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~ 7*?RraM A RIDE TO DEATH. Frlylitfnl Fall of Seventeen Horses and lElders on a ICacenou-se* The Australian papers give details of a ! dreadful accident in the Caulficld cup. 1 The race was a handicap of l,r>00 sovereigns. and the distance one mile and a ! half. Forty-one* horses went to the ! post. One or more of the runners fellas they came racing up the straight, and no "fewer than seventeen horses and jock- | eys were iD a few moments struggling on j the ground, in a seemingly inextricable j mass. The following extracts are taken ' from the Adelaide Adctrliscr: ' Suddenly a shout rent the air, a gap j was male in the centre of the living ; ranks as though a park of artillery had ! opened tire upon ihem; down went a j cluster of horses?of horses and riders? I " *?? i> r.n (nn nf tliom '111(1 i uu vumi; viiiMio v 11 n'jj v.. .uv.., - ? shrieks, yells and cries told of a sad disaster, while another section of spectators | who did not sec or could not realize the | extent of the calamity, were singing out? 'Britisher wins; no, Marie Louise: no, Grace Darling?Grace Darling.' Where the horses and riders were heaped pellmell, ready hands were quickly at work to extricate the poor lads from their dangerous position. No less than seven, teen horses had been brought to earth, and the scene while it lasted was a terrible . one. Some say it was Tom 15rown, j other Too-Too, and some again aver it | was Claptrap who caused the disaster j and was the first to comc down. It was j pretty certain, however, that Sard i us j was the sec ond or third horse to fall, i poor Wyman pitching heavily on his j head. Then fell Lord Exeter and his rider. The unfortunate rider, Donald Nicholson, was seen for a moment to ! struggle upon his feet, when crash into I him came Prince Imperial with a shock ' that knocked the horse's teeth down his own throat, and struck Nicolson lifeless to the earth. On came Mozart, Despot, Winchester, Kingship, falling over and over their rider?,who were either thrown out of the saddle, crushed beneath their j weight, or kicked by the horses in their j struggles to regain their feet. It was in j this melee that the riders Cracknell, Wy- J man, and McGrath sustained their scri- j ous injuries. Nicholson was pulled out | fmm hnnpath two horses a shapeless ; mass, with features so pounded and urn- j tilated as to be unrecognizable, and just, enough life within him to breathe his j last gasp. Yeomans had a most unfor- J tunate escape with Welcome Jack. 'Thank God I am back again,' said the crack horseman. 'I never bad a narrower squeak in my life.' It appears that he saw two horses down on the J ground in front of him, and rising Welcome Jack with both spurs in his sides, he jumped him right over them, aud in landing cannoned against other horses, Welcome Jack going down on his nose, but he ultimately shied away to the right and cleared further danger." "The placed horses had scarcely been weighed in when a mclauaholv procession of dead and wounded men was carried to the jockey's room. The first to be brought in was M'Grade, the rider of Tom Brown, who appeared to be very badly hurt, and then the lifeless body of pcor iittle Nicholson appeared, and he was succeeded by Cracknell, the rider of Kingship, who was so severcl}r injured that h-3 case seemed a hopeless one. McGrath, who was on Prince Imperial, and Wyman, the rider of Sardius, were j oext, and tbev were both insensible. "A brief examination revealed the fact j that Nicholson had been dead for some ! minutes, ana that Cracknell had his j breast bone broken, and had received i other internal injuries, M'Grade had a broken shoulder and nose, and was in- j sensible: Wvman. who was on Sardius, ! sustained a fracture of the skull; | McGrath. who rode Prince Imperial, was : suffering from concussion of the brain; Winchester's jockey, Iluxtable, was in- | sensible, and had a nasty wound on his i face; and Toomev, who rode Urara, who j was killed, was very badly hurt indeed. Moore, Ellis, Ivemy, Hutchens and Morrison who were riding Lord Wilton, Despot, Impulse, Country Boy aud Sirocco respectively, escaped with a severe shaking each, but Frahm and T. Brown, who were on Claptrap and Too- j Too and fell in front of all the others, J escaped without a scratch, and the j former won the last raceou Merrimu." Cattle Raising on the Plains. T. W. Chatlee, general manager of the Hillsdale Land and Cattle Company, Df Hillsdale, Wyoming Territory, who was formerly a wholesale drygoods i dealer in Boston, says: "Cattle raising j is a money making business if a man | ?oes into it properiy, and knows whom j he is dealing w;th. Xo man should go j intn it inflf>n?nrlfill11V a.ud alone unless ! lie has a capital of at least $->0,000, and j it would be well to hive double that amount. In five years he will make ; himself quite wealthy. The only way | for a man with limited means to do, is! to go into a stock company that lie, knows is reliable and not organized by j sharks. Our company has a capital of ! ?250,000, and all of it has been taken [ but $10,000. When we first began, I ! sold shares to the amount of $130,000 i to four men in less than half an hour, f We have 04,000 acres of land fenced in ; on the iine of the I'nion Pacific road. It ! is thirteen miles long and seven and one- j half miles wide. Thirty miles of ditches j irrigate 5,COO acres upon which hay is j raised. We cut 400 tons this last sea i sou, and in the course of a couple of | years we shall have from :J,000 to 4,000 tons. Of course we can't begin to use it all, but it is worth from $10 to $13 a ton out there, so that it is profitable. It required 50 miles of barbed wire to feuce in our tract, but, in order that we should have no trouble with the government we have gates at every mile stone, so that people can cross the laud if they want to. Of the entire acreage we own 35.000 acres, and that includes control of the .water privileges, so that, while the remainder of the land is subject to entry, no man wants it unless he can secure irrigation, s:> he must treat with us."'?Buffalo Courier. Snakes in Her Stomach. The wife of Lem Allen, a prominent citizen of Churchill county, has been an invalid for a long time. Occasionally her sufferings were great, and recently her ailments were most serious, such as to cause her friends to almost lo3e hopes of her surviving. While laboring under the most accute pain, accompanied with i symptoms ot lnimmmanon 01 me sioiu i ach, the most heroic medicines were used. After a time four snakes of the water species .