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Home > Documents > I..N0-13,407 TUESDAY, SI, SiEARTHQUAKE ISCHIA-voKKLII I..N0-13,407 NEW-YORK, TUESDAY, JULY SI, IMl...

I..N0-13,407 TUESDAY, SI, SiEARTHQUAKE ISCHIA-voKKLII I..N0-13,407 NEW-YORK, TUESDAY, JULY SI, IMl...

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) voKKLI I I..N0-13,407 NEW-YORK, TUESDAY, JULY SI, IMl PRICE FOUR CENTS. _A '«Tlrt Tt HI.1L1 rt I nntf triTT fn I atfiro Th* narran. nf fh-miinfrr Whloh ho told hM Gr'nir T*V CTnT fVT TVf ATI! I SiEARTHQUAKE IK ISCHIA- e ,NES IN THE TOWN OF CASAMICCIOLA. V»WO»OF THE BWI«WB EST.MATE9 OF m DEAD AND WOtNPKD. Tl.fi latest new. places the number of death. .n«Hl on the inland of Iaehia. near K***** the earthquake on Satorday evening, at 4.0UU. SL. in the theatre, where a burlesque jj-- !«*, with a scene representing an earthquake, wa. plHved, were saved. Thirty-seven perons .re said to have been entombed rn one room in .,boU>l All the policenieu in the town were wm, i The work of aenrch.ii r for the dead is -oiDt' on slowly. Most of the corpses are un- JJwnizable. lu Naples, where the dead and , wounded are carried, heartrending scenes are witnessed. The work ot relieving the destitute h*s be^un. ,. THE SEARCH AMID THE RUIN'S. .UK BODUM I-NRFXOGXIZABIE-RK.UKF FROM nairn tuan and incidents. Napi-KS. July 30..Many women aud children are among the victims of the earthquake on the Island $i l.«chia on Saturday evening. It is stated this aitenioou that the number of persons killed wan ' 2.(K)0 and that the number of wounded was l.OOO. Pitty wooden huts will be built immediately for the gooqmmodation of tho survivors. The municipal autboiities of Naples are sending relief to ihe island aud are doing all in their power to alleviate the dis¬ tress of the people. Most of the corpses winch bare been recovered* are so discolored by dirt that evott after they have been washed the features of the victims are unrecognizable. All the members of the police force at Casamicciola were killed. A boat has arrived at Naples containing tho bodies of tw.'jty-four infants. A few persons were taken fron the ruins alive last evening. Eight bandied more troopa went to the scone of the disaster last nigfct. IIKART-REND1NG 8CENX9 IX NAPLES. Tho sceues here occasioned by the accident are heart-rending. The hospitals are crowded with wounded survivors aud the dead-houses are lilied wit1! bodies of the victims. The bodiea of several Nsapo'itan ladies have been recovered from the raine. Five houses remain standiugat Casamicciola. Cries for help can be heard coining lrom the rams. Sappers are hard at work endeavoring to rescue the peraons who are still alive. Boats from the island filled with dead bodies aio arriving here cou- .tautly. Professor Palmieri, Directer of thc Meteorological Observatory on Mount Vesuvius, states that the disaster was not due to an earthquake, but to the subsidence of the ground. ONLY THOSE AT THE THEATRE SA.VFD. London, July 30..Of the foreigners staying at Casamicciola only those were 6avod who were at tr»e theatre Saturday night. Survivors state that they were obliged to paw Saturduy night m aWi- Jm darktifss.without daring to move even to assisi a> sc calling for help beneath tho ruins. There is uaw little hope that the latter are still alive. Ac- eor<ling to the latest estimate 3,000 persons perished on the island. Three soldiers searching for victims were fatally Injured to-day. Subscrip¬ tions have been o]>ened throughout italy for the reb>f of the distressed persons. iX EARTHQUAKE KEPRESKNTKD IN THE THEATRE. Survivors say that thirty-seven persons wcro en¬ tomb d in a room in the Hotel 1'iccola Sentinella. Coon; S Tgardi, :tlt<T three hours'exhausting labor, rescued eleven per oas but failed to accomplish the prt»oi:>:ii obj* t ol his efforts, the saving af his sin¬ ter. The plav at the theatre ou Saturday night was a bur!