GLADSTONE IN POWER. England’s New Prime Minister Takes Command. The Liberal Leader Announces His Cabinet. PRIME MINISTER GLADSTONE, William E. eral party in Great Victoria on the Isle of Wight to lay befor Gl vdstone, leader Britain, visited Que her the names of those who woul the Cabinet, and to perform attendant upon office by a new Prim On the following day Mr jon, and the ne yunes | as fo monies tland, The Right vocata of Se The State for India Council. The Marqui for the ( Sir Geor Scotland Mr Mr President Baron with 1 James Bryce, Chancell of Lancaster, with a seat in the Cabinet An Associated Press dispatch from don says that ‘the composition tland Earl of and the Duchy » off al National proteste e members of st r Ralica turned from sent ms of scorn ved ASROC he e traditions of iggery, with some new recruits from the territorial and aristocratic clase, that the Radicals had given their money and their t ? This was the general question, and the responsive prediction foliowed that su +h a Government could not last three months alter Parliament resumed business, “Apart from Radical opinion the Cabinet is really composed of e reputabis men. Mr. Gladstone ing around him tried to subordination and deviate strange ways new Cabinet Ministers, Mosars quith, Arnold Morley an A are sound Liberals. Mr. Asquith al slightly tainted with Radicalisin, but he has a legal mind, with such a strong bias tow ard high office as makes him malieadie ciples Arno.d Morley is in ' Oladstoni . Mr Aciani has Whig family connections and estates.” Speaking « Houghton's ment ns Vicer Ireland, th Freeman's Journal says { the stance in the modern Baron H pod Yeas list ninentiy into As land, ae is on prin AOPO nt Pablin heoory of h 113 Hkely to Ie a Ireland, ani n with uzhton In justly popular L wd Lieutenant of His father was a geatieman scholar, of winning personal courtesy, deep sympathy for Ireland's national aspie rations. The son is said to be active, dis tingnished and popular in his own country, endowed with political ambition and ability and with wealth and personal accompiishe ments that will enable him to fil sition with dignity and su coms unquestionably the chief ths aopointment of Baron Houghton as Viceroy, without a seat in the Cabinet, is that John Morley will tak: the administra. tion of Ireland completely into his own hands, We trust and beliove that his ade ministration will be thorough, Hitherto a change of Government has but wsighty changed the administration of Ireland, |is, the first Government ever electad with a distinet mandate to do full justice to Irish opinion, means a revolution in Castle ineth. " the pos jut lesson of ATI A FRIGHTFUL FATE, Five Childran Barned to Death in a Georgia Town, Nathan Ellis and hie wile, with his sister Silver Baker, wont to church at Griffin, Ga. a few nights ago, leaving two children of a dead sister of Ellis and throes of the Baker woman's chiliran locked up in the building. The house was discovere | on fire about nine o'clock, and the flames had gaine | such headway that It was imo wibile to rescus the children, although th cries for help were heard, All five perished, Accounts from Russa in regard to the pects of the growing crops are very omy. Locusts bave destroyed the grain over several of the Bouthern provinoe, In other places worms and junumerable mar. mots, the same as the American grouad have done enormous injury. . Rusia, The sams | PROMINENT PEOPLE, GLADSTONE S first fifty-four years ago. book was pudlishel Louis Kossuri, the Hungarian patr.ot, is Just eighty-six years old, I RESIDENT HARRISON and David Swing, the great Chicago preacher i . ware class mata at Miami University Ir is said that the Sultan, of Johor: who is to visit this country, obsarves the tenet ff Mohammedanism so strictly that his only beverage is pineapple juice, 4 MR, CLEVELAND writes all his lotters be tween 10 o'clock at night and 2 o'clock in tha morning. This habit the ex-President tracted at the White House. GENERAL Lew WALLACE been the first man to conduct