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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

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lEIF iiJ 'ilMISIR I VOL. XXXVIII: NO. 264. MONDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 20, 1880.

PRICE FIVE CENTS. JOHN, Otherwise tho' Heathen Chinee. I la He a Desirable Neignoor ana i fHtizen? i -i rMration ABoteato TheolOffionl Consideration of the Question. "Chinese Begrde4 aa People of God. the Chosen I The t.v...i.

i ItiaM rreaeaea 1 I Baaasy, Btpnawr 1 I. DlWitt Talmage. I diupatcw to rmn Bjtautssm. I rbooxltVi September 19. This was the see- I end sermon of Dr.

Talmage since his return I the Psclflc Coast, and the great Taber- I sole was thronged with an attentive audi-1 grandfathers, and at different times the elab- I Chinese port. Ever since we have been beg- I this forenoon ordered to the scene of the dia-soce. The opening hymn was the favorite oration, the over-topping and appalling mys-j glng the Chinese people to come out and come I tnrbance. The excitement and wild com- motion tbe missionary slogan: "From Greenland's Icy mountains. From India's coral strand." The following la a verbatim report of the sermon: aaajeet Tk Chlaeao la America.

Tut Luke "Who is my Neighbor A keen lawyer bad Christ under cross-examination and this was one of the questions. Christ's answer enlarged the Idea of and the idea haa been enlarging ever since. It onoe seemed a figure of speech to call people on the other sides of the n.t.hhora. but nations are so rapidly I nowar from Bouthamo-1 son to New York, from China to Han Francisco, and iron tracks across the continents and cables under all the seas, make the world one neighborhood. Is the Chinaman a neighbor Does he belong to the race of which God la Uie Father? Is he brute or an immortal? Slow ought rod to treat him? Must be be weloomed or driven back? Will he help or hurt us? These Important questions are pressed upon th.

attention of this Nation and decide tliem wo must, and decide them we will. It will oe as agitating a question In Brooklyn as In San Francisco. I want to have yoa start right In your opinions, and for that reason I give you the result of my summer observation In California, where the Chines, population haa Become a tremendous factor. Arriving In San Franclsoo Saturday, August 7th, I bad been but a few moments in the Taoti when the highest officers of the State called upon ma in the Interest of the an U-I Chinese sentiment. From that time and for I wnanv dava from morning till night there was I half hour in which, by Committee I or document or letter, the subject was not pre- MnLML The Chinese quarters, called China town, are-shown to moat Eastern people who get to California.

The papers this week say that President Hayes was shown Chinatown, bat the roughest part waa covered np so that he should be deceived aa to how bad It waa. No one caa say that of my Inapection.for it was the one Interest of the gentlemen who took me there to make me aee the worst aide. The five gentlemen who took me there were openly opposed to the Chinese emigration. D. Meara, a most obliging gentleman, the President of the Board of Health, wen with me at the request of the Msyor, and there as no man ost the Continent more pronoun oed against the Chinese than Jr.

Mean. Bol saw Chlnatawn at its worst. It is bad enough, filthy enough, dreadful enough. Bat underground New York is SO M. nnilanrwHinil K.

Pnn. olsco. New York American vies Is five-fold -1 more braseQ tnaa nan- MMirrx yeuow-eov-V red vice. The difference la malodor is thedlf-' ferenee between whisky and opium and the malodor of whisky Is a hundred-fold worse than the malodor of opium. The crowded tenement-bouses of New York are more fear- folly crowded than the Chinese quarters.

As I told them face to face in their Grand Opera-house. If their three hundred police, together with an extra fore, of five hundred police sworn in from among their most worthy eltt-sens, would, In the name of God, and In the strength of the law, go out to do their whole duty, in one night they could break up the last Iniquity of Chinatown. Do you tell me that 280,000 law-abiding people of San Francisco could not pat down the 20,000 bad people? Front my observation this summer, and ten years ago, I give as my opinion, an opinion In which thousands of the merchants i and clergy and best people of California agree that of all the foreign population who have come to our shores within the last forty years, none have come more cleanly, more industri ous, more sober, more courteous, more harmless, more genial than the Chinese. 1 have in my poseselon a long list of affidavits by the first farmers, merchants, manufacturers and professional gentlemen. of California, testify ing as to thejr Integrity and hard work, ana Ingenuity and love of good order.

They have no equals as laundrymen, and In many of the homes I was told that they had no rivals as honse help. One of them I waa told would do the work of three ordinary servants. It la objected of them that tbey underbid other workmen, being able to live cheaper than other nationalities. Mistake! Tbey get higher wages In many No such wages are paid in Brooklyn for domestic' services as'are paid to the Chinese servant In California. So far from barling the of others they have made possible vast enterprises which have given employment to other people.

But suppose-that In any ease they did underbid. If yoa torn them out on that account then yoa ought to turn out all those people who work the sewing-machine, or reaper or hay-rack, since these machines noderbid tens of thousands of hard-working people who toll only with the band. But the fact that rerutea all these- stories about the ruinous competition of the 'Chinese is that wages have been higher in California than in any State of the Union. When there shall be twenty thousand Chinese in New York and Brooklyn, aa tbare will be. there will be Just as large wages for all oar people and more prosperity than now, for then, instead of one million of people, we shall have three or four millions.

Again, If objected that the Chinese do not spend their money where they make It. False again Tbey pay rent in San Francisco mrA unn t)m ftm -t Miaider t2.400.u00 added to tbe Income of Brooklyn a prosperous sddltlon? The Chinese pay to the State California a tax of over M.000.000. They Peia in Custom-hoase datles to the United Butcslnon.y.sxl0,4Ollr. Now, take back that falsehood about Chinese not paying any rooney where they make 1L I do not wonder ik.l, moiic owe their money aad do not make large investments ia this country. How much of your money i.

where Ton were noTallowd clllsen.hlp and might moment have to suffer outrage any expatriation? I not wonder they have their bones sens back to rvi. uiudiv in Brooklyn ss the Ch.ne have been treated in California, we would not want tobebanea within Sjooo miles of tbe place where soeh indignity wss poatdbisa W. would atwuc: If theydosacb things tons while we have our rtn strong for defense, what may they not when we become helpless? But what an Inconsistent thing it is for us to complain that they send their money borne! Have we ot for the last twenty years been eompli- A klmo-t every comfort, they have sent ratatsaK wKI. fa fhelf Kainr. k.i.

Ma. ta hii rather, kna ea a lhale a Fl 7 wa SMsii as vswcas wain 2cm" SH. l-iTir IV" a i a 1 1 i.lLa adGermanyt Perhaps yo have not b. told what la dona with much of tbe weges whlea the Chinese send home. Hear it and esesenanome.

Wash that yoa have eve d.rided the iso anjostly. Their parents in enma ar. th.sabj.cUof a base feudal system, and much ml this money goes to liberate these parent. from "bondage. I have thia Irom a manoarm WtU eathority.

