ESTABLISHED AUGUST 24, 1852. , WHEELING, AV. YA? FRIDAY, JUNE 26,, 1891. YOLUME XXXIX-NUMBER 263. I ^FORraraiRS. I Parccil and Mrs. O'Shea Married Strictly on tho Quiet. I ffiT S?CR?C^_MfllNT/I!N?D I TbruiiKtiont tlio AVholo Affair?-Tlio I y.jjic Mini Cardinal Mannlng?Tlio I Kticjcllcnl on llio Imbor Question. I Consul Corte Attracting no AttonI lion In Italy?Almost it RI6t ill Paris. | loxuo.v, Juna 25.?'There appears to Ip no lunger any doubt that Mr. Parncl! iv.n married to .Mrs. O'Shen this awrning, and that he nnd his bride itjrted fur parts unknown immediately alter tho liiurriago otStoyning. Tlie irei?traro( that place, together with tho I,iiftfl to record marriages, lias apjtuntlv vanished. It is believed that the registrar has been bribed to hide tirnfi'K and to keep tho books concealed for the present. LATER. It lias been learned that the marrlago tSik. I'arnell and Sirs. O'Shca took place at 10 o'clock this morning. The. only witnesses to the ceremony were wo servants from Mrs. O'Shoa's house ai Brighton. The registrar was strictly i-nj'iinl'il nut to give any information ,i i; tir- marriage, and he promised t? : ?i aiamfiwaiM Tirr'.i.. Mrs. O'Mea's residence. ,\u order was given to have a solitary one-horse pha*ton in readiness at 0 oYU-k this morning. When tho conveyance was ready 31 r. Parnell and Mrs. O'&hea entered tfie phaeton and orders were given to the coachman'to drive to tin- W('.?t\v:inl Storing was reached at o'clock, at which time a heavy rain was falling. Upon entering the town Mrs. O'Slica, who was familiar with the t.hoe awl knew the situation of the registrar's office, relieved the coachman of tho ribbons and drove direct to the Gllire herself. Mr. Parnell was dressed in dark cli'tli''.". lie appeared to he well and iv chtvriiii gnirits, but occasionally threw ncn'ons gianecH around him, apparentl y Ii'in^somewhat anxious lest the weu ?? v >M?li ding party be observed. aira. u*snea ?as also iti dark attire, anil wore a pink trimmed bonnet. fc>he. too/ was in good pirits :t!i< 1 was very vivacious both before and after the ceremony. It was announced that n second religion? marriage will take place iu London immediately so as to satisfy. the Catholics. Mr?. I'arnell was seen at Walsinttham Terrace to-night. ?Sho said she and Air. r.irmH wore married this morning, but 'h'diiiL'd tc? havo the ceremony perfumed in a church in London, thero having been difficulty in connection with the license. BROKE Tilli JtECOKD. The Fact-it IJhiuarek Makes the Fastest Trip Vot Made. hmm, Juno 24.?The stcainor Fuerat Bismarck left New York Inst Thursday, (main* the bar at 4:30 p. m. She p3ss?l the Noodles (Southampton) at 10:40 this morning, thus making tho pusago in 0 days, 13 hours and 10 minuses. Deducting sixteen hours for timo between Qiicenstown and .Southampton, the Bismarck's timo is 5 days, 2 hours awl 10 minutes, which is the fastest eastward passage made by any steamer. Almost a lUut lit Pnrli* Paris, Juno 25.?A meeting composed of about six thousand carpenters and bakers took place in this city to-day. Several speakers addrossed tho bakers assembled and it was resolved to strike immediately. The bakers are in arms apinst the registry ofiice and insist as the price of their returning to work that these offices shall be suppressed. Afrer the strike resolutions had been unanimously adopted the bakors who attended the meeting formed in procession una with much cheering and infiumatory cries, tried to march upon the labor exchange. Tho police, however, gathered in force across the intended line ol march and ordered the ./.vuwsjuu 10 disperse. a iree ngnt followed. The police evontually won the day and arrested several ol the leaders. As if it was not putting the public to a sufficient decree of prospective annoyance to have the bakers ot this city Etrikiiir; and rioting, the butchors of l'ariu have just announced that they aUo have determined to strike lor tho settlement of several real or fancied wrongs from which they claim to be fullering. And now, at 3:30 p. m., in comes the decidedly startling piece of news that tho grocers of this city have joined tho bakers and the butceers in the strike movement. Stcnmihlp Wrockotf. Losdok, June '25.?News has been received to the e fleet that tho British steamship Cid, 076 tons, bound from New Castlo on Tvne for Naples, has been wrecked off tlie French coast. The third .