I Onr Choir. Who soars so high on Music's wing Wheij wide iihe ope her moutb to sing, And giggles at (he slightest thing? OurB'pranoI Who Units the places In the hooks, Convulses un with funny look, And never once gets "off tho hooka T Our Alto! Who stands In danger day by day 'Of being carried clean wy Ry pretty girls? Well, I've heard say Our Tenor! Wl o glveth forth n ponderous tone One which can nil hut stand alone On firm foundation of Its own? Our Basso I Who touches lovingly the key And dm forth sounds which charm and ple'iTO Born In a csstle o'er the sca? Our 'Comp'niat! It la a quintet to admire, Uiitourhcd by jealousy's llerco lire To bu engaged ! Who unta to hiro Our Choir? -Boston Timca. IN A HOLE. 11Y II. C. DoniiK, I linl been nivay from tho ranch ainco tiny break on a solitary hunting expedition for small game, unci now, with night earning ojti, I was endeav oring to 11 n J my way back. Whero juul liow far I wai from camp I know not, but with a genem! idea of it direction, 1 plodded over tho wild plain, expecting every moment to striko the trail and get homo with out cither trouhln or danger. Tho thoughts of tlic good supper and glad greeting I would have from my Jolly "cowboy" companions spurred mo on whilo '.ho netting sun warned mo that I had no lime to loso. Iu apito of my woodcraft and scout ing ikill and fearlessness In travelling the wildcrnoas alouo I begun lo feel apprehensive that I was lout. At flrit I only luiighed ul myself for thinking lo, but when inilo uflcr inilo iu the doopeuiug dink brought no sign of tho anxiously looked for trail I began to realize that tho smiirtost ranchman sometime cau blunder iu big reckoning"- Still I wouldn't admit yet I was wrong ami, lighting back the dismal fooling of loncsoiiioiioss and poril that oppressed mo, I continuod to push on as fast as my tired legs would let mo. 0:t I wont through the prairie grass, si ruining my eyes iu tho dusky gloom striving to find tho truil suddenly down, down I tumbled straight to tho bo! torn of what suemud to bo a deep well. Stunned by my full, luckily broken by tho heap of soft rubbish I landed on, I must liuve lulu for a while un conscious. When I I'ccovorcd my senans all was pitch blackness about tno and looking upwards I could see a few slurs faint ly glimmering from tho sky. After pinching uud cxuminlng my body and thankfully finding that alt iny bones were intuct, 1 struggled to my feet and groped around lo discover if possible wliut sort of u plaoo I hud gotten into. - The hole aooinod circular and ap parently five or six loot in diiimoter. Tho sides folt liko hard oiay, and the bottom was dry und thickly covered with a long accumulation of leuvca and grasses. How doep I was down in tho earth I could not loll, but I rightly guessed tuo aistauco was some tweuly toot. How flio hole over got there 1 couldn't imagine. Maybe years ago it - was dug iu tho hope of striking wuier for tho uallle which belonged to tho discarded ranch. At any iivio tho holo was thore and I was iu It. Tho thing that puzzled mo the most was how to gel out. As nothing could bu done in that lino till daylight, uud perhaps not Tlion, I laid me down - and went to loop. When I awoke nftor a refreshing slumber tho round spot of bright, blue sUv above mo seemed higher than 1 ever knew it before. As a needful preparation to oscuj e front my more tliuu likely grave mado it little fire with somo of tho ' dry itutT uud muuaged to cook oue of the three bird I hud shot tho duy uciuic. wii tout wiiii u lew uropa from my witter Hunk I break fasted. . Thou I started my wiu to work out plan of deliverance I had with mo my gun und plenty of cartridges, pipo and tobacco, a small hulohor, . mulches, hunting kuife. revolver, two birds and a pint of wator; ulo a few yard of ropo. In 'the almost vain hope of being heard I delonuiuad to frequently fire my gun and shout, though I know the - sounds would be deadened.' - After shooting and ha'.oolug several ' time wlilt uo