Ji GRAND FRENCH WEDDING. Due do Morney and Miss Gasman Blanc's Marriage In Paris. jParis special : The Due de Morney's wed ding with Miss Gusman Blanc came off at the Church of the Madeleine to-day with splendid eclat. The weather was the ideal Parisan summer day of dazzling sun and cool northerly breeze. At noon the mass ive bronze doors of the Madeleine were thrown wide open and a crimson velvet carpet was spread from the granite steps and reached down to the boulevard. The vast church was filled to overflowing , hun dreds of ladies standing on tip toe on chairs > to catch a glimpse of the bride. The toi v lets were beautiful , lavenderpinkpale blue straw and white predominating. Thou sands of people gathered on the sidewalks and in the balconies and windows facing the Madeleine. At 12:15 the nuptial cor tege appeared , The Due de Morney alighted from a coupe drawn by two superb bays. He looked very pale and serious. He was in evening dress , and wore a large cross and ribbon of the grand commander of the order of Charles III of Spain. His fiancne drove up in a largo landau , with dark brown horses covered with white satin ribbons , and with coachman and footmen in brown , crimson and gold livery. She worea white satin bridal dress with a very long train , very simple and entirely covered by her white tulle veil. She was attended by three bridesmaids. In the nave of the church six abbes'in full canonicals performed the marriage service , Abbe Pattis pronouncing the nuptial bene diction. The music was very impressive. J Deluding the Deus Israel of Beethoven , the Ofons Pietns of Haydn , and Gounad's Ave Marie. The organ was played by Theodore Dulcurs. At 2 o'clock all fcft the church , the Due and Duchesse de Morney driving off in a coupe drawn by 'two superb bays. The wedding reception and breakfast were at the Grand hotel. The due's presents to tlio brido were equal to those ol the famous duke of Buck ingham. I will only mention four of them : A superb riviere of diamonds , not mount ed ; that is to sny , held together by a wire of gold so fine that when worn on the neck the diamonds only are visible , and have the appearance of hundreds of huge drops of dew. Another present was a magnificent diadem of diamonds , worth at least § 20.000. Then a broad ribbon of dia monds ; attached to a sort of gold chain- work , so as to tie and untie about thoneck like an ordinary'silk scarf. Then a fan of white feathers , literally powdered with thousands of small diamonds. The flowers that the due sent to the bride during the thirty days preceding the wedding were superb , no two bouquets ever being tire same. One day there would be a ship of carnations , filled with rosea ; an other day , a South American hammock , made of twisted lilies of the valley and filled with orchids ; the next day a bicycle , made of corn flowers surmounted by roses ; then a balloon of lilies , with jasmine and pansies ; in short , every floral originalitv that a vivid imagination could devise. THE STATEMENTS OF PARNELL. Lord Salisbttry Denounces Tliem as Utterly Untrue. LOXDON , June 29. Lore Salisbury has writ ten for publication a letter denying in detail every assertion made by Mr. Parnell concern- Ing the alleged negotiations made on behalf of the late conservative government to secure Irish support In return for the concession of home rule. He pronounces every one of the statements as ' 'baseless fabrications. " He lays : "It is false that Mr. Parnell was given reason to believe that If the conservatives were In power after the general elections they trould give him a statutory parliament. No body connected with the government gave any men indication. It is false that I ever showed the slightest leaning in favor of such a con cession. It is false that Lord Carnarvon urged such a concession on the cabinet ; it is there fore false that the cabinet did not refuse such a concession until the polls went against us. It Is false that Lord Carnarvon urged a statutory parliament for six months ; it is therefore false that he urged it without the cabinet opposing it to any extent It is false that after "the result at the polls were ascertained the cabinet swerved around because it never had the slightest in clination toward a statutory mrliament I need hardly add that the story that the land purchase bill was passed in deference to a wish expressed in an interview on August 1 is simply impossible , because the bill had al ready passed the house of lords and the gov ernment had publicly pledged itself to the bill. The government resolved upon the pur chase bill as soon as it entered office , a mouth before August 1. " SOME WASHINGTON GOSSIP. The fiscal year to close with Wednesday , June 30 , will.find the national finances in pretty good shape. The public debt , which twenty years ago was § 75 for each man , woman and child in the country , is now § 23 for each person , and the interest charge , which at that time was over § 4 per head , is now 75 cents per capita. The total debt to-day is just hall what it waa then and the annual