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Show :igniE SALT LAKE TIMES. jjjg SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, MONDAY, J ULY 28, 1800. NO. '2M. CAMBLINC AT LONG BRANCH. The Stories of Heavy Lo7.es Are Not New YoiiK, July 28.Tho stories of heavy losses at Long Branch aro Iu no wise exaggerated. Tho experience of the four bookmakers who at dropped one sitting has not been forgott- en..- That kind of play is now r.f night-ly occurrence. A coterie of Spaniards and Greeks has given a great impetus to the games. Hardly a night passes that the dealers and croupiers are not asked to raise the limit, aud as a New-Yor- Star man entered a club house the other evening a wealthy tobacco manufacturer of Jersey City had just been accorded the privilege of wagering $1000 on the turn of a card. Then it is no common thing for the original capi- tal of the player to run as high has $."0UO. In fact, Dick Roche, the St. Louis bookmaker, asks for a slack of twenty chips at a timo, each chip valued at $100. Everything is carried on the grandest scale. A player the other evening went into Daly's and made wagers around the various tables which cost him $1700. He simply ap-proached tho proprietor and said: 'John, I have markers against me at every table; please release them: here is my check for the amount." Then, again, when a little dispute occurred between two players about tho owner-ship of three checks calling for $130,the same host settled the difference of ouin- - ion by nodding to the faro dealer and saying: "Why, Dick, don't delay tho game for a little matter of that 'kind; pay both gentlemen." It is not very wide of the mark to say that Long Branch this year is a worthy rival of Monaco on the Mediterranean in its palmiest days. It is amusing to the public some times, but profitable to the gambling house keepers always, aud their guests must pay all the bills. g IS MORMON MONEY. Jti. SS Dstats of Tho Saints Are Buried in Various Enterprises in 5Jgb.; San Francisco. " ecru Z ,oVED BEF0EE THE SEIZUEE. ; ns of Dollars Carted Off to the k ' Coast in Advance of the U" Levying Process. Z i,rKsasco,July28.-ThoCh'r-on. !r' l's oocn ascurt!imed that ' ionly $700,000 worth of prop-i,lnirine-the Mormon church ' States marshal found ly the United when ho was instructed to - . ilMormon funds, from $5,000,000 y m'm .rth of Mormon capital m. nvtcd in San Francisco and other s fornia cities- - This money has been li,., " ei iu real estate and manufactur--enterprise- s under tho names of in- - duals who have made tho invest- - apparently, for the church m. its Dot 'n: fur themselves. his method has been adopted with the " pe that the United States government m nli find no trace of the money. The f" ,mion capital invested hero has been 2" .niifil by tho Pacific bank and by the t?r bank. It. H. McDon ' fir., of the Tacitic bank admits that 'd! .bank had handled Mormon funds :i m'ust'd to make public the tran- - lions. Bishop Cluscn of the Mormon church a the city, ami denies that Mormon iiital is invested here. Ho has been iociated iu financial transactions with " ;,x Badlam and Isaac Trumbo of this r iy for the past year. Trumbo is now j' Sail Lake City, and Badlam denies i' Chronicle's story. Til ARBJDISPUTiNG. The Eailroads and the Grand Army of the Eepublio Having Their Annual Eow. VILAS WANTS TO BE GOVERNOR. German Caiholio Societies in Convention The Bijou Theatre to Peek-a-Bo- o Scanlan. Rostov, July 28. Special. Tho railroads aud tho Grand Army aro again having a dispute about the rates which should be given to veterans who want to attend the encampment. The attendance at the encampment last year was not as large as usual as the railroads refused to graut the rates de-manded by the veterans and it looked during the earlier stages of the prelim-inary arrangements as if the eneamp-meti- t would be abandoned entirely. Wiser counsels, however, prevailed, but the railroads had signally failed to win the good will of tho veterans. The same conditions again prevail, and if they continue the feelings of the veter-ans against tho roads will be intensified. A PREACHER ARRESTED- - The Allalr is famine t'oulderalile XcrrL mcnt Iu Colli Water Kansas. Leavenworth, Kan., July 28. Early this morning Rev. A. S. F.mbree, pastor of the First Methodist church of this city, shot and killed a line grey-hound, the property of Dr. L. K. Hun-ter, a prominent physician. It is al-leged that the dog had been in tho habit of trespassing upon the grounds surrounding Rev. Embrce's ' resi-dence, and that all efforts to drive him away by throwing dishes and furniture at him had no effect. Tho minister resolved to gel rid of the dog. and, having procured a gun, when the dog made his usual morning rail today he took good aim. shot and killed him. Tho killing of the dog en-raged Dr. Hunser, who immediately swore out a warrant and caused Rev. Embrce's