Pome HAIRS E—— "” Qolumbia, Dartmouth and Williams Colleges have dispensed with the com- mencement orations. i The fastest train in England travels from Grantham to Doncaster, a distance of seventy and one-half miles. The trip is made in fifty-six minutes, A new law in Missouri provides that the fees of no executive or ministerial officer of any county, exclusive of the salaries actually paid to his necessary deputies, shall exceed the sum of §5000 for any one year, A , Forty thousand miles of railroad have been projected and surveyed and capital subscribed to build in this country dur- ing the next two years, but less than | that mileage, predicts Farm and Fire- | side, will be constructed. The cedulas—or Government loans of | money on land mortgages—first precipi- | fated financial disaster in the Argentine | Republic, asserts the Philadelphia | Kecord, and they continue to play anim- | portant part in the affairs of that unfor- tunate country. Doctor Thornton, of Phijadelphia, Penn., believes that in a solution of hy- drogen peroxide he has discovered an in- fallible remedy for diphtheria. Should this expectation be fulfilled, remarks the New York Telegram, he will rank with Pasteur and Koch as one of the fore- most benefactors of human kind. Bird trimming on bonnets is going out of fashion in France. The change is at- tributed to human impulses, but we more than half New York Telegram, that it is due to the However, now that ¢+he edict suspect, remsrks the milliners. of fashion is issued, you may lo Ye fora f f crusade against the slaughter of J, feathered songsters. Ia ievout trans Pacific from Bydoney, Australia, to . Cal, the winning steamship the trip in twenty-four days, beating its con- testant by one day. This is the time yet recorded and will presumably lead to a new schedule of quicker pas- sages between the two ports. While the ultimate speed of this journey is being discovered and fixed upon, prudent and timorous folk will travel by sailing ves- sels or will stay at home. ace San Francisco made best That one is never too old to learn is being demonstrated to the satisfaction of the San Francisco Chronicle, at Spring- ville, Tulare County, Cal., where the schoolmistress has one pupil of twenty- eight—a stock raiser of Black Mountain Valley. to the conclusion that it is high time to He de- is seldom He is a widower, who has come repair early neglect of education. for it mature years serves encouragement, that a man of humble his pride and receive instruction is able to like a child, though many are in sad need of such training. PE ————————— France is suffering almost as much as Germany from the overcrowding of the learned professions. Fifteen school mistresses, 7000 primary school- thousand masters and 500 high school instructors ara looking in vain for employment There are 27,000 French physicians, that is about 6000 or 7000 more 10.000 than there are in Germany, with her more inhabitants, Two thousand lawyers iu Paris, who have passed all preliminary examinations for a full practice, cannot make livings in Paris has 800 apothecaries, their profession. Civil and mining en- gineers are so numerous that hundreds of them are secking eagerly petty posi- y pets) tions in mines and factories. The Railway Age recently published a clever article by Joseph O. Kerbert, | United States Consul at Para, Brazil. The subject of the article is ** Railroad. ing in Brazil,” but its object relates | more particularly to that vast alluring phantasy of chullient statesmanship known as the ‘Pan-American Railroad.” This might better be termed the Tight. | Rope Air Live, for it is proposed to | bridge the valleys and tunnel the peaks | of the Andes, traversing the great water. shed of South America by balancing the road-bed on the knife-edge of mountain tops. Aside from the facts that such a + milroad would cost a thousand times more than an ordinary road simply to lay the rails, that an ocean steamship can carry freight faster and cheaper than a freight train, that the major portion of the country to be traveled has no popu. lation worth the name, Mr. Korbort gives ws a peculiar obstacle to railroads in Brazil that they must tunnel the forests and a pew path must be opened after every train, because *‘the dense growth of vegetation js so rapid that a path cut in the morning Is overgrown in the night.” This last fact settles the Pan-American milroad scheme, declares the Chicago News. No self-respecting locomotive engineer will handle the Jever of an engine which is obliged to | man's four | Rachel