whk.v Archibald Forbes visited Oinclc naliuti Iris lecturing tour tho towndi not bow down as ono man to do him hoa age. Hut he was shown some polite attor lions, among ether things being kindly r< ceived in Mr. Trobasco's elegant home. In his new'book "Souvenirs" Forbe gives Mr. Probasco and his art collectio: a turning over. He declares that Mi Probosco has " a basement crammed wit the uttereat impostures, with slmm ol china, sham Etruscan vases, shatn old mai tew, and sham everything." Of his hof he says, "Behold this awful rubbish nnd listen to tho old hardware merchant' wailing struggles with art mystories." This is not very gracious treatment of j?enti'.eraan who has in his home paintinf and sculpture by mauy of tho most renowi o 1 artists, Mhoroujhlyrepresentativo co loctiuii of what is best in art. Forbes write his criticising witli the lieel of troojier boot. When lie Tiaits Cincinnati agai lio is not likoiy to see tlia inside of a goi Human's house. It caunot bo Uiat the Ei lilish exiwct this Icinil of tiling of the; iiookuiakers. tiono to m Monastery. CuWA(io,Sopt. 3.?Mr. James C. Nesbit late business manager of thu Current, n ceivoil a telegram from Mr. E. L. Walt man last Hunday requesting him to ine< .Mr. Wukeman at a town in Northern Wi eonsin. Mr. Kesbitt at once started ft the town in question. Arriving there 1 metthu railway station by a Hon Vine monk who raystorioualy handf Jlr. A'eabitt a sealed package, and the waved him away. The package confainc a letter In Mr. Neabitt, and another to o the euudoyes of tho Cunwl. In tl former Mr. Wakiman explained that t had retired to a monastery, where 1 ,.,...1,1 ^ttUamlirht nf tho WOrl ? "III l\? ICUIOUI VfUV Ul IUU -rr^? W- ? - .. nutil his spirits revived. The Conrt of Alabama Claim*. BcrliXotok, Iowa, Sept. 3.?Ia in ii tcrview relative to the recent decision i the Kirat Comptroller ol the Treasui disallowing all the minor expenses ol tl t.'jnrt ol Alabama Claims, Judge Harli proij'lins Judge ol the conrt, holds th the Comptroller'sdecision is not only ' indict with t'>e acts of Congress creatii the conrt ami'inscribing itsdutief ai with all precedent* In that and oih courU, but that it will, if sustained, rest in prolonging the work M the court ai increasing the aggregate exp?oom. Th* Oolon Crop. NrnmnnKLD, Mass., Sept. 3?Reports the New Kngland BomattaA lndica that tlio onion crop of the country w bo below the average in all but favon sections, and prices promise to be mc rcnnmeratlve than for two yeros pa / rowers will hold the crop from <10 cei to one dollar per bushel. Tho crop both, tn sets is only two-thirds of the avi nic, b"n; ol tine quality. Onion seedli itood crop Jioth In yield and quality. llaak>b?*t(jrtip D?it?y?d. ^iuaixc, Sept." fl.-For nearly a w? past Iroets have occurrt"!. nightly north this city. At BtowWwsi the buckwhi crop is rcjxvtej to Ve Mtity destroyed. WASHINGTON NEWS. V = CHIMIXAL CAKKLKSSNK8 8 = Of tlio MamrilUi Author! irn in Krpml to Flshtlng the Cholera-A United Stn??j* CodmuI'm Hopiirt on tho Matter?Mall >S Kobbera Xubbcd by ttiu Authorities a 1 ' 1 i Washington*, Sept. 3 ?Tho Secretary of 1 State has received a detailed report from 9* Consul Miuon in regard to the cholera at J* Marseilles, lie comments on tho false ' policy of the authorities in endeavoring to 1 suppress the truth as to the existence of ! r_ the diBease and speaks of the earprise J j. cauaed by the rude awakening on tho 14th , ult., when the community wau allocked by j the announcement that An epodeiuic pre- I l* vailed in their widat. Tha moat ele- J :a mcnUiry principles of sanitary cleaulineau ( w are unknown in Marseilles. j Tho gutters of the streets flow with the 1 veriest filth and the canals and aewets are t e infected. On. tho eastern Bide of tho old I g }K>it is one building which contain# 700 < it inhabitants whoee exeicmomsare thrown < ir intothereeej-eoaof tho stairway*}. Behind ? , tho Mario is a school foryouug girls poison- \ * cdbvtho exhalations from tu* vault of neighboring cloaeU', and aired only by * windows opening u pon a dark closed court ' e which is a veritable Hink. ? B From tho iirst lo the nineteenth of Au- 1 gust there were 7-1 riosrflw, or an avtrago ) of 38 per day. The diseaso lias also ap- \ " poared seriously in the suburbs of the c r city. The malady has been la a relatively more fatal ratio than last year to sailors of vessels in the port, and has bean partic- i 0 ularly serious with seamen from Euglaud. Tho disease manifesto its characteristic ' preference fur the dissipated, the insane r o and the unclean. Tho present situation r. aod tho record of the paa-, secondary epi- r " domic3indicatothacthM8cour^o hasrtaeh- {. ed its maximum fatality. J CLKVKIt UOHUKJW. tl ?c Two Youth* wlici Khv? Itnlllml thr l'ofttufticb ^ Dcpnrlnient Arr?n?t?d. j s Washington, Sept. 3.?Jnspicior Hen- n g dorson, of the Poatoilice Department, has r jost returned from North Carolina, where " ho succeeded in causing the arrest of two j mail robbers, who though mere lada, had * by the neatness auii dexterity of their operations, bullied the skill of the Iuspecr tors a loug time. Since Jane 1 a number H of complaints have .leached the Depart?' ment that registered letters passing be" tween .Salisbury and Albamarle, N. 0., have been riilad. These tovns are cony nccted by a fc'car routo over which the I, mails were carried by George. II. Eagle, aged 17. After a carefni examination the iuppeeie ots concluded lhat Eagle v;is robbing the s mails. Decoy letters containing marked i money were placed in a register poach. Upon Eagle's arrival at the end of the route, the di cov letters were found to have , been rifled and Eagle was promptly arrested and searched. ??o money was found on i 't his person and the inspector was forced to r release him for lack of eyidonco, though f confident of hfs guilt. On tho night of hi* discharge Eagle bought a honw and , lt ainappeared in tho pine woods. J g Some timo afterward, while digging at f tho bottom of a well on tho premises of v one Armoud. tbo well-digger heard Jothro y Arinond, a lad of 16 