University of South Carolina Libraries
ABBEVILLE PRESS AND BANNER.! BY HUGH WILSON. ABBEVILLE, S. 0.. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1885. NO. 13. VOLUME XXX % ' ' / ; * ; ggI A PATH LEADS ALL THE WAY. I sit before my door at ove ' And looking westward softly say, Should I these garden precincts leave And cross the meadows sweet with dew. And climb the hills so deeply blue, And follow still the setting day? Still other gardens I should find And other meadows dewy sweet And still the summer roads would wind, And still the patient earth would lendThough I a thousand miles should wend? Herself unto my patient foet The rivors hido 'neath many a bridge, The better pleased they greet the day; There's guidance o'er the roughest ridge; Aye, though 'tis thousand miles or more To where she sits within her door, luero js u pain leaus tin wo v> aj>. Oh, blessed land of tho dear earth, Betwixt us still, though wide we stray, Thou seem'st to lesson thy groat girth In dusk an:l stilness for ray feot; Thy futile hinting yet i> sweet; There is a path lead3ali tho way! And at its ond she sits the same, With even face serenely bright, With lips that sweetly speak my name; While through her look and smile there plays Suggestion still of holy ways, That conquer parting, change and night. ? \f f Rr innff ?ii Snri.?afield Renubliean. BETSEY mm. "Yes," said Betsey Bliven, "I'm a Maine girl, and I calculate that I can earn my own living if anybody can." Miss Bliven was tali, erect and composed. She had seen the world, and she wasn't afraid of it. "But to think of a Bliven going out *s a hired girl!'' said Mrs. Midget, a feeble, pink-cyed little women with chronic catarrh and dejected sniffle, who had been bom Matilda Bliven and attached superstitious respect to the name. "What's the odds?" said Betsey. "I've got my living to cam, aud I mean to earn it. Now you, "Tilda,' with a compassionate glance at the pink-eyed aristocrat, you're made to work without any wages. Just for the satisfaction of being called Mrs!" And Betsey picked up her bag, shouldered her umbrella and stalked out to meet the stage, whose rumbling wheels j were beginning to sound upon the road I like distant thunder. * . Miss Bliven had visited a Boston in-1 telligencc bureau, and there they had oh-1 tained for her the address of a house in i the northern part of the State when a i reliable girl was wanted in the capacuy I of table waitress and chambermaid. "Wasres?" demanded Betsey. "Fourteen dollars," replied the gentlemanly man who stood smiling behind the desk. "Privileges?" questioned the young woman. '"A wholeday to yourself eveiy month and every other Sunday afternoon," replied the m&D. "Any other girls kept?" asked Miss BliTen. "Four," said the man complacently. "Humph!"commented Betsey. Family large?" "Well?rather," admitted the man. And the situation is very lonely, and so?" "I don't care anything about that," interrupted Betsey. "I'd as soon keep house for a hermit, or go on a desert island. "I'm not very young, and I've no followers. Let me see?Grand trunk railroad to Black Gorge, stage coach to ; JiieaK ?1.111?yps, 1 ve got me uuccuuim i all written down." And Betsey paid her fee, took her j card and creaked out of the room in a pair of brand new calfskin boot9. Miss Bliven traveled comfortably. Sho carried her lunch in a splint basket, jyid ate comfortably ob the road; she beguiled the lagging hours with a newspaper, and j was not very tired when at last the con-1 ductor flung open the door and yelled ' out "Black Gorge," at the top of a : stentorian pair of lungs. And Miss Betsey found herself stand-1 ing on the platform, surrounded by dark pine woods. "V. here's the stage?" she exclaimed. "Lady for Bleak Hall?" demanded an I insinuating voice closc to her ear. And the next minute she found herself lifted politely into a c'ose, dark wagon, with leather-cushioned seats. "Where are the others?" asked tho ] driver. "What others?" said Miss Bliven. "Two gentlemen who were with you." "There were none," said Miss Bliven. "I came alone." "Alone," said tho driver, glancing uneasily around. "All the way from AJI/O iwu ; "Yes. all the way from Boston!" said Miss Betsey, a little impatiently. ""Why shouldn't I?" You don't suppose I needed keepers, do you?" "Oh, no, ma'am; ccrtainlv not," promptly responded the man, as he climbed into hi3 9eat and took the reins. He drove circumspectly, a'ong a lonely road. Miss Bliven observed, up to the very door of a great dark stone house, hedged about with funeral-looking spruce and cedars, as Betsy could discern jn the star-sprinkled darkness, and a narrow door was opened. "I've brought her," said the driver to a respectable-looking man in black, whom Betsey at once concluded to be the butler, "all alone." "Alone! bless my soul!" cried the man. "I hope you didn't, have any trouble?" "None in the least," said the driver. "She's as quiet as a lamt>:" "Well, I never," said Miss Bliven. "Do they take me for a raging lioness, I wonder. In an instant her arm was drawn through that of the respectable man in black, and she was conducted along a dark, stone-paved passage, lighted only by a swinging lamp which hung above their heads. "Very polite they are here,I must say," thought Miss Betsey to herself. But the idea was scarcely formed in her mind when she found herself pushed, gently, but suddenly, into a small, stonepaved room with circular walls, windows high above her reach, and the scantiest allowance of iurniture that she had ever seen in her life. And. to her amazement, the polite butler was accosting her through a grated doorway, as if she were a wild criminal. "Eh!" said Betsey, "what'sthis? Let me out, will you?" "Quiet, ma'am, quiet. There's a dear!" said the respectable personage. "You will have some supper directly if only you will compose yourself.'* "But I want to get out," said Betsey, -.? rattlinsr at the door. "Quiet, quiet, qui-et!" shouted the man "riftn't r>MV X f?5 tfi VOllrSftl f !" -t ? "What on earth is the meaning of this?"' said the bewildered woman from Maine. "Now, pray be calm," said the butler. "Quiet?quiet, that's the way." "But I won't be quiet!" said Miss Betsey. "I'll tear the walls down. I'll shout for help. What have I done to be shut up like a prisoner or a madwoman?" "Gently, gentiy, urged the respectable man in black. "Jonas, I'm afraid you'll have to bring the straight jacket!" "The?straight jacket?" Miss Blivcn dropped down on the little stone bench WQC c^pmroH nirninsf thfi wall, as if a bullet had struck her. Was it possible that they believed her to be mad? "Stop!" said she, trying to calm the wild, inccssant beatings of her heart. "Don't put qn that thing. I will be quiet." "There's a dear soul'" said the man in caressing accents, as if he were reasoning uith a fractious Infant. "It's a great deal the most sensible thing you can do." "But there's some mistake here," pleaded poor Betsey, on whose brow, in spite of the cbiliness of the night, great drops of perspiration had broken out. "I'm not mad." "No, no," said the man. "Of course not. You shall have some tea directly and a slice of dry toast, and?" "Bronson," called out a clear, distinct voice, "vou're wanted! Where are you? What are you doing?" "I'm with the new patient, sir," answered <he respectable man. She's quieting down very faat, and?" "What's the man talking about?" in- ; J tcrrupted the voice, shrill, sharper and more distinct still. "The new patient ( j has just come by special conveyance from ; Warrentown." "Then who is this?'.' gasped the re- ; i spectable man, hi3 lower jaw falling like | that of a fi6h. "I'm Betsey Bliven," said our heroine, i "Let me out, I say! Betsey Bliven, i n from Maine. I'm the new waitress and b chambermaid at $14 a month, and they've li taken me for a madwoman." j r< "Hush?hush?sh! For heaven's j v sake!" whispered the respectable man in a black, as he made haste to unlock the t door. "Nobody is mad here?they're 1 g only peculiar. I'm sure ma'am, I beg si < SV.11. nor.lnn Rllf Wl> IVPfP PYn^ntin"' I i< Mrs. Lamarque, from Portland, and you e correspond almost exactly with the dc- a scription, and we didn't know that the . p new waitress would be here until to-mor- v row. And Mr. Lamarque is subject to I 1: dangerous turns, and- -and I hope, v ma'am, you won't mention this to the I superintendent." d "No," said Betsey, with a grim ' p chuckle; she was beginning to sec the ci humor of the thing now. "So this is a si ?madhouse, eliif" : "5: "It's a private sanitary rcfreat," said ! w the respectable man. Very sclcct and ci exclusive. I'll introduce you to the tl housekeeper at oncc, ma'am, if you'll lc step this way. You'll find her a most s: ladylike person, ma'am." h "She ain't mad, is she?'' asked Betsey. . cl "Not at all," said the man rather ; 13 shortly. j qi j "Ah," said Betsey. "I didn't know n: I but that everybody in this establishment tl j was a little cracked in tlie upper story. Mr You must be or you would have uever j tc ; taken mc for one of yourselves." To which taunc the respectable man ti I had no answer prepared on the spur of w ; the moment. j gi J Three months afterward Miss Betsey ! hi i Bliven wrote to her cousin, Mrs. Mid- ai j get: : bi "I'm in a mad house, Matilda, my le ' dear," she expressed herself, "and pi | really, except for the name, I find ti ! everything very nice and comfortable.