-nyineer and a fireman were aroui;. ,i, Tho remainder of the crew we at Havre. Will l'nhii ou lilt Sanity. v?>s, June25.-Dr. Walter Kemp, in'ini""'we!' '"'own American specialist I,. "?,?c-v''"!< arrived in Wnles, wherd ttn i u- l'l' on bcl'"l[ 01 R- b. Dun'jy ""'"I'lrton, I), (j., who is shortlv ti'mnii' on trial t'">rB<=d with at"mpting to murdur his wife. United with Sntlifnrtlon. >?r. J11 lie 25.?The recent vote of the ?S!i' D?P?Ues in favor of ri,v J I " ?? ?' duty silk cocoons and OTMt satisfaction to Itaij , v " "ailed as tho beginning of a ' '"creased trade with France. Carried on l>y lirlfrnnds. STISOW* June 25.-A diepntch o! asla Minor, srvs a band vr. in"1'1. ^ carried off two of the ij.,.; I'- residents of that placo. oaiU ou wi. VO b0en ,cnt in P"""'" Mr. Uliulatoaa'a Ilrallli Poor. iici '!uno 85*?Mr. Gladstone's v.. l 1,"}.C0P>e visibly feebler fin? Ai j.,:;!"'91 MtWmu. Ills physician trii> mi i, vk' uw lllm to make a sci p Buj 'o have an unbroken rest. THE POPE AND LABOR. His Attltnde Townrtl Cardinal Manning With Reference to the Question. Rome, Juno 25.?Reports have again been circulated regarding the Pope's attitude toward Cardinal Manning in respect to the labor question. It has been assorted that the I'opo, disapproving of the advanced ideas of Cardinal Manning, lias intimated to him that in the Pope's opinion he was going too far in liis treatment of socinl questions. It is authoritatively learned that these reports uro entirely without An 4 K ft A iiAnontlntinl tnati. ninny about Edward Camp, tlio defondnnt ill the case, and Mrs. Foarsall Biiid she would horsewhip him, and when she mot him to-day she produced a whip | and gavo him a so'nnd thmulling. Strniimlilp Nun-*. New YonK, June 28. ? Arrived? Etoamcra Lahn Bremen; Keweenaw, Hay City, Mich., via. Montreal, eft routo i for tho Pacific coast. I London, June 25.?Sighted: Fulda, , Ueiv York. i N?w York, Juiio23.?Arrived: Dania, Hamburg. ~ jack" the ripper. I la He Identical With Prenohy No. I 1, of New York, NOW ON TRIE FOR HIS LIFE?j I Ono of tho Most Intcrcatlng Trials on Rccord Begins?His Method of Killing Precisely tho Snme as that of! tho Whltechapol Fioud ? Distin- j gutslied Pcoplo in Court. I New York. Juno 25.?Ameer Bon All j la on trial for his lifo before Recorder Smyth in I'art II. of the Court of General Sessions. Known to tho police as Goorgo Frank and to his companions as Frank Sherllck or. Frenchy No. 1, tho prisoner'a real name is Amoer Ben Ali. Ho is a dark-skinned, hollow-eyed Algerian Arab, ignorant of tho English language, and of a low order of human- ity?oven for an Arab. An immense throng of peoplo gathered at the brown-stone court liotiso and clamored for admittance to the sconoof Fronchy's trial, but a half dozen sturdy officers slaved them, and when tho Eocorder took liis seat on tho bench there was only an ordinary court audience. Among tliOBe in court was tho Vis'count d'Absae, French consul-general for New York, a liandsomo man with u patriarchal gray beard. Chief Inspector Byrnes, importurbably sorene, and Captain and Acting Chief'of Detectives | McLoughlin sat in a retired corner, wnlrhincr the uroceedinirs. Dr. Paul Gibier.the French physician j and expert in hydrophobia, and Dr. Justin Herold, formerly Deputy Coroner, sat with Lawyers Fnenl and Levy, who will look after the rights of I the defendant in the selection of a jury. E. Sultan, tho Frenchman who runs the cigar stand at the hotel Marlborough, and Constant