yoah, confess to hi* 8 father that he had tbo money st">Jep by s Edffle. The father told his son to keep { l" the money. Armoud has formerly carried c g tho mail over tho same ronto. The dig- ^ j ger informed tbo inspectors of the facta and , Armond was arrested an4 the pi oofs of t the criiuo secured. Eigio w*s arreted '* yesterday in Kansas. It appears that t d tho boys met in the woods and opeued J ? the pouches with home-maio tools. v An old knife had boen converted into an c exceedingly keen servicuablp gaw. With o ! Iii3 tool tho clasps of the pouuhcs yvere i l" aevtred on one side, bent back with d another inctrument and room tbusse- t i- cured for tho insertion of .a hand iuto the t pouch. The Utt^/f were skillfully openod, r tlie money abstracted, qu?] with the uid of * * a bottle of mucilage the entelopa neatly sealed. Armond s?ema to have p>eii the 8 custodian of tho stolen funds. Inspector Henderson sjiys this was one of the cleverest device** far ivhbiog the mails he r had ever discovered. 1 h c j Mnny Culled, Snveu t'2iiia*i). J }_ WASiiiMiro.v, September 3.?Tbo exam- \ (t ination of candidates for appointment as a . cadets in the revenue marine has been 1 g concluded. Fourteen candidates passed, j but as there are only seven vacancies, it 1 was decided to appoint the coven who at- j a talmttl the highest averaged in tho exaini- t nation. Tho names of too successful can- t i. tliilateB are; John IS. Hull, of Virginia; 1 , 8tanleyil. liandroy, of fiuliaua; Preslon i II. Uberrotb, of Pennsylvania; Jv'ijsworth ? P. Berthalf, of New York; Gordon H. 'b Wilcox, of Pennsylvania; Richard 0. " * ?i i urnuam n v. . n Ufisp, OI iiuir/iau\>, BUU n , j Jacobs, of Maryland. 1- Trau?ft?r ol U. S. li.nula. 1 ir Washington, D, 0s-pt. 3.?Tho j acting Secretary of tho Treasury lias re- <] icinded the order recently prepared by g the Registrar in regard to the transfer of 1 t, U. S. bond?, which repaired w a pondi- 1 e. tion precedent to tho issue to any trustee, (f executor, administrator, guardian, fa, that the beneficiency shall bo named in ' -l the application and in the assignment of < a- tho bonds. J *+ * >r Mnnnltiy'N Opluloi) of. tb? O. A. It. j ie Albany, N. V.,Sept 3.-rJt is reported < a' that duriug Manning's stay here he was ^ called upon by Postmaster O'Leary, The I" magnate complimented the postmaster j ,11 upon his administration of affairs in the . to otlice, and finally abrwpUy paid: "1 see t 16 you still have Z<>llman in the office. Why 1 |? is he not removed?" "Weil, ho's a pretty j lu good man, and besides he'd a Grand Army J man, and the order hijire requested his de- ! Itention." was air. v i/'myn rupxv. umnu ^rmy be damned/' Mr. Manning is ye- < to have sententiously remarked. J 0f -'.Remove liim atonce, and put Mike Qor- | m*n in his plac?\" Gorman is a practical y politician, after Manning ovn beart. ie ???, ?. i in Hamilton County Republican CodtouUom. at Cincinnati, Snpt. a.?The Republican In County Convention reconvened at nearly jg noon and has just completed the uowtnaid tion of the ten candidates for Uepresontaer tives in the General Aas??rabiy. Tho list dt stands: Oliver Outcault, Jrred Jjiker, . id Theo. F. Nieman, 11. Krockman, i{. 8. Wydman, Dr. J. F. Bailey. Dr. T. W. Graydon, Robert Uarlau'i Walter Ilartpence and John K^gers. UJ ? iJntlfSt MoIItaIqm Uecllce*. .jj CoLUUDUi, 0., September 3.?Judge G. ;il W. Mcllvaine, of the Hupremo Court, and ire a candidate on tlie Republican ticket for t re-election, has sent his declination to the committee on account of ill health since the nomination. A meeting Ku been 01 called for September 9th to fill the rn, ^ cancy. President Cleveland'# NoreMist, Pawner Horns, Adiiioxdacks, N. V., . SipL 3.?President Cleveland returned b?re lul night. It ia exported that be 01 will remain until Saturday morning, whan Mt he will leave for Albany and WaiiiBjton vi? Platlabnijjb. . i WKKCKKJ) I1ANOVJ5ULAN. How the Df*n?ter Ofloiirr?l-41! PoiMnjf?ri Safely I.anri?rt. St. Johns, Nkw Fou.ndi.and, Sept. 15.? 11 Very meager details have thus far been received from the wrecked steamer Han- a overian. No statement can be obtainod from Captain Thompson until he arrives bora from Trepjssy, to which point a sealing eteamer has been ?ent with articles of relief for tho passengers and crew, who must have sutiered great hardships. p The place where the ship struck is some e| six miles from that fishing village and ao n alio is reported to havo been going at n speed, it is hardly possible there was time ^ lo remove either provisions or clot hing to . the shore, and tho rough coast oilers ao shelter. The passengers have JJ now been t^kon to Trepassy, where J.' they will remain in comparative com- r' fort until tho steamer sent to bring them w to this port uriives. It is the general jpinion among seamen hore that tho j*T Hanoverian miutopk tho light of Cape Jjj Pine for that of Cape Kaco and without iounding proceeded to lay u courso for his prirLwhivh ran her into Portugal Jove. Tlu re are shoals bofcween tho range ,u )f the lights and the cove, and if the usual w lonndings had baon ma-lo tho mistako 01 vould havo been speedily discovered. m flu-re is uo otber tenable theory of the n,: lisaster without charging gross and crimtir.l carelessness upon the oflicors. A dis- cr atch from the Signal Station at Capo M {ace, which is tho nearest telegraphic nJ ?/???* In H?n Kfano r?f flm Jmjiufvr. hrvrIIio ?tl "0S3(j1 will bo a total wreck with all her largo. :l< A ItlGAMOU* lMtOFKbSOK I&ul?d Up with a llouud Tarn Aftsr Milking A! Lightning LuvCi Ambricus, Ga., September 3.?Prof. H ). Dewelss, phrenologist, lawyer, Cinein- ?* tail Enquirer reporter, traveling photo- 00 ;raplu r And bigamist, is in jail here, in lefault of $200 bail, charged witli marryog Stella Stokes, of Smithville, daughter f Captain Stokes. Dewaiss made love to tel he yirl while he photographed hor, and be I riving across the country the couple were c0 oarried hero, ftows of the marriage cached Mrs. Deweisa No. 1, at. Savannah, j' .