*; ai We're very select, and on the whole I ; pi find society here a good deal politer it and more ceremonious than it is outside j ^ the walls. And I suppose you'll say ti that I am as mad as the ladies and gen- I M tleraen that I wait on, when I tell you 1 at that I'm engaged to be married to Mr. j b( Babcock, the head keeper. But I'm j w getting rather partial to insane people ' Si and really I see my way clear to doing fli some good in the world" if I conclude to ai stay here permanently." b^ So Miss Biiven found the place a lifelong benefice, and when Mrs. Midget j H< was asked by thecousinhood, "what luid j in become of Betsey," 6hc was wont to d< answer in a nasal whine: i al "Poor dear! she's gone into a lunatic- lij ?3ylum and she's married to the head p( keeper and I don't know but what it is rh as bad as being crazy one's self. But si' Betsey seems to like it. Betsey always m was peculiar." di The llomance of It V] The story of General Grant's life savors C? more of romance than reality; it is more j cc like a fablu of ancient davs than the his- ! tory of an American citizen of the nineteenth century. As light and shade pro- 0, duce the most attractive effects in a picture, so the contrasts in the career of ! rQ the lamented general, the strange vici3- ^ situdes of his eventful life, surround him with an interest which attaches to few gt characters In history. _( His rise from the obscure lieutenant to the commander of the veteran armies of the great republic; his transition from a ^ frontier post of the untrodden West to ! Jj. the executive mausion of the nation; his ! sitting at one time in a little store in I a Galena, not even kuown to the Congress- | man from his district; at another time ! striding through the palaces of the old | l; world with the descendants of a line of i j kings rising and standing uncovered in j av his presence; his humble birth in an Ohio : town scarcely kuown to the geographer; | ^ his distressing illness and courageous j ^ death in the bosom of the nation he had ev saved?these are the features of his marvelous career which appeal to the ?c imagination, excite men's wonder, and i fasciuate the minds of all who make a u:? ui/> ! Pl OIUUJ Ui liiO IJUU. Many of ibe motives which actuated j him aD(l the real sources of strength em- ' ployed in the putting forth of his singular powers will never be fully under* ge stood, for added to a habit of communing much with himself was a modesty j jj which always seemed to make him shrink w, from speaking of a mutter so personal to j him as an analysis of his own mental ! | powers, and those who knew him best sometimes understood him the least. His i most intimate associates often had to judge the man by the results accom- ge plished, without comprehending the ^ causes which produced them. Even to j * the writer of this article, after having ^ served with the general for nine years ^ continuously, both in the Held and the i r I presidential mansion, he will in some re| spects always remain an euigma. His ^ memoirs, written on his deathbed, to be published only after his decease, furnish the first instance of his consent to un- 1 bosom himself to the world. In his in- , ,tj tercourse he did not study to be reticent ' about himself; he seemed rather to be {L unconscious of self. While visiting St. Louis with him while he was President, wj he made a characteristic remark showing je how little his thoughts dwelt upon those j ' events of his life which made such a ' deep impression upon others. vj Upon his arrival a horse and buggy were ordered, and a drive taken to his j farm, about eight mi'.es distant. He stopped on the high ground overlooking i aT the city, and stood for a time by the ^ side of the little log house which he had ! ^ built partly with his own hands in the ; jg days of his poverty and early struggles, j u Upon being asked whether the events of j the past fifteen years of his life did not j j^j I seem to him like a tale of the "Arabian ! Nights," especially in coming from the ' White House to visit the little farmhouse j ? of early days, he simply replied, "Well, j n] I never thought about it in that light." j jr ? General Porter, in Hunter's. | ! 30 "Second Wind." p, Every one who has run a mile kno\v9 ' in what it is to gain a "second wind," : hi though he may not be able to explain "] why one minute he is out of breath, and then feels as if he could run several miles. ! fr A writer in Longman's Magazine gives I pr this clear explanation of the fact: j th The reader may not be aware that in th ordinary breathing we use only a portion | N". of our lungs, the cells at the extremity j lei not being brought into play. I fa This is the reason why those who are I m not "in training," and who try to run for j any distance, soon begin to gasp, and j la unless thev are courageous enough to j re persevere in spito of the choking sensa- ! pe tion, are forced to stop. But if they will ; la persevere, the choking goes off, and the at result is what is technically known as hi "sccond wind." When the second wind H is fully established the runner does not la become out of breath, but goes on running as long as his legs will carry him. m I know this by experience, having been p< accustomed for some years to run three ss miles every morning over a very hilly hi road. The fact is, that on starting, the furthest portions of the lungs arc choked le with air, and the remainder do not supply ! w air enough to meet the increased circula- j tion caused by exercise. I YY By degrees, however, the neglected w cells ccme into play, and when the en- YY tire lung is in working order the circula- P tion and respiration again balance each 30 other, and the "second wind" is the re- w suit. j b; * Now let the reader repeat his experi- j b< mcnt of holding his breath against time, ! but first let him force out of his lungs ;? every particle of air that he can expel, Yr and theu draw as deep a breath as his b< lungs will hold. If this be repeated C seventy or eighty times by way of imitation nf tho whale, the exnerimenter will find that he can hold his breath for a minute and a half without inconvenicnce. ; Should he bo a swimmer, he should always take this precaution before "tak- , ?J ing a header,'' and he will lind that he v'' can swim for a considerable distance before he needs to .ise for breath. j Remember that it is not he who gives j Je abuse or blows who affronts, but the " view we take of these things as insult j ^ ing; when therefore, any one provokes you, be assured that it is your own opin- I ion that provokes you. j " - i LIGHT OF OTHER DAYS INCIDENTS IW THE LIFE OP TOH MARSHALL. fbo Krntuckian Who Gloved Crowfli wtih 19 Klo'iifcn-c and 7lad? Mght Hideous with Orjlc*. "Tom" Marshall, of Kentucky, was j aarked character in his day and time, iut died, like Reverdy Johnson, withoul paving, so far as can be ascertained, an} ecord of his career. Mr. Marshall was cry fond of narrating his experiences, nd* if they could be written as they were old and word-painted in his own lan;ua<*e they would be, indeed, a veritable etting rf colloquial gems, admixed, it i true, with much dross. Tom Marhall's life was fitful and fateful, and, Ithough possessed of talents and accomlishments far beyond the average oi ery great men, his fault consisted in .?i. ?< * . . 4? ..?,1 .-.ri ii;xv ui aunii) tu iJiiv lutui iu liuuu a^Aantage. It was in the fall of 1830, after the Inian summer of the Northwest had assed and gone, and Ihe air had beome sharp and chilly, when Tom Marhall made his appcarance at St. Paul, linn. He was unseasonably, indeed, 'rctcliedly, clad, presenting every indiitiou of straitened circumstances, but ic good people of that city, nevertheiss, made him welcome, and expressed itisfaction with his announcement that e intended to lecture upon the lives and baracters of George Washington and [enry Clay. The writer made his acuaintance at that period, and, in comion with his colleagues of the press and ie citizens genera'ly, busied himself to iduce appreciative audiences to listen > his addresses. Although unkempt, unshaven and undy, bearing the appearance of a man ith whom fortune had dealt neither sntly nor generously, Tom Marshall Vnmanlf nrnnrllv Rtrnio'lif- no nn row, he strode through the streets uttoned to the chin in a drap d'etc coat, aving to impertinent conjecture the resence or absence of a shirt, yet, neverleless, the very incarnation of dignity id assumed superiority. The St. Paul 2ople, with their accustomed ho^pitaly, fraternized with him in traditional Western fashion, and as a consequence le bowl flowed freely to the music of x. Marshall's superior conversational tractions. Within a brief period every>dy came to know him, and as there ere many noted characters resident at t. Paul at that particular period the nts of their association came togethei id many Promethean spurks were therej struck and scintillated. "When the evening arrived for the de?ery of his lecture upon George Washgton, Mr. Marshall appeared yadlv un:r the influence of "the rosy." Nothing >ashed, however, he orated upon the "c, character and services of the Pater atria; in glowing periods and ornate lapsodics, but interspersed with occaonnl commonplaces which grievously arred the effect of an eloquence almost vine. His succeeding address upon enry Clay was a repetition of the preous lecture in all its beauties of coniption on the one hand and attendant >arsenesses on the other, and the alienees naturally became indignant, if )t disgusted. Having reaped a plente13 harvest of dollars, the proceeds of s lectures, he forthwith proceeded to am the town night and day, in a conquous orgie. Meeting him in the street one day he ated he had just learned a lesson in >litcncss. He'had met an Indian, he id, clad in all the gorgeous array of lint, feathers, trinkets and "blanket, ruck with the apparent majesty of e Indian's presence, his hand involunrily sought his pocket and drew forth silver half-dollar, which he proffered a token of pcace and admiration. The (original took the coin, silently bowed s thanks, and with the combined digty of Scipio and Jugurtha, strode vay. "Ic was the most magnificient ecimen of untutored courtliness and ttive grace I ever saw," quoth Mr. Marall. He was much disturbed, hower, when informed that Indians were eat beggars, and their cupidity knew > oounas. One cold, stormy evening Marshall it in an appearance at the Winslow >use, evidently suffering the cffects of protracted debauch, lie was the very rsonification of wretchedness and sufring, and approaching the stove, then nding forth its grateful heat, lie held s benumbed, skinny hands over it, ivering to