arrest, charging him with dis-charging tiro arms within the city limits, destroying private properly, disturbing the peace and maliciously maiming a domestic animal. The affair is causing considerable merriment and comment around tho city, on account of tho high standing of tho parties mixed up. Rev. Kiubree is an able and eloquent minister, and ho has of late been preaching a series of sermons agaiust the joitilists aud others, who were illegally selling liquor in this cilv, that, caused them great trouble and resulted in the for-mation of a law and order league. The liquor men are greatly pleased at Rev. Embree's arrest, and their two attor-neys have been instructed to appear against him iu the police court when the ease comes up tomorrow morning. CUE 1ST THE I'OI'E. The Only Ornament She Wore on Her Wedding Day Came From Hia Holiness, SHOCKED AT HI3 APPEARANCE. A Mm'age Ceremony That Hid Many Curioni and Exciting Features Con-nected With It, Viknva. July S3 Special j The marriage of Archduchess Marie Va-lerie to the Archduke Francis Nalvator, which was solemnised today vrtk bril-liant event. The ceremony, which waJ performed by the cardinal archbishop, took place iu tho parish church at Meld. At the nuptial num. at which tho cardinal officiated, the; bride and groom knelt In derp devotion. Tim cardinal, tn'foro performing thn rvr. inony, nd.lri-i.v-d the archduke) and tlm archduchess solemnly un the (.acred-nex- t of the sacrament which h wo about to administer to them. Tho only . ornament which lite archduchess wore, apart from the crown jewel. a li.iiiiU.mie diamond lioekUee, thn gift of the pope. Tim emperor and em- - j press denned much affected during this j ceremony, Those who know the em j i lor were shocked at hit appearance, j I hey claim that lie hntJ ngmi twenty year in thn ' Inst twelve 'month. The empress who wan never very popular with her subjects wept ropioiudy. 1 Ley eon struct! (his a a cmrolioration of the re port ill it she is mentally unbalanced. The rmM'ivvM-- ' tigure isttll Itihit and girliih. 'J lie wedding cue-- u were very lew, lit fact, only tin' bride, and bride-groom' nearest relative and not alt of these even were pivnout. Therruwn princess, who I at OMetid, and who Is still inolirnirig the death ot her bus-ban-was not at the reremohv. The limited attendance a caused princi-pally by the recent death of the l'vime Helen of Thurn and Taxi, but Irvsoum extent also by the fuel th;tt the till al which the emperor and empress reaidn ut Int-li- l is of very moderate ditiienoiaa. The rdding breakfast at wlueh the AiiHlriun aud Hungarian parliament iiinl government were rrprt-scntw-served In the large dining room of the hotel. The furniture, the rhino. glass, plate, raruct and hangings were seat from this city for the oernaion. Uf foreigu court only Berlin aud Munleh were ivpresentetl. All the erowmsl head of Europe, hewerer, dent eoally pr'rnN to the bride. There was mi military display of any kind, aad tho veteran of Us'lil and thn liri brigad furnished the guard. The emptiror for bade the itrclnlukes to accept the vnl-din- g presents whi.h the municipal council all over the empire toted tn her, and the (rrnnlx w id now, at thn Miggirttion of Ui majesty. dcrotwt t charitable object. solicitation, on the understanding that some time I might send for him. The darkest times for me were yet to come. 1 lost almost all hope in the litigations, and almost all my friends besides. But through all tho marquis wrote me cheering letters. Do you wonder that I have a great regard for him? I assure you those who ay he hos been seeking a fortune hi following me are sadly mistaken. "Finally all r.tniti out right, and one day I took a sudden notion and cabled over to him to come to me iu New York. Yes. I cabled to him that I would marry hiui. This was about live years ogo. He came over, but 1 did not marry him. somehow. He stayed around the city for rleveu months and then he went home. Yon see I thought a great deal of him. I do yet, vou know. I believed and yet believe dim disinterested. Hut well, he went back to England, anyway. Uavo we corre-sponded nineeV Well, yea. We are good friends, you know.1 "The last lime I went over it was for my health. I was very nearly worked out. Of course I saw the martinis. I saw him frequently, in fact. He wa in trouble and a. we were old friend he came to me for ivmpathy, and I gave it to him. He had sympathized with me iu my darkest times and I could not, of course, go back on him when he needed me. The marquis, perhaps you know, is extremely eccen-tric. Ho dresses iu an odd way that frequently excite ridicule and has mannerism aud w lint not of a peculiar sort. People have various opiuion of him everywhere he appears, and the opinions'are not generally if a highly complimentary sort, lie is, as the phrase goes, peculiar. H is only his iiitimalo friends who know' the breadth and depth of his heart and mind He Is 1) the few extremely captivating. He write charming v erses, by the way, too. Well, last jear the Princes theater produced o play in which the marquis was Imitated to tho dot in the character of the heavy vil-lain. It was the town rage for, few nights until one night it wa hissed and then public opinion turned suddenly and the pl.