(so Captain Stokes, and the latter tracked w ho ouple to Sehnn, Ala., where the I'ro- ? Essor was arrested. m) The original Mrs. D3we!98 was atone [me Mir.s Kliria Williams, of Wilkes ounty, Alabama. She Jirdt married John ?j .loore, a man of moans, who shortly aftertard died. She took for a second mate a 1r. Ifitchnnok, from California, whom sue net in Mobile. Becoming embarrassed, t.' 10 threw himself into the Alabanu river, t fuw days after Duweips appeared in 'amden, Ala, an I became the third bus- ] land of too bereaved widow. People fere so incensed that they hung tho Projcwr !n ant! llie counltJ tliOli Dllll ill stakes for Savannah. Iiora he sallied Mi orth into the adjoining comity to pr:?ao- xii nte 0:10 of his numerous purauife, and it ,(a las on one of tl?es-i trips that he enacted ba lis romance with M ita b'tokes. 0p Vt3 311L LION A1111C MACKAY. foJ lumura Circulated iliut lie Want* to buy th! tho New Vot k "HcroM." W New Yobic, Sopt. 3.?'Tiio Tribune thisooruing soys: "A report is current that ?a] obtt W, Mackay is negotiating with Mr. Vfl, bniktli-for Iko purchase cI tho Herald. rith tho luiention of putting John JJue- < ell Young at the >.oad of the editorial tj1( taff. Mr. Mackay is interested with Mr. {ennett in the Commercial Cubic, in tho ^ onstruction of which $8,000,000 is said to 1 . lave been sunk. Por Jfr. tfujioett's shnre 1 a this euterpriee Mr. Mackay ia'rwported a hold a mortgage on the Herald. V Mackay's wealth is much talked of in 1 his pongee tipn. Ho is said to have $21,00.000 in securities locked up in his safe, 'iz: $5,000,1)00 in Unittii St&tea 4 per- i"l' enta, $5,0^0,000 in French rentes, $5.000, 00 in English consols, SG.000,000 in State londa and similar American securities, uuping 5 to 8 percent. In addition to ] his, is bis cable investment and bis inereat in tho JJaiiI; oi Noviuia. The gos&ip n; una that he could back the Herald with ?f >30,000,000. erl A Now Comet. *0' Ro?ijB3K|in, If. Y., S*pt :j.?On the irening of August {si,* \V. R, Brooks, of th Whelps, N. Y., discovered a suspected gn :omet, which to-night was verified by 'rofi^aQt l^wia Swift, director of tbo ! ' Earner Obwr^atory, of this city. Its portion is: Might astvnsion JU hours 14 uinntes, declination, North 21} degrees *}0 i ninutes. It has no tail nor nucleus and K 8 pretty faint. It is moving Southeastery and citfi easily be seen through a four- ra' ucb telescope. ).t ia in the compilation of wi he Hunting Dog*. This disooyery, if not ag inUdated, entitles Mr. Brook* to the aq rVamer piizaof $200, making the third sti ton by him in tlie pant three years. ag Die Fire at Uluclanatl. CiXjCiNKi.71, September 3.?About dusk hia evening the entire fire department Vfls called to the corner of Sixth ami wi ioadjy ctrcets, where a lire had joined da nuiih headway iu the freight depot of the ht Cincinnati, Hamilton DayOjn Jiailroad. an CheJmilding extended from i/i/tlx ?0 Si^th fa itreots, a distance of 500 feet. The lower loor Is ojacupied as a freight depot by the ailroad company, vbile the upper stories x ire used by tho Cincinnati Milling and Warehouse Company, J. It. AfcQrice * Jo., proprietors. An immense quantity )/ grain was stored in the byilding, and " villi Urn building was totally destroyod. do Hie freight on hand was also badly dam- en iged. A rough estimate places the loss at ' >ver |80,(KX), but this may bo modiiilod. <c re, fia-irurllvo Fire In Ilaltiaiortv ^ Baltimoue, Mp.f ?ej)tember 3.?Tho .ouratory brick building, comprising }C5, w; 107 and 469 West Pratt street, was der iijj itroved by tire this afternoon. It was oc- us mpied by four iirins of.wood-workers, and ag iieir stock and machinery is almost a total pt loss. K. G. i/inley $ Bros., saw and plan- to ine mill, lose $3,000 to $10,000, insurance hi M,000; B. J. Sparkling, manufacturer of ?u jornicea, loses $20,000, fully insured; cl frw/n (jack it O*, desk manufacturers, tb loao to$lfl,Q0Q, insurance $4,000; at Bailey Bros., dealers in builders' supplies, or lose 17,000, inaurance $2,000. The build[ng wspowne<4 by Mrs. J. C. Morgan. It so -* ?<?e nnn -.?,l iin rvin W(L4 y^liueu Blj.w,wv, iuouivu *w? |riv,vw. It. tic* $jOfM00f 111 New York, Sept. 3.?The New york 8B flaily Commercial Bulletin, of September gi <, estimates t)jn Ore losses in the United n< suii'd and Canada darinj; August at ? {5,300,000. This is a deefded iinjjroye- " mefjt upon former records, the average ?i sggrfgato ?f lire Iowa in August for (he " ten years past being $j,OQO,000. In August, >i )SSJ, the tire loss was about $10,000,000. n The Uulklin thinks there is ground for en- ei courageinent in so fayorable an exhibit cj Noverthelets tho Are losses of theypar to tiie end of August foot up tto.tWO.ClOO, with four months yet to bear from. PUMIIIM Homil?n, K Albany, N. Y., Dept. (he bniid- ?j jngson the block bounded by Booth, ,, pearl, Cros>J and Alexander streets and f| Fourth avenue, were bjjrned to^lsy, expept three brick ones en Pearl street. The wsll of one of the buildings fell at 3:43, and tbe firemen narrowly escaped being a buried. Fireman Frlendenhill, of Truck p No. 1, was badly burned about the head. I Treoty-flva to thirty families are burned u p THE LABOR WORLD. UTTER ASSAULT ON NAILERS t Ironton, Obto-Trontole in the Shawnee, Ohio, Jtfluee?Tho Monorgshela Velitjr Coal Mluem Split on the Qaeitlon of a Strike?General Labor Notea. I ronton, 0.. Sept. 3.?Great excitement revai<B here to-day. An organized mob, itimated at from fifty to ono hundred i i )en. Hupposeu 10 uo uuiupuauu ui buiiuuk till men, went to the Bellfonte mill, At i? close of Foraker'a speech last nipht, i<l capturing the guard, whom theydia'mod, compelled him to goto tho door of te wareroem, in tho upstaira, of which vo Chattanooga "blacksbeep" nailers, ere bleeping, and ask them to comedown. The nailery, however, suspected trouble, id refused to open tho door. A shot waa j ed, it ia claimed from tho outside, when ic men from their inside barricade openl up a rapid llring from the heavy revolira with whicji they were armed. Some teen whota wore tired, and tho svindowa ero badly riddled, but fortunately no" w waa hurt, ao far 110 known. Tho