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^ ,y """ THE LOVER'S EOL' LOQUY. liY JKVl'IK VOItUVHU llAKAFOHU J. If I wore a bint in yonilpr troe, All day long I'd Ring for thoo; I'd praise those eyes of matchless blue. And all uty songs -would bo for you. 11. If I wore the rose that uokIIob down Soft in your hair or golden brown, I'd droon against your nook so fair, And be nappy -wlillo I nestled there. Ui. l?ut, alas! I'm neither bird nor flower, They are happy by the hour; I nut only a man with salary small, And 60 will umount to nothing at all. MORNINO. BY HQ VI KK 1IO HUH. Ob, glorious morning I The earth adorning wim roDob or silvery itglit; Wltb sunlioaiii's (iAiiotux, - to. P^^wusuju1 ' '? ^ Tfadr i'.vl?.8 pj,wMhftto 11; Ib gaylv ringing in treo-top, dale, and dell. With ineonso glowing, The air in blowing: And zephyrs kiss tho flowers. Their iioriuuie-bruttthing Ony disks unsheathing In pr. tty laughing bowers. ^ As day is growing, V The cock is crow.ng ^ A welcome to tho tno.n ; l<'ro;ii out tlio gloaming, Dim distance roaming, An echo faint is borne. O er house-top curling, Tl"< Btuoko is whirling Thosoiuo r clouds to meet; Too world is teeming With toil; anil bo.lining, Tho day is now complete. TOM _ ItmilVX I I! IMI BY "'J'lIK MAJOR." A ClIAnEKXlX. the iiam> ok katk An impulse of sympathy had led ^^'.fessioa to call upon the widow on this ''' afternoon; sho was taking the loig walk there from her home when 1 Jelmont met her. Whil&she had not the slightest affection tor Edgar Van Wyck, the new.; of his Hiiddcn death lind shocked her, as it did a 1 who had known him. Ihit it awakened no emotion in her breast besides that of pity for his mother, whom she hail met twice since her hand bad been promised to the son. That afternoon Tom lfryson did not go to his work. Ho It his pipe after dinner, and sat down to smoke in silence. up now?" "I am going over to see Mrs. Van Wyck." "Oh, aye?the mother of that voung fool who died the other day." She made no reply to his brutal re mark. "I was willing you should marry li:m, Jess," lio said. "Don't know bat I wanted you to. 15ut it's just as well as it is. He was a poor kind of a stick. What do you thii.k about it, anyway?" Her lips were silent, her tad eyes made him uneasy. "O, well, if you don't want to talk about him, never mind. Only," and his voice grew hoarse, "don't you dare to have any love-nonsense with that aristocrat, Randall Relmont! 1 hate him!?1 hale the name! do you hear? If I catch liiin here with you, I'll knock his brains out with the ax!" She left liiin growling over his pipe, and went on hot* way to Mrs. Van Wvck's. All that we have seen of this girl hu9 shown us that obedience to her father, consideration for his wishos, was her law in life; hem o, it will not seem strange, after this tirade, that she hastened past Randall Hchuont on the way. Airs. Van Wyck answered her knock at the cottage, and foil back with a little cry of surprise and pain as she yV^ecogni/.cd her. ^^^ HYou, Miss Rryson?is it you? O, i v-_.. * i uui yuii tuuif r ii?u uki not lovo "J^^^Sioor boy; I saw it, but ho would iiiv'boliovo it; ami by-aiul-by, when ho came to understand it, lie went heart-broken, and died. O, why did you come?'( i Tho scene in tho wood was not then known to .lessiea. any more than to the widow. The latter had taken it for grunted, from the few words uttered Kdgar before lie died, that ho had PKQBuarreled and parted witii (ho girl. ' * Jessica could not midccoivo hor, because she had no suspicion of the truth nor of the widow's belief. Mildly reproaching In r visitor, as we have told, Mrs. YanWyck led her into tho cottage. Then, seeing tho misery and compassion on (lie beautiful face before her, she threw her arms about her neck, and sobbed upon her shoulder. Very sadly and tenderly, then, did ^ Jessica console the poor mother, and justify herself "I did not love him; 1 never pretended to," she said, "i ut my father asked, almost commanded me, and I yielded. 1 Mull 1.1 till v., .I. 1. ? .. ...??? I IIV/II^II 11/ nil" i\* ed my happiness; or, rather, though il mado happiness us impossible to mo as it lias always boon. I pity you, from the bottom of m.v weary heart; and oh, give mo your pity, too, for I am very wretched It was not in (lie kind, motherly aoul to resist such an appeal as this. Kho took the girl to her heart; she kissed her, she smooth d her hair, and declared that she would always love her as a daughter. Tho long shadows were falling across the road as Jessica again passed over if. As sho reached a clump of treos, a man emerged from if, leading a horse. She quickened her pace, but in a 1110*ment he overtook her. "Why do you avoid and turn away \from me?" he a<kcd. "Leave me don't follow mo!" she answered. "It is for your own good." She averted her face; still lie hastened along bv her s:do, with his arm through tho rein, striving to take her I hand and calling her endearing names. eJhe answered not. He ponred oat hi8 long'ng heart to her; ho besought her to spoak to hitn. She looked not, Hpo. e not?uutil, iu despair, he led his horse right before her uud blocked her way. A faint rod spot was in lior eheck. "Have I not told you that it is impossible?" she demanded. "It shall be |>oss bio!" ho cried. She trembled as his deep, rosouant voice pronounced the words; at tho strong purpose that looked from his eyes. "Has there eomo no change with tho death of Edgar Van Wyck?" he asked. "Docs not that froe you from your