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A FIRE HORROR. ! i Flames Started in a Theatre Destroy a Town. A Score of Lives Lost and Great Pecuniary Damage. For the fourth time in its brief history the mining town of Hurley, Wis., has been visited with terrible fire, this time resulting in the almost total destruction of the town and the loss of nearly if not fully a score of lives. Only a few weeks ago two blocks in the business" center were burned to the grouud in as many hours at a cost of $100,000. The fire started on the stage of the Alcazar Theatre at eight o'clock p, M.. and within an hour the entire business part of the town was in flames, while eleven persons had perished in the theatre. The loss is fully $500,000. The Alcazar was a variety tlicatre, chiefly frequented by miners, and was one of the resorts of unsavory repute associated with the notorious dance houses of the mining regions. Only a small andienoe had gathered when the "fire broke out, and they scrambled out in a hurry. Several of the actors, however, rushed up stairs to save their wardrobes, and when thej* sought to escape found that they were hernned in on all sides,the flames having spread through the wooden buildiug with in- I credible rapidity. How they struggled to escape will never be J known, as none of them except Sailie Wells and Mabel Powers were seen again. The former appeared at a second-story window and called piteously upon the crowd outride to save her. Before a hand could be raised the flames reached her and communicated to her clothing. She made a frantic effort to jump through the window, then with a piercing shriek fell into the furnace below. Mabel Powers had reached a third story window. She jumped, and was fatally injured. Among those who perished in the theatre were: Frank Young, Sadie McCabe, and Jackson, colored comedians; Tillio Moore, song and dance artist: Mabel Goodrich and husband, Sadie Wells, Mrs. Fenton, and two or three others whose names are not known. Nor was this the worst. Like all mining camps, Hurley swarmed with the tin-horn gamblers and roughs, long since banished from more civilized communities to such as these. A public dis:ister was a private feast. They contributed to the spread of the destruction, carrying brands of fire into buildings not touched and takinir advantage of the panic to loot at large. Cozens of these scoundrels were seen in the street boldly replacing their worn garments with suits of clothes snatched from . the shelves of burning tailor shops. Nothing escaped their hmds. They seized bottles of liquor from the saloons and drank till some of them fell down unconscious in the midst of the devastation and were burned to death. The Alcazar was in the very heart of the city. It was a mass of flames in a short time. The fire seemed to lean from building to building until several blocks became a roaring oven. It was not long be' fore every business building between Third and Fifth avenues was in flames. All efforts to get the fire under control seemed futile. The Fire Department, reenforced by scores of volunteers, sent its puny streams against the advancing walls of flame, but had to retreat as the fire swept resistlessly on. It did not stop until material for it to feed upon was lacking. All that remains of the town is the Burton House and another smaller hotel, the Lake Shore denot and two or three new i-evidences on the very summit of the sloi>e, whose detached position saved them. There is 110 insurance, as all the companies canceled their policies immediately after the late fire. The Western Union Telegraph Office was destroyed, and there was no communication with Ashland, forty miles away, until the next morning. I Conductor Jones, of the Lake Shore train, which passed through Hurley at 7:20 the next morning, reported the total destruction of the town as described. GKAND ABMY ACTION. The National Encampment in St. Louis?A Circular Issued. Officials of the Grand Army of the Republic have held a secret meeting at Madison, Wis., with Commander-in-Chief Fairehild, and arranged a circular to be issued to all the posts of the country. The circular declares that a gross misrepresentation has been made in regard to the feeling between the National Grand Army headquarters and the St Louis Committee of Arrangement, and that the committee is in perfect accord with the Commander-in-Chief on all questions relating to the National encampment next September. The circular is General Order No. 15, and is signed by "command of General Lucius KaircTrifti uj' Adjutant-General Gray. It begins by promulgating a letter ant! resolution from the headquarters of the General Executive Committee, St Loui?. The letter states that "nothing has ocrurred. or is likelv to occur, that will dampen in any way the fixed purpose and desire of the citizens of St. Louis to make the twentyfirst annual encampment the most noted and successful meeting in the history of the organization of the Grand Army Kepublic." The following is an extract from the minutes ?f the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Council ot Administration held at Madison .Wis., July 8, 1887: "The Executive Committee of the Council .Of Administration have considered the communication of the Committee of Arrangements 0:1 the part of the citizens of St. Louis, having in charge the reception and entertainment, to the Commander-in-Chief. Jr. view of the many gross misrepresentations that have gone abroad touching the action of that committee and its relations to the Commander-in-Chief and the Council of Aministrution, we recommend that a generhl order be issued embodying the communication. We suggest that in said order the comrades be assure 1 that the work of the committee and the officers of the National Encampment have been in full accord. We also consider it alike dtip to th,? firand Armv of thn Ronnhlic and the St. Louis committee that the Commanderin-Chief s hall announce that all statements which may have been made by any one concerning the manner of conducting the reception of the encampment or of the contemplated presence in or the absence from the city of St. Louis of any particular person or persons upon that occasion have not been based upon any official action ou the part of the officers of the Grand Army of the Republic, who alone have authority to speak for the national encampment when it is not in session.1' MUSICAL ATO DRAMATIC. Christine Nilsson has been engaged definitely for an American tour by Mr. Abbey. Patti's seventeenth farewell tour in the United States will not begin until winter. M. Gounod's "Joan of Arc" mass is to be first