the very marrow. All he said us "Poor Tom's acold!"and the guests ated in the foyer gazed upon the odern King Lear with eyes of distress1 sympathy. In a few minutes he awed out sufficiently to peer about in quaint, inquisitive manner, when obrving a group of persons seated neat r, lie cxclaimcd. "Gentlemen, I do not tend to be offensive, but may I be inged if I ever in my life saw so many >ok-nosed men fogether at onetime!" voluntarily the guesfs took each other's mensions, and sure enough it happened at all of their noses were of pronounced :>man architecture. Tom Marshall happily broke the sigficant silence by loudly exclaiming: Landlord, what time do you have snpr?" "Supper at 7," hconicallv replied e host, the chick pointing to a quartet 7. A dead silence fell on all around, hinVi hq r?lnr?lr cfmrOr 7 tvk in. rruptci by Mr. Marshall, who, thrustg his hand into his pocket, extracted set of false teeth, and snapping them ciously into hismouth, shouted .""Now ing on your supper and be hanged to iu!" How Tom Marshall managed to get ray from St. Paul nobody ever knew, it the next time the writer met him was Nashville, Tcnn., during the spring of IG4, after the defeat of Hood's forces r General George II. Thomas. He was like condition as when at St. Paul, :aring marked traces of dissipation id in distressed circumstances. He was ;ain befriended, and the theatre eniged for him to deliver a lecture upon aarlemagne. The house was fil'ed om pit to dome at $1 a head, and. to e surprise of everybody, he was duly ber. He opened his discourse upon the rench soldier-monarch by paying glowg tributes to his virtues, and quoted s dying adjuration to his son Louis, Love your people as your children; loose your magistrates and governors om those whose belief in God will eserve them from corruption, and see iat your own life be blameless." At lis juncture he drew a comparison with onn'fl^n linnn nnrfn nnrl tliovniffnr i hn cture was devoted to the Bonaparte mily, to the utter exclusion of Cbarlcacne, whose name was heard no more, lie-enforced with several hundred dolrs, he abandoned the lecture field and turned to the wine cup. His next apiarance was at a meeting of New Engnd men celebrating Forefathers' Day Nashville, upon whom lie obtruded 3 unwelcome and inebriated presence, e refused to retire, and proceeded in nguagc more forcible than polite to nounce the I'ilsrrim Fathers, Plyoiith rock and all that thereunto apirtained. "Vou internal idiots," he ;claimed. 'you know nothing of the story of your country. Celebrating arefathers' Day, are you? The fathers ft England in order that they might orship God in their own way and make enbody else worship as they did. hat about your blue laws, your Salem itches and persecution of the Quakers? 'hat about Roger Williams, whom the uritan fathers banished, and who ught freedom of conscience else1 T T ii 11.. 1.. ueru; * nu juianjr uiuu^ui iu ??uj f a policeman and lodged in the cala)o.se. Returning: to his home in Kentucky lortlv after this episode, he died ucru ersailles, AVoorlford connty, Septemjr 22, 18G4, aged sixty-four years.? h tea go News. A Broken Heart. The term broken heart as commonly jplied to death from excessive grief, is 3t a vulgar error, but may aiise from iolent muscular exercise or strong menil emotions. The affection was, it is slieved, first described by Ilarvey; but nee his day several cases have been ob>rved. Morgagni has recorded a few camples, among them that of George of Euglaud, who died suddenly of lis disease in 17(H), and, what is very irious, Morgagni himself became a vie m to the same malady. CREMATED ME. I1 i The Fate that Ovortook Two c Brothers While in Jail. ' I i Ail Arkansas Crowd Burn Them in : J Their Oslls- j * \l i>espatcnes irom ?> asumgoon, Arit., scaio that great excitement provniled at Murfroes- j S1 1 boro over the burning of the Polk boys by a i n mob in the Pike county jail at tho latter j l> 1 placo on Sunday night Tho mob, consist- b ing of about seventy-five men, broke into | tiio jail, and, as on a previous occasion, i ? tried to shoot tho Polk brothers, who | are charged with murder, to death. Finding ?, that tho location of llieir cell was such that n tho two prisoners could keep out of the range of the bullets, the mob hauled a lot of wood E to the jail, piled it around tho iron cell, satu- fi rated tho wood with coal oil and literally di roasted bo*,h the prisoners alive. c< The Polk brothers, Sylvester and Henry, fi were in jail for killing a poddler named tt'il- sj liams, and three previous attempts had been d made to lynch them, tho most notable of oi which was on Wednesday, tho l'Jth of Au- TM gust, when a mob from thesurrounding coun- oi try visited Murfreesboro. Thoy first fired a few st shots into tho cell occupied by the brothers, cl They then broke two holes through tho wall, ai one on the west and the other on tho south ir sub, through which six men wore seen to en- w ter. ThesJgot on top of tho cells and poured coal oil down into them and set fire to it, but p thoy only succeede 1 in making it bum in one b cell, all tho bedding, clothing, etc., being Jj consumed. jii They then began to use dynamite, and thoro were three or four terrible explosion? inside of the jail. Bo severe were tho shocks that it , caused the ceiling of the jail to fall with a ' great crash. Tuo window glass, which was j largo and heavy, all shattered to pieces except two or threo panes on tho etist side. Tho numt\ni? r\f L'lmto firo'1 thn fonrfnl r.m^rk nf 1.1m dynamite, together with the firo and smoke Jc to bo soon in the jail and the perfect sileuce I K of the prisoners inside led all who were near li: enough to see and hear to believe that tho Polk brothers were certainly kilted. Upon b; examination, after the party left, however, n: they were found unhurt, but were somewhat a jarred by the explosions, the heaviest of which occurred uuuer the corner of the cell di in which they were confined. se After- gaining an entrance to the cell iD ei which the prisoners wera confined the mob ol was held at bay and finally driven from tho ft jail by the younger Polk, who had been provided with a pistol by tho jailer. Whon tho c( mob visited the jail a committee of two jn with shotguns was appointed to visit n Sheriff Pagan and demand the keys. They did so, with guns presented, after calling Mr. Fagan out. He first turned as if ho were v' going to get them, which throw tho commit- 7!l t.'e off their guard. He tlion drew his pistol and told them they could not get the keys J? unless they were better men than he was. Aft;r a little parleying they concluded to do without the keys and took their leara g< A friend of Mr. Fagan was with him at pi tho time, and, although the sheriff knew T what would follow his refusal to deliver up e? the keys of the jail, it is said he bolievod the W I jail sufficiently strong to resist any attempt B or a moo 10 enter iu w Tho failure seems to have exasperatod the fc mob to greater fiendishness, and after warn- ac ing had been sant to the officers that another attempt would be made, the gaug made thoir appearance again on Sunday night with tho horrible result above stated. C? LATER NET7& ju A bronze statue of Commodore Perry was a unveiled at Newport, K. I., a few days ago, with appropriate military and civic ceremo- s], nies. m Ex-Congressman Scott Lord, a noted ; lawyer, and once partner of Ex-Senator Rosi coe Conkling at Utica, N. Y., died a few cc ! days since at Morris Plains, N. J., aged sixty- hi j five years. | Massachusetts Prohibitionists at their ; State convention in Worcester nominated a f i ticket headed by Thomas J. Lathrop for li: j governor. The Mississippi Republican State commit- ^ tee at a meeting in Jackson City adopted a jn resolution which says: "In view of the fact w that an organized opposition to tho Demo- ^ cratic party in this State this fall is useless, (e because of the well known impossibility of m securing at tho polls an honest election, it is w. the sense of tho Republican State committee ^ that no convention be called looking to the t|] nomination of a State ticket by the RopubliI can party." ia The President has appointed Rensselaer Jjj | Stone to bo collector of internal revenue for a the first district or Illinois, m place oidoei D. Harvey, suspended* L Seitemher returns to tlio department of ai agriculture indicate a largo yield in the corn ^ and cotton crops, a general average for all (j I spring wheat of against 93 in August, E and a general average in winter wheat of 05.8 against G3 in July. The expulsion of foreigners from Ger- p., many and Austria continues. Hundreds cf c | destitute Poles, expelled from Silesia, are j], j flocking into Warsaw aud Cracow. Accord- 00 j ing to tlio Austrian papers over thirty-five 1 tliousand inoro I'oles will shortly bo ejocted j* j by the Prussian authorities, among them-0,- 0f : f-OJ Austrian subjects aud 1,000 of French ch j origin. w The Spanish government has dispatched a special messenger to Berlin with a note to ej j Germany. Tho note requests Germany to co j renounce nil intention of establishing a suz- ex crainty over tin Carolines and Pelew islands. | Without such guarantee, Spain must decline j? j to givo satisfaction for tho recent insults to \V the German embassy at Ma Irid. pi i Coi xt Paul Festetics. of Hungarv, has fa killed M. Pochy, son of the president of the j Hungarian delegation, in a duel. (j{ n, i ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. ? : Annual Reunion at rfetcaffo-t.cn> I erai Sherman on General Grant. The eighteenth annual rouuion of tlio So! ciety of the Army of the Tennessoe was held UI at Chicago. A business mooting was held in ni : the morning, at which about 200 oflicers and I members of tho society were present. General William T. Sherman, president of the associ- ^ ation, was in the chair. On tho stage with tv him were General Logan and Governors aI Marshall, Oglesby, Sherman and Fletcher. In the body of the audience were I Generals Belknap. John B. Sanborn, M. M. j