Sherman, | embalming the General's | where ‘shove a lawn mower abead of it, GENERAL W.T. SHERMAN, The Federal Soldier Dies at His Home in New York City, A—————— A Sketch of His Eventful Qivil | and Military Career, o Fellowing is the President's message © Jon i To the Senate and House of Representa | tives: The death of William Tecumseh Sherman which took place to-day at his residence ia the city of New York at 1:50 pr. is a event that will bring sorrow to th heart of every patriot citizen, Ne living American was so loved venerated as he. To look upon his! face, to hear his name was to have one's love | of country intensified. He served his coun | try not for fame, not out of a seuse of pro. | fessional duty, but for Jove of the flag and | of the beneficent eclvil institutions of | which 1t was the emblem, He wu | an ideal soldier, and shared tg | the fullest the esprit du corps of | the army, but he cherished the civil insti tutions organized under the Constitution. and | was only a soldier that thess might be per stuated in uondimdnished usefulness and onor, He was in nothin an fmitator, A profound student of mili tary science and precedent, he drew | from them principles and sug | gestions, and so adapted them to novel cond]. | tions that his campaigns will continue to be the profitable study of the military profession | throughout the world, His genial natures | made him comrade to every soldier of the groat Union army. No pres ence was so welcome and inspiring at the camp fire or ocommandery as his. His career was complete; his honors wore full, He had received from the Gov. ernment the highest rank known to our GENERAL BHERMAN, General W. T. Bherman, the last great figure of the Civil War, died of erysipelas a few days ago, at his home in New York | City, after an illness of ten days. His death was caused by the accumulation of mucus in the lungs, which he was unable to throw off | There wasno sign of death beyoud a faint | grasp and stoppage of the breath, The end was painless, and the only persons who noted the change were the physicians Around the deathbed were General Sher daughters Misses Lizzie and Mrs. Thakara and Mrs. Lieutenant Fitch—his som, P. T. Sherman; his brother, Senator John Bherman; Drs. Janeway, Green and Alexander, and the nurse, Miss Price. Gen- eral 0. 0, Howard, General Thomas Ewing, General Henry W, Blocutn and Mre, Walter Damrosch, daughter of Secretary Blaine, were in the parlors. General Sherman's son, who is a Catholic priest, did not arrive from Europe in time to witness his father’s last fight, General Sherman caught a severe cold ten days before his death, when he attended a theatre party at the Casino in New York City. Onthat occasion a special invitation had been sent out to the military officers in the city, and General Sherman sat in one of proscenium boxes with a party of friends, He seemed to be then in the best of health and spirits and apparently enjoyed the per. | « formance immensely. He returned home immediately after the performance, yd the next morning when he woks up he “pd that he had taken a severe cold. “gs gave him no anxiety at first, but when the following day the symptoms of | ments and batallions will be draped mourning for a ery ox began to show themselves he scat we iz Asxander oi 18 HL day he was worse, and, when Dr. Janeway w.o"qllad in, his face and neck were very much a. ii. and inflamed, and it was realized that oo ondition was much more serious than waa, He continued to grod family were summoned, Four days before his death +, at intima. tion of the serious nature of Ly (ines be came public, but there was no £®%pn] alarm. | Next day the General was thouge ¢ be dying and extreme unction was admin. 1 by a Catholic priest, but the old soldier ras 4 and became so much better that through w, of the day prior to his death his family and friends were cheered and began to believe ia the possibility of ultimate recovery. Hope was abandoned for the last time Jus at daybreak on the day of his death From that hour till death came it was only a question of how long the almost exhausted vitality could hold at bay the enemy The erysipelas which had seemed to with. draw returned with renewed force. The inflammation became acute, and all during the forenoon the sick man's lungs were being slowly choked At 1:45 in the afternoon breathing began to grow less and less frequent. The lungs were gradually filling, and breathing was becoming more and more difficult, The old man had given up the struggle, and, uncon- scious, was letting life pass from him All at once the breaths, which came now at longer intervals, grew shorter. Dr. Alexander glanced around, and then all eves were fixed upon the one form It was like the turning down of a light, Slowly, quietly, painlessly the General died. There was one short breath like a sigh, and there came upon his face that change which needs no interpreter, All saw that he was dead. But the nurse, leaning over, lifted his bead and said in a» wh rs: “He Is dead.” Only the crackling of the fire was now fo be heard. The breathing had ceased, and with it the life of the last American to bear the high title of General passed. 