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the :Dsr:E"ws. t BRUCE CHAMP, Publisher. i PAEIS, KENTUGKY; NEWS OF TEE WEEK. Condensed and Put Into Readable Shape. , DOMESTIC ' ' ' v q A young girl seventeen years of age, named'Bertha'Olsen, who has been employed as a domestic in St. Louis, has been missing since the 25th. She is described as rather tall, with dark brown eyes, and can be readily recognized by a strawberry-mark on her right cheek. Some of her acquaintances think she has eloped, but her parents incline to the belief that she has been kidnaped. A conductor on the Chicago and Alton Railroad had a private detective arrested a few days ago for following him, and the Justice fined the detective ten dollars. Nearly one thousand old soldiers of the Confederate and Union armies were in attendance at the ex-Confederate reunion which began at Jefferson City, Mo., on the 28th. - - N. M. Smith, a Nashville man, a few days ago received a box of what purported to be wedding cake by mail. He ate two pieces and was taken very sick. The cake was analyzed and found to contain strychnine. The great Cathedral of Incarnation and St. Paul's School at Garden City, L.-L, were pronounced completed on the 29th. The cathedral has been five years and the school three years in building. The money, nearly $3,000,000, has been furnished by the Stewart estate. The school building is said to be the finest educational structure in the world. It will accommodate five hundred pupils. The steamer Britannia, under way from Marseilles to New York, was struck by a cyclone on tho morning of the 26th. The sea seemed drawn toward the clouds and dashed over the vessel, carrying away the boats and the rails. The lightning seemed !to jump from the sea to the clouds, and the wind came from every point of the compass. The straining steamer was whirled around like an egg-shell. Daylight turned to darkness, and there was the greatest consternation on board. The cyclone vanished as suddenly as it came, when the crippled vessel was still capable of making her port. Not a life was lost. The recent suit of the negro preacher, George H. Smith, of Norwich, Conn., against a "Washington restauranteur,is likely to lead to trouble in the Louisville hotels during the session of the Colored Convention in that city. The Georgia delegation, headed by W. A. Pledger, it is said, intend :to insist upon full equality at the hotels. The question was freely discussed by the -delegates at Atlanta a few days ago, and they were outspoken in their intention to put up with nothing less than white men's accommodation. Unless wiser counsels prevail, there will be occasion for many more suits for the enforcement of civil rights after September 24. The dry goods and grocery store of E. J. Olds & Co., at Mt. Clemens, Mich., was burglarized a few nights since by professional thieves. The safe was blown open and robbed of twenty-five dollars in cash, and about $1,000 worth of the more valuable goods was loaded into a wagon and driven off. The fourteenth annual convention of Fire Underwriters of the Northwest began at Chicago on the 29th, and was attended by fully two hundred representatives of companies doing business in the Northwest, and in Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, Iowa, Wisconsin and Kansas. In his annual address the President P. M. De-Camp, of Cincinnati, referred to the financial results of the organization of a State Board of Underwriters. He said legislation in favor of properly-built structures and competently-constructed fire departments were the hopes of insurance companies. High wind and high water prevailed all along the coast from New York to Atlantic City on the 29th, and a good deal of damage was- done. Buildings, which were thought to be beyond the reach of any sea, were undermined and battered to pieces by the heavy surf. By the fall of a staging at Burden Dock, at Hudson, N. Y., on the 29th, Patrick Coughter was fatally, and John Cain, Frank Walker, Michael Connarick,Michael Jolly and Michael Sullivan were seriously injured. At Atlanta, Ga., a few days ago, Frank Bures, a colored burglar, was shot dead by Police Officer Green. They were entering the station-house, when the negro furiously assaulted Green with a dirk, inflicting several wounds. The negro started to run, when Green shot him. Henry Cutcher, a Michigan farmer,-with a fourteen-year-old wife, was poisoned a few days ago by an inmate of his house, who had fallen in love with the young matron. Strychnine was put in Cutcher's whisky. An express train on the Philadelphia and Atlantic Narrow-Gauge