Bone, Clinton B. Fiske, Hickenlooper, Force , j and others. The secretary reported that * four members had died during the year, viz.: General U. S. Grant, Colonel D. N. | Welch, Captain John E. Jones and i Major Josiah Barber. A committee was appointed 1o draft appropri- s I ate resolutions in view of tho death of ^ | General Grant, and his widow was 01 i elected a substitute member of tho society, as G ! wore also tho widows of General Crafts, J. tf ! Wright and Major Josiah Barber. After tho s;I appointment of committees to sslect oflicers c' | and a place of meoting for next year, an ad- tl joumment was taken unttl 10 o'clock the next day. At night addresses were delivered by General Sanborn, Governor Oglesby and General Sherman. The latter in tho course S of a long address on General Grant, said: "He knew little and cared less about p, I 'strategy,' and I doubt if he ever read Jomi- ,.j I ni, Grotius, or any books on tho art and laws tjj j of war, except tho West Point toxt books, i So with 'tactics,' ho never, so far as I can roi call, expressed a preference for Hardee over js I Scott, Oasoy or Morris. Still, ho loved to seo , order and system, and wanted his corps, divisions, brigades and regiments handy and well- m . instructed when called for. Ho aimed to | R i achiovo results, caring little for tho manner ' of j by which they were accomplished. Ho be- i I] lieved in deeds, not words?in a war of aggression, not of manreuver? and from Bel- n] niontto Appommatoxhis strategy and tac- 0] tics were tho same?ever straight to the mark 0, till all armed resistenco had cense 1 and absoluto submission to lawful authority was j promised . "To compare Grant with Alexander, Han- !V nibal, CiPsar, Napoleon or Wellington seems r" j to me folly, for ho was not similar to any one 111 of them, any moro than the period of time j j in which they existed resembled ours. No, j o\ ! each epoch creates its own agents, and Gener- j se si1 f-J rnut, mnrfl npnplv imrwrsiuintpfl t.hft df American character of 1 Sf? 1 -/?than any other i ! living man. Therefore he will stand as the re j typical hero of the great civil war in Aineri- , fe | ca of the nineteenth century'." j h: ' ! ni MARINE DISASTERS, jfi ! A Rritlali anil n? lialian Stcniucr ' J-.' Willi Tliirty-oiic l'er*on? 1 a] Information comes from <>enoa, Italy, to j tlie elTeet that t'.io st.-ainsr Viila ilo Malaga, i ir : with sixty passengers and n crow of ' ? | twenty-eight, foundered ncur Snvcna. | u When tho vessel, which was supposed 1 ... I to have struck upon a rock, was ! I found to be sinkine, a terrible panic insued 1Vi | among the passengers, and tho crew, it is ; said,availed themselves of tho confusion thus create! to lower threo boat-: with which the vessel was provided, and mado goo 1 their ca- n capo from th? sinking ship. Forty-four pas- g sengers, however, uiuunged to save them- ; " selves, the remaining siiteen being drowned. ] b Tho cowardly action of tho crew has aroused ; " much indignation here. Despatches from Copenhagen liriir^ news of a disastrous collision b"twe -n the Herman j gunboat. Blitz and tho British steamer Aitck- v land. Tho Auckland was sunk and ill tevu of j j, her crew of seventeen were drowned. ! D yTEWS SUMMARY. FnMcrn antl middle Stales In* a terrific storm near Oleati, N. Y., !eorgo Isaman, Jr., aged twenty-three, and lelvin Youngs, aged sixteen, were instantly illcxl by lightning in a barn. Two brothers named Kinney knocked [enry Lee down at a camp meeting in Unionale, Ponn., and kicked him to death. They ero arrested. The Rev. Stephen H. Tyng, Sr., for innny ears one of the'loading Episcopal ministers 1 New York city, died thero a few days nee in his eighty-sixtlTyoar. Oscah Pajiiiy, a bright Philadelphia lad ot yet twelve years old, committed suicide y shooting himself through the head with ' is father's nisfol. Tiie Boston poiice have been raiding dens f crime in that city, making a large num er of arrests. A noo for which Emmet, (ha actor, paid 1,000 was accidentally strangled to death ear Albany, N. Y. While the Rev. Mr. Clark, of the East [aven iC'onn.) Congregational church was nishing the opening prayer on Sunday, a ove tlew into the church and alightod on the >ntre gallery. When tho pastor read om the first chapter of John the clause, "I iw the Spirit descending from hoaven like a ove and it abode upon hini,1'the dove perched n tho open Bible. At the close of the service, Lr. Clark said that this might be emblematic al f the presonce of tho Divine Spirit. As ho i lid this the bird alighted upon lushead Tho j lergyman took the winged visitor down j nd held it against his breast. Many were loved to tears, and the whole congregation ero visible affected. * Lawrence Brainerd. the defaulting exresident of tho St. Albans (Vt.) savings imk, was kidnapped at Winnipeg, Manitoba, y detectives, who forcibly convoyed him ito the United States. The annual parado of tho United Labor ganizations or Now York city arid vicinity rought out from 1:2.000 to 15.000 workiuglen and women. Many banners were car ed with inscriptions reciting tho demands ] nd grievances of the working people. A week after young Moran, a liorso j .-1 1 1 1 ? 4- * l... T> T> I, KJKUJ , IlllU UfUJl KUitfti in LUU Dl JgllLUli IjU.ILU Joney Island) race-course by being thrown t a race and trampled upon, a similar accisnt occurred at the adjacent Sheepshead ay trade. The victim this timo was a jockey a'med Ford; after falling ho was trampled Imost beyond recognition. Two passenger trains collided near Midlesex, retin., and both locomotives and iveral cars were smashed to pieces. An igineer and firemen wero killed and seven [her men injured, one or two with probably ital result Ax explosion of sulphur gas at the Otto >llierj*, ten miles from Pottsville, Penn., istantly killed one boy, fatally injured three ten and severely burned ten others. At the New \ork Prohibition State conjntion, held in Syracuse, Governor St. John as present and made an address. A full cket headed by H. C. Bascom for governor as nominated, and resolutions denouncing le liquor traffic adopted. George O. Jones has been nominated for jvernor by the New York Greenback Labor irty at the convention in New York city, here was also a convention in the samo hall, irlier in the day, of the National Antimonopoly party, but no coalition was effected, eside the candidate for governor a full cket was nominated, and a platform in conirmity with the principles of the party iopted. South and West. 13 W?u;u *5 Vll 1111*1* J uygil uuu ittlo in Illinois. The Shelbyvillo (Tenn.) savings bank Las ispended. Two men wore killod nnd three fatally inired by the explosion of a boiler attached to mill near Knoxville, Tcnn. Advices from Evauston, Wyoming Territory, state that the number of Chinamen ain at the Rock Spring mines by white iners is variously estimated at from fifty to 10. Ah Say, who is the head of Chinamen that rogion, says there were 13) missing, id he believes nearly all are killed. Two unpanies of soldiers from Kort Kred Steele ive arrived and gone into camp at Evansn. There are 2,000 Chinamen, including ifugce.?, at that place. \V. i'. mitfhfci-i., a street car driver of liattanooga. Tenn., ojcctcd Charles Wiluns, a colored man, from his car for disorsrly conduct. Williams procured a re* ilver, followed Mitchell and shot him dead. | he murderer was captured and lodged in i iiL At night an immense crowd forced its ay into tho jail. While the crowd was inrlo two companies of colored men, armed ith muskets, appeared beforo tho jail to pro ct Williams. Shots were fired and one white an was killed and a colored man fatally ounded. Williams was finally taken from s coll by the maddened crowd and hanged, lie afTair created tremendous excitement iroughout the city. TllE Rev. Charles W. Trice, a Presbytern clergyman of Cherokee, Kansas, handed inself tho oilier morning. His mind is lought to have been unsettled by t he death of brother anil sister. The safe in tho county treasurer's office at inn Creek, Mo., was blown open by burglars id robbed of $7,000. Pkhuy Whiti.ock, twenty-eight years old, ent to tho house of his father in-law. E. G. hi n.?i Kio" milv, and her sisters (^lassie and Tmchic), id then killed himself, Tho three sisters ere mortally wounded. Thk commissioners of emigration of the Date of New York have reported to the erotaiy of the treasury that during 1SS* ere arrived at the port of New York 330,- j J emigrants, allot' whom were examined j r the board, and of such examinations 1,1-14 ) rsons were found to bo either convicts, j natics, idiots or persons unable to take care j them solves without becoming public arges, and wore returned to the countries j hence they cmne. A heavy gale has prevailed on the great | kes, and many marine disasters are roporfc- I I. The schoonor Advance, of Chicago, was ,psi/.;d on Lake Michigan, and all on board j cept a sailor were drowned. Miss Ida Maxwell, a beautiful young dy of Atlanta, Ua., eloped willi John Shel- I n, and the two were married. Mks Maxell's father and brother, armed with pistols, esonted themselves at Shelton's house, and tho affray which ensued all three men were tally wounded. The Lee brothers, two of tho most noted 1 speradoes in Texas,have been hunted down ' id killed by three detectives. Rewards ag- j cgating $7,(.'Oil had been offered for their ijjture doad or alive. Wnsliinffton. Reports received from various quarters ow that the recent withdrawal ot' one and j ro dollar bills from circulation by tUo treas I y has resulted in notes of those denomiitions reaching a slight premium. Reports received at the war department j om the Indian Territory indicato that the j rms of the President's recent proclamation j i regard to the removal of cattle are being i illy complied with, and that the cattle men ! o moving their cattle as rapidly as possible. President Ci-.evet.and has returned to io White Houso from his trip to the Adijndacks. The President has appointed Mrs. Marion . Mulligan, of Chicago, III., widow of a jlonel in the Union army, to bo pension ;ent at Chicago, vice Miss Ada C. Sweet, jsigned. Captain Davis, of tho Fourth United tates cavalry, under date of Ilunchana, lexico, reports to tho war department that i the 7th ult. Lieutenant Day surprised eronimo's camp in the Sierra A "adre inounlins, killed fivo Indian- and captured fifteen luaws and papooses. Nana, the old Apache lief, was one of the killed. Geronimo, lough wounded, escaped. Foreign. TnE princo of "Wales has been traveling in ' weden. Twenty-five deaths in one day of small- j jx in Montreal has induced the adoption of ... Ua ?uruu?