answer of course, I ex- amined (he texture) of the sides of my tomb. It was a red clay and firm enough to cut without crumbling, if I hud somo strong sticks which I badu't, though I sonrchod through the heap of rubbish for them I might drivo pegs lit the aide of my prison and maybe climb up on them. Perhaps 1 could chop spaces thero to answor tho ime purpose, ' Taking tho hatchet t commenced lo do It, and for a while It appeared I might succeed, but after rising a few feet in that way I gave It tip. Had the woll been narrow ao I could brace myself by using my gun against the opposito aide I think I should have accomplished the feat. Then 1 attempted shooting with a light charge of powdor a bullet from my pistol lo which 1 attached my watch chain fastened to an end of the rope, thinking it might somehow catch on a bush oulsido and bear my weight whilo I climbed on stepping place 1 should dig. Hut that plan proved a failure, too. lly Ibis time it was high noon, and the hot sun was shining for a few mo ments straight to the bottom of my awful tomb. Like a cnged beast I was becoming furious in my vain efforts to gain liberty and the hurdo" I tried tho more difficult grow my task. I kept firing my gun and calling for help, for now it scorned that that was my only clinneo for lifo. Tho afternoon passed slowly away and night appeared ngain, and dis pairing, but not giving up hope, 1 ale my last bird, drank nearly my last drop of water, and managed to full nslecp. It enmo morning at last. I had my gun raised tiro to a signal when I de. tooted a something nlivo peering from tho ground abovo mn into the bole. Could it bo a huaimi being? Even an Indian in his war paint and certain to scalp me I should have hailed with Joy. Tho object showed itsolf again plainly. It was tho head cf a wolf. Taking a quick aim 1 11 red and hit it squarly. With a howl of pain tho wounded brute plungod forward and into tho hole, landing on my shoulders. In a moment it recovered from its surprise and before I could draw my pistol it was crouched to loap upon me. liatcliot in baud I met its on slaught. As it jumped with bleeding, open mouth I duekod my bend and bo fore it could turn a lucky blow buried tho blado in its skull and finished it. Xow with its flosh to eat and its blood to drink I could exist for a week, at least, and if help came iu tho manntiino I wouldn't perish. Tor three long, woary days and nights I livod on my providential sup ply of wolf meal, firing my gun hourly and yelling till iny voico guvo out, but all for naught. On tho fourth duy I completely de spaired of assistance from outsido and resolved lo make a Inst struggle to get out of my horrible living tomb. AVI. lie I franctically chopped with iny hatchet at tho aidos of the hole trying to heap up dirt enough to riso on, even though I undermined and brought tho earth to bury me, I ro mombored a plctnro of tho towor of Bubnl that I bad soon iu the big, family Bible ut homo. It had a aplrul road running around its outside on which tho workers us. cendod aa tho towor was growing. Why couldn't I cut out a similar path on the Inside of my under ground, turnod-over towor? With a glad shout of joy and won dering why tho idea liudn't como bo. foro, I commcnood ut onco tho cork, screw road. Starting as high as I could conveniently work I cut inlo tho hard, clay wull of tho woll until I hud dug out a space big enough to bold inc. By shelving tho roof of tho excavation and curving It to the back part of its eighteen inch wide floor I prevented tho earth from caving. I laid out this opon, half tuiiuol to ascend on u rather sleep grade so Its winding road-bed would bo sufficiently supported, uud aflor some hours' hard and careful work, I fliiishod the first circle uud found that my engineering calculations promised, to bo success, ful providing tho earth as It liearod tho surface would koep front crumb ling. Not daring to continue digging as evening aud darkness caiuo, I lightly crawled bnck to tho