was thrown from the track by a loose switch on the 30th, and thirty people were injured. Those whose injuries are serious are E. S. Lippencott, Ge6rge De Haven, Detective Houghton, Conductor Lee and Mrs. M. A. Scott, all of Philadelphia. A New Orleans grand jury has suggested in its report to the Court that as a sanitary measure a crematory be established, wherein the bodies of those who die of contagious diseases may be burned. Before adjourning the Supreme the Knights of the Golden Rule adopted a rule granting to the Supreme Commander and Secretary power to issue extra death assessments under certain well-defined restrictions. The purpose is to prevent delay in cases of needy beneficiaries, .Eleanor and May, aged eighteen and twenty, daughters of Lewis D. Vail,, of Philadelphia, were drowned while bathing at Ocean Grove, N. J., a few days ago. Edward C. Machen, a broker of New York, ihas been arrested for stealing railroad bonds worth $8,500 from the office of William E. Town, a lawyer. Heinrwh Ganger, alias Heinrich Machie, a fugitive from justice at Wurtemburg, was arrested on the arrival of the Antwerp steamer at New York on the 30th, on -a. cable dispatch charging bjbaa with stealing from Widow Emily Horrf, fit Murrhardt, several hundred dollars, with watches and jewelry. . A number, of watches and a quantity of jewelry were, found on his.person. As the. case does ibtcome under the extradition' treaty tb? accused was turned over to the ; - ? ,- - "- i"? . ' i ,' Sheriff for prosecution on the charge of bringing stolen articles into the State. Edward .-F. Joslyn, aged twenty-seven yearSySbotancPinstantly killed Etta Buck-' ingnam, agea ms mistress,. in the corridor of theNotting House, at Elgin, HI., bn the 30th, and then fired a bullet through his own brain, dying almost instantly. Jealousy was the. cause. ; The Pensacola Board of Health, in view of no new cases of yellow fever having developed in the twelve days since the first was discovered, asks that the quarantine against that city by other towns be removed. A Mountain Park conductor put John Kerrigan off of his train a few days ago, while it was going at the rate of thirty miles an hour. Kerrigan was killed. Contracts to the amount of $15,000,000 for the construction of new lines have been awarded by the Board of Trustees of the Postal Telegraph Company at New York. Lines of two wires each will be put up from New York to Washington, and New York to Boston, Buffalo to Pittsburg, 0.,to Toledo, and Chicago to St. Louis. Two wires will be added to the wires already strung between New York and Chicago. The lines are to be completed, according to the terms of the contract, by January 1. " PERSONAL .4XI POLITICAL. A commission of. Frenchmen have informed Mayor Edson, of New York, that the Statue of Liberty will be ready for presentation to the city any time after January 1. His Honor expressed regret at the lack of' interest in the magnificent, gift of France, and the slow progress that is being made in the preparation to receive it. A Plaquemine, La., special of the 28th reports the death there of Captain E. H. Szalla, who was in ctiarge of the United States surveying party making a survey pf Bayou Plaquemine. The daughters of Joseph Vallequette, a wealthy pioneer settler of Chicago, have brought suit to have a conservator appointed for their father's estate, alleging that the nuns of the Mercy Hospital are exerting undue influence to have him leave his money to the hospital. The father denies the allegations, and asserts his ability to take care of his property. Thomas Brown, jr., member of the New York Democratic State Committee, on the 29th, directed his attorneys to bring suit against the New York Times for libel, for the publication of false statements with reference to the attendance at a meeting of the committee. Damages are asked in the sum of $50,000. The ruling by which the beer saloons of St. Louis are allowed to remain open on Sunday, does not apply to the other towns of the State. Governor Crittenden is said to have under consideration the call of an extra session of the Legislature to either amend the Downing Sunday law so as to make it apply to St. Louis, or to prepare and submit a prohibitory amendment to the Constitution at the next general election. The address of the Massachusetts Republican Committee, recently issued, says the State has been foully slandered, for personal and party reasons, by her Supreme Executive Magistrate and his followers. Dr. Norvin Green, President of the Western Union Telegraph Company, testified before the Senate Labor Inquiry Committee on