telegraph, Chis was in 1852, sages wore to his future wile, Con is sald to have a couriship by and the mes Tue Queen of Greece is President of a sis terhood devoted to the reformation of « n inals, and visits personally the condemned prisoners in Athenian prisons Miss Enna M. Kxowres, whom the Peo ple's Party of Montana bas nominated for Attorney-General of the State, is ful practicing lawyer in Helena Mns recently whieh 1s fA Success UILD, an American sculptross, has ympleted a bust of Mr, Gladstone, very highly commanded by the critics as a portrait and a work of art Joux G, Warrrier writes ina bold, dash- ing, but irregular and uneven, style, as dif. ferent as you can imazins from the pl precise, unassa ning Quaker that ho is an, Ix Earope the two most conspicuous lay are Gladstone an marck, bot of whom hava passed lic personages to yond the mark of GOSC OTA YOArs Winniax H, ! to Texas in 183 8 given the of Houston $2X.000 ir $4) in ties, and VO acres xas farm tr ——— NEWSY GLFANINGS. Sutra, of Bona M Bae wr f twias in t2a Aral Dasiihy. has given birt years. The eigh A MAY in Maine lost nrarly 63) lobrtars Iataly, that ha madasiia apral bya quantity of fresh wat fowinziaty it aad killing chem. Ar.8 ad Fux highest 10 world has jas wan erected in iv r thy River Loa, 533 feet abov and 493% feat BOOVHe the riva Reronrs fro wheat bait sh with an avsrage cron average with god wath n all ova Northwaslara YW Zool pro rota on the waols, andl above Turae are sevan brothsrs and sistas in New Loadon, Coan, waose comdinsl ages are 5.3 years Their family nam is Come and their Caristian nam ars Enily, Orlan fo, Cordelia, Joan, Fraak, Ezra and Btephan Tae rocent disastrous avalanche at Saint tha ia disastare of the sama sort to o tas Alps during the prassnt csmbtury. Nuarly 50 persons per ished in the avalan m ths Rosberg in 1505. Eleven ot » ny dissstars oo curred) ¥ said Lae yoaars 13% and 1749 lacias i% an avalanchs at Piars in the Uren wbcovel nearly 2590 pe rang, . stoo 4, (harvais is A NEW TURF QUEEN, Nancy Hanks Trots a Mile at Chicago in 2:07 Maud 8 turf. The proud position which the dangh- ter of Harold has held wrested from her, and Nancy Hanks reigns is no longer queen of the trotting so long bas been NANCY [IANKR, in her stead. At Washington Park, Chievgn, in ths pressace of 10.50) spectators, Build Doble drove his beaatifal mars to beat hey record of 2:9. Mh not only beat her own record, but lowerad the worll's trotting reerrd from 2:08, made by Robert Hon ner's Bund! and 28%, the time of Maud HN. to 207 Ix Now South Walse awa hava bn sid ab sixteen cents pw hat aal bdr ware pubsequmtly mals o’ 13 cme. A drove of cows wasolfarsl ab gi.) sao, fat bul looks could not bapa las 819, an 15) twos tooth ewes wani at disy emt no bils by obtainable oa afucser Dito! 300, Sar ing supply and droa.y ars aziyiasaole for De cwnton ol alur., BURNED THE STOCKADE. Trouble Between Mi ners and Fennossee. A Prison Destroved and the Ine y vy N A. mates nent Away. paten says t ses enacted at Driceville, Coal Ci Oliver Spring ‘ago when the miners rose uj ¢ arainst convict bor and, capturing the prison stocka les, ap plied the torch to them, have boon repeatsi at Tracy City, the sto prison there brane ths alo at the burne i In this released, but the 32) man the stockades anid wx cars and sant to Nash VTS y the miners to tion between the local Iron Hines ¥ { lennesses Coa ad Company and t homs offices , and all the enzines in ths rai y hold for a similar purposes, iar lad and Rar in Na road yar but the e At 5 awoke KE. 0, the mines for th Railroad ( miners bao f ynmities Superinten ‘oal, Iron and him that the work sathur "on nesses ( mpany, and askel allowed as many h each week as the convicts My replied that ho Ww | ths matter the o an! do what ho could, ft. and Mr, Nath a bound wiry’ pomit mpany sommitt y came t the convicts vihing was men mmstruct The rived in to the enter aTe remy ne U 15 o it of Inman are Nashville at night, and were taken prison by the State officials, hav ng informal the Governor Board