sung in the cathedral at Rheims next month. Charlotte Wolter, the famous tragedi enne ot v leana, is maKing reauy iur a ium in America. Mrs. Laxgtry helped the American e igle to scream on the Fourth by reciting a patriotic poem 111 San Francisco. Mrs. Tom Thumb and her second husband rrill make a tour around tbe world, under the management of Messrs. Simtnonds & Brown. Nicholas Crouch, of Baltimore, Md., has b33n made a member of the London Society of arts. He is the autlior of "Kathleen Ma voumeen." Commodore Nutt, who rivalel Tom Thumb as a dwarf some years ago, is selling tickets for a dinu museum in Bostou. He is gray hairei. " The Amber Heaht'' which was tried ia Lridoa reco.icly tailed as a play, eventliujgu it ha i Miss Terry in the caste, and is said to to.' a very pretty tabic. As Italian paper calls attention to the fact th it, not with stan ling the flourishing condit!o.i o:' injiio in Germany an 1 Austria, only t'.Vi.ity-s.x new operas an 1 operettas wei"e ai i lekjowu to those Empires during the year !>>;. wailj tliirty-nine were brought forth in Italy. It is said that few debutantes have mide a no.*e deeul *1 .sueee-^s in L~m lo:i than M ss 4..nelia Uvoil, of (Jle/eiaui, Uaio. When she ippearel at Drary L iuj recently as Mxilaerite in GojiioJs Faust," sin carried the Aid.e ice by storm. Siia has a ia iz^o-soprano loice ox' great volu:n3, notably strong in the ipjer JiKister. EXCOMMUNICATED. I j Rome's Blow at I)r. McGljun, the j Xcw York Priest. The excommunication of Dr. McGIynn, tho . New York Catholic priest who refused to go to j Rome at the Pope's request,has been formerly j announced ly publication, according to directions sent by cable from Rome to Arckbisfiop Coirigan. The announcsmeut is as j follows: [Official.] To the Very Reverend Clergy rnxcl the Faithful ; and fteverend Laity of Ihe Archdiocese j of Xew York. Be it known that on tho 4th day of May, I ISnT. the Sacred Congregation of the Propaganda admonished the Rev. Dr. Edward McGIynn, late rector of St. Stephen's Church, in this city, that he had a 1 read}' rendered himself liable to ecclesiastical censure by disobeying the positive command of" the ' Sovereign Pontiff, given Jan. 17. Wishing, however, to deal leniently with i him, the Sacred Congregation refrained from j inflicting censure, ana, offering him a further opportunity to lie neara in ins own i behalf, gave him a final and a peremptory order to present himself in Rome within forty days from the receipt of the letter containing such order, under pain of excommunication to be incurred, otherwise, ipso fado et nominatim. This letter was duly delivered to the Rev. Dr. McGIynn, and, as he allowed the days of grace to pass unheaded, it became our" sad duty to notify him that he had incurred by his own act this penalty of excommunication by I name, whereby he is cut off from thecommu| nion of the Church, from its sacraments and participation in its prayers, and, should he persevere in his contumacy, deprived of the j right after death to Christian burial. It has become also our duty to declare to the | clergy and laity of our charge, which we do by these letters, that the Rev. Dr. Edward McGIynn is excommunicated nominatim, with all the penalties attached to this censure by the canons of the Church. New York, Julv the Sth, 1S87. Michael Auguktixe, Archbishop of New York. C. E. McDonnell, Secretary. On Sunday the day following the publication of the above "announcement, Dr. McGIynn received an enthusiastic reception at a meeting of Henry Georges Anti-Poverty Society in the New York Academy of Music. The deposed priest attacked the Church from the Pope down, declaring that the 'Roman Machine" had made a great mistake, and fhnt. it, had liberated him. Dr. McGIynn will hereafter devote himself t* the labor "party. THE NATIONAL GAME, A Michigan base ball club has a clergyman for pitcher. ^ Roger Connor of the New Yorks, was the first League player to make 100 hit-!. The New Yorks are the beft base stealei-s in the League and the Pittsburgs the worst. Kelly, Boston's ten-thousand-dollar prize, is not playing good ball, on account of lameness. Browning, of the Louisville*, leads tho American Association in batting. He was the. first player in the country to make one hundred base hits. The Detroit? have earned more runs than any other League club. New York, Chicago, Washington, Boston, Philadelphia, Indianapolis and Pjtt#burg follow in order. Dcnlap, the captain and second baseman of the Detroits, is laid up with a broken leg, received in a collision with Thompson, the right fielder, while running after a fly ball. Johnston, the Boston fielder, has not made an error in twenty-two games. Hardee Richardson, the Detroit fielder, has also not made an error in eighteen games. This is great ball p'.aving Ex-Congressman Brewer, of Trenton, has written President Young, of the National League, asking that the League accept a beautiful Parian trophy as an emblem of the championship of the organization. President j l?oe flia Griff, wit.fl fhjJIlllS. * v""b "" * 0... During the recent game between the Oshkosh and liuluth clubs, played on the grounds of thj former, the wind was traveling at the rate of 47 mdes an hour. Of course the dust was blowing nwe or less, so that it was a difficult matter to p'ay under the circumstances. During the progress of the game no less than three flies were knocked up in the air which should have fallen into the hands of the centre fielder. When they reached a certain altitude, however, the wind caught them an I blew them back with such rapidity that they were either caught by the pitcher or one of the infielJers. The catcher also had an assist in like way, catching a fly with his back against a back-stop, which under ordinary circumstances would have been captured by the pitcher. In the face of all this tha game was a remarkably close one, Oshkosh finally winning by a score of 3 to 2. THE NATIONAL LEAGUE RECORD. Won. Lost. Won. Lost. Detroit 40 10 Boston 84 23 Pittsburgh 21 32 New York....33 27 Philadelphia. .20 32 Indianapolis...17 40 Chicago 34 21 Washington...18 33 THE AMERICAN' ASSOCIATION*. H'on, Lost. WotK Lost. St. Louis 4G 18 I Baltimore 38 21 Brooklyn 30 29 | Cincinnati....S8 20 Louisville 30 30 j Athletic 34 33 Metropolitan.. 10 44 | Cleveland 15 40 THE INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. iron. Lost. Won. Lost. Xpwnrk 1-tA 14 I Svracusa iXi 21 Rochester. ...34 2-'i Binghamton..lit 22 Toronto 25 20 Hamilton 25 24 Buffalo 32 20 Jersey City...21 2 Scranton 7 24 Utica 10 2 southern' league. Won. Loit. iron. Loitt. New Orleans..32 IT Charleston...81 21 | Nashville......25 10 Birmingham. 