< :»q:ie, which opened with a scene repnseut- iagau earthquake. na urn um placed at 4,ooo. London, July 31..It is now stated as certain that 4.000 persons perished on the island of Ia hi on Katunlay night. The stench jfrum 'lead bodia. of human beings and animals ia almost unbearable. Several men and women were rescued from the ruiDi on Monday morning. Many more might have been saved il a huger loree of rescuers had been available earlier. Many persons who were beard groaning during the night were dead before th*y eonld be reached and earned to places of nafety. ©VE THOI'SAM) LIVES SAVED BV SOLDIKKS. JIaples, July 30.M'ulnijht..Two thousand sol- iiert diKg'iiK ii' the ru>ns saved one thousand lives Bp to midday ou Sunday and exhumed twenty-four aaraons alive on Monday. Tie Roman newspapers appeared to-dav witta mourning borders. Many of we people injured in ¦Maa will be cripples for life. Tba dead at Kano a a ai ber 300; at Laecoaineno 500. and at Fontana berrara'_*ou. Tweuiy-.'our children perished in the Missncordia Asylum. The King anil Queen of Italy baveMitisciib.-l 100.000 lir- and tho i'ope L'3,000 lire for tho re:icf ol the suij«T«-rs. CHOLERA ASD YELLOW I EVKR. KEP'»KI8 OF DEATHS AND OTHER NEWS. London. July 30..There were 330 deaths from lawn in Cairo on Sunday, and 413 at twenty other places situated between Miuyeh and the Mediterranean Sea. Cairo, July 30..Thc Government is considering t Wojcct for the partial burning of other dangerooa quarters of the city like Bulalc. Kstiu-r Patric* acting Catholic chap aln to tli<- onti,h forces stationed in Cairo, lias died of ei'Olera. Alexandra, July 30.-Four deaths treal cholera occurred her« yesterday-. An analysis has been niacle cf the waiT of the Nih- which shows that it * 'nfected with putrid matter to a point above the entente! s. a ESCAPING FROM QUARANTINE. New Orleans, La., July 30..Two men to¬ day escaped in a b >ai fi om a vessel undergoing o, naran- .liusattue Ship Island Quarantine Button,and made luwr May t., fa,, t briaUan. Wbsn tbe Diet became H.-'..',' l,y PfeaUtent lout*, of tu*- Louriana Bosi of Bsa* h. be ordered tbe urreM of tue rueu. Tbtj were iMeii hilo custody, and turned o»er to th* Coiled'buts* salacities, churla witu Hte»iin« tue boat. JTEI.I.ow VEYEK OH THE CITT OF MEBIDi Washington, July 30.-BurKeoii-Ucmral Ma ..illoi'.of tue Marine Hospital Servlce.to-day recsKeo esbh- dispatch from Havana muting thal tuc City of -Ma.frora Vera <'ru* lo XewYork, left ,i.,.n caM,. of "fever al Ital port, Iheatuaiutr waa dunn reeled i tturday. w*o« 1 HI Ql'AKANTlNE AT THE CAPES. Vt AsiiiMiioN, July 30..TheSargeon-Qaneral Of U' Mann" Hospital Service to-day neut tbe following tsisfTitui to Surgeon Henry Hmltb, at Norfolk, Va. : " It li important for the public luiereats that a capablo .ftcsr take charge of the Naiioual nuarautltie About lo bs leannjrut ril at tbe Capes. You must take cttarge of ttl* Work. Proceed to tbe steamer California, prescribe 1st il, men, remain there until cbannel la buoyed out to elsatrmaii'a Inlet,theu remove with sick to barge Uelden. .beiK-amer Woodworth will bo sent you for orders lo . fswdHTi). Then take up Tour quarters on ncr. Orders Will be »ent by mail." tarcoon Smith replied ss fdlows: I.Mtgraui roeeived. win proceed at once to carry «t{J""Oueiious tor a vigorous and effie.