If your father and mother I I 5LTOU DH ome-! me toiBM lore luxuries as rnnah as youf Shall their magnificent self-denial for others be the caase of their assanltf Bat, It is objected, they gw roch close economy, well, that la a crime of which oar nation la. not very much guilty. think In uuen guilty, i think it tnta may lemrn something from th. cm- inese. ney are not only economical, but nese.

They are not they pay all their debts, two peculiarities for which, of course, they ought to be punished. whatloworder.ofe,Tll,,aUon" Chinese have, for they work all the time, lire within tneir means ana pay all they owe! Such hab its ought to be pot a stop to. wu tun ruau, ana IBM thelr drM so very different. What do you reier to nowr The Chinese queue Why, 1 utngion wore a queue, Benjamin iranauin wore a queue, John Hancock wore queue, our great-arrandfathersworeanenea. any wing that Washington, aad Frank- jona Hancock, and our re- versa grandfathers did must have uvea respeciaDie.

Besides that, again and again, our American dress has been more wian ine Chinese apparel. The erino- line monstrosities of twenty years ago, the coal scuttle bonnets of oar grandmothers, the powdered hair and knee-buckles of our tery of woman's head-dress In our time ought I to make us lenient with Mongolian consplcul-1 ties. As to their other religious pecullarltli for their dreai has a religious significance can It be that in this country a man's religious belief Is to be interfered wltht Do you suppose the Pilgrim Fathers and the Hugue nots and Revolutionary Fathers would have endured what tney did In be- nail or religious liberty in this coun try if they had supposed their descendants would ever make the style of religious belief the ground of residence or If our Government la to stand, the Joss-house of the ChlncseMs to be as secure and 1 undisturbed aa the Cathedral of the Catholic, the meeting- bouse of the Quaker, or the church of the Presbyterian. If the choice must be between a religion that persecutes, and insults, and stones a man because of the color of bis skin, of the length of bis hair, of the economy of his habits and the Industry of his life, on the one hand, and the Paganism which bears pa tiently all this abnse, keeping-right on with its work If I must make a choice between such a religion and such a Paganism, give me Paganism. If you have a superior religion, in kindly and persuasive way present that su perior religion.

Aud this brings me to tell you what I saw and heard of the florlous work being "Hone among the Chinese in Saa Francisco. My first ttabbaut morning I sprat In a Chinese mission church, and had there th. opportunity and joy of telling these Mongolians of Him who came, not an American Christ, nor a Chinese Christ, nor German Christ, nor a French Christ, nor a Spanish Christ, nor an Italian Christ, but the round world's Christ. There they stand this morning, doing a work re- nowned in heaven, though little appreciated I on earth the Preabyterian Mission of Dr. Loo ml the Methodist Mission on Washington, street, the Congregational Mission near the Park, the Episcopalian Mission and other great charities.

The Chinese make grand Christians, and there are many of them. and there will be five hundred million of them yet, when according to the prophecy the land of Slnim shall surrender to the one God. Will not this generation of Christians seem small enough and contemptible enough lu the future, when it shall be found oat that these Mongolians were brought here, not so much by the stigmatized six Chinese Companies, but by the God of the Bible to have them Christianised, and then multitudes of them sent backfor the evangelisation of their native country. Now, my friends, these Chinese are either onr Inferiors or our equals or our superiors. If they are inferior, there is no danger that they will ever become oar mas Flat sknllseaa not ml.

high forehead a Stupidity-wUi vtr dotntail'-e Targe trnrto-It they are our equals, then they ought to have equal tights. If they are onr superiors, then we can' not afford to Insult them. Do yon know who these men are? Their ancestors have forgotten more than we ever knew. Education is far more general in China than in America. Yoa can not find a-Chinaman that can not read and write, while yoa can find tens of thousands of Americana who can not write their own name.

Ages before othetpvatlons heard of it the Chinese Invented printing, paper, mak ing gun-powder, the marUIer compass and porcelain. Five hundred yeeb before Christ came Confuciuasnticlpatedv.ihe Golden Rule, and when asked to compreVj Into one sentence a directory for human life, said, "Do not unto others what yoa would not have them do I think the Chinese are God's favored na tion. Why? Because He has made more of them than any other kind of people. More over, He has made China the wealthiest of all lands. Oh, the ruby, and tbe amethyst, and the porphyry, and the turquoise, and the Jas per, and the agate, and the sapphire, and the lapis lazuli, and the crystal Enough pre cious stones to build tbe four walls ol heaven! Oh, the gold, and the stiver, and the copper, and the salt, and the coal, and the lead, and the iron that lie waiting tor the cellar door of her great hills to be opened I Ob, the wood, and the ebony, and the camphor, and the cypress, and the varnish-tree, aad the the ivory to be transformed Into the cabinet-work of the nations! Ob, the wheat, and the barley the mango, and the lneapple.

and the orange, and the perslm mona. and tbe cocoa Duta, and tbe rice enough to provide pudding for all the earth, and tea enough to refresh all nations. Yoa stupid man, to begrudge the Chinese room here! Why, it all implies a permission to go there. Before many years there will be more Amer icans in China than Chinese In America. The Question all over China will be, Shall the Americans go? If Americans went to Call fornia by emigrant wagons when it took six months, do yoa not suppose that New Yorkers and Long Islanders will in great multitudes go to China when they can go in five weeks? It Is the design of Providence to put all tbe nations on Wheels, moving them East, West, North, South The tide happens to be aettins this war.

but after one country is tolerably populated tbe tide will set tbe other way toward Ireland, toward Germany, toward Switzerland, toward China. Alt the natives will Intermarry until far down in the future a man will have tbe blood of fifty nation alities In his arteries, and there will be only one nation left occupying the five continents- I nn arand homogeneous, great -hearted, ail climated, five-coned, world-encfrcllng Chris- the the an 1 a Is of I I Man nation. -They broke to pieces as tneiwno were exiled from other lands, coming Tower of Babel; tbey will come together at tbe throne of Christ. Under tbe shadow of one tbey were eon rounded under the light ox the other they will be harmonised. Aaaln it is objected that tbe Chinese who eome to this conn try sxe mere slaves under the honilut OI ue BIX kumiH iuuiiva vun- oonuage oi oi I mIm-sina-Ynn Company, panles-Slm-Yup Company.

Klng-Chon Com- pony, Bang-wo company, I Deny, Hop-Wo Company, Yaa-Wo Company. Wing-Yung Com- Now. say the two political pUtforms. w.dont want any slaves of suet nere. jeariu Emigration Companies give free Passage to I these Chinese, they contracting wim iu pan.e.

ret here. ThUlS al nonorauie mm contract ever made In New York skin. I warn to tro to Italy to miuI, rt and hava not th. DiOBer to go with. vnnaavt "I will Day all your expenses.