J. Sperco, a Mahometan, wore also present to act as interpreters between the people and tho Algerian. l'he prosecution will be directed by Assistant District Attorneys Francis L. Wellman 'and Charles Simms, and the trial bids fair to be one of tho most famous in the history of criminal jurisprudence, as tho crime was ono of tho most atrocious that ever startled peaceful Now York. THE HI1TKR MIInUEK-S. Ill October, 18S7, London was startled by tho finding of tho body, yet warm, of a forlorn wretch, butchered in cold blood, in tho crowded Whitechapel district, and mutilated in a manner that denoted that the crime was the work of a vindictive wretch, or a madman who had been wronged by some woman of this class. For three yeaTs, again and agum.n similar murder and mutilation was discovered, the victim ouch time being a U1H801UIQ woman. Jitinwu wuuicu jjuu yielded up their lives in this way, and the murders wore credited to tho' same hand. The terrified women of Whitcchapol called him Jack the Hipper, and in spite of tho strenuous efforts of Scotland Yard tho Hipper was never apprehended. It was exactly two months ago Tuesday?Thursday, April 23?that Carrie Brown, a sexogenarian ha? of the lowest class of dissolute women, retired to room 31, on tho top floor of tho vile rosort known as the East llivcr Hotel, Water and Catherine streets, with an unknown young man. At fl o'clock next morning Eddie Fitzgerald, clerk ami bartender in tho East River Hotel, going his rounds and collecting the keys of vacated rooms, found room 31 locked, and on bursting in the door, discovered that "old Shakespeare," or Carrie Brown, as sho was called, by her dissolute acquaintance, had been murdered and mutilated in a manner exactly like tiie victims of London's terror, Jack tho Ripper. I.IKE TIIE WIIITECIIAPEb CRIMES. She had been strangled to neath; her abdomen hud been ripped open, and a portion of the viscera removed. There was a cross cut on the back of tho nearly naked old ling, and a shortbludo'd. sharp-pointed case knifo stuck in the body. The whole town was aroused, and tho whole detective force, under Chief Byrnes himself, devoted it* entire energy, skill and power to the work of hunting down tho murderor. Ameer lien Ali slept that night in a room on the snnio floor as room 31, and, though he had been looked upon aa a harmless fellow, was ono of tho dosen men arrested during that Fridhy. Thirteen meft and women of this same low class wero arrested and sent, to the Houso of Detention of Witnesses, and the wholo work of the police was shrouded in dense mystery. Tho wholo world was upon Chief Byrnes, for ho had boon quoted as saying contemptuously that a Jack tho Hipper operating in Now York would be caught within twontyifour hours. Tho wholo world is straining its eyes and ears to-day, eager to learn whether the chief lion proven the accuracy of that boast. Frenchy No. 1 was a thin, woobegono, haggard and hall nourished lout when arrested. Two mouths In the Tombs has improved him. Those w ho craned their necks to get a glimpse of hiir> when Court Clerk Penney called "Georgo Frank, charged with murder, to the bar!" saw a shambling, slouching fellow, with stooping, narrow shoulders, frotn which hung in loose folds a faded overcoat that reachod to his ankles. Frenchy has very high chcek bones, and small ferret-like eyes, close together over a prominent noso that curves gracefully down ovor a very small and tangled black mustache. A full beard, crinkled and black, grown since ho was arrestod, hides n weak chin, square jaws and a wicked mouth. Frcnchy tins been in a constant state of fright since his arrest. Ho understands no English, and when ho has been called from his cell for any purposo lie has had paroxysms of terror, crying out In Arabic or n French patois tlint he is to be killed. He shambled down the aisle from the prisoner's pen in court In a shrinking manner and xlunk into a seat placed for