^ut qnaraaUas ¦.mw i-apea. I go down to-day with needed udaitiooal «".*» aud medicines for Beldau to remain." *eunsoupurgeoi; Ulenuan tim alto been dlrccicdlto .sssaiu un duty at Norfolk until furtuer order*. .^gaaB ERAS CE, CHINA AXD TOXQUM. DETAILS OP THe'fKEHOH SORTIE. «» FKENCU 6QLAOROX-A TREATY PKOJ'OSEO DY CHINA. iiOXDox, July 30.-Special dispatches to the Lon- .*PapersaUte that the sortie by the Fro. h ka «^"'u on the 10th inst., when a thounaud t the any were killed, waa made from Namdinn and aw trorn H»rni, as stated in the report from Ton- .alfi to the French Minister of Marine. *M Awn<kra". correspondent at Hong Kong says .»eces«oftne sortie was due to the fact that ¦adtJS *arrt80Q was Perelly conveyed In Junks Tfc^K *nemy iu th0 rcar ^ '"prise. "JJChinese still persist in maint*lning the pro- ~^«»« af tba exporuuiua 0j Catti* for tbe French forces. The French squadron will shortly mako a demonstration on tho Chinese coast. The Standar(Tt correspondent at Vienna learns that Chins has proposed to M. Tricon, the French Minister, that neamtiations ba opened for a formal treaty and that Franco readily agreed to tho pro¬ posal. HR. GLADSIOS E SOS I ALS ED. THE COMMONS AND THE CANAL QUESTION. SIR STAFFORD NORTHCOTE'* MOTION' OF.Ki ATF.D. TIIK CittVr.RNMKNT HAS A MAJORITY OK M. LOMBOK, July 30..In tho House of Commons to¬ night Sir Stafford Northcote (Conservative) moved an address to the Queen praying that in any nego¬ tiations relative to the. Suez Canal she will decline to recognize any claim of thc Suez Canal Como inv to such a monopoly as would excludo other under¬ takings designed for the parana. .! opening a way between tho Mediterranean and Red seas. The motion was received by the Tory members with loud cheers. Sir Stafford Northcote begped for a calm discus¬ sion of the motion, which, he said, was not of a narty character. He wished to do nothing to dis¬ credit the Government. Ile only asked the House to express such au opinion as would relieve them from tho eiiibarrasmient arising from a practical recognition of the monopoly of tho Suez Canal Company bv some members of the Government. Mr. Norwood (Liberal) offered an amendment declaring that it was undesirable to prejudge the action of tim Government, a:id that tho House declined to pass resolutions concerning further negotiations or pro"eedincs in connection with the canal. Mr. Gladstone, amid great applause, cordially supported Mr. Norwood's amendment. Sir Stationl Northcote'* motion was rejected, and Mr. Norwood's motion in the nature of an amend¬ ment to tb. former was adopted bf . vote nf '.."-'_' to Usu. Tba Parnell member, abstained from roting. Cnvious to Sir Stafford Northcote'* motion Mr. Gladsome said that before any action waa takci. in regard to the second Suez Canal, the House ehonld have an opportunity ol' expressing Ita opinion on the Mibject. The Govi rumen!, he said, desired mer¬ chants and shipper, to have ample time to o insider the matter. The Government do aol Intend) he added, an early renewal ol the negotiations, as it is hopeless to consider the question fairly a*long as it is entangled in politics. Mr. Gladstone, in opposing Sir stafford Noith- cote's