If all th. nature, von make the first year la Rome yoa will give me." Right! Isltnot Jastas right for the Six Chinese Com panics to say poor, ana mmti nsssaffs and food across the Pacific Ocean, wo.monw r'J-'- na jsasaw vvw I mAKe." miiablt 0100. TBt VBlneBw "IW fWlBf WW ska taisa sfyvsvtrvsTL. AAnnfPV ttrtl DO mOrU TMsaY VI sU Mia vviasrw- I ri Si. yoa Uwyer.

are slaves of the client. who give you III ouuuers for undertaking a job. These prepay yoo Man tm. CU nesen. Tn, Unk, Itt lh.

political plat- Anti-Chinese piani in of 'ruVoa neonle of the Atl.ntle la tba mot I Coast thai this Chlner scare is tne moss I I I I I I I I i I and absurd humbug that bu been on the American people. After twenty-five years of emigration, aa compared with the emigration of other nationalities. Is snow-flake on a sea. Do not be afraid they will overcome us. The Chinese Government la opposed to the departure of her people, and at alow rate they have been coming, as com-pared with other nationalities.

they will never trouble us with their numbers. What a pitiable thing It 1 that the two Kreat political parties had, for the sake of getting the Electoral vote of California, put in an tl -Chinese plank, thus Insulting the largest nation that Ood ever created. I was not surprised at the Democratic party, because they Dt alwars said that tlia color and race question was a reasonable Question. But when saw the Republican party, which had fought four years' horrible war for the aake of es- tabl lab lug that all colors before Qod and the law had equal rights, when I saw that party surrender that National principle which they had purchased with the blood of 600.000 men, and widowhood and orphanage, all the land over, making a diflerent regulation for the yellow man from what they had made for the black man, I said of that party. "Her scepter gone.

The simple fact la this: In 1784. nearly a een tury ago, the American flag first appeared In over and be sociable and neighborly. In ISM the Government of the United States said practically: "Oh, yon dear Chinese! Do come over and see us. Come and bring your work with yoa." In 1858 we practically said: "Oh, you dear, dear Chinese, we cant live without Do, do come and see us and live with us." In 18C7 we sent Mr. Burllngame.

skillful Embassador, to say practically: "Oh, you dear, dear Chinese, you have no idea how much we think of you! Yon are on our minds and hearts day and night. We dream about Burllngame acted so pleasantly that he has been deified by the Emperor of China, and has become one the gods of that Nation. The Chinese said. "Will you protect us? "Oh. yes, you shall not only be protected, but yoa shall be welcomed.

Yoa shall worship what god you will. Dear me, if yoa will only come we will do any thing to make you feel at home." Over- persuaded and against all their National habits they came. But finally the pot-house poli ticians got hold of the question and stirred up against the Chinese the hoodlums of San Francisco, the most accursed population with rhlch any city was ever afflicted, Kear ney their And the Cbim are maltreated as no foreign people have been, brlckbatted and slain in the streets; as no other Nation, made to pay a tax for the privilege of entering the country; after arriving here, made to pay tax to a Gov ernment which refuses to defend them taxed for atreet-cIeanlOTs, while not one dollar of It was spent on their Chinese quarters. In other words, oar United States Government, in the sight of God and the Nationa, broke its treaty Eight hundred thousand dollars did the Chi nese Government cheerfully pay as ind.m- nlty for the bad treatment of some Americans la China The Government of the United 8tates refused to pay indemnity for the wrongs inflicted on Chinamen in this coun try. In the name of Almighty Ood the God of Nations, who made of one blood all people Impeach the United States Government for lu perfidy toward tbe Chinese.

I want to forewarn the people of the At lantic against Joining In any crusade against tbe Chinese, as they are now coming into these States. While yoa meet the mul titudes of Europe at Castle Garden with hopes for their future prosperity, have the same treatment for of Asia, who by the great Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads are being forwarded over the Sierra Nevada. Offer them civilization and Christianity. There Is no Gospel in brick bats. Under a Government, like this there is no room for violence.

The most insignificant, abandoned, besotted. leprous Chinese that ever lav in lazaretto will tvwws long as God Uvea. He ts immortal. That Chinese Nation is going, to be saved whether Traus-Paciflo or Cls-Pacific. In the millennial glory will yet stand aide by side Europe, Africa, America Aala.

The Boeky Mountains and tbe Himalaya will answer each other with salvation echo. Aji to the whole question of Chinese emigra tion let me encourage you by the thought that the God, of Nationa will regulate that In the right way. Ever and anon in this country we fly about In great excitement as though every thing were going to pieces. But God never gets excited. The Chineso question, is going to be settled.

What a time we had with the slavery question! For half a century the North proposed one thing and the Sooth proposed another thing. Matters grew worse. Missouri Compromise; that didn't settle It. Fugitive Slave Law passed; that didnt settle it. Colonization Society worked vigorously; that didn't settle It.

Riots In all the cities; that didnt settle it. Ecclesiastical Courts passed resolutions, and Congress deliberated for a quarter of a century; that didn't settle it. LoveJoys printing press thrown Into the Ohio River, and Pennsylvania Hall burned In Phil adelphia, and negroes shot, negroes tarred and feathered, negroes hung all that didnt settle it. Then God rose up and said: "All human wisdom has failed. I will settle it." And he settled It at Shiloh.

and Corinth, and South Mountain, and Gettysburg settled It by the graves Of one million of brave Northern, and Southern dead. So this Chinese problem Is vast, complicated, tremendous. Ch Inese eml ration, together with tbe qnestlon of all other foreign emigration. Is a question higher than tbe dome of your City Halls, higher than the heathen gooddess on the top of tbe Capitol at Washington, higher than the highest chaich- steeple, so high that It is on a level with the throne of God, and the same power that eontrpls the tides of the ocean, sending them this way and that, will decide the great tides Of human emigration, turning them wherever He Will. If He say come, they will eome; If He say go, tbey will go.

Do not get nervous about their coming and build a tilgh. strong wall to keep them out, while you letotber Na tions come in. Such a wall would be shaken with the earthquake of God's Indignation from beneath and struck with tbe thunder- bolts of God's wrath from above, and it would DeAy and rock and fall upon the demagogues who constructed It, and upon the Nation that favored It and upon the Christianity that was too cowardly to denounce it, and God would say: "I built that American temple for civil and religious liberty and the Gospel tbst would have all men saved. I founded that temple in the blood of the American Revolution. Its arches were lifted by ttoe shoulders of men who died for their principles.

