AAI THOUSANDS HOMELESS. SEVEN HUNDRED HOUSES IN SAINT SAUVEUR BURNED. NO WATER AND XO INSURANCE, ONE KILLED AND ONE FATALLY INJURED, QuzBEC, May 16.—A disastrous fire broke out early this morning ‘n Saint Sauveur, in the house of Murs, McCann, on Valier street, and spread with great rapidity through the wooden district which surrounds it, The streets burned are portions of Valier, Cheunel, St. Peter and Ste. Marie. The insurance com- antes interested are the North British and Mercantile, London and Lanca- shire, Guardian, Agricultural, of Water- town, and Northern. The total losses so far made and in prospective may be B150,000, At 3 o’cloek it was 1mpos- sible to guess the limit of the fire, and the people were in dismay at the rap- idity with which the fire jumped from sne wooden building to another. The local arrangements for quenching the ire were defective, and the Quebec Fire Brigade was sent for and were juickly on the spot, but their efforts were crippled for want of water. B Battery was called out and rendered valuable assistance in fighting the dames, Over 100 wooden houses have been lestroyed. A good deal of distress will be caused by the destruction of a large aumber of wooden shanties, on which there 18 no insurance, At seven o'clock the fire was under control, havin military were preparing to blow up some of the houses to check the fire a Sergeant Wallick, of B Battery. Both were hurled into the ruins. The body f Sa:rgeant Wallick was found near the door of a house dreadfully mangled. QuEepec, 10:30 A. M.—The fire in *ity side, but is still burning furiously bly stop only when nothing is left to feed it, The insurance is compara- tively small. There is a sirong easterly wind blowing, and rain hasbeen falling steadily for the last three hours. Quesec, 1 P. M,—The fire is still burning and no hopes are entertained reached. Already about 500 buildings, mostly wooden tenements, have been burned, and over 1000 people rendered few effects they were able to save, while a few have found shelter with friends in the city. Major Suort’'s body was recovered about noon. One leg and one arm had veen torn from the body by the explo- + ut from the trunk. St. Sauveur is a separate munici- sality from Quebec, but is seg arated ‘rom this city by only the width of a street, It has a population of about 15,000, Only last night the St. Sau- veur officials refused an offer of this city to supply them with walter. QUEBEC, May 16, 430 P. M.—The fire has burned itself out after reaching the limits of St. Sauveur, the tollga keepsr’s house in Valier street being about the last to go. The district north and west of Massue and Si. Ambroise streets has beep swept clean, with the sxception of a portion of Val About 700 houses were burned many of them were tenements, Fog de shan 1200, 5000 Jersons. comprising im a HEK CAPTAIN AND THIRTEEN MEN RESCUED. IVE ENOWN TO BE DBROWNED— (FTEEN OTHERS NOT YET HEARD OF, PORTLAND, Oregon, May 16.—Tle steamship Columbia, which has J arrived at Astoria, botind from San Francisco to Portland, brings a repor sf the loss of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company's side-wheel fron steamer Alaskan, ust lered at sea off Cape Blanco, Monday, land to San Francisco, Only meagre particulars have been received yet, May 11, bound for San Francisco, where she was to go on dry dock for jome repairs preparatory to being slaced on the Puget Sound route. it 8 supposed that she must have encoun- tered a very severe gale while on her way down the coast. The steamer fortunately carried no passengers, mouth of the Columbia river. The steamship Columbia, which was coming up the coast, picked up the captain and brought them to Astoria. Five men are reported to be drowned, There were 34 persons aboard, As soon as the vessel began to founder the the boats, Captain Howse, Captain Woods and all of the crew all in one boat, and the remainder of the crew in the others. Toe tate of the others is not yet known. Hopes are entertained, how ever, that they drifted landward and were saved. It is possible that all got in boats, escaping .rom the sinking steamer, The Alaskan was built in 1883, for the O. R. aed XN. Co., at Chester, Pa, by John Roach & Son, and launched August Sth of that year. She salled around the Horn, reaching this port April 8th, 1884, She was exactly like her twin steam- sr, the Olymlan, now plying on the sound, Her length over all was 275 teet, Ler depth of hold, 14 feet 6 inches, with 80.10 foot beam. She was the most elegantly fitted up steamer in the Northwest, and cost $350,000, ~— Andrew Cavanash snd Stephen Goodtask, Hungarian laborers, were killed by a freight train at Tullytown, Penna. on the evening of the 11th. ——————— a TERRIFIC HAIL STORMS GREAT DAMAGE DGNE IN EASTERN VIRGINIA. ESTIMATED LOSS A MILLION. BALTIMORE, May 14.