1t was just ten minutes of two o'clock Lisutenant Fitch made a semiofficial statement, giving the details of the scene at the deathbed later in the afternoon “At 11 o'clock,” he sald, “the General lost consciousness, and Dr, Alexander said that it was the beginning of the end. The General's head at the time rested high on a pillow, As the momenta flew by his breathing became more difficult, and little by little the pillow was lowered to ense him At 120 o'clock the signs of approaching dissolution were soon. The tipaof the dying man's fin became icy cold. Blowly the cold feeling spread through the hands and then up ths arms. The breathing became more and more difficult, The lungs were filling with mucus, the doctor sald and the dying man had not the strength to throw it off. He was being strangled to death. The pillow was pressed lower and lower, and finally it was taken away alto Kether, oy a fow minutes afterward thers was no long sigh and the nurse said, ‘He lsdead.” Bo peaceful had been the death that oven the watchers could hardly realise i.’ i The undertaker, completed the of | worse, and all his process i about 5 and then it was laid | on the bed | had died, arms were folded, | The only trace of the erysipeias that was | visible was a slight swelllag under the i and a swel on the right cheek. After the | o cloe | om October 35, 1863, i : following ex order: | “Its my painful duty to w to the that w staff from the time of the receipt of nl. to his | day guns will Le fired at commencing at 8 o'clock A. Mx. of the army will wear the usual badges of ers by telegraph, subordinate commanders, orders t first supposed. the appropriate funeral ceremonion” | and Mr. ( | wauit and military establishment, and from the people unstinted gratitude and love No word of mine can add to his fame, His | death has followed in startling quickness that of the Admiral of the Navy, and it fs a sad and notable 1cident that when the de. partment under which he served shall have put on the usual emblems of mourning four of the eight Executive departments will be simultaneously draped in black, and one other has but to-day removed the crape from ite walls, Jens. Hannisow, Executive Mansion, The President also sent a telegram of eon. dolence to the family, in which be suggested that the body be brought to Washing. ton on its way to Bt Louis and that it lio in stats in the rotunda of the Capi- tol at Jeast one day, The acting Secre tary of War in the afternoon issued a feniral order to the army announcing the death of General Sherman, It included the President's message to Congress and the Executive order issued by him to the Execu- tive departments, This was accompaniad by another order is sued by Adjutant-General Kalton by com. mand of Major-General Schofield, as follows: “Un the day of the funeral the troops at every military post will be paraded and this order rend to after which all labors for the will ooas The national flag will displayed at half this of the funen On the a salute of seventeen half hour intervals The officers them, aay be wder until the close of the funeral mourning, and the colors of the several regi in porn of six months “The aay and bour of the funeral will be communicated to department command. and by them to their Other necessary fssned horeafter relative to will be When the President's message announcing General Sherman's death reached the Senate, discussion of the subject under consideration (the Copyright bill} was suspended, and Mr, Hawley offered tha following: Resolved, That the Senate roceives with profound sorrow the announcement of the death of Willlam Tecumseh Sherman. late General of the armies of the United Btates, Resolved, That the Senate renows ite ace hbowledgment of the inestimable services whit he rendered to bis country in the day Of 18 terrain peril, laments the great loss which ta country bas sustained, and GOUPLY SYisqthizes with his family in ite