of Prison Inspectors that they have nothing to do w Lrovernor a the and would hoe ith them hanan sanounced his dee termination to every lawin!l means in his power to preserve order when the ap- plication ia proper and legal form was made to him by civil authorities The Tene nessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company officials stated that they wo re mines inafew days assoon ast organize a force to work the oven be used te the and that agalia at these convicts might not mines, Hepulsed Free Miners Ine excitement among the free Anderson County, Tenn, whio sifled by the developments first at City and then at Inman, resnited in holding of secret meetings at which tue cision was reacted that a bold effort sho be made to release the convicts at the O.iver Spring mines hese mines are four or five miles ant from the Coal Creek mines, where the soldiers have for months been guarding the two hundred conv cls employed in digging coal there, The miners intendad to destroy the stockade and other buildings by fire after they had set the con. victs fres, and thus for the s*cond time in a year strike a strong blow at conviot labor Arming themselves with guns and rifles, they made the attack at 3 o'clock the morn ing. The guards, some twenty-five in num. ber, were game, and volley after volley was exchanged, the result being the wound. ing of several mon, three of them being guards and the others miners, One man, a guard, received a moral wound, During the firing the convicts were considerably excited, but the ofilcials kept a close watch upon them, and ater the de parture of the miners quiet was restored, Governor Buchanan was notifie!, and troops were forwarded to Oliver Springs from Chattanooga and Knoxville on special trains. The troops reached the stockade at Oliver Springs by night, and sumediately went into camp, During the afternoon a bani of miners, armed with Winet possession of a trae and Ohio Road, at Coal Creek, bound for Clinton, where they hoped to be able to intercept the reinforcements; but they were 100 late, 100 i Oliver Springs Captured, The victory of the guards at Oliver Springs over the free miners, as detailed above, was followed the same night by a second attack upon the stockad with different results, Eight hundred miners assembled at Oliver Springs at night, com. pelied the soldiers and guards at the prison stockade to surrender, captured the stock: ade, burned it, and forced the troops to conduct the convicts to Clinton for trans tion to Nastivilie, via Knoxville, It was the general impression among people distant trom the scene that a terrible fight wouid tas piace, Dacauss the guards at Oliver Springs bad repulsed several hun. dred mien ia the early morning. Howuver, the opposing forces wers £0 large that, be Heving surrender was preferable to almost | certain annihilation, the fifteen guards and twenty-sight soldiers decided to give way Having expelled the convicts wand their protectors at this place, the miners, who ware strongly reinforced, expressed their in tention to make an attack upon Cosl Creek, five miles distant, where nearly 2X convicts were in the stockade, guarded by probably 125 men and forty guards under the mand of Colonel Anderson, (ireat pressure was brought to bear upon (jovernor Bucbauan to call out the eatire National Guard, Before deciding upon ot lering the State Guard to the scene of the trouble Governor Buchanan opened tele graphic communication with the Shoriffs of the Counties of Hamilton, Knox, Roane, Morgan and Anderson. Those officers were directed to summon as many men a8 might be deemed advin and to go at once Ww Oliver Springs and Coal Creek, The Sheriff of Anderson County, the sounty in which the two mines are situated, was reached with the greatest difficulty, wing to the lack of telegraphic facilities, He sent » vl the effect that he wa A AIG OS \ | i CO live POW je i the matter rders were given Lim, Coal Creek Also Captured At 10 o'cl Kr MM i ville that the tro surrendered to the free miners fight Ihe battle