Its bsntismal fonts were filled with tears of those her for refuge. The swords of your patriot ancestry were the trowels that mortared the foundations. Bat yoa have sacrificed on your altars the swine of passion and hate. You defaced her pillars by unholy handa r-t it to down, column and capital, arch and aaa null wvro goaerona people, and in soms brighter age of the world, wui aemonstraie oeiore earvu KB4 heaven how I would have all man equal tTn Newark Natea. rectal.

arsrsTca to Tarn sacacraKB. Kivau, Ohio, September Tbe verdict of tbe Coroner in the Winters ease. In which a man and wife were killed by tbe cars near Newark a Friday last, on a crossing of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, exonerates the Comnany from ail blame. Aa effort waa made by friends of the deceased to prove that at tbis particular crossing the approaches-wens in a bad condition, aad the place a dangerous ana. A man by tbe name of James Klpp was ar- Mted at one o'clock this morning on a west-hound train by Ofticer Griffiths tor blrhwsy arcuuisvu govt from that place- OMlMry AMMtt'lU Tl a sa ftaMVisvaaa rxT, Ohio.

September lMra. Soil, of I eouniy, fortr rears, died thia aged ninety- -Em Pess.A September H. B. Fleming; a veteran of the War of 1812, died to-dsv. He was baroneted at the capture of port Erie, and so tiered fromtoe wound till the day ol niaaeain.

WAR III the HPCajPg YtHej Coal BegiOBS. I An Outbreak in Calico Charlie's Black Diamond Domain. Five HiBdted WklteBIiereTake Possessloi of the Village of Coraiag. The Militia Called Oat and Me "With, a Warm Reception. a tataa weoaaiaf ei Tore ex tat sea.

srwisa msrATca to raw "prorrasa. uoLTOCircrs, uhio, Beptemoer is. ins irre pressible confliet.belween the Union miners and thecapitallsUinth.Sanday Creek Valley at Corning still continuea The company Of Ohio National Guards at New Lexington were are to-day greater tban ever and, struggle between the invading miners from the mining centers in tbe Hocking, region end the managers of the Ohio Central Mines, backed by their Virginia negroes, begins to resemble actual war. As has been explained heretofore, tbe eon- test between the miners and the operators at Corning ia a vital one, which all the miners in Ohio, aa well as tbe coal operators, are watehing with the liveliest solicitude. It is a contest upon tbe result of which, much de pends whether or not machine mining shall succeed in the great coal fields of Ohio.

Another and equally important consideration for both sides Is tbst the operators have massed at Mine No. near Corning, a larger number of negro miners than have ever been brought into Ohio and worked in a body, Tbe white miners In the Hocking'Valley, after a bard fight, first forced out the im ported white employee of the Central mine at Straltavllle. Tbe white men were bounced, and the old emp'oyes were taken back by the managers nnder protest, but at the figures demanded by tbe miners. Tbey next moved on Longstreths mines, on tbe Snow Fork branch of the Hocking Valley, lnduoed the laborers, who were working with the machines at day laborers' wages, to come out and gained tbelr point so as to compel Longstreth. one of the heaviest operators in Ohio, to psy forty-two cents a ton for the ma chine-mining as they hal done at the Central nun.

in -strattsvme The miners having carried every thing be fore them In the Hocking Valley, next eon' centra ted on Corning. At that little mining center, situated la one of the most lnexhanstl-. ble basins of bituminous coal In America, there are very few resident white miners. The white employes of a month sgo refused to work on the sliding scale basis which has already been explained. The objection, as haa already been stated, was not so much on ac- eonntof any present Injustice feared by the miners as the fact that It would In conrse of time enable tbe Sunday Creek operators' rivals of tbe wealthy Hocking Valley coal kings to cat prices and reduce their own wages In proportion whenever they saw an opportunity of running their own product into markets where tbe Hocking operators now have such a powerful foothold, When the disturbances took place at Straits- vine and at Longstreth's Mines there nothing said about sending in the troops, and Governor Foster bravely al lowed the operators there to fight out their own bajttjes.

The two districts are antagonistic to the Corning In teres ta. This was done, notwithstanding that there waa more force and violence at Stralta vllle waa ever attempted at Cor- When, Acskiisturhancca be gan to -brew- at however, there was the greatest anxiety In the Gov ernor's and Adjutant-General's office to rush down troops forthwith. The Governor remained np until after midnight. A train was kept fired np to take several companies from this city, and nothing was wsntlng save a formal demand from the Sheriff of Perry County, which that official refused to make. Governor Foster Is a large owner In tbe Ohio Central Railroad which carries the coal mined at Corning.

He waa also largely in volved In the Ohio Central Coal Company when the trouble broke out, but says he sold his interest. Nevertheless, even if he has disposed of all his mine stock, the men en gaged la tbe enterprise are his intimate and business associates, and his sympathies can not belp being with them as against the Hock ing Valley miners and the Interests centered His appointees in the Adjutant General's Office understand this clearly, and troops would have been quartered, at the State's ex pense, at Corning long ago bad the Sheriff of Perry County acceded to the prayers and en treaties poured In on him. So far the Sheriff seems to have acted with strict Impartiality, and has refused to lead bis official action toward either farthering or retarding corpora tion gains. Governor Foster arrived in the city at ten minutes after three-this afternoon. On his way back to tbe city from Matomoras In Washington County, where he bad been making a speech, the first Intelligence he bed of the trouble at Corning wss on getting a Cincinnati Ebqtoibkr at MoundsvUle, this forenoon, on the line of the Baltimore and Oh'o Road.

Tbe first news the Governor had of any thing further was on hiaarrival at the Union. Depot here, where a man. not designated, gave him tbe important in formation that the most of Corning had been burned to the groond, and Assistant-Adjutant General Smith, on the receipt of the above, by authority vested in him by the Governor be fore be left on his electioneering trip, ordered out two Companies of the Fourteenth Reg iment, Ohio National Guards, to proceed to Corning Immediately by a special train on the Ohio Central Railroad. Upon arriving at Corning Colonel Freeman waa ordered to- report for orders to Sheriff Martin, of Perry County. This order read, "By order of tbe Governor," and waa signed by Colonel Smite, Assistant Adjatent-General, before tbe official notice had been received from Sheriff Martin that the ourteenth Regiment had been ordered out.

The incen diary part of this story wss false, bat, nevertheless, it was industriously circulated about the depot and in the city. Tha first official information that came from Corning waa a aispatch from Sheriff Martin, dated at Corning at two o'clock this afternoon. and running as follows "GovKnxoa Chas. Fosrm: IToave the New Lexington company here, but not sumeient force to protect persons and property. Please send two more companies Immediately.

-Hxksy Maa-rur, "Sheriff of Perry There waa considerable correspondence from Colonel Lement, of the Ohio Central Mines at Corning, which Colonel Smith quests be not made public All the correspondence heretofore was mostly from the mine-owners, and the action heretofore taken in th. Adjutant-Geoeral'a office seems to have been based- on the appeala made for aid from these parties. Tbe anxiety on the part of Colonel Lenient and his colleagues at Corning is believed to have been caused by the fear that the white miners would Induce the negroes to leaVe work aad Join them. more tban py any fear of violence or danger of destruction to property, Colonel Freeman, on receiving the orders to take two companies to Corning, got consider ably excited, and attempted to have a riot alarm rung oa the city fire-bell. Instead of ringing in what he Intended, be rung in an alarm which sent tbe Fire Department pell- mell to the County Infirmary.