3 20 j Memphis.....,34 IC , eastern league. - -v* Won. Lout. Wort. Lost Hartford. 28 21 I New Haven. ..23 23 Waterbury.. .26 24 | Danbury 17 3o PROMINENT PEOPLE. Spurgeon, the celebrated London preacher is fifty-three years old. Dom Pedro has sailed from Rio Janeiro for Europe and the Holy Land. Frederick Douglass is expected to re- I turn to this country in September. General Simon Cameron has sailed for Europe, to be gone until September. Secretary Lamar is a Jersey cattle fancier, and has a small herd at his home in Oxford, Miss. Queen Margherita of Italy, is a proficient Hebrew scholar, and reads tlio old testament in the original with ease. Judge Hilton's park at Saratoga now comprises 1,000 acres. It is said to be the handsomest private park in the country. Rev, James Robinson, of Money Creek, III., has baptized over 15,00 ) persons during his ministerial career of forty years. U.nitkd States Senator Sabin, of Minnesota, has no children of his own, but gives paternal care to nine friendless orphans. Governor Knott of Kentucky is passing his vacation season by a sea voyage on a coaster from Baltimore to Halifax and return. Mrs. Livermore has delivered more than 800 temperance addresses. For many years she has lectured five nights a week for five months in the year. She travels yearly 25,000 miles. Bonanza Mackat has just invested $230,000 in an Alaska mining expedition. It consists of a vessel and a force of miners, with tools and supplies. Linga Island is to be the scene of oi?erations. Mrs. General Logan is in very poor health. She has been in Chicago arranging some busness affairs of the late Senator, but will return to her Washington home soon, anu uiKe ;i lung rest. Mker I3aboor Alliy, a Hindoo resident of | San Francisco, has filed a declaration of his j intention to be:-omea citizen of the United i States. He is thy first of his race who, so far as is known, has ever done so. The Empress of Japan expects to visit the | United States in October. She will land in I San Francisco, come east Ly way of Salt Lake, Omaha and Chicago, and return in two months by the southern route. Mrs. Levin a. Fillmore is the oldest woman in Buffalo, N. Y. If she lives until August lo she will celebr *ta her one hundrath birthday, at the Methodist Church over I which her lata husband presided for a quarter | of a century. Syracuse boasts of having the biggest dog In the world. He weiglis 203 pounds and measures six feet and three inches from no.>e i to tail. He is nearly two jrears old and was born in England. CLINTON'S CENTENNIAL. Celebration at President Cleveland's Former Home. Two Addresses Delivered by the Nation's Executive, President Cleveland, with his wife nn^ sister, Miss Rose Cleveland, participated on Wednes<lay in the centennial exercises of the village of Clinton, N. Y., the former home of the Cleveland family. The procession consisted of six divisions of firemen, militia, societies, etc. Chiefs Skenahdoa and Daxtater, descendants of the [ndians who gave the site of the village to the original settlers, and over 100 Oneidas, with the Indian band from the Onondaga reservation, were in the line. One Grand Army post, that of Clinton, took part in the parade. Several others refused to take part in the procession. The. exercises in Clinton Park began at 1:30 P. M. The Rev. Henry Darling, President of Hamilton College, opened with a prayer. The Rev. E. P. Powell made the address of wel come, and President Cleveland spoke as follows: "I am by no means certain of my standing here among tliose who celebrate the centennial of Clinton's existence as a village. My recollections of the placs reach backward but about thirty-six years, and my residence here covered a very brief period. But these recollections are fresh and distinct to-day, and pleasant, too, though not entirely free from sombre coloring. It was here in the school at the footof College Hill that I began my preparation for college life, and enjoyed the anticipation of collegiate education. We had two teachers in our school. One became afterward a Judge in Chicago, and the other passed through the legal profession to the ministry, and within the last two years was living further west. I read a little Latin with two other boys in the class. I think I floundered through four books of the .Eneid. The other boys had nice, large modern editions 01 virgu, wan ui^ [mnu imu plenty of notes to help one over hard places. Mine was a little, old-fashioned copy which my father used before me, with no notes, and which was only translated by hard knocks. I believe I have forgiven those other boys for their persistent refusal to allow me the use of their notes in their boo'cs. At any rate they do not seem to have been overtaken by any dire retribution, us one of them is now a rich and prosperous lawyer in Buffalo, and the other is a Professor m your college and orator of to-days celebration. Struggles with ten lines of Virgil, which at first made up my daily task, are amusing as remembered now: but with them I am also forced to remember that instead of being the beginning of higher education, for which I honestly longed, they occurred near the end of my school advantages. This suggests disappointment, which no lapse of time can alleviate, and a deprivation 1 have sadly felt with every passing year. I remember Benoni Butler and his store. I don't know whether hi was an habitual poet or not, but I heard him recite one poem of his own manufacture, which embodied an account of a travel to or from Clinton in the early days. I can recall but two lines of the poem, as follows: "4 Tarie Dill next came in sight, And there we tarried over night.' "I remember the next-door neighbors, Drs. Bissell and Scollard?auu gooa, Kinu neignbors they were, too?not your cross, crabbed kind, who could not bear to see a boy about. It always seemed toinc that they drove very fine horses, and for that reason I thought they must b3 extremely rich. I don't know that I should indulge in further recollections ( hat must seem very little like a centennial history*, but I want to establish as well as I can my right to.be here. I might have spoken of the college faculty, who cast such a pleasing though sober shade of dignity over the place, and who, with other educated and substantial citizens, made ur the best of social life. 1 was a boy then, but, notwithstauding, I believe I absorbed a lasting appreciation of the intelligence, of the refinement which made this a delightful home. "I know that you will bear with me, my friends, if I yield to the impulse which tho mention of home creates and speak of my