watchan claims that tho men were masked ui all armed. Tho probability ia that most of the owd caiue from Ashland, where tho mo trouble cxista. Tho better class of tilers, heatero and rolleia, who are on a rikf, aro not in aympathy with such [ tho.is atd aro louil in thoir denuncia>na of tho raid. tjjjs sur jsi- .uu.i.n. St. Loiil* Firm isltfa* Hid Scnlo?The Acinigunm'p.l A?Nucl(ttii>n Encouraged* Pittsbuugii, Pa., fc'ept. 3.?The oflicials tho Amalgamated Association havo reived intelligence that the Neidering lose stamping company, of St. Louie, 3 signed the sheet mill scale. The idering house is one of tho most exisivo sheet mills in the West, and, ing the tirst to sign the scale since the n/erence in this city, it is considered of cat importance inasmuch as it will ubtlees have the effect of swinging the eatern manufacturers into line. Hie executive oiiicers of tho Amalgaited in the several districts are now jretty engaged in strengthening the ornizatiou. Within the past three weeks ree lodges were organised in tho Pittsrgh district Reports from other di?t*ts show a large increase of memberip, and new lodges were organized sluce j scale convention at Wheeling, W. Va. DlrMmift tu tt??- Jlluers (liink<i. PinsHuaaif, Sept 3.?'There is a divin among tho Stonongahela Valley coal liers that will reault disastrously to the iners Union of the Knights of Labor, to hitter haa ordered a strike on gatury for an advance of three cents per she). Qllioihls of tho Miners Union are 1 posing it. It the men go out the conation of tho miners association called the 15th will not bo held. Thoeo who 1 iakthey know the liver miuera pretty ill,say that it ic hardly probable that they 11 assume tho resjKinaibility of a Htrike this time, as with divisions in their iks, the prospects of success would be ry small. Trouble nt tliw blmwnce mine*. jjiawnuk, 0., Sept. ;i.?Coyle, one of i Kenney sympathies; will leave town'1 s coming week. Stanton and Gallagher, ) other two who have had notice to | ve, will stay and face their foes. ) Sows has jnst reached hero of a horrible me having been pomipittcd near this ice. Charles Eiclmerj who has been rking in one of the syndicate mines. , itrary to tho rules, was taken ont ana aten in a horrible manner, and it. is red will die from tho eiTects. No*'one i tell where it wijl en*.|BXuolder4 Galu l'hclr Point* Philadelphia, Sept. 3.?The striking tuUlara nf the two large stovo foundries 1 Lohrant McDowell, and Thomas Rob , Stevenson * Co,, retjjfnec} to work day, the firms agreeing to the payment the v n percent advance demanded. > conditions, it is said, were exacted by o employers. Five firms havo now jnted tho ten porcont increase. The julders feel Jjrp^lv enpjqrazed and ink thai before many daya all tlio estabhmenta will again be running. ltnllroud Strike landed. Galveston, Sept. 3.?Tho strike of the aighu of J,*bor agaipat \\\e Golf Colo? jo and Santa Fe Railroad Uompany, th the mutual signing of articles of r6ement regulating the rates of wages 4 guaranteeing immunity to all the iking employes. The schedule of wages reed upon has apt yet Heap made pttbiip. Two I)a7< In Advauee. Pittsbuuou, Sept 3.?A McKeesport, , special says: Tho coal miners strike is inaugurated to-day instead of Satury ao intended. On? thousand five if id red ineri in the second pool quit work u it ia exported by to-morrow evading lly 4,000 miners will be out. A ?QNMA.tt'iVar K.^tuyg. Uonemi oior?uieni m mi ncii m ins Kate of Five Hundred a Day. PiiitiDsu'iiM, Sept X?Tho exodus of ungarlans from this Stato to tho West iring tho past two months has been oriuous. Jt has not been more than a ar slope they |)QCke4 intQ the mining glona at a rate which thoroughly alarmed; a minors. Thoy were known to havo no affiliation Itli trade unions and to accept work at jiirpe f.qr [telow those npon which tho itive miners could pretend to live. So grcssivo was the feeling against these on'.e that agitations were began looking legislative enactment which would ford their emyloymont in any capacity lor uiji Iqt'or t|)an those paid to the same asa ol lalior. *rhey wetu uncleanly ip eir habits, hmldied together like sheep, id as many as twenty-five would occupy 10 room as a sleeping apartment In any instances they have been known to ibilst upon otta', aud possetjed tip quall;s that assimilated with thone ot the dives. There were a* many as twonty thoaJld of these people in the mining reons of l'ennsyivanin at one time, and )W they have boen seised with the dere to migrate, and are leaving at the to of five hundred per week tram the lthr?c|te regions. They are destined for le western btates, vl)cr? {l|ey will follow iricultDrai pursuits upon a small scale, early every one of them having saved joogb to pay his railroad fare anil pursue a small piece of land. |r?n Sblppid to Elk mrii?, Minn, Hep', a.?Tho Klk lipids Iron Company hare received an rder lor 400 tons Of charcoal iron to be dipped to England, probably tbe first o? of woftprn manufacture eyer shipped om tola country. A M?w Vori Ou W?)l> JiKMTOffH, W, Y., Sept 3?The drilling n the (treat gag well at Majrvllle was conleted lut night, at a depth ol J,811) feet, 'he well was plugged and the presanro sated, when It was found to Range 130 ORadi, k,:: A0A1N8T TUB C'HINKSK. Further Detail* of tho Outbreak in Wjomini Territory. Rawlins, W. T., September. 