A BIG DEAL IN MARBLE. TIE QUARRIES AT RUTLAND, VER~ MONT, PASS INTO THE CONTROL OF TWO COMPANIES, IOSTON, Jan, 3 —A sensation will be caused in the marble trade when it is learned that a big deal was consum- mated to-day by which the control of the most extensive deposit in this coun try 1s contined to two great rival cor. porations, ‘The deposit Is at West Ratland, Vt., and was divided: into several quarries, whose product included the standard **Rutiand white marble’’ and the *“*Rut- land statuary marble,” the two best grades quarried in this country. These various interests have been consolidated in two companies, the Vermont Marble Company and the Sheldon Marble Company of Rutland, Vt. The prop- erty purchased by the latter company Includes about two hundred acres of and, The undeveloped derosit is consid- ered practically inexhaustible, and probably the most complete plant io the country. There are flve quarries and flve mills and several finishing shops, The annual capacity of the mills on present working basis is about 4,000,000 superficial (one inch) feet of sawed marble, yielding about $500,- 000, Boston capitalists are largely in- terested in this deal. THE WEALTH OF THE VANDERBILTS, I'WO HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FOUR MILLIONS, NEW York Jan. 3.—The combined wealth of tie Vanderbilt family ac- cording to an article which will appear in to-morrow’s World, is $274,000.000, and the estimated income from It per annum is $13,864,000. No other single family in the world is so rich. If kept intact the total fortune will at the end of 25 years almost reach $1,000,000.000, and this result will be attained by the simple arithmetical progression of compound interest. A careful calculation of the wealth of individual members of the Vander- bilt family makes the following ex- hibit; Cornelius Vanderbilt, $100,000,- 000; William K. Vanderbilt, $83,000,- 000; Frederick W, Vanderbilt, $16,000, - 000; Geo. W, Vanderbilt, $15,000,000; Mrs. Elliott F. Shephard, $12,000,000; Mrs, Wm, D. Sloane, $12,000,000; Mrs, Mrs, W. Seward Webb, $12,000,000, Total, $274,000.000, general belief. She has an annuity of $200,000. When Wm. H. Vanderbilt dled he left a fortune, in round num. bers, of $200.000,000. It is remark- able how it has been increased in the death, NEWS OF THE WEEK. —James Machen and Nathan Gil. christ, aged 9 and 14 years respectively, were drowned on the 30th ult. while skating at Toledo, Ohlo. Policeman Henry Fehle died in St. Lous on the evening of the 28th ult., from hydro- phobla. He was bitten in the leg by a dog last September. An explosion Puyallup, Washington Territory, on the 28th ult, blew a cabin to pieces and killed James Blagg, — Amos J. Stillwell, a merchant, of Hannibal, Missouri, was murdered by burglars at 2 o'clock on the 30th ult, The weapon was an axe, which, with Stillwell's pocket-book and $35, was found in an alley in the rear of the house. John Burns, manager of a res taurant in Pottstown, Penna. , bas been named Sweeney. Sweeney became obstreperous and refused to go out, when Barns hit him on the head with a club, —Burglars broke the plate-glass window of Isaac Aaron, a Grand street pawnbroker, in New York, on Charles F. Merle, San Francisco with $10,000 of the firm's money, The warrant for the pardon of Benjamin F. Hopkins, the Cincinnati bask em- bezzier, was signed by the President on the 29th uit. ville, Penna., on the evening of the 28th ult., carried the safe, weighing over a thousand pounds, to the rear yard, and blew it open with dynamite, securing over $6(0. Four persons and two dogs were in the house at the time the burglars were at work. --A daring robbery was committed on the 31st ult., in the money order departmant of the Post-office at India- napolis. A. R. Johnson, cheif of the department, was left alone, his assist. ants having gone to dinner, A stranger appeared at the window and said that a gentleman in his buggy desired Johnson to come out and see him. Johnson was persuaded to go out, but found the man wanted to tee another Johnson. When he returned he found that the stranger had entered the office and filled his pockets with greenbacks, The thieves secured about $2500, ~In Craighhead county, Arkansas, the wile of William West, a rougn character, left him and went to live with her motber, Mrs, Dairey. West went to see his wife, who refused to gee him, but ber mother went out on the poich with the young child of the couples. West abused Mrs, Dairey as baving caused the trouble between him On the morning of the 30th, ult, near Ripley, Ohlo. Mrs. Turner and her little daughter, also a daughter of George