own home here, and how through the memories which cluster about it I may claim a tender relationship to your village. Here it was that our family circle entire, parents and children, lived day after day in loviug and affectionate converse, and here, for the ! asc time, we met around the family altar and thanked God that our household was unbroken by death or separation. We never n et together in any other home after leaving this, and death followed closely our departure. And thus it is. that cs, with advancing years, I survey the liavoc j deatli h:is made, and the thoughts of my early | home bccome more sacred, the remembrance | of this pleasant spot is revived and chastened. I can oi ly add my thanks for tlie privilege of being with you to-day, nnd wish for the village of Clinton in the future a continuation and increase of the blessings of the post." Professor A. G-. Hopkins delivered the historical address, Professor Owen Root the oration, and Clinton Scoliard, of Clinton, the poem. At the banquet which followed the exercises, in response to the toast: "The President of the United States," President Cleveland spoke a<;ain, referring to his office and its responsibilities, concluding as follows. "If your President should not be of the people and one of your fellow citizens he would be utterly unfit lor the position, incapable of understanding the people's wants nnd careless of their desires. That ho is one of the people implies that he is subject to human frailty ana error, but he should be permitted to claim but little toleration for mistakes. The generosity of his fellow citizens should alono decree how far good intentions should excuse his shortcomings. Watch well,then,this high office,the most precious possession of American citizenship. Demand for it the most complete devotion on the part of him to whose custody it may be intrusted, and protect it not less vigilantly from unworthy assaults from without Thus will you perform a sacred duty to yourselves and to those who may follow you in the enjoyment of the freest institutions which heaven has ever vouch- I sared to man." After the exercises, Mrs. Cleveland pave a reception, which was attended by many ladies. At <i p. m. the Presidential party reached Utica on their return, and was escorted to the residence of Senator Kernan, where they dined. In the evening Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland pave a public reception in the Butterfield House Parlors. The next morning the President and wife proceeded by special train to Forestport to visit Mr. Cleveland's brother, the Rev. W. M. Cleveland. The Presidential party, accompanied by Secretary and Mrs. Fairchild, spent Saturday on a tour down the St. Lawrence River among the Thousand Islands. SUMMER RESORTS, Robfikries prem iturely agitate the cottage people of Newport. Music at the West End, Long Branch, for eight weeks costs $5,0W?. Ei-kctricai. illuminations of Niagara Fulls have been resumed, and will be continued through the season. Horsepack riding i> indulged in to a creator extent the present season than ever before amid the Catskills. There are more hotels from Sandy Hook to Cape May than anywhere else in the world for the same distance. At most of the summer resorts the few re maiuiiig tin rented cottages can now be nau ac materially "reduced prices." Braxdvwink Springs, Del., until the outbreak of t lie war the most popular resort in the country and famous for political or social prominence of its guests, \s reopened this season. Thky are to have an "aquatic tournament'' at Lake George in August,with boat races for maidens, and prizes worth winning. The last night there is to be a "feast of lanterns" 0:1 the lake. W. T. Herrick, of Winooski, Vt, has the Tlistinction of being the oldest and most regular visitor so Saratoga. His first summer there was in and he has not missed a season since. Two United States Senators are now at Long Branch. Senator McPherson is at the West End Hotel with his wife, anil Senator Blodgett is living in a modest cottage on Third avenue. On- Frkd Grant is a prominent figure :it Eli .eroit He is at Mrs. Grant's cottage. He drive* occasionally. Mrs. Grant, who is enjoying good health, is frequently seen driving oil the avenue. The district messenger boys all know her, and raise their caps as s'.ie passe?. NEWS SUMMARY Eastern and Middle States. .mrs. Isabel lyon, wire oi ur. nanaoipn Lyon, who in a fit of passion shoe and killed Rhode Moe at To wanna, Penn., a few days since, and then committed suicide, took strychnine and died in great agony. John D. Van Gorde. of Dingman's Ferry, Penn., was stung by a bee on the wrist, and died in a short time. Edward McDade, fifteen years old, was struck by a foul ball and killed while catching in a game of baseball at Mauayunk, Penn. Queen Kapiolani, of the Hawaiian Islands, and her suit? arrived in New York a few days since on their return from Europe to Honolulu. President and Mrs. Cleveland arrived at Holland Patent, N. Y., on Tuesday, and spent the day with Miss Rose Cleveland During the afternoon the President held an informal reception. On Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland took part in the ceutennial celebration of the village of Clinton, and in the evening they were the guests of ex-Senator Kernan.. Later a reception was tendered them at a Utica hotel. From Utica Mr. Cleveland proceeded to Forestport, N. Y., on ft visit to bis brother, the Rev. William JN. | Cleveland. An Orange procession in Paterson. X. J., was attacked twice and numerous heads were broken. The polite arrested seventeen persons. South and West. At a mass meeting of St. Louis citizens President Cleveland and his wife were invited to become the city's guests during Fair tims next October. Petroleum has been discovered near Xacodoches, Texas. Six wells have been opened. Mrs. Lydia Wilson was married on Saturday, July 2, at Lafayette, Ind., and procured a divorce Tuesday, July 5. Governor Gordon was hanged in effigy at Daltou, Ga., because he commuted the death sentence of William Holman, a wife murderer, to imprisonment for life. Five thousand persons had assembled at Dalton to witness the execution, and when they heard of the commutation theytook possession of the prison and hanged the Governor's effigy on the gallows prepared for Holman. The Southern cotton crop is in an unusually promising condition. Millions of locusts have been stripping the fields in portions of Minnesota. A heavy tornado laid many houses low in Dakota. Hailstones as large as hen's eggs did much damage to crops. ITltt.