A second attempt waa made, and the riot "alarm was at last sounded. As there was no riot in I corning, me ciusens, vaenwej the cause of the blundering, were somewhat indlcnant at being disturbed by Freeman's unusual method of calling out his warriors. Colonel Freeman got off with part of three i companies at six o'clock. There were one hundred men in all, and making one hundred at 3. a a and fifty.

Captain Smith's New Lexington Company being already on the ground. The Palmer Guards, a colored organization, turned out, and were much chagrined that they, too. were not taken along to share in the fun. The Columbus companies got to Corning a little before nine o'clock. A rumor prevailed half-past seven o'clock to-night that two colored miners had been shot, but this la not believed to be reliable and as Governor Faster had received no word to that effect up to tea o'clock.

At 7:45 the following telegram was received from Colonel Lement: "During the exchange of shots between sol diers and miners three of the miners were wounded. None of our men were hart. The yew Lexington company did the The dispatch. It will be seen, contradicts the rumor of. colored men being killed.

Babse- eelved Ay General Thomas: "The troops nave arrived. There is nothing threatening. Guards are being detailed for each mine and- depot. Dont expect any farther trouble to-night. I think wo are now masters.

W. G. Lxxkjkt-" MiDsnGHTv The following telegram was re ceived from Colonel Lemert by General Thomas at ten forty-five to night: "I am too tired to report folly. At five o'clock tbey divided Ltmert her refers to the white miners their forces Into three divisions, and simultaneously attacked us on the ridges north and sooth sides of mine No. Their column on the south hill was folly two hundred strong and well armed.

They were halted by oar men and responded with volley, thereupon the strikers opened fire along the whole line on both ridges, and the battle lasted- five minutes. Three men were wounded. Tbey then retired precipitately. Since then all has been quiet. At seven o'clock they attempted to organise a force to storm us, but most of them decided to leave.

"LlXKET." Since this was received another dispatch which stated that one of tbe wounded men was named Young. Another was wounded in the hip, and the extent of other wounds are not known. The story of the firing as given above la that of the mine managers. Tbe miners' version may be materially different. The following telegram waa received eleven o'clock to-night from the Colonel of the Fourteenth Regiment: "Arrived O.

K. All quiet now. Fighting this afternoon. Men all on guard. I anticipate no trouble to-night.

Will telegraph yoa the situation at midnight and at six in the morning. George D. Freeman. Mr. Bowman, book-keeper of the Ohio Cen tral Mining Company, arrived here this evening.

He left Corning at one o'clock this afternoon. He says there were at no time more than five hundred men In Corning, either yesterday or to-day, up to the time he left. is of ska Military. erncTAT. bispatcbi to mm sarumazm.

New Lzxibgtox, Ohio, September 19. In obedience to the order of Governor Foster, tbeEwlng Guards, Captain T. J. Smith com manding, assembled and banked last night at Armory Hall to await farther orders. To-day little before noon the long roll was beaten, th.

company having received orders to proceed -at once to Corning. The boys quickly fell into line, marched to the Ohio Central and boarded the ears that were in waiting. It is estimated that four, hundred vr five hundred miners came over from StfsltsvUlS and Bhawneetown last night, snd hundreds of others came over today. Some demonstrations were made on the picket-line aurrounding the col ored miners last night, but no actual collision occurred. A train of empty ears went north ward on the Ohio Central this afternoon.

It Is said, to bring In more military- The situation looks serious, bat the general belief is no collision will occur between the dissatisfied fnlners and the State troops. Latkbv A train passed here at 8 o'clock this evening with three companies of tbe National Guard aboard, bound for Corning. Rumors are afloat that th Ewlng Guards have been surrounded by ambers, but nofTtMieh Tsllsneeis plsosd ia the tfEWS NUGGETS Gleaned From Many Fields, And Garnered Toy Industrious Delvers in tbe Enquirer's Mines of Information. Part UlstM, Ohio. A CARV1ST FINED.

Poet Cr-nroir, September 10. Chaa. Honta, who stabbed Wm. Palmer aa mentioned -in cost in the Probate Court this afternoon. autorestarts, Ohio.

KB. surra's aisroBTuif a. Mn-t-ERSBUito, September 19. Wm. Smith, of Winesburg, Holmes County, feu off a high fence and broke bis arm and dislocated his shoulder, besides being bruised otherwise.

vllle. Ohio. BVBOLART. Zaitesvili-K, September 19. Burglars en teredthe residence of Charles Pickering, on North Fourth street, Saturday night, and stole two salts of clothes.

Tbey effected aa en trance through a back window. No clew. Betleroatalae, Ohio. FATAL AOCIDKMT. BaXLEroirTAiKK, September 19.

Major Peter Stamata. a well-known insurance man. was thrown from his baggy last night at ten o'clock, sustaining Internal Injuries from which he died at three o'clock this morning. Ohla. ABRKSTKD Olf SUSPICIOir.

WrtUASstDio, September is. A man namedllay. who boarded at Amelia, Ohio, and in this place daring the summer, waa ar rested at Blanchester, Ohio, last night by our Marshal, and brought here on suspicion of having stolen a horse from John McAffee, near this place, and one from Phil. Offutt, of Amelia, at the same time. or walla.

Otaie. TATAT. BKSUIT Or A ZUXAWAY ACODZXT. Nobwalk, September 19. Mr.

J. McMaster, a farmer living in Greenfield, about ten miles from this place. died yesterday from injuries sustained the day before. He waa hauling wheat and his team ran away. He was dragged by one foot for some distance, and wheel pasted over his body.

He leaves a wife and two children. Mella. oato. smrcinn. Mkdixa.

September 18. E. G. Honck. tailor, of tbis place, left bis family on Friday morning with the Intention, aa he said, of go ing Into tbe country to boy hay.

His body waa found thia morning In Rocky' River, two miles east of Medina, with a bullet-hole in his left temple. His revolver lay near him. It ia doubtless a ease of suicide, aa be had at tempted it once before. Wfaeellwar. West Tlrgisila.

WAYLAID AID SOBBUD. Whkexihq, September 19, This morning about half-past three o'clock Newton Mem- dangb, of Morristown, while passing down Sixteenth street, at the corner of Kofi, was at tacked by some person or persona, nocked and kicked senseless ana robbed of a fine gold watch and He waa found some hours later ana taxen to pmiw oeu -quarters. He has no idea who committed the deed. Tbe police have the matter ia cnarge. lesIasTlUs, KeataekV.

STOI-Bir BOBSa BBOOVBSCm. HicHOiJUnriiAX, September 19. Rev. T. W.

Axllne yesterday recovered the horse stolen from htm last week. It a found In Jackson COnntv. where. It is said, a young man of High Bridge had sold him. This Is tbe turd or fourth stolen horse that haa been taken there lately.