the 30th. He said there was no such telegraph service in the world as that furnished by the Western Union. Every absorption of a competing company has been a public benefit. The capitalization of the Western Union is now only $500 a mile. It used to be $000. A requirement that wires shall be put under ground woul T be a detriment to the public service. Th - Western Union is constantly buying patents, but refused the Bell Telephone at $10,000. It is now" worth $2,000,000. The Deaf Mutes Convention in session at New York on the 30th,.decided to raise a fund for a memorial to Rev. Thomas H. Gallaudet, founder of the first deaf mute school in America. Prof. Weeks, of Hartford, Conn., was appointed Treasurer. It was decided to hold the next convention at Washington in August, 1888. John Devoy, , editor of the Irish Nation, of New York, has issued an address to the Irish Nationalists of the United States, in in view of the recent publications seeking to fasten upon him some responsibility for the treachery and escape from punishment of James McDermott and his confederates, in which he denounces McDermott as utterly untrustworthy. WASHISGTOX 3TOTES. The investigation into the facts connected with the loss and subsequent .recovery of 10,000 National bank notes in the Treasury Department, shows that the notes had been canceled, and were useless to any finder, and that no loss could in any event have occurred to the Department. The loss was purely accidental, and no blame can be justly-attached to any clerk or of the Treasury. At a meeting of the World's Arbitration League in Washington on the 28th, resolutions were adopted favoring holding of a World's Exposition of Art and Industry at the Capital of the United States, in 1892, the fourth centennial discovery of America, and recommending that there be held in connection with it a representative Congress of the Nations, for the discussion mending the next Congress to some legislation looking to the successful attainment of the ends contemplated. A number of Virginia Read justers and antBourbon leaders from the South held a conference in Washington on the 29th. They are very mysterious, but are understood to have agreed that if General Arthur will stand by them they will support him for the Presidency in 1881. During the last fiscal year 91,000 applications for pensions were disposed of by the Pension Bureau. Commissioner Dudley says the office handled every case brought before it. All applications were passed, rejected, or additional evidence required, so that no case was left untouched, of questions affecting the moral and social relations of the human race. It was also decided to appoint a committee of seven members of the league to wait upon the President, and request him to take into consideration the propriety of Inspector Williams, of the postal muney oraer system, a lew days ago caused the arrest of Charles F. Heusman, Postmaster at Marks ville, La., for the alleged embezzlement of $1,500 in money order funds. Heusman is held in $5,000 bail. Commissioner Dudley says he is conducting an extensive investigation 'into the subject of pension frauds, and that he is making very curious discoveries; The- . jr Government', has lost very, little by these operations, most of the losses falling jon the pensioners. 'Two hundred and twenty special agents. are now ini.differerit parts of the country investigating these frauds. The duties of rthese special agents ar.e both t)f a dete&tive andjudicial' character. A Washington dispatch of the 30th, says : "It is rumored that in an investigation which will be made shortly in the interest of the Government there will be some startling sensational developments as to how the verdict in the Star-route trial was secured." FOREIGN. It has" been discovered that cattle shipped from Montreal to Liverpool, and slaughtered there, were infected with Texan fever. A serious volcanic eruption has occurred on the Islaud of Krakatoa, East In dies. A village has been washed away, the rivers having overflowed because of the rush of the sea inland. O'Donnell, who shot James Carey, the informer, claims to have done so in self-defense, using a revolver which Carey had himself drawn, which he (O'Donnell) took away from him. A cable dispatch from London on the 27th, reports the receipt of a telegram announcing the death of the Queen of Madagascar, which occurred July 13. In the trial of James McDermott in Liverpool, it is in evidence that a card was found in McDermott's trunk from Conspirator Featherstone introducing him to Dalton, another conspirator. Placards appeared in various quarters