>. UUIl^ DAiiAiltAU (111(1 tuiot' LUimiCU were struck by lightning whilu standing on the veranda of their house near Opelika, Ala. Two children were instantly killed, and the mother and remaining child were fatally hurt. Archie Martin (colored) was handed at Rockingham, N. C., for the murder of Henry McNeill (also colored). Washington. The President and Mrs. Cleveland left Washington on Monday to participate in the centennial celebration at Clinton, N. Y. The President has appointed P. Stephen Hunter to be Collector of Customs for the District of Tappahannock, Va., and Jzander M. Keene to be a CaDtain in the United States Revenue Marine Service; a'so the following Postmasters: Amos H. Kisner, at Cerro Gordo, Ala.; Stephen Potter, at Delaware, Ohio, and Thomas C. Medary, at Waukon, la. Ox account of the revolution at the Hawaiian Islands the Pacific squadron of the United States men-of-war have been ordered to rendezvous at Honolulu. These include the Alert,four guns.nowat Callao, Peru: Juniata, eight guns at Panama, and flagship Vandalia, eight guns, which has already sailed from Peru. The Asiatic squadron, consisting of six men-of-war, will be ordered to Honolulu if found necessary. r*r* S frn Japan will build three new war vessels at a cost of ?2,0!)0,<i0.) each. A farmhouse at Ardnahoe, Scotland, was burned, and Fovea persons?three women and four men servants?were incinerated. Russia is opposed to Princo Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, just elected to the Bulgarian throne, and rumors of a European war are again rife. A madman killed four men and wounded two in a hayfield at Rathfrilartd, Ireland. A revolution has broken out in Hawaii The people assumed control of affairs, deposed tho Ministry and demanded King Kalakuua's abdication. Upon his promising a new Constitution, the King was left upon his throne. The Liberal party, under Mr. Gladstone's leadership, has made notable gains in recent elections for members of the British Parliament. Three midshipmen of tho British ship Canada were drowned in Halifax harbor by the capsizing of a sail boat. Considerable excitement has been 1 "n i n tj? arouseti in rranuu uetauw ucneiui uuulanger, late Minister of War, has been sent away from Paris. The popular French idol is charged by the Prime Minister with meddling in a recent election. A new Cabinet has bsen forme! in Bulgaria. Stout resistance is being made to the wholesale evictions at Arklon, Ireland. Several Italian soldiers were killed and fifteen severely injured by an explosion of gunpowder iu a magazine at Massouah in the Soudan. Firry thousand Orangemen celebrated tin* buttle of the Boyne at Lurgan, Ireland. At Belfast an Orange procession was stoned, and numerous arrests were made. Cholera is increasing in Sicily. There have al -ca ly bee:i 200 cases of the disease at Catanu., of which 140 proved fatal. LATERJIEWS. Thf. National Education Association has b?on in session at Chicago. Teachers from all parts of the Union were present. Nine colored people, among them four ministers, were struck by lightning while stand i'.ig under a trea at Mt. Pleasant, Tenn., and all were instantly killed. JosErH. C. Kennedy, a prominent citizen of Washington, was stabbed to death on Wednesday by John Daily, a laborer. No motive for the assassination was- assigned. Mr. Kennedy was seventy-three years old, an attorney and real estate agent, and an intimate friend of Attorney-General Garland, ex-Scnntor Conkling and oth *r noted people. The first criminal trials in Limerick, Ireland, for resisting evictions have ended in the acquittal of all the accused. A cyclone which passed over Quebec uprooted trees fifty feet in height, leveled chimneys and unroofed many frame structures. NEWSY GLEANINGS. The number of religious sects in r-ng.un i and Wales now number -MO. There is complaint in all parts of California of a scarcity of harvest hands. The Society of Christian Endeavor, only six years oi l, now numbers memb-jrs. Two years ago Findlay, Ohio, had 5,000 inhabitants; now it has 20,000. Natural gas did it. Railway cars are now fitted up as chapals in Russia,so that people iu.iy worship as tluy travel. A mitrailleuse is being tried in the Austrian army which will lire 1,0 j J ballets in ninety seconds. The United States Fish Commissioners have distributed i)l,OJO,OJJ shad in the rivers of the country the past season. _ A Vermont physician reports the recent aeatu 01 a patient at sixty years ul >?uu never possessed a natural tooth. Sixty-two sheep huddled together under ou3 tree in Oshtuino, .Mich., during a recent storm were killed by lightning. Hox. E. E. Jackson, of Baltimore, has purchased 4(),(K)J acres of agricultural land i.i Alabama. He intends to go to raising cotton on an extensive s -ale. Ex-Mayok Davis, of Tuscola, 111., has a sand hill crane that gives a shrill call twentyfour hours before every stor.il Tue crane is fifty years old, and has never failed in its prophecy. i A FRI&HTFULDiSASTm A Yacht With a Pleasure Party it .1 /1 on J5uaru lapsucs. A Large Number of Women and Children Drowned. One man and not less than twenty-two women and children .were drowned by the capsizing of the sloop yacht Mystery, near Canarsie, Long Island. The persons drowned were part of an excursion party that had been on a day's outing in the yachts Mystery and Christina. Most of the women and children were put on board the Mystery on the homeward trip, while the husbands and fathers were 011 the Christina. The Mystery was in command of Captain Hendrickson, assisted by Nicholas Scheldt: all the rest on board were women and children. Henderson was drowned and Scheidt was saved. A vivid account of the terrible disaster is as follows: At the close of the afternoon preparation began for a start, an early one, as the party consisted so largely of women aud children. Tlin Mvchivw wna cnlaofurl tic ttia cofflcf anH best boat, and lier passengers were chosen entirely from the ranks of the women and children. The men were disposed of on the Christina and the other boats. At 6 o'clock the start was made. The Heet separated at once, the little boats taking a channel that the big ones could not use at that stage of the tide. So tho Mystery and the Christina stood off "toward Barren Island, near which they could come about and, clearing the tail of the Nova Scotia Shoal, tack up the main channel to the Cauirsie landing. The Mystery led, and the women and children waved their handkerchiefs to the husbands and fathers, and called out: " A race, a ra -e, we can beat you in." A race it was from that moment, though a race hail not been intended. The Mystery, under a reef, conld not keep her lead, and it was soon