began at 2 ight long the the new ps at Coal ( miners ha Rand 7 he rooms we, the YOre Oars imowdentisa Jeading Kili in al 1 he Waltha 1, of Knox i (i ‘anttanno ia Arty, iawyer groin, in (3. Heiske poll ’ Milton, samu and D irad; wo miners were Killed Milisr, of Ural Cresk Oneida, Tenn John Coal Creek, was slightly wounded in the heel, J. M. Gaur’, a business man of Koox ville, and one of the volunteers, was badly injured hy falling over a ledge of rocks Volunteers from all parts of the oe hastened 10 the sotne of the Insurrection, and guns and ammunition were supoliel by the Federal authorities ani thy authorities of adjoining Ntates, Mass meetings were also held throughout the State, at which res» lutions condemning Goversor Ructhanan for his Inactivity were passe They are George and George Neil, o Wilson, A minar of Federal Arms Farnished, On application of Governor Buchanan the secretary of War ordered 60 stand of Arms to be sent at ones from Indianapolis to Knoxville where they were distribated to the forces gathering at that point Thirty thonsand rounds of ammunition came witn the gans, The lack of arms has been an em barrassing feature of the situation, as the volunteers have armel themselves with whatever weapons they could procure - TRAIN ROBBE&S REPULSED. One of the Two Masked Thieves Wounded by a Passenger, Ax a Denver anl Cheyenne passenger train on the Union Pacifis stopped at the coal chutes at La Salle, Col, two masked men entered ane of the oars and, at the mus gle of loaded reyolvers, orderod the passen. gers to hold up their hans Toe order wae obeyed, and the fellows ware on the point of collecting monay from the passen gers when one of the latter opened fire from A revoiver on the the thieves, The latter returned the fire, but one of them “wing hit they poth § imoed from the oar cad THE NATIONAL CAME, Viat 1 ne Bostons have relea n released by Louisville, dd (i has be cher CLEVE] Iropping straight Hanny nitters on x one of the mos » Baltimore team, Prrouen work for TiN doing phenomenally the Urooklyns IN DER piteher Ale ha named signed un " her for the BL Hawley Durry, of twenty games o he so nn error the Bostons, played 1 On i CRON BAD weather and the poor has a de baseball in Chicago of Cleveland, and are ocousidered md ba New York : not son's colts made this for CHILD Cincinnat) hatting seo Barke, of McePaes the the semen in far ladelphi a winner Cason | Many y IN of Washingt Hour Law will L000) mor | tracts al ine staves ani ver Indiana ani M fight against th Con viet iabor Ine Pt and ha: relu $1.25 a day The company hall the men Toe annual meeting of tate Faderation of Trade in the Asssmbly Chamber House at were rapres Jersey City, Inisipn has also dis tae Hartloe renton tel fro Camden s Ow the 11,00 1,00) wom 2 000. 000 are em dove l in and over 300008) in agr in the majority in i industries, and in 115.000) wonen enpogs the sil mea COMPARATIVEL $n ployed in hie Island t 1 ANY State of the Union r yynalation is 345 000, and not less than 573 chill iraa, betwen ten and fifteen years ara working in mile ani factors ir WAZS Are from sev. enty-fou Rr>en sth AT a meeting in Baton of thy raprassta. tives of the Kaighta of Laoor, Centra Lave bor Union sal Salldiag imails Uranil a committees was appointed an l instraciel © visit every labor or ganiz «ton in Massa shu. sotts and solid fuads for thy Honstead men. Tos organizitions agresl tH rae £50, 00 for the sorikasrs —— —— THIRTY PERSO NS DROWNED Wreck of a Russian steamer in the Volga The steamer Grigorieuff, plying upon the Volga and its trioutaries, has been w recked at Nighni Novgorod, Roesia ried a number of passengers and great excite ment prevailed among them when the vessel struck. A heavy storm was prevailing at the time. and many of them jumpei over board and attempted to reac’ the shores by swimming. overboart Crew Warn Many board fontad asbore in chairs Thirty of drowned ables, ote, while ithe more oo ented the small boats to be launched, were landel without diMenity ss — Mn Frepeatox Jonsson writes 15 