motion, maintained that the late Govern¬ ment was » waio in at when it boncbt the Sue. Canal shares M. de Lesseps claimed rmhts even more exclusive than be doa. noa. Tba pamine, ol Sir Stafford Northcote*! motion, he saul, WOnld greatly diminish the Government's sanguine hope. of coming to an agreement en tb. canal question. The House of Commons would aol be boned by tb. opinion of the Executive. He declared that it would he useless to pronounce an eptnlon on a aub- j«ct which would probably have ta bs settled in the courts of Egypt. Mr. Childers, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said he was confident before many months or years tho Government weah) meeeed ia making a aetiefao- loiy agreement with regard to the canal. NE W8 FROM I HE DO MIS LOS. THC QUARREL OVER A BOUKDABY. WiNNirio, Man., July 30..Mr. Norqnnj, Premier of Manitoba, rind o carload of apodal policemen. have arrived In Rat I'.iriage, where all nus quiet at last accounts. Tho Maultoba men sent io Bel P rt'ijje have determined to arrest all the Oatarloaeeel il officers, sod serious Seating M isttolpaied. rae Winni¬ peg Fib id Battery aaa Cavalry ara ordered te bala c «ta go io it.ii i' irten ie assisi tii*. Manltob > sp icial offi-era. An Oit.ivea dispatch motived yesterday eon- tam* an order ror Kort Unborne barrack* t<i be gol r. ;olv f'r Sit/ mourned troopers, who have been ordered here from lt .iua. A STEAMSHIP AH IfOS K. MovTitKAi., July 80..Tue sasamhip N'ode-s rorth, which left Mon treal lu ballvt la»t M»udar,ia ashore ST West Wolf Island, one of th- M If d ilea group, Toe I >iin nu io.i Wic iking I'o.npaiiy bas sent a steamer to ber relict. INVALIDS OS THE WAY TO A SIIKINC. Ottawa, July no..Nearly 1,000 pilgrima blt trns city to-day on an exoaiaMH to Bt, Anne da Beaupre. They were aeeompeaiad bj tbe Boaaaa Catbells Btafeepaf Ottawa and a auasker of eiaygyuaan, r:<ia annual pUflliaga is niixio'is'y looked forward french Ito, an ( StkoUoS, SWUM Ul Bliegl d m rat I CUT* 1 having been effi eted ou previous exeuraiooa Amoru nie people who wan! to-day were scare, ot Invalid* on crutches aud blind iumi and wom ML SHIPS OF WAH EXPECTED AT QUEBEC. Ottawa* Ont., July no.. rim Marine ;ni<l HabaitaaDeparteeaal ha< baan infurmM nm theaoel Her Majesty's ahlpi of war win arrive at Quebec abeai thc BsMdM of A'i.'iltt. Tiley are tb- ifOfthamp- ton, with Kcir-Adadral Slr John L. Goa on board; the Canada, with Prices Oeorgoof W board, and iBe bi to. Tbey will prooably romalo ia p il several w oks. Tue (ioverain nt « earner La Cona Ileum- bat 11 ai tiaspe from a er use on tbs Laora lor coast. Bbs re> ports la. results of tbs Bsberm. Ibis aetaon diet lng. MISCELLASEOVb FOREIGN SEWS. SOCIALISTS IN GENEVA ARRESTED. Cinkva. July 30..At a meeting af Socialist workmen yesterday violent appeahen were made, summoning tho State io provide employment for workmen. The assembly afterward proeecdod to the Town Hall, bat the ofAdala refaced to receive a delegation, whereupon tba leader of tim procession unfurled a red flag. He ami aeveral others weio ai- raatadt _ ' AMKRICAN BEEF AND POSS ABBOAD. Condon, July no..In the Hooae nf Common, this afternoon Mr. Dodaoa said that the Government would consider tba subject of appointing ii commit¬ tee, en the cattle disease next aoaaloa. They wero receiving, ho Bald, definite, ieport* in regari toll from tho American Qoveramenl and tromBriflah CouhuIs abroad. Bannan, July no..The Senate has leaned an or- derte all captains of vehsels