bores vement Resoleed, Thavy copy of these resolutions be forwarded to the tqnily of the deceased. Brief eulogies wer. then delivered by Messrs. Hawley, Morgan, Manderson Davis, Plercs and Evarts after wilh the Senate ad journs! B the House, about thes o'cloon the mes mge was received from the Presideat an nouncing the death of General Sherman, but after a consultation between the Speaker utcheon, of Michigan, and a few others it was decided by Mr, Reed, in view of the near expimtion of the Congress and of the necomity of getting the appropriation bills over in the Renate as soon as possible, that It would not be ad visable to Jay the message before the House until near the usual time of adjournment. It was then referred to the Committee on Mili tary Affairs General Sherman's Career, William Tecumseh Sterman was born at Lancaster, Oblo, on February § 1830. He was called Tecumseh after the great Indian chief of tbat names who had been a warm (riend of William's father, Judge Sherman. Young Sherman graduated from the Mil. tary Academy at West Point in the class of 1840. After his graduation he served with distinction in the Florida War and ssbse quently in the war with Mexico, He next held a stall position in the army in Califor nia, Missouri and Louisiana from 1847 to 1858 when he resigned. Giving up the tent for the counting room he became a banker in San Francisco and was in that business for four years He bad while in the army studied law, and, thinking this profession more to his taste, he practised it for the next two years, Ho became Superintendent of the Louisiana State Beminary of Learning and Military Academy in 1558, but resigned in 1861, at the baglaniig of the Civil War, Bherman was at once commis sloned Colonel of a regiment of infantry and commanded a volunteer brigade at the bat. tie of Bull Run, July 21, 1881. He was soon appointed Brigadier General of Volunteers and assigned to the command of the | ment of the Cumberland, but from some cause was removed, and was for some months | He took part in the Tenneses and Missle. i Apr as Commander of the Army of the Tennessee He took part in the around Chattanooga and the as of Atianta, September ©, 1834, a it as a mili until 1 fad tary post LY i Rosemont, | Bishopgate With, London branch | Bootland, who was standing at the public reraer of all the Confederate foross in the 1, Thess terms were pronounced inad. missible by the Pederal (Government, and General Bherman, under General Grants ine structions, demanded and received General | Johnston's surrender, April 20, 1865, General Sherman had been made a Major General in the United Btates Army August 13, 1864, for his Atlanta campaign, and af- ter the close of the war continued in com. mand of the military division of the Missis- sippl for more than a year. On July 25 1808, General Grant having been promo to be General of the Army, General Bherman was advanced to be Lisutenant-General, and was assigned to the command of the mili. | tary division of the Missouri, In March, 1868, Grant havin Generalship in consequemaioe of £ President, Bherman was promoted to the va cant rank. In November, 1571, he obtained leave of absence for a year's travel in Bu rope and the East, made his headquarters at Washington, but toward the closs of 1874 changed them te St, Louis. Three years later he returned again to Washington, taking up his residence at No. 817 Fifteenth street, Northwest, In 1876 and in 1880 ho was prominently spoken of as a candidate for the Presidency, On the Sth of April, 18538 Presdent Arthur imued an order announcing the retirement of General Sherman, He at once retired to rivate life and moved to St. Louis, where ao resided for a short time. He then took up his résidence in New York City, where he has since lived, and where his face has been a familiar one General Sherman was a widower, having Jost his wife in 1588, His wife was a Homan Catholic, and her childrea were nurturad in that faith, The General was born a Pres byterian. The surviving members of the General's family are the Rov, Thomas Ewing Sherman, a Catholic priest, in Europe when his father became ill; Philomel Tecumseh Bherman, a member of a prominent New York law firm: Mm A, M., Thakara, of Penn.; Mra. T. W. Fitch, of Pittaburg, and Miss Rachel and Miss Lizzie Sherman. PROMINENT PEOPLE, resigned the Burraro Biry has lately become a gran 1- father ELECTRICIAN operator Episox was a telegrap! Tirroo Tis will be a social lion in Lond next season Ir is said that the Prince in debit to Baron Hirsch f Wales is de eply Tae