3.?The largest coalmines in the entire Union Pacific system are at Kock Springs, 11*0 miles west of here. The road has recently been importing large numbers of Chinese to All tlio places of white men. Yesterday afternoon the entire force of white miners, numbering 150, organized, and armed with shotguns, manned to that portion of the town occupied by the Celestials, and after Urine a volley into the air reloaded and ordered the "pigtails" to leave. The order was obeyed at once, the Chineman fleeing to the hills liko a drove of sheep, closely pursued by the minets. Several volleys were flrod at the fugitives with fatal effect. The Chinese quarters were then sot on fire and thirtynine houses owned by the railroad coinnauy wero destroyed with their contents. I Tho miners next visited the various mined in thu camp, unearthed all the Chinamen | At wotk therein and bade them tide lor there lives. They fled. Of some four hundred Chinamen who jjiAilo Itock Springs their home the day |Di?fore, not oue remained. All ore in tho I hills, heading (or Groen River, 13 miles further west. Seven Chinamen were killed outright by the shots fired by the miners and many are wounded. It is said also that several sick and feeblo perished in the burning of tho Chinatown. The IS her ill' arrived from Green River by special train last evening with a posse o/ deputies, but they were too late to prevent tho mob from carrying out its plans. The miners quietly dispersed after making sure of the departure of the Chinese, and all is now quiet. The railroad officials appealed to Governor Warren for protection, and Assistant General Superintendent Dickenson and Superintendent Wurlell are en route for tha some of the trouble by a special train. Both of these men are popular with the miners, and will probably be able to quell any disturbance likely to arise now. The Chinese have , now been run out of Rawlins, Carbon, i^aramie and other points in Wyoming. NEWS IN BRIEF. Tvro thousand eases of small-pox are ontil /* pvlnt in Montreal Tiio hostile Apaches have been driven over the Mexican boundary. Thirty thousand people attended the Changers' picnic near Harrigburg, Pa. Tho report that lite Indians In Colorado have assumed a hostile attitude is denied. Officers dony any probability of astriko of Western Union operators in New York. Mand S. attempted to b-?at brr former ] time yesterday, but failed, only icoring ii:13 , Delaware and Lackawanna Coal com- i pany has rcduoed tho price of Scranion j coal. ( Hail fell in Pennsylvania to tho depth < of two inches, seriously damaging crops I nud fruit , The City Mills, of Greensburg, Inil, burned lost night. Lous, $13,000; insurance, $8,600. Captain Simmons^ of the yacht Puritan. ] i'r confident of winning the race with the ( Engliflh yacht Genoeta.' j The ax factory of W, C. Kelly, at Louis- 1 ville, Ky., waa burned yesterday morning, t Lose $25,000. Insured. It ia thought that tlio sentence of Pay- * ? n i ?:n i. uiiusivr vrcurrm uuuw t??h uvuitu;, jiiuuBbly dismissal from tho navy. At tho reunion of the Sherman Brigade, at Lakeville, 0., a large crowd listened to 1 addresses by General and Senator Sherman. The Western Union has brought suit i against the B. & 0. Telegraph Company { for infringement of the condenser in the . duple? system. Mrs. Elizabeth Clayton, wife of a promi- { nent farmer of Newton county, Ark., lias 1 been arrested charged with murdering ' her fflothpr-in4aw. \ Investigation of the supposed caso of c cholera, near North Industry, Stark county, 0., develops the /act that it was 1 merely a case ol cholera morbus. 1 The Hager floor mill, on Antietam J greek, near Hageretown,Md., in operation ' over one hundred years, was almost enr ] tirely destroyed by fire yesterday, Richard Board, recently appointed ' clerk in the Railway Mail Service, New ! Mexipo, lias been dismissed un on evidence t|Wt lie is both a former and a thief. The Miami Christian Conference, in session at Enon, 0, adopted a resolution , recognizing local option as tho beat practical means of obtaining prohibition. A general advertisement will be issued on the 15th inst. bytjie Fpstmafter Uen- i eral calling for pfopoeala for rendering etnnmHnnt moil BArvicn in flll nnrtn nf th? United Stales. The Uhlo Wool Growers, in sesaion at Columbus, adoptpd resolutions reaffirming the resolutions of lust year, ami asking Congress to reatoro the tariff ot I8u7, or ita equivalent. Herbert Fa; of Golnmbns, 0, has been notiOed by the War Department that the records show him to have been the youngeat man enlisted in the Union army in any Rf the Stamen (]ming the febplliqq. John Lohruiu, a wealthy farmer, of Dnqueane Heights, near Pittsburgh, hanged himself to a tree yesterday morniwt because hjs nephow accnM him of swindling n|a slater qat ol some property. Mr. and Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Blckuell are held In bail of (6,000 each at Salem, III., <jn a charge ol abortion upon the daughter of tho former. Dr. Junos Is also held in $5,000, and Mrs. Cicknell in $3,500. It Is repcrted that several prominent Qiembera of Dr. J/Connpl'o congregation, at Springfield, O., have written to the Bishop protesting against the Doctor's re - .i ?..?v.; ~ i lUlii Ul IUO poaivtguiji vi mis vcuutu Oharch. Mrs. Iilobard Mains, of Delphos, 0., plaped fl>0<) |n naper money In a Liod far nip kepplnfc. Being about to tuove, tbe children emptied tbe atraw from the bed ud get it on fire. Tbe money was consumed. Ulcbael Smith, a young boy, was shot by IJenry fiersayer whilp sVeaitue applet in an orchard in the town ol Calumet, south ol Chicago, two days ago. lie died from his wounds last night. Bersayor is in custody. The fonr-etQry brick building, corner ol Federal street and Western avenue, Lynn, Mass., occupied by Nicholas Webber as a morocco factory, was burned early yesterday morning. Tbe loss is 1100,000. Two bljndred hands were employed in tbe fact ?<>ry. The conference at St. t<ouis yesterday between Col Talraam of the Ooqld lines and Measrs fowdiirly and Turner of the | Knights of ^abori >B regard to the itrjke on lue nauayn roan was iruiueoo, mo Utter rejecting the proposition ol Col. Talma( , The Nstional Convention o( the Masonic Ijodge o( Relief, in aeaaion at Baltimore, yaetepday, ele#ied the following offlcen for the year enauingi President, Martin Collins, St Lonis; Vjce-Preaidento, I. R. Pope, New York; J. Mitchell, Montreal, Canada; Secretary, Dr. D. F. Pennington, Ballimore; Treuurer, William P<!