which arrive from America with pie li lo 1 jiork ai a part of their cai go, te inform tba customs antbontMeof the quantity the* have on boar of snefa pork under pain of Hot) marks' line fee neglect, to do so. THE TARIFF AND PATENT-LAW IN* TUBSET. CuNxiANTiNon.K, July 30..Mr. W.vimIIihiii, tbe Umtali Obargd d'Affaires, incl Qeaaml Wall iee, tho American Minta cr, maintain their opaoiltlon to the pro, pamipatent law. The latham Oiiiaiamanl baa offered General Wallace lo appoint an Ot loman delegate to ratine tbe tariff, but has declined lo prolong the treaty of commerce with I af United -'ates. POBEIOS NOT LS. Diiuian, July :iO.-It is denied that Dabgi- munzi, the. brother of Colewayo, han baan killed. MAimil,, July 30..Tho newspaper* h>-r« den» tbut tbe Hpanisli Minuter io Mexico la about lo be rsiallld. Vit.s.NA, July 30-Aiigu»t Vi bas been Axed aa tho date for the opculug af ibo luternutlonal Electrical Ex- hlbulon. Hnaaamuaa.Jaiy 30.-ai ibo aaaaj congress hero *££*:&? ** l"""'',('-'"'""">. ti- aiaand ead ax.PRBaanoaa.iaty 3o.-Oue hundred and ciKluy bo iseakave b.jou destroyed by tire lu the town of Berne- nor, ni the OefetneMat ot Tiann Berjung, ¦Batta, July 30.-N0 Mtaietiri wm im> preeaai at the Interview between tim Emperor of Germany und ibo Emperor ot Austria at lachi on A ugu-i 7, limi.i.s, July 30..Ihe Crowul'rluce of Auatrla will attcud the iiuu'imi mb of Hie ci mir. Army. DAMACL Bl JttOk jj j v ?KNN&YLfAMA.y Lancasteu, Penn., July HO.-RapottB from all seciloiia o; thia county abow that thc Lal: and rain ai omi of Saturday night was more destructive tuan was Indi¬ cated by the earlier reports. Ovira thousand ncr.-s of growing tobacco wore complexly iaetlCjed. unn-li of which, howerer, is luaurcl. ibo ¦ixoama wein | awoUoU and aeveral budden carried away, a nnaiDM" ut narrow uacapea fioui Uiowuiuk being ict,ui .od. HO li BLI; T ASH ASSAULT. A number of young men, who were playing cards In allrjuor shop at No. 1 Hi Malden lane last nl«hl, became engaged In an ai leroi ion. The proprietor, Joseph Milli?, forcibly ejected them, where upon tbey dragged bim from bis door¬ way, struck bim on toe bead with some o uni mil ri i mr ii I, icon,* no,. %¦» Ibm robbed bim of a wallet containing BOO. Mllllg who ls suffering from a contused wound of the bead, was removed to ('bambers Btrect Hospital, where at a late hour laat Bight waa lying unconscious. Hubee- quent to the assault Detective. Oakes and Flsnnery, of the Firs! Precinct, arrested on suspicion Michael Matze],Charles Kooeft Waller Beutecb and O;to Petrcil. all of nrooiiivn Charles Wilson, ofSBO alonrooot;Q>r- barft / hTitanfcn. af Malden lane; winiam sidon, ol 10 Hnbart-et.; Renry listens sod Henry Lamp, of HobokCOi and Cori?- Sinn, of Ilutgers-st. The ten prisoners will l»e urriiiKncd at the Tombs to-day. TAMPERING nilli TUL WIRES. TROPnLK uS Bli WBSTBBB OBUM UMBI LAST NH! HT. It wns stated at lb. Western Union office early this maratag that there hail been a good Baal of trouble with thc wires since 7 o'clock last evening. Tba trouble grew worse as the Bight went BU ami twenty wires were totally interrupted. Super¬ intendent rTniaaton. said that there had been no troubie with the cables between New-York and Jersey City, but the wilBB had been interfered with betwaen tba amie etta, and Jena* City. The troiiblo was not due to any storm dtotarbeaoa. Mr. Ilumatone left it to be inferred that the difficulties were caused by tampering willi the lines. "Th's may bo the prout