> incuaui ua iu aiuj? vuu a|;i cuu ul iuu i isoaso. | Mr. Stallo, tho new United State winter at Rome, has been heartily welcomed y tho Italian press. Fixom Berlin it is rumored that Princo Bismrck iutoiuLs to proposo to tho Gorman ' eichstag a further increaso of the duties on j 'reals against all countries hut Austria* tungary. General dk Col'kcy, the French comlander in Annam, reports that serious disrders have occurred in Quinhon. Numer* is Christians have been ma-sacred and a ; umber of villages burned. The Itosnhorc F-UUptina, of Cairo, Egypt, is again bacn suppressed for publishing ari-les which were doomed injurious to French terests. The dispute between Germany and Spain rer tho Caroline Islands is to bo amicably ttled. Spain has responde I to Germany s smand for reparation for the insult to the erman embassy at Madrid by expressing gret at the occurrence and declariug tlieofnder.s will bo punished. Emporor William is telegraphed to King Alfonso that he lias > intention of trenching upon Spanish | gilts, and that Germany will abandon all ; signs upon the Caroline [slands. Advices from South Africa stato that :>ngo cannibals have attacked several staons of tho African association and roasted j id devoured a number of whites. Uiicr.'s appeal lrom ms sentence or ueaui ] is lioen dismissed, and tho belief is general 1 Winnipeg that the half-breed rebel ieailer ill be hanged. The fishing schooner Guardian Angel rap- ! r.ed off the coast of Newfoundland dnr- j g a squall, ami all on board except one man ! . re drowned. Sn.VKR has bo .mi found in several old j lines by tho Mormon colonists who have j one to Corraliittas, Mexico. The mi tie j have , ot been worked for a century and wore ought "for a song-' by a few miners among 1 In Mormons Ciiakles Sahokant, of Canterbury, N. j I., has a scafToid of liny in his barn which i ras put there thirty-four years ngj. The ay is j-ellow from age, but its quality is in 10 way impaired. . 'tm A GREAT MARINE DISPLAY. Tho International Yacht Rncc 01? New York. The Two Contending Boats Accompanied by Hundreds of Craft. The big, ewer-shaped, solid-silver trophy known as tho America's cup, emblematic o? tho yachting supremacy of tho world, was originally offered by the R)yal Yacht squadron of England as a prize to be sailed for by yachta of all nations ovor the squadron's course around the Isle of Wight It has been frequently, but erroneously, called the Queen's Cup. Thirty-four years ago the American yacht America crossed tho ocean, and in a contest against tho best yachts of Great Britain easily won the prizo. Twice English yachts have come to this country for the purpose of regaining the trophy, but on each occasion bavo been beaten by the American contestants? Tho English first tried to get the cup back in 1870. Commodoro Ashbury, of tho Royal Thames Yacht club, challenging for it and bringing over bis schooner yacht Cambria. She raced against twenty-four yachtsof the New York Yacht club squadron, and was badly defeated. But Mr. Ashbury hod grit, and he built biin a new yacht called the Livonia and crossed tho seas next year, determined, if possible, to carry back the cup in triumph to the Castle of Cowes. But it was not to be, and the Livonia was defeated by tho schooner yachts Columbia and Sappho in a series of races. A /m THE PURITAN. Since that time the Americans have not had to defond the cup against a "crack" English yacht. The Canadians sent down the Countess of Dufferin in 187Gandtho sloop Atalauta in 1881. Both were easily defeated, the first bj' tho schooner Madeleine and the second by tho sloop Mischief. Now, however, the yachtsmen of America have had a matter of quite another sort on their hands. The cutter Uenesla, in the full flush of her English victories, a representative of the bust type of English yacht architecture, owned by Sir Richard Sutton, a man who represents a family that has been foremost in sports on "lSnd aud water in England for generations, an J manned by a crew of the flower of English sailors, carao across the ocean to try and regain the world's yachting championship. A series of trial races among American yachts resulted in the selection of the Puritan, built in Boston specially for this contest, as America's representative to race against tho Gonesta. Owing to a light wind the two yachts were unable to finish tho first of their series of three races, and it had to be postponed. But as the occasion brought out the most magnificent niarins pageant ever witnessed inNew York harbor, we give a description of the most notoworthy scenos and events. A vivid idea of the multitude of spectators may be obtained from the following account: About this timo the North and East rivers nnd the bay wero fairly swarming with craft. Not since tho Statue of Liberty came up in the Isere has so bonutiful a sight been witnessed looking south from tho Battery wall. The little yachts with their big spread of cauvas all set to catch tho light breeze, the tugboats, the big white tcamers, ugly lighters, merchant vessels nnd craft of ovory conceivable description and from every country passed back and forth on tho classy water, scarcoly stirred by the faint wind. An observer seated on the battery wall could not count tho boats, they were so numerous. The police boat Patrol went by with a s?4ect party of city officials on board. The tug Joseph P. Stickney sped by with the THE GENESTA. momher.j of tlio I.arclimont Yacht club on board. The mammoth steamers Grand Hepublic ami Columbia took down 7,<I0'J persons between them, gathered up at points along tho North river an I Brooklyn. The members oi t!ie New Jersey Yacht club went Jown on the steamer Lyndlnirst, while tho Sylvan Dell took down live hundred of the nemb?rj of tiu Atlantic Yacht club. On the iron steamer Sinus were tho famiiies and members of ilie 'Eastern clubs from Boston, Portland, Dorchester, Newport, New Bedford and Lynn. Tho tugboats (J.vclops, Excelsior, Ivanhoo, It. P. Cahiii, Indian, C. P. Ravmon 1, M. B. Stirbu -k. E. L. Levy and Keindeor, all crowded with people, glided past, gay with fluttering pennants. The Old Dominion steamship Breakwater, took down the bay 900 passengers recruited from Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Norfolk and Richmond. The schooner C. P. Schultz, in tow of a tug, carried about 100 Eightseers. It was estimated that fully ">0,000 men and women went down the bay to seo the race. As tickets sold from $1 to $3 each, about $125,000 was expended in this way. The Sound steamers that reached the city in the morning or the night before brought hundreds of patriotic isew iSngianders reaiiy i to bot their Inst cent on tho representative of Yankee shipcraft and Yankee seamanship. Not only the regular steamboats that ply between here and Eastern cities, but many excursion steamers that wero strangers in Now York waters wore piloted through Hell 1 Gate about daybreak and steamed down tho bay without stopping, having on boards crowds of men and women for whom tho vessels had been specially chartered. Every train that rolled into tho Grand Central depot for forty-eight hours botoro the race added* its tribute to tho living stream that flowed from New England's "rock-bound coast." Boston, Lowell, Portland, Worcester, Lawrence, Fall River, Providence, Newport, and the big and littlo fcities all sent their representatives. The eight cars of the Boston express were jammed full when that train rolled into the Grand Central depot at G:'Jo a. sr. They were nearly all solid, substantial citizens, merchants, business men, etc. Tho Luckenback anchored to tho northeast of Scotland lightship, with tho yacht committee on board. At 1:30 tho preparatory whistle sounded- Tho Briton thon had her nose to the northward, about an eighth of a inile from tho lino. The Puritan, sailing indolently to tho westward with sheets free, was not more than thnjo hundrod yards away from and abeam of tho Genesta. At the hoarse toot of tho starting whistle at o'clock, the Briton wont about on tho wind with such rapidity as to cause a cutter admirer to wonder whether she was pivoted. | Sho approached tho lino on tho port tack, j with mainsail, club topsail, foro- j staysail, jib and jibtopsail sot She pierced tho placid water nearly as noiselessly as a ' needlo passes through a piece of cloth. Thero was no trace of spray from her bilges, and j only a foatnless wake indicated her course. The Puritan went about into tho wind a few soconas mrar tnan tno JCngnshman, and carrying tho same canvas, parting two faint white-tipped curls from her wider bilges, and to every patriot's astonishment and joy, glided just under the bow of the tug and across the lino at 1 :50. The probable object of tho Genesta in selecting what was undoubtedly the windward position at tho start, was to cross the line beforo tho Puritan and hold on to this advantage. She was foiled by tho smart skipper of tho Yankee sloop. Tho Genesta immediately changed her tack. She was within forty yards of the lino, and lost nearly a half minute in stays. Nho crossed tho line at l:#":#?, just :>7 seconds nfter the blowing of the time-limit whistle. She thus lost nil of her time allowance, and was handicapped six seconds in addition. Tho Puritan also went about 011 the starboard tack, skimming along 3U0 feet to tho windward of her antagonist, and apparently increasing her advantage. Both boats were heading east, close hauled, the Genesta