of Paris, on the 28th, inviting citizens to rally to the support of the Monarchy under. Louis Philippe II. The placards were destroyed by the police. The Court-martial trying soldiers at Alexandria who participated in the massacres last year, has sentenced thirteen culprits, charged with having organized the massacres, to be hanged opposite the police station, and two to fourteen years' and six to five years' penal service. Among other interesting scraps found by the' English in the possession of James McDermott was a good-bye card from Rossa, upon which he wrote: "Tell the boys over there that I will do my utmost to help destroy the common enemy." The treaty between France and Tonquin has been signed. It provides for a French Protectorate over Tonquin and Annam. The French will insure safety to trade by expelling the "Black Flags." Volcanoes have destroyed the towns of Anjer,Tjiringine and Telokbelong, in Java, and four thousand lives have been lost. The Island of Seron was completely inundated and every soul perished. Bismarck's organ, the North German Gazette, claims to have done a service in the cause of peace by its warning of what would result from systematic agitation in France with the object of exciting hate against Germany. The volcanic eruptions in the East Indies grow more fearful with each day's advices. It is now estimated that seventy-five thousand persons have lost their lives. The entire Karding range of mountains, extending along the coast in a semi-circle for sixty-five miles, have sunk into the sea. One populous town within twenty miles of Batavia has been swept away. A tract of country fifty miles square, extending north from Point Capercion, containing two 'villages and many country people, has been allwallowea up. A bed of solid ice of enormous size was emitted from one of the craters and carried along in the flood of molten lava. The dispatch says it is supposed this ice had formed the crest of some vast subterranean lake. The Strait of Sunda has become dangerous to navigation, new islands have arisen and the coastline is changed. Sixteen volcanoes appeared between the site where the Island of Krahatoa formerly stood and the Sibisie Island. A portion of Bantam is an ashy desert. Cattle are starving, and the peo ple are in despair. LATER, TEWS. A combination has been formed in New York for the advancement of stocks which has the appearance of being the strongest ever known on Wall street. It is composed of the Gould party, Mr. John Jacob Astor, and, possibly, Mr. Vanderbilt. Esau Smith, colored, was hanged at St. Joseph, La., on the 31st for a murder committed eight years ago. He was sentenced to hang in 1875, but broke jail and was only recently captured. A sudden storm on the Newfoundland Coast on the 31stcaught a great number of fishermen far out from land, and not less than eighty were drowned. Their dories were turned upside down and wreckage strewn in every direction. Many dories were swept by the waves from the vessels' decks. Ten schooners were wrecked and others damaged. It has developed that Helena Dreihorst, a well-educated young lady of Wheeling, W. Va., who was trying to support herself, has suffered so severely from hunger and privation that she has become insane. Texas fever has broken out among the cows of a Detroit dairy. A herd of forty-one steers bought by a Genessee County farmer has also been infected. Several of the animals have died. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company have purchased the Pennsylvania and Martin's Creek charter, and will immediately build to the heart of the slate region. Judgments have been rendered against the Bethlehem Iron Company, of Pennsylvania, by former employes for amounts deducted from their wages at the end of each month in payment of bills incurred at the company's store. Similar actions will be brought against other corporations. The drouth in Eastern New England has continued so long that farmers have been obliged to take their stock from the pastures and feed them on winter hay. The vicar of Stratford-upon-Avon has signified his willingness to allow the remains of Shakspeare to be exhumed. The object is to compare the skull of the poet with the busts and portraits of him. A pair of swindlers have been held for trial in New York for collecting $3,000 in subscriptions "for a man dying with "consumption and whose family were starving." Eleven hundred assisted Irish paupers were recently landed in Canada and are being sent across into the States from different points by stealth. Quite a number have been sent back to Canada from Buffalo. Billy