-t- proved a heavy liuuiirinl failure. The manager sued, the mar-quis, claiming that ho had hired men to hiss it. The suits dragged along for eight mouths aud uearly killed the marquis. He eventually won, you know, but it nearly killed liini, nevertheless, through worry and shame. You see the suit was brought in the lirst. Instance before a common justice in a low court. Of course, it made an immense sensatioti and the London newspapers printed whole columns, giving trie evidence In the fifllest detail, after the fashion of English newspaper. This, it appear, proved the great opportunity in the life of the small justice for obtaining notor-iety, and he prolonged the agony a long as he could. Ity postponement and by licking up Inconsequential points of law he managed to hold the case in hi clutches for seven mouth or more, and dually, when all resource failed, lot it go for decision to a higher court, v here the suit against the marquis was dis-missed on the lirst hearing. "Well, you see I hnppeued to reaoh London when this affair was at Its height. Tho marquis was in a dreadful slate of mind. He ran stand any amount of criticism on account of his nersonal ticculiarilic. but, this sort of iiEuriijiiriiiii. The Marquis Tell In Love With Mrs. Leslie While She Was Alight-ing From a Cab. SHE WAS POOR OF FURSE THEN. t Notwithstanding This and When She Was la Deepest Trouble the Englishman Was a Persistent Woer. New Yhhk, July 28. Mrs. Leslie was asked twieo today about the two occasions when she and tho Marquis do Lettville got out marriago licenses iu London, but both times she said she preferred to say nothing about the mat-ter. Last night's Londou dispatch to the St. Louis Republic was read to her. She commented upon it frequently during the reading after a fashion calculated to cast doubts upon tho accuracy of cer-tain occasional statements in 'it, but smilingly refused to say whether any part of it was iucorrect. Mrs. Leslie stated very positively that she was not engaged to marry tho marquis; that she never expected to marry him; that since her return home sho was morn of a true hearted American than ever, and that sho found her daily work so delightful that she had no desire or intention of abandoning it for the doubtful estate of matrimony. Then sho gave a highly interesting account of her relations with the Marquis do Leuville from the beginning of her acquaintance with him. "I first met the Marguis de Leuville," said she, "after I had been a widow upward of a year. 1 was almost friend-less and as poor as poverty. My hus-band's will was being contested, there was trouble with the executors, and I was crushed besides under a dozen law-suits which threatened to ruin the small prospects which I then had. Before my husband's death I had been accus-tomed to live at the rate of Ht),(MH a year, but now I had almost nothing. I had given up my fino hnuso and was living in rented rooms iu a medium-clas- s boarding house. Thn rooms were in tho nttie. They wero the best I could afford in fact, were better than I could afford. "In the darkest of these dark times I was introduced to the Marquis de Leu-vill- o by Lady Dufllcld Hardy, who was then living in Forty-nint- street. The way our acquaintance came about was rather romantic. It seems that the Marquis was passing Lady Hardy's houso one day just as I was stepping from a cab opposito her door with the intention of making a call. I was dressed in the deepest, black and woro a veil which completely covered my face. He stopped a second then moved on as I went up tho steps. i did not see him at all, but some timo later Lady Hardy introduced him to me, saying that he hud desired to make my ac-quaintance. Later on in our acquaint-ance the Marquis told mo that he had not known of the existence of Mrs. Frank Leslie.butthat the lady shrouded in black who dismounted from thecal) at Lady Hardy's door bad attracted his attention and admiration on account of tho small and daintily shaped foot that emerged from her skirts when she stepped to tho pavement. Mrs. Leslie blushed deeply as she said this and hastened to add paren-thetically: "You see, the Marquis do Leuville had lived all h's life iu Fngland and all Knglii-- h ladies have very large and feet. Most Americans, on 'the contrary, have small and shapely feet, and mino wero consequently only the rule here, not the exception, so far as beauty was concerned. The marquis had not been long in the country, or hn would not have thought my feet excep-tional. Any way that don't matter. Ho asked Lady Hardy to introduce him to the lady who called on her that day, and Lady Hardy took an early occasion to do so. Well, I met him several times later at the houses of different friends, and he paid mo a great deal of attention. Then I was invited to a large theater party. I declined because of being in mourning, but was afterward persuaded to go and sit in the back of one of the boxes. I did not expect to meet the marquis there, but there he was. He sat with me the whole evening and talked, and neither one of us heard a line of the play. We had a little supper at our host's house afterward, and tiiero the affair began. 