*m|ter.B?w York; Advisory Board, W. II. jeaac,VirKlniailaaaclliiBch,South duo. Una; N. T. Hlggine, Wiaeonain. St. I<oaia waa fleeted aa the nejt place ol meeting. r*y 4 Pliaiakt to the taste and surprisingly qnick In relieving congha and cclds, it la Hot at all atrsnge that Or, Bull') Cough Syrup alwa^aiweeda, . SSjlili PRESTAN PUNISHED FOIl TlIE IJUUXINO OP COLON. The Colombian Rubel ban Short Shrift Altai the Court Mnrt'nl Talent Hold of hla , C(u??THed oue Oay and Hung tho N?xt ISetdrenu Iuitncuae Throng. New Yobk, Sept. 3.?The Spanish columns of the Panama Star and Herald of August 20, contain a report of the proceedings of the court-martial that met on the 17th inst. to try Pedro Prestan, who has since been executed. Four witnesses were brought before the court and declared that Pedro Prcsian was tho principal author of the destruction of Colon on ! the 31st of March last. These were Juan Beltramo, an Italian, Clement Du Puy, acting superintendent of tho Panama Railroad, Hugh Dieterich, a German, and William Connor, agent of tho Pacific Mail Steamship company in Colon. The four gentlemen after having given their evidence against Preatan, were confronted with him. These different declarations show that Prestau waa the author of the firtf iu Colon, although hu strongly denied aU tho charges kid tigaiimft him, actually naming persons who could testify as to his innocence. He nevertheless did not lay the blame ou any. other person, nor did he nay that his followers had not. The Chairman of the court martial ordered the witnesses named by Prestan to be brought into court 6o that they should make their statements. After the lapse of an hour tho court was informed that all the persons named by Prestan were not to ha found on the lath m up. as they had left after the burning of Colon. Iii view of this and as all the witnesses agreed on the ono point that Prestan was tho author of the lire, the court after having heard the prisoner's defense, ordered the room to be cleared and then deliberated as to what sentence they should pronounce. DKATIl 8KNTKNCK I'KOXOUXCBp. AH the votes but one were forthe hanging of Preplan at onoe. The death warrant signed, the prisoner was called in and he was informed of his sontenco. He heard tho sentence read with great composure. When upon the scaffold Prcgtan apoke a few words, calling upon Colombians to believe him innocent of such a terrible crime. Notwithstanding all his repeated protests of innccouce there was but one vote of unanimous approval, when the car was removed from under bis feet and the body lelt to s.ving jn tho gallows. Prestan was hanged eooo after midday 1 an the 18ih ult. Tho sentence was signed it 7:30 r. M. in the evening of tho 17th ' ?#! ?>ou iimmlinAnalit onr.mooil 'I'll a jxecution was witneasi'd by an immense :rowd of all colors and nationalities, the greater part of which probablv never wit? leased tuch a scene before. Iteath aeems o have been instantaneous as ao show of ife was apparent three minutes after Iroppintr, Tliu &tar and Herald says: It is to he i hoped that the execution of Frestan will rove as an exemplary lesson ever to be remembered by those who in an eyil hour 1 forgetting the rncft sacred duties which :hey owe, not only to their country aud , 'ellowmen, but to society at large, pride bemsplvea in astonishing the world with , ;hcir criminal decile. south amkicica. rho Delayed Mat!*?The Optr&t'.oni of the , Military ia Peru. Panama, August 23.?A loading topic of nteroat hero at present is the continued irrival of Pacific Mail steamers without ;he customary New York and San Fran* , :isco mails, which onuses much incouve* lienoe in the commercial oomm unity. rhe Now York maila of dates oi the 1st net, came via Jamaica, by a royal mail iteamer. In Peru a great deal of comment has been excited by tho publication of a proclamation or manifesto signed by General Daceres, at Talasma. Caceres deolaroa his only objeot is to restore peace and tranquility to rem, qu tho b*3i3 of ber future honor ami happiness, and that when his Jeaign is accomplished he will retire to private life^ satisfied with paving complied with bis d'Hy an a gx>d citizen. He jtqtea that on various occasions he has proposed measures which, if accepted, would assuredly have brought about the desired eud, but that he has been met with resistance, and even contumely, as when his Commission, sent to Cullao from Mollend* on the United States steamer Shenandoah, was even refused a hearing. Important military operations aro now being carried on in the north. In addilion to the detachment of GOO men stationed at San Pedro observing tho rebel garrison occupying Trojillo, a division of 1,000 soldiers, horse, toot and artillery, under General Ramirez, tho chief of the general staff, was sent up to Pacast*ayo a few days ago. DUeiued Ung? Condemned. Chicago, Sept. a.?The statement is tmhliahud here that twentv-one cholera stricken hogs worn cut down and condemned nt the stock yards last night, and that ou Tuesday forty others were oon. detuned in th? sauw way, making sixtyone in two days. Tho hogs had been shipped to the cityi n a diseased condition. Doable gcull Knee*. Rocicaway Biacii, H. Y., Sept 3.?Ar. rangements* hare been completed (or a double scull race between the (allowing: Hsnlan and Lee, Courtney and Conley, and Teeraer and Itoss, to be rowed on Jama'ca Bay, September IS, (or a purse o( $3,500. A 8w?- plug Offer. New York, Sept. 3.?In the Spirit nj Hit Titnn o( Friday will appoar a propoaltion miulo by Wm. 0. France, to trot his g"lding Harry Wilkes a raco ngiinstany mitre golding or stallion in I tin world, thus including Maml S. nud Jay EyeSeu. IUm UMl YwUrdaf. At Boston?Boeton, 11; Projidcnce, 1. llmfnn fi? I'mviilnniw It IIuomi. lioston, 11:I'rovidaace, 7. Pitchers, Whitney and Shaw. At St Louie?St. Louis, S; Detroit, 5. Errors, Hi. Louis, 1; Detroit.' 4. Baaes, St. Louis. S; Detroit, 8. P.tchere, Boyle and Wei'lmaa, At Uhioago?Chicago, 10; Buffalo, 4. Errors, Chicago, 7i Buffalo, 4. Bases, Chicago, ID; Buffalo, 7. Pitchers, Clarkeon and Connciy. At St. Louie.?St. Louis, 4; Louisville, 0. Hits, St. Louis, 11; Loaisrille, 3. Errors, St. Louie, 2; Louisville. 4. Pitchers, Hecker.snd Cara there. At PhlUdelphU?Athletic*, S; Baltimore, 4. Base hits, Athletic ,8; Baltimore, T. F.rron.Athletir.3'.Baltimore.2. Pilch era Knonff and Henderson. At Pittsburgh?Pittsburgh, fi; Cincinnati^. Bas??hltaPittiburg,0;CincinnatJ, 12. Errors, Pittsburgh, 2; Cincinnati, 6. Pitchers, Morris and Peebinery. At Ner. York?Now York, 18; Phila(telphis, 3. Errors, New York, 7; Philadelphia, 13. Bises, New York, 18; Philadelphia, 6. Pitchers, Keefe and Ferguson. At New York?Brooklyn, IS; Metropolitans, 14. Errors, Brooklyn, 7; Metropolitans, X Bases, Brooklyn, 0: Metropolian!, 13. Pitchers, Porter and CaruUiera. A MUimittl MY8TKBY la Olilraxo? \ 31j?u Koumi tn the Lake Wl Oaoaottia I 'entitled. Chicago, Sept. 8 ?The dead body of man was fonnd by tbe late at the India! avtnuo line yesterday. There was a bo let wound in the back of Irs head and all a braise on his right cheek. Several pepie thought the boJy was that of a scho teacher named McKinuey, of Wheatiui Ind., although his wife failed to ideritfi it. It is alleged that on Monday nigl McKinney assaulted two little Polla girls, and as lie has been missing since is thought that ho may have been mu dered by the friends of the girls, who wer greatly excited over the&upposed auaulti McKiuney'a wife gave no information o: the subject of his disappearance, and th matter as yet is shrouded in mystery. The identity of the man found dead i still regarded by some nooplo as by n means settled. Several friends of McKir ney called daring tho morning to look a the remains, and though the features ar in a sufficiently *ood state of preservfttloi to make recognition no dillicult matter they all said that the remains were no those of MeKinnej. Tho charge tha McKinney hud committed the aeaault 01 the little girl is to be substantiated, am seems to rest mainly on common report The wife of McKinney declares positively that the remains are not those of her n us hand. Tackled tho Wrouff Mad. Baltimore, Mo., Sept. 3.?To-day i party of Italians entered tho saloon o Walter Welch in the western section oi the city and passiug into a rear rooir acted in a disorderly manner. WelcL ordered them out and drove them from his premises at tho point of a revolver. Five of them returned, a part entering through the front door and the others by tho rear. They were armed with duircenj and made a break for Welch. Welch had his pistol at hand, and raising it llrt-ditat the foremost of lib assailants, and Frank Dintonio fell dead. The others ran, A jury of inquest rendered a verdict that Welch did the killing in self defense. Good Wur<l? fur Uolhrnl. St. Louis, Sept. 3.?A dispatch from Abilene, Texas, tho homo of J. J. Holland, who shot and killed Tom Davis in Now York a few days bro, Bays: "Nearly every resident of Abilene knows Holland well and be is almost universally liked. He is a man of considerable meano. For a year past, it is now called to mind, ho has been on intimate and confidential relations with State rauzera and city and county officers, aud ho is bolievjd to have beooue possessed of important information concerning criminal characters both in and out of T^xis. Holland left here two woeksago takingiUrahall iiill along with him, but not stating his business, but bis friend* generally understood that it was aomoth]na of a detective nature." . Dl? n<ar?xl and Will Die* Geneva, Ills , sept. 3.?Henry A. Ferson, of St. Charles, who has for some days been in a despondent frame of mind, attempted to commit suicide yesterday by placing his chin above tho muzzle of a shot gun and then kicking the hammer with his foot His head leaned fiack and the charge carried' away tho front of tlie lower jaw, part of the tongue, the entire nofio and part of tho oheekbonea, leaving the eyes all right, and plowing a holo About two inchts wide throngh the front of hisfaco. He still lives, but will hardly recover. A CruMd iSlackkmlil). 6t Loins, Ma, Sept. 3.?Thp lastacoounta from Kirkwood, tho scene of yesterday's excitement and tragedy, are that Buccbel was not killed, but was mortally wounded by Sheriff Allen. It also appears thatBuechel wascrazad with drink; that he shot Mrs. Randall while Eho was entering his shop, and thatiu tho attempt to arrest Buechel bo emptied two revolvers at his pursuers; that he attacked the Sheriff with a large pruning knife and wao only overcome uy a phot from the ollicer'fl pistol. Mrs. Randall's wound is not serious. A Len?an to lloodlumi. Jackson, Micii., Sept. 3.?Arnold Moorey, a colored school teacher, attended a church festival near hero Tuesday night. On his way home with two young ladies he was set upon by a party of hoodlums. Moorey retreated and one of the attacking party drew a knile. Moorey then tired his revolver into tho crowd killing Isaac Maxey and wounding Bill Anderson and Albert Startley, The Corouer has returned a verdict of iusti flable homicide. Shot HI* at?p-f?lh?r. Cedar Rapids, Ia., Sept. 3.?A young man named Winney, living with hia stepfather, Georgo Daniols, Uireo miles north of this city, shot Daniels with a shotgun during a quarrel over a board bill, this morning, and killdd him. Ho then came to the city and gave himself up, claiming that his step-father had rushed at him with % club and threatened to kill him, and that he shot him in self-defense. The Puiauiicd Druggl**. Houokbn, N. J. Sept. 3.?There is no change in the condition of G. M. Amende the druggist whose mistake caused the death of Gretchen, Margaret and Ellen Heltz, and who attempted to commit suicide by a large dose of atrophia, lie it believed, however, to ho out of danger Ho has not yet been informed of the deatL of the second victim, Miss Ella. Dlwl In m If rotli?I. Louisvillk, Ky., Sept. 3.?W. B. Snell formerly a business man of Ciarksville Tenn., was found in the house of Malvini llinur, a courtesan, in Motcalf, county, Ky. with hUthio.it cut nnd horribly p;a?be(J about the head and body. The Hiaoi woman, who waa his mistress, has been ar ruMted and charged with the crime. A Wife Murderer*! Lut l)f|i. Cotuanos, 0., Sept. 3.?Patrick Hart nett, ol Cincinnati, wita murderer, will b< executed at tho Ohio panitentiary about: a. v. to-morrow. Ila spent a quiet night la totally indifferent to his fate and assist inz in tne preparation (or bis execution ai if it waaan onlinarv hnwlnrw Irmwaftion &poUtn? Apoll X "THE QUEE "APOLLINARIS r Dictctic Table Waters!' BRITISH MEDICA Of all Greta*, Druggists, BEWARE OP io AN ORATOR ABROAD. A U. 8. MIX18TJBII PII*L1*6' SPJCJiCIIf 8 ll- Plana* the RrltiaUera Equally aa W#1I 01 .