promise?" She shook her head. "Why?" he impationtly cried. "Why is it? You give mo no reason." "But this after noon," alio replied, with an unsteady voieo, " ni.v father told .mo that you should uover enter his house again: he_c\fig ax if h"<o found you there. Knowing thin, will you still distress mo by coining?" "Will you still obey such a father?" "Ho is my father. When I was a mere child 1 promised my dying mother i that I would always l?o faithful to him. ! It is this that controls me. I cannot ! disobey him." "Jo you tlmu bid mo stay away from you?" "Yes." The word was spoken low, but dis' tinct. "Your wish is mv law; I obey. But I from your words, from your looks, from all you do and say, I know you lovo me. Th ugh 1 am barred awav from you for the present., yet I know it will not bo for loug. I know it! ] feel it! .lessen, there is late in it; w cannot be separated! Not tho mount nins, nor the sens, nor time, nor spaco HUM tiJOd'pttllnaifrlfM toMJ for each other. Beliove it, dear, as J I do, and all will bo well with us. Good by?for a little." The bridle was Hung away; his arm clasped her unresisting; nga:n uui again he kissed her yielding lips. Tearing himself at last from tho de lirious embrace, he mounted and too! the road to Aylcsworth. With wildly healing heart did .Tea sica return lo the old house. He! father was not the re. She vought tho solitude of her owi room; she threw herself upon he: knees by the bed, and prayers luinglec with sobs. "O mother in heaven," she oftenes prayed, "guide ami direct me! It wa: to you 1 made the promise; make im faithful to duty and to you!" Darkness camo down; tlio chambei was in shadows; she hoard her fathci stumping about and grumbling below And still she prayed, with something ^ 1 1- mniMtnmi -vi ^?arlh from thesocno in Gcthscmane. "() God, liclp inj! () l<'uther it heaven, help mo?strengthen 1113 t< hear this heavy cross!'' And peace brio'Iy came in sleep. CHAP HSU XX. A PEAt) MAN S REVENUE In tlio preceding chapter a gliinpsi has been given of Tom llryson after In had heard of tlie death of I'.dgnr Vni I "Wyck: but lie ha 1 no occasion to shov i to his daughter, nor did lie show t< her, the true nature of his feeling! i when this surprising news came to him | It. put him in a perfect ecstasy of de . light, lio would not trust himself ii ! the presence of any living person h ' show it. He went out into the wood j and there laughed, capered, and actual ! ly shouted with glee. I.ittlo by littl tiie man's nature ha-l been wholl; changed, l ittle l?y little his love fo his child the only thing that had re mained from his better days, to human Inst for weal^,^an^his*nt??6rl>ing tmx iety to retain in sa'ety the great fruit; of his terrible crime. To seal tin j mouth of one who might ha o been t ; swift witness against him, he hail beet i willing, nay, anxious, to sacrifice hi j daughter's happiness by a hateful am ; unequal match. And now that yonnf > Van W vck was suddenly removed b; I llniltll 111.. ITll.MlM., Af i AUU1...1 ? AO U?. j lust tiling tliut ho thought of u.s causi | for congratulation. The thought that lillod his soul will | joy was that, mivo Jessica, the only per j son who con 11 give information tha i would trace the murder and robhervol I Mason I'elinont to him was silent ii j death. Tho dreadful secret wa i kep i by himself and by the grave alone; In j was absolutely safe. Tor a few days the thought kdpt hi: i brain in such a whirl that he was abh j to form no plans for the future. Tinu was when his first question would ha.< j been: "What can ld> for Jessica ?i how can T best benefit her?" Hut now | Ins very soul had become calloused In his misfortunes, by his crimes, and l?i tho ac jiiisition of h sill gotten fortune, Tho questions tint now ha uited hit thoughts by day and his dreams In niglit. wire: "How can 1 on joy all t It i: money in safety? Whero can I go will it? How far must I go before its usi will censo to excite suspeion?" lb went out into t he woods, but he did no labor. Hour after hour he sat idly upon the trunk of a fallen tree, trying to answer these questions; night aftei niglit did he return home undecided As lie became absorbed in thesi thoughts lie grow harsher and sternei in his treatment of th ? onlv being win still clung to him, and da. 1 >y day wa tho harden of that patient soul in , creased. \l I...? I . . 1 1 - > ?? Hill, nwillli iiiju 11 *IS MYHill lilt !!< stini 'ij of i/nill must have seized hitn, He became suddenly fearful lost tlit murdered uiauVjBOMl bad slipped from his grasp. than oighl months had passed ninoe,'in the early hours of that dreadful day, ho )ia<] lockod it. tip in tho littlo closet. N'evei sineo then ha I he plneed key in that look Sometimes he had sat hoforo it j alone at night, looking at the closed I and lockod receptacle with a kind ol | rapture; hut he hail never opened noi examined it. Hut lie bad boon awav at least some hours of each tlav since, .less ea passed much of her t me in her room, upstairs. Suppose that some prowlei h :d discovered the prize, and robber the robber? These torturing fears became at last intolerable. On the night of tho third i ~( ^ I day after the separate' viajjtp of his : daughter and bandall Belmont to Mrs. I Van Wyck, lie determined to have an | end of them. He would satisfy-him' hoH by ocular iuspeotion that the treasj uro was safe. j He sat moodily by the window, after ! suppor, repulsing every attention of his j daughter, impatiently waiting for the silont