heeling in tho approved fashion of her typa. The Yankee showed that she could outrun and outpoint the Briton in mild weather. Seeing themselves in dancer of being worsted, the Englishmen at 1:5S out their yacht about on the pjrt tack. Her quickness in stays clicitod hand-clapping from some of tho vessels in the variegated fleet that closely followed her. The Yankeo ' boat changed her tack forty seconds later, much to the diseomtlturoof the Briton, whoso handlers seemingly hoped to go olf by themselves hunting for a favorable slant of wind. Tho Genesta turned on tho starboard tuck at 1:5U:-0, and again, jus'., lit'ty seconds lator, tho Yunkee made the satin manoeuvre. Skipper Crocker and t.io Eastern yachtsmen probably remembered how the Priscilltt won tho second trial race by a wind-seeking excursion, and were determined that the Geuestu should not h ivo a chanco to do likewise. '1 he cutter had lost by ber frequent tacking. The two yac'ita continued on the starboard tack. Tin 11.u pointing of the Puritan roused onthusins n that frequently found expression in handt / clapping and cheering aboard overy excur- J sion boat. The Bostonian steadily widened j the windward difference between hcrsolf and the Briton. Sho did not doviate .an iota from hor course, but the cutter, in her i offorts to point us effectually as the Puritan ' did, steored unsteadily. Sho always led her antagonist in tacking. She went about on the port tack at 3:07, having gone nearly eight miles on tho previous log, and headed 7 southwest by west, right through the van of l oirfrv r*i?ftw^nr1 afiininhMnfa nnrl tiirra nnrl **00 sailing craft of overy conceivablo pattern. Th-j Puritan, which was over half a mile to windward of tho cutter, followed her examplo Ave seconds later. Tho scene at this point, where tho canvas- C topped boats mingled with the steamers, ox- t; ceeded anything ever witnessed at a yacht p raco. A stranger coming into tho port might have supposed that an carthquuko had e' struck tho city, and tho inhabitants wore flee- u ing in all manner of floating things. tl All tho boats, big and littlo, turned in the wake of the racers as they passed either astern of them or across their bows. The Eliza a Hancox got dangerously near tho Genosta a several times and had to bo warned away by r tho Police Boat Putrol, on which wero Com- . missioner Voorhis, Inspector Byrnes and b many others connected with the police de- t< partment c At 51:25 the wind hauled to about southwest ^ by south and freshened considerably. The windward difference between the combatants " was then four times what it was originally, ji At 3:55 the mass of craft were abeam and to j, leoward of both racers. ' Tho Englishman . bowled past tho big schooners Dreadnought D and Gitana and the Montauk. She was t) abeam of tho old America, with General tl Butler on board, at 3:55. The flagship tl Polynia, with Vico-Commodoro Douglass, t Mr. noom uenter, \>rignc naniora, ana w two dozen other gpntlomen aboard, drew v alongside the Luckenback at -1:40 o'clock. v ThoGenesta was off again on the starboard ,J tack, after a six-mile roach southwest by b west, at 4:13. Tlio Puritan imitated her a f' minute later, pointing east-southeast. The tl Englishman again dodged through the big g fleet: of excursion boats, whilo the Puritan, d fully a mile to the windward, and constantly c adding to her gain, was on the outer edge of f: the Meet The Genesta's mainsail quivered o frequently. An Euglish yachtsman said that b this was the loosening effect of a cool, moist tl evening, to which British mainsails were pe- fl culiarly susceptiblo. h The excursion boats sighted the tug that ^ was hovering near the flag-topped turning t! float at 4:30 o'clock and immediately headed ii for it. The Yankco was then fully a mileto tho windward of the Gonesta, a difference o eijtial to a lead of nearly a mile and a third. t The time for making tho race was limited 6' to seven hours, and the turning mark was at j that time nearly four miles away from the d yachts. It was plain to everybody that the re- fi mainder of tho courso could not be covered in t tho light wind until long after 8:37 o'clock. So tho regatta committee announced to thft u surrounding boats that there would b? no g race. d j Tlio Kccond Failure. An attempt was made to have the race c take place on tho following day, and a largo v number of craft again gathered in the lower d bay to witness the contest. At about 11:80 t tho boats were less than fifty yards apart, t and in the rnanouvoring for place they came n together, the Puritan striking the bowsprit t of the English cutter and completely tearing t it away. The mniiuail of tho American d was badly damaged. Tho excitement was now greater than ever, and f the scone of-tho accident soon became a veri- t table pandemonium. As the Puritan was to \ blame for the accident the judges decidel to t rule tho American sloop out of the raca, 8 which was equivalent to awarding the victory ] to the British cutter; but tho owner of the Uenesta said he wanted a race, not a walk- I over. It was then decided that tho damage J done to tho Geiu's-a should be repaired at the a expense or tna lunuiu, ami iuuk wd iavo i should tako place oh a later day. EICFT W^ADRID, j Enraged Spaniard* Attack tlic (ier- * man Eml>a?y)*? The disputo between Geriuauy and Spain ( over iHJssossion of the Carolina islands in the j Pacific ocean has resulted in an attack by I enraged Spaniards upon the German ombas- ^ sy nt Madrid. Following are details as given by dispatches from the Spanish capital: c A sensati >n was created hero last ovenin? * on the receipt of important nows from the c Carolino Islands. Tlie Spanish war ships 0 reached Yap, ono of the islands, 011 August 1 21, and prepared to occupy it in the namo of Spain. The Spanish officers were dilatory in 1 landing troops, and on August 2i a German gunboat arrived. Although it was 7 1 o'clock in the evening, the German commauder c instantly landed a body of marines and sail- ' ors, and hoisted tlio (ierman nag over me * island. The governor of the island wished to resist the landing of the Gorman marines and sailors, but the commander of the Spanish man-of-war San Qaentin, which was the only ves-ol of that nationality in the harbor at tho time, refused to agree with the governor as to tho adoption of such a course or to lend the latter assistance. The commander of the San Quentin contented himself with making ail energetic protest: against the action of the German commander, and, on the latter's refusal to recedo from tho position ho had taken, telegraphed to Madrid for instructions. # Tho excitement over this news soon became intense. Tho successive editions of the Madrid newspapers containing accounts of the German occupation were eagerly lx>ugl\t by tho people, and excited groups stooi around i the lamp-posts and doorways of cafes heatedly 1 discussing the situation. A largo crowd soon ' gathered in front of tho German embassy, 1 attacked tho building, ami tore down the coat-of-arms and dragged it "through the * streets of the Puerta del Sol, where f they burned it in front of tho offices of tho h minister of tho interior amid yells of "Down j with .Germany." The Civil guards after- i' ward recovered a portion of it. After vent- t ing their spleen there the mob proceeded to d the French embassy and cheered frantically. Tho crowd had by this time grown much 3 larger, and, fears being entertained of tl a serious riot, troops . wero ordered d out to clear tho streets. Tho v crowd slowly retired before tho military, a On the receipt of the news, the minis- I ters wero immediately summoned to a cab- n inet council, and King Alfonso was advised c of the strained situation. He returned to a tho city to day and the ministers and the h civil and military authorities met him at the f< railroad station. Largo crowds of people lined the route token by the royal party in going to thepalace, and shouted, "Long live Spain." The king was repeatedly greeted with cheers, and notwith- [ standing tho excitement the most perfect order prevailed. A cabinet council was immediately held, and it was decided to court' * ~e "V?-? on/1 f nnm. ^ martial mo goveruur ui x up, ~ mandors of the two SpanLsh war ships which t arrived tliero on August -1, for neglect, of r duty, the latter in not immediately garrisoning the island with Spanish soldiers on their arriving there, and the former in not hoist- c ing the Spanish flag and proclaiming the j suzerainty of Spain over the island. t A lato Madrid dispatch states that the j council of ministers, with the sanction of j King Alfonso, lias framed and dispatched to c the Gorman government an ultimatum ro- ? questing Germany to evacuate the Caroline j islands. Spain in the meantime will refrain j from a material occupation of tho islands, , ami thus alFord a basis for further j parleying. Tho total number of arrests { made at Madrid in connection with tho dem* ? (lustration against Germany is 184. Tho j German consulate at Valencia received the ( same treatment at tho hands of the populace v as the Gorman embassy at Madrid. A HEAVY WEIGHT. ' Dcntli of tlie Fnilcst Woman In tho I'nitcil Mutes. Mrs. Einnn M. Markley, who was credited 1 with being the heaviest woman m the country, was buried from her home, in Lombard street, Philadelphia, a few days since. She I was known to tho amusement public as Mmo. s Victoria. Her advertised weight was over ' <;:<) pounds, and her actual weight about ~>~>0 > pounds. She was born in Reading, Ponn., I atiout thirty-three years ago, and was slim 1 and delicate throughout her girlhood, t ! At nineteen she weighed ninaty pounds 1 ! only, but from this age she ( liogan to gradually gain flesh. lietweon i J three and live years ago, when she made an | ! application for an insurance policy, she j . weighed ".'SO pounds. Afterward her weight' ' | increased rapidly, until she gained the dis- [ . | tinetion of being the fattest woman in the! ! j country, if not in the world. This honor was con.'erredou her at the "Fat Woman's Conj gress" at the Arch Street Dime nius?uni last I winter, when slio carried oil' the tirst prize, j Two years ago she was placed on exhibi-1 I tion for a short time in Chestnut street, ( j and while there sustained an injury that | finally resulted in her death. The platform . | on which her chair was placed was hastily! 