him at tho tsiblo with his lawyers, and his woazel eyes darted furtively about tho court-room as if lie imagined a foe in every person. JAY GOULD'S NARROW ESCAPE From Being Ground to Pioces by a Hud* sou Itlver Train. New York, June 2o.?It is not goner ally known that Jay liouiu naa a very narrow escape from being ground to pieces by a Hudson Klver Railroad train a few days ago at Irvington. Mr. Gould has kept his own counsel about the matter, but the facta wore givon to a reporter yesterday by an eye-witness of the sceuo. Mr. Gould boards a Now York local traiu iivery morning at the Irvington station, to which lie is always driven from his country place, two miles away. Tho other morning as he and a few others stepped across the tracks at tho station to tako the 8:18 train for this city, a westbound express hove in sight, coming at a high rate of speed. Its track was tho one between the station and tho local truin and,stunding on it all oblivious to danger, were Mr; Gould and his fellow travelers. A station hand saw the express and gave a sharp yell of danger, at which all save Mr. Gotlld turned quickly and leaped back to the station platform. Baggagemaster Barrard pushed through the passengers, jumped to tho track, and grabbing the railroad king by the collar, jerked him buuk upon the platform, and beforo tho capitalist know what It all meant tho exnress had thundered by. By the tiino most of the spectators had regained their equanimity the rescued man was on his train for the city, as cool and collected as though nothing had happened. Important to Rniltvujr Compuuloa. Chicago, Juno 25.?The appellate court to-day rendered a decision of /interest to railway companies. It overruled the lower court in taking from the jury the caso of Isaac B. Jianna, administrator of the estate of H. S. Hall, and directing a verdict in favor of the Grand Trunk railway company. Hall was one of the twenty persons iclllod in au accident on defendant's road near Hamilton, Canada, and there are some dozen suits pending in the State courts depending on the miestions involved in the present case. The lower conrt held that the action could not be maintained under the luws of Illinois, because tho acciilont happened in Canada, and the Canadian law differed from that in this State so materially that to enfprco it wnnM I in a violation of our own Slato policy. Drowning nt Toronto. Special Dispatch to the Intelligencer. Toronto, 0., June 25.?Samuel Morrison, a citizen of Steubenville and an employe of the contractor on Freshwa- ' ter, was drowned here this evening at 8 o'clock while in bathing, from cramps. None of his companions made much effort to save him from a watery grave. Thoy would venture a certain distance, but to make further headway was in vain. The unfortunate was 22 years of ago and was to be married in a short time to a young lady of Steubenville. The remains wore found at a late hourly a man named Slick while diving. *:' Col. Bmltli Dtiulliioii to Resign. Cincinnati, 0., Juno 25.?The officers of the First Regiment, Ohio National Gunrd, who have been requested by Governor Campbell to resini on masse, us tho result of a court of inquiry, take various views of.the matter. Nearly all of them will resign and seek vindication in a re-election. Colonel W. B. Smith, however, assorts that he will not resign, and that if the Governor removes him he will try to assert his rl/tfits by law. Ho claims that the court 01 inquiry uuceiveu mm uy mining uiuru was no need for him to nroduco witnesses, as nothing Imd been shown against him. He deninnds a court martial. Two or three other officers unite with him. DWlu't Clinniro II1> Htatlu. Wasiiixutox, D. C., June 25.?Tiio Treasury Department is informed that a Canadian carponter named William II. Crawford, having been deported to Canada on tho ground that ills presence in this country was in violation of tho alien contract labor law, returned to Michigan the same afternoon and filed his declaration of intention to become a citizen of the United States, with a view of removing his disabilities, and is supposed to bo at work for Mal?