—The Sun's gpecial from Norfolk, Va., says: About 8 o'clock this afternoon one of the most severe hail storms that ever struck this section passed over Norfolk and Portsmouth and vicinity. Ice particles of extraordinary size came down with the hall, and several inches of hail lay In drifts before the deluge of rain that followed carried iv away. The shade trees of the streets and the flower and vegetable gardens were badly wrecked. In the country the truck farms were badly torn up, the strawberries and peas, cabbage and other crops being ruinously beaten to the ground. The vineyards and orchards suffered severely, vines and trees being cut ter- ribly and the frult destroyed. Many of the truckers express themselves as ruined for the season, A swarth five or six miles broad was cut through Nor- folk and Nansamond counties by the storm. The truckers all around the Hodges Ferry section and between the Western Branch river and Portsmouth | lost everything. The loss will prob: | ably reach a million dollars, and it is | too late now to atlempt Lo recover, Yesterday morning about 2 o'clock a | terrific hail storm and rain fall swept | over Southampton county in the vicin- | ity of Newsome’s depot, and the grow- ing crops and orchards were badly damaged by large pieces of ice and the | great quantities of It. The drifts of hail were 24 inches deep in some places, and 12 hours after the storm il were over six inches In depth. | barn of Mr. W. 8, Francis was bl { down by the wind and demolished, { three horses killed, suffered damage to th Late yesterday afternoon a ck the great bridge section of inty, and the hail bie extenl, were as The potato and ; were damaged. Three t work in a field beyond Deep the same storm, The Wn and in stones were struck | ining and badly ed. from Danville ce th severest y Cl | passed over this " | day, doing greal damage | fences, fruit and shade trees, WEEK. —The severest storm of thunder and lightning ever known at Staunton, Virginia, passed over that city on the morning of the 12th, between 12 and 1 o'clock. It continued nearly an hour, the rain falling In torrents, The | lightning was continuous and fearfully bright, “and peal after peal o thunder fairly shook the earth.” At o'clock a discuarge of electricity Kk | horses, & colt and a cow standing | different places. —Mrs. William four children, county, Pa., sought safei; storm 1 cellar of their the 10th, laghbtning struck the house, ind the mother and three of the chil iren were killed, The child a month old, was found uninjured arms of its dead mother, » * 1 i 1 MeNall and her Ridgeway Elk, '3 from ; irom Le Louse “l ¥ 3 ue her OL in the wes 13. Smith, local editor of the n, in Springfield, Mas- tts, was shot and killed early or roing of the 13th by his brother in-law, BR. B. Sturtevant, at of his father-in-law, He was mistaken | for a burglar. Henry Demuth, seven years old, died in Si, John's Hospital, tin Yonkers, New York, on the even- ing of the 1ith. It is alleged that while at school he was struck on the nead by a teacher, and ths Was result of the blows, | Ward, aged IZ8 years, shol and killed George the { 13th, and then committed suicide, The | cause of the tragedy is unknown. —A terrific explosion of fire damp | faw miles from Chartlers, Pa., on the i 11th. Four Hungarian miners were | killed and the mine was greatly dam- | aged, —Part of the wall of the house al | No. 151 Spring street, New York, fell ! on the 13th, killing two men and fatal- i ly injuring George Thomas. Another | man, Thomas Crow, was slightly hurt. | The building was being torn