*ere taken from her. Uue was quite three feet in length, another about twenty inches, and two about eight inches. The powerful medicines used poisoned them, and evidently they remained dead in the stomach some little time. IIow they were taken into the stomach and survived is a question. For quite a while the lady seriously complained of a peculiar sensation as if something was creeping around within, little tlrnking there was any reality in it. Since the serpents were unwittingly poisoned she has recovered rapidly, and bids fair to soon enjoy her wonted health. ?Reno {Nee.) Gazette. V ! A STARTLING PLOT. i ' Alleged Scheme to Murder Twenty \ Prominent Californians. Arrest of Several Members of a Socialistic Organization. A San Francisco dispatch gives the following details of an alleged s-homo to assassinate twenty prominent citizens of California: A plot for the assassination of some of the J most prominent men in this city came to j ' ! ?ln.-f tinifl <1 nr. v tllrt nnlinn ! n&uu uwiao iiniu u^v wuu j/v?*w r obtained information of the existence of ail j organization (--ailed the "Socialistic Revolu- ! tionary Association," which, it \va< assertoil, j was composed of ultra-socialistic members. . A close watch was kept 011 their movements, -j and the police finally succeeded in obtaining ; the mi nut .'S of one of their meetings held on 1 November 2o. It was learned that the intention was to j pub about twenty men out of the way by assassination, incfuidng W. T. Coleman, Conpressman W. W. Morrow. General \V. H. L. Barnes, Mayor Bartlett, United States Judge Lorenzo Sawyer, Leland Stanford, Charles 1 Crocker, Governor Stoneman and the principal police officials. These names were put on J a "proscriptive list" ami placed in the hands j of the executive committee. The committee were considering the bast means of accomE fishing the murders when their work was rought to a sudden termination by the dis- I covery of their headquarters at 'JUO Montgomery street. Tne police arrested four men found in the rooms. Thoir names are Juliu9 C. Koosher, Henry Weiseman. Charles Mittelstadt, and Oscar Eggers. The officers found in the headquarters a complete laboratory for the manufacture of infernal machines. The men were taken to the city prison, where they boldly asserted that they were dynamiters, and that th9y proposed to get rid of the citizens named and then raze Chinatown. The Erisoners are also members of the German ranch of the Anti Coolie league. The leader of the band is Henry "Weisemnn n Houfll'l'dtl fltlll ft phftlTlist- Hft W/1S induced to join Coroner O'Donnell's Coolio league, and finally becauia president of an anti-coolie league. "My intention," he said, ' was merely to aid in enforcing what O'Donnell told us was law against the Chinese. He told us that tho State constitution prohibited the Chine-:o from Jiving within the limits of any incorporated town or city in the State. We had a meeting on the sand lot on Thanksgiving Day and resolved that we would call on the municipal authorities to enforco tho law or resign their offices. The only thing that troubled ino was that O'Donnell was always saying that the Chinese were supplied with superior weapons, and that they had armories in Chinatown and wore drilling every night with Wincester rifles supplied by Colonel Bee, the Chinese consul. Most of our people were workingmen, and had no arms. I was afraid that when the Chinese were ordered to go they would resist and attack our people. We must have something to meet them with, and I resolved to experiment, and see if I could not invent a superior weapon. I commenced my experiments about twelve days ago, and bought some dynamite. My idea was to mako something that could be thrown like a hind grenade. We experimented at different times under the rocks near the Cliff house, but the results were not satisfactory. O'Donnell knew we were experimenting.1' The prisoners hav* been charged with a misdemeanor, in unlawfully storing giant powder. The highest penalty for this is six months' imprisonment, or a fine of ? 1,000. Koosher is a Russian, aud speaks six languages. Accoi?ding to his at >ry he was financially ruined by frequmt assaults made on tho nomA fft tlm TTnifaH anrl ant*? UUWO. XXV uaiiio WW vuy wukvvu wwkwx MMV* WV? I tied in New York city. He was appointed an i agontby the Jewish Relief society, and visited j Oregon and Washington Territory to take up j land for his people. He asserts that Henry ) Villard, the railway magnate, assisted him j in his labors. Ho recently camo to this city, and identified himself with the Anti-Coolia league, and the house in which the dynamite! was found was occupied by him. Ho paid a ( monthly rental of $10. Charles Mittelstadt is President of the Third Ward Anti-Coolie Club and vice-president of the German branch of the same organization. In his room the detectives j found 300 badges bearing the letters "D. A. 0. L." Oscar Eggers is a peddler by occupation. He is a native of Germany, is about So years of age and speaks very little English. FIVE LIVES SACRIFICED. An Insane ?Soth?r and T our Children flurued to Death. A dispatch from Olympia, Washington Territory, says: This morning, at Long Prairie, about ' eight miles l rom this place, a deplorable event j occurred, news of which was received here ' to night. Mrs. Miner, a relative of Mr. David ; Chambers, has for some time manifested 1 symptoms of insanity, and according to re- ! port, she last evening saturated papers with i coal oil and distributed them around the ; house, telling one of her children, in response ' n niifwt.imi. that she was wetting them with i WW V. 1 ? 1 w water. Early this morning she mado a remark that she was about to destroy the whole family, and her husband, fearing that she was about to attempt to take his life, proceeded to put her out of the roam. On opening the door he discovered that the house was ] in flama*. Reaching the front door with one ; of his children he found it locked and the key \ removed. Ho ran to tin back door and found j it nailed up. Hnally he and his little daughter sue- ; ceeded in escaping through a window. Hoth were badly burned. The unfortunate mother j and her four other children were burned to death. The survivors were taken to a neighbor's residence for medical treatment, PROMINENT PEOPLE. Skxatok Edmunds's wealth is estimated at half a million. Rev. I)n. T/.lmaoe's tabernacle in Brook- j IV11% uuw jiiu.iiuaa. Ex-Attorney-General Brewster has resumed his law practice in Philadelphia. The sultan of Turkey has ?