Madden, Mitchell's backer and trainer, has declared the Mitchell-Slade fight off on account of the opposition of the authorities. The decree has been issued in Pesth that any who are found guilty, under martial law, of engasrinc: in the riots urninst t.im Jews, shall be executed in three hours after sejntence is passed. '. s ' ' FATAL EXPLOSION. the Steamer Rlverdale Blown Up la New, York Harbor Four .Persons Known, to Have Been Killed, and Many Others Wore Badly Injured. New York, 29.. f Several persons were killed and the river steamer Riverdale sunk by a boiler explosion Tuesday afternoon. The boat, which ran between New York and Haverstraw, on the Hudson, left her dock' at the foot of Harrison street, North River, at 4 "o'clock, and steamed rapidly up the stream. She was' to have touched at' the foot of 23d street for-more- passengers, and' course' was laid about three hundred yards from the New Tork sliore. When between Twelth and Thirteenth streets her boilers exploded with terrific force, killing three persons and wounding eight others. After the explosion the boat drifted up to the foot of Sixteenth street and there sank. The explosion was seen by a few rivermen and tug crews who were watching the boat when the accident occurred. There was a loud report, the smoke stack, pilot-house and the body of a. man were seen flying through the air, and then clouds of escaping steam hid the wreck fiom view. People along the shore went to the steamer in row-boats and tugs, and the police were instantly informed of the accident. The office of charities and corrections was notified by telephone, and all the city ambulances were sent to the foot of Sixteenth street The wildest and most exaggerated reports were circulated, and the number of killed and wounded was, placed at upwards of one hundred. The river front in the vicinity where the explosion occurred was thronged with people, and while but few of the scores said to have been killed were brought ashore, it was averred that dozens had been drowned. There were about fifty passengers on the Riverdale when she left the Harrison street landing, and a majority of them were on the after-deck. As soon as the explosion occurred a scene of the wildest confusion followed. The Captain, J. P. Smith, who was uninjured, rushed to the after part of the boat and told the half frantic passengers that if they would only keep quiet for a few moments they would all be rescued. The steamer was observed to be settling forward and it was evident that a hole had been torn in her bottom and that she would sink. The gangplank was run out into the river and half a dozen men jumped upon it, sinking it below the surface of the water. They were quickiy transferred to the numerous row boats, which by this time had reached the wreck. The tug Zophar Mills was one of the first boats to run alongside the Riverdale and she took on board the greater number of the passengers. The body of a man, apparently about seventy years of age, was found crushed between the rail and a pile of debris on the forward deck. He had evidently ben instantly killed. The body was not identified. The body of an elderly lady, subsequently Identified as Mrs. Charles Sisson, of New York, was also taken from the forward deck. Fireman Charles Dyraes was hurled by the force of the explosion through the side of the boat and out into the water. He was horribly scalded, and when picked up his skin peeled in shreds from his head, neck and arms. He was conscious and his sufferings were intense. He was taken to the New York Hospital and it is believed he will die. Pilot Nelson Magee was hurled thirty feet from the pilot-house into the river, and when he was picked up it was found that both his legs wore broken. John Salair, the mate, stood almost directly over the boiler when it exploded. He was thrown into the river and sustained a simple fracture of the thteh. Howard Gardner, of Williamsburg, who was on his way to Yonkers to conduct a revival meeting, was badly scalded, and it is feared that he will not recover. William H. Henry, aged eighteen, an jiler, was scalded, but his injuries are nol serious. Thomas Saul, of Brooklyn, a passenger, was scalded about the neck and feet, but ii is thought he will recover. Edward Tallman, the engineer, was severely, but jiot fatally, scalded. The following is a list of the killed : Mrs. Charles Sisson, aged sixty-eight yeara Tarrytown; Thomas Gregg-, sixty years, 6J6 Water street; an unknown man; Mr. Charles Sisson, who was on the boat with his wife, ii missing-, and is undoubtedly dead. The injured are: Nelson