boy King of Servia is said to be suffer. ing from a dangerous chrouic malady. Tue Shah of Persia has promised to v the Worki's Fair at Chicage, Il Tux late Duke of Bedford made the tw peer to commit in 180 suicide during th Fraepemror Winns, the pr aprarent 10 the German throne nine yoar Roswonaxs, Buel soomg the Federal still Hying Haxssonovan, the from North Dakota, was a tramp prin twelve yours ago, new Resator-sis Tox late King Kalakaua, of the Band wi Islands, was a Man 0, aud bad attained t thirty-third degree, Bisnor Hane, of Soh Dakota, who lived among the Indians for so many bas the babit of mnoking Dain Barox Hinscst has already given al $14,000,000 to the Hebrew poor, in add to his recent gift of $2 500 (xx worth 3 ry) Ox, mm Jesse RB. Guraxr, the President's son one of the owners of a silver mine in Bon Mex and there he pases a great portion of his time He is 8 quiet, unassuming fel- low and quite popular Jomns Hanngrrox, the author of “Helen's Palle” Is a two-handed man, When ene gaged on a long article be changes from one hand tothe other every fifteen or twenty winutes, and so avoids fatigues GoveEnrxon Hiry's set in the United States Bemate will be next to that of Senator Daniel, of Virginia. His desk is on the outer of the Det ratic side and was occupied ive years by Senator Wade Hampton, Partaars Brooks is lty-five years old, and for twenity years he has been the rect of Trinity Church, in Boston, Mas Hi salary fs $10,000 a year, but of that a larger proport goes for charity, for his gen erosity is proverlia Gronor BR Guamas, the founder of Graham's Magazine, which was very popu- lar away back in the “forties” has just celebrated hus seventy «ighth birthday anni versary at the Orange (N, J.) Memorial Hos pital, Mr. Grabam's mind and memory are still stromg. He is without means, but his maintenance is met by George W., Childs the Philadelphia philanthropist Jos McManox, one of the original part- ners of Flood, Fair and Mackay in San Francisco, Cal, and a man who has run through half a dogen fortunes, is now mak. ing another one in an ldabo coal field, His career has been an adventurous one. There bave been occasions when he $1004 in press. ing need of a quarter, while at other times he could draw his check for a million, WesTixonovss, the air-brake millionaire, Is a practical mechanic, being the graduate of a machine shop in which he spent his Fa He is a skillful draughteman, and is remarkable memory for facts and figures enables him to carry in his head the details of his vast business enterprises. He works hard, as he has done all bis life, and not in. frequently he may be found at his desk late at night. He is about forty-six years old BOLD SNEAK THIEVES, A London (England); Bank Robbed of Over $60 000, A decided sensation was caused in London, as YERTR soquired “kin on England, by a daring bank robbery come | mitted ia broad daylight, man accosted in the vinolal Bank of A stylish dressed National Pro England, a clerk of the Bank counter of the National Provincial Pank, E i i 2 £ i? £t HE : 41) i I A STRIKING COINCIDENCE. Five of the Washington Departments in Mourning at Once, | mast, Clerk | - HONORING SHERMAN. An Impressive Funeral Pageant in New York City. Dead (General's Remains Sent to Bt. Louis, The Binee the great demonstration which at | tended the placing of General Grant's body been in New York City nothing so impres- sive as the ceremonies attending the funeral | Upon his return he | Of General W. T, Sherman. Not sinco that occasion has the city taken on such a widespread appearance of mourn. | ing. From the Battery to and boyond the | Harlem River flags were waving at halt All the public big business bulldings downtown showed this emblem of mourning; and there were not many private dwellings, especially in the upper part of town, which had not flags flying from one of their windows, Every fiouse in Beventy-first street, from Co- ! lumbus to Eighth avenue bore the stars and stripes bordered with black, while around the corner on Eighth avenue, in the squatter region, toy flags adorned several of the little shanties, The shipping in the harbor also joined in displaying flags at half mast, in token of respect to the dead General As carly as 9 o'clock hundreds of persons began to gather on the corners of West Beventy first street, in the immediate vicin- ity of the Sherman residences whore the tody of the General had been lying in state since death, For two days vast crowds had filed past the coffin to take a last look at the dead Chieftain The last member of