1 j constructed, and she expressed her fears as' to its strength. Soon al't,cr she had moimtod : i I tho platform the suptiorts gave way and she fell to tho floor. Her ankle was sprained,' ( and soon afterward she was attacked with I erysipelas in the leg. j Her weight seoai 'd to increase during lior I [ illness, and sometime before her death nieas- i ! ureinenls of several parts of her body were j taken. The ciivuint'eroifo of her arm at the I 1 j biceps was tbirU-six inches. Her waist j < i inA.wiiro.i iat. inches, and from shoulder to j i should"!' she measured three feet and one half j 1 j ineh. The measurement across I it hips was ! ' jus* four feet On the night of her death it ' i required the full strength oi nine m -:i to car- 1 t i ry her body from the seeou- 1-story front ' J room to the parlor 011 th>! gruiin I floor. j The eollin was probably the largest ever | built. It was constructed of three-inch wal- ! I nut planks, anil was stoutly braced on the ' ; inside with a dozen heavy iron bars. It was 1 j six feet ten inches long, forty-six inches wide, ( ! and threo feet deep. It was too lar^e to pass j through the door, and was taken through the 1 I wide single window an! carried to the un- l j dertaker's wajon by twelve stout men. I i There was not a hearse in the city large j enough to contain the eollin. The interment ( J took place at the Odd Fellows' cometery. Her j burial was aguiust a wish expressed by her j 1 shortly before her death. Sir* had a morbid ' fear that her b >dy would be stolen for tin 1 purpose of dissection, and asked that it b? | cremated. Her husband's limited means pre I vented him from carrying out her wish. A TORNADO'S FURY. . Sli Ln Ohio Town Swept Almost Out i or Existence. ton noc clo; lundreds of Houses in Euins and hor Many Fatilitiss, JjJj mz A terrible tornado struck Washington ^.r< Jourt House, a city of 4,000 inhabitants, tweny-five miles west of Springfield, at 8 o'clock son . M , and almost literally swept it from the Ion arth. It camo from the northwest and broke pon the town very suddenly, carrying every- fai; bing before it. The tornado whirled up cro tourt street, the main business thoroughfare, ^C1 nd ruined almost every business block on it, t least forty or fifty in alL Hardly a private 1 esidence in the town escaped, fully 400 hac uildings going down. Tin Baptist, Presby. jrian, and Catholic churches all suffered the ur ommon fate. The Ohio Southern, Pan Han- arr le, Narrow Gauge, and Midland railroad J"a opols were blown to pieces, and every build- t]lc ig in the vicinity was carried away, making Mr igrtss or egress almost impossi- wy le. The panic-stricken people were iken completely unawares, and fled from mi, he tumbling buildings in every direction 0tii hrough tho darkness. A mad frenzy seemed i o seize them, and they hurried hither aud b0< liither in their distraction, little knowing an rhither thov were fleeing. After the whirl- Th find, which lasted about ten minutes, a ^, eavy rainfall set in, which continued unaated durimr the n crht. As soon as a aw of tho cooler heads recovered J heir senses, searching parties were oranized, and the sad work of looking for the ? cad began. T.'he glimmer of lanterns proured from farm houses in the vicinity and ni: rom the few homes left standing was the ^ nly light they had to work by. Two or three &ln odies were stumbled upon in the middle of gai he street, where they were stricken down by I ying bricks or timbers. The cellars of beg ouses and every sort of refuge was filled cloi rith shivering people huddling together in tio: he vain attempt to keep warm. One babe -j i arms died from exposure. g.( Anothor account states that '* the tornado f last evening almost completely demolished anj his place. Itot a single store facing Central quare, out of forty, is left intact, and a ma- 1 ority of them are leveled. About 200 resi- thr cnces aro destroyed, and the streets are so ?>hi illed with debris that it is almost impossible "U1 o pass through them? I "All the gas went out when the storm came anc p. Bonfires had to be built in the streets to Soi ;ive light for tho searchers. The total known sex ead number five, and about fifty are in- i urod. One of the latter, manager of the ^ elephone exchange, was hurried across the j)a treet, and had one arm, one leg and his fjj, ollar bone broken. Some houses f rere lifted up and carried bodily several hun .. [red feet, and then dashed to tbe ground with p J erriflc force. The shattered fragments were 9?1 hen whirled in some instances a quarter of a i ? nile. - Relief committee is at work and all mt he houses not destroyed aro thrown open to I lie homeless. Farmers ar3 coming in by am lozens, bringing food and bedding." Bu Ths loss in Oaklawn, just across the river caj rom Washington, is estimated to be larger an( han that of the whole of Jamestown last ^ -ear. In all it is estimated that at least 200 COr mildings were either unroofed or totally de- ma troyed in Washington. The following is a 6ta 1st oC the killed: gr( Miss Hattie Forcha, aged 20, Johnnie He i'orcha, aged 12, childron of Hugh Forcha; vai Irs. Mollie Jones, widow; Miss Edith Floyd, ^ai iged 20, and a ten-year-old daughter of rhil _ ,'arrs, 1 The following were seriously injured, and ei vere not expected to live: Bernard Haggard, irm and leg broken, breast crushed, two ribs jid collarbone broken; James 0. Jackson, Net pine injured; John C. van Pelt, hurled fifty ?h ! oetand internally injured: Judge A. Gregg, erious internal injuries. Miss Kinchart, inane through fright; Charles Mercer, clerk ,'horry house, arm broken and internally inu red; ^ John W. Lewis, injured about the pjn Lead. Lod Beside the above about fifty other persons vere injured. _ . Early next morning Sheriff Rankin called fut Company B of the Sixth regiment, and Lan ho soldiers carefully guarded overy stre?t >-at sntrance to stop plundering. The city is an >:c\ iwful sight. The maiu buildings are all in uins. Atl, The loss aa near as can be estimated is fixed aoi it $1,000,000. Bin At Plain City, eighteen miles from Colum- Chi >us, Ohio, a carriage factory and mill were lemolished, and other buildings unroofed. II rhis placo is on a direct line north of Wash- HI ngton Court House, and all along south to he Ohio river the trail of destruction is re- j lorted inlike manner. hjj Reports from various parts of Ohio and In- , liana show that tue storm which devastated * Washington Court House was widespread, n Miami county, Ohio, its course was due E iast At Colesville, in that county, two cou isrns were blown down and the dwelling of i '.Ir. Winterstein was carried around and ono mo lido and end blown away. Three mombsrs c >f the family are seriously hurt. On ^la :he other side of the Miami river i grain house was blown away and , 3erry Ramsey's frame house was blown from . ts foundation and wrecked. The path of the '-a itorm was from forty rods to half a mile Pro .vide. At Cambridge City, Ind., M. Shanks' I louse was blown down and Mrs. Shanks was S_i<l njured. At Dublin several houses were Ne fvreckcd. At Seymour, Ind., and at Napo- J eon, 0., much damage is reported, but no Yo ives were lost. the A dvices from Circleville, Ohio,-state that t ho tornado passed through the country a ow miles south of that place, nnrooling . louses and blowing down fences and trees. i. very heavy rain fell. News from Wash- 1 ngton Court House is difficult to obtain, as he telegraph wires wero blown down in all t"c irections. J Dispatches from Adrian and Tecumseh, wh lich.. renort a tornado as ha vine visited ii i hoso localities, and having done considerable trii amage to property. A number of buildings (_ rero wrecked, and wheat stacks were goner- pa, lly demoralized. At Adrian a farmer named jjn; Edmunds was in his barn with two hired ^ len, when the storm struck the building. ? ompletely wrecking it Mr. Edmunds was , ariously injured, and the two men wero P?" urt, but not seriously. The tornado was ,'ie alldwed by an exceedingly heavy rain. a . 1 HUGE FRAUDS. E val TIany Indiana Towns Involved In 3 School Fund Swindles. Un TBe illegal issue of township warrants or het >rders by the three trustees of Daviess couny, Ind., to a very large amount, and their * j ecent flight to Canada have been instru- fpr nental in bringing to light a gigsn;ic swin- pri lling scheme, which is known to have been A" >racticed in several Indiana counties, and ^ ;here is at present no means ot ascertaining iow extensive such operations have bejn. lc Z-." 3 certain, however, that in Daviess county , irders to the amount of $75,000 or $100,000, ter md probably more, have been issued and sold o innocont parties, and there are rumors of ike transactions in other places. An attorley of Indianapolis, who has just returned roin Fountain county, says that a largo unount has been issue 1 from that ind Vermillion counties, and a dispatch from ( ,Josoy county announces tho discovery there j hat George D. Rowe, who for fourteen years C0I k'as a trustee there, has issued $8,000 of ille- , ral warrants. It is feared that tho game has jeen played in many counties, ana it is posible that the frauds will run up into tho nillions. boi ??? wii DESTROYED BY DYNAMITE, J las TcrrlUc Rc?.H(? oT an Cxploalon in n Ontario. gtf A load of 1,000 pounds of dynamite ex- jev )!oded the othor morning about two miles l!H! outh of Lakefleld, Ontario. Tho dynamita vas for tho Trent Valley works at Burleigh, >nd was in charge of two men. It exjloded while passing through a dense tam- Be< irack swamp. A hole sixty feet across Ca md eight or ten feet deep marks !Sh ho sp.it where the wagon was La x'foro tho explosion. Trees for fifty yards He >n each side of tho pi ice were cut down and educed to splinters. Pieces of the iron work Fl< >f the wagon, pieces of the harness and jodies of the men and horses liavo been W ticked up a great distance from the spot. Kj I ho shock in the valley was terrific. Tho Bn >eople in the vicinity deserted their houses, Co luiuxisins: tho shock "to be an earthouake. Oa NEWSY GLEANINGS ? La O.vi.v one soldierof Xapolooti's "old guard lia low survives; ho is ninety-four. A ckematio.v society with stockholders s boasted of by San Antonio, Texas. "Gp.ovek" is the name of a new postoffl:o Cli II Cleveland county. North Carolina. Birch mid boxwood spoons to tho number p. )f I3S.UJ0.IHK) are in ide in Russia annually. Tub average annual pro.luct in silver and p|j jnld in Mexico from l^Jl to 1850 wa? I'.'