apparent that the Christina was overhauling her. Capt. Hendrickson quickly noted this and shook out his reefs. Some of the women were a little timid about this, but the Captain laughed as he said: "We must not let the men beat us in. If she goes over we can have a swim." Under full sail the Mystery drew away from the Christina, and had a good lead when she tacked to go up the channel. Before she filled away on the other tack si e got a knock down, careening until the water came into her cockpit, and then more s'owly until on her beam ends. The women and children screamed with terror, and some of the latter ran down into thi cabin to get away from the water when it came aboard. But the next minute it was pouring down the companionway, and these, with others that had gone below be lore there was thought ot danger, were in a death trap. Those on deck had some little chance for their lives, as the swamped boat sank slowly, and must have afforded support to those who could cling to her for fifteen or twenty minutes before sinking below the surface. By this time all in the cabin were dead, and many of those who had struggled to clutch the boat or some of its floating rigging had been swept off by the tide and tarred under. Captain Hendrickson went dow n after he had been once safe on the upturned bottom of the boat. He is believed to have been trying to save some one and to have been entangled in the rigging or drowned in the death clutch of some sinking person. The Christina all this time was about 2?KJ feet away, and to those who looked on from a greater distance the actions of her crew were inexplicable. They seemed to be making ?no effort to come up with the distressed party, and suddenly took in their sails. Captain James Williamson says that an accident prevented him from doing anything. Somehow his anchor got overboard, and though he tried to hold the boat on her course and drag the hook, ho could not do it. The shrouds finallv parted, and William Seaman, acting mate and a member of the C. Y. CM cut the halliards to get the strain off the mast at once. Two of the men on the Christina were unable to stand this inactivity. Their wives and children were struggling in the water before their eyes,and they plunged in and swam to their assistance. Ihese men wire John Booth and Mr. Schweizer. Whether in consc'juence of their efforts or not, the fact i-i that Mi s. Booth, her daughter and sister, and Mrs. Schweizer and one of her children, were among the saved. The women declare that they were saved by their husbands, and the men were picked up almost exhausted by the tug It. C. Dean, when she arrived at the scene of the disaster Only one boat had reached there before the tug, and that was the yawl of the schooner Reaper, manned only by Andrew Robinson, th3 colored cook aboard the schooner. Ho is unquestionably the hero of the day. He fearlessly rowed into the struggling mass of drowning peoEle, who might easily have swamped his oat and dragged him down. After dragging three into the boat he found that she would not hold any more, but helping four others to hang oil to the gunwales he kept them afloat until the arrival of the tug Gr. C. Dean. The latter ? as not far away when the accident occurred, but had to steam around the tail of the shoal to reach the spot, and was nearly half an hour in doing it. The rescues made by the Dean and Kobinson number eleven; the lost are twenty-three or more. THE LABOR WOKLD. In Argentina, Ark., laborers work fourteen hours a day for To cents. The average yearly consumption of nickel in the world is between i>00 and UOJ tons. The builders in all sections of the country will be kept busy until the winter holidays. Drmxa June 10,000 men struck, against 70,(118 in May, and 10,000 the same month l:ist year. The Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners issued nineteen new charters to local unions during May. One of the most successful co-operative enterprises on record is the Knights of Labor Co-operative Soap Company of Chicago. It is stated that there arc from ii'J,003 to 500,000 persons engaged in the manufactuie of shoes in the United States and Canada. Seven* or eight New England manufacturing corporations have passed resolutions to invest money in uuucnng nous?s to sen or rem to employes. The German Ministry of War offers to native saddlers and manufacturers a prize of 5,000 marks for the best model of an improved cartridge box It is said by a prominent labor leader of New York city that 10,000 persons have been permitted to laud during the last year in violation of the law against contract labor. Thb National Works, at Bristol, L. I., owing to the large amount of manufactured goods on ha-'d, have suspended operations for an indefinite time, throwing 1,200 hands out of employment Reports from different points in the Connellsville (Penn.) coke regions show that the strikers were returning to work in large numbers, and it is believed all will be at work within a few days. The New England manufacturers of cotton goods count up their six months' profit at ten pjr cent, more than last year, and think they see business enough ahead to keep every loom busy until the holidays. The General Executive Board of the Knights of Labor has given official noticj of the adoption of the new constitution, together with regulations governing the formation of national trades assemblies. uf tue prisoners m rrussia or srventy-five per cent., arc farmed out. The}' are mostly engaged in the manufacturing industries. The government gets from six to twelve cents a day per head. Numerous co-operative manufacturing concerns are springing up all over the United States backed bv the Knights of Labor. The General Co-operative Board of St. Paul has appropriated $40,000 to co-operative industries. A Pittsburg dispatch says that discontent is spreading among the Knights of Labor iron and steel workers throughout the country. They are indignant at th? general officers of the order because they have not been granted a charter for a National Trades' Assembly, and already several assemblies threaten to withdraw from the order unless a charter is granted."' Penor Romero, the Mexican Minister at Washington, thinks that $10,000,000 worth of American goods will go into Mexico every year under the new mail arrangement. A TREASURY FORGERY. Aa Official Arrested for Passing FqIca riaimo Something of a sensation has been created in the United States Treasury Department by the discovery that a trusted official had been guilty of a systematic attempt to defraud the : Government. The officer was arrested in Wilkesbarre, Pemi., where he had been on a vacation, and his dismissal from the service was ordered by Secretary Fairchild. His name is Oscar J. Harvey, and he has been employed in the department since Junc,18so, when he was appointed Chief of the Horse Claims division of the Third Au<litor's office. It was while he held this office that he perpetrated the frauds with which he is now charged. On June 2 he was transferred to the head of a division in the Second Comptroller's office, a division which has charge of claims of the same nature as those in the division he had left. Mr. Austin H. Brown, of Indianapolis, succeeded Harvey as Chief of the Horse Claims division, and soon after he took charge of the office he discovered the frauds, which consisted of the passage of forty-three fraudulent ' claims for horses, aggregating $9,200, aud the preparation of 1(>1 additional cases of a similar nature, which were under consideration in the office. Mr. Brown reported the matter to the Secretary. 