Officers went to srrest the yonng man esrlv this morning, bat be escaped. Two hones be'lonziDK to lr. J. Welch disap peared, and the High Bridge people say that this party was trying to hire some boys to ride extra horses last night presumably Welch's. A Ike.ee.daat af Miles Staadiate.

Nobwich Conx September 19. Lafayette S. Foster, born In Franklin, Connecticut, No- vember 22, lSOtt, and a direct descendant of Mile. Standi died this morning after a brief Illness. WASHINGTON.

Soma Business Talk From the South. Bamago Dona to Cincinnati by Her Hepublican rress. Slort-Siuted JPolicy of Infuriated and Derperate rarUsana. Diversion of Soatbera Trade to East-- era Cities. civa Servies Xsfsrst in the Cheap is Bs-formers' Departmeat.

eraciAi. aisrATCw ro raw WABHuroroir. IX September 1S.18S3. A Baslmssi View. A prominent dry -goods merchant of this city called In at the ExquiBEB bureau tonight and said: "While I am not a resident of Cincinnati, as every Ohloan, feel great pride In the growth and prosperity of the Queen Crty of tbe West; and the great Increase of trade' that haa been brought about by tbe opening of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad only shows what the future may be if the proper policy ia pursued.

A few days ago a number of gentleman were sitting on tbe veranda at one of tbe Virginia Sprinca. Ohio, Tennessee, Georgia. Alabama and Virginia were all represented la the group. Aa usual, politics was the chief topic of conversation. One gentleman from Georgia said: Why la It that a portion of the press of Ohio, snd Cincinnati particularly, are so bitter In their invective and denunciation of the South.

On tbe one hand we, are called traitors, rebels, Ku-Klux, cut-throats, and every thing bat, gentlemen; on the other, they point oat the great advantage of the Sooth trading with Clncln nati. It seems oar money la good enough, bat oar political preferences are heresy, and we should be kept uoder, as they term it. Cer tainly Cincinnati's busineHS men can not expect aeontlnuance of the trade from oar section if we are to be continually denounced in this manner. Now, on my plantation 1 have thirty-four separate families of tenants, all white. Most all of their supplies, each as agricultural Implements, dry goods, Ae come from Cincinnati.

Tbey all read the papers. A few days aso I heard them talking the matter over, and they said In future they would send to New York, although It waa further. I confess I feel as they do, and shall aid them if this abase continues, although I prefer Cin cinnati, and would rather trade with the Wort. Thia was the sentiment of all prawnt, representing many and varied Tbe Model Reformer. Secretary Scburs, the suthor of the ro-called Civil Service Reform policy of thia celebrated Administration, does not demonstrate well In the light of a microscopic examination or his administration of the Interior Department.

According to the official register of the Department of tbe Interior, there were borne upon tbe rolls of that Department on January 1, 1879, the names of 1,429 persons appointed to office by the President and Secretary of tbe Interior, the names of those appointed lo minor places by subordinate officers of the Department not being given In the register. Tbe Presidential appointments, limited In number, are generally made upon tbe recommendation of the Secretary. So that, to all Intents and purposes, the head of the Department is responMOlc for whatever changes are made In tbe several offices thereof. From the advent of Mr. Schurs as Secretary of the In terior to the date of the report, January Ju 1879, a period of but little more than twenty-one months, 723 n.

appointments were made in the several offices, which new appointments constitute a portion 'of the total number of 1,429, being sabre than 0 per cent. Of the aaliro lore, jg St Irish Tteed Apply, Secretary Sch an, who haa returned, denies the story thst he is to marry Miss Irish. His friends say tbe story haa been so often and explicitly denied, and nevertheless so persistently Is ipubllshed by some one who seems to make it his business, that steps have been taken to discover who the person Is thst Indulges In such disreputable practice as this Iterated publication seems to be. TO THI ASSOCIATED rSEBSL Washington, D. C-, September 19.

General Walker, Superintendent of Census, has replied to the letter of 'the Confederate General Anderson, wbo returned to General Walker his sword, captured from him during the war at Ream's Station. General Walker cordially thanked General Anderson tor his generosity and ihoaghtfnlness. and aaid he would prise the weapon all the mora because of its his tory since w. war. COLORED KU-KLUX.

Peaceable Spectator Hardered and a Balldlna; Uesaollahed By a Xegra pasrtleaa Clabw dispatch to ux xxacrasa. PrrrsBCBa, Pejx, September 19. At mid night Saturday niaht a riot occurred on Pen avenue, at Twenty-eighth street, the scene of tbe July riots, between a lot of negroes and a number of working men. It seems that the colored men, wbo are employed at the Black Diamond steel-works aa paddlera, at reduced wages, and are, therefore, known among the working class as "scabs," bad been com- oelled by their employers to organise a Garfield Club. They paraded Saturday and wavn near the saloon of Chris Schubert, on Penn avenue, tbey allege some one fired a revolver at them.

Tbe ne groes then made a rush for Schubert, who was standing on the pavement, and he ran into Una's saloon, which adjoina his establish menu The negioea followed, and beat blm over tbe bead with wooden axes and sabers. Injuring him, it is thought, fatally. Tbe ne groes tben demolished the building. A large crowd gathered, and a score of were drawn and fired, and the negroes were compelled to beat a retreat. Two or three persona were slightly Injured besides Schubert.

It is claimed by parties present that the. negroes jrere tbe aggressors, one party present stating that a negro hit a by stander over the head with a torch. Tbe workmen wbo live In the district are very much worked op against tbe negroes, not only on account of the fight, but also on account of their having taken the positions of the white poddlers at, tha steel-works. IIXIBEBAL LMEstALfk. A Spilt la the Lemgwo A Delegate Uxhtly Saeafea of Hell, aad Bob Ingersoll Abnadeaa ta Aaseelattanw Chicaoo, lu.

September 19. The Liberal League last night discussed the proposed platform until a fter midnight. Colonel Ingersoll wished to substitute for the plank abrogating the COmstoek laws a resolution that the Com mittee of Defense wherever It is claimed that a person has been indicted tor whst that person r.iTr. to have been aa honest exercise freedom of thought and expression, shall In vestlgate such ease, and If tt appears that he has beea guilty of no -offeoss, then the Committee shall defend him. If he is unable to defend He ssld they wanted It understood that the Church power mast not smother the liter- Stare- of Liberalism.

They could not under take to defend all tbe slosh that is written In thia country. They had not time to go into the question of authority the United States may have over tne malls. In one an the Government assuredly had a right to say what shall go Into the mails. Until tbe Christian world should expunge obscenity from their Book, they would demand that the lawa against obscene literature shall be executed aealnst the Bible. He has confidence In the Federal Courts to try these esses.

