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^wWKsw^tJ^. < "xST^JSBn- Biro* <JS^!BZ '^M* -i. -?* l. 'Tf^'wOTilk. f^H^SBM?Mro^^^^^HHMVMto*B"aia""">H - ... \ PBvaa TO 1MUIA3 8VKMS&. ' ?* WM. XADOHTOI*. Come to th# haunts -where the naiads are J^-flrtwnUiso with try V Come. for O'lr oyos to behold thoo are longlog^^ O spirit of beauty and child of the dawu. jV-' ** We know thon art noar by tho mist on tho mountain, Tito hosoou th* hl'lnlde, tho gold in tho glen ; We hear thy ?wc.t volco in tho fail of tho fountain ? Quoon of tho autnmorland, wolcomo again. Aflame with the ruby tho hilltops are glowing, In volvet and critUHOii tho valleys are dressod ; Tho summer who loves thoo Uolays in hor going. And waits to oaross thoo, hor fairest and best. Beautiful visitant, well wo romembor The winds of the north that wore cruel to < thoo: TLoy chillo 1 thoo to sloop on tho lap of No vomlier. And boro th .-o afar to tho lslos of tho uoa. We'll mako thpo a homo (n the hoart of tho t -, - wihtwood. Thy curtains with amber and amethyst twine ; And fair an tho visions wo loved in our childhood, The purplo and gold of the dolls will be thlno. O oomo In thy robe of vormllton. gem laden, Thy balm nud thy witchery tender and swoot, As though th? rich tide from the river ot Aidcn 11.,ii-? s? ? ? >UU uiuj uiuuuuia ?B3 b oko at thy t ?t Tlj0" ?crr.J"fo tbo haunts wlioro tlio nnlnds are throng n ( l'Qcrown thee with iyy by woo<llan<l and lawn; Couto, for our ryos to heboid thoo aro louring, '> Spii it of beauty and child o( the dawn. 'Viimkua, Wis., October, 1hh7. A MODERN MAGDALEN. ; . BY If. C. FARLEY. CUAPTKR XVI.?(Contihued. 1 Below stairs there is commotion, and ^ hurry, and bustle, and more or less 1 -m confusion. Kibbey is master of the situation. Ho ueitlicr loses his presence of mind nor his amiable placidity of man nor. And ho orders his stalT of servnnts after the fashion of a great general on the batt!o ltlod. Kibbey does, not suspect that hois boiug watched. Novcrthole3S such is tho fact. The i-uppor-room is marvelous in its arrangement. Kibbey looks it over ' with tho eve of a connoisseur. Nothing is wanting to add to its porfoction. i> 1?i ? ? - ? uupiu rivrvuui iu ana out; (boy eat, drink, langli, and go away again, only to return a little later And repeat the eating and drinkiug, the laugning and chattering. So the hours wear away. Madam Dundoa rofreshes herself with JUsiestft.ljehind the nurtalnu Tiniw? shafts S11"1 " ctouh and smiling to her gnosis. Miss Lafargo glows like a star of tho brightest radiance. Hor blue eyos are clear and bright as summer skies. She smiles like au augel, and quite forgets for the time being to snap her little white teeth at anybody. Sho is socrotly determined in hor own mind to bring the gallant Oaptaiu to her feet to-night, but this toak is more ditiicult than she at tirst imagines it will be bo. Tho Captain has angled some in his own time, and though ho at once nibses delicatoly at tho bait thrown out by his fair guest, ho is too experienced a fish to at onco swallow it, hook and all. Loo wntchos tho pair secretly. Bho loses hope and almost believes that the Captain is in love with Miss Lafarorc. after all. Uut. outwerdlv. she is as gay as tiie rest of them, ami nevci* loses a dnuce, bo it wait/., or galop, or the statoly old cotillion. She receives enough attention to tarn the head of another girl, and enjoys it after a fashion, too. But she is not sorry when tho clock strikes one and the revelers begin to disperse. Still, ^ the Captain hovers near Miss Lafarge. jjp Madam sits in a groat carved ohair near the open door of tho hall as tho gneste come down the stairs, wrapped and ready for departure. "Carriage for Ferndeau," "Carriago for Haverly," "Carriage for Stan wood," cry the different voices of the coachmen, as tho carr'agos roll up beforo the entrance and come to a halt. The short, fat man who has occasion ally been seen moving unobtrusively Among tho servants during the latter part of tho ovouing is standing in the shadow of the staircase. Quite accidentally, of course. Kibbey, the butler, I has just approached him for a moment. If a significant look passes between "Judith!" m id a low and wmtngvoto* them nobody notices it. The bokler E2ES carries a tray on whiol* 1b a pop of hot tea. which is intended for Madam her- 1 ? He goes along with the tray to the groat carved chair in which jfce ' I reclining. Mias Lafarge lias disapimrod in the dressing-room at the head of the staircase. She now appears a vision of blondo loveliness In her white embroidered evening wraps, as the voioe of Obe sings out slowly: "Carriage for Stnbblofield. Carriage for Miss Lafargo." ? g Now she floats down the staircase. Tho Captain, like the gallant gentle^ j^^man that he really is, stands near roudj to hand Miss Lafarge to t , mA loddv." again cries S"" L af e? ?ee? ' [ hor, tuns curiously about as she comes 1 down the stairs. t | At the mention of Miss Lafarge's r nume^^^kort, H^uat person standing rig^^^HTow of the casement poers H ^Pluto (he light and stares at- <1 my at the floating figure. He is a curious to seo the kind-heartod lady > who Was yesterday too ill to grant him 1 an interview. Now, at the announcement of her namo he leans slightly for- a ward, and as she comes under tho full 8 glaro of the gas light curiosity gives ? way to am lzomeut. This emotion is * quickly displaced by ono of overpower- v ing rage, for he glancos at hor with tho eyes o( a devil. Totally unconscious cf the effect hor 1 presence has produced on the soi-din- F anl servant, Miss Lafargo gracefully ap- '< pronehes the great carved chair whero j1 Madam is seated, to say hor adieus. * Kibhoy shrinl s back away from her, g his hands shaking so that the otxps rat- o tie on the tray he is holding. a Captain Hazard steps toward her as o she pauses in front of Madam. Miss g Tinbrirn nnnno !