1 He said his suspicions were first aroused by a peculiarity in the autographic signatures to a number of claims for horses lost or abandoned during the war by officers of Pennsylvania and New Jersey regiments. On June 20 he discovered a palpable forgery in one of these cases, all of which appeared to have been prosecuted by W. W. VVynn, first of Philadelphia and then of Washington. The investigation lasted over a week, and during that time Mr. Oscar J. Harvey "was on duty at his desk in the Second Comptroller's office, and there was every evidence that he was concerned in the preparation of all the suspicious documents. The stamp of the mail room, Third Auditor's office, and the stamp of theHorsi Claims division had been forged, and the dates arranged so as to bring them within the limitation fixed for the filing of thes? claims. The stamp of the Quartermaster-General's office was also forged. In this way fortythree fradulent claims, aggregating $9,200, were paid. The drafts were regularly issued, and an examination of such as have been returned as paid shows that Harvey and Wynn are one and the same j ]>erson, and that although the j drafts wf>iv> flrawn in fftvrtr nf ' the money, with one or two exceptions; went ; directly to Mr. Harvey or to some of his relaI tives. He had procured their payment by, ' forging the signature of the payee and then 1 endorsing the draft with his own name. Mr. 1 Monfort, the Philadelphia notary, like Mr. Wynn, the attorney, was found to be a myth. Most of the notaries and persons named in the claims are unknown to the department In addition to ihe forty-three cases passed . there have baea 150 similar cases adjusted, ! aggregating $811,000, and there are still pend( ing and unadjusted sixty-three cases, amount| ing to $13,(WO,making a total of 161 fraudulent cases which might have eventually been paid but for the discovery. Harvey was brought from Wilkesbarre to Washington by secret-service officers and taken before Secretary Fairchild, to whom he 1 made full confession of h's guilt. He had i been driven to it, he said, by pecuniary* 1 necessities, brought upon him by a man with | whom he had been in partnership, and who, ever since he received his appointment in the | Treasury, had .goaded him on to make the most of his opportunities. "My partner," j concluded the prisoner, ' told me I had a good office and that I could raise the money He wanted. I did it, and now sea what has i come of it." | Harvey was taken before the police court in Washington and was committed to jail for 1 : the action of the Grand Jury, bail being fixed [ at $12,000. He is described as a man orunusi ual intellectual attainments, and as having * ! secured the unlimited confidence of his supe- 1 *ior officers. ___ ] A boy riding a horse In a race at ] Ogden, Utah, passed the winning post, j and after running a short distance 1 turned sharply into a wagon which was standing by the track with the ^ brake set. Tho foot-bar of the brake j was on a level with the boy's ear, and 1 pon this bar the boy was caught. The upper portion of his ear was pene; trated and the iron ranged backward , J along the base of the skull. The horse 1 passed from under its rider, who was 1 left dangling in the air. He is expected to die of concussion of the brain. ] Maryland oystermen formerly ( ' worked hard in the winter and early ( spring and lived in the summer on the money thus earned. They had plenty of food but very little money. The I Maryland steamboat company built a I ' , wharf at Roaring Point and issued a circular advising the men to cultivate j their land and sell the products. The 1 advice was followed, and each trip of | the boat from the wharf now carries 1 I ( away shipments from 150 consignors. The oystermen at other pcynts are fol- i lowing the example. i 1 A San Francisco butcher nas been ! notified that he and his immediate relatives have fallen heir to an estate worth ' S30.000.000, which belonged to his J great uncle, Leopold Mayer, in British ( India, aud was confiscated by the Brit- < ish Government when he died twenty- ' five years ngo. It has just been re- ] I linquished, and will go to the proper | I heirs. I i THE MARKETS. I NEW YORK. 28 < Beef, good to prime 7J? , Calves, com'n to prime f Sheep 4 *<?i 4% , 1 Lambs 7 Hogs?Live 5Jt@ 5yK i Dressed 8 %(ck 8% i Flour?Ex. St, good to fancy 4 45 @ 4 55 West, good to choice 3 90 @ 4 9!) Wheat?No. 2, Red *4 % 85% Rye-State GO @ 02 Barley?State W @ 75 | Corn?Ungraded Mixed.... 41 @ 4~,% : Oats?White State 3SjJf Mixed Western 3> "@ 37 j Hay?Med. to prime 75 @ 85 i I Straw?No. 1, Rye 55 (& CO I Lard?City Steam o ou ig i uu I Batter?State Creamery.... 20 @ 20^ i Dairy H> ($ 19 West Im. Creamery 14 @ 20 Factory 10 @ 14 i Cheese?State Factory ' > i Skints C<$ (>}.-? Western Eggs?State and Penn ? (? l(i BUFFALO. Steers?Western.... 3 75 @ 4 25 1 Sheep?Good to Choice 4 00 @4 3"> Lambs?Western ? (a; i; 50 Hogs?Good to Choice Yorks 5 45 (To 5 55 Flour 4 75 (& 5 15 Wheat?No. 1 88 (<j) Corn?No. 2, Mixed 42 (<i 42}4 I Oats?No. 2, Mixed 31 (j? 31}^ < Barley?State 04 (i$ 05 < BOSTON. | , Beef?Good to choice 16 Hogs?Live S'V? ^ ' Nortlieru Dressed.... 0J.g?? 7)4 1 Pork?Ex. Prime, per bbl..12 00 (ii 12 50 Flour?Spring Wheat pat's.. 4 75 (a. 4 !K) Corn?High Mixed. 50 (tp 51 Oats?Extra White 41!.j(# 42 Rye?State 00 (& 05 1 WATERTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. Beef?Dressed weight 0;\ 7 Sheen?Live weight ? @ 4% Lamb i <? dh tihj Hogs?Northern ? @ PHILADELPHIA. Flour?Penn.extra family... 4 00 @4 "1 Wheat-No. 2. Ked 83%@ 84 Corn?State Yellow 4S}|(^ 4!?1? Oats Mixe 1 !> >?<??S 37 Rye fctate ? (<% 53 Butter?Creamery Extra.. 