>) wives, and his personal expenses are per year. It is said that the emperor of Brazil has a chronic complaint in the matter of disregard of etiquette and court rules. Mr. Packard, ex-governor of Louisiana, has bought two farms in Marshall county, la, and he is to make his home there. The late Marshal Serrano saw during his lifetime forty rebellions, eighty-four Spanish ministries and a dozen chiei's of the government. Should lie live till the :>d of January, Emperor William will, on that day. celebrate tho twenty-fifth anniversary of his accession to the throne of Prussia. General Longstrket lives on the top of a high hill near Gainesville, Ga. His long hair is white as snow, and his clothes hang very loosely about him. There is an ex-Vice-President alivo, it seems, whom everybody has forgotten for many years?David R. Atchison, ot Missouri, wno, 111 was cnosen uy uie oenuio to mi the place of Vice President William R. Kins;. Seth Kinmax, the California hunter, who presented unique chairs to President Buchanan, Lincoln, Johnson and llayes, will next spring honor President Cleveland in a similar manner. The chair is to be made of elk liorns, and is curiously and elaborately constructed. Dir Pio Pick, tlio last Mexican governor general of Upper California, returned to his old quarters at Los Angeles soon after the country was acquired by tin United States, and has lived there from that day to this. He has never been able to master a single sen. tonce of the English language. The domestic felicity of Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks was a proverb in Indiana. At a wedding ceremony at Shelbyville three years ago the oiliciating clergyman, after" shaking hands with the newly married couple, gave them his benediction in these words: ''May you always be as happy as Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks are." There are no less than four queens of Spain now living?Isabella, mother of Che late Alfonso Amelia, wife of ex-King Amedoo of Savoy,mother of the present king of Italy, who was itwo years king of Spain and re signed in disgust; Christine,widow of the late King Alfonso, and Mercedes, the present I queen, five years old. I NEWS SUMMARY. Eastern and Middle State*. James Mup.phy, a well-to-do expressman of Williamsburg, N. Y., in a fit of jealousy shot and probably fatally wounded his wife and then inflicted a mortal wound upon himself. Since work began on the now New York aqueduct in January, 1SS1, thirty-two employes have be;-n killed and twenty-one injured. Up to recent date the Grant monument fund had reached $104,500. Joseph Hanley's fivo children have died within a week in Jersey City, N. J., of scarlet fever. Two largo coal mines near HazelCon, Penn., have been flooded by the waters of a rising creek, and an immense amount of damage has been inflicted. One thousand men and boys are thrown out of work. Two hundred of the New York city gro- j cers have voted unanimously not to have anything more to do with oleomargarine, or any kind of imitation butter, unless it is , colored so that it may be told from the | genuine article. The funeral of the late William H. Vanderbilt was an unostentatious affair, the remains being conveyed from the church in New York to the family vault on Staten Island. By the terms of the will six children get ea;;h nearly & 1:2,000,000, the sons Cornelius and William K. receive each about $52,050,000, and the widow is left $500,000 in cash, an annuity of $200,000 and the house on Fifth avenue. About $1,200,000 goes to charitable and other institutions. A railway mortgage for $50,000,000 was filed a few days since in New York. Municipal elections in Boston and Worcester, Mass., resulted in the re-election of Mayor O'Brien (Democrat) in the formor city by 8,597 majority, and the election of Samuel Winslow (Republican) as mayor of the latter city by 1,535 plurality. Worcester voted no license by 4,522 nays to 3,0)5 yeas. Last year the city gave 2,123 majority for license. South and We?, Joe Parkek, a colored man, died a few days since at the county poorhouso, Dallas, Texas, at the alleged age of 120 years. John Alexander (colored) was hanged at Stanton Plantation, La., for wife murder. The Ohio supremo court reversed the decision of tho lower court in the Cincinnati contested election cases and ordered certificates of election to be issued to four Democratic senatorial candidates. This leaves the Ohio-legislature Republican by three ma jority on joint ballot. A boiler explosion at theFurthe foundry, Austin, Texas, killed Charles Jones, proprietor of the works, and Lewis Preston, the engineer, injured several other people, and demolished the building. On gala occasions when the average mortal indulges in roast turkey two families of coal diggers residing near Bellaire, Ohio, roast a dog and eat it. The propeller Oconto, with twenty-three passengers and a crew of twenty-four, was wrecked on Lake Huron during the recent severe storm. All on board reached a desolate, inaccessible island after great suffering. Mayor Reed, of Louisville, Ky., has been fined twenty dollars for fighting. Mrs. Robert Smith an 1 her two children were brutally murdered in Montgomery county, Texas, by a nineteen-year-old mulatto named Johnson. B. Gratz Brown, ex-governor of Missouri, ex-United States Senator, and candidate for Vice-President on the ticket with Horace Greeley in 1872, died on the 13th in St. Louis. He was born in Lexington, Ky., in 1824, and had oncebeen prominent in State and national politics. A committee of more than 5,000 citizens, representing every county and town in Indiana, has been forme I to obtain funds for the erection of a monument to the late VicePresident Hendricks. A number of prisoners who attempted to break jail at Meridian, Misa, were fired upon by the jailer, and one of them was fatally wounded. Ernist A.twood and his newly-made bride were drowned while attempting to cross the Chattanooga river, near Tallulab, Ga. They had been married the day before. In anticipation of its soon becoming a State tho Territory of Dakota has opened a "legisalturo" at Huron. The vote by which the Virginia legislature elected John W. Daniel to succeed General Mahone as United States Senator, was: Senate?Danie!, 2(5; Mahone, 8. House?Daniel, 70; Mahone, The State of Texas has bought a large plantation on which it will employ convicts. aahfngton* There are four Taylors in the present House of Representatives. The House committee on rules decided by a nearly unanimous action, Mr. Randall being tho principal objector, to report in favor of making eight committees on appropriations, instead of three committees, nrifVi mnL-A nnnmnrint.iorw -in in t.lm last session. Additional postmasters nominated by the President; Thomas A. Carr, at Thomaston, I Me.; John A. Barry, at Oswego, N. Y.; IV. W. Nichols, at Wellsville, N. Y.; John Foran, at Lambertville, N. J.; Mary E. Sifeonson, at East Orange, N. J.; John G. Randall, at Doylestown, Penn.; George Sch&U,atNorristown, Penn.; M. S. Longaker, at Pottstown, Penn.; John Haviland, at Phccnixville, Penn.; James H. Covington, nt Eastois. Md.; W, R. Colston, at Martinsburg, W. Vs.; Dtoaiel J. Slier.ran, at Ashtabula, O.; thomas Hubbard, at Bellefontaice, O,; Ringgold W. Meiley. at Lima, 0. R. B. Gordon, jr., at St. Mary's 0.; James W. Talbot, at Middleport, O.; W. C. Clark,al Paducal). Ky.; Erastus