C, Lloyd, three Brooks brothers, and a man whose name 8 unknown, all colored, attempted to eross {he river from Kentuckey to Ohio in a small flat bottomed boat. At some distance from shore the waves from two passing steamers capsized their little craft, and all seven were drowned. - A passenger train on the Chieago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad struek a broken rail near Tama, lowa, on the morning of the 31st ult, and the engine was wrecked, The engi- neer, Nichols, and fireman, Francis, were killed, A boiler in Dush’s saw mill, near Millbrook, Michigan, ex- ploded on the 31st ult, killing WW, W. Dush, proprietor, and John Carr, the night watchman, and fatally injuring Dert Smiley. Patrick Redding, a fire. mun, was killed at a colliery; near Shenandoah, Penna., on the 31st ult,, by a premature discharge of dualin, Col. J. M. Jones, a wealthy ranchman, in Cheyenne county, Kansas, was gored to death on the 30th ult, by a bull. He was engaged in work about the stable when the animal suddenly attacked him in the rear. ~ William I’rice, a prominent and wealthy farmer who lives near Athens, Tennessee, was shot and fatally wonnded by some unknown person on the night of the 20th ult, A policeman named Seal was murdered by a negro while on duty in Charlottesville, Vir- ginla, on the evening of the Jlst ult, The murderer escaped. —James Gilmore, of Boston, Indiana, has recently been annoyed by persons stealing and riding his horses at night. On the evening of the 20th ult., he awoke and saw some one at the stable door. He shot, and, going to the stable, | found his own 14-year-old son mortally wounded. — During a Christmas celebration in the Lutheran Church, at Soughtstown, in Camberland county, Penna., on the evening of the 290th | heard and the floor began to sink, The | people rushed to the doors and windows, | mapy women and children were tram i pled upon, and & number of persons | were injured, two— Newton Goodheart {and Cbarles | Many were severely cut glass in jumping from An examination of tre building subse- quently showed that the sills were broken and the floor had sunk ten | feet. ~ A shght fize in Zeller’s Hotel, in St. Louis, early on the morning of the | 1st, caused a panic wwiong the guests, i during which three women jumped {from a third story window, These were Mary Wesland, who, besides | being badly burped about the head and body, had : n arm broken and in- i baled flames: died at the hos. { pital; Mary Dav: on, aged 30, nad an | arm broken in tw. places, and received scalp wounds; lLi/ze Durbam, 32 | years, a widow wiiu three children, | also received scalp wounds, and had an ram broken, A {re in St, | early on the morning of the 1st, des- | troyed the immense six-story brick | bullding of the Richardson Drug Com- | pany, at the corher of Fourth street i and Clark avenue, with a three-story | brick warehouse in the rear belonging to the same firm, The fire extended to and also destroyed Woess's masque- rade goods store, a row of three-story | brick boarding houses and the livery i stable of Scott & Lynch, The loas of | the Richardson Company is estimated | at $750,000 on stock and $150,000 on | bulldings, The stock was insured for : $650,000; the building for $100,000. | the drug house, is missing, and sup- { posed to have perished, New York on the ist one man was killed and two men and a8 boy woun- {ded by pistol shots fired to celebrate {the arrival of the new year. The shooting is supposed to have been ae- jcidental In each case. During a {drunken brawl In New York on the evening of the 1st Michael Crow, aged 23 years, was stabbed to death by a { party of five men with whom he was quarreling, His brother -~ in - law, were arrested, Louis Schmidt, an inmate of the Soldiers’ Home 1m Mil- | waukee, Wisconsin, stabbed and { killed W. F. Ruder, a fellow veteran, on the lst. They quarrelled about their war records, met on the 1st in Harrisburg, and or. ganized. John C., Grady was elected President of the Senate, and Henry K, Boyer, Speaker of the House, The Governor's message was received and read. —The San Francisco Chronicle, in | its annual review, states that the past year was the most prosperous in the history of California. It is estimated that the present population is 1,400, 000, many of the counties Laving doubled and even trebled durlug the past year. The value of the mineral products In 1888 is placed at $20,000,- 000; manufactured products, $170,000, 000; orchard products, $24,000,000; cereal erops, $65,000,000, ~ Louis A. Horner, a salzaman, in the employ of Heary Homer & Co., wholesale groczrs, in Chicago, depar- ted a few days