the family to ses the body of the dead General was Lis oldest son, Father Thomas Ewing Sherman, who ar- rived from Europe just in time to attend the funeral by the steamehlp Ma joutic Shortly before 1 the Sherman family gathered in the front parlor and pre. pared for the funeral service, There were wesent Rev, Father Thomas E. Sherman, Pullemon T, Bherman, sous of the General: Mrs. Thackara and ber husband, Lieutenant Thackaran; Mrs Fitch and her husband Lieutenant Fitch; Miss Rachel Bherman and Miss Lizzie Sherman, daughters of the Gem oral; Benator John Sherman and wife. Gen. eral Thomas Ewing, wife and son; Mrs, Col gate Hoyt, niece of the General, and her Hit i Lusbnnd o'clock sled and oven asieet had be usly + oandeara Lhe tw n previ oach ‘atholie faitd The mignutes, and wera all rendered in English, The funeral pageant was conducted with military precision. At 1:55 r. a. precisely Colonel Lang , of the regulation escort rode up to the Sherman mansion. At 158 the oaskel containing Geueral Sherman's body was carried down the steps of the residence on the shoulders of Sergeants Kashon, Reardon, Foley, Soll and McCarthy, of the regulation escort, and deposited on the caleon. The casket was snwrapped with agreat flag of the Union which has histor IDEnROrWeE The platform on which the coffin rested has been used on many former ocoonsdons tc bear the coffins containing the remains of distinguished military beroes. The flag which was to cover the casket and whic remained on it during the journey to St Louis is one which General Sherman him self prescatad to the Lafayette Post, Sans of Veterans, about two vears ago. The caisson was drawn by five black horses, closely muffled, and mounted by ar tillerymen. Behind the caisson was a biack charger covered completely with black vel wet cloth, hiding thereby the warlike accou trements of the dead General Following the caisson were the pall-bearers and mourners. The pallbearers in carriages wore as fol lows: Military. — First carriage — Major Gon. eral Bohofield, Rear-Admiral Braine, Gene erais Joseph A. Johasston and Daniel E, Bickele, Second ocarviage-—-Major-Geperal ©, 0. Howard, Rear-Admiral Greer, General G M. Dodge, General G, M. Corse, Third oarriage—~Profesor HH BB Eon tricks, Major-General H. V. Slocum, Gene rd Stewart L. Woodford and General Wage Hwy ye Fourth carriage--General Majo HH. G. Wright be Stateunen. — First carriage Presi dont Harrison with General Horace Porter Becond carriage Vice-President Morton with General George W. Husilea Third carriage Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Becretary of War, Secretary of the Navy, with General M. D. Loggett Fourth carriage. Postmaster General, Seo retary of the luterior, Attorney-General Seo retary of Agriculture and Assistant Secretary Grant, Fifth carr — Ex President and Chauncey M. Depew Rixth carriage—Ex President Hayes and Joseph H. Choate, Seventh, eighth and ninth eared Committees of the Benate, six in number with Senator Abbott as Chairman Touth, eleventh, twelye and carriages ommittee of the House resentatives, ten in number Fourteenth onrriage<Governor Hill, with General O. O'Byroe Fifteenth carriage Governor Pattison, of Pennsylvania, and staff Sixteenth carriage ~Governor | Baikeley of Connecticut, and staff Seventeenth carriage -Adjutant-Genera Dalton, representing the Governor of Masa chusetts, and aide Eighteenth carriage~Goverdor of Ver mont and Dr. Sew ard Webb Nineteenth to Twentywsizth carriages Committe of the Senate and Assembly at Albany Twentysoventh carriage Mayor Grant, Twentyeighth and Twenty-ninth carriage wComumnitton of the Common Council sorvicos did not Moors and Cleveland thirtesnt} of Rep worth $900,000, i ii : Ny! 2A h : FF 4 | and thers | National Guard disbanded. buildings and the | ‘While the procession moved along the belle of old Trinity, Grace Church, Bt, George's ae well as the belle along the route all through. out the city, tolled out thelr half minute acs compauiment to the minute guns that from Fort Willlam, the navy yard, the harbor and wherever cannon could add its solemn boom. ing, conveyed far and wide the intelligence of the funeral The column grew so long that it was dark before the rear reached Washington Bguars, numerous regiments of the The head of the column was three hours in reaching the ferry. The ferryboat Baltimore carried the body and the escort across the river to the Penne | sylvania Rallroad station, where, amid the is olootion as | in the tomb in Riverside Park there has | tolling of bells, they were received