R. McKinney, at Lacon, 111.; Henry E. Wadsworth, at Laporte, Ind.; Joseph Brelsford, at Onarga, III.. A. Z. Weber, at Albia, la.; John I). Smith, at Bedford, la.; A. C. Hutchinson, at Burlington, la.; Clarence Snyder, at Puicine, Wis.; Ransom Cutting, at Decatur, Mich.; Angelo E. Tower, at Ionia, Mich.; Charles R. vaunn, at St. Helena. Cal. The correspondence of the .'tite department with tin governments of Italy and Austria concerning the appointment of Mr. A. M. Keiley as minister to lirst one and then the other country shows: That Ita'y objected to Mr. Keilov on account of opinions expressed yoars ago concerning that government; that Mr. ICei ley's name was thereupon withdrawn and he was appointed minister to Aus'ria; that the Austrian government refused to receive Mr. Kie!ey because his wife is a Jewess; that Mr. Bayard protested against such a reason as untenable and as an infringement of the principlo of religious liberty, and thnt no other appointment to Austria had accordingly been made. A large number of nominations made by the President since the close of the last Congress have gone to tho Senate for action. Foreign* 'The German minister of tho interior has announced in the Reichstag that Germany had not been invited to participate in the Paris exposition of lSjiO. The followers of Parnell, the Irish homo rule leader, number eighty-six in the new house of commons, and they hold the balance of power between tho conservatives and liborals. The most intensely cold weathor experienced in five years, has just been prevailing throughout England. The Panama canal is declared in an official statement to be under way two-thirds of its entire length. There are now 12,000 laborers employed on the big ditch, and it is proposed to goud16 DQ&t numuer WlltJU tuo ui y aoaouu begins. In* a long and bloody engagement between the Servians ancl Bulgarians the latter were routed. There are three Americans in the now British house of commons. Four persons?two men and two children ?were drowned by breaking through the ice in Lake Chumplain at Philipsburg, Canada. BuRMAn's white elephant is dead. An enormous crowd attended the funeral of the sacred animal. Many Irish tenants are refusing to pay their landlords except at great reductions in rents. M. Pasteur, the now famous discoverer of a cure for hydrophobia, daily receives telegrams advising him of the departure of fresh patients from all countries for Paris. Herr Gener and son, owners of the largest hotel in Prague, have been bitten by a mad dog, and have gone to Paris. Five Poles, terribly mutilated by a large hound known to have been in a state of hydrophobia, are among the latest of Pasteur's patients. A liosiF. (Italy) dispatch says that up to November 1, iu the Yicarate of Cochin China, 9 Catholic missionaries, 7 native priests, 60 catechists, 270 members of religious orders end 34,000 Christians were massacred: 20) parishes, 17 orphan asylums and 10 convents were destroyed,and 225 churches were burned. King Ferdinand, the titular ruler of Portugal, is dead. He was recent during the minority of his son,and many years ago created a stir by marrying Miss Heusler, a young ady of great beauty, and the daughter of a Boston shoemaker. LATER NEWS. A big banquet was given on Staten Island a few nights ago by Erastus Wyman in honor of Roborfc Garrett, president of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, and to celei?i. j.I j v.n;i urtttu nit; prupuseu uuimeutiuu ul uuuu iatr road with Now York city by way of Staten .Island. Tho four great States of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland I were represented by their governors or by officers or ox-oflicers of high degree, and many other prominent men were present. At a meeting of tho Anti-Monopoly league in New York Edwards Pierrepont, late minister to England, presided, and the silvjr question was exhaustively discussed. Speeches in favor of unlimited silver coinage wero made by Congressman A. J. Warner, of Ohio, and others, and a series of resolution? were adopted calling upon Congress to reium6 the coinage of tho standard silver dollar of 412 grains. Frank Knocfi, of Woodmere, Mich., his wife and two children were burned to cinders by their dwelling catching fire at night. Tiib Preside at has nominated Hon John Bigelow to be assistant treasurer in New York and General Franz Sigel to be pension a^ent in that city. Both nominees are residents of New York. Mr. Bigelow has served as our minister to France, and as secretary of state for New York. Revolution is rampant again In Mexico. Ex-President Gonzales is in the state of Guanajuato with 8,000 men willing to support him against the present administration. Eleven Europ:ans employed by a trading company have been murdered in Burmah by native troop3. The weather is so cold in the Balkans that a number of Servian soldiers at the front have been frozen to death. MR. Uavid mills, town treasurer or Milford, Conn., was gored to death in his barn by a young Holstein bull. Cremations are of quite frequent occurrence at the new crematory on Long Island. The other day the bodies of Dr. Louis Lambert and his wife, of Jersey City, N. J., were reduced to ashes. Jacksonville, Fla., has been the victim of a disastrous fire, much business property being destroyed and the total loss being estimated at ?450,000. One fireman was killed and three others were injured. The Dakota self-make "State legislature" has elected two United States "Senators." This action of Dakota in forming itself into a State government is done to compel Congress to either accept or reject the Territory as a State. The courts wore called upon to prevent an announcement of the recent local election at Atlanta, but Ihj judgo has dissolved the injunction and sustained the constitutionality of the Georgia prohibition law. Sam Wilson (colore i) murdered a colore.1 woman and her two children at Laurel, Miss Ho was captuivd and summarily lynched. A repokt just mado to the treasury shows that during the three years ended August 1, Its!" tKa rtf PhinocO w)lf> left tiie 1 UU?