Magee, Haverstraw, pilot; Edward Tallman. engineer; Henry Mosner, Peekskdl, porter; John Sa air, mate; William H. Henry, oiler; rlhomas Saul, Brooklyn; Howard Gardner, YonKers; James Clark, 86 Goerch street; W. B. Chapman, Yonkeri; Dennis Egan, 80S West Twelfth street; George A. Dymes. fireman, Haverstraw; James Tobin, Yonkers; Israel Lazarus, Ii Mott street The dead were taken to the morgue and the injured to St Vincent's and the Ne York hospitals. The engineer was about entering the engine-room to slow up, as another steamboat was at their landing, when an ominous rumble was heard proceeding from the boiler, and in a moment the terrible explosion occurred, blowing out the entire inside of the vessel, and leaving only the helpless, sinking hull. The force of the explosion was downward, apparently, the rapidity with which the vessel sank showing that the bottom had been blown out The river was strewn with wreckage cabin doors, beams, boards and furniture floating .about and proving the force of the explosion. Accounts of the manner of the explosion differ. Those on the boat- agree that it was sudden and entirely without warning. A policeman, who had been a boiler-maker, and who was standing at the foot of Bloom-field street, declares that his attention was attracted by the sound of escaping ste.im. Looking out on the river he saw the Rier-dale going up stream, partly enveloped in steam, that escaped with a loud roar from her side. He saw people rush from the lower tQ the upper deck and make ready to throw themselves in the river. The next moment the explosion came. The steam yachts of Jay Gould and E. S. Jaffrey were lying at the foot of Twenty-third street Both Gould and Jaffrey had just gone ashore when the accident occurred. Upon hearing the explosion they immediately turned about, and, putting out to the scene of the wreck in their gigs, ordered their yachts to follow without Both engaged in the work of giving aid wherever needed with great zeal. When their yachts appeared all who were in si&hl in the water had been picked up. The New Postage Stamps. Washington, Aug. 2&. The Post-office Department has selected as the color for the new four-cent or double rate stamps a shade of green somewhat-darker than that in which the present three-cent stomp is printed. As the three-cent stamps will be retired from circulation, no errors are likely to arise from the similarity in the co'or. The new stamp bears the profile of Andrew Jackson. The distribution of the new two-cent stamps will benin September 1, and it is believed everything will be in readiness for the change October 1. There are 127 steamers engaged in the. passenger service. ?TflE COMMONWEALTH. t Miss Maggie Bateman, aged nineteen, daughter 'of Wm. Bateman, a prominent and respected 'farmer of, Mason County,, shot herself through the body a few days ago with suicidal intent. Her mother and elder sister had gone away from home, and her father and brother were in the barn.' hanging tobacco, leaving only her and her younger sister in the house. She told her little sister that she would go into the adjoining room to dress, and in a few minutes a 'shot was, heard. When her father caine in she was kneeling on the floor, with one hand? pressed to" her head', and exclaimed, "Father!" She was perfectly conscious. They found her clothing powder burnt and a large bullet-hole in her left side, just beneath the last rib. It is thought impossible for her to live, as the weapon used was a large old-fashioned powder and ball pistol, and she had placed it close to her side. She would give no reason for- her rash act and none is known. She has been suffering with her head of late, and she may have done it in a fit of insanity, but she will not talk about it, though she is perfectly rational. Governor Blackburn, on the 24th, pardoned. Frost Rose-, sent to the penitentiary from Bourbon County for ten years for attempted rape; Amos Brown, sent from Fayette for five years for horse stealing; Carl Miller, sent from Franklin for two years for grand larceny; Thos. Mayford, sent from Jefferson for two years for housebreaking, and Silas Hatchett, sent from Henderson for one year for obtaining a beef-steak under false pretenses. A passenger train from Nashville to Louisville came in collision with the rear of a freight train at Lebanon Junction, about twenty-five miles from Louisville a few days ago. The freight train was heavily loaded and the engine recoiled, telescoping the tender and baggage-car. No passengers were injured, but engineer Clarence B Gifford was badly crushed and will probably die. Fireman Kidd also received