1 had always worn my wedding ring, but this night acci-dentally pulled it off with my glove. It was found in the hall the next day, but that night the loss made quite a dis-turbance. Our host and hostess had all the guests join in the search for it, but it was not found. Finally, just before we separated, the Marquis put an ex-quisite ring, studded with diamonds, upon my ringless linger, and said iu the presence of the Whole company that he would replace the Iom. I protested, saying that the ring I lost was a wed-ding ring. "But this is a wedding ring," said the Marquis, earnestly. "Well, I aw him a number of times afterward and at length things got to such a pats that I thought he ought to know before he pressed his suit further just what my situation was and how miall my prospects were for ever corning into any money. I'eo-pi- e spoke of me as a rich woujati and I wanted him to know that i was not and probably never would So I invited him to eall on nie in my meanly furn-ished garret rooms, thinking tfiat the night of them would disenchant hint. P,i,t it did not. somehow. Kiglit on top of that be urg'-- marriage. I told him of the lawsuits and of my prospects but it only m;uJo him the more pressing. He urged me streuu- - ously to let the lawsuits and th will contest go to whoever might profit by U;i-ii- i and to go to England with bun and chare his fortunes. This I persist- - entlv rffiied to do for many months, saying that I owed it to my 'dead hus-band to ce his btwinew saved and carried on toward the end at which he had aimed during his life. Finally the Maf'iuia nent back to England on my thing completely unnerved him. When you get under tiie surface with the Mar-quis, you know, you liud him of an ex-ceedingly sensitive nature. , He heard I was in town and canie at, onee to ino with his troubles. Could I refine him sympathy? I could not anil I did not during the whole of his troubles. "Now let me nsk you as a man of hu-man feelings if I could have acted otherwise? And let me ask if ttftr what I have told I could doubt the sin-cerity of the Marquis de Lmiville in pur-suing me as he has. It Is a shame that he has been charged ith following me for my money, for he lirst asked tue to be his wife when I was penniless. All contrary reports, which have appeared in the papers frequently In the past, are entirely false. But f wunt it understood that 1 am not engaged to the Marquis de Leuville." "And how about the marriage li-cense?" "I do not care to say anything more upon the subject." THE ASTER-GENERA-Sir. Vilas U lielug bought For a Gover-nor's Job. Milwaukee, Wis., July 28. .Spec-ial. It is quite probable that Col. William F. Vilas, tho of Cleveland's cabinet will be the democratic nominee for governor. Col. Vilas does not seek the nomina-tion, and would nvoid it if he could, but his party has decided that he must lead it this fall. His political enemies are largely responsible for his selection as tho candidato of tho party. Pri-vately they say, that in democratic politics iu the state ho has been tho power behind the throne; that he went to Washington when others went to de-feat, and that now he must accept some of the little experiences of politics, as he has enjoyeu the sweets of ofliee. Publicly they give as their reason for nominating him that he is an able lawyer and au incomparable orator and'that therefore he will easily over-throw Gov. Hoard, who is a "farmer and unpracticed in oratory, in a joint debate on the public school question to which he will bo challenged. DUE TO DOMESTIC TROUBLES- - Sirs. Howard ftot llreaklrut Ready and Tlion Blew Her Head Of. St. Joseph, Mo., July 2. Mrs. Rowcll Howard, who lived six miles south of this city, committed suindo this morning by shooting herself iu the head with a shotgun. Her husband is the owner of one of the finest farms in Buchanan county. This morning they arose from bed at the same time. Mrs. Howard got breakfast ready then awoke their children and, going to an outside door, she called her husband to break-fast. After ho had taken his seat at tho table Mrs. Howard walked into an adjoining bedroom and locked tho door. In a moment afterward her hus-band heard tho report of a gun. The door to the bedroom was broken in and the wife was found