/f IUC J1UUIU.4 VI. VUtMVU? .. ? ? United States wa3 41,:)22, and the number who arrived, 20,077. Cholera is raging with great fatalitjr in Hioga, Japan. Much excitement lias been aroused in Great Britain by the announcement that exPremier Gladstone favors home rule for Irel land, with an Irish parliament at Dublin. Some of the English papers opposing this scheme predict civil war. There have been held in Canada 10i> indignant meetings, 100 protests have been made by the city councils, societies, etc., on account of the government's action in hanging Riel, the rebel leader. COAL MINEJBXPL03I0N. Four Miner* Fatally and Four Itadl)' In tired. A disastrous explosion of fire-damp occurred the other morning at the Mill Creek slope, situated at Mill Creek, a few mile3 from Wilkesbarre, Penn. Eight men were cratrarnltr in imWI nnrl Crwornl nHii?ra Sli?rhtlv ""'"'""J ? ? O * hurt, while a portion of the colliery was badly wrecked. The fire-boss, Joseph Cleasby, had, in accordance with the miuo law, niad9 his tour of inspection through the mine beforo the men wont to work,and found gas in dangerous quantities in a portion of tlio mine known as No. lti Lift. He therefore posted a notice warning the men employed 111 this lift not to go in to work until he had | cleared the gas out. This warning, for s Jine reason unknown, was disregarded by a miner named Peter Coffey, who, accompanied by his laborer, a Hungarian named Peter Stone, went into their chamber in this lift and went to work. All the other miners employed in the lift did not join. Had they done so the loss of life would have been "frightful. After posting the notice, C!ea$by obtained the help of his assistant fiie boss, George I Martin, and, entering the shaft, began the ' process of brushing out the gas. He was engaged in this work when the gas in the chamber in which Coffey and Sfone were at work caught fire, it is supposed, from their nalie.l lights, and an explosion, terrific in its violence, shook the mine. fl lie concussion was felt in workings a mile and a half distant. and in the vicinity where it occurred the results were terrible. All the men working round about were thrown down or dashed with great violence against the sides, or rib, as it is called by miners. Doors, brattices and woodwork were thrown down and broken to atoms. The wildest consternation prevailed, and from all parts of the mine the men rushed to the slopo and were hastily hoisted to the surface. Eight men were seriously injured, and one soon after died. The name of the dead man was George Martin, the assistant fire boss. His skull was fractured and saveral ribs were broken. He and Cleasby were foundcloso together buried under the debris. Cioasby's skull was also fractnred, his arm broken and his body covcred with cuts and bruise?. He was noc expected to live till morning. Coffey and Stone wore found in their chamber. Both men were terribly burned and the flesh and skin hung from them in shreds. Both were certain to die. Every particle of Stone's clothing, except his bDOts, were burnt off his body and the head and hands were charred to the bone. The other injured men, all of whom it is believed will ultimately recover, are Nicholas Gray, aged nineteen, head and body badly cut and bruised; Samuel Morris, aged twenty six, arm broken and back badly bruised; Joseph Tarduskey, aged sixteen, cut and bruised; Anton Farowski, Hungarian Jauorer, snouiuer broken, body badly cut and bruised. A reception* tendered to Mme. Modjeska last Monday Dieht by the ladies of Cincinnati in the parlors of the Burnet house, was attended by over 1,00.) ladies and gentlemen, including many prominent in social and ari circles. Murat Ha'stead, Mayor Smith, oxMayor Stevens, aud Mrs. Foraker, wife ol Governor-elect Foraker, were among those prosent. There are no less than four queens of Spain now living?Isabella, mother of the late Alfonso Amelia,wife of ex-King Ainedeo of S:ivoy,mother of the present king of Italy, who was ttwo years king of Spain and resigned in disgust; Christine,widow of the late King Alfonso, and Mercedes, the present queen, live years old. THE YEAR 1886. (D * > ?* 5* 5 CO ?> J; -S^ S ^ "5* ? lll-g 111 oo 6 jl Tan 1 2 July 1 2 3 3456789 456789 10 10 u 12 13 14 15 I? 11 12 J3 M ? 16 17 17 18 19 $ 3i 22 23 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 24 25 36 27 28 29 30 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Feb. ?.! "i "2 "3 "4 5 6 Au&- * 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 9 10 11 xa 13 8 910 11 12 13 ? 14 15 16 17 ? 19 30 '5 ?6 17 18 19 20 21 21 22 23 24 35 26 27j 22 33 34 35 Zfi 27 38 28 j_ 39 30 31 ...;. Mar. ... 1 a 3 4 5 6; Sept i, 2 3 4 7 8 910 1112 13I 5 6 7 6 9 10 11 14 15 16 17 i3i? 30! 13 ? 14 15 '6 17 18 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 28 29 30 31 26 27 28 29 30 Apr 123 Oct 1 3 45678910 3456789 t ? rn Til TC tfi 1*7 I?3 II XI II I** l6l ? 19 xj2I 21 23 2 j| 1718^1920212223! 25 25 27 28 29 30... ' 2425262728293O May it) 31 2 3 4 5 6 7 8;'Nov. ... 1 a 3 4 5 6 010:112131415 7 8 9 13 13 Ib,5l8l9]20 2I22j 14 15 16 17 18 I? 20 33 24 25 26 27 28 25 21 23 23 24 35 26 27 I 30 31 | 28 29 30 June 1234 5; Dec 1 2 3 4 6 7 81 9 10 ii 12 5 67 8 910? *3 M ?5 ? I7 18 x9 " *3 M 15 16 i? " 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 19 20 21 23 23 24 35 [37283930! Ia6 37 38 39 30)31 ...] Eclipses for 1S86. There will be two eclipses this year?both of the Sun. 1. The first is an annular or ring-form eclipse ' of the snn, March 5th,'at 5:10 o'clock evening.) This eclipso is vlslole only for a short time at Charleston anil Washington, by sunset; but will be annular in the Pacific ocean on the equator. 2. The second, is a total eclipse of the snn, August 29th, mornin-r; visible only f<-.r a short period by sunrise. Will be total in the Atlantic ocean and near Western Africa. Dior tin? Star?. j Evening Stars. Venus, until February 18, Venus, after February IS after Pen. 3. until Dec. 3, Mars, not this year. Mars will sliinoall year. Jupiter, after Oct.. 10. .Tup ter, until Uct. 10. Saturn, after July 5. jSaturn, until July 5. Mercury, Jan. S, May Mercury, March 22, July 6th, Sept. 2, Dec. 22. i 19, Nov. 13. PI nits Brightest. Mercury, ."anuary 8th, May 6th. September 2d, December 22d. rising then just before the snn. Also, March 22d, July 19th, November 13th, setting then just after the sun. Venus, January 13th", March 25th. Jupiter, March 21st. The Four Seasons. Winter begins December 21, 1SS3, and laste seventy-nine days. Spring begins March 20,1SSG, and lasts ninetythree days. Summer begins June 21, and la?ts ninety-foui days. Autumn begins September 22, and lasts eighty nine days. Winter begins December 21,1SS 5. A "NORTHER'S" FURY. Fifteen Vessels and Scores ol Lives Lost at Panama. The Scene of Devastation Describsd by ail Eye-Witness, The Pacific Mail steamer Acapulco, which has arrived at New York from Aspinwall, brings advicos which tell a terrible story of disasters to shipping and the lo3a of life caused by the hurricane of December 2. When the gale bejran there were eighteen vessels of all rigs und nationalities laying in Navy bay at Aspinwall. At its cessation 011 December 4 only three of them had escaped destruction and many lives had been lost. Purssr Henry Emerson, of the Acapulco, said to a reporter: "I was a witnjss of the terrible norther that vhite 1 Aspinwall 0:1 December 2. The town had been partia'ly rebuilt since its complete destruction by the rebel Prestan, lately hangel, and commerce, which had beon frightened away during those troubles, had returned. Yes-els of all kinds and many nations lay at anchor in Navy bay on the morning which ushered in the hurricane. Situated in the tropics, the barometer acts imnerfectlv and a norther generally comes in unannounced, exc -pt by a squall. I At this season of the year the weather ! is always uncertain; but at that I particular time there was nothing to in iicate a storm which would induce a careful skip- | per to put to sea. Navy bay is shaped some- i thing like a horseshoe, the opening being I toward the northwest, so it is impossible for j a sailing vessel to leave if the wind and sea i are fr.