ago, leaving a deficit of $15,000 in his accounts. On the 1st, he was arrested in Montreal, and will probable be extradited on a charge of forgery. ¥. H. McCann, cashier of thé bank of the J, B, Watkins Bafik- ing Company, In Lake Charles, Louis- inna, who fled from that place as an embezzier of a large amount of the oy Lu Daven port asa clerk, and on the 20th ult, he is said to have forged a check for $3505, obtained the mohey and disappeared, —The six-year-old son of John Ut ter; while playing soldier at his home, near Little Sandusky, Ohio, on the 1st, jeeized a loaded shot gun from a corner and, lifting it to a chair, threat. ened to shoot his 18-year-old brother, A moment later the gun was dis- charged, the load lodging in the older boy's breast, causing, it is feared, a fatal wound. Several ‘stray shots struck the mother in the face, and it is thought she will lese her sight. -John Prettyman, an employe of the Western Union Telegraph Com- pany in Quincy, Illinois, fell off a train on the evening of the 30th uit, the wheels cutting off his right leg. He was three miles from West Quincy Station, and binding up the stump he crawled the entire distance on his hands and one knee, dragging his crushed and bleeding limb after him, He arrived at the station at © o'clock on the evening of the 31st ult. —Charles De Ia Graza and Jesus Barbo bad a quarrel about a woman in Anaqua, Texas, and on the 1st, when they met, began to shoot at each other, Both men were killed, falling within six feet of each other. -The pultic debt statement, issued on the 2d, shows a reduction ef §14,- 427,605. Total cash in the Treasury, $0615,501,078, —Two young men named Erb and Shoecker, employed at James Miller's dynamite factory, near Sumneytown, Montgomery county, Fenna., were blown to pieces on the 1st by the ex- plosion of a Lialf bucket of dynamite, It is supposed that in mixing the stuff the proper proportions were not used, “None of the pieces of flesh picked up were of sufficient size to show to which body they belonged.” — Lester Woods, 22 years old, was murdered near Paris, Illinois, on the 1st. The Sunday school of the district had a social gathering at the school. house, and, during the exercises, ascul. | fle took place and Woods was stabbed in the neck, the main artery being sev- i ered. Woods fell in his mother’s arms The murderer escaped during the ex- citement and was not recognized. | warrant was issued on the | young man named Awburger, —Al a dinner partly given by Charles | Wilson, living near Cre:ton, Iowa, {on New Year's Day, his family and nine guests were poisoned by partaking of meat salted in a vessel made of zinc. All are in a serious condition, ~San Jose de Costa Rica was shaken on the night of December 20th and morning of December 30th by a series of severe earthquakes, It is believed the shocks originated in the voleano of Poaz, eight leagues from the town. aud principal buildings in i suffered considerable damage. The | inhabitants encamped in the squares i and parks. No farther shocks having | occurred the alarm is subsiding. - Near Fentress, Mississippi, on the {evening of the 2d, Frank and James | Coleman quarrelled with Chas, and | Wm. Delay about the possession of the { farm, A fight ensued, in which Frank | Coleman and Chas. Delay were | killed, and the other two severly woun- ded, Two sisters of the Delays, who appeared on the scene, received slight { wounds, * All were prominent cilizons { of Choctaw county.” | ~The Board of Health of Springfield, | Massachusetts, has posted up placards | announcing the existence of a number the city i Christmas vacation for the large gram. i mer schools in the centre of the city | has been extended. | =A quantity of dynamite was ex- | ploded on the tracks of the Philadelphia ‘and Heading Railroad | Plane, Penpa., on the evening of the {2d. Four dwellings were partly { wrecked, and the rails torn up for some | distance. The dynamite is supposed to | have been placed on the track by train | wreckers, No person was Injured, ————— SENATE. Congress reassembled on the 21. In Tarif bil was resumed. On motion tof Mr. Alliston, the chain schedule | was gone back to, and amended so ss | to reduce the rates on chains Jess than i of an inch in diameter to 21 cents per pound--the present rate. The Senate then proceeded to the consid. offered by Mr, Vest, adjourned, Inthe U. 8S. Senate on the 34, the consideration of the Tariff bill was re. sumed. After three and half pages had been gone through, the Senate ad. journed, HOUSE, In the House on the 24, Mr, Springer introduced a joint resolution for the admission of the States of Ari- zona and