lying on the bed with tho wholo top of ner head blown off. From appearances ,slie had set on the bed and lired the gun by pushing the trigger with a long stick, which was found lying at the side of the bod. Mr. Howard had been previously married, and by his first wife had three children. From what can bo learned tbeso chil-dren were the cause of frequent quar-rels between the couple that resulted in Mrs. Howard's suicide today. , A DETERMINED MURDERER. He Shoots a Reputable Mu and Then Sinks Beneath the Ware. Memphis, Tenn., July 28. About three months ago Oscar Grantham broke into Bilt Pilliken's shanty, near the mouth of Wolf Kiver and stole a pistol. He disappeared from the city at once and did not return until today. Meeting Grantham about 2 o'clock, Pillikens charged him with tho theft. Grantham made no reply except to draw a pistol and shoot his accuser, the bullet taking effect in tho left side, just below the heart. The wounded man dropped at once and, seeing the murder-ous result of his action, Grantham plunged into . Wolf Kiver and swam for the opposite hauk. When half way across he realized that he could go no further, his boots and clothes dragging him beneath the surface. Making one final and desperate effort, he turned over upon his back and leveling the pis-tol, which he had held while in the water, he again lired at Pilliken, hitting him in the left elbow and breaking the bone.- - Immediately after this was done the determined murderer sank beneath tho waves and was seen no more.; The wound in Pilliken's side is not certainly fatal. Physicians think, howevei", ho intist loso his left arm, blood poisoning having already net in. Pilliken was a watchman for the Louis-ville & Nashville railroad. Grantham, the murderer, was a worthless and dis-reputable character and a notorious tough. ' UNDER THE WAVE. Sot Captain's Ashes Consigned to the Deep. ' Xnv York, July 28. A novel funeral remony took place on board the iron ainboat Taurus on her return trip to lis city on Thursday afternoon. Tho ties of Capt. Richard Brasse, who nil been for a long time commander of lie of the Cromwell lino of steamers, adwho died in Brooklyn on July 3, ore committed to the deep in accordi-ng with the wish of the deceased, 'he body was cremated at Fresh Pond ii July 5 and the ashes placed iu a etal case. The widow and' a few iientls made arrangements to deposit he ashes iu. the ocean on Thursday, nil with this purpose in view made the rip on tho Taurus.' The ceremony iiok place on the return trip, when the learner was about three miles from hore off the Highland Light. The aurus was brought to and Capt.Hobbs, t the request of the widow, took haw of the case.containing the ashes. ' le placed the colors over the rail on tie main deck, and a line was mado hi to the case. As the line was cast J ami the case dropped into the sea apt. Hobbs made a few appropriate marks. WILL TONIGHT. The Principal Fart Will be Aisnnied by McKee Rankin. New York, July 28. Special. 1 The Bijou theater will tonight with a new play called "The Canuck." The principal part will be assumed by Mc-Kc- e Kankin. The play, which was written by Kankin aud Frank Maeder, is a serio-comi- o drama in four acts. The scenes are laid in Vermont, near tho Canadian border, in this city, and in Canada at the home of old Canuck.. Kankin will bo seen for tho lirst time here as Jean Baptiste Cndeau.v, a part which is said to aff ord him ample op-portunity to display his ability as a character actor. iMaborato prepara-tions have been mado for the opening. MARRIED SIXTY YEARS. A Minister ot the Church ot iiod and His Cood Wife. Robinsox, IU., July 2S, Kev. Edwin A. and Mary Lougeneckerlmf this city, celebrated tho sixtieth nuniversary of their marriage on Tuesday, having been married at Pittsburg, Pa., July 22, 1I0. Mr. Longcnecker was born in that vi-cinity in 1HU7, and his wife in 1812. Soon after their marriage they came to Illinois and settled in this vicinity, whero they have since lived. Mr. Longcnecker learned the trade of a blacksmith in his early days, and when ho located here worked at his trade for several years anil then eugaged in farm-ing, which he followed until some ten years ago, when ho sold his farm and moved to the city. Himself and wife aro both of German descent, and are of the stock known as "Pennsylvania Dutch." They aro members of the "Church of 'God," and Mr. Longc-necker has been a minister in this church for forty or fifty years, in which capacity he has solemnized more mar-riages than any other minister in this section of Illinois. Their fifth son is the present state's attorney of Cook county Judge J. M. Longeueckcr. German Catholic Societies. Mkkiden, Conn., July 28. Special, The second convention of the German t'atholio societies of Connecticut began today. The parade in which societies from New Haven, Bridgeport, Hew Britain, Hartford and Dan bury, was