-nlm Rlun at Bnv Mills. Michigan, under tho original contract. In acting on this case Assistant Socrotary Nottleton held that Crawford's status is not changed because of tlio declaration to become a citizen, which step ho regarded as a finesse to evade the law. Immigrant, Inspector Sch'oll is thereforo instructed to notify Crawford that ho is in this country unlawfully and must roturn to Canada. Iron Workors Strike. Forraviu.e, Pa., June 25.?The employes of tho pioneer furnaces of this town have demanded that they bo paid according to tho Pittsburgh scale of wages. The Pottsvillo Iron and Stool Company, owners of tho plant, refused to accede to the demand and the men to the number of several hundred went out on a strike. Tho furnaces are now idle. Driving Out tho Faoturloi. CmcADo, Juno 25.?Tho cigar makers strike has driven ono largo factory from tho city, tho Phicnix, which has removed to Detroit, and tliero is n prospect tlmt thtf factory of Oppenheimer & Fisher will movo to Milwaukee, and thatZimmerman will go to Dayton, 0. PlnmtooTt' A?>toc!ntlon. Cincinnati, Juno zo.?ine numuers' Association spont the forenoon in discussing proposed changes in tho rules. A proposition to ereato an Insurance department was, after discussion, defeated. , North UnUutu Alllnnoo. Grand Forks, N. D., Juno 25.?The Aliianco platform adopted to-day makes no mention of tho Cincinnati platform; demands a ono hundred cont silver dollar and taxation of mortgages and favors an income tax, prohibition and woman sutrragc. Tho Alliance also indorses the Ocala platform. Fatal Qnnrrol. Kansas City, Mo., Juno 25.?Frank Trnupo and Dave Rhodos, colored boys, aunrreloil last night over tho respective merits of Sullivan anil Slavln. Rhodes struck Troupe on the head with ? club, inflicting a fatal injury. SOCIAL SENSATION. Escapade of the Daughter of Reuben Barnett, of Saratoga. COUPLE TRACED BY TELEGRAPH, And Maud's Brother Brings Jllm Homo at the Point of a ltcvolror. The Drummer is In Jail and Narrowly liscaped Bolng Shot by the Irittc Father. Saratoga, N. Y., Juno 25.?Maud Barnett, daughter of llcubeti Barnett, of Saratoga Springs, eloped to-day with Frank ?. Andrews, of Albany. Miss Barnett is about 18 years old. Andrews is u drummer for n wholesale wino urm in Albany. It is said that he has been married twice, and that his sccond wife is uow living. The couple were traced by telegraph and followed by the girl's 22-year-old brother, llo overtook1 the pair at White Hall-this morning, and compelled Androws to return with him at the point of the revolver. The father of the girl was at tho depot when the train arrived this evening, and was bnrcly prevented from shooting the drummer. Andrews is now in jail. FIVE PERSON'S DROWNED. ltun Down by a Tow?One of Thorn Doacun Smith'h Stenogrniihur. Cincinnati, 0., Juno 25.?Five people, all of the best citizens of Riverside, were out floating down the Ohio river in a yawl at a quarter past ten to-night, when they met tho towboat Frank Gilinoro coming up stream with a large tow of empty barges, and 1 r\n flio linrirnu CO tlin IIU llgUU) Ultll UK I'Ub WH>nvu .... story goes to-night. Tliey steered clear of thesteanier, but were rundown by its barges. Tliey were all thrown in the river and drowned. The empty yawl, n man's hat, a girl's hat, ucotiplc of handkerchiefs was all that was found. i The victims were: Mr. Thomas Thurman, member of the Bannor Tobacco Company, of this city, aged o4; Mr. Joe Kins, bookkeeper of the same firm, aged 22; Miss Edith Zins, his sister, aged20; Miss Catherine Cox, aged 2K, Miss Kate Klddlo, of Burlington, Ky. Miss /ins was n beauty. She was a stenographer and typewriter for Hon. Richard Smith, artd only this evening left the Commercial-C/aieUc otlice full of lifo