>?? 1 " ....0v vj/v.m UVI |/iU?VT 1UUUVII, IftllU ? rajs in hor silvery voico how much she i) Juis enjoyod tho ovening; says something pretty about tho pleasure Madam has given her, and glances casually for the first time at the butler. What she seo* in that scared face [iroduces a strange effect upon my ady. The light fa<les from her eyes, the bloom loaves her lovely face. She looks away, partly recovering liorsolf, and gives tho Captain her hand. "I am not feeling woll, I think," is wbnt she says, faintly. "With your permission, Madam, I will bid you gooduight." Hho stoops bofore Madam, then turns toward the Captain. An * evil countenance, on which is writtch cvory evil emotion. fcnown to tho humau lie rt, peers at her from the shadows of the stairs down which she ? has just como. M is* Lafargo sees this face. She retreats two steps. White foam begins ? to gather upon hor livid lips. s ' Judith, says a low and warning fj voico. * ? ller teeth chatter. A sudden chill ?' freezes tho very marrow in her bones. "Judith." * Now bIio shrieks. A long, wild p'ercing sliriek, that rings throughout . tho liouso?a shriek that paraly/.os . Madam in lier chair?a shriek that c! fotehes tho guests from the ohambers ? n shriek that brings the sorvants from bolow Btairs?tho policomon from the P park grounds. !' The butler drops his tray and it falls crashing to the floor. He looks im- ll. ploringly at Hazard, who stands trans- V tixod with astonishment. I( People crowd into the hall; guests H1 and servants mingle confusedly to- , (y. *????. J ?wmm Iiwfargs?sw j uuiiiwg r?' but the etll face and twinkling red eyes , of the strangor. Who shrieks again. Suddenly she rushes toward liira; her eyes look like bluo llamos. she leaps upon him liko a . tigross, and, snapping, snarling, buries her little white teeth repeatedly in his T flesh. IIow like a boaut'ful demon she looks 0j zz she snarls, and growls, and bites. 0 But it is a si-honing sight. f, ClIArfiit XVIL V MAD. >11E policemen know their " duty and' do it. They 7 aoize her. There is a short but furiouB struggle. Her pretty hands are P scratched and bleeding, they are at last se- 1 J^K&^SHvcurely bound behind her. ? A? she stands before her " ifff& JW/j captors foam and froth 8 l&YiSfjKr I fulls from her livid lips. Her long blonde hair * sweeps down over her 1 ' torn and blood - stuine<l 6 bull dress; bine lightnings scorn to ? shoot from her flashing eyes. As Hazard looks at- her the truth " bursts upon him. "8ho is mad." The word is taken up and passes from lip to lip. The orowd surges back and forms a dense circle about the little group in the hall. Madam has fainted. Loo flits away for tho smelling bottles, the camphor? * anything. c Miss Lnfargo, unconscious of the i curious stare of which sho is tho objoct, looks straight before her. She 1 sees nobody but tho rascally butler and t his equally rascally confrere. She recognizee both. s "Hearth I" she screamR. "Hearth and Jim Donithorne. Lost, lost! Why <did s ou not tell me that wretch was hero? Lost I All lostl" Then she heaves a great sigh. i "This is a pretty bit of work," hisses ? Donithorno at the craven butler. "I v believe this is a vile plot botwoen you both to ruin mo." t UI thought slio was dead," begins c Hearth, palo with terror. "You sent > me yourself a newspaper account of 1 her death. How could I know she was alivo and right hero under my very t nose? I tell yon I am as much sur- 1 prised as you oan possibly bo." t "It was tho other one that died," ( cries the false Miss Lafarge. "She < was burned in the railway accident, ( when tho floor flew up to the ceiling 1 and the oeiling came down to the floor. Hhe ought to have died, the silly goose. Hhe told me everything. They carried 1 her out on a board?she was a long, whito thing then in a sheet. I gave 1 her mr clothe?. Black is the color to bury folks in. And I aent a notice of her death to the newspapers. Oh, it i was fine?fine. I knew somebc^t 1 would weep when they read it. I wanted to bite her once. I wanted to bite Mitt Chidley, too. I wish I con id i bite everybody." [ Hho snaps her little white teeth. Hazard seizes the batier by the arm. "What is this woman to yon?" he i asks, sternly. "Nothing." lies the coward. < Miss Lafarge bursts into a peal of ringing laughter. Sho writhos and i twists, and still she laughs at the butler's lie. t "Soarth is my sister," shoots Miss Lafarge, whose fancy at present is to < put her