serious injuries. George Boone, colored, aged fourteen, was thrown from a horse four miles from Louisville, on the Cane Run Road, a few days ago, and instantly killed. The animal took fright at a bicycle. ' Robberies are being committed with such frequency at Georgetown, Scott County, that the citizens are becoming alarmed. No arrests have been made, though the robberies are of almost nightly .occurrence. Mort. Anderson, a'countryman, fatally stabbed Mike McKinsey, a hostler, at Winchester, Clark County, a few days ago. The killing was tho result of a quarrel over a difference of five cents in the price of a feed for the former's horse. Governor Blackburn on the 28th granted a pardon to William Newell, a young man whose parents are respectable and well-to-do people, living in Cincinnati. Newell left the latter city about a year ago, and went to Louisville, and was sent to prison from that city about eight months ago, for a period of two years, for the alleged theft of $5.90. He and several other young men were in a saloon together and all were intoxicated. One of the party, missed his pocket-book, and the others charged Newell with stealing it, and had him .arrested. Although the pocket-book was not found on his person, he was tried and sentenced to prison. Newell has been at work on the railroad for the past four months. His pardon was recommended by Senator Pendleton, Judge Hoadly, and Archbishop Elder, of Cincinnati. The Governor also pardoned Austin Fleetwood, sent to the Penitentiary from Scott County for life, for the murder of Constable Melford; David Curtis, sent from Madison County, for nine years, for horse stealing; Andrew Jackson, sent from Fayette County for two years, for grand larceny; John Robinson, sent from Pulaski County, for breaking open a railroad car; John Robinson, sent from Jessamine for five years, for burglary; Sam Wilder and Joseph Taylor, and two other convicts were also pardoned. Joseph Clarke, a farmer, while returning from New Hope, in Nelson County, a few nights ago, was attacked by an un known assassin and stabbed thirteen times in the back and shoulders, none of his wounds, however, being dangerous. Weekly RcTiew of tle Louisville Jlarltct. The receipts for the week were SSO hhds. against 970 hhds. last week, and CS0 hhds. in the corresponding week of 1SS2. The market has been in a very healthy, animated condition, though there have been no speculative motives or incitements, and trade has depended wholly upon legitimate influences. The requirements of home manufacturers are increasing again, to judge from the fact that some of the principal concerns which have recently held aloof are again free bidders. The foreign demand on regie and other account, has also been active, and the market has been generally favorable tc sellers. In Burley tobacco the variou grades of medium leaf have quite recovered from the decline previously noticed, ar. advance of 13 having been manifested. Good and fine grades have not varied materially. Fillery and smoking lugs, which were exempt from the late decline, have continued firm and about stationary, though very active. Colory goods maintain a very good premium. Dark and heavy tobaccos have been active at very full prices throughout the week. It is reported that portions of the Blue-grass region, and one or two other localities, are suffering seriously for the want of ram. The crop generally appears to be doing very well. We quote now crop tobaccos as follows : . Dark chid Heavy. Burlcy. Trash $j 75 i 00 Si 00 5 00 Common hi!?s -1 23 5 00 5 25 7 00 Medium to jrood lugs. . 6 50 .... 7 25 9 00 Common leaf 6 00 6 75 Medium'to good leaf. . . 7 00 9 00 Fine leaf 10 0013 00 " Selections U 0017 75 Medium leaf, dark or coarse 7 00 9 00 Common, smooth and bright 10 0012 00 Medium, smooth and bright 14 O016 00 Good, smooth and bright 18 0022 00 Fine and fancy 25 0030 00 A young lady in Delaware was taken suddenly ill the other day, and a physician was called in. He gave her morphia and departed. As she did not visibly improve another physician was called, and not having been informed of the action, of the first, repeated the dose, and the young lady died. Philadelphia Press. In children's fashions one of the most effective portions of the dress is the collar. Deep collars of embroidery or lace are universally worn; the handsomest of these are made up of fine insertion of delicate Swiss embroidery and ruffles to match. N. T. Post. TOriCS OF THE DAY. 