down. The men killed were Patrick Gillan and James Joseph, both laborers. Pro- | fessor St. Clair, attempting to give his {leap from the clouds, at the falr | grounds in Houston, Texas, on the evening of the 12th, lost his grip on | the parachute and fell 300 feet to the | earth, He was instantly killed. ~ A terrific storm passed over Rock- ingham county, Virginia, on the 12th, | and news of the damage is just com- in. Lightning destroyed several and stables, Much stock was killed. In a part of the county hail fell and destroyed the wheal crop. Fences and houses were blown down, but no lives were lost, ~ Navigation on the Upper Missis- gippl, from Grand Rapids to Aitken, Minnescta, is reported to be com- pletely blocked by no cedar-log jam, “which extends for miles in tiers 10 feet high.” It will take several hun- dred men a week or more to break the jam, —During the progress of a Sunday School Convention in Somerset, Ken. tucky, on the 12th, Constable Doolin tried to arrest Wilillam Watson, for a trivial offence. The young man started to run and the constable shot him dead. Doolin was arrested. ~ Frank Ryan and Harry Sadler, the young men arrested in Canton, Ohio, on the 12th, on a charge of attempting to wreck the New York and Chicago limited vestibule train on the Pitts burg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Rall. road recently, have confessed their guilt, Three other men will be ar- An earthquake was felt on the 14th 1a the Mexican State of Guerrero. Toe oscillations were from north to south and lasted four secon is ing { barns —Five tramps attacked James Burns in Altoona, Penna, on the morning of the 14th, and robbed him of $30. They also stripped him of his clothing and left him for dead. Subse- quently a fight took place between the city policemen and the tramps and four of the gang wers captured, manacled and taken to jail, A gang of men sur- rounded the houee of a farmer named Phelton, at Rogersville, Kentucky, on the evening of the 11th, and attempted to take him out, Phelton shot and killed two of the gang, and the others fled, A hotel in course of erection in Tacoma, Washipgton Territory, was blown down by the wind shortly before 6 o'clock on the evening of the 13th, Five men were killed and four injured. At last accounts there were still some laborers buried in the debris. A fall of coal in the Huron mune, in Hough- ton, Michigan, on the evening of the 13th, killed two miners and badly in- jured two others. John Forester and passing train. The latter, while on his his neck. The Old Friends. Where are the scattered now, The old, old, old friends? One made ber dwelling where the mapies grow, And mighty streams through solemn for. ests flow, But never from the pine-crowned BOW A message sends. land of Bome meet me oft amid Life's common Ways; And then perchance a word or smile de- clares of cares; For love grows on, fares, Till harvest days. like wheat among the “Put some are fall’n asleep;’’ The words are sweet! O friends at rest beneath the blessed sod, God, When shall we meet? O Thou, divinest Friend, When shall it be That I may know them white, And see them sight, { Mine old familiar bright, Like unto Thee? ON TIARAS. HIS ONE LOVE, in their garments with a new and friendg—made fair and at Tolsnot and Wel. occurred the same evening Station, on the Wilmington and was delayed two hours” panes of glass were broken windows, a tree was biown across the track, and much damage was done to crops. Telegrams from various points in Minnesota and Dakota give accounts of heavy rain and snow fall The crops have suffered, fall will save the Crops, tilled and ally injicred by a terrible an Car We on the afternoon of the 1 were unloading a some part of the and 1 the men, When the h Den CoOil~ the ne others were thirea Lidl » 4 - * % o accident at the aaiciiy rks, 4s tith. : ¢ 3 of broke 1 miners, two, The accident oc- 1s of one — eter ws, aged DU years, killed and George Kochberger fa- y hurt, on the 14th, by the fall of an church in Plattsmouth, Nebraska, near which they were excavating for a new hotel buliding. work- were ightly h Mary a young girl, was accidently d, 1ilinois, on the 14th, boy was playing a revolver, the girl went