>m that quarter. "At 2 P. M., ali hough the wind was not i strong, a heavy rolling s?a set in. This in- | creased to such an extent that at 4 o'clock I all steam vessels were forced to slip their | cables and go to sea. The first to attempt this was a German steamer, and so great wa3 the force of the waves that she found it impossible to get her head to the wind and drifted sideways against the dock of the Royal Mail Packet company, damaging it considerably. After a time she sucveaded in liealingsoaward aud passed out of danger. In the mean- I time the fleet of sailing craft, were using every exertion to keep from being driven ashore. The first one to part her cable was the little sloop Mark Time, manned by two men. Then followed the Norwegian bark Helden, British brig Evelina. American brig Orto.'on fall hands lost*, French bark Ocean, American bark Veteran, British bark Duuglas Castle, Norwegian bark Karnau, British bark Lynton, Austrian bark Tigri, Norwegian bark Blanche, Colombian brig Catalina, Colombian brig Stella, American schooners Frank Atwood, Aris and Rio Grande and sloop \inrt- Timrt. It is remarkable that each hour of tho galo was marked by the loss of a ve.-sel. "The loss of !ife is variously estimated and not yet ascertained, few, however, placing it bolow lifty and many above a hundred. The thrilling scenes which took place during thj storm would lill a book. On the afternoon of Thursday three men were seen clinging to a buoy not far from shore. It was impossible to get them through the surf. When night closed they were still there. In tho morning they were gone. The most heartrending incident of the storm was that of the captain of tho bark Lynton. With his wife and two children, one a babe in arms, he was seen clinging to the wreck of his vessel. The chief officer of a French pteamer and four sailors volunteered to go to their rescue. When near them an enormous wave broke over their boat and the mate was swept oir and drowned. Discouraged tho men put back to their vessel, r.n I tho chief engineer took the place of the ljst mate. He snared the fate of his brother oflicer. The boat's crew kept on and succeeded in saving the woman and her babe. The lather wa< drowned beiore assistance reacueu mm. "The total loss is said to be not less than $1,000,000, most of which is covered by insurance. It it seven years since a ncrther visited Colon, and it is fortunate that the intervals are so long, else traffic with that port would be greatly reduced. The schooner Frank Atwoo.l, of New York, which was lost, is notable as being the vessel on which Boss Tweed effected his escape." JBUJiJNLD TU JJJtlATJi Thi tccn Per ons I ?*e tlieir Lives at a Fire in England. At Plymouth, England, a few days ago, a tenement house on Love street, in a low and squalid neighborhood, took fire and a terrible calamity resulted. The flames burned rapidly and fiercely, an<i wh n at last subdued twelve calcined human bodies were found among the ruins. Twc others were missing, and in all probability they, too, had been burned to death. One '? ??inf i*v? wnp / JiIl'Nq,! 4--v V\*t UIHU1 VUliaiU YiLUUl ?? UO VJUOUCU U / piV?*_VO 1/jr jumping from a high window to the stieot; Several of the occupants of the burninj building, in their fright, ignored the iire-escapjs and, throwing bedding to the pavement, forty feet below, jumped from windows. A number of these had logs and arms broken by the fearful leap. A harrowing incident of the calamity was the appearance of a youth named Bickford, who, with his little sister under one arm, hung suspended from a window by the other for some minutes until the flames surrounded him and caused him to lose his hold and fall to tlio ground. lie had both legs fractured. The child was also severely injured. The intensity of the flames gave the building the appearauce of a furnace, out this did not deter the firemen, many of whom entered the house and by a heroic struggle succeeded in rescuing several persons. ' -,-V ' - (V : ;, SUMMARY OF CONGRESS. Senate Sessions. Fifth Day.?The chair laid bepore the Senate a joint resolution of the legislature of Connecticut urging Congress to pass, wis faout unnecessary delay, a bill to provide for the Presidential count,... Mr. Hoar, from the committee on privileges and elections, reported favorably an original bill providing for the performance of the duties of President in case of the death, resignation or inability or both the President and VicePresident. He said it was substantially the same bill that had been acted on last year by the Senate. The only addition of importance is a provision for the repeal of sections numbered from 147 to 130, inclusive, of the revised statut?s. These provide for special elections in case of vacancies in the office of President and Vice-President. The effect of their repeal is to continue the successors to the presidency in office until the next general election. The bill was placed on the calendar for early action. Mr. MePfierson introduced a bill to suspend the coinage of the silver dollar After an executive session the Senate received a message from the President transmitting all the correspondence relating to the appointment of A. M. Keiley as minister to Italy and his subsequent appointment as minister to Austria. Sixth Day.?Mr. Edmunds introduced a bill granting a pension to Mrs. Julia D. I Grant, and another bill granting her the franking privilege. Mr. Edmunds also favorably reported the bill to relieve General Alexander R. Lawton, of Georgia, of his po 1 litical disabilities. At Mr. Edmunds' request the bill was immediately considered and passed... Mr. Hoar discussed bis bill providing for the presidential success on.... A discussion took place on Mr. Frye's report providing for a code of joint rules for both houses of Congress. Among the rules adopted, after considerable debate, was one prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquor in the capitol. Seventh Day.?Discussion of Mr. Hoar's providential succession bill was contiuued. Mr. Maxey favorod, and Mr. Edmunds opposed tho bill....Bills introduced: By Mr. Teller?Providing for tho free and unlimited coinage of the silver dollar. By Mr. PJumb -?Extending the provisions of the bounty act to soldiers discharged witbin two years from the date of their