brother, the butler, in her own 1 El ace. My sister. Soarth's real name i i Judith Douitliorne, and she is Jim 1 Pouitborne's wife. Poor thing. Jka i ends her a hard life, and she goea aad occasionally over it." Then aha toda her head at her late victim. "That's J iin thoro. He'd a tyrant and t villain; a liar, and a thief. No wonler my poor sister goes nmd and runs way from him. I'd g? mad myself rere I tied up to such a wretch as le ia." Donilhorno is backod up against the taircase, closely guarded on either iue by a policoman. llis faco is doaoniaoal in its look of batHed rage and iate as his mod wifo pours out the voltmo of hor sarcasm upon him. What she says is true onougn. " ronithorne was once the editor of \ fifth-rate country newspaper," whis>ers a policeman in Hazard's astonshed ears. "A big libel suit ruinod tiirt nn?1 Ka L ?m At - - ?i uu muii uuii ui ?ne newspapor msiness. Since ilien lie has been enagod in various enterprises, all more r less nTTcstloijnble.. It a more i?Uau_: uspcctcd that both liith ancnrn? xrfTftTP rin-law, tho butlor here, belong to a ;ang of burglars. His wife is, or was, designer for an Eastern manufacture ag house, and is inclined to giddiness. Somebody pulled Hazard's sleeve at this juncture. he ran off last fall with a low fellow ho hod paid her some attention. 1 sad an account of the affair in more ian lifty papers. She is wanted ow for escaping from the Biverton unatio Asylum, and I'm mighty glad o'vo got lior at last." Somebody putlod Hazard's sleeve at lis juncture. Ho looked up and boold tho village constablo. This odiial beckoned tho Captain, and they topped aside. "Wo'vogot them down flno," whisers the Constable. "Wo watched ntil tho plate was takon out of the ouso?a bit at a time, and secreted in wagon that has been standing under lio troes by tho little gate in tho wall, ?r tho lost hour or moro. Thoy never aspect ed that thoy wore watched." A soroam of rage burets from Kib'on?table's wngU. "You'll never takefnfe," cries *klb-' ey. "I haven't been out of tho house > night." Scarth looks strangely like his orazy istor as he gives way to his rage and srror At this unexpected turn of Hair8. "1 won't be arrested?I swear won't." "Yes, you will," tho Constable roplies heerfully. "I was within arm's length f yon both when you passed the plate rom the pantry window and gave it to tiis gentleman with the side-whiskers, t's all up with you both. This last aul at Bywatcr Park has finished our businoss for some time to como." Hazard shudders. "Away with them all!" ho says imatiently; "away with them 1" When they are all gone, Hazard urns to Madam, who has remained unonscious all this time. In vain I. oo as opplied the camphor, tho smelling alts, the sal volatile. The moment Hazard touches her he nows what has happened. Madam )undus jwas vory old. The shook, the xcitemont has boon greater than sho nu oear. She lies back in the great arved chair auite still and cold. Her cart has ceosod to boat, Sho is dead. [TO BE CONTINUED.] From Father's Well. "Js there no hope?" "These is none!'' The doctor la<d down the heavy hand rhse rapid, flickering pulse he was dinting, and turned toward the weepng family of the sick man. "He may last until morning, but more ikely ho will pass away at the turn of he n'ght." "He does not know me," sobbed the rife. "He is not conscious," answored the loetor, gravolv. "His mind wanders. "Will he sufter much?" "No; he is very happy. He is talkng in his sleep. Do not disturb him," aid the doctor as ho left the patient, rhose lifo he was powerless to save. The dying man, who was so poor at us momoui mai ne couia not purcnaso >ne honr of timo, was rich in the vorldly possessions he was abou t to eave forovcr. Ho had houses and lands, and bank dock. He had rich viands to tempt his ailing appetite. It was his pleasure o drink of many different wines at his grand dinners. Yet his restless spirit craved ono luxury?a ample, homely ,liing?that all his woaltu could not buy. i listen I He is Hjieaking, and they bend eagory to hoar. He is asking for a drink. His wife presses a goblet to his lips llled with asweetandcooliug draught. He rcfreos it. Then his loving child pours out a {lass of his favorite wine and tendorly >egs him to take it "Ko, no; not thatI* He speaks wildly, and they bend low tnd try to distinguish his broken end 'altering words. "Bring?me?the? gourd 1" "What docs he mean?" asks his wife, n despair. "It?is?banging?just?insido? the jurb." "Papa, dear, what is it?" asks his tweet-faced child. "1?want? a?drink?of ? fresh?water?from?father's?well." That was all. He closod his weary ?yes to open them in his heavenly tome, where, when life's little dream a over, wo shall all one day slake onr hirst from onr father's well,?