interest charge-bu * one-fourth of what it was at that time. Then the interest-bearing debt was § ,332- 000.000 and interest from 5 to 7 3-10 per cent. Now the interest-bearing debt is § 1,220,000,000 and the interest rate from 3 to 4J per cent. Then the population among whom the debt was divided was 35,000,000 , now it is 60,000,000. It is a favorite occupation with people with bad digestion to complain that the country is terribly burdened with debt. So it is , but it is especially happy in this line when com pared with those of some other countries that are supposed to rank very high in the school of civilization. For instance , while our debt is § 23 per head , that , of Austria is § 30 , that of Russia § 35 , that of Spain § 80 , that of Italy § 80. that of Great Britain § 100. and that of France § 130. DEMOCRjlTS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. In the New Hampshire democratic con vention at Concord , the following proceed ings took place : The convention pro ceeded to nominate a candidate Jor gov ernor by "ballot. L. H. Brown , of Concord , withdrew the name of Charles H. Amsdcn. Charles , F. Stone , of Laconia , presented the name of Col. Thomas S. Cogswell , of Gilmanton. The ballot resulted in 432 votes for Cogswell. His nomination was made unanimous and a committee was ap pointed to notify him and request his pres ence. A resolution was then adopted en dorsing the course of the present Speaker Carlisle , Mr. Morrison and the democratic members of congress in their efforts to re form the present tariff law. Col. Cogswell appeared and was greeted with hearty ap plause. He made a brief address. At the conclusion three hearty cheers were given for him and the delegates divided into county conventions and elected members ol the state committee. SHOT BY A BURGLAR. MILWAUKEE , Wis. , June 23. At Beloit this morning Professor C. W. Merriman. in astrng- gle with two burglars , was shot and probably lataily wounded. ' 'A. FORMIDABLE'ORGANIZATION. St. Louis dispatch : Several very impor tant meetings of tho leaders of tho Law and Order league have been held recently , both here and at Sedalia , Mo. A promi nent officer of the league says-the intention of these meetings is to establish an organ ization from one end of the country to the other in support of law and order which can be largely massed at one point if neces sary. For instance , in case of trouble in St. Louis with which the league here could cope , preparations being made for the pur pose , enabling officials here to call on Chi cago or any other place for reinforcements , members being bound to answer such call at a moment's notice. As means of getting forces out in a moment's notice , the ad dresses of all members , business or resi dence arc taken. Beginning in Sedalia and spreading to Desoto and Hannibal , it was taken up by St. Louis and from there spread to Corondolet and Clarksville , Crystal City , Mo. , Belleville and Chicago. 111. , Jackson , Mich. , Evansville , Ind. , St. "Paulj Minneapolis , llochcster , Newark , Milwaukee and Baltimore , and is now gaining a strong foothold in Iowa and Kansas and other states. It has reached a membership of over'seventeen thousand. Included in membership , it is said , are a largo number of workingmen , engineers , conductors , and Knights of Labor. Tho league has organized a greatmany branches and has committees working in all direc tions. The principal object is to prevent labor disturbances and discountenance strikes and boycotts. The latter comes in for particular condemnation. A. MONTIPS WORK YET. Washington special : There is very little prospect of the adjournment of congress before the last of July. In its debate upon the postoflice bill today , the senate showed a disposition to insist upon an appropri ation for the transportation of ocean mails , and the democratic senators were the most emphatic of all. The members of the house appear quite as determined in their opposition to the measure"and neither will yield without a long struggle. The president has given notice that he will not sign any midniglitlcgislation , and tlyit will prevent the bills being rushed through , as is usually the case on the last day of the session. He can take a bill and keep it ten days if he chooses , and congress has got to wait for him to consider it. It is believed that he will hasten an adjourn ment as much as he can , but will oppose hasty legislation , and it would be just like him to veto one of the big appropriation bills because * of some single objectional item in it. Therefore the prospects of de lay are better than those of adjournment. PROBABLE TIME OF ADJOUNMENT. "Washingtonspecial : The prospects of an early adjournment has received a setback by the president. He informed members of both the senate and house that he will not sign any bill without first carefully reading it through and informing himself as to its provisions. He asserts that lie will not go to the capitol and approve bills as fast as they are Drought to him , for the sake of expediting adjournment. With