.OoO,?IJ. ; Stt There are a quarter of a million of Her- j Ho " ' ..<if.li Mih tr.-iiln of the ! Fit ll'lll.H 111 Dl tl/.ll, till tin. ? x,- w.v ountry is in their bawls. i W1 Theme nro still public lands open to settle-. lient in nineteen States and eight Territories. 1 l*ho prices vary from ?I.'S> to s&oO per acre. j "a The fastest cruiser afloat is the British ves- | sol Mercury. Slio lias attained an average ; u ' speed ot' eighteen anl one-half knots an , hour. I Po The French government has just caused to FU ).) built a cot in which live tour hundred j C'o .rained carrier pigeons ready for use in tune I Oa af war. I Long Island farmers are beginning to 1 aise peanuts, utilizing the sandy wastes of Be Ihe interior. Sticcojs wi.'l mean a fortune to j Ph iho enterprising agriculturists. ! The Italians in New York city have in- j c creased from 15,0)1 in 1SS J to 40,001 in 1 During tho prist le i years th) Chinos:* po,>ulation has increased from l,00J to 10,'JUJ. i j* I.v England in coal mine; alow, sine 1S51, ^ aver :?i?,0 H) live have been lust, and during (ja the last ten years upward of 12,00'J lives have ftu been lost, giving an average of more than ^ l.aoo a year. 1 'v MRS SBANT'3 OFFEBILTO. e Lays a Wreath of Immort?IU> Upon her Huaband'a Coffin. 'he line of visitors to General Grant's ib, at Riverside park, was interrupted at >n, ono day recently, by the arrival of a jo carriage drawn by a team of blaclc ses. The carriage stopped in' front of tha ranee and a young man followed by an erly lady alighted. They were not recoged at first. Captain Fessenden, of Camp int, was near tho entrance and ho recoged Ulyssos S. Grant, Jr. The elderly lady s Mrs. Grant. Both Mrs. Grant and her , were in deep mourning. Mrs. Grant'* g crape veil was over her face. . . ,'aptain Fessendon ordered Private"Jo3eph stace on guard to request the visitors to I back. It was whispered through tha wd that Mrs. Grant had como to visit neral Grant's tomb, and they stepped backrd until a largo semicircle Was formed. i the men took off their hat*. 'hen Captain Fessonden and Mr. Grant 1 hnlf n. tnlnutfi's conversation, nurl tbft mer immediately unlocked the doors the tomb, and throw thorn open, s. Grant, loaning on her son's .. ; ;?a n, walked slowly through the doory, and descended two step3 to the >r of the tomb. Pausing an instant at i side of the steel casket of General Grant, a Grant drew from under her long outer lipping a large wreath of whito immores. It rested on a larger wreath of laurel j I ix base. These Mrs. Grant laid on the t : ldloofthe casket, in a space cleared of ' ' '> ler offerings by her son. 'or a minute Mrs. Grant stood motionless ore the casket. Then, taking Mr. Grant's n, she went back slowly to her carriage. o wreath is in plain sight from the outside the tomb. ME NATIONAL GAME. The Bostons havo lost seventeen games 3 season by one run. Derrick, of the Nashvilles, has played lost every .position and has not missed a ne this season. t's singular, but year after year Buffalo ^ns poorly and comes out-strong near the se of the season. This year is no excepts V * ? 'wo short stop3 have been disabled m 4he ith. Cahill, 'of Atlanta, has a broken ' rer,and Beard, of NashViile.has a sprained tie. >' a Southern league game at Memphis, ee umpires and the manager of the Mems club were thrashed before the game wasshed. Nashville has a larger average attend? of ladies at the game than any other uthern league city. Hundreds or tno iair attend every game. 'he Boston National League club has rosed Manning, McCarthy, Hnckett and vis on account of their recent bad playing. d club is to be completely reorganized. iUFFi.vTON, oC Boston, still leads the league chers for this season with sixteen strike- . -si none game. In the American Morris, egan and Matthews have each struck out een bands. Jew York has no less than six batsmen ong the first dozen leaders in the leaguo, Halo two, Boston two, Detroit two, Chi;o, Philadelphia, St Louis but one each, i Providence not any. Yard, of the New York clubjsays he wfll . itinue batting left handed. Ho does not ,ke a large number of base hitB, but he nds a better chance of beating a slow mnder or a fumbled ball to first base. says that a left handed man has au aditage of ten feet or more over a right ided man in reaching first base. he championship records up to recent date , re as follows: TIIE NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won. JjOBt, Won. Lost. v York. 70 20 Boston..- 37 64 cago 73 18 St. Loalg 27 61 laaelpHi(L...42 4d Buffalo 83 68 videncc..?.?46 41 Detroit 80 63 american association. Lonis 66 23 I Athletic 46 60 shorn 52 42 | Brooklyn 43 61 cinnitl 55 41 | Baltimore 35 68 isville 48 47 | Metropolitan....32 58 EASTERN LEAGUE. Igeport 4 61 Norfolk 83 43 icy City 9 271 Trenton 45 39 castor 28 39 | Virginia 61 19 toual 53 23 I Wilmington 6 32 vark 32 43 | SOUTHERN' LEAGCTE. inta C6 29 I Columbia 48 4T {Iista 53 36 Macon 4S 47 gingham....38 77 | Memphis. 44 49 lttanooaa....34 57 | Nashville 69 34 USICAL AND DRAMATIC. J Lmton Rubinstein's new sacred qpera, ioses," comprises eight acts. i concert company is forming In Milan, ly, to make a tour in America. f ? Iixty theatres have been burned in this intry in tho last twelvemonth. In* exhibition of church music, ancient and dern, is beiug held in Nuremberg, Bavaria. Iign'or Gal ass i, baritone, and Louise La- 1 che; contralto, will concertize along with "'3 ae. Gerster. The Lady of Lyons" is to be in Mrs. ngtry's repertory during her forthcoming ivincial tour. t is reported in London that Mrs. Scott Idons is to appeal' at Wallack's theatre, ".< iv York, October 12. Irs. Scott Siddons will appear in New rk this season and open at Wallack's atre, on October 12th. jlllan Russell is to tour this season ler C. D. Hess' management. She opens Milwaukee, in "Polly." 'he English version of "Dark Days" will t be seen in this country November 9, at New Criterion theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y. liss Hark NESS, the Boston lady violinist, ,o appears on the bills as Mile. Senkrah, low concerting with great success in Ausl t )le Bull's famous violin, made by Gas e di Salo, and carved by Benvenuto Celi more than three centuries ago, was lately 1 in Brussels for $1,000. iIme. Carlotta Patti is engaged on a >k to bo called "My Artistic Tour Around --- ' *- *- - ertffla rlntpn in i VV orlil." one i ileum iu ris as p rofessor of singing. ."HE Japanese musical instruments that re in the New Orleans exhibition bare ?n presented to the >"ew England conser:-ory by the Japanese government Jadame Geistinger is to come to the ited States once more.' She will bring own ccuip&ny and appear at the Star atre, New York, lor throe weeks, during vember and December. Slla Russell, whose name has appeared some years iu the Italian papers as a ina donna of the highest promise, is an r.erican girl who studied in Italy for years. 9 is now gainjng a European reputation. IIme. Judic, the French actress, will give i performances in America, beginning in tober and ending in May. She wguaran1 ?i:>0,000 and expenses, and a percentage the receipts after they reach a certain mt PBOMINENT PEOPLE. 1 te.vekal Sheridan is growing stout )it. Tanker is named as one of the latest iverts to the laith cure. h'eal Dow is making Prohibition argunts before New York audiences. Jit. Blaine ha? bought a lot at Bar Har , Me., and will build a cottage' there next (iter. ris said that Walt Whitman's royalties his publications amounted to less than ?50 t year. Ciik sultan of Turkey has presented United * ites Minister Cox with a set of valuablo relrv and rare oriental books. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. 30 ef cattle, good to prime I vr 9 (3 914 Ives, coin'u to prime veaU. 5 (3 714 eep 8 4}? mbs 4}?(<| *? igs?Live i'/iw Dressed, city 0 >ur?Ex. St,, good to fancy 3 <55 j? 4 00 West, good to choice. 4 00 (<*> 5 S3 heat?No. 2, Red 91 c?State 02 (<i 04 rley?Four-rowed Stato.., (S 85 rn?Ungrad. West, mixed. 4S i? 50?? ts?White Stato 40 (A 42 Mixed Western 30 @ 32 iy?Med. topr. Timothy.. S"> (S 5)5 *a\v?No. 1, live 70 (<]} 75 rd?City Steam G 45 (it 0 !)0 tter?State Creamery.... 22 (S 24 Dairy 10 (5 2L West. Im. Creamery 15 (3) IS Factory 0 (S 12 eesc?State factory 0 @ S Skims... fi @ 0 Western 4,1i(<B 7}j gs?State and lVnn 1$ @ l'J BUFFALO. eep? Good to Choice 3 00 (7b 3 50 mbs?Western . > DO ^ 4 00 ers?Western o 50 (ii> 4 00 gs?Good to Choice Yorks 4 85 (it 4 '.'5 >ur?C'y ground n. process 5 25 (16 0 50 lieat?No. !, Hard Duluth 1 01^(5 rn?No. 2, Mixed Ne\r.... (Vfl 4!)J? ts?No. 2. Mixed Western . 40 h/> rley?'Two-rowed State.... ? ($ ? BOSTON. of?Ex. plate and family.. 1- 00 (312 50 igs?Live 4'..J(<d 5 Northern Dressed.... >\(? rk?Ex. Prime, j>er bl)1...10 00 (510 50 >ur?Winter Wheat pat's.. 5 25 @ 5 40 ru? High Mixed 54)j@ 55 ,ts?Extra White 4S (? 50 e?State 70 75 WATERTOWX (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. ef?Extra quality G oo (& (3 '67\? een?Livo weight 4 (do 5}? nibs <> >gs?Northern, <1. w 5 "(3 5% PHILADELPHIA. >ur?Fenn. ex family, good 4 00 @ 4 25 heat?No. 2, Red 90%@ 'M% e? State ''($ 75 ni?State Yellow 52 (it 53 its?Mixed 40 (c& 41 itier?Creamery Extra Pa. 20 (<"} 22 ieese?N. Y. Full Cream... 11^ 14