and gaity. , STOVE WALL JACKSON'S BODY ltomovotl to Its I'lnnl Renting Plnco on I.exisotos, Va., June 25.?At 5 o'clock this morning the body of Gen. T. J. Jackson (Stonowall) was taken by order of thcCcfflB^pSOTMo of the monument from (lie gravo in the city'ceriletery, where it was interred at the time of his death, and pluced in the vault over which the monument is now building, and which will be unveilod tho 21st of July. The vault was sealed up permanently. It was .Mrs. Jackson'B request in a letter yesterday that tho body bo removod in tho night, and that no one should knowit but the cominittco in charge. This request was complied with. Klllott's DofoiiHo Begun. CoiXMUtis, 0., Juno 25.?Tho defonso examined several witnosses to-day-in tho Elliott murder case, who testified to threats mado by the deceased against W. J. Elliott. Joo Fassott, waiter in a saloon, and Mike Dwyer, a barkeeper, stated Osborn said ho would shoot the ' ' * -i.-Li r? n u.i?? (iciunuam, on mum. v. $300,000 in long standing accounts which are held in Philadelphia. Tho assets, which are said to be abont $250,000 or $300,000 nominally, aro nil in New Orleans, ami the linn may go into insolvency thero. Bit rami by Alcohol. New Yoke, June 25.?By tho explosion of alcohol in tho basement of Columbia Colloge to-day l)r. John I. Northrop was seriously burned and it is feared he will not recover. Comliiff Tills Way. San Francisco, Juno 25.?Prince George, of Greece, who arrived here Tuesday from Japan, left for the east last night. com jiniu aoixou* Halifax, S., Juno 25.?A gold mine at Taiiglor, ownod by Frederick lloudlott, of Boston, wan seized to-day under a writ of attachment. The sum involved is largo. Immigrant Arrivals. Xmv York, June 25.?1There landed yesterday at tho bargo oflico 2,000 emigrants. 'About twenty eases of measles, taken from tho stoainer Aller, wore sent to tho hospital. Dr. Tnlmrign'ii Brother Demi. , Somehviu.e, N. J., Juno 25.?Dr. Tulmage, bothor of tho noted Brooklyn divine, Itev. T. Dowitt Tolmage, is dead. Deceased was ono of four brothers who entered tlio ministry. Only two are now living, the Brooklyn divine and Dr. John V. Talmage. Dr. AI?op Demt. Nnw Havbx, Ct., Juno 25.?Dr. John W. Alsop, tho Democratic candidate lot Lieutenant Governor in tho last campaign in Connecticut, is dead. THE CHILEAN* REBELLION. Novri," from Atlmlriil 3IcCanii?Matter? Comparatively Quiet. Washington, Juno 25.?Tho Navy Department has recoived n report from Admiral McCann, on board his flag-ship, the Baltimoro, dated Iqulquu, Chile, May 25, as follows: "There have boon no military or navalViperations of importance in tho northern provinces recently. All tho revolutionary squndrons Iiavo gone -i '? ' 1 - I -.1.- UllA norm irom v. uk&uu, iuiu ouiy iw?t ow men wero left to garrison Caldera and Copiapo. The 11 mis car grounded on tho 12th, tilt floated again. "Since tlio loss of tlio lllnnco Kncaladn ino.it of the insurgent forces are concentriitinj^-Hbout the nitrate porta. Tho only ollleient vessels remaining to the insurgents are the Huoscar and Estneraldaand tho Almirunte Cochrane. Thero in little probability of a demonstration by water by tho revolutionary fleet. "On the 10th the Imperial appeared ofT Coquimbo and opened a rapid Are, though 110 other vessels wero 111 sight in tho oiling. The Cochrano and the gunboat Hlggint stood out toward the Imperial, uiter which firing wnB again heard until a late hour, but with what results could not he learned. J ust before this oiio of their torpedo launches was accidentally blown uj> by its own torpedo, anil sank Immediately, drowning two and mortally wounding four ol her crew of eight men." Xuxt Yonr*? Went Point Clans. "Washington', D. C., June 25.?As a result of the recent examinations at West Point, ninety-nine out of a total of 140 nnnlinnnm lintw 1111IIII flrlmlllnf! Ifl lllfl llliitod States Military Academy to form the new class. Other cadets will