Cap tain J. MH. MH, Paggett, of the Virginia World's Fair Commission, that he lsc «is coversd at the Natura! Bridge in ons ridge, Va, what be bolioves to ba Inrgest sassafras tree in the conatry, mensures aloven feet in circumferences, le also found am oak twenis wo feet in on camferoncs, and an arbor-vitm seventem fest, and one fourteen feet in circumference, CL ——— wan i% the new Maine town of Rumford Pally, where not even a log hut stood a year ago, a #10,000 residence is building, and 700 men are at work upon mills and structures, : The vessal oar Many of the erew also jampe! | the passengers and | of those on | who waited for | the | SABBATH SCHOOL, ISTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR AUGUST 258 Text: “The Acts vii Text First Christian B4-00; vile, ‘ots Commentary Lesson Martyr," 1-4-Golden vil, 60 54. “When they heard these ti cut w the heart, and they him with their teeth The rage of the council at Bie phen, one of the seven who to serve tables, in or might give themselves woolly WU and prayer (vi, 2-4, t Btephen full of the Holy Spirit an that God wrought greal miracles by him Thins falsely socused and bro of re oounc in Whose presen sermon recorded just accused them wing ‘ and murderers { this 4 cut ngs they gnashed on w 1b Jot t of the was yrs milion w ord wns #0 were Lime Wer er that r the wer and being Lhe the bad ravers wan ana pr ners in this cnaj Hs Ana them and * them so (rbhost, saw soul tha and enables Lhe aenl t teslin , and saying, When J¢ unto i Int Xx yolk ike “Father etween Gent ithe s “Xeon u his deat) after as be Ihy marty standing © nd wented unto kept the ramos them Acts xX 20 ne there Was A greal per church, which was at hey were all soattered t the regions of Judea and the aposties The com. unio all the worid, “Te be lis witnesses unto the uttermost part of the earth” (Mark xvi, ib; Acts 8, but up to this time they seam to have confined Lhelp testimony to Jerusalem, hence Liis persecis tion permitted 1 God to oause more to obey His command, dev oarrie | and made great lamentation over was with his Lord, “absent nt wit he Lovd™ but Josue said of r of his death, "“Uur John xi, 11-14 ed 1 also bis that blood of was sl was deat and ine them Ou 5 “And out men Ntephen to buria Rtephen ' ® iY. press his body was asiee] even as Larus when spes kin friend Lasarus sleepeth [here was DO OCORKION lament for Stephen, for to him It was a great gain, but it seemed that the chu ould ill afford to jose such itness As for Saul, be made havoe of the entering into every house, and hak and women, committed them prison.” Beyond measure he persecute” “he church and wasted it, being exoeet gly mad against the Christians f sal, L158; Actes xxvi., 10 11 He little thought that he was ail the while fights against God, as kis own teacher, Gamaliel had said (chap ter v.. 3. He did not know, thourh he al- terward learned it, that when he touched a Christian he touched the Lord Himself (Acts iz. & Boh HN, 8 4 “iherefore they that were scattered abroad. went everywhere preaching the word Olaeryve that these Wars not the aposties Who went every here evangelining twerse 1) Lut all believers It should be wo pow that all believers cvarywhers in the office and the store, in the mine and on the farm, at howe and abroad, should be able and ready to tell sm other of Jesus and His Jove, His humiliatio n, ceath, resurrection, mterossion, retura, Kingiom and glory Then would He soon be made known in all whe world and His Kingdom cone, = Laoson Helper. There is a sign on the entrance to a cemetery at North Wales, Mont gomery County, which reads: “No admittance except on business." Philadelphia Record. I'eacner (to class)—DPut this ex pression in a different way: “Storm follows calm.” Small boy (whose father 18 not a tectotaler)—Racket comes after a “Stil *® ek: ‘I'ne Vennsylvaula woman whogave a costly funeral to her pet mastiff the other day comes under the exact duisition of a dog gone idiot. ~ Bose Aw arch ing ten
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers