in mi. hi 1 1 uTmn hi ii ii i i mi in j -TTiiiT-iTaiaiafiridMJiliMBIi'tMBBBHPT73T!iwiTaBrL M 1 1 jb'Bg.g'aiT,aB'i' i'"tJailMBHBSHBB 'f' iMBHBHBBiBiBBB qf5 THE' PiTTSBTJEa"':blSPATCH SATURDAY, JUNE 20.189i: '.,..- - 7 4 . . . ? , m IIIUV r-N N tees and executors of the new corporation, ' ..... & J HVIJjOJL LU A-UXiwi' 7 m....fc, av;uuuj 111U illiiniUlUi 11U1UVS1. iJlJ X U 1UJ.UUX VX. T Recent Events Indicate Tliey Are Breaking Out in the Cabinet Itself. DISSOLUTION IS EST SIGHT. Gerst and Churchill May Lead a Xew Political Coalition, EXPECTING THEIR PARTY'S FALL. Liberals Are Tired of ihc Onslaught on the Trince of Wales. 3IK. IIXCOLX WILL KESIAIX IX LOXDOX I Copyright 1SS1 toy the New Tork Associated Press. London, June in. Parliament will be prorogued August G. This is the official .arrangement which resulted from an agree ment between the Government and the op position whips, after the latter had commu nicated with their leaders with reference to their policy upon the remaining bills of the session. A vigorous effort will be made in commit tee on the education bill to extend the operation of the measure. A- strong section of the Badicals will fight for an amendment giving ratepayer local control, but the progress of the bill generally will be acceler ated ly the Liberal acquicscense in its main principle. The members long for a spell of rct before beginning the election cam paign. The party managers, who are swarming to the lobbies of the IIoue of Commons, liare yxf, received authentic in structions to prepare for dissolution early next fciiiDincr. The Government intends to Mtmmon the House early in January and stake its fate on the Irih local bill, and calculates to dissolve Parliament after carry ing the bill. Ctnt.ei-vntlv es Beginninc to Lose TIopo. The Conservatives' uncertainty over the future of the party is leading to further retu.iis by present members to recontest their seats, and within the Ministry itself discontent is producing disorganization. A remarkable outburst, in which Sir. J. E. Gerst expressed couterapt for certain of his colleagues in the Ministry, occurred in the Manipur debate. Being obliged officially to defend the Indian Government, he made a mocking apology for the brutalities and stupidities of the British rule abroad, and behind jibes at the Indian Government he tatiri7ed the Imperial Government, He said that the Senuputtv was a man of brains: tlmt his real crimes were independence and originality, and that the Government dis liked original talent, preferring amenable mediocrity. The Tories heard him aghast, wondering at w horn the language was leveled. "When interviewed later, Sir. E. J. Gerst denied tliat it was directed at Viscount Cross, hs chief in the India Office, or at any other colleague whose complaisance overtops his ttbility. icrttand Churchill May Lock Arms. The accepted interpretation of the speech 5s that Gerst, recognizing that the period of Conservative power is about to close, is preparing for a time when he will resume with Lord Randolph Churchill an inde pendent position, aiming to form and lead a group strong enough to give them eventual control, or, at least, that the more promi nent shall lead the party. Gerst, who is a Tory Democrat of keener intellect and sounder judgment than Churchill, has long chenhed ideas of renovating the Conserva tive partv. He believes a prolonged period in opposition would afford his best chance to come to the front. The baccarat ferment is not over yet. Mr. Cobb proposes to ask Mr. Stan hope what the Duke of Cambridge in tends to do to enforce the anti-gambling regulations in the army, and what officers ormeniuwe been punished for gambling. Bcgretting their w eakness in abandoning the hunt on the Prince of 'Wales, some other Badicals mean to raise the subject again on the army estimates. If the plans to sustain the denunciation of the Prince of Wales are pursued the Liberal leaders will not only he disassociated therelrom, but Mr. Gladstone privately states that he and his colleagues must retalliate on the defamcrs. Th; unconcealed disgust of the bulk of the Liberals over the proposed further action of Parliament in the direction of censure of the Prince may deter the democratic ltadi cals from following up the quest. I'rotectioii 3Icasure in Disjrulso. Mr. Chajiliu's Atlantic cattle bill, behind the teeming simplicity of its provisions, chiefly l elating toaddioiml powers to inspect vessels, ha a latent application of the sever est protective character. Under a clause granting the Board of Agriculture power to insure animals proper ventilation, food, water, etc, the board obtains supreme regu lation ol the trade. A meeting of the Xa ;ioal Liberal Club, Sir Thomas Parrar pre siding, arranged for organized opposition to the amended American and Canadian regu lations lor improving the conditions of traf fic, and wih reinforce opposition against the new measure, which reallv aims to ob struct the importation of cattle. Consul reports on the half-time system abroad, which were tabled in Parliament for u-e on the debate on the factories bill, f-hovved that the recommendations of the Berlin labor conference have been fully ap plied in Germany, Belgium, Holland and the Scandinavian countries, and partly so in Prance, Switzerland and Italy. The con sensus of the reports is that legislation for the protection ol women and children is everywhere progressing. Most countries, also, are promoting schemes for the insur ance of workmen. JMliiistcr Lincoln'). Jtiilllant Reception. Tne reception given by the United States Minister and Mrs. Lincoln this evening was attended by a large number of Americans, including Mr. and Mrs. Maekay, Mr and Mrs. Meiggs, Mr. and Mrs. Brad"lcv Martin, Mr. nud Mrs. Boiiald, Mrs. Harrfson, Mrs. McKee, Mrs. Cameron. Miss Blaine and Horace White, besides a large number of members of the Diplomatic Corps. A friend of Mr. Lincoln denies the report of tr. Lincoln's transfer to Mr. Xoble's place in the Cabinet at 'Washington. The friend jsays Mr. Lincoln is well pleased with Lon don; that lie will remain here at least a ear longer, and that he is not anxious for the fatigues ol a cabinet position. Mr. White has returned from an interest ing trip m Turkey, Greeee and Syria, and will sa:l for America next week. Dr Briggs, in company with another American, Dr. Brown, will visit Oxford to consult Canon Driver on the issue of a new Hebrew lexicon. A number of religious Wers discuss the vote of the Presbyterian General Assembly, and rather sympathize with Dr. Briuirs. Prof. Tjndjll is recovering from his long illness. iii-vi .usable to leave his bedroom to-day after two months of confinement. Herbert Spencer's new work, "Justice," is ready, comjdeiing the part of the "Prin ciples of Kthics." Lord Tennvson has returned from his cruise in excellent health. AN ENGLISH BANKING SCANDAL. Liabilities or a. Concern Which Chanced Hands Grossly Misrepresented. London, June 19. There ore rumors prevailing in financial circles here to-day ns to the difficulties which have arisen between Mr. Murietta, head of the blinking house f f Murietta & Co., recently transferred into I a limited liability company, and the trus tees and executors of the new corporation, owing to the discovery that the liabilities of Murietta & Co. exceed the liabilities represented to the trustees and executors of the corporation. It is also said that fresh liabilities have been incurred since the for mation of the Limited Liability Company, which will require the further subscription of nearly $175,00 in order to avoid a calam ity. This state of affairs is said to have caused Sir John Pender to resign his seat on the Board of Trustees with disgust after a stormy meeting of the board. Later news is to the effect that the money necessary for the im mediate requirements of the company was raised among the stockholders, thus afford ing the concern temporary relief. MEAGER DETAILS OP A WBECK. Six Tcrsons Loso Their Lives on an Illinois Central Express. Xkw Orlkans, June 19. The fast ex press train on file Illinois Central Railroad, due here at 7:20 p. ar., passed Kcnner's station nearly two hours behind time. Five miles south of that point, and an equal distance from this city, the train was wrecked. Six persons, it is reported, were killed, and 15 or 20 more or less badly hurt. A relief train has been sent to the scene of the accident, and doctors and a number of ambulances were ordered to the depot to re ceive and convey the wounded to the hos pital. The wreck knocked down all the wires of the "Western Union Company on tho Illinois Central Bailroad. THE LADY AFBICAN EXPLORES. Ur Serious Illness at Zanzibar May Inter- fere "With tho Expedition. Zakzibab, June 19. Mrs. French Shel don, the American lady who started on an exploring expedition in Africa, has arrived here seriously ilL She was so weak she could not stand, and had to be carried aboard the steamship Ma deira, which sailed for England on Monday. SHUT OUT ITALIANS. A Brakeman Said Tliey "Were Too Dirty to Kido in a First-Class Coach. A party of dirty Italian workmen held iirst-clsas tickets going cast last night. "With tho exception of one, they were satisfied to ride in the smoking car. The kicker had learned something during his short stay in America, and wanted to sit in the ladies' coach. The brakeman noticed the soil on his clothing, and refused to allow him to enter the ear. The Italian stirred up quite a rumpus, but ho got cold comfort from the bystanders. "I had no right," said the brakeman, "to keep him out of the ladies' coach, but the line ought to be drawn somewhere. A man who hasn't euse enough to keep himself clean shouldn't be allowed io herd with de cent people. The agentswon'tsella drunken man any kind of a ticket, hut thev will hand out first-class tickets to a lot of dirty Italians, with a license to make everybody else in the car miserable. I believe in pro tecting the rights of the majority when men will not keep themselves in n'presentable condition. The fault, however, is -with the company and not with the Italians." THE GOVERNMENT LOSES. A Verdict Given for tlio Importers In tho Celebrated lint-Trimming Caso. Philadelphia, Juno 19. The jury in the celebrated hat-trimming case, in the United States Court, this morning rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, Meyer & Dickinson, for the full amount they sued to recover, 51,622 47. The jury handed the Court their opinion in the case, but the Court refused to take it as part of the verdict. Then the foreman stated that their sympathies were with the Government, but they were compelled to find in accordance with the evidence, and in their opinion the evidence was in support of the contention of the plaintiff. United States Attorney Bead is engaged in a consultation to determine upon a line of action for the Government's defense in the subsequent cases, the one decided this morning being a test case. The cases, are very important, involving millions of dol lars. SnTRLLT DAKE potirs a volley of hot shot into doctors -nlio complain abont oth ers 'writing on bcalth topics, and holds np tho fashionable phjslclans t& ridicule in THE DISPATCII to-morrow. A SET OF BUBGLAR TOOLS Left in Ilr. Elliott's Barn, and tho Polico "oir Want tho Owner. Allegheny police have captured a fine set of burglar tools aud are anxious to find the owner. The set consists of five drills and a brace, a jimmy, a package of powder, six yards of fuse, a lot of white ducking and a curious sand bag, made of rubber hose nailed to a handle and filled with sand. The tools were found in a hay loft on the Ivory farm about a half a mile outside of the city. Thursday night Superintendent Muth and Assistant "Superintendent Glenn visited the place, and spent some time about the neigh borhood in hopes that the owner of the tools would comt back after them, but this did not prove to be tho case, as no one ap peared. Picked tip a Valuable Horse A citizen of the Twenty-soventh ward yesterday reported to the Southside police that he had found a valuable horse wander ing aimlessly about the streets. It was stated that the horse had been purchased by a Nineteenths ward man from a fanner in Baldwin township. The horse was taken home and placed in a pasture bv its new owner. The animal broke out of the field, and by following a wagon crossed the South Twenty-second street ferry and was hunting its way home when found in the Twenty seventh ward. SILVER ADVOCATES IS COUNCIL. A Iteport of Their Work May Bo Made to the l'ubllo To-Day. New York, Jane 19. The Executive Committee of the National Silver Associa tion met to-day. It was stated that none of the proceedings was yet to be made public A committee was appointed to formulate a plan of work, and it is probable a report will be make to the public to-morrow. No Corner Loafing in Brushton. A crusade on street loafers has been com menced in Brushton. The ordinance officer, a very important functionary in all well regulated towns, ha? been directed to arrest aU young men caught standing about in public places. Brushton is only a small place, but it enjoys the distinction of being a remarkably well governed one. Found Dead in Bed. Mrs. Kate Donnley, aged 38 years, was found dead in bed at he- home on Second avenue, near Fraukstown, about S o'clock yesterday morning. She was a hard drinker, and died from excessive drink. Ex-Scntor McDonald No Better. Indianapolis, June 19. Ex-Senator McDonald's condition is unchanged to-dav. Senator Voorhecs came from Terre Haute to see him this morning, and had a brief in terview with him. Ilxlng Bnflalo Bates. The BuffalotFrcight Committee wrestled again yesterday with the Buffalo rate ques tion. The advanced rates won't go.into ef fect before August 1, and they liavon't de- pirlfH In rlifit nninfo 1 Tiv mrn n,..flF.... 1A-.. classes will apply. RIVAL TELEGRAPH UNIONS. A Compromise Agreement In the Nature of a Truce Patched Up. St. LOUIS, June 19. The judiciary Com mittee of the Order of Eailway Telegraph and M. D. Shaw and J. H. Schwcrzgen, grand officers of the Brotherhood of Tele graphers, came together at 10 o'clock this morning and it took only a short time for them to reach a conelusionas tothe question of amalgamating the two organizations. The Judiciary Committeo of the former re ported that the grand division had refused to reduce the time of the eligibility clause of the organic law, whereupon Messrs. Shaw and Schwerzgen called all negotiations off. It is said an amicable agreement was reached whereby the two orders will jpro ccedand organize the telegraphers of the United States, one not encroacning on the other's territory that is, the brotherhood will take in commercial operators and rail road telegraphers not members of the Order of Bailway Telegraphers, while the Order of Bailway Telegraphers will receive only railroad operators. The Order of Railway Telegraphers will applv for membership in the Federation of Bailway Employes, but it is said the assurance has been given the brotherhood people by members of the council that neither organization will be ad mitted until an amalgamation has been reached. A YOUNG MAN'S FORTUNE. .1 nullum ncreomeot in tne mature , ""- """" " . Natural on wells around Pindar arc 'M He Was Left $500,000 in Trnstand a French Woman Is Suing for Some of It. rsrECIAL TELEGEAM TO THE DISPATCH. New York. , June 19. Under a will made in I860, by James Haggcrty, James W. Smith was entrusted with property valued at nearly ?500,000 for the-benefit of George L. Kent, then a child. At the age of 19 Kent started for a European tour, before entering at a university. At Paris he be came acquainted with a woman 15 years his senior. Eight years later Kent died in Singapore on a trip around the world that he was making with the same woman Aimee Liente. After his death in 1886 Aimee found three wills among his effects. In each will she was a beneficiary. She also pre sented 17 promissory notes, with a total face value of nearly 150,000 francs, that she said had been given her for value received. Claiming that there were just debts of Kent and should be paid out of the estate, Aimee Lknte, a daughter of the original Aimee Liente, has brought suit against the public administrator to recover the amount with interest. The case was called to-day before Justice Truax and a jury in the Supreme Court, but it was set down for the regular calendar. SEVERE KANSAS STORMS. nail, Clond Bursts and Tornadoes Vary the Monotony of the Weather. Arkansas City, Kan., June 19. About C o'clock this evening a heavy wind storm, accompanied by hail, passed over this city, doing considerable damage to shade trees and exposed windows. Two miles southwest of the city the storm assumed the character of a tornado, and leveled to the ground the wheat in the shock and the growing corn. The dwelling of "William Moordy was re moved from its foundation, and several barns were demolished. No one was seriously.in jured. A dispatch from Ft. Scott says: "A phe nomenal rain fell here to-night, beginning at 7:30 and continuing one hour and ten minutes. The streets were flooded and Buck rnn, a ravine which travorses the city from south to north, was transformed into a rain ing torrent. It is feared several persons are drowned, but nothing certain is known at this hour. JULES VEKXE lias excelled himself In his new story, "The Callfornlans," which -begins in THE DISPATCH to-morrow. NOT AFRAID OF INVESTIGATION. The Bequest for tho Examination of an In surance Company Approved. New York, June 19. At a special meet- mg of the Board of Trustees of the New YorkXife Insurance Company resolutions were adopted approving the request for an examination of the company; expressing un diminished confidence in the officers of the company, and believing that the charces made against the management of its affair are wuolly unjustifiable. THE UNrVEHSITY COMMENCEMENT. Senior Class Graduation Exercises Will Bo Held Next Thursday. The commencement exercises of the senior class of the Western University will be held in Carnegie Hall on next Thursday, , 2oth, at 8 o'clock. The baccalaureate service will be held in the Bellefield Presbyterian Church at 10:45 o'clock next Sunday. Next Wednesday will be class day. LITTLE ITEMS OF LOCAL INTEREST. Tnn parents of Mollie Cufus, aged 15 years, of Beltzlioovor, yesterday reported to the Southside police that she had run awavfrom home. A description of the girl was "taken by tho police, who will arrest her if found. Thieves, belioved to bo boys, broke tho -window of Miss Lizzie Williams' candy stoic, Preble avenue, on Thursdav, nnd stole property to a small amouut. 1'he police were notified. Coukcilitan Mart Doicsr-LY returned yes terday from camput Grove Clty.nndbi ought several hundred pounds of turtle and three young groundhogs. The latter will go to Schenlcy Park. The chief clerkship of tlie City Assessor's office, vacated by tho death of Samuel 31. Clark, has been tilled by Edward Jenkins, who has been connected witli tho ofllco for three years. The Amoskcag engine test will take place Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock on tho Slonon gahela whajf, as ordered by tho master In the suit. Chief Brown is confident of its success. Chiek Bnowx- yesterday denied tho state ment that ho had prepared an answer to Mayor Gourley's last letter. Tho Chief soys he has written no letter and does not in tend to. Scpehiktende-t McKktoiit, of Schenley Park, Is looking for a drove of deer ex pected to arrive daily from West Virginia. Three hundred immigrants reached tho city yesterday over the Baltimore nnd Ohio road. .Tho majority w ent West. COLLIDED WITH THE LAW. - W. J. O.ATTOS- was arrested last night for reckless driving on Center avenue, near Din widdle street, and locked up in the Eleventh ward station. A srEAK-EASY kept by Mrs. Edna O'Brien at No. 15 Fourth avenue, was raided by Lieu tenant Dennlstou last night, who captured her and six men drinking in tho place. George Kempie was committed to Jail yes terday to await a hearing beforo Alderman JtcKenna on Juno 13, to answ er a charge of desertion preferred by his wife, Meranda Kemple. Detective Demuel returned from Steuben villo yesterday with John Erockenbaugh, wanted for shooting Samuel Ilarris and his mother at their homo at Oakdale. Ho will beheld to aw ait tho icsult of their Injuries. Jons Kkaiiii will have a hearing beforo Alderman Donovon Monday to answer a chargj of selling liquor without a license. The prosocutor is Charles Hcdenburg. De fendant lives at 38 Mifflin street, Sixtecnth ward. James Blackburn, colored, was committed to jail yesterday in default of $5C0, by Alder man Cahill, for a hearing to-day, on a charge of larceny, preferred by James fAdnes, a colored barber on Wylle avenue, who alleges that Blackburn stole a pocketbook containing $5 from him Sunday morning. Prakk Holmes, colored, was arrested on Liberty street, by Dctectlvo McTIgho, last night as a suspicious person. Holmes was carrying a bushel basket full of string beans and cabbages auspiciously covered over with kindling ood, nnd when asked how he had como into possession of tho stuff could not give a satisfactory explanation. L4 PROTEST ENTERED Against the Bering Sea Agreement by an Aggrieved Company. ITS PUR SEAL EIGHTS INVADED. A -Contract 'Witu the Government That Cannot Be Set Aside BI ENGLAND OE THE UNITED STATES Washington, June 19. The North American Commercial Company, through Its attorney, Judge N. T. Jeffries, Las filed a protest with Acting Secretary Spaulding, of the Treasury Department, in which it re cites that it has the right to take fur seals from the islands of St. Paul and St. George for the period of 20 years from May 1, 1890, and that it has and will continue to per form the stipulations of its lease. The com pany states that it was assured a quota of 60,000 sealskins during 1890, and upon such assurance submitted its bid tt three times the amount paid by a former lessee. Upon the acceptance of the lease the company made a large outlay in buildings and pro visions, and arranged for transporting tho 60,000 sealskins to San Francisco. The company says that it was compelled to cease taking seals on the 20th day of July, when the sealing season had not ex pired, and only one-third of the quota of skins had been obtained, and the company was further prohibited from taking any ad ditional number during said year. On this account the company has sustained a loss of S400.000. Protesting Against the Ordor. The company further represents -that at the time it was compelled to stop taking seals at said islands it earnestly protested against such action by the United States and has continued to protest, and now again suhi mits this, its formal protest, against the ac tion of the United States in preventing it from taking tho quota of sealskins it had a right to take by law and by the terms of said contract. The company submits that it is justly en titled to receive from the United States such sum as will compensate it for the loss it has sustained on account of the action of the United States, as aforesaid, and gives notice to the Secretary of the Treasury that it will claim to be reimbursed by the United States to the full amount of thelossit may sustain by reason or its being prohibited by the United States from taking it full quota of 00,000 sealskins during the year 1891. The company further represents that in pro viding for the maintenance and education of the inhabitants of the islands of St. Paul and St. George it has expended the sum of 150,000, for which it has not been reim bursed. Interference by England Not Iiejral. The company respectfully invites the at tention of the Secretary of the Treasury to the fact that the islands of St. Paul and St. George in Alaska belong to and are in the undisputed possession of the United States; that the right of this Government to dis pose of the fur seals born on said islands has never been ouestioned. This beine so. said company assumes that the right of the United States or its lessee to take fur seals on said islands, within our unquestione'd jurisdiction, is beyond dispute and not sub ject to question or interference by England or any other foreign state. The right of this Government to take fur seals on its own territory is not one of the questions to be submitted to arbitration and has no relation to the contention be tween the two countries. In that dispute Great Britain affirms and the United States denies the right of English and Canadian poachers to slaughter fur seals In "our part of Bering Sea; and this company re spectfullyinsiststhat an agreement between the two Governments, set forth in the Pres ident s proclamation, in so lar as it pro hibits said company from taking its lawful quota of sealskins is in contravention of vested rights of this company and subjects it to great loss." Standing by Its Eawfnl Bights. If it be assumed, as England has asserted, nnd this Government has denied, that the eastern portion of Bering Sea is not the marine territory of the United States, but is tho "high 6eas," the company respect fully submits that it is not competent for Great Britain and the United States alone, or for any other two governments, to deter mine who shall be permitted to navigate these waters or to prohibit fishing or taking seals on the high seas. The company respectfully points out to the Honorable Secretary of the Treasury that its rights have been overlooked by said agreement between the two Governments, in that it deprives the lessee from taking seals which it is authorized to take by law and, by its contract with fhe United States, thereby inflicting a severe loss upon said company, in order to obtain tho consent of England to arbitrate the question, as to the right of Canadian poachers to destroy the fur seal industry by pelagic sealing. DB. ALBERT SHAW sayg war In Europe cannot bo postponed much longer. His thorough analysis of the situation in THE DISPATCH to-morrow. AN EPIDEMIC OF MEASLES. Over a Hnndrcd Cases Reported by Doctors Yesterday in Wllkinsburg. Tho ravages of measles in Wilkinsburg have assumed the pioportions of almost an epidemic In one short block on South street there are a dozen cases, and through out the borough it is estimated there are over 100. The disease has spread with cus tomary rapidity, whole families being down with it at once. So far there have been no fatalities, although during the present hot weather there is always danger of complica tions that may end in death. Cholera infantum has also been very bad in the borough, physicians being in constant requisition. It is to their credit that very few of the cases have ended in the death of the little sufferers. The grip has not been quite cleared out of the borough yet. The physicians report an occasional case, but always in a mild form. Detective Cook's Case Postponed. The hearing in the case of James W. Walls versns Detective C. W. Cook for misdemeanor and extortion did not come off yesterday before Alderman McMastcrs owing to the absence of witnesses. Walls says his wife is the principal witness, and that she refused to go to the hearing, giving as her reason that Cook liad done her a favor at onetime and" that she did not like to appear against him. The hearing was postponed until next Monday at 2 r. it. One-Third Off Regular Prices. For today's sale we have reduced all our men's suits, boys' suits and summer clothing (one-third) 14 off from the regular prices, a clean, clear and solid saving to you of 3J per cent. Bead this: An elegant line of men's sack suits, made from striped cheviot and checked catsimerc, reduced to ?4 73 500 men's sack suits and 500 elegant dress cutaw ay suits reduced to-day ( , , to ?9 85 each. They are the greatest ) -4 bargains you ever beheld. Equal to ' . merchant tailors' garments. Our price for 'em to-day is $9 85 P. C. C. C., Pittsburg Combination Cloth ing Company, corner Grant and Diamond streets, opp. the Court House. Ladies gingham suits, ?5 nover sold for less than 58 just received. Buy them to-day. Jos. Hokkk & Co.'s Penn Avenue Stores. Negligee silk shirts at James H. Aiken & Co. 's, 100 Fifth avenue. Unlike Tennyson's Brook. The sale of lots.at Kensington will not go on forever. Buy now and be wise. i T3DATWP T?VT17T?T?n. he btokoed an m. p. AfpnCQ TITT7 ATI XTSTTO. LATE NEWS IX BRIEF. "r ACHAT T3WC irTCQrAAT M And Was So Slick About It That the Victim Only Admires Him. "Although I am the youngest member of the House of .Commons'," said P. G. Harri son, M. P. for Tipperary, to a New York correspondent recently, "I always thought until I came to this country that I was shrewd enough to keep out of the hands of the festive bunko steerer, yet I hadn't been in New York two weeks before I fell a vic tim to the wiles of as spruce a young man as I should care to meet. I dislike to dwell upon that experience. It was not pleasant to have the conceit taken out of me by meet ing a man who had honesty written in his face and the broth of sincerity on his tongue. "I only lost a few pounds, not enough to cause me any inconvenience, but I should like to meet the young man again, just the same. His game? Well, never mind; you'd laugh at me if I told. Probably the experi ence I had was worth the money, and I would like to assure that young man of a fortune awaiting him in London and Dublin. He would create a sensation in either of those cities, because his kind is very rare there. There is just one consoling thought about the whole business. He said he was an Irishman, and every native of the old sod ought to be proud of the fact. He would re flect credit on any country." NEGROES TURNING WHITE. The Case In Baltimore Is Nothing Eesg Than, Real Leprosy. The negro girl of Baltimore who is turn ing white has the true leprosy the leprosy we read of in the Bible, says an old traveler in the St. Louis Oldbc-Dcmocrat. When I was first pointed out a leper in this country I was surprised and thought my informant was in error. The leprosy that rages in the East is precisely the same as the unknown disease of the Baltimore negress. In India, where lepers are numerous, they are snow white, and their naked bodies glisten in the sun as do the scales of fish. Leprosy first shows itself on the hands. Small white spots declare themselves, and if care is not taken those spots cover tho entire surface of the bodv. They grow whiter and scales form, and, as the Bible says, "white as a leper." ONE CHANCE IN FORTY-TWO. Naval Academy Candidates Will Be Exam ined Next Tnesday. Colonel Andrew Stewart, ot Ohio Pyle, has appointed Profs. W. C. McClelland, Wash ington; Alex. Phillips, Allegheny county, and A. F. Cooper, Fayette, a committee to examine candidates for admission into the Naval Academy at Annapolis from the Twenty-fourth Congressional district. TThe district .is entitled to one cadet, and there are 42 applicants for the place. The committee will meet in the Court House next Tuesday to see which one is the most deserving to be educated at Uncle Sam's expense. By the time the successful candidate passes all the examinations re quired, he will be a fit subject for on insane asylum. DENIES THE CHARGES. Dewltt Wilt Says Ho Did Not Abandon His Summer Snap Company. Members of the "Chip of the Old Block" Company make the charge that Dewitt Wilt, son of E. D. Wilt, of the Grand Opera House, and John Klein took the company on a tour, squandered all the .pro ceeds at Louisville and skipped out, leaving them stranded. Mr. Wilt says the company gave a very poor production compared to what they had promised, and when he concluded to stop at the end of the week they wanted him to pay their way back to Pittsburg. He had not agreed to do this and refused. Mr. Klein corroborates Mr. Wilt. MAGGIE CASSELL WANTS BLOOD. She Tries to Stab a Man Who Sold Her Hns band Llqnor. Maggie Cassell, wife of "Dude" Cassell, was arrested with an open knife in her hand, at Second avenue and Grant street, last night She explained the fact of her having the knife in her hand by saying that 6he had "intended to "give it to" a man named Larkins, who was standing at the corner. She said Larkins had done her a great injury by selling her husband liquor, when Larkins, who is a Sixth-warder, was formerly a saloon keeper. An ofheer arrested her before she reached Larkins, and thereby probably prevented a tragedy. Mrs. Cassell was in a greatly ex cited state. THE NEW CENTRAL PARK. It Will Bo Formally Opened on the Even ing of Jaly 4. At the request of a number of citizens Chief Bigelow has decided to name the new park at the tipper Bedford basin "Central Park." People in the neighborhood are making active preparations for a grand opening of the pretty place on the evening of the Fourth of July. Jacob Etzel has engaged a band for the occasion, and all the people who have been wishing so long for a breathing spot will be there to join in the ceremony. THE TABLES TURNED. American Capital Bujlng Up Factories in the Queen's Dominion. St. Jons's, Nfld., June 19. It is reported the National Cordoge Company of New York has purchased for $3,000,000 all the cordage works in Canada, including that of Thomas Conner & Sons, of St. John's. The St. John's w orks will be run for ex- Iiort trade only. They are said to be the argest in the Dominion. Will Inspect tho Police. The entire police force of the city will be inspected by Chief Brown at Old City Hall, Monday morning, at 10 o'clock, in full summer uniform. This, will be one of the semi-annual inspections, held after the men are all equipped" with the uniforms provided for the summer or winter seasons, as the case mav be. THE FLRE RECORD. At Clarksburg,; W. Va., the extensive foun dry and machine shops of A II. Osborno wore totally destroyed yesterday morn ing. Tho lire started In tho engine room and spit-ad with great rapidity, en veloping tho entire place in loss fhan threo minutes. Most of tho machinery was saved, but many valuable patterns and draw ings were destroyed. Loss, $10,000; In surance, $2,500. Two alarms of llro wore struck In Alle gheny yesterday forenoon. One wns for a slight Are at tho Elbourno Hotel, Robinson street, and tho other at the Port Wayno depot. The damage In both cases was very slight. At Franklin, Ky., yesterday, the Franklin Woolen Mills burned. Loss on building, $20,030; stock, $12,000; insurance, $15,0C0. John Latham, one of tho owners, and a negro w ere inj ured, probably fatally, in lighting tho flames. A pew pparks from a saw, which set fire to some woodwork In Jones & Laughllns' now South Twonty-nlnth street mill, was the cause of an alarm being sent in from station 157 at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Near Alliance yesterday afternoon tho residence of George Lerlong was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. Tho fumlly woro not in tho house at the time. Loss, $3,CO0; fully insured. No. I ExaiKK Company answered a still alarm last evening for a slight Are in tho house of Sirs. Mary McTighe, In the rear of 502 Fifth avenue, caused by a gas Jet setting lire to a lace curtain. A small llro started on tho roof of Bay loy's cafe from nn clectrio wire. A still alarm was sent to No. 2 engine company and the blaze was put out with little damage. An alarm from box 35 about 6 o'clock last evening was caused by a gas stove explod ing in the house of 31. O. Sedcrsley atNo.5 Wylle avenue. An Experimental Balloon to Be Sent Over Before July 4. TO MAKE THE TRIP IN 30 HOUHS. Xo ilnman Freight Will Be Carried on the First Expedition. THE TIAXS FOR TIIE AERIAL V0TAGE , PniLADnLPnTA, June 19. To cross the Atlantic is the enterprising mission upon which a balloon will start from German town within the next week or two. The balloon will not carry any passengers, but it is intended to pilot the way for a monster airship that will carry at least two voyagers. The inventor of this new airship is Charles P. Fest, of 4555 Lena street, Germantown. Mr. Fest has been working on the prob lem of aerial navigation for the past CO years, and is now convinced that he has solved it. He is on eminently practical business man, and works at his invention at odd hours. He has tried every scheme of aerial naviga tion that has been suggssted in the past decade and a half, and has reached the con clusion that all schemes of propulsion by machinery are impracticable. The air cur rents, in his opinion, form the only motive power that can be relied on. The balloon which Mr. Fest has now projected is on the old principle of the hot-air ship. . The experimental machine that will be started across the Atlantic is completed, and is an exact model of the larger one that is expected tolfller rsirrv over the inventor. The hot gas that will inflate the bag will be generated from gasoline, which is chosen on account of its enormous volatile proportions and great lifting power. To Europe in Thirty Hours. In the completed machine the gasoline will be carried in a rectangular tin can hold ing exactly ten gallons. A small tube runs from the can to an upright brass pipe about three inches in diameter and about six feet long. This pipe is lined within and with out with asbestos. It passes up into the gas bag, while the tin receptacle remains below. The gasoline is ignited at the tube that passes into the pipe near the bottom, and the flame shoots np the pipe to-tbe top, where it is arrested by a cap. The bag is made of a preparation of pa per and is rigged so that it cannot sway and come in contact with the flame. This flame will be constant, and experiments show that the ten gallons will last just 40 hours, or ten hours longer, according to Mr, Fest's calculations; than will be necessary to carry the airship across the Atlantic. Mr. Fest believes that the balloon will make tho passage in 30 hours. The gas bag on the pioneer balloon meas ures 22 feet in diameter. Underneath the oil can has been suspended a copper buoy shaped like a big top and weighted at the bottom, so that it will float in the water in an upright position. It is surmounted by an American flag and is suspended by a hook that will unfasten if it comes in con tact with the water. This will be filled with directions to be returned, if found. This will only become detached in case of accident and in the unexpected eventof the balloon falling in the water. In the large balloon for passengers it will be made large enough to float the voyagers in case of accident. Only Floating Power Needed. Mr. Fest declares that it has been clearly proven that there is a constant air current! to tho east that will waft his airship across the ocean in 40 hours at the outside, and the only problem that has prevented aero nauts from crossing the ocean before has been that of keeping a balloon up sufficiently long to make the voyage. The existence of these currents was shown by Professor Wise when he made his trip from St. Louis to New York, nnd he then declared that lie could cross tho ocean if he could only keep his airship afloat. Mr. Fest thinks that he has solved this problem bv providing a constant and uni form supply of hot gas. The size of the oil receptacle can be expanded to almost any dimensions that will give them sufficient fuel to keep afloat for a long time. Mr. Fest has already sent up over 200 small balloons made on this principle, so that his calculations are based on reliable data. The date for sending the balloon on its transatlantic trip has not yet been fixed but will be decided on shortly. It will probably be before the Fourth of July. The ga3 bag will be decorated with the shield of the United fatates, tor, although Mr. Fest was born in Germany, he is a veteran of the war and an intense American. "I want America to have the glory of solving this problem," he said yesterday. JULES VERNE'S new story begins In THE DISPATCH to-morrow. THE ART OF SHEDDING TEARS. Sarah Bernhardt Can Not Cry and Sho Will Never Learn How. Ellen Terry In New York rierald. I do not say that the absence of tears shows a lack of feeling. For instance, the greatest of living actresses, Sarah Bernhardt, spoke upon this very subject with me at our first meeting, which was on the Lyceum stage after a performance of "Iolanthc" (King Kene's daughter). The scene was still set. It is a garden. Dear mel how she dazzled and interested me! She flitted here and there, pretending to smell the flowers she rustled and rustled shimmer shimmer went her dress and flit fit went she. It made me think the garden was real my own stage garden that I had been acting in. She seemed to me a butterfly, and I an elephant. I did feel heavy, dull and stupid by the side of her. It was the first time I had met her off the stage. She chattered away all the while in French, since she couldn't in English, and thereby showed her wit, all the time charm ing us or me, at all events and holding the situation most completely. I remember that evening (when she left off flitting, and E roved to me she was not really a butterfly y eating some asparagus for supper after the play) she spoTce to me about my real tears in King Rene's daughter, not with surprise, but with interest and sympathy, and told me she could not cry. But I know that she felt like crying, though her tears did not come. "It is a very penurious nnd skep tical love which must understand before it can sympathize." Although I did not see "I heard her tears," and knew tbey were in her soul. No! despite all that Diderot and even M. Coquelin have said to the contrary, I do not believe that an actress can really move her audience unless she is herself affected by certain passages. But to teach the art of shedding tears is as impossible as it is to teach the art of feeling. PHOTOGRAPHS ON WINDOWS. A Caso in Mlssonrl as Wonderful as Those Reported Recently. A few miles from Columbia, in Boone county, Mo., there is a little church in the middle of a small country graveyard, said J. N. Wilson, of St. Louis, in discussing spirit photos on windows with a Oltbe-Ventncral re porter. A few years ago, one morning after a severe storm, a homeless man was found dead in the churchyard, directly beneath one of the windows. On a pane in the win dow was as accurate a photograph of the dead man's face as an artist could have taken. The picture seemed to be perma nently fixed in the glass and remained there for years after the man was buried, and for all I know may be there yet. It was seen by hundreds of people and was the talk of the whole country at the time the event happened. Of course no body could explain now it was done, but if we believe only what we understand our creed is likely to be very short. flltlr, Molting snow has caused mountain floods in Colorado. A large underground lake has been dis covered In Edwards county iTex.. Canadian Premier Abbott says the Mac donald policy will bo adhered to. "The funeral of O'Gorman JIahon will taice place in Dublin to-morrow. Emperor William wishes German land' owners to settle in Alsace-Lorraine. The marauding Arnches have escaped iiuiu mo pursuing jioxican cavalry. Sixty earthquake shocks In Bengal -Luurauay, destroyed many uuiiumes. Tho American Society of Mechanical Engineers adjonmed at Providence Thurs day. The Order of Railway Telegraphers has abolished the anti-strike clause in its consti tution. Germanv fears that Balmaccda's snech'w would mean American commercial suprem acy in unne. Ex-Senator Mahone thinks the Farmers Alliance won't amount to much, politically, in Virginia. John Most, tho Anarchist, was resent enced in a e w l ork yesterday to one year In the penitentiary. Many Jefferson Davis memorial meet ings nave jecn Held In Arkansas to augment the monument fund. - Sixty Chickasaw soldiers, on their way to eject boomers, all got drnnk and terror ized every white man they met. Mataafa still claims to bo the rightful King of Samoa, and is taking steps, it is be lieved, to forcibly assert his pretenso. James Waggcnor, a wealthy horse thief at cnoyenno, l. T., was lyncneu supposedly by threo United States officers Thursday night. Premier Rndini Insists npon knowing what adhesion England will give