probably swell the total membership to 110. Among tho (candidates admitted are: 0. M. Butler, K. Davis, C. E. Iiempton, Joseph S. lferron, 0. K. 1 lowland, II. D. Uflibrldge, 1'. L. Miles, A. C. Nissen and H. 1*. Rifenbori, Ohio; C. E. Hawkins, E. J.Nowbnkor, A. H. J. O'llara, Paul Heisenger, E. I'. fiiveter, M. II. Stout and J. G. Whitosides, Pennsylvania, and E. U. Sliulz, West Virginia. Secretary Sjiuuldlng Denied It* Washington, June 25.?Artics-Secro-'" tary Spaulding said this afternoon that the report telegraphed from Chicago that arrangomcnts aro being made to compromise for $5,000,000 the claims against the government for excess of duties collected on hat materials, is incorrect. Ho said tho only possible foundation for such a report was the consideration lij,- tho Department of a proposition 10 navu tuu uuiuu ui #vum oral appraisers determine the cIuhh of materials entitled to refund under tliu decision of tiie United States Supreme Court. No such reference, hoivovcr, was made. A Nnvnl Order. Washington, D. C., Juno 2.").?Secretary Tracy lias appointed a board to convene at the Navy Department on Saturday, June 27, to oxamino into and roport upon the present standing of olllcurs in the line of tho navy, und to recommend such measures as it may deem ilesirablcrto'rcgulute promotion therein with u view to the increused efficiency of the navy. To.dny'w Cnl>inot Slotting. Washington, Juno 25.?Secretary Foster returned to Washington this afternoon, from Ohio, for the purpose of attending tho cabinet meeting which is expected to bo of more than usuul interest to-morrow. Tho question of further coinago of tho silver dollar will ue mo pniicipju iujjii: vi uibuudbiuu. Counterfeiter* Arronted. Washington, Juno 25.?Tho Troasury Department is informed that Alfred 0. Green, J. A. Walker, J. B. Walker, George Walker and John Lowdbaugh liavo been arrested in St. Louis lor counterfeiting tun cent, twenty-five cent and one dollar silver coins. Alleghany College Commencement. Mr.adviu.e, Pa., Juno 25.?Tho annual commencement exorcisos of Alle- . gheny College closod to-day, graduating u class of seventeen. Tho annual reception of President Wheeler, held this nvpnint*. was a arand airair. attended by nearly five hundred students, alumni and friends of the college. Tho annual commencement bnll occurred to-night in Library llnll and was a very elite affair. Yale Froxlimnn Clum*. New IIavex, Con.v., June 25.?The ne?t freshman class of the academical department of Yalo will number over 300. 1-HHt year tho class numbered 250. Today 200 are undergoing examinations in Alnmni Hall, while examination* are iu progress in twenty other cities. Ocbuni Konpltcrf. Atlanta, Ga., Juno 25.?Tlio Governor this morning respited Charles Ozburn for thirty days, which wfU postJone his execution until the 23th day of uly. The respite is aranted on account of Ozbum'e critical physical condition, and at tho request of tho jury, which sat yesterday by special summons of tho sheriff on the question of tho sanity of the prisoner. KohIkihmI to do Higher. Wahiiixotos, D. C., Juno 25.?CMel Postofllco Inspector Jtntlibono to-day handed to the Postmaster General hla resignation, to take effect .lune 28. On July 1 Mr. liuthbono will bo appointed Fourth Assistant I'ostmastcr General. Honteucod to Hang. Cleveland, 0., June 25.?At New Philadelphia, Oldo, yesterday, Henry Wehrly, who killed James Booth on Christmas day wus sentenced to bo hanged October 16,181)1. Iteftult of n Fnud. Ibdianapolis, Juno 25. ? About 4 o'clock this afternoon a shooting affray occurred at a colored picnic from Indianapolis at Maxwell, in Hancock county, in which three men wore wounded, ono prolwbly fatally. Tho shooting was tho result of an old fend, lVontlmr For?cn?t for To*dny, For Wcit Virginia, Wcsturn iYnn*ylvaala and Ohio, fair; warmer: somberly trluds. tuukkday. 7 tL fit I 3 p. in B 02 9 a. in,......-. 7 >. 7 i?. m m 12 J3O | \\ eathcr?Clear.