-JCtyr oil Vice rrct$, /the news, 1 Fire at Lancaster, Pa., destroyed variable storehouse jfoperty, causing losses aggro- c gating $104000. AugtHtus Rosenberg, ' aged forty-ljre years, at ^omorville, Mass., j murdered Ms. Catherine imilh, with whom r ho bod boor,' living, and l^jr fourteen-yearold son, am" also shot and seriously injured 1 the womani two other children, completing the terrible tragedy by leaping from a window himself and dying,?Frequont earth- i quake sb?cks have been felt about Obispo county, Gal. C. Lb Gillespie, lato door- ^ keeper of the Nebraska Henate, Is uuder 1 arrest in Pittsburg, charged by his wife . with grand larceny. Three prisoners ( were suffocated in u lire tlmt destroyod tlio j iilut Jacksonville, Oregon.??Joseph Web- c ber, a prominent citizen of Chicago, committed sulcidev Frank 1L Tiernnn, Castro and olov JubWj crew lost. Tho Otis Iron and Stoel Works, at Cleveland, | Ohio, have been sold to l?uglish capitalists 1 for $4,500,000. ??Alfred Greene, an insane Bwede in tho Mialiignn State Asylum, 1 Blnllhfu) Jjiniibl T .TnMri<in Irt *K.. A ?I.I- I a butcher knife. Usorge De Weight fatally stabbed a uian named Moauoy in the Michl- t gan State House of Correction, in mistake 1 for Charles Stanley, another inmate, with 0 whom he had quarreled. C. 15. Fulton and Miss Mury Ault, were instantly killed ' by a cart in which' they were riding bsing * struck by a train near Bellaire, Ohio. Levi Khrhart, a young mau, was killed on the Northern Central Itallroad near York, Pa. John Daly and Andrew McUregor wero kilted, and several other men injured by a dam breaking at Pittsburg. The tanks of the Consolidated Oil Company, at St. Joseph, Mo., were struck by lightning and destroyed. Loss $75,000. Thomas JelTorson, colored, was hanged at Momphls, Tenn.. for the murder of William Rasland. Charles Black mar, of East Saginaw, Mlcb., ffhilo drunk shot bis mother, and a grandson of the woman then shot tho drunkard. Fire destroyed the business section of Carson, Iowa. Loss $02,000, insurance $25,000. ??Efforts are being made to settle the llli* nois miners' strike by arbitration. J. Hogs Winfleld, son of the Episcopal bishop of California, was fatally shot at Benicia, Ca!., by J. E. Crooks in a qudrrel over a newspaper article. An attempt was made to blow up tbe Salvation Array barracks in Indianapolis. August Bolr., of Appleton, Wis., put to flight a dozen whltecaps who had come to flog bim. A shortage of $21,000 has been found in the account* of exCounty Treasurer T. W. Colo, of Marshall, lit. Rev. R. F. Flo men, alias John Geldell was arrested in Pittsburg, charged with a ^^^^^^rKiUerpr.Bo nas Was lined *2Kl? !? Nni? York court for smuggling jewelry from Franco. Michael Roouey, under a (en years' sentence at Daunemara state prison, N. Y.. for manslaughter committed suicide by bunging. Henry Blake and Michaol Frawiey, while drunk at Busquohanna, Pa., fell Into the river and received fatal Injuries.- Albert Orlaroeki, a young Qerman, committed suicide in New York city by first shooting and then hanging himself. By the wreck of a freight train on the Pennsylvania Railroad, near Pittsburg, three persons wore killed, a number injured and thirteen cars demolished. Dennis Depauw, a crazy man, was found in a Chicago court room threatening to kill Judge Grinnell.??Binil Plettig and August John, of Chicago, in attempting to run a dam at Kilbouru City, Wis., in a rowboat, were drowned by the boat capsising. The new census of Buffalo, N. Y., just completed shows a population of 82.027. Daring a fire In the American Provision Company's warehouse, Chicago, six firemen were overcome by smoke, two of them ' fatally. A storm near Albuquerque, New 1 Mexico, twisted railroad rails out of shape, waahod bridge* away, and did general do- | struction Ex-Congressman Edmund Rice, ] of Minnesota, is dead.?William Fisher, of ( East Bsginaw, Mich., was bitten on the thumb by a man with whom he had bceu ] "gUbAUg, H1H1 bUO wuuuu oauswi gdllgl UI1U, I from whioh he died. The mayor of Cin- j cinnatl baa ordered that the Sunday laws , prohibiting the sale of soda water and ice ( cream be enforced. William Sharkey, ar- ' rested at Toledo, Ohio, for murder, oonfeeaca that he killed Cotoman Dupeo, an old hermit, and then set fire to his hut, in the hope that all evidences of the crime would be reduoed to ashes. George Whltmore, of Rochester, N. Y., has complained to the police that he was robbed of $1,075 by the girl be was about to marry. William Weddington, colored, was hanged at Charlotte, N. C., for the murder of Policeman John Pie roe. Lightning struck a cottage in Chester county. Pa., and killed a colored child. Other damage was done by lightning In that section. The grand lodge of Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks concluded its annual session in New York, and adjourned, to meet next year at Cleveland, Ohio. The Southern Yellow Pine Lumber Association mot at Montgomery, Ala., and oOusiutuvd freight ralve. oligM earthquake shocks at Charleston, S. C. A circular has boon issued to Grand Army departments alt over the country to resent the action of the railroads In not giving the customary rate of one cent per mile to the national encampment to be held at Milwaukee, by no', attending in numbers, only the regular delegates going. TWO TR A INsTcOLLIDE, Thirteen Cam Wrecked nod Six Per* eons Injured. A collision of ffifctvISkOd ooal trains oo the Pitlahurir uriC^uih r? -TTl-"" ,MV" curred near High Bridge, four mileo from Pittsburg at two o'clock In the afternoon. Thirteen care ware