regard to appropriation bills he regards it as his duty to carefully consider every item an/1 he warns members of the two houses that they need not expect to send him long bills appropriating large sums of money within , a day or two of adjournment , with any idea that he will sign them blindly ; that ha will not do anything of the kind , in view of his feeling of responsibility. Through those best qualified to speak as to adjournment , the opinion prevails that the president's determination to have time for thorough examination of all bills passed will proba bly defer the day of final adjournment to July 25th. - THE FISHERIES MATTER. Ottawa dispatch : A member of the Do minion cabinet , when asked to-day what he thought the outcome would be of tha stringent measures the government waa enforcing for the protection of the fisheries , replied that he firmly believed the whola difficulty would be settled within a very few days to the satisfaction of all parties concerned. He further added that thers was every prospect of some sort of a reci procity treaty being arranged between tha United States and Canada. He further said that , basing their opinion on the re sult of last year as regards' the mackerel fisheries , the Americans made a sad mis- tnke when they said they cared nothing for the Dominion fishery within the three-mile limit. Last year the mackerel were all of ! shore outside the prescribed limit , but this year they are about all taken within this limit , from which the Americans are ex cluded. BEECHER AND GLADSTONE. Liverpool dispatch : Henry Ward Beecher was interviewed last evening after the great liberal mass meeting and was asked by a reporter of the Liverpool Post what he thought of Mr. Gladstone's speech. He said : "Mr. Gladstone's speech was luminous and powerful. It delfghted me. I told Mr Gladstone I was too much over come to express my appreciation of his speech , and that it had given me a greater insight into Irish affairs than I ever had before. Mr. Gladstone said in reply : 'I take that as a compliment , for you are as competent to judge as anybody. ' " LTTELT TOTES IN CONGRESS. "Washington special : This evening's Critic of this city says : "Mr. Cobb of In diana , and Mr. Laird , of Nebraska , got real ugly at each other in the house yester day on the land question. " 'Don't threaten me , ' yelied Mr. Laird. " 'Don't threaten me , ' said Mr. Cobb , 'for when it comes to public lands , I think I know a job. ' "And then they shook their gory fists outright at each other's faces , and savagel- ly _ they chewed their chops across sixty foct of space. They wiped the floor all up in spots , they kicked their chairs around , they glared across that open space , and finally sat down. " THE CAMERON DYNASTY. Washington special : As Don Cameron came into the senate this morning the sen ators all clustered around him and began to shake his hands irithembs6 hearty man ner and to congratulate him as though ho had had a narrow escape from something. It transpired that the cause of the demon stration was the report that Mrs. Cameron had presented him a daughter Sunday morning , and the senator admitted it was true. It is the first child by the senator's second wife , the youngest child by his first wife being about 17 years old. TOE ARKANSAS DEMOCRATS. The Arkansas democratic state conven tion met at Little Rock on the 30th. Tha convention nominated the following ticket : For governor , Hughes ; treasurer , Wood ruff ; land commissioner , Cobbs ; attorney general , Jones ; judge of the supreme court , Battle ; secretary of state , Moore , and sup erintendent of public-instruction , n Lomp- eon. UNCLE SAM'S INDEBTEDNESS. A Statement Settlmj Forth the Situation Re garding the Public Debt. 'JL'lie public debt was reduced last month over § 0,000,000 and for the fiscal year which closed June 30 , over 590,000,000 ncainst § 63,449,709. the preceding year. The bonded debt shows a reduction during the year just closed of § 50,136,850 , all of which AVOS in the 8 per cunt loan. There has been also during the year a reduction" in outstanding certificates of deposits , $11,330,000gold ; certificats , § 50G85,355 , and silver certificates , § 13,414,721 , mak ing a total reduction in this form of indebt ed ness of § 75,430,076. The column show ing the debt on which interest has ceased ins increased sincelast July about $5,500- 000 , caused by the call of bonds and their transfer to the non-interest bearing debt upon maturity. The total amount of 3 per cent bonds now outstanding , subject to call is 8144,046,600. During theyearover 836,000,000 of 3 per cent bonds , held to 3ecure bank circulation , were withdrawn from the treasury , thus reducing the na tional bank circulation § 32,553,000. One year ago the amount hejd for the redemp tion of notes of liquidatingbankswas § 38- 160.938. It is now § 60,146,726. This represents the actual amount of United States notes deposited by reducing , liqui dating and failed banks in the treasury , in lieu of the bonds withdrawn , and that amount of United States notes is withheld from circulation. The gold fund shows a loss since June 1st of § 5,977,275 'in bul lion , and a gain of § 2,390,665 in coin , making the net loss § 3,586.610. The bullion was exchanged for certificates , and doubtless withdrawn for ex port. The treasury holding of gold , however , shows no material change For the month just closed , theamountheld , not covered by certificates , being § 156- , 793.749 , an increase over June of about $500,000. The amount of free gold held by the treasury July 1 , 1885 , was § 180- , 296,895 , which is nearly § 36,500,000 less than the amount now held. While the treasury gained this large sum in gold dur ing the past twelve months , it materially reduced its outstanding gold by redeeming nearly § 47,000,000 in certificates , cutting lown these liabilities from § 127,000,000 , on July 1 , 1885 , to § 80,000,000 , on July 1 , 1886. The number of silver dollars in thotreas- iry is 181,253,506 , an increase for the ' month of 3,000,000 , and for theyear'of 15,840,444. The number of these pieces held , not covered by outstanding certifi cates , is 93,137,341 , an increase of over 29,000,000 since July 1 , 1885. The num ber of silver dollars in circulation is over 52,000,000 against 39,000,000 one year ago. ago.During the year the outstanding silver certificates were reduced from § 101,000- 000 to § 88,000,000. The available bal ance reported by the treasurer is75.191- 110 , an increase of § 34,514,179 for the year. Under the old form of stating assets and liabilities the available balance would be § 215,116,225 , against § 172,800,852 a year. ago. The receipts for June were § 32,510,620 , an increase of over § 5,000,000 compared with June , 1885 , nearly all of which was from customs. DEATH OF EX-SENATOR DAVIS. An Old and Prominent Citizen of lUinois Breathes His "Last. Judge David Davis died at his home in Bloomington , 111. , on the 27th. He sank into a camatose state twelve hours before the end and' passed painlessly away , sur rounded by his family. The cause of Mr. Davis" death was Bright's disease of the kidneys , aggravated by a weakened condi- tioii'of his system , dating from the time when he became affected with a carbuncle. The following brief biographical sketch of the deceased is from the Omaha Bee : Judge David Davis was a prominent and distinguished figure in 'the politics of the country for the past twenty years. Ho was born in Cecil county , Maryland , March 9 , 1815 , was educated in Kenyon college , and studied law in the New Haven law school. He followed the tide of settlers to the west in 1836 and settled in Blooming- ton , 1111. , which has ever since been his home. He was a member of the Illinois legislature in 1844-45 , and .a member of the constitutional contention which drafted the constitution of that state in 1847. The following year ho was elected judge of the Eight judicial district and was re-elected in 1855 and again in 18(51. ( On the bench he displayed signal ability and impartiality , and was elevated to the United States supreme bonch by President Lincoln in October , 1862. The anti-Grant movement which begin in 1870 and cul minated in the nomination of Horace Greeley two years later , found in Judge Davis a strong supporter , and his admir ers in both the independent republican and democratic parties strongly urged him for the empty and fatal honors which fell to the founder of the New York Tribune. He , however , secured that year the nomination of the national labor reform party for the presidency. Durimj the stirring and anx ious days following the election of 1876-7 , and before the result was determined to the satisfaction of either party , the republicans of Illinois quietly acquiesced in the move ment to elect Judge Davis to the United States senate. This , had a two-fold object to retire him from the supreme bench and make certain the election of R. B. Hayes to the presidency. The plan worked suc cessfully ; he was elected to the spnate and Hayes was declared president. During his term in the senate that body was closely divided politically and on party questions the balance of power was held by Judge Davis. Therepublicansnominated him for president pro tern and he was elected over Thomas F. Bayard , the democratic nomi nee. nee.Judge Davis was married in 1883 to a lady many years his junior. He was re markable for great mental powers and phy sical dimensions weighingatone time over 400 pounds. He has been in poor health for the last two years , and his sufferings re duced him to a skeleton. His weight at the time of his death was not much over 150 pounds. He leaves an estate valued at about § 300,000. A DEPUTY SHERIFF KILLED. Cheyenne ( Wyoming ) special : Sam Baker alias Brown , a well-known Northern des perado , killed Deputy Sheriff Dave Loyd of Buffalo on Powder river on the 1st inst. Baker was wanted as a witness in a horse- stealing case. Loyd went to summon him. He was admitted to Baker's house at night by a woman. Baker shot him as he step ped in the door. The slayer ga-yo himself up the next day , declaring that he thought Loyd was a man who was laying for him and trying to get the drop on him , and claims that the killing wns'done by mis- take. A RECKLESS MAN JUGGED. Ottumwa ( Iowa ) special : Kinsley Jor dan , oras he is commo'nlyknown , "Stormy Jorden , " the most notorious saloon keeper in the state , has just been jailed for violation of the prohibition law and will have to servo 300 days in jail. He kept the notorious saloon at the Ottumwa depot whcse sign bore the legend , "The Road to hell. " AN ADDRESS TO ELECTORS. Gladstone Appeals to the People for tha Cause He Espouses. London cablegram : Mr. Gladstone has issued a manifesto to the electors of Wales. "It is not the first nor the tenth time , " he says , "that the tories h'ave raised a cry of alarm and predicted ruin of the empire. TJiey have been at it all their lives and always when those great and good meas- UTPS were proposed which have made the age illustrious the reform of parliament , the abolition of the corn laws , of slavery , of religious tests , of church rates , and the Irish church , the freedom of burials , the dcfcn.se of tenants' rights , and many more. Which of these did they give you ? Which did they not oppose and cry down as de structive to the constitution , the throne , religion , prosperity , and all the rest ? People say the Irish will never be content ; nor would you be content if you had been oppressed as they have been , and above all , if after you had your own parliament 500 years it had been taken away by a mixture of violence and corruption with a union which disgraces the name of Eng land. This parliament the people of Ire- laud have ever since striven to get back. They no-v ask not for the rejieal of the union , but only for a subordinate legisla ture as a colony , Give it to them , because it is just that they should have it. Give it to them promptly and graciously ; not waiting , as Wellington Availed , for the emancipation of the Catholics , who failed under the terror of war. Let Wales upon this great occasion be worthy of herself. " BOYCOTTERS SENTENCED. New York dispatch : The convicted boy- cotters on Theiss , the proprietor of the concert garden , were arraigned in court to day for sentence. Judge Barrett made some strong remarks to them on the law lessness of the crime of which they were convicted. He said that this was a viola tion of the peace to the country that wel comed foreign born citizens to a country that offered freedom and the privileges of right ; they had violated the public rights and opinions and theh offense was not short of blackmail. The distribution of circulars before places of btibincss was a conspiracy and was punishable as such. Their conduct , if unpunished , would lead to savngery. They may have been misled by bad advice , but tbuir counsel should have rebuked them. They did use money for their own advantage and this pacified the citizens. We are told that it has been the custom to rob in that manner. He would not impose the full penalty of the law as they were working men. The judge then sentenced Paul Wiltzig and Holdorf to two years and ten months at hard labor , Michael Stroh and Julius Rosenberg to one year and six months imprisonment ; Daniel Danenhouser , the most violent of the boy- cotters , got three years and eight months in the state prison. GOING "OTER THE ROAD. " Sedalia ( Mo. ) special : Edward Page , who stole § 10,000 from the Adams Ex press company while agent at Golden City , Mo. , in January last , passed through Se dalia this morning , en route to the peni tentiary , to serve a two years sentence. The case attracted wide attention at the time , from the fact that Page donned female attire and fled from the scen.e of his crime. He was captured by Detective Ers- kine in St. Louis , his identity having been discovered while a passenger on a Missouri Pacific train. Page was cheerful this morn ing , and diactmsed the theft with all who cared to talk with him. He realized that he was about to be discharged from the company's -employ , and fearing that his wife and two children would be left desti tute , he determined to take the money. When arrested , § 3,000 was found on his peison , and the remaining § 7,000 was sub sequently discovered near Golden City , where Pase had secreted it in the woods. FIENDISH WORK. PHILADELPHIA , PA. , June 23. Exactly 314 people were poisoned at last Thursday's pic nic near Flemington , N. J. Six of these persons will probably die , and twenty are In a precarious condition. One of the physicians in charge of the cases has examined the ice cream cans , and says there was not enough sulphate of zinc about them to do any damage : that the symptoms are those of arsenical poisoning , and from the fact that those who first ate of the cream es caped , he is of the opinion ttiat the poison was put into the cream by some one purposely. As a large number of people were engaged in crving the cream , it will be difficult to catch the perpetrators. A BLOODY RIOT. PARIS , June 29. Thirty thousand people went last night to witness the performances in the immense bull circus at Nimes on the departure of Card. The entertainment had been extensively advertised to be given under electric lights. The lights went out soon after the perform ance began , and owing to the defective ap paratus could not be relit. The people became enraged , and tore down the fittings of the cir cus and made a bonfire in the arena of them and the furniture. Troops had to be called to restore orcler , which they only succeeded in doing after a desperate conflict with the people , many of whom were wounded and arrested. I'llOSECUTIXG THE DRUGGISTS. Sioux City special. Judge Wakefield has taken the cases against druggists of this county for not complying with the require ments of the state liquor statutes under advisement. The court was occupied all day in hearing arguments on a motion of defendants to dismiss the cases. Consider able interest is manifested here as to the outcome. In connection with these cases it is certain that the temperance people are preparing to make an attack all along the line. Just what shape the prosecutor will assume and under what leadership carried on does not yet appear. AS IRISH PLOT TO MURDER. BIRMINGHAM , June 30. Joseph Chamber lain told a reporter of the Birmingham Jfnil to-day that well informed friends informed him that there was in existence an Irish plot to murder him. This information , he added , had been corroborated by the London police , which had warned him of the plot and in formed him that the assasins meant to kill Lord Hartington also. Both himself and Lord Hartiugton in consequence permitted themselves to be placed under police pro tection. RAILWAY PASSENGERS JCILLED. DUBLIN , June 30. Eight persons were in stantly killed to-day by an accident to a mail train from Belfast to Dublin , which was going at a high jate of speed aud which left the track at Knockbridgc. Twenty passengers were wounded and the train completely snfash- ed. The accident was due to the expansion of the rails , caused by excessive heat. The driver and guard were arrested , but it is believed they were not to blame. MOSES DOW'S BEQUESTS. Boston special : The will of Moses A. Dow gives to the Dow academy § 6,000 for a permanent fund ; to the fund of the Win chester home for aged women at Charles ton , § 100,000 ; § 35.000 in private be quests , and the balance of his estate to trustees for his widow. The will provides for the sale of the Waverly house lot for not less than § 390,000 and of the Waverly ; Magazine property to the highest bidder. STANFORD AND MEISSONIER. Tlio Callfornlan Gives the Pointer Points on His Arts. Mr. Stanford , of California , has a portrait of himself by Metssonlcr , painted in Paris when the senator was there a few years bade , writes a Washington correspondent of The Cincin nati Enquirer. The price was $10,000. It la not considered to be a good literal likeness , and very few portraits of Americans by French artists are. That-intultlou for truth and the habit of getting at it which portrait painters of the British and American schools possess the French gives way to his artistic disposi tions ; he is always searching for something which shall Improve one's nature. I have of ten spoken of the American Inventor In France who wanted some portraits made for a machine he was building to spin silk automatically. He went to the best pattern-makers in Pans , and not a pattern could he get precisely like his model , which all the French with them knew but little more about than he did. Finally he had to send to the United States for the work he desired to do in France. Mr. Stanford gave Melssouier a cood manv sittings , about three hours for each. A curious incmcnt hap- Eened with regard to one of the most cele- rated pictures of the artist. He had painted for Mr. Stewart , of New York , the dry goods man , one of his largest and most impressive pictures a battle , where Napoleon is sending In his Guards , aud as they go past him they all salute him. Mr. Stanford had spent § 40,000 iu photographing horses in motion , lie ob served , among other things , that when horses were in rapid motion , or galloping , they never struck on their toes , but on their heels firmly , because they would have fallen and broken their necks. He observed that the foremost figure of the officer , whose saber Is up in the air , was coing in such a way that his horse would strike on the toe. So , seeing the first drawing of this at Meissonier's studio , while the artist and sister were conversing on the subject of how the horses moved , Mr. Stan ford said : "Will you bring that horse forward a few feet iu the same action he is now mak ing ? " "I was , " said Mr. Stanford , "certain that the horse would not strike on his heel if he continued the action. " Meissonler continu ed the movement , and in a moment he per ceived that what the two men had been talk ing about convinced him , and his especial forte was drawing horses ; he had horse models with all their anatomy movable , especially about the legs and feet. He turned to his model and brought the animal forward , aud he suddenly perceived that his great canvas had made an anatomical mistake. He put his hands into his hair and began to race around his studio like a manvhd"had lost his wits. DISGRACING THE SABBATH. CLEVELAND , O. , June 127. This nlternoon an excursion party of about 300 men , women anil children visited Fairview , about thirty miles east of here. A dozen or more men , who had been drinking on the boat , visited a sa loon on their arrival at Fairport and soon suc ceeded in starting a quarrel which ended in all the windows of the saloon being broken by the excursionists. Stones were then hurled through the win dows of a larce tenement house occupied by 1'olaiiders. The latter to the number of fif teen or twenty armed themselves with clubs and moved on the excursionists. Several Clcvelanders were cut and bruised , and one Polandur named Michael Peeler was struck in the temple bv u stone. He fell unconscious to the ground and was carried away by his com panions. The Polanders chased the men , women and children SOO yards to the boat , over railroad tracks and ore piles , but just as the pursuing party reached the dock the boat moved away , preventing further bloodshed.- A WEAPON AGAINST BOYCOTTERS. Binghampton ( N. Y. ) dispatch : A nen weapon against the boycott was brought out here to-day. John H. Dann , John Doyle , Edward Barnes and George Sauls- paugh , cigar makers , were arrested undei the federal laws for boycotting Fred J. Hill a cigar manufacturer , slfc is claimed that Hill , by paying his internal revenue tax thcrebv acquired the right , under the inter mil revenue laws , to manufacture cigars and that the right so acquired is a right secured by the laws of the United State * within the intent and meaning of section 5508 , under which the action is brought This section provides that if two or more persons "conspire to injure , oppress , threaten or intimidate any citizen of the United States in the free exercise or enjoy ment of .1113'right or privilege secured tt him by thu constitution or laws of the United States they arc subject to an ex treme penalty of § 5,000 lino and ten years imprisoument. FLOWERS FOR SENATOR ZIANDEIiSON. Washington special : A very large and magnificent floral offering occupied thedesk of Senator Manderson on the floor of the senate to-day. It was in theform of scales , representing justice , and came from the employes of the government printing othco , for whom he advocated gallantly a bill which recently passed the senate , giving a month's leave of absence every year with pay. Heretofore the printing office people have not been given an annual leave like other government servants. THE MABKETS. OMAHA. WHEAT No. 2 60 © 65 BAULKY No. 2 41 @ 43 RYE No. 2 40 @ 45 CORN No. 2 mixed 21 @ 22 ; OATS No. 2 20 @ ' 27 BUTTER Creamery 13 @ 15 BUTTER Fair to good 7 @ 10 Eocs Fresh 7J4 © 8 CHICKENS Old per doz 2 60 © 2 75 CHICKENS Spring per doz. . . 200 @ 300 LEMONS Choice 8 00 © 8 50 ORANGES Los Angeles 6 00 @ 6 50 APPLES Per bushel box. . 100 @ 125 BEANS Navys 1 40 @ 1 60 ONIONS Soifthcrn , per bbl. 4 00 @ 4 50 POTATOES New , California , per bushel 1 00 @ 1 25 WOOL Fine , per Ib 3 0 © 14 SEEPS Timothy 2 20 © 2 50 SEEPS Blue Grass 1 30 © 1 40 HAY Baled , per ton 5 50 © 6 25 HAY In bulk 6 00 © 7 00 HOGS Mixed packing 395 @ 400 BEEVES Choice steers 4 25 @ 4 60 SHEEP Heavy grades 3 25 © 4 25 NEW YORK. WHEAT No. 2 red 85 @ S6 WHEAT Ungraded red 85 CORN No. 2 49 OATS Mixed western 34 PORK 1000 LAUD 648 CHICAGO. FLOUR Winter J 25 @ 4 50 FLOUR Patents 450 © 4 75 WHEAT Per bushel 72-g © 72 CORN Per bushel 34 @ 341 OATS Per bushel 26M@ 262 PORK 952K © 955 LAKD 6 30 © 6 32 Hoos Packing &sliipping. 4 25 @ 4 65 CATTLE Stackers 2 50 © 4 00 SHEEP Natives 2 75 @ 4 75 ST. LOUIS. WHEAT No. 2 red 78 © 78Jj C'ORX Perbuuhel 31Ja@ 32 OATS Per bushel 25 @ 27Jj HOGS Mixed packing 4 10 © 4 50 CATTLE Exports 510 © 550 SHEEP Common to choice 3 00 @ 4 00 KANSAS CITY. WHEAT Perbushel 65 @ 66J { CORN Per bushel. . . . . . 25 @ 26ft OATS Per bushel 22 © 22) ) $ CATTLE Stockers 2 75 © 3 40 HOGS Good to choice 4 35 © 4 M SHEEP Common to good. . 3 60 © 3 CROCKER'S EYESORE. Tlio Tcnco Uullt by tho IJallroaC About n ! N olpliT ; > or's Lot. . Tho stranger in San Francisco win. I goes about to view tho dwellings ot J the rick is struck with wonder at : singular monument which rears its un sightly shape on Sacramento street , be tween Taylor and Jones. On all sidci but one it looks like an overgrown ici house , and ao it stands within the broac shadow of tho palatial homo of Charlei Crocker , tho observer who does not look beyond appearances is disposed tc vow eternal admiration of a love foi cooling beverages which manifests itself by the keeping of a sheltered ice berg so'near to one door. This con clusion , however , is erroneous. The other side of tho mysterous structure tells the story. It is entirely open tt the street , and as the eye plunges intc it also reflects the a genuine cul-dc-sac , surprising fact that there is no rool overhead. The enclosure is no ice house , but a mere pen , minus a gate. It is formed by a heavy , leaden-colored fence about twenty feet high , with a level and continuous coping on top , and strongly braced at short intervals on the outside. It encloses , in fact , a building lot , thirty-six feet wide bj -j , ninety long , in which a variety of ex- , - , uberant weeds hold riotous sway the j year round. About nine years ago a house stood i there , the property of a wealthy under- ' taker named Yung. When Charles , [ I Crocker had secured the whole of the square plot which his residence occu- i pies , except this parallelogram , ho waa willing to pay dearly for it. Mr. Yung ; knew that tho lot was worth a greai deal more to his affluent and powerful neighbor than to any one else. When Mr. Crocker made him an offer he de manded a much higher sum. After n while the would-be-purchaser resolved to pay the price , when he found that it had again been raised. This experi ence was repeated several times , Mr. Crocker's final oiler was $20,000 , but Yung wanted $25,000. Then the mil lionaire found himself at the cud of hia patience , and he registered a solemn vow never to buy the lot from its then owner. Futliennore , as the presence of a dwelling so near his own mansion , into whose ample rooms it looked , waa a cause of hourly annoyance , he gave orders to haye a tallfence erected around the lot , shutting out all view on three sides of it. The lot was then a good deal lower than the grounds surrounding the Crocker mansion. Tho fence was built almost thirty feet high , and intercepted every ray of sunshine that did not descend almost vertically. Mr. Yung may have repented of hia obduracy , but he made no sign. Tho vengeance of Mr. Crocker was compar atively complete. The enemy beyond the fence did not venture into litiga tion , and after a year or two the house , which has been put in blinders , as it were , was removed and the lot was left vacant It was subsequently , leveled up to the grade of the Crocker grounds. The fence was blown down , but a new one was erected a score of feet high. It is still there. Charles Crocker professes the greatest indifference as to whether.the lot ever becomes his or not Intimate friends , however , con fess that it has been a sort of hated thorn in his side , and it will probably , therefore , be good news to him to learn that there is at last a pro = pcct of ita being plucked out , and without it be ing necessary for li'm to break his vow. Mr. Yung , the undertaker , is dead , and his widow is well enough to do to disdain the consideration of a fev thousand dollars as a hopeful incentive to the keeping of a persistent clutch upon a property that is to her useless. People on California street hill were astonished about two weeks ago to see the sign "For sile" posted up in lofty conspicuousness on Mr. Crocker's dis mal fence. The agents are a well- known firm on Montgomery street Inquiry at their office revealed the fact that Mrs. R. Yung , the relict of the de ceased undertaker , is far less exhorbi- tant in her expectations than he was. She asks $12,500 for the lot , which is equal to $363 a front foot It is under stood , however , that these figures are far from being her ultimatum. San Francisco Chronicle. Advertise Your Town. In this busy , bustling age , when everything goes at lightning speed , the man who sits supinely down and waits for the procession to catch up , is apt to find , when he wakes and rubs hia eyes , that the procession has gone by while he slept , and that he must do some pretty tall running to overtake it As with the individual , so it is with the ? city or town. To rely upon natural advantages is to allow those advantages ' to go unimproved , and to cultivate a large crop of lost opportunities and faded hopes. The man who undertakes to do business without advertising , in some sort , has leisure for much reverie J and contemplation , and pleases the i sheriff' , who is sure , sooner or later , to form an attachment for him ; but he does not create any sensation until the sheriff makes a public announcement at his expense , or the newspapers give him a free advertisement The city that thinks it can grow and thrive with out the aid of judicious and persistent advertisement , will find itself dropping back towards the rear of the proces sion. Texas Farm and Ranch. Tarred Floors. Some months ago the floors of many Austrian garrisons were painted with tar , and the results have proved so uni formly advantageous that the method is becoming greatly extended in its ap plication. The collection of dust in cracks is thus prevented , and a conse quent diminution in irritative discasea of the eve has been noticed. Cleaning of the rooms has been greatly facilitat- ad , and parasites are almost completely excluded. The coating of tar is inex pensive , requires renewal but once yearly , and presents but one disadvan tage , viz. , its somber color. Medical Xcws. A recent rain-storm In Texas is described aa having been ' regular root-soaker and gullej- c washer. "