to look into the when weapon was dls. , & produce Kent ICKY, Was room in a New Jersey, op Trop I'wo other 8ii inure A the " 1 4 i$ 114 rged. James hey dealer in Lexing! found unconscious in hi hotel in New Drunswics, 1 ry reine 5 bigs vue I Tht if on i, 15th, the ga having been eit He died wT hE wellddy shout 30 years of age, which kept ad the bottom by heavs Lie morning of [atlem river, at New washed ashore. A piece ng over 20 pounds, ¥ ! leg with stout pac silk umbrella, lady’s gold i partially Lurne Ok. in the afternoon. body of a seed man, had been weights, in the wl Was #1 154% WIE La York, iI ae On a g « right 3 a black bar with a star on iis head. — A telegram from Readi ng says that etiers have been received I rom Dr, J. Jrause, in Oklahama, showing that a was not murdered, as reported. —A deposit of tin bas been discov. ered about 20 miles from Topeka, kau- ~The Attorney General has author- ized the Marshal of Arizona to offer a ~While Mrs, Louis !Malmer was burned. an inner room, were burned to death. —A boy named Denham, aged 12 years, was drowned in Lake Trout, parton county, Florida, on the 16th, A Miss Shere.z, who went to his ssistance, was also drowned. — Robert Day. 27 years old, living near Loveland, Ohio, went home from a circus intoxicated on the evening of the 15th and shot and fatally wounded Lis father, Robert Day, Sr, 05 years of age, and also his divorced wile, Mrs, Hubbell He also slightly wounded the servant girl. wounded his daughter-in-law cause of the shooting was a quarrel between the young woman and her mother-in-law. Thomas L. Angel, a promicent citizen of the Indian Terri tory, was shot dead by John Swal- low, a ferryman at the Audrain ferry, on Grand river, on the 156th, Swallow was drunk at the time. — An attempt was made on the even. ing of the 15th to wreck a passenger train on the Fitchburg Rallroad, a short distance west of Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts, A track walker dis- covered a pile of ties on the track at a sharp curve, and on atiempting to re- move them was pelted with stones by unknown villians, He ran back to Shelburne Falls, procured help, and bad the track cleared in time to pre. vent loss of life. wJames Turner shot and mortally wounded T. A. Holton, a merchant, in a Magistrate's office, 1u Nashville, on the afternoon of the 16th, They quar. reled over a sult by Holton to recover goods sold to Tuarnor, , An old gentleman, leaning forw: dl | with his hands clasped over a goia- | headed cane, was seated in house situated a sumumer- grounds of a at a fasi walering-piace. dden by drooping * hotel He was in acorn vines, and his rentl seed deep and 13 appa frain of Li +3: 2) b Wikdl “Pity “si is {fa fall Yak yyy sacd Ol Mminea i and often causes him weeks ing pain, inl deares thunk | times in nursing him. ”’ «I wonder if she is the same?’ The old man leaning upon his was thinking. “Can be true? think so little of my money, that will be his, that he bas never even mei- tioned it to his promised wife? Can it be that 1 shall gain a loving, tender niece instead of losing my nephew, when Malcolm marries?’ | Loving his nephew so deeply, Hiram me with tears of this friend kind uncle, and 1 t it he hopes 1 may be us ful some- iin tells 4 1 RAR % + & 24 € ae 3 feat iis eves of has fear losing and Cans Does ie iw ——— of his betrothal. He had never seen been brought up in a circle of fashion, Haydon, | He ascertained by inquiry that the winters were spent with her Aunt Marcia, her summer with a maiden sister of her father. She was quite a belle, although only in society one sea- gon, pretty and accomplished, and the old man groaned in spirit over his nephew's choice, A belle, and with a head full of fash- fonable frivolity, he wa Sconvinced that the girl had been wan by the prospect of Malcolm's hielrship to his own fort. une, He had seen in the future his nephew estranged from him by the in- fluence of a dressy, empty-headed woman, or, still more appalling, his piece-to be making false protestations of affection, with a hope of winning golden favors, While he mused upon the conversa. tion hie had overheard, the silvery voices of his young neighbors stil sounding beside him, there was