wreoked and tix per* torn injure.!, one. it is thought, fatally. The Injured were: Wm, Kunhle, bUokemitb, caught la Ifc A Wreck a ad terribly eoalded by he burstir' At the or Under; body crushed; though* //be fatally hart; George Ham. blackw /o'e helper, oruahed about the head and txx.y; Wm Hoof, atable boa*, body badly crumbed; Kngtneer Hilton, foot crushed; Rnglneer Rtppell, badly bruised and out; unknown Italian, cut and bruised, will rooorer. The drat three ngmed were stealing their way to Castle' Shannon. Twenty Italian labbrerh ware tin tha grarel train, but only one was hurt,' The accident Waf paused by a mistake Uy order* DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES, John Broinwell, a bricklayer, was run or and killoJ by a locomotive iu Ba'tl- r, nor* 4 Carrie, the IS year old daughter of Hirara Yost, was burned to death at Hopkins, Mintesota. Sixty cases of typhoid fevor are reported p, a Wilkesbarre, Pa., and an epidemio Is . eared. ' Two unknown men were Instantly killed it Baltimore by the Chicago express on tho ' ialtiiuoro and Ohio Itailroad. Th Eiwvn Iyithain, a young drug clerk of ha Vest Washington, was drowned in the Po omac by the upsetting of a boat. William Schletx and Charles Schrooder, 'os toys, wore drowne i while boating, on the " ionic grounds, at Riverside, near Chicago. bl{ mww IUO en(nijniuii ui n ix.iiiur in in? worKI po if the Asphalt raving Company, iu Wilkes- be tarrv, l'a., John Moylo, the engineer, was tilled. WrvL K. Cameron, Mrs. Loses *0(1 her 1'S i boat. bo Local rains in Kichmond, Vn., caused the vater in Shookoo creek to back up, and the ower (loon; and collars of at least fifty bus- an ness.houses were submerged. koi By the siuking of a ferry-boat In the Tal- ,h< apoovi river in Alabama, three colored men vera drowned, and two wagons loaded with r nerchaudise for Wetumpka were lost. Two hundred persons were injured, about |)'l lalf of thorn severely, and u child was killed r >v the fall of a grand stand during races ?n it Oklahoma, Indian Territory. Tho Buffalo fly is reported to have ap- c.u leand among cattle at Three Mile Hun near nw few Brunswick, New Jersey. Its presence 1 van disclosed by two fatal casos. ?n Li/./.lo Hawks, aged 14 years, and Mamie sot lawks, aged eight years, were killed by aw ightning while in a swing on the farm of 1 fohn Hawks, about threo miles from Lock- we wrt, N. Y. Ar A jjassengcr train on the Mobile and Ohio . J Viilroad was thrown into a ditch by a cow 10 ibout twenty miles south of Cairo, III. Six Vl' i.issengers were injurod, one fatally. Nellie Burton, ago.l 18 years; May lloyal, cf iged 10; Ida Cassidy, aged SU; Fannie Mc- ga, Jourt, aged 18, and Bert Frocinun, aged 'JO, fr( vcre drowned by tho upsetting of a barge i irar jviipgnoiiy uny, ra. xrn A passenger train from Macon to Coluin- elf ms, Georgia, was thrown from tbo track I ind into a ditch while rounding a curve, am icar Goueva Eight |vissengors wcro in- bu ured. 1 A cloud burst over Ak; on, Ohio, and two Bn nchee of water fell ill an hour. Consider- J iblu damage was done to property, and sand 'ro cas washed upon the railroad tracks in such the pinutitios as to prevent transportation. t'a John Doyle, fireman in the stone crushing works of tho Harbour Asphalt Company, it Wilkcsbarre, Pa., was blown through the oof of tho lire house by tho bursting of a fl* ralve, and fatally injured. lnj A 1 couiotivo on tho Northwestorn Rail o:ul crashed into a farmor's wagon at May- at wood, near Chicago, killing August Multvn- ,ja our and fatally injuring his brother-in-law, an Frederick Liebentour. Three children wore tui >adly hurt. Btc While ox-President Clevoland and Joseph Jo feff.TSon wcro taking a ri lo near Buzzard's Btr iiv. MnRS - P'u? nf their, hwuirnt iin- I Ihrowu out. Both escaped with slight bruises ui< mil wirri'0 Bunking Up. V?4 The steamers Biv (Jneon and Dolus col- hu ided near Gould Island, in Narragnnsetf ' Jay. A thick fog prevailed at the tune. 1 Jotb vessels were badly domaged and had ou o bo towed to New|>ort. No person is bo- J?" iovod to have been iujurod on cither boat. An explosion of gas occurred In tho Boston az, row bo it Coni paii y's offlc-, ill the Pisko buildng, at Boston. A leak in the pipes was igliled in some unknown manner. Two ineu md a woman were injured, tho latter?Miss Laura Lincoln, soveroly. There was a collision on the Chicago, llurington and Qulucy Railroad, n ? ir Glendale, ' jhio, between a passenger and live stock In irain. Express Messenger Blackburn was of "~"J "?'