Mr. Wskeman, in answering, declared that all such trials shall be HT State Courts, and If a jury in a State Court found a man guilty, let him go to hall. i A lady delegate inquiring what the League A lady delegate inquiring what the League had to do with bell, the speaker sabsUtnted had to do with bell, th. speaker substituted The-Eternal bow-wows." The debate became quite warm. Colonel llngersoU protesting that he was trying to! H.

of keep the League from destroying Itself to knock some sense Into Its Mr. MeCraeken offered a resolution demanding such modification of the Comstork lsws that their execution, wiy protect citixena ta the right of freely exercising their optnlona. and spreading them through the mails. Colonel Ingersoll and Mr. Green declared that if the original- resolutions were adopted they would withdraw from the League, which statements were greeted with applause and cries of "Good Both amendments were tben voted down, and th.

resolutions reported by tbe Committee were adopted. Colonel Ingersoll then announced his resig nation aa Vice-President of tbe The resignation was accepted, aad Mrs. Julia Severance, of Milwaukee, was elected In his place. The resolutions adopted, Inaddltlon to those slready mentioned, declare it expedient for the League to co-ope rat. with political par ties to accomplish the objects of the platform, and to nominate candidates for office as soon aa they have sufficient strength to make such nominations effective; urge that in 1881 the Laexue nominate a President whom the entire League pledgee Itself to support; demand State and United States lawa to defend the liberty of the press and speech, and to allow free circulation through the mails of publications irrespective of relialooa or other views.

They declare that they do not demand thia to abet any frauds, lotteries, obscenity or other wrong-doing; but. on the contrary, oppose the dissemination, by- mall obscene literature. Inspired or uninspired, and call on the Christian world to expunge the Indecent parts of the Bible. Such offenses, however, should be punished through tbe criminal Courts, and not by persons responsible to Amateur Sernl-Teolocleal Societies; they disapprove the Comstock Laws, which are fraught with danger to the rights snd liberties of the people, for reasons fully set forth, and urge their repeal as unconstitutional, and aa giving Improper jurisdiction to the United Courts and as bringing the inviolability of the mails Into question. While not spprovlng offenses by Lent, Train, Hey wood and Bennett, yet they regard their conviction and accusation as outrages far exceed ins the offenses.

MISSOURI MURDER. Cowardlt Assassination of a Well-Known Cltixen. Sr. P. H.

Talbett Skot by aa TJaka.wa Parson Wails at the Bedside ei His Sick Wife. jrnciAt nisrATca to tmm CTQcrnn. Haktviixs, ko, Seoteniber 19. Our elty waa thrown Into an latena. excitement last Saturday night at a late hour by the an nouncement of the fact that Dr.

P. H. Talbot editor 'and proprietor of the Greenback Stand ard, of thia elty, had been assassinated in cold blood In his own boose by some unknown person. Early thia morning your representative went to tbe residence of Talbott, three miles sooth of Maryvllle, to ascertain as nearly as possible the facta concerning, the deed. The doctor waa last seen in Maryvllle Sat urday evening at six o'clock, after which hour be departed for his house.

He reached there safely, and there found a neighboring farmer waiting for hlni to go and see a sick child. This he did, returning about nine o'clock, ac cording to the statement of his son Albert, a young man aged twenty-four years. After coming home, his father went into the cham ber where his mother waa lying on tbe bed( and, after taking off his eoat and vest, sat down oa tbe bed. Albert says he was at this time sitting by a window reading, with his arm resting oa the wlndow-alli. when at the moment his father had his band up to his aide, a ballet shot with terrible force from a gun from the outside of the building came into the room, shattering the pane of glass, pass ing Uroogb aeortaia and thence striking his father, first cutting off two of bis fingers aad tben passing Into and entirely through bis side, graxlng the leg of Mrs.

Talbott and lodg ing In the wall beyond. Immediately npon being shot, the doctor sprang to tbe floor and cried "Murder; I'm shot," and tried to reach a gun that was in the room, bat could not do so, sua fell back on the bed. Tbe son says he grasped the gun and went to the door, where he beard hurried steps passing by the front of, th. bouse. He opened the door and saw a retreating; torra, at which he fired, but without effect.

This la all tbe family appear to know of the matter; and there Is no clew to the perpetrator of this hor rible crime. Tbe boll with which Dr. Tali ott waa shot was afterward found, and weighed over an ounce. An hour before tbe death of the murdered man your reporter went to his bed-side where he found him suffering greatly, and gradually bearing death's door. He stated that It was hard for a man who had beea laboring, as he had for the past fifty-one days.

In conducting bis paper, and wbo had been honored with a number of letters from tbe Greenback candl date for Vice-President, should thus be shot down by a midnight assassin in bis own house. There aie numerous theories regarding his death, bat the generally received opinion is that some person with whom he bad dealings or a falling out had committed the foal deed. No person believes polities had any thing to do with tne murder. Dr. Talbott was born and raised In Hocking County, Oblo.

and moved to Nodaway twenty-eight years ago. He amassed a fortune by tbe practice of medl cine, and was considered an honorable man in all bis dealings. He was a Greenback speaker and writer of considerable pVomlnence, and daring tbe past tsro mouths has been editing the Greenback Standard, which be baa owned for a year past. Tbe deceased leaves a wife and large family of children to mourn his loaa. His death has cast a gloom over the en tire community, and do effort will be spared to bring the perpetrator of the damnable deed to speedy Justice.

BV THE ARSENIC ROUTE. ftaleMo of Ktea Aaa-smta Wells at Sor- walk, oato. sraciAi, msrsTcw to van aacanaaa Nor walk, Ohio, September 19. Miss Au gusta Wells, aged twenty-nve, cornmiwea suicide as the borne of her parents on Marshall street last night by taking one-naii or ounce of arsenic about half-past nine o'clock. 8ty died st three o'clock this morning In great agony.

Io inquesiwuroe n.iu.as mm ia no doubt the rash act was premeditated, although its cause is unknown. She purchased the arsenie last evening, and went im mediately to bed, leaving part of her clothes and her lewelry on. After her death a note written by ner was found beneath the bead of her bed, addressed, "My Dear Mother. In it aha confessed having taken poison, disposed of her Jewelry and other property, and gave directions ss to her funeral, and urged her mother to be Careful In rearing the other children. This, as aear we eaa learn, is the substance of the note.

Tbe parents of tbe deceased refuse to show tbe note, but say Its contents may be made public after tha funeral, occurring to-morrow at two o'clock. Miss Wells hss figured prominently la Mveraireeent local scandals. at TTfscaa Uterary Fellera. St. Pavz Mm September 19.

A lady named Mrs. 8. S. Harris, wbo claims to be tbe minor of "Koutledse" and other popular novels. Injured by carnage accident here yesterday, died at half-past nine o'clock to night.