bottom of my prison, ate somo more wolf meat and wont to sloop with hope renowed aud comparatively happy. . ' Bright and early iu the welcomed morning I began my toll for deliver anoe. The higher I dug my way the inurj hazardous it bucamo. I utmost feared to go ahead for I kuow tliut a break now would be fatal to my only chance of escape from a horiiblo douih. WUuu night once more caused mo to stop, ! was within about six feel of the end of my agony or -alas f might be only at Its beginning. ? Tho awfut uncertainty of being so near and yet so far from life and tho glorious, beautiful world kopt mo wakeful. By tho following noon 1 should know my fato. At daylight I tremblingly crawled up my circular stairway and roconi monccd operations. Tho earth that hnd been removed lay in a big pile on tho bottom, but of course not high enough to help mo In cac a cavc-ln occurred. Carefully I started on tho last cir cuit, and, as I expected, found thai tho dry earth there was much less firm than bolow. Stilt I could make headway, al though onco onco or twico I thought I was doomed to failure when tho ground broko over and undor me. Xow 1 reached tho place to dig straight up, and, holding my breath, I attempted it. Slowly I scraped my shaft's ceiling, littlo by llttlo, then as tho sods above mo loosened ( tore thorn away and after a wcok of liv ing deuth- 1 once inoro stood on the earth's solid surface. I soon found tho camp, and my friends, who, nftor searching iu vain, wore mourning my supposed death. Chicago Sun. Trees. What a strange underground lifo Is that which is led by tho organisms we call trees I These great fluttering masses of loaves, stems, boughs, trunks, are not the real trees. They livo underground, and what wo see nro nothing inoro nor less than their tails. Yes; a tree is an underground creature, with its tail In tho air. All its Intelligence is in its roots. All tho senses it has are in its roots. Think what sagacity it shows in its search after food and drink. Somehow or othor, tho rootlets, which aro Its ten laclcs, find out that tlioro is a brook at a moderuto distauco from tho trunk of the tree, and they make for it witli all thoir niiglil. They find every crack In tho rocks whero thero are a few grains of tho nourishing subMnnco they care for, and insinuate thomsolvcs into its deepest recesses. When spring and summer come, they let their tails grow, and delight in whisking them about lit tho wind, or letting thorn bo whisked about by it; for these tails are poor passive things, with very lit tlo will of their owu, and bond in whatever direction tho wind chooses to inako them. Tho leuves mako a dual of noiso whispering. I huvo sometimes thought I could understand them, us they talk with each other, and that they seem to think they made the wind as they wagged forward and buck. Ucmomber what I say. Tho next lime you seo a tree waving in tho wind, recollect that It is tho tail of a groat underground, many-armed, polypus-liko creature, which is as proud of its caudul appendage, es pecially in summer time, as a peacock of his gorgeous expanse, of plumage Do you think thero is anything so very odd about this idea? Ouco get it well into your heads, and you will find that it renders the landscape won derfully interesting. Thero aro as many kinds of trco tails as there are of tails to dogs and othor quadrupeds. Study them as Daddy Gilpin studied them in his "Forest Scenery," but dou't forgot that thoy aro only tho ap pondago of tho underground vegeta. bio polypus, tho true orguuism to which they belong. Dr. O. W Holmes. A Queer Old Texan. An eccentric character named Brit Bailey caiuo from Tounossoo to Texas In 1830. While cu routo iu company with several others he requested each man to tell what ho wu coming to Texas for. When uli wcro through it cuiuo to hi turn, and bo said: "I nm going to Texas to establish a charac ter. I huvo not got any ut homo, und I am going to try uud estublisU one lu Texas." Ho settled nt Bailey's