enlistment on account of disability incurred in the line of duty. By Mr. Ingalls?Providing that on the representation of two heads of departments U> tho chief justice of the supreme court of the United States, that the President is unable to discharge the duties of his office, the chief justice shall convene the court, and it shall detirmine the nuestion of such alleged inability. By Mr. Manderson?Providing l or tin pensioning of all persons who served at least one year during th3 war and were either discharged after such term of service, upon surgeon's certificates of disability as no longerfit for military duty, or who, after like term of service, were discharged with re-enlistment clause stricken from their certificate of discharge. Eighth Day.?The feature c; TM Senate 011 the eighth was the debate between I Messrs. JbJvnrrs ana .tcimunas u[,on toeamenament of the latter to the Hoar presidential succession bill. Mr. Edmunds desired tc have the law left standing as it is now. Mr. Evarts made an elaborate argument to show that no member of either branch of Congress was ati official of the government in the sense of the word as employed in the Constitution an:l that, thereI fore, neither the president of the Senate nor the speaker of the Housa would be eligible in his opinion to succeed to the presidency through the death or resignation of the President and Vice-President. It was Mr. Evarts' first address in the Senate, and he was listened to attentively by all the Senators. At the conclusion of the debate a vote was taken upon Mr. Edmunds' amend# ment, and it was lost by 21 yeas to 37 nays ? not a party vote, The bill was then put on final passage and passed, without iivision, in the form reported from committee.... Other business transacted during the day was the swearing in of Mr. Mitchell as Senator from Oregon, and debate upcn Mr. Butler's resolution, Air. Butler calling for a committee to inquire as to the alleged organization of the Territory of Dakota into a State and the alleged election of United States Senators. House Sessions. Fifth Day.?Mr. Morrison, from the Committee on Rules, submitted the report of that committee on the proposed revision of the rules, and it was ordered printed and laid over until the next day, permission being given Mr. Randall to submit a minority report. Sixth Day.?Mr. Morrism called up the report of the Committee on rules, and explained the provisions of the proposed now code of the rules for the House. The main feature of the report is its distrioution or tne labors of the appropriation committee among various committees, thus stripping the appropriation committee of much of its power which it has heretofore wielded. Messrs. Randall, Scott, Hammond and Cannon opposed the report, and Messrs. Gibson, Reed, Keagan and Willis spoke in its favor. The debate closed for the day without action. Seventh Day?On motion of Mr. Norwood a Seriate bill was passed removing the political disabilities of Alexander R. Lawton, of Georgia Discussion of the proposed revision of the House rules was resumed. The bill was discussed by Messrs. Herbert, Hiscock, Randal), Holraan and Blount, without action. Eighth Day.?Mr. Dibble p.sked leave to introduce a joint resolution proposing a constitutional amendment. It provides that in case of the removal from office, by duath, resignation, or constitutional inability, both of the President and Vice-President of the United States, the office of President shall devolve on the second Vice-President, who shall be voted for in distinct ballots at the same time and in like manner and for the samo term as the President and Vice-President, by electors appointed by the several States. The second VicePresident shall preside over the Senate in the absence of the Vice-Piosi- i dent, or in cas3 the office of Presi- | dent shall devolve npon the VicePresident. Mr. Randall said that be had a like measure which he would like to go with the proposition of the gentleman from Sou: h Carolina. Upon objection by Mr. Tucker, the resolution was laid aside in favor of the report on the new House rules. The debate lasted the rest of the day, and was closed in a speech approving the proposed new rules by Mr. RandalL SENATORIAL CAUCUS. Action of of (he Kepiililiian ' onatori Upon Presidential Xeinitiations. A Washington special says that "the Re" publican Senators met in caucus at 11 A. M. and continued in session until 2 o'clock. Senator Sherman resigned his positiou as chairman of the caucus and Senator Edmunds was unanimously elected to the place. This action was due to t tie fact tnat no senator i has ever been chairman of the caucus and J presiding officer of the Senate at the same 1 time, lha action of the caucus committee in the arrangement of the chairmanships of Senate committees, namely, in deciding to tender to Senator Sewell that of the joint committee of the library, and to Senator Logan his old place on military affairs, was ratitied; nearly all the time was devoted to a discussion of the line of policy to be adopted toward presidential appointments. No formal action was taken and nono was proposed. Senators expressed their views lreely, and were found to be practically unanimous against the adoption of and genoral policy of opposition, but were agreed upon the advi-ability of treating each nomination upon its merits. Opinions were expressed and generally assented to, that good men appointed to otlice because they were Democrats should be confirmed. except in case; where their predecessors were removed upon unfounded charges brought for the purpose of making pretexts for the creation of vacaneios. In such cases it was urged that the nominations should bo held up to give the removed otlieials an opportunity for vindication. Senntors who were present express the opinion that iQis pian xor iiie pxouuo %yhi ^uveui tut? course of the Republicans. The caucus ad? journed without day." Ph:tk Indian's are making an onslaught on jack rabbits west of Humboldt, Nev. A scoro or more of the red men, armed with guns, are slaying the rabbits, which are almost as large as fawns, by the dozen. a clock that was removed for safety from a house in Lexington at the time of the battle there in 1775 has just been purchased by a Boston man for ?113. It is in good running order. : ' -v o O.""" * '?'&*? mammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmrnI COLLISION ON THE BAH : One Train Plunges into Another in Georgia. Ten Persons Instantly Killed and Many More Injured. ______ ^ At midnight the other night, on the Georgia Pacific railroad, seventeen mile3 .from Atlanta, the Georgia Pacific train was run into by the East Tennessee train. Eleven persons were killed instantly, and six seriously wounded. Of the latter one died soon after, and the death of another was expected. The East Tennessee trains have the right of way over the Georgia Pacific track as far as Austell. The Georgia Pacific train pulled out of the station at 10 o'clock p. >l . At 10.