She came west from New York a year axo. There ia a mystery about her Wentlty and nothing can be learned of her antecedents iMtiiini. Editions of Marion toie Harris, author of Kentledge," do not reeog- also her, but among her papers la a maaa-scriDt of aa onfinlsbed novel by Mary Cole Harris, which sppears to be genu ins. Saw Fbahcisco, September 19. Michael TvHt th.

Irish aKltator, arrived at Oakland thMMMth -tha wis evenmg. to principal trw "J- uermania xaj. -H was aeiiverea presided. There was mack enthusiasm. OVER THE SEAS.

The French Cabinet Gone to HiiiiiterDe Freycinet Insist TJpoa THa HesigTAation, And ales Ferry Appointed to Ferra a IjTew Ministry. Th Steamship Aurora Foundered Fifty Lives Lost. FRANCE. Pabm, September IS. The letter of Coa stans.

Minister of tbe Interior and Worship, to tae Arcnoisnops, a conning to accept, tne de claration signed by tbe religious eontraternl- ties aa a substitute for toe demand for author lsatioa. says tha Government willingly takes note of the resolution manifested la the declaration to disclaim any. solidarity Ith political parties or passions; bat as regards the hope expressed by the dee- laratloa that tbe Government would allow the communities to continue the work fa which they are engaged, be declares that tne object of the second decree of March 2lh was pro- ctsely to pat aa end to the toleration which tbe communities desire to see maintained. and substitute for It a return to a legal state et things. Tbe Ministerial crisis recommenced thia morning, because of a divemnca of vim between De Freydnet and Constans, relative to tbe application of the religious decreea.

President Grery haa again been obliged to postpone his departure for the Jura, aad will preside at a Cabinet Council to be held this afternoon. La France states that Bremler De Freyelaet has definitively teudered his resignation. Jules Ferry hss beea charged by President Gravy with the formation of a new Cabinet. De Freyelaet has sent the following letter to President Grevy "After mature reflection I have come to tha conclusion that the Cabinet can not be i structed as It waa yesterday. There serious doubts of Its duration.

Beti several of my colleagues and myself there exist divergences of opinion, whiea. leave no room for hope that accord maintained, even at tbe cost of mutual cessions. Such a state of things. If prolonged, would ba injurious to the Interests snd tranquillity of th. country.

I believe my retire, ment will offer the most prompt meana of solving the crisis. I beg yoa to accept my resignation." President Grevy, on receiving the letter, summoned De Freyelnet, and. In conjunction with several other Ministers, tried to tndaesi blm Jo recall bis resignation, bat De Frey-einet refused, and President Grevy flnslly ac cepted his resignation. Soon after Ministers Constans, Cassot and Fanre had a long convar- satlon with President Grevy. Ultimately Jules Ferry was charged with the formation of a Cablsef.

Regarding tbe sudden change In the posit last of affairs since Saturday, when the differanose between De Freyelnet and bis colleagues ap peared to be compromised. It haa transpired that De Freyelnet bad a farther consultation with Ministers Constans and Caaest, during which it became manifest that the agreemeat established at the Cabinet Council was unreal, snt ad 1 vergence of views between MDe Freyelnet snd his colleagues was irreconcilable, The 8oir says: 'Jules Ferry hss slready offered the Ministry of Marine to Admiral Polthaan." Several papers consider the Cabinet crisis will necessitate the early assembly of tha Chambers, TLoxDo-r, September 90. A dispatch frosn Paris says: 'Admiral Joreguibery, Minister Marine, and Vanoy.M in later of Public Works, have resigned. President Grevy baa tara- moned Gambetta. who attended at tbe Elysea, It Is qutt.

evident. Gambetta ia the rest author of tbe present crisis. IRELAND. Dcnuir, September 19. Pamell addressed a great meeting of tenan a-farmers at Ennls oa Sunday, and set forth the line of policy he wished to see carried out In order to sucnsa the early settlement of the land quest too.

The mala features of the programme ara unanimity of action among tbe Irish members, independence of all Kngllsh political parties, refusal to pay more than what tha tenapt considers fair rent, and social exenny manleation of any person taking a farm from which another has been evicted foe non-payment of rent. RUSSIA. St. Petersburg, September 19. The 0010 referring to tbe secrecy maintained In regard to the objects of theTekki Expedition, sayai In view of England's change of policy.

tbe execution of Russia's intention In gard to Merv Is no longer necessary. It will only be necessary to keep part of the steppe as a warning to the Tekkes in the future." Th'e article concludes ss follows Enough of victories snd annexations, lag Russia devote herself to Internal develop ment." DULCIGNO, I-ojcdox, September A Ragusa dispatch says: The naval demonstration hss beea postponed until the Christians Can leave Dsd- clgno, aa a massacre la feared. The vessels ill be unsble to keep tbelr station soon, as the autumn storms will begin In a Admiral Seymour, in a dispatch to Rera Pasha. Informs him he will be b.ld responsi ble for tbe lives of tbe Christiana his Jurisdiction. 8ERVIA.

BrXGiADK, September 19 A band of three hundred Servian brigands has crossed to tno Hungarian side-of the Danube. A battaUoa of troops hss been ordered to bar their war toward tbe interior. Much alarm ia felt among the traders of Western Servla. beeaassi of the recent large Increase of bands of rob bers. AFGHANISTAN.

LOKDOir, September II. The Viceroy at Indiana telegraphs: "Ayoob Kbsn is two marches beyond Glriskk on tbe road to Herat. It la rumored that the Zamlndawr peonta offered to assist him. but he refused. Tha telegraph line from Candahar to India been STEAMER AND FIFTY LIVES LOST.

Losrnojr, September 19. The steamer Aa- rora. from Oporto for Soot ham pton, foandsrofi Fifty persons were drowned. Wotea (rasa festrtsiKStold. arxciAX.

aasrATca torn jnaetaaa. SnuxarxxLO, Ohio, September 19. A lad named John Doyle, workin at Floyd's llvery stable, was kicked In the head by a horse today and badly injured. George Smith's team, stolen last night, wad found several miles out oa the Selma pike today, hitched to the fence. Two parties aso.

suspected as the thieves. A stable belonging to a man named Kelly, on Fair street, burned tbis sf ternoon. caused, it Sa stated, by- an urchin playing with matches la a straw pile. Tne horses aad other contents, except some hay, were aavoa. Insurance flow, which will probably cover tha loss.

Dr. E. Owen died to-day after a long Ulnesa, Dsm simil was on. of oar oldest and most sao-uiosfnl physicians, having com. here from Meebaaiesbarg about twenty years ago.

as eralle Rally at Wat sYatesa. wnut msrATCB to tsi sworTaxa. West Salas, Ohio, September 19. Tbe big geat political meeting held In this place waa the Democratic meeting last night. It waa addressed by Jodge Kenny.

It was a popular outburst, and not expected by either party. Maine did it. i Dld of tUM. Hrw Yoxx, September 1. J.

Elsky. merchant of Bradford, Peon, died In Crook's Hotel last alght from ta haling illuminating.

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