Idaho, which was referred. The Fortifications Appropriation bill was reported and placed on the calen- dar, A bill was passed providing that in case of omission of the sender to place the lawful postage on a special delivery letter, such postage shall be collected on delivery. The River and Harber bill was considered in Commit: tee on the Whole, The clause appro- priating $200,000 for the improvement of the harbor of Philadelphia, and providing that no part of the money shall be expended until the title to certain islands in the harbor shall be acquired by the Umted States, was ’ River and Har lof August last, Pending action on an amendment of- fered by Mr. Cutcheon, of Michigan, the point of *‘no quorum’ was rawsed, the committees rose and the God Is Great, When waitiog, and watching, and weary, And dismayed at abrupt fave, Aud chided unkindly, and the world looks dreary; Remember that God is great, When all your efforts, and striving, and trying, Beem useless, and oftentimes too late, And the days are short, the years fast fly- ing; temember that God 1s great. When friends you need pass by without heeding, And refuse the word for which you walt And the world from under your feet seems receding; Remember that God is great, A ———————————— LADY B.’S BUTLER. Miss M. Is a pretty heiress, whose name for obvious reasons we must sup- press; Mr. R.is a young diplomatist who fancies he has every chance of be- coming an ambassador before the last of his ehort-cropped locks has deserted him, Mr, R, has heard of Miss M, as being the owner of a wonderfully beautiful diamond necklace, and as possessing more personal interesting paupers. Miss M., on the other hand, had been informed that Mr, R. was a very decent sort of a fellow, with the small- est amount possible of Foreign Office swagger, each other with mutual the opposide sides of decorated dinner-table, came up to Mr. R.’s expectations, but thetr owner surpassed them. ay i but evidently amusing-—not a painted, him, got up for admiration, and Inca- pable of conversation. | Not being accustomed to admire without some sort of return, he left | left hand neighbor and devoted his at- {tention to Miss M. They had grown i quite friendly over 5 o'clock tea, and | now exchanged telegraphic signs across {the table about any small episodes { that arose during the dinuer, {thought he was getting on, and be- icame so engrossed that he neglected his favorite entree and had scarcely | time to do justice to the saddle of mut- | ton. But when the regulation { had made its round he noticed a sud- | den change in the girl opposite to him, | She turned as white as her kerchief, and leaned back in her chair, | eyes and parted lips, For the rest of seemed incapable of rallying; but she shook her head when he made a sign that he was ready to assist her out of the room, and kept ber seat until the ladies rose and filed slowly through the | door. He would bave given much to follow them at once, because his curi- osity was vividly roused, | He was sure there was some mys- as if she had received a shock—seen a friend. Assoon as he could get away | he looked round the drawing room, and other ladies, and turning { preoccupation; he made his way to | her; and standing before ber, 80 as to ! shield her from observation, asked in | a low voice if he could do anything for { her. She looked up In surprise. | I don’t want anything.’ | at dinner, | ‘Did any one notice it?’ eagerly. | ‘Not a soul except myself. Of | course, I don't wish to force your eon- | idence, but if I can be of any service | £0 FOU? ‘Noone can do me any good,’ hur riedly. ‘Only I wish to heaven I had never come!’ He looked at her with genuine com- passion, for he saw that she was shiv. ering from head to foot, “Shall I feteh Lady BP ‘Not for the world. I would tell you, oniy you would think me so fool- ish,’ looking round to be sure that no one could overhear. ‘I promise you 1 won't,’ earnestly, as he took a chair and sat down just mn front of her, so that she should not have to raise her voice. ‘Pray, tell me.’ ‘It was only a dream,” with the ghost of a smile. ‘Last night I thought 1 was being murdered for the sake of this necklace,’ playing nervously with the diamonds round her white throat, ‘and I woke up struggling with a man ~a man with a long chun and reddish bair, I telt I should know him any. where, and I saw him to-day at din. ner,” with a shndder, ‘handing the liqueurs,’ ‘Why that was Bird, the butler, You couldn't be afraid of him?’ ‘1 am,’ looking up at him with ter- ror in her preity eyes. ‘I am sure he will try and murder me to-night. I can’t go to bed. 1 should never close luck-