to the Dreibund before signing a renewal of tho alliance The Czech students who attacked and assaulted threo Germans at the exhibition in Prague, have been sentenced to pay a small line. Secretary Tracy has invited proposals for the construction of a steel twin screw sea going torpedo boat. Kids are to uo opened August 13 next. Richmond held a mass meeting Thursday night to endeavor to induce Mrs. Jefferson Davis to allow her husband's remains to be burled In that city. The Senate of tho National Union, in session at Milwaukee, yesterday morning selected Kansas City as the next place of meeting in June, 1S92. Fourteen men wero buried beneath the debris of a fulllns lumber shed in Berkeley, Va., Thursday. Munroo B. Kiino was killed and others seriously injured. Bruneau's opera founded on Zola's "La Reve" was produced In Paris Thursday evening. It Is strongly Wagnerian, and ft met with only partial success. At the commencement of St. 31argaret'3 School for Young Ladies at Buffalo.. Thurs day night Brshop Coxe reproved 'his fair auditors for riding astride on bicycles. Tho boiler of the Benwood blast farnaco at Martin's Ferry, W. Va., exploded early yesterday morning, wrecking the buildings. Killing Charles Rouse and wounding others. Five Qnebeo children named Lachance were playing in a skiffintheSt. Lawrence river Thursday when the- waves of a pass ing steamer sank the boat. All but one were drowned. While lying asleep In bed at Philadel phia, Andrew Terry, colored, was stabbed 23 times In the neck and body with a large table knife in the hands of a rival, John Brown, also colored. Lieutenant Robinson, Explorer Mooro and four of tho crew of the revenuo cutter Bear, were drowned In Icy Bay, Alaska, -recently, while attempting to land with the Russell Mt. St. Elias party. During an Investigation of the Coon Rap ids Railroad wreck by the Iowa Railroad Commissioners, the engineer of the train swore that the engine struck a tie which had been wedged in between the rails. E. J. Corrigon, John Brenock and Isaac G. Lansing, proprietors of the new race track at Hawthorne, near Chicago, were In dicted by tho grand Jury Thursday for sell ing liquor on the grounds without a license. Tho Republican County Committee of New York, at their meeting Thursday night, adopted resolutions expressing approval of the platform adopted by the Ohio conven tion and of the nomination of Major McKin ley. Hawthorne. N. J., near Patcrson. wn. visited by a tornado Wednesday, plunging tho village in utter darkness during its progress. All crops passed over were de stroyed, and the usual amount of other dam age inmcteu. A package of poisoned crystallized fruit was received through the mall by Sirs. E. D. Redd, of Richmond, yesterday, she and five others partook of tho sweets, which made them deathly sick. Timely medical aid saved their lives. Lord Dunlo says ho will not take hl? sett in tbe House ot Lords nntil his wife has abandoned the stage. He declined to stato whether be would be Liberal or Conserva tive in politics, but said he meant to And out soon what those terms meant. Uno, tho'snake-cbarmer of Forepaugli'i show, was nearly squeezed to deitli by one of her pots during a performance in Chicago, Thursday. Miss Jcnnio Ycamani, a sou brotte of tho "Blue Jeans" company, re--cucd Uno by choking the reptilo Into ifl senslbilltr. A girl namod Jcnnio Williamson la In jail at Newbnrg, N. Y., charged with mur der, arson and horse-stealing. She is said to have married an old farmer, burned down his house, mill and barn, roasted his weak minded sou to death and wound up by steal ing a livery team. Ablacksmi th of Sebewalng, Mich., named neymau, shod a. vicious mnle with the help of three men Wednesday. After the J oh the bnlte broke loose and attacked the black smith with distended jaws, biting off his nose and right cheek. Tho mule was shot. Heyman may die. -Mrs. T. R. Glennan, wife of Past Assist ant Surgeon Glennan, United Suites Navy, arrived at Raleigh Thursday evening of last week from Washington, with four children. Since Monday diphtheria has earned off two of the little ones, and now the other, two are at death's door from tho same dlseuso. An enormous artificial lake, partly formed by a glacier in the Tyrol, burst Its confines and caused devastation similar to that of the Johnstown flood, excopt that it was probably unattended by loss of life. The inhabitants of tho devastated valley had been expecting the disaster and were prepared for It. The steam barge Jane Cook anchored off Amherstburg, Ont., at tho foot of tho Detroit river, Thursday evening. Part of the crew went ashore, became intoxicated, and, on returning to the vessol, raised n disturbance. A battle between the drunken and the sober parts of the crow ensued, In which six men wore shot and wounded. J Thirty of the lcadlne women of Sonth Dakota, and an Aberdeen new spaper, have been sued by Mrs. Marietta Bones, of Web ster, S. D., for $53,C0D damages for besmirch ing her reputation witli a set of pun gent resolutions. The suit grows out of a row between Mrs. Bones and Susan B. An thony, at the national meeting of tho Women's Christian Temperance Lnion, last summer. Apackago of flour and another of coffee wero found by a farmer near llagerstown, Md., named Daniel Shlffler, In a lane near his house. Not finding an owner he gave tho articles to Mrs. McKurron, u neighbor. Her entire, familv of six were niado deathly sick. Ono boy died and another is expected to dio. It wns found that the flour had been poisoned by some nnknown enemy of Mr. bhitller, who doubtless expected that gentle man would uso the provisions himself. Tho widow of Captain Burton writes from London that she intends, as far as pos sible, to publish all ofher husband's manu scripts in accordance with his desires, with tho exception ot his "Magnum Opus" upon which he worked until tho day of his death a translation fiom the Arable of tbe "Scented Garden." Captain Burton, when rlvinir. told his wife that this work would realize an annuity for her, and ho would never write more on the subject, but would devote himself to his autobiography; that it was a baby tale compared with his "Arabian jilghts." and wns likely to make a row In England. Mrs. Burton says she wonld not run tho risk of publishing the ''Magnum Opus" for $3D,003,0CO. CELIA LOGAN tells how sho got rid of surplus adlpoao In THE DISPATCH to-morrow. The only safo and common senbe core for obesity. Why suffer with corns when yon can per manently cure them with Daisy Corn Cure. Come early to-day for- choice of trie great bargains in silk short lengths. Jos. HOKNE & Co. '3 Penn Avenue Stores. A Cnre for Grip. One that induces yon to release your grasp on your pocketbook and invest in Kensington lots. He Wants Old Cairo in Egypt repre sented at the World;s Fair mm A STREET OP THAT CITY. An Arabic legend of the Prophet Enoch, the River .Vile and THE FA3IED 3I0UXTAINS OF THE 31005" SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH. NkwYokk, June 19. Colonel Alexan der McCorab Mason is in New York on his way to Chicago to consult with the directors of- the World's Fair on behalf of the city of Cairo, Egypt. Colonel Mason, who is known in Egypt as Mason Bey, has been in tho service of the Khedive for several years, and is a Colonel in the Egyptian army. Mason Bey has done a good deal of explor