hours of tho night, that ho might oxecute hip purpose. The hours passed slowly. Near ten o'clock, Jessica took a candle to go to her lonely room. She hesitated, with her hand upon the latch. Did some premonition of the events that uight hideous in her memory then assail her? Do cotuiug events thus cast thoir shadows before? "Good-night, father," alio said. "Good-night." Five minutes later he looked up, and saw her still btundiug there. " W lu?fcd'vo v.'anfc arlvl? ' L?o crowled. "Jess clou't be a fool!'' Tho door closed betweon them. Novcr woro their mortal cyos to seo oaeh other agaiu. Mryson waited till tho hands of tho clock pointed toiniduight. Long since j lie had ceased t? wind the struter; its sound in the night had smitten his I soul as with the voice of thunder. I Then ho unlocked tho closet door, ! pulled out tho monov, and counted it j all o\&r. It required a.i hour to do it; but it i was all snvo?twonty-live thousand dolj lars. lie stuffed it back into the little i compartment, and relocked it. \Vhat rostless lioud then led tho man down into tho collar, to look around, and bo sure that nothing appeared there that might betray him? 1 No man can know; not even the tormented criminal himself could, have ' told. socre1. He peered into oyery 900k and corner of the cellar. He he. ? the can, die down to tho bare ground, and tc I the stones, us if ho ovpected to see the dead hand of Mason Belmont thrust ouf. j lie gave himself up to the delirium that the scene and the hour wrought in . his bra;n. r "it is mine, I say ?mine; rightfully mine!" ho shriekeJ. Tho dead walls , of tho cellar gave back tho echoes. r "He was my enemy; ho ruined me j when ho might have savod mo. I had j my revengo; his treasure became mine, t, It's only a fraction o his wealth; I wish 3 it was more. Hut 1 had my revenge ? g and the money is ail mino!" His hands gestured to suit the words, 1 and tho camllest ek fell from his grasp. r ; With an oa'h ho snatched it up so I quickly that the flame was not extiu, J quislied. Then he hurried ua to his j j ?.. ?, ?j, thTCTwrnp trrmirtrir.droasod [ as he was, upon his bed, soon fell j I asleep. 3 To those who are inclined to be superstitious, it might almost seem as if tho huud of tlio murderod man had been stretched forth from his unknown grave in that cellar, to overwhelm his assassin with a terrible revenge. 3 Unporeeivod by Tom Bryson, the 2 Hume of tho overturned candle had 3 touched a single dry shaving. It crent e j slowly thence, by several scraps of pa? | per and dry refuse, to a heap of broken a ; boards. '1 bore was no dralt to fan it; . I but feeding steadily upon tho com; bustiblo contents of the cellar, it i reached the joists and the flooring l' ; above. It seized upon the stairs, and s i at last swept into tho hall, consuming * | tho door li!?o paper. A window was -1 ! shattered with tho heat; the wind from t without blow and fanned the fire; it > roared at last all through the lower - j rooms, and tho heat and smoke asS |TO BE OONTINUEP 1 1 An Astonished humbler. ^ Thero is a gambler in St. Paul who j will not try to do up another telegraph operator in a hurry. A night operator * in one of tho big railroad orlicos Iiun ' quite a local rcpiitatou us a poker-play* er, and as poker was also the favorite 1 | game of the gambler, tliev arranged to liavo a friendly game. It occurred in the railroad o!lico, no one elso beinu I present except the operator on d.ty. . I'or (lie first time in his iifo the gain( hlcr's luck ?li?l not come to his aid, and ( lii-t opponent won on nearly every } hand, or else laid down when the gamblor had good cards. I inally the gaml?!er had four Kings, made a small bet, and tho operator refused to call. Tito \ action had iieeome so monotonous that the gambler reached over and ran the cards that the operator had laid down. To his snrpriso they woro threo queens and a pair of tens. "What in did you lay that down on a $.! bet for?" ho exclaimed, adding, "1 guess I've got [ enough." The secret of tho operator's | luck was (hit tho other operator, sitt ng where he could see the gambler's i cards, had to!egraphod each card when i it was picked up, thus enabling the ! player to know how to play tho game. , SI. I'diiI Pionc r Pre *. i I ___ r I Ante Money, r j Many a poor fellow has got into a . | straight by betting on it. ?Ottawa ? II"-. | a man who is color-blind lias no i business with pokor chips?1'liiladcli i>liin Cull. | Sonio men nro so addicted to poker that everything they have goes to-pot. ?Ifox ton Hit lie in. If a man wants to give a helping hand^i^a^b^^^h^^mn^niiiii let Pokor is ono of tho few games Where | tho loss a man knows abo it the game I the bettor his opponent likes it.?Tid| Hils. Ail\ ise.l to Sh Itch orr. I "No, my girl," said old Annt Sally; ' "it isn't a pleasant thing for a woman | to live without a husband in this world. If it hadn't been for my paronts I'd a married a good man. Jtut I listened to them, and I've boon chewing tho bitft r end of disappointment all theso 1 years." "Is it possible? ' ojaculated tho fair young hoarding-school girl. "Why don't you switch off 011 gum ?" ^-Juilye, Handera'arid Powers, " bjwere elected United States Senators blV* Kej ublican llou e and Senate of Moutai*bavo been de* uied their certiftaatds by tbi^^overnor. James E MifQ-n's barn, ue| WrigbUville, York county, Pa., was jleAroyed by lire. Doss $5000; insurance $3,51?? Bell Boy, the celebrated trotting horl, who jo owner had refused