>?? oc.uioij IIUI I,. I Considerable of tbo live stock was killed iud injure 1. ne It is reported that tbo engine, baggage a car and one coach of a railroad train broke scl through a defective bridge near Terrell, Texas, and thatouo man was killed and sev- d? sral persons were injured. No particulars y?" sre given. t<) An autopsy on the body of Mrs. Morris lot Rubens, who was found in Albany, New York, dying beside her dead child, showed an teat death was caused by urramio poisoning, the result of acute Bright'* disease. The n , child was suffocated by the mother's rolling (|w over upon it in her death struggles. A steam bleacher in the mill of the Lyons m< Paper Company, near Clinton, Iowa, ex- jr ploded, wrecking half of tho large brick ,iei building and killing Alexauder Hart and ,ij< Thomas McBride, workmen. A man named jjfj Callahan was badly scalded. , George Gould, president of tho Pacific 0i, Mail Steamship Company, received a dc- fi< patch from Man Francisco verifying the re- Tli ported loss of the company's steamer Gran- |{(. Ida on the rocks at Po.nta Tejohan. Tho vessel and cargo will be a total loss. Tho ' Uranada was valuod at |250,U00, and tho ^ cargo at $75,000. .... go ii & Kin nocccce a nrtDTf n n/\tv u raLoouo nuui i lu, ^ wi ex 8(eam IMale Prewes in tlic Rurcaa of ?u KiiKraviiiK Abandoned. Secretary Windom baa decided that the recent act of Congrees concerning ateatn J(j plate printing preens for the Bureau of Kn- of graving and Printing is intended to be prohibitory of the use of all steam presses. 1 1 Under tbia ruling tbe Mil igan presses now usod by the bureau will bavo to be dispensed to with. There are eighteen Milligan and 0110 Hemer Lee steam presses in use there. In Tbe Secretary's decision is a clear victory Df for the labor unions, who have been lighting w for the introduction of hand presses. They * were succeesful In thoir efforts in this directlon when tbe act of Congress was passed, but the language of the til! was such that a " question arose as to whether it was striotiy P prohibitory and the matter was referred to w Secretary windom for decision. The S.?cretsry has refit id to sign any contract with ! U M illitrnn ( kimnanv. 1 Tho vy?rk of removing the steam presses will begin at once; they will all be put out of the building by the sud of the week. In place of them Captain Meredith will put at . onoe into operation twenty eight hand presses now iu stock. The chief says that by working an hour longer every day, the bureao will soon catch up with current bus- H iness, which baa fallen behind because of a week** stoppage while negotiations were in " progress. He says the work will be better al done, too. and the expenses of the burean b not laroalv increased thereby. Ql CONSULS APPOINTED. * ii Men Chosen to Represent the United 11 8tat< s in Foreign Cities. a The President made the following appoint- i( inente to be consuls of the Unitod States: Emmons Clark, of New York, at Havre. Archibald J. Simpson, of Colorado, at Aoapnloo. . Roswell O. Ilorr, of Michigan, at Valparnisa >um r. narn^nn, ui vns LsmtriCt or UO (ambia, for the port of Trieste and all other C |#orts in the Austrian dominions etc., etc. w John J. Chew of the district of Columbia, to be arcrotarjr of the Uegaliou of the United n Btetes at Vienna, ? A CLODDBDBST iusos the Disaster at Johns<nnm N V VV VT II) ?' * >ur Roillos Recovered?Bridges and Damn l>rMr?yMl-l)nin?(;o ? Itailroad and Oilier Property Heavy (V special from Johnstown, N. Y., says; e water which came up over this village s subsided greatly, but has left scenes of solution in every direo! ion. The water h) Qitoen foot and ovorllowed everything, has now fallen about eight foot below its [host point. Ton people are thus far rerted mining. Tbo holies of four have on recovered. These four are all Johns- ! rho drowned and missing people wcro long a crowd of from thirty to fifty peris who stood on tho stone bridgo crossing 1 |rlver at Terry street watching tho rising iters. L'hey seemed regardless of danger until i bridge gave way and they were precipi> *1 into the Hood. i'lio bridge was about twouty feet high and teen or twenty feet wide. It was a sinvle ;h structure and was crossed by a streetr track. Tlio stone bridgo was swept ay at about soven o'clock in the evening. I'wo iron bridges of tho Johnstown, Fonda 1 Gloucester I tail way were wrecked and reu or eight other bridges wore carried ay. rwo tanneries owned by Hlmon Scrlbor re 8wept away, and the Scbriber and iderson dams were broken down. The water in tho Cnyadauttn crook begun rise at 4.1(0, and tho strenui was soon courted into n raging torrent. Jt tho men, womon and children who re throwu into tho water by tho breaking tho stone bridge, tho large number was red by moans of ropes thrown to them >m tho shore. The final and fatal rise In tho Ca.vadutta 8 vory sudden, and is attributed to tho acta of a cloudburst. losides tho sweeping away of the bridges (I the tanneries, there is much damage to ildings which aro yet left standing. I'bo electric light plant was washed out I tho town loft iu Uarkn-'SS for (lie night. Vmoug tint bridges carried away was an n bridge at Htewart's loather mill, and i iron railroad bridge at Fonda. Tho yadutta creek was never before so high. 0 crook rose from 12 to 15 feet in ik) minis. lly tho washing away of bridges on 1 Fonda, Johnstown and Glovoraville llnil, , .? ?