ing on the Upper Nile and around the Al bert Lake. He told Tub Dispatch corre spondent to-day that it is 14 years since ho was all but at the place where Stanley camped when he saw the Monntains pf the Moon. At that time Mason Bey was on a. small steamer exploring the Albert Lake. He was working along the western coast in the summer of 1877, but the nature of his work was such that he made no long stops, and the conditions of the atmosphere never happened to be favorable for the appear ance of the mountains. It was in June, 1889, that Stanley camped almost on the western beach of the lake, and there it was that the Mountains of the Moon appeared to him to his great delight, and the equally great delight and astonish ment of his Zanzibar carriers. An Arabic Legand of Enoch. Mason Bey has with him the original copy -in Arabic ot the old Arabian legends of tlie origin of the Monntains of the Moon. This legend also professes to accountdbr the dis appearance of Enoch, the son of Jored, who "walked with God; and he was not. God took him." The legend says that Enoch discovered that the Nile was a tur bulent, disorderly river, overflowing its banks at improper times and spreading de vastation. The trouble was that it has too much water. Enoch traced it to its source and found that it sprang from 85 small streams. Enoch then gathered three streams together and checked their volume by means of faucets and cocks, and over the whole contrivance erected the enormous mountains of pure jasper. The surplus water is accounted for by an Abyssinian legend, which accompanies" the Arabian tale. This legend says that Enoch, used it to form the great "Sea of Darkness," as the Victoria Lake has been called. The first legend disposes of Enoch by leaving him under his monntains of jasper; the second leaves him at the bottom of the Sea of Darkness. Mason Bey has come to America to ar range, if possible, for the reproduction at the Chicago fair of a street in Cairo. There was a similar exhibition at Paris two years ago, and it was one of the most entertaining features of the great exhibition. Cairo Will Appropriate 8200,000. Americans-who saw that display will bo enthusiastic supporters of Mason Bey's plan. The city of Cairo is willing to devote 5300,000 to the exhibition. That, however, will not be enough to cover the expense of the work, and Colonel Mason hopes to obtain a concession from the direc tors of the fair. He thinks that the propo sition to charge an entrance fee would not meet with general approval and would result in a failure. It is proposed bv the city of Cairo to have for the exhibition as accurate a repro duction as is possible of the Khan Hhallila, one of the famous crooked streets of Cairo, with a mosque at one end and a beautiful gate at the other. This is lined with little box-like shops, and the air is heavy with the odor of spices. Dervishes nre always at service in tne mosque and girls dance at the beautiful gate. If Colonel Mason can make satisfactory arrangements with the directors of the fair, work will at once begin on this peculiar featnre. Colonel Mason was detained at Paris bv illness, caused by the cold weather. He will go to Chicago in a few days. JULES VEBNT1 has In "The Callfornlans" produced not only the best story of his life, bat a thoroughly American one. Opening chapters, handsomely illustrated, in TIIK DISPATCH to-morrow. RIVER KEWS AND K0TES. What Upper Ganges Show. Aixxritext Jo CTIOX Elver 6 feet 6 inches arnl stationary. Cloudy and warm. Moboantow Klver fi feet 3 inches and sta tionary. Cloudy. Thermometer 85a at 4 P. M. BKOWNSVlLLE Elver 5 feet 2 luetics and sta. tionary. Cloudy. ThcTmometer77at6P. M. AVabbes lllver 1.2 feet and rising. Heavy showers. The News From Delow. WirFELTVO River G feet and rlslmr. Departed lien Hur. I'arkersburiT: Batchclor, Pittsburg; Al len, l'lttsburg. Weather cloudy. CrxctxxATl River II feet 7 inrhes and falling. Cloudv and warm. Departed bcotia. rittstturg. Louisville Itlvcr tailing: 7 feet 9 Inches in canal, 5 feet 5 inches on fall. 14 feet 4 Inches at foot of locks. Business good. 'Weather pleasant, part ly clondr and hot. MEMPHIS Departed Arkansas Citv. for St. Louis. Hlvcr 111 feet, 3 Inches and filling. Clear and cool. CAino Arrived S. L. Wood. Ohio: Departed 8. h. Wood. New Orlvins. Ktver 21 feet, i Inches and falling. Fair and warm. yT. Louis Arrived City of Providence, Nat clie7. Departed Cherokee. .Memphis Ifiver down, IS teit, 9 Inches. Clondy and cooler. Gossip Along the Levees. Tbe haat along the wharf was almost unbearable yesterday afternoon. The rain seemed to attract the heat rather than cool off. The marks show S teel 1 inch, and rising slowly. Barge water is ex pected this morning. THE Courier is due to-night from Parkershnrg. The James Gllraore. of Brown's line, arrived yesterday. THE II. K. Bedford left at noon yesterday for Parkersburg. Tire M. F. Allen will leave to-day at noon ,for Parkersburg. THE Dick Fulton is due to-day with empties for W. W. O'Xell A Co. The Andes did not arrive last evening nntil 5 o'clock. Sho got away at midnight, THE C. W. Batchelor will be the regular Cincin nati boat to-day. four o'clock is tbe tlaie bet for her departure. The I. N. Bunton arrived yesterday afternoon, and the Joseph Nixon Is due tc-dav, with empties for Joseph Walton & Co. THE Mavflower tied up yesterday at the foot of Market street. The Chartlers and KlUabeth packet line people are con&eijueutly happy. In the United States Circuit Court, yesterday, arguments were heard on the motion for prelim inary injunctions )ln the cases of the Government against the Pennsylvania Tube Works and the lorter A Douthett Companv. to restrain them from dumping Into the Monongahela river opposite their works. 'The court granted the injunctions. In the other cases of the Government against other per sons who were dumping in the rivers, agreements were made that there would be no more ruling until the harbor lines nowbelngsurvejed are established by the Secretary of War. H0BZ COAL FOB THE SOUTH. A List of tne Tows iCxpectcd to Go Ont on This Illse. Ths following Is a list of the boats the diflerent coal Arms expect to get away on the present rise: For Joseph Walton A C Coal City. 10 barges. 2 fuels; bam Clark, 10 barges. 2 fuels: Joseph Mxon, 6 barges, S boat. 1 fuel; Maggie, 12 harges;Con way, 12 barges; Clifton. 10 barges: and the George Shlras. 12 barges, all for Louisville, with the Nellie Walton, 12 barges, and I. N. Bunton. 12 barges, for Cincinnati. trForF. M. Jenkins & Co. tho Frank Gllmorewlll ike 14 barges. The Time Coal Company will send the Time. 10 barges, and Little Bill, eight barges. John A. Wood Son expect the Tom Lysle and Jim Wood up to-day with empties, anil will send them out, but could not say of what tbe tows wonld consist. Horner A Roberts now have In but one boat, tho W.J. Homer. The Ilaymond Horner fu expected by to-morrow. Both boats will be sent out with tows. For O'Nell & Co. the Fred Wilson will take J3 boats and one barge, and the Little Fred Are boats and seven barges. Brown's line will send the Jim Brown and James Gllmore, but cannot say what they will take. W. W. O'Nell A Co. wilt send the Belle 31e Gowan and Enterpslse. If the Dick Fnlton ar rives in time she will also be sent out. Altogether from 6,000,000 to 8,000,000 bushels may be sent South. '-iH a &ti