an offer of $ lOOKh), wus burno-l to death iu his stable* at Voiiaillee, Ky. Merrill Griflin and hisdaughcr, of Dearborn Mich., sulT ring with it.fljeiki, took a fatal dose of stryohnine in ra stjtys for quiuine. Charles W. Elliott, a B. <i O. brakeman, was crushed to death at Grafton, W. Va. Scribner's Mountain Ilonte, at Goffiown Cent 'r. N. H., was burned. Loss (15,000. Jesse Wilson's barn on the Upper Delaware river, near Bor .'entown, N. J., was burned, and tweqUy OTprs and a number of j L>you*,'ft^$9 thSrifm :gy being o'aru^L''ojr I _ ..iirnml t rain The B ink of South Da koto, at Madison, S. l> .has assigned. Tho members of ths Pentecost band of Faith Healers at NuscoJa,I;l., are being prosecuted for holding noisy meetiugs, Stephen A. llubbard, managing sditor and ono of tho proprietors of the Courmit of Hartford, Ct, died at tho ago of 63 years. The supremo chapter of the w^rld of tho new order, "Tho Progressive Endowment of Amorica," was organized at Richmond, Va. Tho fiuit trees in the vicinity of Lexington, Va., are in bloom. A eoi<)rod inun, charged with burglary, was taken from a deputy sheriff 1 in B irnwell county, S. C.^ tied to a tree and shot to death by feailikeJ wBito men. Huff-on <fc RuglerV furniture manufactory st Sandusky, (Mo, was burn'd. Loi-ses 1103,000; ins irarM?C5J)03. F.re at llrii.l> dock, Pu.,destrofl flliannis Brothers' plain' log niill nnd lumbal^r Is. Loss f 1 >,000; no i- imurance. ??. of Mississ'pp ? " lo*bh aanuhTTK^HBK^t^T?tho can y? ' ing of oono#aled/W3bon^ John XV. Kaufman waselocted predion! of the Sr. Louis ' Merchant*' Exchange.-F.nnl piprrs of [ treaty between the States and tho Coour d'Alono Indians fas. bcon signed. Tho Patoka river, in Iuiiar^a, linsove: flowed and Mood >d n tract of coi^itry twenty miles long by three miles wide. ?Is idoro Monarch, the defaulting secretary of tho Turner l Build.ng Association of Minneapolis, has I been arrest'd. chargojwit'u eipbezziing {3J,i of the society's lunda' Tuo> West Indiannpolis Hominy Mdls ut Indianapolis, was destroyed by ilre. Lou $7>*d)J; insurauo flJ.OiH).??One of the walls oLthj New Presbyterian Church in .Brooklyn gave way under tho fore? of the wind, ny'd cru-hod an adjoining dwclliug, killing ss^reral of tho inniates and injuring others.-'?Five woo'eu mills of fs'orton Mauufucturimr Couiouny, of Walpoki, Ma-a., wore burned. William Belle CarU?ygr- rt ~?#p5:rtrtxii0gn4a.il. then coinmifod suicide. L, P. Scoville, o uepbew of tie assassin Geitcuu, and secroeary of (h Chicago Building Association, has disappeared, and it is charged, short iu his accounts $5,000. A pile of timber in Chicago toppled over and crushed John Thompson ail Andrew Johnston to death. i The CoOiellsville coke workers have offered their iew scale, but tin operators > | have not yeti:copted it. Calvin S. Briee j whs nominate^for United States senator by | the Democrats of the Ohio legislature in > caucus. Tliewa Prohibition Convention ndopted resolutbuKl demanding t..o enact| ment of laws toiojmpel the absolute enforcement of the prohibitory law. J. V. Pai risu was hanged at iiaieign, N. i C., for a criiuiital assault upon bis thirteen i year-old daughter,-*?"Three masked men . bound Petei; Lirioa, of Saline, Kins , will] ropes, an i thes atolahis bonds. The seven have firm ynrt, a farmer, of WmaKac, Itid., and Ker diuand Castings, about the dividing line of their farms, Castings.shot 1 killed Kur yart and woundel his child, after which he l committed suicide.? By a nutural gis ex plosion ut the Luoy furnace, at Pittsburg I Thomas Welch, a workman, was killed, a < live others seriously hurt. There wore 3J4 business failures in the Unite 1 Stat-! and thirty nine in Canada the pist week. DEATH IN THE WIND. Spvoii Formans 14 i 11 ? ?! liy (li?> Fall a: a Church Wall. An nppilllng disaster occurred in Broofc lyn, New York. The heavy n in Is ih -ok the no wPresbyeriar church at 151) > Tbroop avenue toils founda, I tion, and at 4.3J A. M., 0110 o( I ho walls fel j with a crash on tho ?hfa?_storv from? buil I ing adjoininK and brought with it death an , destruction, i j Tho ruined building was tenanted by thf Mott and l'urdy families. They numberei l ine persons. Five of thoni nTe reported dead. Two were carried out of the ruins at fifiriniKltf iniiipnil lh..f il.au ?u.ll ili?* The tennnt* in tbn littl frnrno house n<ldoining wero a'nrmcri by the manner in which tho chin ch walls shook ami rattled, Their own d welling was considerably sltakt n, ami it was with fear and trembling that they retired. Twice during ihenlght some of the inmate were urous d hy the ro:ir.ng wind, but every o e was in bo.l and asleep when the disaster j occurred. The heavy brick wall of the church fell su ldonly with a crash, an I in a I heap that lore through tho cockle-shell I structure adjoining like a battering rain. Tho dwelling seemed to part in twain,ami in stantly the shrieks and groan-* of the injured startled the residents for blockanbout. The noise of the falling wall attracted the attention of a polio-man, and hr sent in a fire alarm and summoned the reserve from a police station lie n at'hand. Ttie house hud been torn in such a uj4nnrr that a bed room w.-l cxpo.iedftaas^j^^fcE-' .".bin plain Of 111k osf/belieltHt 6 mass of ruins. The fearful podBH^H5ttod to stun those who witm-M^d it, all vor a few momenta nothing was don* render nsslstanco tc those within. TbcAttio police and llremon arrived and started?!, KMho rescu \ Th-y first found Mrs. KrXna Purdylymg beneatli a mass of t;mbei8^knd bricks, so seriously injured that she cotAl not sp*ak or move ev<nwh nt cyhndfptfred her out of tin charnel house into ti^ ?tr.et. By the overturn!