Prairio, and soon ufter trouble commenced with tho Mexicans, und purtiuiputed iu the bulllu of Volusca. lie curried homo with hi in a cuuuoii bull us u lello of this light. When he cume to dio be requested to be buried standing up six feet uudor tho eurth, which would re quire a gruve of mora than 13 fuot lu depth, as ha wus 6 feet S iuches la height. Ho also requested that thore should, be buried with hint Ids rlllo, 100 rounds of ammunition, his butcher kuife, two plugs of tobacco, one bot tle of whisky, bis dog, uud tho cannon bull from Velusuo. All this was done with the exception of tho dog. He died at home lu 1838 on Bailey's lVairle, Brazoria County, and was buriod on Ovslor Creek. Ho was liked and respected, by all who kuow hitii.rDjlUis (Texas') News ' I0K THE HOUSEWIFE. SOFA MIAOW. Cut out n trianglo of chamois skin and button hole in tho cornor a Itoinan-kcy pattern or any pretty do sign with blue embroidery silk. Catch the points together nndbotween tho embroidery corners insert puffings of blue silk, graduated somawhat nnrrower toward tho centra of tho cushion, whero a largo bow of satin edged blue gros-grnin ribbon is placed to conceal nil tho joining. Hair, sweet grass, or balsam of fir may be usad to fill tho cushion. American Fanner. lnsnxuvu TOBACCO SMOKH To remedy tho stale smell of tobacco In rooms an authority recommends a liasiu of pcrmiing mate of potash placod in tho room during tho even ing. This may bo left during tho night in tho room, and with tho top of the window loft open tho room will be found qulto sweet during tho day timo. Another smoker writos: "But n few grains of iodine on a pinto on the floor lu the coutro of the room, or a llttlo trlodi in water iu a soup plate, and leavo tho window open a llttlo nil night, aud you will probably find, as 1 huvo dono for a long time, that nil troco of tobacco lias disap peared by breakfast timo next morn ing." New York Sun. A Itl'I.F. l OU MINT SAtCK. Tho rules for mint sauce vary. Somo cooks uso a certain pcrcontiigo of slock, but this seems to us to bo a mistake. Tho timn-bonorod English rule is the best. This calls for vinegar, sugar and mint alono. Select only fresh und tender mint for this sauce. Strip tho leaves from tho stems, wash them and drain them in a sieve, and minco them lino with n sharp cook's knifo. Gather the leaves together in a littlo pile on an ordinary board, and strike them rapidly with this knife, which is shaped liko an oidiuury enrvlng-kiilfe. As tho pile separates with tho forco of the chopping, heap It together ngain and continuo tho chopping till the leaves aro a fino minco. French cooks always chop up their herbs in this way and evon tlieir moats, tho chopping knives of our American kitchens boing a rarity with them. There should be four heaping tublespoonfuls of mint chopped. Four ovor tho mint a half cupful of good vinogar boiling hot. Add thrco table spoonfuls of sugar and act tho suuee awny whero it will becaino ice-cold. When mint disagrees with individuals this sauco may bo strslnod after it has stood four hours; but it is ordinarily sorved with tho mint in it. Xow York Tribune. KKCM'KS. Spiced Cooklos Ono cupful of sugar; two cupful of inolassus; two thirds of a cupful of butter; ono cup ful of milk; one toitspoonf ul of soda; one small teaspoonfui of clovos, and ono of cinnamon; two eggs; one-half of a nutmeg; aud llvecupfuls of flour. Holl and cut out. Choeso and Egg Toast Break Into a bowl as many eggs as you require, oue for every two slicosof toast; beat thoroughly, with suit and peppor. Add a gcuerous quantity of gralod chceso. Fut into a pan contain ing a tiny ploco of butter, l'laco In tho oven for seven minutes. Ho. movo and spread quickly on toast. , reach Pie Lino a deep pie pinto with n rich crust. Lay in tho pouches in a doublo row, packod closely to gether. Sweeten with whito sugar und cover with crust and buko. Eat warm, with crcum, or cold with gratod cheese aud iced milk. This Is vory nico if tho top is sproad with a morliiguo made by whipping tho white of an egg andonolnblospoonful of rich cream with four tablespoon fuls of whilo sugar. Cover tho top crust with this, and sot iu tho ovou a few minutes. Pressed Veal Cook a pieco of veal until very tender, remove tho bones and gristle; before it gots vory cold put into a choppiiig-bowl aud chop very fine; season with suit, strulu tho liquor and pour ovor tho moat so as to muke it quite moist. Then press firmly luto coffee cups and sot away until entirely cold. When ready to serve run a kuife around theodgo aud turn out on a board, sllco thin with a sharp kuifo and arrungo on a plat tor, whiuh should bo garnished with pars Icy or other greou loavos. Slicos of lemon laid on tho platter of voal im prove it. Pliny, that raro old gossip, lolls ot cave somewhore Iu Dalmailu whore a siono thrown in raised a rogulur din of noises. Fingal's care, on tho Isle f fitufl'a, ha an abnormally developed icho. i LATE TELEGRAPHIC TICKS FROM if ANT POINTS. Important News Items Baselved .as Ws So to Press. trim, ana' Ppaaltle. While trying to arrest two unknown thieves some miles north of Oreensburg, Kiowa county, Kas A. W. Ilalfour, a con stable of tbut town, was shot to death. The officers are on the trail of tho murderers, A man named Thompson killed his wife snd an old woman with a butcher knife nt Arlington, 8. D. He expects to be lynched. ieorgc Bonner accidentally shot William Olis at Louisville, Ky., and then killed him elfin remorse. Capital, l.nbnr unit Initnstrlnl, The wages of miners at Fine Forest col liery, Schuylkill county, Pa., huvo been ro ihlccd 10 cents a wagon. The Amalgamated association has declar ed olT the strlko at the Fottsvillo, I'a., iron and steel company's rolling mills, which was Inaugurated on .Tilly 1, 1KN), the work men refusing to sign thn scale. It is thought that most of the strikers will be tnken back. The rolling-mill of the ('rum f'reek Hteel snd Iron Co., of (.'heater, Fa., Is shut down owing to a misunderstanding between tho firm and llie puildlers, and tho refusal of the former to sign tho scale of prices. Tho troublo nt Homestead, I'n., has '.brown men out of employment at the North Chicago rolling-mills, Chicago. Tho men are heaters, rollers and helpers. Their contract or scale expired July 1, and the Illinois Steel Company who owns tho mills leaded to make no arrangements for a fu ture scale until tho result of tho eastern Itrike became known. Nnllmnkers to tho number of l.nno In Montreal ale on striko for an lncreaso of Wages. Tho Amalgamated Association at Tltts. bnrg, I'n., received advices thnt the follow ing linns had signed the 'scale: Wellieral Hulling Mill Company, Flndlay, O.; (ur tiegle, l'liipps cfc Co., Heaver Falls; New Al bnny (lud.) rail mill; Nixdorf-Krein Munti bvWring Company, St. Louis. The JIoorehead-Mi'Cleano Company sign rd the Amalgamated scale Satunluy. About 800 men returned to work. Tho following additional linns signed the scale: Ohio falls Iron Works New Albnny, Ind.; tho Columbus Iron Works; which also includes the I'. Hayden Saddlery Hardware Com pany and the Oliver & Iloberts Wiro Com pany. Two rnilroad strikors named Hodgers nud Benson were shot down by a man ut Sumner, t'al., for calling him a "scab." Ihslgcrs was killed end Ilcnson seriously iiijtuoti. Fires At Duluth tho Catholic pro-Cat hedral and bishop McKiolrlch's residence were burned Loss on both buildings, 1 10,000, At Providence, It. I., the storehouse of B. II. & K. 11. Knight, together with 0,700 bales of cotton and l.uoo pieces of cloth. Is about (500,000. At Montgomery, Aln., tho wholesale dry good department of (lorgu Kttor, Weil Co. Loss about flOO.Oofl. At llnltiiuorc tho largo furniture manu facturing establishment of tho P. Hanson Hiss Manufacturing Company. Loss on tho stock, l,'iO,OoO;lnuraneo about HOO.OUO. Loss, on building, 4.',ixr; fully insured. Tho rolling mill of the tin department of the Nledringhaus Mills, at St. Louis, was totally destroyed by tiro. The loss will bo about (75,00i). At lloeklnnd. Mich., 30 buildings, Includ ing stores, dwellings and tho Masonic linll, woro burned, Tho loss will bo up In the thousands. At fireenvlllo, Tex., tho Orecnvlllo furni ture factory was burned. Loss, ( )0,0o:); In surance, (8,000. At Poeomoko, Md., thirty-eight business plncosand ono residence wero destroyed by tire and tho loss will not bo loss thun t'M, 000. The greater port of Areola, Miss., burned Wednesday. Loss, (:t0,000, insurance, (30,000. A lurgo part of Shoshono, Ida., was burn ed. The new mining town of Biwahik, about 80 miles from Duluth, was burned, causing loss of (ai.ouo. UlMiaiera. Airlclrnts nod I'malltlen. Herbert Slater and Mrs. Kcllert wcro drowned at Kingston, N. Y., by thu capsiz ing of a pleasure skiff. Two men and eight horses wero burned in a lire, which destroyod a New York stable. Joseph, Xncharia and Henry Martin, three brothers, aged 2!, It mid IS, wcrs drowned in Kings liiver, Cul., while bath Ing. ' At Pprlng Park Lake, Minnetonku, a row tiout ocenn'ed by Oscar Sundell, Ruins John. fon, I.uuru Lewis and Ida Swansea, nil of pt. Paul, .Minn., wus upsot una an oiu sail ilell drowned. Four people wero killo 1 nt Kansas City on Jho Fourth; Henry Hoover, I'.ttie !slie,Ax tell Puttersou and Clar.i osier num. A hand cab on tho Central railroad, of New Jersey, jumped the track when on nn embankment below Seawurden, and time of the men on it wero instantly killed. By a fall of coal iu tho South Wllkesbarro shaft of tho Lehigh and Wllkesbarro Coal Company at Wilkesburro, I'a., two civil en gineers und u timbor man wero Instantly killed. The dead aro: John Williams, ugcoj '.'a, civil euglneei; John Mt'Cuffory, ugoti Jl, ,if Philadelphia, civil engineer; William Kvuus, aged 11, a timber man. A wild steer broko loose In St. Louis. The aim of the police w is poor, nud their bulJ lets killed Albert Folseh, aged IS, and budly wounded several others. Two explosions iu tho furnace room of the Illinois Steel Works at South Chlcugo, ro sm' ed lu ihe death of ono man, Fetor bind strum, and the injury of three others. A wull 300 feet lpug and 30 fvet high, running along the south side of the Newport News railroad yard, at Memphis, foil from pressure of earth against it. The Pullman ear Savannah, In which conductors Hunter and llounn and a porter named Bell were asleep, was crushed and the three men were killed. The Senate committee on appropriations finished the consideration of the sundry civil bill, and reported It to the Senate. The amount nt the appropriation madn by the bill Is (37, "(17,71c, being an Increase over the bill as It passed tho House or IU,n7J,816. There Is an appropriation of M.IOO.OOO In aid of the World'a Fair and a requirement that the Fair shall not be kept open on Sunday. Ppeaker Crisp has received a telegram from Cordele, Oa., announcing his renoml natlon for Congress by acclamation. Tho July returns to the Blntlstlelan of tho Department of Agriculture make the aver age condition of cotton 80.9. The June re jiort was eo.v. r or the purpose or compari son the returns of July, 1801, are given: Uencral average. 88 0. Folltleal. The New York Democratlo Anti-Snap Convention State Committee has decided to continue Itself as a permnnont organiza tion. Peraeaat. Cyrus W. Field, upon whose head mis fortunes have fallen so fast in the last nine months, Is lying unconscious In his borne,! Ardsley Tower, N. Y., und his death is ex pected any moment. MlM-Hlanrna. The Confedernto Veterans of the Slnte of Missouri have formally adopted and offlclol1 ly announced that this year and hereafter the first Wednesday in June will be observ ed as Confederate Memorial Day. " BK1IIMI llt'K BOIIUKH. The Stars und .Stripes hoisted over the residence of the l!ev. O. A. Yeomnns, a Presbyterian minister at Wharton, Ont. were torn down by an angry mob of cltl teus, because the Hag was larger and floated higher than any Knglish flag in town. At Madrid. In the riots against the new tax three policemen were killed and 30 to 40 Injured. The civil governor received some sovero bruises. About a dozen of the rioters'" were hurt. The Madrid newspapers take the ground that the riot was successful, and that tho taxes will probably bo abolished. Herrtieyor.an Austrian landed proprietor, attempted to make the ascent of the Grim ing mountnln, near Aussec, in Moravia. He missed his footing, fell into a chasm and was Instantly killed. The miners In Prague who caused the ex plosion in the Uraheuberg silver mine, by which 300 lives were lost, huvo been sentenc ed to prison for three and two yeurs. An unknown sloop supposed to be a Chinese smuggler, capsized near Victoria, B. . C All on board were lost. Near Quebec ptayers are Jising offered for the cessation of rain, while in IMmouskl the supplication is for rain. The steamship City of Chicago, which, went on the rocks near Klnsale Head. Qiieenstown, Is now a totul wreck. The) coast is strewn witli boxes. In a buttle between a troop of Chilian cavnlry and brigands, 3t of tho lutter w era killed. The recent flood lu Fukeshlna submerged 4 1,000 houses, swept 000 bridges away, drowned 33 persons and inundated 4,00O' acres of rice. FIVE If EN KILLED. Serious Damage Dona by an Explosion at a California Powder Mill. San Fiiascisco, July 11. An exploalonat tho works of the Giant Powder Company, this morning caused a loss of five lives and tho injury of many men. The company loses 5)0,000 and tho San Francisco Chem ical Works were destroyed nt a loss of ll!K),n 000. The cause of the explosion is said to) have been the upsetting of a bottle of acidt ' in the office, which set flrotothe building. (. Three white men who wero working in the nitro-glyeerlne house wero killed. They were John I'.owo, Wallace Dickerson and Charles Ouberllge. Tho others killed were Chinamen. Windows were broken all over Sun Francisco and surrounding towns. NEWSY GLEANINGS. , I Ym.t.ow Fkvsii prevails in Honduras. Thk iron ore trad still runalns stagnant. Thkiik ars fears of a cholera epldemio in' Europe. Tiik oils wells In this country supply 130,- wu uarreis a uay. t Hrkiaiteu all telegraphing la Spain will be dou uy military operators, Tiik.re were oo less than tire staje rob beries in Moatuna duriuj June. "The next Prusidontnf tlia United State will roeeivd about 7,000,000 vjt-. The pack of canned lobsters la expected to fall olf Utty per cent, compared with last Reason. A tun::ki. to coat (1,000,000 haa beo sturted ut Lat-lvlile, Col., to drain toe nun iiU camps. Jamkh MuLLitN-, of Louisville, Ky., bled to death from a holo in his tougua about th sizs of a piu. Thc ehinfsot the Arapahoe and Cheyenne Indiana refuse to aeojpt the boat Usuu trout Uie Ooveriiineiic. The embezzlements of the first six months of tho pre-win year amounted to toe large) UUI VI V., 7VU, 7 1 ti by the lluoled Dkouth Southwest. grout calamities of the year. Advices from nearly all buinsaa osntrda show a Kra lusl growth iu uonti Isnoe, though, not iu the volutin ot busmen done. Tua Governments o( Germany and Aus tria are actm iu eoaoirt iu the a loption of measures to prevent uaolttrs frooi eutoriuf their countries, : United States cavalry to the nu uber of four UuudrtU are ouuaiuped near Douflat, Wyoming, prejimubly to tike a baud iu tuV rustler troubles. H. L. Lincks, of Huron, South Dakota, Vice-President u( the National Alllauoe, auccjoda 1 L. Polk, deoatied, as FrasiduuS of the organisation. . I The eatato of the lato Father Molllnser of Pittsburg, worth iW 10,000, aal supposed to havs beeu given to tae ouroa, is clinuiei by a poor oousiu living la New York. Thinos r goiug to be lively in ths Ber ing Sea this sei.uu. Ttts iuigr4tin herJs IKK boats provide! and nrovislonoj tute. li.tve left New Orleans lor thn I district of ths rftate. J famine in Northern Mexico and V Texts looms uo as oue of tlut 1 are uow near tae pistes In tile olos4 so uui the oruUirs re fullowiug tueui, ' j - - . .. - t i -- v- ,