-45 the East Tennessee train pulled out. The Georgia Pacific train stopped at the water tank, and While taking on water the East Tennessee train came up behind and ran into the rear end of the Georgia Pacific train. The Georgia Pacific train was what is known as the night accommodation, and was composed of stock cars and two coach*es. The stock cai-s were nearest the locomotive, and next was a coach divided into a baggage car and smoking coach. The last coacn was divided into apartments, one with sleeping berths and tho other containing regular seats for llrst-class passengers. The Georgia Pacific train had barely stopped, was running a little, so the conductor. stated, when the East Tennessee train came thundering along at the rate of twenty-fivd or thirty miles an hour. In the passenger coach of the Georgia Pacific train some of the passengers were sleeping and others were awake and talking. Without warning there came a terrible crash, and the scene was immediately transformed into one of contusion, destruction, and death. Souls were hurled into eternity, and the air was filled with the gToans , of the wounded and dying. At one side of the water tank there is a trestle, and the rear end of the last coach of the Georgia Pacific train was standing on the edge of the trestle. When the East Tennessee locomotive struck this coach it plowed its way through as far Ss the dividing partition, splitting the car in half. The shock moved the Georgia Pacific train fifteen or twenty yards, and when it stopped the escaping steam from the East Tennessee locomotive filled the rear' coach and immediately all the lamps were extinguished, the darkness making the scene more dreadful and appalling. News of the accident was telegraphed back to Atlanta and a special train sent oat. In the meantime passengers and railroad hands who were uuhurt removed the dead and wounded into the baggage cars on tbo two trains, anawnen the special train arrived they were sent on to Atlanta. The special train arrived in Atlanta early the next morning, and the dead and woundea passengers were placed temporarily in a small house near the Georgia Pacific depot. The dead were as follows: Bernard Peyton, Birmingham, Ala., attorney for the Georgia Pacific Railway company; Nathan Stanley, Anniston, Ala.; J. W. Pierce, San Angelo, Tex.; Jacob Banks, Fairburn, Ga.: Mr* Mary Banks, wife of Jacob Banks: B. Bright, Fairburn, Ga.; E. T. Hull, Forest Station, Ga.; a two-year-old child of B. Bright: two children, three and six years of age. belonging to J. K Brown. Of the wounded, who numbered ten, Mrs. Bright died soon after the accident, and C. W. Belton's death wai hourly expected. All of the unfortunate victims had been scalded by hot water and steam, and their faces and hands were terribly burned. Among the injured men was J. H. Sink, of Salem, Ala., who told his exi erience. 'I was sitting," he said, "in the rear of the sleeper, which was the last car on the Georgia Pacific passenger train, when the east Tennessee locomotive telescoped our car. There was instantly a burst of scalding hct ateam, which filled the car, and, as I afterward learned, the floor wa3 flooded with scalding water, causing terrible death to every one who was thrown to the floor and rendered helpless to get up." Among the wounded iron brought to the hospital were C. W. Bcitou, of Fort Worth, Tex., a stock dealer and a partner of A. W. ? - - ^ ? - m 1 l.ill. J .Frico, ot Jp orc concuo, iex., wuo was Kiueu instantly. These gentlemen bad on the train the famous mare Gypsy, which they had * bought in Atlanta and were taking to Texas in a box car. The car was totally wrecked, but the mare cam-? down on her "feet in the debris unhurt. This was one of the most remarkable incidents of the accident ROBERTJTOOMB?. Dnath o! the IVoted lio'-rgiau?Sketch of his C irccr. A telegram from Washington, Ga., says that General Rob&rt E. Toombs died at his home there on the 15th after a Jong illness. General Toombs was born in Washington, Wilkes county, Ga., on fie 2d of July, 1810. Ho graduated at Union college, Schenectady, in 1828; studied law at the University ol Virginia, and commenced practice in his native place. In _ 18&> he sarved under Genera! Winfiold Scott at , captain of volunteers in tke Creek war. In 1837 ho was elected to the Georgia legislature and, with the exception of 1841, continued a member until 1815. Ho was a member ot Congress from 1845 to 1853, when he was elected a member of the Unit< d States Senate, and was re-elected for the term ending I March 4. 1805. He was a prominent member of the extreme southern party, and after the election of President Lincoln was 0:10 of the most active in persuading; Georgia to secede. The State of Georgia having passed its secession ordinauce 011 January 1!), 1S(5I, General Toombs withdrew from the Se late on the 23d of tliat month, and on March 14 following he wr.s expelled. He was a member of the Confeierate congress which met at Montgomery, Ala., was subsequently for a short time secretary of state of the Confederate States, and also eervei as a brigaiiier-geueral in the Confederate army. THE 31 ARRETS. V. NEW YORK. 50 Beef cattle, good to prime I w 9% Calves, com'n to prime veali 5 @ 0% Sheep 2 & 5 T?r'? 45* (ab 6X Hngs?Live 5% (5 5% Dressed, city 3%(? 4 Flour?Ex. St., good to fancy 3 75 (? 4 40 West, good to choice. 4 00 @ 5 75 Wheat?No. 2. ReU 94%@ Rye?State $%(?> 68 Barley?Four-rowed State... @ 85 Corn?Ungrad. West, mixed. 47 @ 50 Oats?White State .. 39 (3 41}? Mixed Western 34,3?@ 37 Hay?Med. topr. Timothy.. 91 (3} 95 Straw?No. 1, Rye 80 (3 85 Lard?City Steam 6 35 @ Butter?State Creamery.... 27 ? 32 Dairy 18 (S 26 West Im. Creamery 18 @ 25 Factory 7 @ 13 Cheese?State factory 7 @ 9% Skims ? 6 @ IX Western 8 (3 9% Eggs?State aud Penn 26 @ 28 BUFFALO. Sheep?Good to Ciiuice 2 50 @ 4 00 Lam os?Westera 4 50 @ 5 75 Steers?Western 5 20 (5 5 40 Hogs?Good to Choice Yorks 3 (30 ? 3 65 Flour?C'y ground n. process 5 2-5 @ 6 50 Wheat??io. 1, Hard Dulutli 1 Cora?No. 2, Mixed New (a 41 Oats?No. 2, Mixed Westera 40 (<t> Barley?Two-rowed Stato ? ($ ? BOSTON. Beof?Ex plate and family.. 10 50 @11 00 Kogs?Live 4 (dt> 4}? Northern Dressed.... 5 (3 5j^ Fork?Ex. Prime, per bbl...l0 00 @11 00 Flour?Winter Wheat pat's.. 5 65 5 75 Corn?High Mixed 58 (5 60 Oats?Extra White 44 (d) 45 Rye?Stato 67 (a) 70 WATERTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. Beef?Extra quality G 00 @ G 25 Sheep?Live weight 3 O 4% Lambs 4}^(6 6 Hogs?Northern, d. w 4%(g 5 PHILADELPHIA. Flour?renn. ex family, good 4 25 @ 4 50 Wheat?No. 2. Red 90%$ 90^ Rye?State @ 75 Com?State Yellow 52 (? 53 Oats?Mixed 40 @ 41 Butter?Creamery Extra Pa. 20 @ 22 Cheese?N. Y. Full Cream.- 114^/3 U