by a reg imentof the New Jersey Nations! Guard, which is to accompany them through the Two of the militia companies formed double lines between the ferry-slip snd the train, and the carriages passed between thew, General Sherman's horse was led up to the combination car snd the saddle and trappings were taken from Sm and placed In one end of the car. Tio Bowers that were soen at the head of the coffin in General Sherman's home were sent to the train and placed at the head of ths catafeique in the car on which the body rested for its Journey to Bt. Louis, The interior of the car was entirely draped in black, not a piece of the woodwork anywhere being visibl Tho train was composed of an engine and eight vestibuled cars. In the combination car with the coffin were the six sergeants, who will guard the body on the Journey to Bt. Louis, . The second car, the Live pled by Governor Leon Ab say, and stall, who will accompany i through New Jersey, ar or Patt son and staff of Pennsylvania who will be with it rough the ait of that State. Then came the Danville, in which were Secretaries Rusk, Proctor and Noble, General H W_ Barnelt, Major W J. Randolph, Generas Boward, Slocum and Bchofleld, and ex-President Hayes The fourth was the diniagcar, ani the fifth, sixth and seventh, the Abyo, the Cadi and President Roberts's private car, were socapied by the Sherman family and close friends. These included the Rev, T. E Bherman, P. T. Sherman, Lieutenant and Mrs, Fitch, Lieut Mrs. Thackars, the Mises Bherman, Senator John Sher man and Mrs. Sherman, Hoyt Sherman, Mrs Wiborg, General Thomas Ewing and Mrs. Ewing, Mra. Charles Ewing, Eenry Sherman, General and Mrs, Miles, Mrs. Co! gute Hoyt, Mr, Steele, Colonel John MM. Ba con, Colonel Lo. M. Dayton and J. M. Barrett ane last car on the train w privates car of General Manager Pugh, and in it were President Harris vies -Prosident Morton, Becretaris Blaine and Tracy, and Mrs Morton The special train of vestibule ¢ station for Bt. Louls Mo torment Wok plac iv 0 rpool, was ooey " v wit, of New Jor the body i Gover: h; Uae ars where the in- CHICK 1alt the NEWSY GLEANINGS, Inano bas adopte #wE world has 800 00 i high Doense T deal mute Hoo cholera is spreading in Kansas, Tax Japanese Capitol has been burned. £3 Ga, Lopstens have been “c at Hali- fax Tar official name of Koch's lymph is “tu. beroolin.’ Gresaxy is talking Fair in 1506 : Trene are 12,000 slot this country Fork Creek rnered” LD has beens struck at of holding a World's machine FALIAX exports for 1800 show a decreas of & 50K Lie A MOVEMENT is on tly funerals. foot in Paris agains SGRY WoOu ves Indias HEAL ESTATE nine miles from the « sells for $4000 an acre dtoba are attacking 3 eating the enire of FaoH gold and silver 6 reported me M AX epidemic of piracy broken out on the Chinese o Ix 1%0 313 aggregating 13 tons, were launched in Now Engla Ture Kansas Legisiabure has passed a to prevent the holding of lands } During the past year issued by the American pu nas fr ty, Texas ntague Lous appears t« havi mat vena A TRAIN of sdghteen cars io the stolen in Idabo was run int the animals wold Caine and the Ge ply the money for ( tion have quarreled Anovt 500 fam ered on the bordes paratory to moving into IT cost 32.378 to give the proper am of athietic instructions and experience to Harvard students last vear Tux Philadelphia Supreme Co held a decision of a lower court Sunday shaving to be illegal WORT es of bo e gath rOoKee strip pre srs has of the Oi : unt Tug Belgian Government has bagun ne tations looking to the recy sions customs betweon Belgium a ted Nlates Tax soda lakes of National County ming. which contain deposits twenty foot deep, have been sold W KE capitalists Jor $2,000, 000 Ax attempt is making in the of West Virginia to have the capit Niate transferred from Charleston chapan, in Upshur County, Tre census office has announcead the popu lation of Arkansas by races as follows White, 810517; colored Indians 204. and Chinesa, 131; total popuiateon of the State, 1138000 Last August there was a fall of manna in Asia Minor, which was baked (or bread after the manner of the Biblical! tradition. It has been examined by Frenchmen of sciences ani identified as lichen, Tae mle by Mrs. King, of Corpus Christi, the “cattle queen” of Texas, of 15,000 two year-old steers is probably the largest single order for oattle ever filled in Texas. The con sideration was $82,200, Mra, King's ranch is $1 a0 si ee OHILIAN REBELS. Thelr Victorions Advance Places the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers