THE TKIBUNE. F. M. & E. M. K1BIMEIX , Jub . McCOOK , NEB NEWS Off NEBRASKA. THE RAILROAD SITUATION. Agent Nash of the St. Paul and Milwaukee railway , al ways full of sharp-eyed vigilance for its Omaha interests , called on the Herald yes terday to complain of it for calling on the people to protect themselves against the Chicago and Northwestern's pursuit of Ne braska plunder , by patronizing the Bur lington. Mr. Nash was somewhat warmly received on the main question , as he al- way.i is , personally , at these Nebraska and Omaha headquarters. He claimed the large identity of the Milwaukee road with Omaha , and the same for the Eock Island , which is conceded. But his own argument was turned against him , and , as wo think , effectively and unanswerably. The partial identity of these roads with Omaha is a physical necessity from their location , and the fact is their salvation. This fact is also a crowningreason why that identity should be made complete. The Burlington comes here with its principal passenger trains from Chicago. It buys ground and builds a new line of road to the southwest , in ad dition to the one it has already. And yet its interests , like those of the Chicago & Northwestern are diverse from our own in many ways. Why do not the Rock Is land and St..Paul come in here and spend their money where they get their business ? Are they always going to be fed with a pew ter spoon by the Union Pacific like so many puling bubies ? Can their managers not see and seize their opportunity to share with the Burlington the great ad vantage of being in Omaha with their great trains and traf fic , and with both the Burlington and Northwestern , the kingdoms that lay open before them to occupy and possess ? Are our Chicago and Milwaukee servants en tirely idiotic ? "Let Omaha stand up and shake off these Iowa barnacles upon the progress of her trade and business. " There is a way to wake them up" , as other monkeys are wak ened up , by squeezing their tails. Talk is cheap. The act is what is needed to bring these Iowa railroads to their milk , and also to their senses. Omaha Herald. DEFENDANT BURR'S ANSWER. Lincoln special : An officer of Kearney arrived in the city this forenoon with a warrant is- lued by a magistrate of that city for the arrest of L. C. Burr. The charge is aiding Bimmerman to escape , and the warrant was issued at the instance of H. M. Sin clair , the district attorney of that district. Burr was taken out to Kearney on the noon train. Saville , the commissioner who released Simmerman , was arrested Satur day and is now in jail at Kearney. The defendant , Burr , has filed the following an- wer to thepetitionof theattorney-general : And now comes the respondent and sav ing and reserving to himself All rights of ex ceptions to the sufficiency to said relation against said L. C. Burr , attorney at law and respondent herein , and of the jurisdic tion of this court over the matters and things charged against this respondent , and unto so much and such parts thereof , as ho is advised it is necessary or material for him , this respondent , to answer unto. Respondent admits the first , second , third and fourth paragraphs of said relation to be true as the same is thereunto averred and alleged. Second And this respondent further an swering said relation , denies each and every allegation and averrment in the fifth , sixth , seventh and eighth paragraphs of said re lation , as the same is therein averred , al leged and set forth. Third And the respondent says that he did in good faith and without falsehood in the discharge of his duty as attorney for aid Matthias Simmerman , make out and file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with J. M. Saville. a commissioner of the district court of the United States in behalf of said Matthias Simmerman , on the 25th day of September , 1885 , for the purpose and with the view of admitting said Sim- merman to bail , and thereupon said Sim- merman , as such United States commis- Bioner , issued said writ of habeas corpus , directed to the sheriff of Buffalo county , commanding him to bring the body of said Matthias Simmerman before said Saville , the United States commissioner aforesaid , which writ was duly served by A. C. Hast ings , deputy United States marshal for the district of Nebraska , and the said sheriff of Buffalo county did obey the said writ and produce the body of said Simmcrman be fore said J. M. Saville , and then made re turn of the cause of the caption and deten tion of said Matthias Simmcrman to bail ; that said proceedings for habeas corpus on behalf of and in favor of said Simmerman , were had in an open and public manner and in good faith without fraud or collu sion , and without deceit , guilt , artifice , circumvention or collusion ; that if there was error in the said proceedings it was error of the head and not of theheart that no disrespect of this court or'its judgment or decrees was designed or intended ; that the said respondent acted in all things in good faith with pure and honest motives , and with no evil design , and without deceit or collusion , and respondent prays to be herein dismissed out of the court and he will ever pray. L. C. Bmm. 2OISCELLANEOVS STATE MATTERS CORTLAND is troubled with a gang ol rut- fians whom the citizens of that place are talking strongly of taking in hand. Gov. DAWES has issued a proclamation declaring the city of NebraskajCity a city of the second-class. THE Northwestern railroad has made a proposition looking toward an extension to Lincoln if $50,000 five per cent bonds are voted. The company agrees to com plete the line within one year. A proposi tion will be submitted to the voters of that city- cityTHE THE Albion News says it was reported there the other day that a couple of citi zens of Plum Creekhad a rough-and-tumble knock-down and throw-out. One Hubbard unmercifully beat , kicked and otherwise disfigured his neighbor Packard for life. The latter will lose an eye. The trouble originated by the children of the two neigh bors quarreling at their play , and taken up by the parents with deleterious results. T. J. ECKER , who has been running a photograph tent at Kenesaw , was consid erably surprised the other day by the ap pearance of Sheriff C. H. Jordan and his deputy , Geo. P. Lewis , of Albion , Boone county , who wanted Mr. Ecker to answer to the charge of burglarizing a saloon at that place , and extricating therefrom cer tain billard balls and other valuables. He was taken to the scene of his alleged irregu larities. ) \ K * / * * _ THE plans and specifications for the pro posed water works at Ashland are looked for any day , and when they arrive the ad vertisement for bids and the sale of bonds will appear. JOHN D. ALLEH , an Omaha hack driver , blew out his brains with a pistol a few nights ago , selecting a house ol 411 fame in which to commit the rash act. No reason for the deed is known , except it be that ono of the girls of the "institution" with whom he supposed himself "solid" transferred her affections to another frequenter ol tha house. JAMES SPIKES , aged twelve , was acci dentally shot by his brother , fourteen years old , at Holmesvillo one day lasl week. The boys were loading goods into a wagon and the oldest one was putting in a gun when it went off and shot the other in the face , tearing away part of the front ol his skull. The boy lived about two hours. THE elevator now in course of construe tion by the Wakefield milling company will be a very creditable structure when com pleted. It is forty feet long and thirty-four wide , and will be considerably higher than the mill. SEWARD has a special election October IGth to vote on the question of water works , the estimated cost of which is $20- 000. 000.THE THE settlers on the reservation in Wayne county have formed a protective associa tion and deal summarily with land jumpers. THE water-works project of Blair is now fairly under way and will be pushed vigor ously forward. THE Weeping Water Republican says an era of prosperity and progression which it is gratifying to note , seems to have dawned upon the various churches in that city. The Congregational and Baptise churches have each purchased and put into position large and expensive belis ; and now the Methodist brethren come to the front with an order for a furnace with which to heat their house of worship. CEDAR COUNTY has the best prospect for corn this season she ever had. THE proverbial quietude of Bcllevue was disturbed the other day by a law suit. BPH Bachelder caused the arrest of Professor Grate , the LaPlatte school teacher , on charge of assault. The case was ventilated before Justice Martin and a jury. The jury failed to agree , and the parties asked the justice to decide the case. He did so , find ing no proof of assault , and discharged the versatile teacher. The fun of the day cost Bachelder about $20. THE Women's Christian Temperance Union society of Nebraska numbers 100 local unions. The ladies who compose it are greatly encouraged in their labors by the rapid growth of the society during the last year and the growing influence which the local and state unions are exerting in the direction of the object for which they are working. The reports from different parts of the state in all departments of the work , and especially in that of the Young Women's Christian Temperance Union , aro extremely gratifying , SOME scoundrel in passing a carriage manufactory in Omaha a few nights ago , slashed the tops and leather work of sev eral buggies that had been left in front of ; he premises for repair. AT the Gage county fair all departments were well filled. Col. C. S. Chase , of Omaha , delivered an address. ABOUT sixty speed horses were on the jround at the Fairmont district fair. MRS. POWELL , of Kearney , suicided one night last week by taking laudanum. No cause for the suicide is known. THE Falls City Journal proposes that the citizens of that place drop everything else and concentrate their energies on theestab- ishment of a canning factory there. LINCOLN special : A decision was rendered n the supreme court yesterday in the case of the state ex rel. Hoff vs. McClelland. The case was on application for a madamus to compel J. W McClelland , county clerk of Sance county , to include in the list of offi cers in his call for the county election that of register of deeds. The court refused to grant the mandamus , thus deciding the law void. The defect in the law was that as it passed the two houses it provided for the office of register of deeds in counties of over 15,000 inhabitants , but a mistake was made in enrolling the bill by which a cipher was omitted , making the bill read 1,500 nstead of 15,000 , and in this form it was approved by the governor without discov ery of the error , and was signed by the gov ernor and the officers of the house and senate. WM.HARLOCK , of Hastings , has been hap pily reminded of war times by the receipt of $2,800 back pension. THE line embraced in the recent lease of the Central Branch of the Union Pacific to the Missouri Pacific embraces 388 miles , and considered one of the most paying branches of the road. LINCOLN special : W. P. Critchfield , ares- ident of Nance county , has filed mandamus proceedings in the supreme court to com pel the county commissioners of Nance county to insert in the election notice a call for an election of * register of deeds. This is to test the constitutionality of the laws passed at the last legislature creating bhe office of register of deeds and in which an error was made in enrolling which made it read counties of over "fifteen hundred , " instead of "fifteen thousand , " as originally passed passed. TAKING of testimony in the case of A. B. Morse , a farmer of Gage county , charged with wife poisoning , was begun in the dis trict court at Beatrice on the 6th. His wife died in June , andby examination it was found she died of poison. Morse was arrested , and at this term of court indicted. Ele is 74. years old , while she was a com paratively young woman. TOMMY WALLS languishes in the Buffalo county jail for theft of $128 , taken from > the pants pockets of a man with whom he slept. JAMES MOORE , of Adams county , recently met with a severe accident by falling or eing thrown out of a wagon. He left 1B Hastings towards evening and about 11 o'clock at night he was found lying insen sible in the road about two miles from thai place. When he came to he said he had no recollection of what had occurred. His team bad ran away but was caught by Borne one. It is supposed he had an at tack of heart disease , being afflicted with it , and fell out of the wagon , inflicting severe internal injuries. THE M. E. conference returned Rev. J. W. Barger lo Juniata for another year , where at his old parishioners are greatly rejoiced. THE arrangements of the conditions o ! the lease of the Central branch of the Union Pacific covers certain questions of right o ! way , terminal facilities and other questions over which issues have heretofore arisen. A MEETING of Nebraska editors will take place at Seward on the 22d. Miss ALLAN , the city librarian of Omaha , gets a salary of $90 a month , and some members of the council , believing this too much , propose to reduce the amount. D. P. SHEPHERD , of Dodge county , fell un der his wagon while driving to Fremont. One wheel struck him on the head and la cerated his scalp terribly , cutting a gash clear to the skull several inches long. His left ear was torn loose and cheek-bone bad ly scraped. THE house , barn and granary of James Foley , on the reservation between Blue Springs and Liberty , were burned last week , involving a loss of $2,000. The buildings and everything they contained were a total loss. FREMONT'S foundry is doing a large busi ness of late. SERGEANT BRAINAHD , of the Arctic expe dition , who has been on a visit to relatives in Dodge county , left for New York City a few days ago , whither he went to be with Brederbeck , one of his old companions in the Arctic regions , who is sick and it is thought will not live. The day before starting Mrs. Pavy , of New Orleans , ar rived for a brief visit with the sergeant. She is the widow of the surgeon of the Greely expedition and wished to converse with one of the survivors in regard to her late lamented husband. JOHNSON county's fair was a success throughout. The attendance was large and the exhibit a surprise even to the old est inhabitants. A FIRE at Unadilla destroyed the hard ware and stove store of B. F. & Walsh Mohler. Believed to be incendiary. DELINQUENT tax lists are coming to the front in all directions. Prepare to settle or see your property sold. THE barn , house and other property of William Price , of Dodge county , burned last week. Everything in the dwelling was destroyed and the family , before in reduced circumstances , are now almost destitute. THE Journal says that Ainsworth boasts of a man who enjoys taking castor oil. He says he likes it. The only regret is he can not take it for his neighbors. As AN evidence of what is thought of real estate in the vicinity of Oakland , it may be mentioned that James Askwig , of that place , refused an offer of $60 per acre for : iis farm of 300 acres. Nothing short of an even $20,000 will capture the dirt. HON. GEO. W. E. DORSET'S address deliv ered Wednesday at the Burt county fair is spoken of as an able effort. There were present about two thousand persons who listened with careful attention to his re marks. THERE are forty divorce cases booked for the October term of court in Lancaster county. The bulk of them were filed by the gentler sex , and it is likely that most of their liege lords are drunkards. Miss MARY HARTWELL , a returne mis sionary from Siam , is doing the state in the way of a lecturing tour. tjn A GOOD watermelon , when the steni has not been severed from the melon , will keep till Christmas ; but if you want it to last longer than that a good coat of glue will do $ the work. REPORT SOMEWHAT SENSATIONAL. The Same to Soon te Forthcoming from Com missioner SparJcs. Washington dispatch : Probably the most sensational report which will be made by any bureau officer will be that of Gen. Sparks , commissioner of thelond office. Ha s now busily engaged in preparing it. It will make some startling recommendations w as to the land-grant roads , and will advise that suits be brought not only to recover lands which it is alleged that nearly all the roads have secured in excess of the amount earned , but that criminal proceedings be instituted against some prominent persons in cases where proof of fraud is indisputa ble. The policy of the government will be to select some prominent men as examples and to permit those who have merely been hired to do their bidding to go free. Tho recent conviction of an Englishman in Col orado of fictitious land entries while the cowboys who actually made the entries of wjre not punished is an illustration of the policy of the land office. It is said evidence has been secured which tends to implicate la some prominent men in Minnesota in irreg ular transactions. If this evidence shall be satisfactorily completed criminal suits un doubtedly will be instituted. Commissioner Sparks holds that all the land-grant roads have made irregular locations , and run the road in curved lines , often doubling up on 5 itself , in order to secure an excessive land crant. P1 labor Demonstration in Detroit. A labor demonstration was made in Detroit on the evening of the 6th , which was a great uccess. There were about 2,000 men in line , composing five divisions , or twenty-five organ- zations. and embracing all kinds of labor , "he demonstration was orderly throughout Upwards of 103 transparencies were carried , among mottoes being the following : ' 'Con tract labor must go'Eight h nrs only for a day's work " "When ; capitalists conspire poor men must combineThe ; employment of child labor should be made a state prison offense ; " "Equal pay to both sexes for equal work ; " "Rent , Interest and profit are rob- er ; " "Agitate , educate , organize ; " "The ujvt lor the people , not another acre for rail- oads ; " "Child labor la the product of our boasted civilization ; " "Schools for children , work for men ; " "Employ the unemployed and reduce the hours of labor1' Slmlhu ry mottoes were printed in German and Polish. OXNKRAL ajsira AND NOTES. Hotter * of Interest Touched Upon 6y Pven Jfetn Gothtrm. Norrls fc Co. , one of the largest dry goods dealers in New Laredo , Mexico , undertook to transport a large quantity of dry goods to New Laredo. They found the teamsters be longing to the transportation train securelj bound to trees , thirty miles north of New Laredo , while the most valuable portion ol their'goods had been carried away by robbers. The Sherman House , Fargo , Dakota , hai been burned. Loss , $30,000 ; Insurance , $ ! } , 000. 000.Prairie Prairie fires in McPhcrson county , Dakota , In the past few days have swept everything over one hundred square miles. Hundred ; of families are destitute. The loss is estima ted at $250,000. The fire Is now said to be under control. A long-standing feud between the Nance and Critzen families , about six miles from Fredcrickstown , Mo. , culminated by B. C. Nance , a young member of that family , as saulting Lev ! Critzen , also a young man , wit ) a knife , stabbing him In a dozen places and killing him. Nance fled , and has not beet captured. At Ft Wayne , Ind , , a few nights ago sev eral sheds and stables at the fair grounds were fired by tramps aiid consumed. After the flames were extinguished a burned body was found , supposed to be one of the tramps who was too drunk to escape and was roasted alive. Mrs. Bulla , who Is undergoing the remarka ble fast at Syracuse , N. Y. , completed her 56th day on the 5tb. That morning she swal lowed half a teaspoonful of liquor. Prayers were said over the woman. The remarkable feature of the case Is that Mrs. Bulla has gained S3veral Inches In length since her fast began. She is growing weaker and recog nizes no one but her daughter. A few days ago Miss Emma Faulkner , of State Bridge , N. Y. , took a large lamp , and removing the burner , poured Its contents about her head and shoulders. She then set fire to herself and ran shrieking around the house. Mr. Lawrence , a neighbor , saw her and ran to her assistance. After considera- ble difficulty the fire was subdued , but not until nearly all her clothing had been burned from her body. She died next day. She had attempted suicide" before. The marine hospital bureau has received information ' that four seamen on the steamer Cral hall , which arrived at Boston , Sept. 29 , fiom Colon , have symptoms of yellow fever , and have been removed to Gallup's Island hospital. The captain of the steamer died of yellow fever while on the voyage. Several cases of small-pox have developed at Fall River , Mass. , traceable directly to Canada. Merrick Richardson , hardware dealer at 75 and 77 Lake St. , Chicago , has assigned to John A. Roach. The liabilities are given at S55.0CO. Assets , § 75,000. An Iron Mountain special says : One Gould alias F. H. Bassett is wanted by the Italian miners at Vulcan , Mich. He was the mine time keeper and a private banker , and sold exchange and passage tickets. He left for Chicago three weeks ago , ostensibly for med ical treatment The depositors now learn that he has skipped and the bank bursted. The liabilities are 57,003 and the assets an old leather pocket-book and $10. He left a w If e and two children. Brigadier General Crook under date of Oc tober 2 telegraphs to the war department as follows : "The Apache Indians have been for two days crossing the San Simeon valley Into Steino Park range , as was evidently their Intention. Yesterday morning they were 'orced out of these mountains by the scouts and troops and driven into Sulphur Springs valley and their trail was lost after dark. j They have stolen sufficient stock to mount ; hemselves well , and I am informed this af- ternoon that they went into the Dragoons this morning. They probably killed two men in the Chiricuhuas , and this in spite of every effort made to warn all the citizens. Two companies of the Tenth cavalry , and Captain Wood's troop of the Fourth cavalry are on the trail. Everything that is possible for troops to do is-beiug done to destroy the hostiles. " The postoflice department is informed that [ nspector Bassatt of New York , has arrested , near Greeley , Colorado , Thos. S. Tiffin , the absconding postmaster of Bennington , Ver- nont. More than two years ago F. N.Bassatt was appointed postoflice inspector. His first case called him to Benninirton , Vt , where it was alleged the postmaster was short in lis accounts. An examination developed the 'act that Tiffin owed the government upward $500. He asked the inspector's permission to go to the bank and draw the amount found to be due. The request was granted. The defaulting postmaster immediately boarded a train , and a few weeks ago it was learned he was located on a farm in Colorado , engaged in sheep-raising. It was there he was ar rested. Bassatt will bring his prisoner back to Vermont , where he will be tried. f Wm. McCluskey , a prominent II , uor dealer at Urbana , Ohio , went home Jand found his wife and child Insensible from morphine taken A with suicidal Intent After taking poison the woman arranged herself and baby , ( which took the premium at the last county fair for beau ty ) , and laid the child down on her arm with her husband's photograph and a prayer book and a letter by her side. The physicians worked all night with the two. The child died , and the mother Is dying. No cause can be assigned for the strange and cruel deed. The merchant tailors of PIttsburg have re- golved to publish the names of all persons who refuse to pav their tailor bills on the programmes of the various theatres and places amusement John Duran , a jeweler at Aurora , HI. , sui gc cided with strychnine. He had been detected inl false manipulation of the books. l Albert Cook , who murdered his wife and or mother-in-law near Geneva , HI , Is still at tl large. Over one hundred men are In his purp suit , and If captured he will hardly escape c lynching. Both of his victims were buried at u Burlington. Public Indignation against him s runs high , and If he Is caught he will In all probability die at the hands of the mob. CHRONICLES BY CABLE. d Vltcellancotts Matters of Interest Pertaining si to Foreign CovntrU * , IEC The nationalists' convention met at Wick- C ( low , Ireland , Oct 5th with a full attendance. Parnell delivered the opening address. He N urged that all differences should be buried , 'si cautioned his hearers against allowing their- lii fcelings to get the better of them , and that liiC. wisdom should be exercised in making nom C.a Inatlons. He advocated self sacrifice rather a " than to jeopardize the success of the party. He uttered" stirring eulogy on the Irish peo , in pie and testified to the high class of work the tt ttP Irishmen had been capable of , but which ttn could not compare with the work they wer- n capable of unless the tyrannical laws they were now governed by were abrogatpd and Irishmen were unfettered from the slave P < that now holds them down. * to The London Standard's Berlin correspond- Pi I' I ent ' telegraphs that the powers have all agreed to advise the porte to consent to the union of Eastern Roumclia with Bulgaria under the suzerainty of the sultan. Count Van Munster , German ambassador , In an Interview with Lord Salisbury , Impart- * d Prince Bismarck's views on the Roumeliau question. Six thousand Russians have en tered Bulgaria. This number represents the ggregate number of Isolated volunteers that kave arrived so far in a private capacity , sitch s commercial travelers , clergymen , etc. Koumella is pushing forward rapidly the work > n the frontier defenses. The czar received a Bulgarian deputation at his royal country palace of Murienlyst at Elsiuorc. The mission of the deputation was to secure the czar's recognition of the union of Bulgaria and Roumclia. Members of the deputation refused to state whether their ob ject had been fully accomplished. They , however , expressed themselves very well sat isfied with the result of their interview with the czar. The dispute between Germany and Spain In regard to the Caroline islands has at last been amicably settled. Germany acknowledg es the right of Spain to occupy the Island of Yap. Spain grants Germany free navigation and commerce and also the privilege of main taining stations on the islands of the Caroline group. A dispatch received from Belgrade states that the Bulgarians have seized and occupied Bourgas , the principal seaport town of east ern Ronmelia , situated on the Black Sea , and have planted torpedoes in the harbor. The police of Warsaw city have unearthed a plot to assassinate the czar. The plotters number forty In all , and among them are leveral professors of colleges here , and oth- era In high standing. The discovery has caused a profound sensation throughout the city. city.Salisbury Salisbury spoke at the national conservative conference at Newport He thanked the con- servative union for exposing the true nature of , the gaudy promises of the seductive pro- j gramme of the liberals. The premier urged his j hearers to continue the efforts in behalf of conservatism which he said was growing and had a glorious future. He denied that'c the Berlin treaty upset the rolicy the govI eminent had decided upon with regard to the Turkish empire. Dublin dispatch : The fund for the relief of James Stephens , ex-head center of the Fenian brotherhood , has reached only six { hundred pounds. The promoters of the fund are much disappointed. Outrages by moonJ J lighters throughout Ireland are reported of , nightly occurrence and the "no rent" movei i mentis growing to alarming proportions. Farmers refusing to declare openly in favor of the movement are visited by moonlighters and forced to swear they won'tpay their rent Several farmers were called on and put through the swearing process. One hundred and five new cases of cholera and sixty deaths from the disease were re ported Oct. Cth in Palermo , Italy. King Milan in a speech delivered In the skuptschina declared that he would fight un less Scrvla's demands for an extension of her boundaries over an area equal to that ac quired by Bulgaria in its union with Eastern Roumelia were granted. THE BEAT OF GOVERNMENT. t VlscfUnneoua Matters of Interest at the JHs tional Capital. REPORTS are received through official channels of the apparent utter failure ol ' the recent Mormon mission sent to India.Cl Minister Lowell , by direction of Secretury ° Frelinghuysen , officially called the atten- tion of the British authorities to the sub ject < and requested that appropriate in > structions be issued to the proper author ities with a view to checking the shipment w of Mormon recruits to the United States. ' _ a The Mormons made no recruits in Calcutta. b In other parts of India they met with little lat ladi success , converting only two or three per di sons , and the intervention of the govern didi dihi ment was unnecessary. hi SENATORS BRECKENRIDOE AND JONES , ol 1 I P' ' Arkansas , called on the president to urga HI him to incorporate in his annual message ui to congress a recommendation for liberal w appropriations to improve the navigation w of the Mississippi river and tributaries. They report that tho president showed n marked interest in the subject and con- Si cidered the interview very satisfactory. tT THE president has appointed G. H. Hoff It man and George R , Snowden to be assist- ' ant appraisers of merchandise at PhiladelU phia ; Benjamin Green , of New Orleans , to ; j be surveyor-general of Montana ; John' ' 8 Cardwell , of Texas , to be agent and consulpc general of the United States at Cairo ; Owen J > McCarr , of Colorado , to be consul-general in Equador. To be United States consuls : ec Thomas R. Joinigan , of North Carolina , at Montevidio ; M. A. Laycrook , of Indinna , at Algiers ; Lewis Gebarfc Read , of New York , at Barbadoes ; Henry II. Merritt , of Hlinois , at Aix la Chappelle ; Otto E. Reimar , of Now York , at Santiago do Cuba ; ; is G. H. Goodwin , of Massachusetts , at Annso berg , kingdom of Saxony. j [ 1O ACTING SECOND COMPTROLLER MCMAIION sic has made a ruling that bounty can not bo allowed in the case of any volunteer - flier who enlisted after April 1,1865 , unless re upon proof derived from the records that If the notice of the telegram of the provost bit general to all officers in command in the o insurrectionary states , dated April 22 , jy 1865 ; , directing thatno bounties be allowed ; paid for any volunteers enlisted after ° r that date , was actually not received at the wj place ] of enlistment until after the time of no enlistment. A large number of colored vol * coi unteer ; troops enrolled in the southern ne-j states about April 30,1865 , aro affected pa by this decision. , all A STATEMENT prepared at the treasury Q department shows that the amount of of standard dollars put into circulation durhir ing the month of September , in the regular le f course of business , was § 2,700,000. | se , THE board of management of the new be "et North , Central and South American expo- o sition at New Orleans have added to their an list of special days an "American Silver HI ! Congress , ' , assigning it to December llth * he and 12th , the two days following tho wo "American Bankers' Congress. " This was pU response to a request from the silver inhe terest. Steps have been taken to secure a 81.c grand display of products from the eilve he regions of the United States. coi The president made the following ap- * o he pointments : Chas. D.Jacobs , of Kentucky , be envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United Statesto _ the United States of Columbia ; Chas. Foster , of Indiana , consul general of the United % States at Calcutta ; D. J. Partell , of the Dis trict of Columbia , consul of the United States to Dusseldorf ; Wm. F. Henderson , of Arkansas , to bo associate justice of tho supreme court of tho territory of New Mexico ; Daniel W. Maratta , of Dakota , to be marshal of the United States for tho ter ritory of Dakota ; Thomas Smith , of Vir ginia , to bo attorney of the United States for the territory of New Mexico. Tho postmasters at Ashby , Graniteville ; and Shirley , small towns adjacent to'Bos ton , Mass. , have been recommended for re moval for mailing matter at thelr"offlces" that siiould "have been mailed at Boston. In the case of tho Shirley pontmnster , it is alleged by the inspectors who investigated the matter that the postmaster paid 30 per cent of the value of stamps to persons who brought quantities of circulars to his office for mailing. The postoffico depart ment is determined to break up these irreg ular practices and small postoffices near large cities will receive close attention. Se'cretarj'Lamarhas heard nothing from Indian Inspector Thomas in relation to th additional charges preferred against him , nor have any steps been taken to inform- him of their nature. The whole matter seems to bo regarded as of very little im portance by the interior department offi cials. They say that Assistant Secretary Jenks is fully capable of disposing of tho matter , and tho secretary will not there fore give it a moment's attention until hi return. Ex-Representative Broadhead. of Mis souri , who has been in Franco since las * spring , looking into the records of tho French claim , has submitted the result ol his observations to the state department. Ho visited about twenty points in France , , and received every assistance from th French authorities. The information . gathered is on cases where judgments ot forfeiture ( were recorded , manifests of ves sels seized and protests of their captains and owners formulated. The consul of the United States at Quay mns , Mexico , informs the department o * state that statements made in various newspapers that there are a thousand Chinamen in his district and that the saint are being surreptitiously introduced into the United States in contravention of tht restriction act of congress are untrue , as the total number of Chinamen in that con sular district does not exceed 125 and theso are nearly all employed in shoe and tailoring factories and have no desire to leave their present profitable positions. No additions are being made to their num ber , a FALL OF A METEORIC STO.YB What Caused theRecent Loiul Defoliations in- Fennsylcan ia. Pittsburg ( Pa. ) dispatch : The aerolite or meteoric stone , which caused the loud de tonation heard throughout thcgrcaterpart of Washington and Allegheny comities on Saturday , fell upon the farm of Mr. Buck- land , in Jefferson township , Washington- county , near the West Virginia line , instead of in Cecil township , as reported. Ellia Jones , a mail carrier , witnessed the fiery ball in its flight through the heavens. He e.'iid that he never beheld a more awful or impressive scene. Ills horse suddenly stop ped and he heard a noise as all the winds were rushing onward with great violence. Looking up he saw moving high above him huge mass , which he described as resem bling a great coal of fire as large as the- largest barn he ever saw. There appeared to be attachcti to it an immense flame of a deep red color which tapered off into n darker tail. Instantly the noise which- had accompanied it ceased ; the fire-like- appearance ] , the flame and the tail disap peared ' , and in their stead the stone as sumed a whitish hue , which it retained until it passed out of sight. Jones' horse- was so frightened that it took several minutes of vigorous application of tho whip before the animal could be persuaded tc move. When tho stone fell it broke into threa pieces ' , but did not penetrate the ground to- such a great depth as already stated , as two-thirds of it remained above ground. is grayish in color , with a succession of red streaks , is irregular in form and at least Rfty fest in diameter. Consternation seized upon ] the people who beheld the meteor in ite flight , and many of them are filled with superstitious dread , believing that the spirit which causes pestilence and famine pervaded the fiery visitor. A great num ber of people have gone to see the visitor. Up to this time the relic hunters have lone remarkably well in carrying away souvenirs. HAS FAITH IN THE PRESIDENT. JVm Dorntan R. Eaton Has Confluence In the Chief Executive's Jittlijinent. In ] answer to the request of a reporterfor opinion whether the president would oon , reorganize the commission , and as to ow he would reorganize it , ex-Commis- ioner Eaton said : "I will give you my own views frankly , rithout in the least speaking for the presi- lent. My successor will , I presume , be eady to enter upon his duty November 1st. the president , in view of the unreasona- jealousies which exist , shall deem itwiso supersede one or both of the other com- aissioners , I think he will do so deliberate- > freely , and at tho proper time. "He will not be coerced , either , as to time- persons to be selected , by the imprudent emands of noisy intermeddlers. Those rho , clamor most about reorganization are friends of reform and they have but to ontinue their clamor to make their weak- ess as manifest as their hostility. " If he shall place two members of his own arty upon the commission he will not How laxity of administration or any ivoritism on their part , to open the way patronage and spoils , which are the aim so many of the most anxious to help im bring about speedy reorganization , would , I am sure , deprecate the making a precedent for treating the office of civil ervice commissioner as political , and to- filled anew by every succeeding president , something must be conceded , perhaps , be exigency of a new experiment and to unenlightened public opinion on the- ubject. Knowing ( as the president does ) ( work of the commission is both new nd complicated and that it is not like ih& rorks of other parts of the service ex- lained in familiar regulations , I think that fully appreciates that the new commis- ioner will gain much bv serving for a timfr rith one or more of those familiar with work. No disguised enemy of reform ould deal it a more disastrous blow than bring about an immediate change of all commissioners. Hunger and conversation an t'io bet lianw cane * . l .