reviewed by the bishop aud Catholic clergy of the city. The convention which will be in session until tomorrow night will elect delegates to tho meet-ing of the Central Verein German Lea-gue which meets next month. This will bo the thirty-fift- h annual conven-tion of the League which has a mem-bership of 50;000 German Catholics. HE SHAVED A MAN'S HEAD It Was laa Thai Cms MIi Sl Mk , , . In lh I'm. SrAiMiiit" Conn., .Inly 8 Patsy Mitchell, a locul star actor of Thouipuinvillv, had the bigT't head of hair iu ronnrcliciit. and h loved gin, too. Until luck followed him, and lately the good pe.iple uf the villaga dn v.cd him in good elothns, aided htm with money, and in let urn received hi solemn pronii' that he would uewr titxte another drop of gin as long as there was a hair on his head. Sn he kept sober for a few day, and then liai her "IU)My" t 'riiiuby said to hlnn "tdiave your head, Patsy, and gim you a pint of Kin to boot?" Patsy agfct to the barir iin. dropped Into the chair, and Crumby sliarieinit live razors and went to work mi the wihleruesa of h.ir. 'I lie job laoted thirty minutes and w hen, Palsy gut out of the chair Ins ht-a-d wan na smooth aud shining as the full niixirt in September. Theu Bob Crnrohy prt settled Putsy with a pint Ixitsle of neer gin, and iu two houts thn latter si In lie lockup. Next day hu was before a trinl justice, and the room was croadeil with n grinning rmigregiitinn. Mitchell bad to tell the story, und submitted his lieud in ev idenee, Then Mr. I'mmbr was called In the judge' ib-a- and sternly acquainted with the solemn tm 4 that tii tiHimirial performw was nt joke. The justice sent him to the IIft ford jail fur six weeks. An Invalid's Suicide. HotsroN, Tex., July 28 Last night kailcs B.Cook, brother of Dr. E. T. ook, a prominent physician of this itv, committed suicide by blowing his rains out with a shot-gun- . Ho was a fictira of consumption, and for tho past w months had been growing steadily Four weeks ago he commenced '"grow despondent, and a few days wee stated that he would rather die at "we than suffer as he did. The trag- - ly took place in his room at his brothe-rs homo during the absence of the .'iter, whose wife, however, was at some and of course was very much hocked. Deceased was a son "of the to Aimer Cook of Austin, a wealthy lesan. The remains will be taken to in for burial. Deceased had no family. "A HORSE!" "A HORSE!" New lork Stork Brokers Pick a Victim and Have Fun with 111m. New York, July 28. Ambrose Leon-ard of the Stock Exchange, who was buncoed on Thursday into buying for $110 a horse whose wind gave out after it had walked a block, appeared on the Stock Exchange today for the lirst time since the transaction. Ho did not wish to meet tho boys, but it was evident that they . wanted to see him. Mr. Leonard had lots of business to attend to, but they would not permit it. If he appeared in the New England crowd and shouted: "I'll buy " "A horse!" would be tho stentorian res-ponse before ho completed his bid. If he rushed over to the Pacific Mail crowd and shouted: "I'll sell a " ."Horse!" would be thundered back at him. It was go in every crowd, and Mr. Leonard was cut up. Not to stop at this, the guyors sent out and bought toy horses, flaunted them in his face when-ever he wished to buy or sell stocks, and besides got strings for reins, and in pairs scampered aroiind the floor. Busi-ness during some of the racket was practically suspended, and at the close Mr. Leonard confessed that he had been unable to do a single stroke for himself. But it is suspected that it was not difficult to get other brokers to ex-ecute his orders, and then he stood by and accepted the guying. Thinks He's the Czar. New Youk, July 28. Policeman Smith of the Mercer street police station arrested a crazy Italian in Bleeckcr street yesterday who had fantastically dressed his soft felt hat with pieces of cotton, black fur aud artificial flowers. He was taken to the Joflcrson Market police court, where he said ho was the czar of Russia. Justice Gorman com-mitted him for examination as to his sanity. While waiting in tho ton until he could be removed to Bellevue he summoned the prisoners about him as his subjects. ROMANTIC MARRIAGE. A Matrimonial Advertisement Uesnlts Happily In One Instance, J wir.stiiw.N, N. Dak , July 28. Miss Belle Itoss of Pittsburg, Pa., arrived here this mnrniug. unit was married to Samuel McDowell of New Itmk ford. Neither hud seen the other before to-day. The union was effected through a Chicago matrimonial Journal in which McDowell inserted a personal, towhicli Miss Kosf replied, lie it a well to-do farmer of Wl, who ha 74 acres of wheat ami 500 head of cattle and sheep. Miss Boss is 28, very intelligent ami rather pretty. A Plucky Young Ranger. San Antonio, Tex., July 28, News reached here today of a bloody fight at Hidalgo on the night of the 20th inst. a "all