- ,L * * iu, W>u mm mill BUIIill 01 Johnstown, it placa is completely shut oIT from railvi 1 communication. rho Cayndutta empties into tho Mohawk Fonda, and Fonda is flooded. Great mage haa been done to bay fields, which ? flooded. Two bridges on the Mohawk rnpike were carried away. Travel is ipped, and tho Central Koilroul and hnstown Railroad bridges were both dooyed. i'nwmngors are transferred, i. F. Mill's &, Co.'s plaster mill was jnsviflr, TOui Vnt.CT oenOw jounstown, n itm wheel at 21!g Mill was earned an a , 1110 other damage was done, fct Horry ville, a mile below Sammonsvillo. i dam at Clapper's shoddy mill wus washed t. The general belief is that tho tlood is caused by a cloudburst near Johnstown, is theory ii confirmed by the fact that nt kls's mill's, 3}? miles up the creek, no ilama was dono, uud tho dam at that place is right. NEWS NOTES rho E ?rl of Zetland, the now viceroy of dand, enjoys ail incomo(salary included) about ?175,000 a year. Wisconsin takes the lead in public school lewne&t," at least, and now educators and wspapers in that State are discussing proposition to establish baths in public Hools. Mr. Parish, of llorrien county, Oa., is uhtless the > oungest sheriff in tho State, hen electe I he ha 1 to wait throe months become of nge before he could bo sworn to olHce. John Shootsmon, Teuaesseoan, republican (1 able-bodied citizen, has named bis reutly arrived triplet infants?two boys and ;irf?aftor the President and tho Prosint's wife. A Mussulman woman has just died in scan Mccr, India, credited with one hutted and iifly years of age. Klio was blind, sf and dumb, and almost Inanimate. tShe si in the house of a grandson, who is over [hty. The Paris Journal dcs Debnts has just eelrated its one huudreth anniversary. Atjliod to its staff have bavn Chatoaubrlan I, lieos, Kenan, Tuino and Jules Mitnon. irlioz was its musical critic. James Edwin Vardeman, who died last ek near Mparts, On., could repent the rnesof all ttio Senators and Kopresontn es in Congress from the beginning of tho vernineut. A Connecticut man who died the other y left uearly all of his property to a >dow who had refused to marry hiin. An change suggests that this was a very bstaiitiat way of allowing his gratitude. The burglars who went through John Maru's house at West Buxton, Mo., the other ght were both hungry au<l thirsty, Mrs. artin says she is out a barrel of pork, part another barrel anil thirty gallons of onler. An old couple nam d Thompson, tiring in tilthy hut in Allegheny, 1'a., had thirteen igs aud some cat >. The man has been sent a hospital, and the woman refused to go the poorhouse. The dogs have been killed. The Cherokee Indians support over one null ed common Bcbools, with an aggregate 4,05'J pupils, and a high school tor boys, ith -11 students. They are just completing somiuury that will accommodate 100 sluiuU. The leading candidate for nioanost man ves fa the United States lives in Milton, a. lie refused to give up sonio timber bicb Moated on bis lot, and which belonged > a man who had rescued him from his _Kxl-wrecked house. DliFuKE A HERO. L Young Man McrtsaSingular Dcutli While Saving a hatly'N Life. Willis Henderson was horseback riding in lanley county, N. C., with a young lady, hen bcr horse took fright and dashed off t a furious rato. Young Henderson lashed Is horse and was in a moment at the hoeli f the flying horse. He leaned over to one de to rescue tho young lady from her perous position, when Henderson's head struck dth Mrrific force ngiinstu tree, knocking un from ma noise unit crushing his skull, le was picked up doad. Tho young lady fell from her horse, but side from a terrible fright she was not ser>usly injured. SHAKEN AGAIN. toother Karthquako at Charleston, 8. C.?No Damage Done. A slight earthquake shock was felc at barleston, S. C. The duration of the shock 'as about three seconds; the movement orth to south, and the motion vibratory, iwmpanled by a slight uoi?J. CABLE SPARKS. The Norwegian ministry have resigned. Hishop Lambrecht, of (Jhont, Belgium, It dead. j lie mnssncniMau riuoiuon ucieauxl iba 1/ondon Kilio Brigade. Archdeacon Goodyear, of tlie East Africa missions, bus died ut Mngilu. Michael Dnvilt continual Ills testimony before the rurnell commission. The regent of Bavaria opened the Oral annual art exhibition In Munich. It is announced at Berlin that the German officers in the Chinese snrvice will resign. Uerr Husenclever, formally a leading socialist member of the German Reichstag, is dead. The art jury of the Paris exhibition has awarded imihln lumur to Taili-ma utni ^ A number of the American engineers now in Europe were received by the Dowager Empress Augusta at Coblents. The World's Sunday-nchool convention opened in London, over IKK) delegates being present from the United States. Charles I'. Psolta, the American amateur champion oarsman, defeated Black more, the English sculler, on the Henley river. Emperor Francis Joseph and the C'xar have * telegraphed to lving Alexander of Servia congratulating him u|k>ii his anointment. The Shah of Persia j was escorted by a procession to the Guild Hull, Ixmdon, and Lord Salisbury's carriage was lost in the crowd. The l'opo has sent a copy of his recent allocution to each of the powers, asking whether or not they would interest themselves in his posltiou. Tbo Columbia, the new Hamburg-American Line steamer, made an average of over I'd knots an hour, and occasionally exceeded lit) knots. Mr. llirsch, tlio new United Minister to Turkey, presented hi. credentials to the .Sultuu at Constantinople and mot With a cordial reception. Ruggieri's Fireworks factory at AutierV i I lure f'tPii tiiilou nribfu I'"-*- L1 ...... ........ ..v.. **7 ... . ui in, rrmieo, ?. was destroyed by an explosion, seven |h.tsons wore killtxl. The Homo correspondent of tlio London Chroniclo says it is certain that arrangements for the refuge of the 1'opo in Spain have boon completed, Tho 8t. Jamas Gazette states that tho marriage between the Karl of Fife and Princess lionise, daughter of the l'rincoof Wales, will take pl.co next spring. Tho dervishes who were defeated at Arequin by Col. Wodehouse's troops have Had to the hills. The gunboats havo cut olt tho dervish's' water supply. Tho bureau of the Kronch Senate has nj>po!..k'il a committee to consider the Tanainn canal relief bill. Four of the coiumitt-o favor the measure and live opposo it. A sailors' boardiug-houso keeper in Liverpool has tiaen lined live pounds for furnishing workhouse |Mui|ters us able saamcn to tho White Star Lino steamer Adriatic. PrAfliiJanf n-tijiyit on?'1 Jlf Mntillar iniiucLui ?... ont at ino unveilliiK At Pars of tho lieplica or iiartnoidi's statute in New York harbor of Liberty enlightening tho world. Tho Hlinll', after receiving I/ord Salisbury and tlij other meuiersof the cabinet and the members hf the diplomatic corns, deoarted for Windsor Castle, .whore ho was received by the Queen. . Tho Berliner TngeWaW snys Hint England, Germany, .France^ Portugal, Belgium, tho Congo State and Italy are making arrangements for a conference to Buttle tho limits of thoir respective settlements in Africa. Count Kalnoky's speech to tho Austrian delegation expressing confidence in the intentions of tho Servian regency has tended to allay tho alarm in Berlin which Emperor Francis Joseph's speech produced. ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. It Is said that General Boulangor has grown tired of fsiudou and contemplates making a trip to this country. Walt Whitman says that tho greutest pleasure or his old age tias been iu reperusing tho novels of Charles Dickens. David Dudley Field, at IK) years of uge, Is a good sleeper, strong walker, hearty eater, vivacious talker and persistaut smoker. John 1). Rockefeller, tho Stand irii Oil millionaire, is the head of it syndicate which is said to have bought up ull tho Detroit brink maiiufactorios. James Jackson, who was a candidate for the office of district attornoy of the'uorthcru district of Alabama, has gotio crazy because of bis failure to obtain the place. Archbishop Corrigun, of New York, h .s been siiuuuoued to homo by the Sovereign Pontiff. It is expected that his name will bo includeil in the next butch of curdiuals croaled. Marcollus Pope, Secretary Noble's now private secretary, is u son of Oen. John Pope, of St. Ijouis. He is a young attornoy who was receutly graduated from Harvard University. Julian Hawthorne says that autographs of his father "uro as rare as icicles on tho equator. 1 have refused them," he suys, "to more people than 1 believe at present exist in New York. Audrow Jackson ColTee, a nephew of "Old Hickory," is a notary public at Sau Francisco. Mr. Coffee is a native of Louisiana, niiu uui mail/ iiiiAiiIISIIII^ iiiina ui auuoic onian character in his possession. The name of the donor of the new granite ni?l brownstoue recitation building at Yale University, hitherto unknown, is Mrs. Miriam A. Osborne, widow of Charles J. Osborne. The building completed will cost $125,000. "Bagdad" Iicylund, who Is to marry Miss Chamberlain, the fumous American beauty, got his queer naino from "bagging" his father in the hunting Held in I/oiceatershire. lie mistook the paternal legs for a hare, uu I tilled tuelu with shot. It. 1*. McGregor, of Ohio, the deaf mute orator, who made the address at the unveiling of the Gallaudet Statue at Washington, was accompanied by a reader, anil the elFeot of this simultaneous delivery of the t>|>eccli orally anil in the sigu language was extremely striking. Gen. Don Carlos Buell, whose natno Is now rarely seen In print, is living a retired life in the little village of Adri-', in McLean county, Ky. Here the old soldier passes a contented existence in a beautiful boin * on >.ha hlllffjnf Uroan I.- n.? .......1. . ... of hit) library he can see for miles u|> and down the river ami over the territory beyond. Captain Kvun P. Howell, of the Atlanta Constitution, at tho recent mooting of the Southern Press Association, illustrated tho persistant industry of tho Cbattanoogans l>y an anecdote of a man in Wcorgia who kept Itoes, and, not satisfied with their proverbial Industry, actually attempted to cross them with lightning bugs in order to| secure a continuation of honey-making through the night. The University of Oxford is about to confer the honorary degree of I). C. I* upon Dr. .T M fl) I I IllirO / w?l ? nt Washington, and medical director of the Johns Hopkins If' spital. Dr. IUUings waa a iirgeou during the civil wnr in (Iran t*a arm y, and since the ponce he hna been in charge of the medical library and museum in WaabIngton. Through hia management they have become of special importance, not alone to tbe United tttetee. but to the world.