*i ? Lovr?U'a-Hli Vlowa on Koonomlo Mat* tor??Fmnco DUclRlm* any Dailra to Bte Oermnny nnd Spnln Look Horii*. V - - . A 11 it.. Imn. , London, ttept. ?.?as uwuhhw o j . quet, at Sheftteld.this evening,Mr. Pbtlpa ^ jt replied to the toast, The American Minr. ister, and was heartily cheered, lie said jj e he regarded the welcome as an indication g ' of a similar feeling thronghout England g toward America, which reciprocated and echoed the Bentiinents ol love, honor and ?| s devotion just expressed toward, the 0 Queen. He was glad tbo Govern- jj ment had instituted an inquiry iflto e the trade depression, which wss equally 1 existent in America. Ho thought that -, the depression was somewhat duo totho SK t haste to get rich, luxurious living aud tho v t flooding of the world with goods not rei quired. Iu conclnsidn Mr. Phelps said 1 that if any word of his should linger in tho . English mind, histirst and last wish was ? for a continuation of the brotherly fueling . j - between the English speaking peoples of J tho world, whose peaceiul demeanor gavo tho best hope for an enlightened, noble } and Christian civilization. I Tli? Caroline ikIhocIh. [ Paris, Sept. X?The I'arii publishes the , following aewi-ofllcial note: Several Gar- " ^ t man aud Spanish newanspers accuse i France of seeking to stir up strife over tho Caroline Islauds. That accusation is : absolutely false. The great burden of ^ public opinion in France earnestly deBirea N an end of conflict, which tends'to cause v fresh trouble on the French frontier. Tlio truth is, the hostilities between Ger- '-?! many and Spain are fostered by the violence of Spanish and German newspapers, ' and by parties interested in embroiling . V France and Spain, as witness tho National ' ? Zcituwfs recent malicious warning to <:|S Spaniards that France seeks to part Spain , ana uermany m oruwr w stem niuxucco. " ??? * G?roulmo'?l>Atiug, Ti'scon, Ahmosa, fTcpt. 3.?A Fort Bowie special says: Lieutenant Guy E. ^ ileise, just returned from Mexico with twenty-two men, having made 1,000 miles frince May 19, haain charge liCteon of Qero- ' J', nimo's squaws and children aa prisoner?. ;->j lie reuorta that in the late fight (Jeronitno pickcu up his favorite child and rushed oat of the camp. Then he was fmrprised and had to run the gauntlet cf fifvy rifles, $ the beat Hhota of tlio Ohiricshuas and Han Carlos tribes. He waa shot twice, and dropped the boy and rau, covered with ;j blood, and with lila left arm shattered. His tquawssay he waa shot through the y body; same of them aay he is dead. Mlni.tor Ph*l|>? n? n Speaker. I.ondo.v, Sept. a.?The Timet, in com- H menting on the addresa made yeaterday by United States Minister Phelps on the occasion of the opening cf.a workmen's club at liugby, raya that ho is treading r with success in the footsteps of Mr. Lowell. He has readiness in the use of 8peech and aa remarkable a power of interesting : ^ histories on public occasions, and he mav -J ba congratulated on hia manner of avoiding the utterauceof anything that could j givo offense to either political party or to to the country. Ac American liMreatcd. ^ Pakis, Sept. 3.-?An" AcioVican named Link was arrested here about a month | ago on a charge of trying to sell worthless Mexican lands and waa sent to prison. };*J| The prison ofllcers ill-treated him with the view of forcing him to make a confession and would not allow him to see $ his wife. Although lie proved bis fnnocenco he was retained a whole month, and . a has just'been released ;nt the instance of- .:*m Mr. McLean, the United States Minister. Editor Blend Alone beopouslble. London, fiopt. 3.?Mr. Stead, editor of the Fall J/all (JttseUe, telegraphs from Switzerland that he alofto is responsible in the Eliz.% Armstrong case; that Mrs. Jarrett was an unwilling agent, and that V he will return to London at once and answer for himself, and that he is certain to clear himself fh>m all blame. KUl?d While Shooting. London, Sept. 3.?Lieutenant General John U. Melville Babbington, of the 1 British army, was killed Unlay whilo shooting grouse in tlio County of Dumfries, Scotland, by the accidental discharge ' of Lis gun. After Train llobbera. Kaksas City, Mo., Sept. 3.?Tho ?pect?l train sent out froin hore to the acene ol the '] robbery last night on the Chicago & Alton yS Hallroad, near Blue Sprint's, left shortly before one o'clock this morning, and alter i some delay, reached there about three o'clock. Tne car contained several officials and employes of the road and a strong poseo of detectives and deputy marshals, arriving ou the ground here wero secured, and tbe officers started on JS the track of tbe robbers. Blood hounds have been procured to aid in the search. ' ij i At noon, tbe time of the latert report, ;i , none of tbe robbers had yet been capt Fait Traveling. Buffalo, Bept. 3.?President Sloan'and . 0 i his family arrived in this city list even. ing en route to Niagara Falls. The trip j] 1 over the Lackawanna from Bingbaraton to East Buffalo, 197 miles, was made in 210 minutes inclusive of 22 minutes stop- via pige for water, oiling and railroad croralng, miking the actual tunning time exactly ' 11)7 minutes, or a mile a minute. Mr. ' Sloan expressed his satisfaction at the One . condition of the Lackawanna's roadbed I and rolling stock. lbs party went to -Tit Niagara Falls over the New York Central - from here last night Kl s?Dalor Olvln Diul. New Yobk, September .1-Ex-Senator | ' Givin, of California, died at noon to-day > at the New Park Hotel. Senator Call, of I California, was with him at the time of hla .a , I death. Tiie dead inah's son hu Iweii tnl - ejfrapbod for and will arrive Monday. No 11 member of hie family waa with the da j ceam-il at hladpaUi.' ' ' .3 yt? 'BMatec. .1 imris j N OF TABLE, WATERS." eigtis, atom among Natural L JOUfctiAL, May 31, 1884. Ji and Mint rat Water Dtaltrs. ~\ 1 IMITATIONS, J;