^ of an engine on th Eouisville and N istV jo Railroad. owing t tlio sprcadi g ot toj frails, at Kinchtown Kentucky, CiurenceWTesford, night clerk a the rouii t house, w.ifcs k lied. Enginee Charles Slogg, Piretn*#! O.'orge Colloty no 'ihouias McCuue wiro injured. Fourteen Men Meet Death in the Falls of the Ohio. A Terrible Accident. at the llrlil.TC at I.onlsvllle?'Without WnrnliiK the Workmen aro Mangled to Heath or Drowned. The most appalling accident known toKentucky in ninny years occurred at Louis ville. It was nearly ??ino for work to 6toj all orer the city, and workingmen were expected homo by their families, when tho report spread rapidly that there was a wreck or crash of somo kind at the now bridg< under construction between Louisville auc JelTersonviUe. It wm first reDorted that a span of tlx bridge had fallen and a gang of men hat Iwftta v.frj- Ar,*Ci WVH tAtYM< ..V 'iM-ffPSl.?, and the workmen employed in it had beer crushed to death by stone and timbers. The caisson, known as No. 1, wasnb-mt lO yards from th> Kentucky 6hore. As tin workmen of tho pumping station wore look inj for the men in the caisson to put off it their boats, leaving work for the night, tlit*j suddenly saw tho low, dark structure dis-ip p-^ar in dashine, white waves, and hoard, be fore they could realise what had happened the roar of the furious maelstrom. A runner was despatched to the lifo-snvlnf station, and throe skiffs were marine 1 aire pulle I to the scene of the wreck. Word wai sent to the police station, and a f quad wai at one ordered to Ore ground, to aid in th work of recovery. The coroner was called and went with a corpi of physicians. The site of the bridge is at the upper em' of the citv, just below Tow Head Island Within an hour from tho disap|>earanco ol tho caisson, three thousand people wore 01 the shore straining their eyes in trying tf see something of the wreckage. Dozens ol bo its wore plying alout over the spot where the caisson had stood, and lights danced t? nnd fro with thom i-tout there was no trace o the massive structnro cf stone hud timbei which had kept off tho' bungr^4*erHJ< promise any hope to the anguished, Stristm mothers nnd wives who stood indite throni i on the shore. The water rolled sullenly bu smoothly down from tho cofferdam aliov the pumping barge below where the caissoi 1 had stood. It was soon known that onl four of I ho eighteen men who woro at worl at that time had escaped. The Inst man out of tho calson whs Frnnl Haddox- IIo was barely saved by Murray who dragged him from where lie was e mail waist deep in the quicksand. Taylor says h 6tood nearest the iron l.addo- bv which thci got in and out of the caisson. He heard i rumbling, nnd there was a rush of nirnlmos at tho same instant. He jumped upon tin ! rungs of the ladder, followed by the oth?i men. They had hardly get clear of tho caissoi when the water hurst tlirough tho mnnholi in a surge, knocking them all into the river where they were picko.l up. Haddox says It 1 saw Ham Morris, who was cl tnliing nox below himself, swiftly drawn under by tli , sand and heard his cries for help hut couli do nothing. | The caisson is not wrecked, as at first sup posed, but has settled down in the bed of tli ?*'<? ?. xoinulaUly tilled with imuiI air wnter. There seems nh?so'ntely no hope fc anv of those c night within the caissin. John Knox, the gain; boss, took charge c the work Monday. The men who escape say he had thetn dig too deep before lettin the caisson settle, and the digging was to close to the shoe of the caisson. Just hcfor the accident Knox gave 6ome order t Robert Baldwin, the keeper in charge of tli upper door to the exit. Baldwin then opene this door, and the compressed air, wliic kept out the river, rushed out, letting in tli stream. The men say tliej* were working in an ugl quicksand at tho time. The caisson wa about forty feet by twenty, and built o timbers twelve inch s square. It was pre tected by a cofferdam, but tho river is ver high and the pressure of the water ver ftre at DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES Malcohn F. Ale Leo J, u mail carrier, we froz.'ii t)death ii-ar Wushiugton.CuliforuU Henry Grenmr was kill id at North Cori wad Furnace, l'a., by u craitagfetfttug While Bertie B -atio \vjgSTirAoTjjtj? wltip pistol in Atlanti, Georgia, Vt'was discharge fatally wounding his brother Garliel I. Two freight trains collided on the Sout Cheshire Railroad, near East Moroland.N ? Iiamshire, Engineer S. W. Slate and Firi ? man Gibson, were killed. A constiuetion train collided with an e: tra train on the Pennsylvania Railroad, net Brlvidere, New Jersey. Kngimer Wuilc of i'hilllipsburg, was killed, mid engine i s llnggcrty and Tetiiicliff were badly injur, i Frank Mahon, an el ctric light Itneiuai bcaino entangled in wires on an eiigui lu.u-.tj in Sr. Louis, su.