a sudden crash, something struck him upon the head and he lost consciousness, Cries from the summer-house, from groups of people collected in brought a party ol The rolten posts the given way and the side and roof had ter were buried der the fallen timb- Not iii go the He 3 taken out @less, Nobody knew him, He bad come fast, but no room, and askedgthe hour A as in- surgeon, s possible, Alls a broken arm and an jury long, tedious illness, There was some of hospital, a search through the pock- ious victim, resulting small sum of each » comforting red 18 over, and only those 1 AF § of the summer boarders wi One cool "ry #4 COWARD, en October day the sick man, vow fast re. covering, called Alice to him. ht | said, regretfully. “Yes, she answered, cheerily: *‘very soon,” shall ll soon be well again,” “+1 shall miss my nurse,”’ “And I my patient; but 1 am glad you are recovering. We were afraid at parting.” “You mean I was in danger of | dying. Why should that be painful, 1 | am old.” She made no answer, looking sor- | rowfully into his uplifted eyes “And a burden upon you, the doctor | tells me. Why did you make yourself responsible for a stranger?” The fair face flushed, the soft eyes were dewy with feeling as Alice said, soy: “Because you are old and seemed poor and friendiess. 1 was glad it was in my power to aid yon. Do not think burden of obligation. *‘I have some money laying idle.” “For the wedding day, perhaps. Well, child, you might have poorer jewels to deck your bridal than an old man's tears of gratitude and love, 1 am getting well and shall soon leave you; will you give me a keepsake?’ The girl loosened a little locket from a chain round her throat, cut off one of ber golden curls and put it in the place of some she took out, and laid the trin- ket in the old man’s band. SWith my love,’ she said, softly, “Ah, child,” he sighed, ‘an cd man, sick and feeble, wins little love.” “yet,” she sald. earnestly, “‘vou | must belleve that I have nursed you, | since you were conscious, with affec- | tion. My own father is gone, but | want a daughter's care or affection, | believe me, 1 will gladly come io you, { if possible.” Three days {was deserted, You sii inter little Aunt returned to their home t ther lost time in sewing r, and A lice cheer! f 3 i i the Kond cottage i wer small patrimony and expenses of her She little guessed be pression her care and made the heart | against human upon affection { of any advances from It was a revel active charity ures, 3Lid He had gone to the hotel mers "Ton a ag Maleolm’s choice ar w to his identity behind him, ntended meet unknown, an but OCT it dren, who will ry 0 make youl : 3 } £ " 100 UBLOTY hoped happy by loving care! knew you, Malcolm told when he bad a home, « me he win you to i * live in it. Will you let me, 100, DEE OL YOu us?" child! Gladiyl”’ to come 10 “Gladly, said. So, where the rich feared to lose the one gained another tenderer, sweele jove, to beighten his declining years 1 a daughter’s devotion and affectior —————— the old man lonely man love of he Invention for Bachelors. 5 soos to De There dence that a watchful pr care of that class of men who experiment as to whether “‘mar 2 failure” or not, } His buttonless condition that for humorists a namely, the ors the ye Are back is made NneCeRsa theme introduction of buttonholes a and his ingenuity has guided gard a small nail as the tory fastening for a suspends now lo! and behold! he | jament the loss of spiral studs genine among the nnwedded covered that nothing looks neater, | more convenient or cheaper to supply | their loss than the ordinary round | topped paper fastener. The Little | points of the paper fastener are pressed | through the eyelet, clenched on the under side, and no one but an expert can tell them from the most costly | Etruscan gold jewelry. As amber attracts a straw, s0 does beauty admiration, which only lasts while the warmth continues; but virtue, wisdom ness, and real worth, like the loadstone, never lose their power. These are the true graces, which, as {Homer feigns, are linked and tied hand in hand because it 1s by their influence that human hearts are so firmly united to each other, nes [Bo IRoTr for Ling «13s 1% as