was in progress, aud, apparently "itnout any provocation, a young ranger named Smith. IS years old, was shod, by Macellus Dougherty, one of most desperate men on the frontier, a Mexican accomplice named In- - 'Ji'es. Smith shot Infantes in the "nach with a pistol and "wsherty ran away, followed by a fizzing bullet from the plucky young if3TS revolver. The Mexican died : ' '?w. hours. Smith was slashed !,"nes with a stilletto, but was aot fatally hurt. THE FICHTINC WAS DESPERATE. Revolutionist Ciot Away With the (iorera-Ine- TroOM. Bt r.Noo Aviiks, July 2H The rvo lulionary movement continues to spread. The lighting between the gov-ernment troops and tho revolutionist, today has been desperate, The govern-ment forces were defeated, and thous-ands of them killed or wounded, Tho navy has joined the revolutionary movement. Au insurgent artillery bom-barded the government bouse and bar-rack" today. Twenty-fou- r hour of truce has been arranged. HORRIBLE ACCIDENT. A Heater Woman' Head ('reaned Mfr Her llnahand' T.f. Drtv rit, Colo , July 'in A horrible) accident occurred loday in the yards of the 'nrt Worth road. A. Kuwll live with his w ife near the tracks, which run between their house aod the Wt. long train of freight cars had been standing upon one f Ihese tracks fof several day, and at mxti today Mr. Ktifeccll. returning from the welt with a bucket of water, rather than walk around the train attempted to rrt under one of the ears. Mi did nut aw tiee the approach ot the switch engiae, and jut at thn moment she irt under the wheels the engine struck in train. The (mr woman w knocked diu aud etie pir of truck p.isaetl over her he-vl- . crushing it almost to j !!y. Her liuiutMl. who was rcturtuojfrorij. ork, beard lo r scrnrn. and nithed t her just in lime to pull her oil the track; Iwf.ire another car rould y over her. Mm? murmured a few word and died in li r husband's arm. Mm leave ttif-- l children. Picked Up the Crew. HTnJu,y 28The steamer "D. fmm "a whioh arrived here today Itimore, reports that on the liX.T-lCD.oi- Five Fathom bank tho snip picked np two boats contaiu- - tM,L,n ,!1,en' tlle crew of the British v Cb;ll-1- s Moran," which sailed feet-- Y,ork to Vera erne's last unkiw; ne "Moran.' was sunk by an schooner on the 26tli. A YOUTHFUL ELECTRICIAN. Wonderful Work Being Done by a Chi-cago Boy. Chicago, 111., July28.-V- ery quietly and almost sub rosa a young Chicago electrician is working out an idea of his own for the perfection of an electric steamboat propeller. The inventor proposes to drive a boat of any size, battery of his own de-sign, and by a storage to be charged from a battery, also invented bv him. with an especial ob-ject iu view: of its economy in the mat-ter of fuel. His design is all but accom-plished, and electricians who hav e seen the working model say that the boy has his fame and fortune in that little ship. The young man is L. L. Summers hardly out of his teens and by all odds the youngest professional electrician in the country YnS ""ffS his business career Prof C. H. Summers, electrical engi-neer'- the Western Union Telegraph company. LAST WEEK'S BANK CLEARINCS- - It Was a Good Week for Halt Lake, Despite a Holiday. Boston, July 2H. The following table, compiled from dispatches from tho clearing houses of the cities named, gives the gross exchanges for the last week, with rate per cent of increase or decrease, as against similar amounts for the corresponding week in 18H1I. Salt Lake had only live days of clearings, the being a legal holiday: Citiks. Clearings. Inc. Dec. New York. T.fi7.7ira..'tlo! 0 7 Boston I.OM.:VHj 1.7 Philadelphia ff,Hfi,xir 0 5 Chicago Ti.ll.lsWi av.O St. Louis MMMJ.liaHi 10. s Kan ih.7m.xm(; at s MttslilUK ltl.ll.47lj !il fl Haltlmore tasisl.fiM, is 4 Cincinnati IO.iwhW w.T KansasCity ..174 Buffalo 1.m,tm 15.1 Louisville ' 7.IKI.WR.' IS. 7 New Orleans a.iauMH: Wi ll Cleveland .7W.Ift. 4ii.fi Omaha 4.iul.iS'; hh (i Detroit fi.4ivi.5H m il Providence ft Uivmi; 14 tf Milwaukee !.Xi',.(H) y.t.V Denver 6.310.1 IS. SO D Minneapolis 4.iiw:t7'. 10 3 St, Paul I'J i Columbus 2V!N IU I Ktchmoiid 9 U h Dallas 2.1?; HIS, &H.0 ... Indianaiiolls I.ijiVpm MS DillUth I.W Portland. Ore... I..V 3r 13.1 8t. Joseph 3 Fort Worth I.i4.lf; W. Peoria I.7..li Memphis .'7.WB; 17.6 WashinKton l..ir-- j ": 73.r Surtniriield evil. S3. 1 vVrwter. IIWj: 4 7 New Haven J.rtSi?' 'jy.S Portland, Maine.. I 'mfii 6J Hartford I.:tfc.OS.' H.4. Wilminifton 2 H Oa!veton fMO.7! 15 O Kiouz c'ltv 'eV.MJ7. 75 Crsnri Kaplds TOS.Te IS. ft Wichita 7Mif.1V 7(1 Norfolk KW.lv . HinumKlmm eisiM) 'JUS Taenia K.",rr us 4 Ive Augele IS 4 Jewell l3rt1! 17 & In Moines HS.3UM SI s Svrarni 7M.MO. Ciii.oln 4i mh VtM Lextnctva!. Ky.... 1s -', New Bedford 0 vc, 's: V I ChaitMOOKa ryiw" ,WS Montreal HO.!!'."' OS Halifax l.V.J'J ' US 4 Nashv.He 2r.nttt 1.177.171 .alt l.ake ( ity J 1.3!fl.4. --Seattle I ISr)SK ' Kocaiter l.470.l ""HI TU1.. tl.N175.l' 4 S ' Outside New York tjis w, w. tnTeaee, K.O. Not inrtudeo In total, no clearing at'Uise at thn time it rr. Chicago Market. OlICAOO, July Hose Wheat Firm; cash. 03; September, 9"d. Con Firm, cash, 4'Sj; September, ;;. Oat Firm, cash, S-- ptemls-r- , .U. Baki.KT Steady. j'ottKSteadv; 'Mn. "2; Spte brr.tlMO. LAfcD hteady; cash, 91.131; Sep-tember, Wii- Tlie Market Was Hull. nJut YoKK- - J,l,v 28. The stock of .niniop',netl ith its usual amount WinTuT n and decided weakness, ion jj '"symp,Jthy with the lower Lon- - ,hr4hout !e activLty d,id.notiast fineries ?",r' an,d ony m suar there bt;la"l and Atchison was ateraCtivity- - The Urst pri,eS BOBXIXO TKLKGKAMS CONDENSED. Base ball game at Butte yesterday: Butte C, Salt Lake 5. Martin B. Dunn was drowned while bathing at Focatella, Idaho. During a row at Mileuburg, Texas, three men were mortally wounded. Mrs. Hannah Sullivan died at New Castle, Wyo., at the age of 110 years. Kev. Robert Collier, a1 noted Unitar-ian divine, has died at Salisbury, Md., from paralysis, The governor of Texas denounces tho proposed boycot of the south against the products of the north. At Rossburn. Manitoba, two farmers were overcome by gas and died while engaged in cleaning out a well. Five persons, all members of one family, were killed by being struck by a railroad train at Grafton, W. A a Judge S. S. Marshal, a prominent detnocrat.died at his home in McLcans-boro- , Ills. He served for fourteen years in congress. Tho remains of the lale Captain Emerson will be forwarded to Sweden for burial, and they will be received there with nil the honors usually awarded a Swedish duke or admiral. Women sobbed and the men were visibly affected at the forewell sermon of Rev.Ib". Buichell, the depoed Calh-oli- c priest of New York. He said he never did aught which he knew to be wrong. "No doubt I erred sometimes, but never knowingly. I will continue in the same path. I will try to do mv duty as a priest and a Catholic, and trnst that you will pray for me." Assistant-Postmaste- r General Clark-so- n in an interview says this of the west- - "What this country needs is t more light on the great west. 'The east doen tlialf appreciate it. It does not understand it and the government at ji Washington has treated it according to j' the methods by wbich it has for years deait with the east. West of the Mis- - ! souri are two-fifih- s of the railroad ser- - j vice of the country. In that vast coun-try is now slumbering the vote wlucb. in mi. will elect the next president of the United Slates." Monoment for Chris. linsofH July 23 Special.-T- he at 15 (W(. , eity, who are numbered Te-- t s ' e started a movement to ,WnnKn,'ment to the raemorv of nt H cl- - ll,mb,,s' TheV will" and have 'it unveiled Hew York Moaey aod toek. XfcW Y'ikk, July iH.-N- .wn. Slocks dull and heavy. Money easy. HV I. Bar silver. ll .fw I lour coupons : f'aeitie sin-s- , 13; Central Pacific. &', Burling-ton, 7. Denver A Kio Grando, lt; Northern Pacific. V.); preferred. Northwestern. tl. New York Central, 7: Oregon Navigation 24; Trans conti-nental. 4'.i: pKilic Mail. 4".J; Kork .'. Louis Man Frane!eo, X!, St. pan I & Oiuaba, iH. Tes Pari tic. 201; Union PaeihV. 'f . WelN. rarj;o F.r-re- , 41; Western I niou, Wj. J WONDERS CF THE PHONOCSAPH. i H a Hie; Sseeew m a Sfthecumt for rlr, Nr.w You. July iM. At th nxMrnV-convention of phorjnjf nipb etmpnii held in Chicago the tr--i practietj tes id the inachiiw" as a sulwtrtute for --feno graphy was made. A verbatim repoH j of the entire profecdiuif was taken, i Several typewriter transcription ver made afterward. Due of thcni hs JU ! been sent to Thomas A. Kdison. It i ! in book fnrui and contain Hl.tssJ word The report waa taken by au epr : i. no(f i iflicr, who Ufed two machine, i H-- i r pated every word the speaker. ' aid As fait as be talked one r41 full : be ohifteU to the tft-ou- and h!W that ' w Lib- - an assistant prejmred the othef j ftr aoother dose. l Ue roll wen taken, to another room and at one transcribe ed. Forty roll were used. Thexpr intent proved a gratifjint sucoess, Fe'""t of Depreswon. pr4nK'July 23.- -A feeling of ?reTails on the stock ex-ae- s "aro "eutine and Uruguayan H,,,.Pr:''tically unsaleable, and "led from 4 toll per cent. THIS LOOKS QUEER. I..nra rttolz for W0,000 Mrs. Man Sue. Damage. 28- - - The EvANSViiLE. Ind.. July revived vesterday. Stok-Man- a case was The original suit was brought by Laura StoUof this city against her uncle Henry Manz of Chattanooga, in. the in which she claimed 00 Illeced seduction. The case was tred for anfthe jurv found for the plain-if- f The .mount in the sum of15.0o0 d.fc-t- oi i" u? '"; The Autrian proprietors of yo-ht-s have resolved to form a nVft and to offer its sen ices to the state in ea- - of n?ed. Ftr ."a Bars for Kurope. ,K' Jl,,' 28. Hoffman & "and rinii 'krod f0r hundred thou-ipnic- , ,. Worttl of gold bars for |