19 @ -J:t Cheese?N. Y. Full Cream.. ? 9;? < , - r.> . I WORDS OF WISDOM, I That cannot be a healthy condition in which few prosper and the great mass are drudges. A proud man is seldom a grateful mant for he never thinks that he gets as mucb as he deserves. A man must be excessively stupid, a? 2 well as uncharitable, who believes there is no virtue but on his own side. Real friendship is a slow grower, and never thrives unless engrafted upon ft stock of known and reciprocal merit* Beauty is nothing else but a just accord and mutual harmony of th$. members, animated by a healthy constitution, A snob is that man or woman who is 3% always pretending to be something better?especially richer or more fashionable ?than they are. None can love freedom heartily but good men; the evil love not freedom," raj hnt xrliiWi notror hotli mArn crnnn ?/\iv uv<vu4v) <f m?vi* uv > vi uutu uiviv uvv^rv -'v" or more indulgence than under tyrants. ."4 Love, whether newly born or aroused ^ from a death-like slumber, must always create a sunshine, filling the heart so full of radiance, that it overflows upon the -J outward world. To the untrue man the whole universe is false?it shrinks to nothing in his >-5.hi3 grasp; and he himself, in as far as he V shows himself in a false light, becomes ia shadow, or indeed ceases to exist. A multitude of eyes will narrowly in? -t>; spect every part of an eminent man, considcr him nicely in all views, and not be a little pleased when they have taken him in the worst and most disadvanta- i geous lights. 4 Vinrmlpeo Tiilorifir nnrl o luinrant i?5$ cheerfulness are not iufrequent concomi- ^ tants of genius; and we are never more deceived than when we mistake gravity for greatness, solemnity for science an? J pomposity for erudition. Many fortunes are received which it ought to be the first business of the heir -[ to clean up, to purge. A curse must ^ rest upon any home where indulgence- ?>-. of the love of the beautiful has been ob- %3 tained at the price of honor. After Fredericksburg. After the great battle ot Fredericks- -J|jj burg the Northern and Southern armiet- ^ wintered on opposite banks of the Rap- "v! pahannock; and, though there were fre- *? quent artillery duels between the Stafford. and the Spottsylvania heights, a friendlier spirit had sprung up between the- ^ antagonists. The courage with which the Union soldiers had advanced to cer- r'-i tain death at Marye's heights had commanded the respect of the Southerners, -* 1 and contact with them in their helpless- 0, agonies in Fredericksburg houses moved their sympathy. The Northern soldier?could not but rcspect a foe so v;iliant. The Federal bands played beside the- '>* river, and the Confederates sometimesheard '-Dixie" follow "Yankee Doodle,"" , * while hearts on both sides were touched by the theme of "Home, Sweet Home."* ^ On an incident of this kind John R. Thompson, of the Southern Literary Me?tenger, wrote a pathetic poem. A friendly exchange of coffee for tobacco and of" :i newspapers went on across the river? i little plank boats being used at low tide- - '*} for the smuggling?and greetings were ; ..A sometimes heard between the "Yanks'*' ind "Johnny Rebs," aa they called each other. Walt Whitman, the poet (whose brother was wounded in one ?f the battles at Fredericksburg), began his hospital ministrations at Falmouth. He-1 ? isked one of the soldiers who lay fifty tiours on the field at Fredericksburg how the rebels treated him. "A couple of 1 . "u them who were together spoke roughly ind sarcastically, nothing worse. One* middle aged man, however, who seemed to be moving around the field among the 3cad and wounded for benevolent purposes, came to him in a way he would never forget; treated our soldier kindly, bound up his wounds, cheered him, gavehim a couple of biscuits and a drink of * whisky and water, asked him if he could'. ?at some beef," etc.?Magazine of Ameri-- . mi History. Preserving: Eggs. We do not believe there are any secret methods of keeping eggs superior to those published in the Farm JournaT from time to time. For the benefit of new subscribers, we repeat some of them: ]. Pack in salt, small end down, so- ' that the eggs will not dissolve each other. >..? 2. Place in a pickle made by dissolv- ;? ing a teaspoonful of salicylic acid in a gallon of boiling water. L'se a stone or wooden vessel and renew the liquor every three months. 3. Slake two pounds of lime in hot . ^ water, add oue pint of salt and water snough to make four gallons. Put the :lear"liquor into a stone jar and add fresh <>(? rl'iilv until nearlv full. Put a clean. :!oth over the eggs and pour on this some af the settlings from the vessel in which 1 the lime was slaked. Always keep the pickle above the eggs. By using the , same proportions, sufficient pickle may Ije made to keep any quantity of eggs. 4. The "Havana Method" aud "German Process," which we presume are "one and the same," is this: Water twenty-four gallons, lime twelve pounds, >alt four pounds. Put twenty gallons of :lcar pickle in a whisky barrel. Pulverize and dissolve in a gallon of boiling water five ounces each of baking soda, cream tartar, saltpetre and borax, and one ounce alum. Add to .the pickle. Cover ivith a cloth and settlings as iu No. 3. rhis will cover 130 dozen. 5. Take llowcrs of sulphur aud enough lamp-black to hide the color, put in an iron vessel and set in one corner of an lir-tight box and place a basket of eggs in the same box. Set the compound on tire, cover box tight and leave it so for twelve hours. Those who like sulphured Fruit should try this method. In all cases use smcuy iicmi eggs, uuu ind be sure none of the shells are : racked. It is said, though we doubt it, that unimpregnated eggs will keep indefinitely without any preserving process being jsed.?Farm Jvurnaf. Children's Shoes There never existed a custom more objectionable on the score of taste and cleanliness than that of rigging up chilIren in white kid shoes, it has grown obsolete with the better judgment of the people, and we only now and then see a reminder of it. A shoe should be made ivith reference to its liability to come in contact with things which may soil it. Resides, a light colored shoe magnifies the size of the foot. In some families shoes for children that arc denoted "best" are laid a*ide and kept for full dress wear. This is a mistaken notion. The feet of children are constantly growing, and if the shoes " lit" at first they will soon become too stni"- for comfort, and create pain and possible deformities. It is better to let the youngsters have the good of the shoes before they outgrow them ?Shot awl Leather Reporter.