'IThe Connecticut tobacco crop is ox vcellent, and imported cigars should b& good and cheap. California is discovering oil s wells," and we may expect a better body and flavor in the wines from that State, . Oscar Wilde's great eccentricty is in the display of ability to make plenty of money without work. On that point he is wonderfully and admirably crazy. ' - In JersEy City they are cutting down! a lot of street shade trees that have been deemed unsafe. Already are tho tramps there suffering from drouth. Secretary Chandler's recent visit to New Hampshire was . a sad one. His aged mother died soon after his arrival, and since then his brother took sick and died. A registry in Ireland shows a total return of 5,958,973 of all kilo's of trees. Extended planting is proposed as a means of improving the condition of that country. The women in Boston seem to be losing what little interest they at first took in exercising the "right" of voting. Only forty of them have thus far this year come forward to be assessed for a poll-tax. The probability is that our country will have to struggle through next winter without the presence of Mme. Bernhardt. But there will be with us other distinguished foreign ladies who love America. A farmer in Orange County, N. y is running a successful summer boarding house for city people. He mauled the first man he heard growling about the grub, and has had no more trouble on that score. ,. o Fresh buttermilk is kept on tap at many saloon-bars in Phil adeljmia, at a few in New York, is cooling, refreshing, wholesome, doesn't intoxicate, is almost as cheap as water, and the hot-coppered old topers pronounce it "bully." To pay war pensions this year a sum will be required equal to the earnings of one million laboring men for one hundred days, according to the figuring of some illustrative writer. In plain figures, the amount is $100,000,000. Senator Allison, of Iowa, is almos crushed with grief at the tragio death of his wife, and of course has abandoned all active political work, but it is believed that his friends will the more earnestly work for his re-election. The annual waste in London smoke ii estimated at $5,000,000, while the injury to health and damage to property is incalculable. It is said there is an expense every year of over $12,000 to repair iia damage to the House of Parliament. The Canadian postage remains at three cents, but October 1 a tter prepaid two cents and mailed in United States will be carried through Canada as before, letters being carried indiscriminately by the two postal systems, according to mutual agreement. For oysters New Yorkers spend $5,000,-000 yearly, Philadelphia $3,500,000, and Bostonians $1,750,000. The prospects for a good crop the coming season are encouraging. The oyster industry exceeds in value all the other fishery interests of the United States. California chicory is in demand in Europe for mixing with coffee, drinkers of this beverage liking the taste it imparts. The root of the plant, when being prepared for use, is cut by a machiue into small square blocks, then placed in the sun to dry, afterward roasted, and finally ground in a mill. oi A prominent Berlin newspaper advises that measures be taken to stop the outflow of population by emigration to foreign lands by offering inducements to the people to stay at home. These inducements are increased chances of earning a better living and acquiring a permanent homestead. . fcV. . . - " Cases of injury have been reported in Philadelphia from swallowing metal hooks used in affixing tags to beef shipped from the West. They are said to be more dangerous in form than the ordinary fish-hook. "This barbed wire," says the Ledger, "will have to be ruled out of meat, just as the millers were obliged to rule out from their mills grain that had been bound with wire." The Providence Journal is of the opinion that while the Concord School of Philosophy has been subjected to a good deal of ridicule from pure flippancy and ignorance, the prevailing impression has been that the obscurity of language in most of the Concord philosophers has not been so much from the profundity of the subjects as the lack of any clear ideas regarding the-a. m A "writer in the New York World closes an article on the fashions as follows : "There is a fresh fashion making its way among Americans, both at home and abroad, that is to be deplored the ;making up' of the face and eyes. If all one hears be true, not a few of the American guests at the Marlborough fete gave an exhibition of this fashion, and one has but to go to Newport, Long Branch and other resorts to see that an effort is being made to introduce the use " of paints and other eosmetiquei. mora, ' freely than before for -v ears." , Lv "r 4 ft-