-tiine>i a severe shooi au l foil to tho ground, sustaining prooubl fatal injuries. A freight train on the San Antonio nn Arkansas l'uss Railroad went through bridge at llalleltsville, Texas. O.i the cat were twelve ir.o i. fieveu were raviiru, nu t of tlieni bally ii'j nvd. Tiie bodies of tli ethers were not recovered. Two broth-i s, mimed Dyer, and two me named Collon nud Homers, loggers, wer tiurned to death at Beebas Camp, on tli I Teunossoo river, 7-i miles from I'nducal - Kentucky, by their cabin lukuig lire. I One of the thousnn 1 barrel stills of tli Nop' tha Works ut the S.und iril's Solar It It tinery in Lima, O.iio, exploded, sliakin * ad the houses in the city. The oil iuinu 1 dlately caught lire. Nine men were bruise I end burm d. t Carson Parker was found dead in a snloo in Pueblo, Calorado. At one time he wn one of the most eminent preachers of tli i Methodi-t Kp seopul Church in New Vor , State. He becumo a di unknrd and on teas , tiid wandered to Pueblo, lie ioav.s u tun ' tlv in Indiana. : THOSE KENTUCKY FEUDS. .Indue l.tlly Tells of I lie O ily Way I KSop Tlieni. Judge Lilly of tin circuit in which tl 1 mountaip feuds exist, is in Frankfort. 1! was asked what remedy ho could su^gc | for tho lawlesinoss. II? said: "Bend t , ernanl force to Perry County and keep there. It docs no gool to send Irpope.tW for two or three weeks and i ti ..i?..ia b ...i in.ra. coit money, hut tlio Hinte will h ?ve to spin * morifjr to nieak lip th s thing. Ths feud , I'erry county n? a vory difficult oiih to uioe ( Nearly every one of i Mo murderers has he< , in ambus i. Th rohasb-en almost no opj I fighting. , "Our people aro too completely intim , dated. You could not get up a posa \ \V r have a military company there, hut asm *n t> rs are afraid to do unything- Its captai \ hasn't dared to sloop at homo for thrt mouths. The proportion of our populate ac; ually engagt d in this quarrel is note largo, hut? per c nt. of an the r. st are i syinpethy with one side or th) other and tl 0 rnuander are so thoroughly cowed that the ? do not tl ire to make any attempt to ilii* h out t he lawless e.uinoiit. Tno helligerents ai >t (tie in-st anno I mo < anyone ever s iw. Th? r h ive guns and revolvers of ths very latei d and i>e?t patUrus aud are thoroughly orga Ucd." The SpatPatnR^^^aiM^HHHI^MH The Glatgow iron market U again excited. Jj^t The strike among the colliers in Belgium is spreading. The steamship iiritanuic sunk a brigantiuo on the Irish sen. I??*m , Tbo famous Church of St. Miohnel at Aix la-Cbu pelle has been burited. 1 Tho broken cable in the middle of tlij Atlantic ocean has been repaired. Al Tho porters empl tyed by tho Dublin, clon Wick low and Wexford ltiilway Co. have oity ' struck. ,. uort A new customs tariff is being prepared by , the Russian tlunucj ministry. It will take i ft *1 ' eircct July 1. and Russia and tbo Vatican arc now on good soar terms. The Pops has appointed a number of stor : bishops for that country. been > The theatre at Zurich, Swi'z. iland, took . .. I ti e during a performance and was burned, but the audience escaped. over s I'rlnco Charles William Philip, head of tho t,,os . House of Auorsperg, dead ut Prague from stor t itiH mini ttion of the lungs. uuti ' " r?: ? ?- ...? tho i i I with uistiuguished honors. ,M* I u. | Mr. 1) ?vUt in a speech at Dublin express'd Bori ) I his want of sympathy with the proposed gov- agoi * J eminent endowment of universities. six, The French government will enforce the Cna ' legal penalty against three hundred priests ?hsl convicted of interfering with elections. uor> . ! King Humbert was thrown front liis horse while returning from a hunting trip ?m>l was 8 * '" ' bru.sed, but remounted ami rode home. w.18 . ... 'that ; An Austrian newsp ip-r c'aiius to have in. ns t1 i formation showing that Dr. Peters and mom- niCrt s | hers of hist Y,during party in Africn.uvniive- py , * j Twenty six boys were suffocated in th> tel ( ' | pnupor's school at Forest (date, ling. Tlio mile ? | budding look lire fi oni an overheated stove, is In I ] ITince Hism uvk received IVJ0 ti l jgrnms of " 'P , New Year c ngratulntions Ironi dilfereut ',u" f piris of Uoriiiuny and from foreign coun- l"'0' , j tries. > | A iiumhcr of conspirators who it is si id I rj f were nupl cated in a plot to kill the L'z ir luol > were captured iu the imperial paUoa iu Bu | ^ llred upon while resisting the desti uction of '*'* 1 r llieir printing presses. for Ic The luman Line steamship City of Paris .' ma le tuo run from New York to Q leunstown 1, k i in 5 days hours und 50 minutes, her high- ? , est dail)' run being 475 miles. ,j, ' Mr. Parnell is anxious to have Cnplnin Pol 0 O'iSflea's divorce suit brought to trial ns soon ton ^ as possible i:i order that ho lit ly have au op- woi * portuoity to defend himself. B -b 0 The Unitod States squadron arrivedat Tanr giers and exchanged salutes, but did not com- hea municute with the city, us th?*ro are on tlio ',ut a j ships altogether 48 cases of iillueiizi. he b The shopkeep rs of tlio Cmnleroi district , of Belgium rofuse to give the striking miners o furtlier credit, conscqueiitly many persons , t , ure starving and a Lreiid riot is threatened. " I At a consistory the l'opo referred to the ina " | restoration of temporal pow -r as necessary mo ) to the independenc ' und litierty of the Pops ' in the exercise of Ids mission, and declared ? i lie did not claim the restoration irom human jj \ DIOliTN. t Many members of tbo committee of tho ,f ' Society of Artists ut l'aris will resien tlmir un tj ' positions in order to force re elections on the I ? ; question of the justice of the awurds made ? ,q lor exhibits in tbe urt department of the re- b 0 cent exhibition. ten o | The Jjondon Slur says tlio ninrringo be- low o tweon Miss Gwendoline Caldwell, who pre- i r| d son tod tlio Aimricin Catholic University : h with $oUO,000, and l'ruico Mur.it h is been nr- 1 e r mgt'd, the prince being w.llmg to ncc ptany j it'H ! allowance the lady may grant him. j ?bo y A defective stove in the palueo of the King |ar, ? of Pelgiuiu at Uaokon.a subuibof U . uisels, * set lire to the building, and before the II lines could bj subdued the palace was dosiroyo 1 Hl,i y with ull the royal urt collection. Princess I<on y Clementine, tin King's d tught r, had a liar- l og j row escape from being burned to do ilh. Her at \ | governess was suHKcutod. The uio ley loss W | on the building and its contents will bo ini- und i. | nit us.*, whiletiioart treaiuresdestroyed ciu- tin, ' not he replaced. lu r due ; WORK. A^WORKERS. Z In bis addM^j^^^^^^^kkhood of Locoa motivaMfl tUe o( > _ .dmniilsiwpgW rn ' Tlio iniioutifl Brothei* of i si hood of Cs'r|3?H|^HHHRI*kre?sury for No- I '1 vember was $8,WdMK' ? | bee ,b Taunton (Macs.) Locomotive Works and j 2 w the South ru Paciflc Railroad Company, at { We< & ; San Francisco, have reduced tho Hours of j ' ,V( ! lab r to eight hours per day, und pay by the ? t. hour. 1 Nv*t ir The barbers' union, of (Irani) It-ipids, 1? >s 11 established a rule lining a member 50 o.-nts ? ' rs ubeliever cuuglit smoking u nou-u> ion cigi r, J. $1 lor the second oirense and expulsion lor . . ,t the third oir.-nse. j 'J io ; Tho date for the joint convention of tho j' i c, ; Nation d Progressive Union of .Minir< and CJn y the Ivnigliii ot Labor has hi on changed from iro January til to J.tuuury ~i, in Columbus,wiien tip. ,j amalgamation is possible. 1 K a j Tho American Flint Class Workers' Na- bus s tional Assembly, iii its latest report, shows a win o yearly income of f100,000, and total in> mber- PW o i hip of 5,0>5. There aro less than ono hun- j MSS died non union men in the entire trade. Is n Tho Boston f roe-si one cutters got the oi.h'.? rt." o hour day as a Now Year's prcs mt, both em- NV', io ployer and omp.oyod favor.ng the reduction 1'' ' i, of \vi rking hours. Tney will accept 44 cmts i per hour tor their work until April 1, when P01 0 a d.-inaud for 5J cents will bo inude. The socialist lalor party of Italy his g achieved brilliant victories in its tlri-t march ,0l j- into tho political Hold. Wherever t io work- . ()1 d ' men had cuiididut)s in the uumicipai dec- [|V 1 tious largo vot s were cast (or them. In some |,y ? i places not only several candid it-s but t'io 18 ; entir.- labor ticket has been elected. Through- j>r l() out I a'y, Ironi Loin hardy to N iples, too llI( j. | wording class has raised its voice. COl i, I The organizing Commit-oo of theContril | | Labor Union ot Indianapolis, Itid., will give j : special attent ont >theorgainz .t on of work- | ni ' tag women during tbo present yo.r In the di "iiciiii unions mimt'Ii c ill nun it ruiiijnr, ; pratlicit I and inexpensive method of orgum| zition winch focuivs tiits member? all t o advantages to be found in any other labor o organizition, and many t iat can bo found , nowhere else. They can have absolute con- ?j Hoi of all matters directing their own ii.t*r L M est, * Ui The total number of failures iu the Un.td >UJ st States during 188W, as reported to Hrnd th< m street's, is ll.7itt. or Ktefotr cent, more than lif it fui j,t II oent., while 40 Pnitdll! t.es lorn Ilka ]w R6.7u?iii> n. In ?r p r oea*7V^^H^H|Ra??e!a is ai oiu fo.UOO.ttU, c?W^PPr%ent. th ja Mr. iv>wder!j'elet*aJIKSio the workinghi men of Pennsylvania on tbo value of thoballot iutelhgeatly and honestly used is nucth r ' exumplo of the wise and honornhle motho Is . o by winch ho nims to improve the condition '! n- of organiz-d wage-workers, lie tells the vast .? in army of labor* rs in thut Stat that they must 1 o cense being partisans, Ho urges them to ig- . in nore parly and work tigetlier for a secret 10 ballot so that they may vote henceforth uh- < 1 in s dutely as tin y choose, without any fear of io | coercion. Then thoy can compel tlm powery | lul corporations of Pennsylvania at 1'ust to j'j' ro resueit exirt.ng laws. re j ? ?? ||(. y 1 Hy the breaking ot a caisson of Uie new in I Ixruisville ami Jeffersonville bridgo at to *' : Louisville, Kentucky, fourteen worktueu th wore drowued. 1cm West is Broken. ith nntl Itcsl rnclInn In ttio Wliiil'* (rep In VI immurl II my House* lllow ii Itowii mill lVopIo It II loft mill Injured. bout 4 iiC o'o:ock in tho afternoon n cy0 struck the southwestern section of tin of Sr. Louis and swept ou through to the hern limits, miking a pathway nearly artor of a tnilo wide, an I leavinz death destruction in its tracks. There was .. eoly any warning of the upproacli of the in, owing to tho fact (hat the sky had 1 ovorc ist for several hours boforo the fore? of the wind was fel', and it was nil ' in an inajfolibly brief period of time, .o residing iln an 1 near tho path of the m scare lv realizing what had happened 1 it was all over. In neighboring towns A storm did terrible dam ige. At YenicJ, Jk Kiiionniiu injures: - ?? jad?Mrs. Maggie Connors, aged t^rtyi inrd MoConuel, aged forty; J>w Weaver, I ninety. Injured?There# i Weaver, aged both legs broken, will probably die*, Mrs. rles Miller, badly cut and bruised- Seriy injured?Annie Connors, Maggie Ooni, Francis Connors. mess ingor from the east side t f ilia river ; that tlio storm in St Clair county, 1 I., unusually sovere. iiro >klyn, a villa of if ri l I u.iiilj fiiuiniu fit h-llM <nir T.til mi)4f. le dam* ;o at 15 ist St. Louis ami at Voir.is largely ounllao.l to railroad properin 1 cm *11 dwelling! mid telegraph and ihono p i'.os Brooklyn is about throe i! north uf 15ist8r. Louie, lis population rgely composed of colored pjopl \ It was irted in 15 ist St. Louis ill it tbo l.t le town b.'cn sw.-pt off tho face oI tho earth. lo res not q dto so ba l as that though bad l,li, an l though several wero injured, no i woro lost. A number of dwelling* aro uiii*-. Til* liaptistCnurch is onti.ely detailed, and the M. 15. Cnuroh, a frame ding, unroofed and turned clour around ts foundation!. t Bj levlll?, III., sever il public bui'diugs j unroofed, but. no one r jportod injurj.I. lito Wall ash train arrived at Relay Du, in Knit Ht Louis, about 8.15 P. M. Tho iueer and conductor rep >r; that during storm tiny feared that tho train would .brown from tlio track, so torrill J was thi co of tho wind. n addition to dot >n of dwollingsand stores be southern, centr il and nor.burn s "dions bis city more or lost wrecked, tbo followbig buildings wero damaged: bo Anchor Mills, Goodwin candle factory, Innn shops, Va * liroack's furnituro fnoy, Kuigsland & Ferguson f irm linplenient ks. Missouri Pacific Hospital, iiogdon ooi, German Evangelic il Cnurch, Second sbyt.'rian Church, and ut lers yet to be rdironi. Three f itaiitios nre reported, tho names of tho victims have not yet n ascurt lined. They comprisi an ont.ro idy, f ilbor, motlior und child, residing on iiiitl stroet, near Tenth, and they in tth ir lbs tiy tin falling of a building on their oiling. 'ho losses on property are rouglily estited at lUO.OJO, but will probably prove re. -aSiTATE OF TRADE. ^ * Kit) I ill pro vein rut CuiiMtil by More NfiiNonitblc IVenther. VV. pecial telegrams to ftrartstrc 't s note the \ >1 orai y apjie iratice o:' coluor weather, fol* 4 ed at important Woctorii cities, particulyCii c i'{C,8t l'.iul, Minneapolis, O nuh 1, irni City an 1 St. Emis by a mod ntoly iroved distribution of clothing, hoots and > 8 (?ii l giooery staples. Tuo gain is not jo, being in t hy lower teiuporaturo an I aperol by th i uuf ivorablo condition cf gon roads at the interior South and West, ilhorand lumber are quiet, and cutleand ;s, with freer rec opts, tend to weakness iVestorn centers. iurciutilo collection < generally aroslow, I the immediate out I o< is not for material irovsment. Atlh* West, Indian corn is viug with fre dom, butSiutti farm proi'.s ere shipped with loss freedom, notably ton. Hog pro lucts have been more active, h flrm or st ?ady prices and in some Juices slight advances. leperts to Jhratisdr**4'* grow earnings \looty-two rain 0*4 companies lor 1880 agigate #3;7,5o0,tr$jf an iocn'eaae over 1888 line per cent. 'he demaud for Hour and for wheat lias hi dull both at hotno and abroad, cash No. ido oiing at ,ft?o only over the previous jk. Indian corn is more uctive, h leculn'ly. with the close showing an u iv mic j of \<jo 011 nearby options. O its folic w id corn urathsr less activity. Stocks of wheat , 10 United States, balls ceisls and Ciuaout orfar.uers' hands, with like stocks in ctrulin, in E 110,?e, and ull iat from all ntries for Europ , as cabled to Urd't rt's aggregat 1 l.i,800,(100 bushels 011 Jan. s'J 1 against 101,80.1,000 bu chels oil J Miliary 880 a doclme of 18.0J0 bll-llils, 10),,' per t. Exports of wheut and Hour as wueat m liotn coasts, United Statesnud Canada, c weok aggregate 0.017,001 bushels against IS,151 bushels l ist w.-ek mid 1,080,887 hels 111 tho like week of 1880. The total of rut (mil flour ac wheal) exported July 1, 0, to date is 50,000.501 bu-lt -Is against 63,000 bushels 111 a like portion of 1888 0. lotwilhst iiidigig free r.ce'ptsof raw sugar aors have 0:1 joyed a goo 1 demand which, ti linn cables, is responsible Tor an ndvunci '? lb?, for raw an 1 for refined sugars. uksot refined in tho (J.iited wtitosaru re ted to be 20,0*0 tons less than ttioy were a ir a^o. Til -re has beon more act.Tity in Tee. with prices j+O higher. >pi I gtrade in cotton goods has opened eni ag.n.;ly, a goo 1 package trad t being re v "ted. I'ruit cloths uru only modernt >iy aco. Woolen goods uro quiet. Doliver.oi ogoitsof Spring goods on orders are lurge. w wool isst ady but in moderate de uund. icjs nr.- firm. L'glit crop inovoinent and proved sp eculative demand liuve ad vat.c.'O ton prices % ; to 5-itio. JRNED BY MOLTEN METAL. rrilic anil Fatal Holler K*plosion In it I'ltlMburg Furnace. \n exp osion occurred at Lucy Furnace >. 1, of Carnegie, I'lilppsfc Co., 1'ittsburK. to man was kilo land nino others seriously lured. Simultaneously with the report of s explosion, the bell and stopper wire tyu irora meir positions at m-? t ? ? rnact*, the bcmry iron r|m was broken and bower of molten ore1 And bricks shoU up 0 tb? ?lr blth above tho furnace like a Ininturo volcano. Tne men at the base of fclio furnno?, whon ev heard the explosion ran in terror for eir lives, but nearly nil of them were Ught and inoro or less injured, while Mich1 Welsch 'ost his life. He fell into the ley into which the cinder runs and was ttlly burned. When found he was still ive, but died on the way to tho West i'eun ospital. Nine of the men were either struck by fallX debris or burned by the molten metal rowu out at the too of the fiimaoe. The juredare Thomas Welsh, brother of Michi struck on the side and injured interilly; Thomas Sumnterlee. John Mcdinnis. irry Hulford, John Qjigley, Michael >rm<, Alurtla .Summerlee, Henry Hkillknn d J lines Puffy. None are fatally. The >lten inetal winch fell on all sales, set fire the wood work about tbe furnaou, but o II noes wore extinguished with slight M.