move," he said, "which thu strikers have been telling about for som" days pist." The Superintendent of Construction, Mr. Poren, left tho ollie, at o'clock- last night, but no ktiiiwlc.l.i- of his intent ons was possessed by the Western I'nion BaMala It wasfiaid, however, that between IftaBB aad twenty linemen bad bena emt owl tu hunt up th- ti on ides ou the wires OB M BB 'ia: ai Island. The disturbances in the wires wen tbecaomof disturbances also in police circles. For bonn ¦ earriage daabed from punt to p mit in the city, goiog from the Polio. Ueadquarten to Hm Twenty- seventh Precinct, thence to various piers on tb. Nott ii and Fast Rivers. A Tatauaa reporter who followed tba eahwl* learned thal at the foot ol Ma doa Lane a tnu had beaacbartered about midaight to be -.cady nt i a, m. to take a pat ty of six men to Sixtieth-st. It waa said that I be pal pose of seeiii inc the lag was to watca the enblec under tho river lietween New- York City and Jeiwv City. TUT. SUNDAY LAH VIOLA TED IS ST. Lolls. BUtnSBM (dMU'.TIIi A - I'M'A!..WAItlUNT. rOB lill, ill I I Mil - St. LouiSy .Tu'v lin. .Anion,' those reported bj Ike pobce os hevtng rtoleesd thc Browning Bundey law yesierdiiv were the proprietors of livery Manie.. bfonortoo.rtgai stone, thannae, railway, andes eompanloo, barbara, k Mbaaen, new*r>ai>er ¦en from me proprieiorsdown,thc Onion Depot Oaaapaay mrane> lng mil trains and all who «,-r< detected eeUll nun lawfully and various ofier pr* »n*. Tko lager bc I I a m lb. central part of the elie, w'.lr'i opened In th* mornl-irf. closed belan aeon, nen evade, bal bUtM" Utions obsr>rvi«i br tin- police win bc reported to tba prooeoaUog etiornar. who ..iii pr orasal scalBSfatba rio. lalor*, In police stn ea li le sera tint neat Bundey tho Moa will be closely drawn sud arre'ts »;li poraapi ba utaoe, if u soad ¦¦ eomb i Ina u.« b ian formed io reiUt UM low, oed prominent lawyers bara boan rotalM M carry rt»r«, If n-e,-«s iry. lo IBS United Matt . BoorwHM i .mn. Itlaeatioaai I thal t,000 barralo of boor wore sold reaterda waieB el ss *rouid pav th* brew. erx e:i.',OiKI. 1*0 ttl* add lee nie. aud lhpior* sold, and tao outlay of eoosunx ll r 900,000 Bleatarrgeaate from tbe liff r nt police elsi j tbe oliy celled at UM Four < ourts this morning, and. acii <g iimbr Information eopptled nv Hie officer*, pith ia ».. ir out «.i eighty-ali gr eera, fifteen brewers, twslve stn eoosaoolea, twelve Monufacturthg tetabltebraeata, etoo a, earea barbara, Mveu baa pew of urary .. live express 'our fruit..), .l> rs. four ., Bve dally newspaper*, two boasba! I parka, one theatre aad «.¦« ;u nouns I , one of waleh waa tba bridge s tbe btw wai (aaa t was oars bod iii.l<' their delimit dc. ..ira, -ti on friday at'erni>on. Al that lag ibero wara 1 tot! 1 proosnt, ami lt ««. resolved to 1, , a dieeetitlac role. 1.1 mi.iou ti,nu Um sssoelai m «a* tb* poaoity fer lu* ii*-. -. ter » - l . * iM.4ioHi.em of a tj ol i.tram-shop keepera on ¦>¦' irt.y, mid Were lt ia.I lli.i- tl.. . . forward on Saturday afteraooa aa lu willingness t«. beor tbe capt noaa of lbs dsfenae of anv liquor lier who wo,lin keop open and sell beer and wine, nirr* ooold aol .. bi over BOO liquor ahopa. oat of I.7A0. open Tbe prooseu ting atloroej tb* pi ¦-< cul ma against tbe lhjnor.se lera will bold, and thai tba renal- Ilona 1,isi will ie- found g.ii.tv and depriTed of their Warraota wera proi .. .100 of tb ll 11 r»eiir«,ead taoss aaaiiiat lac balance and cbarged with selling gooda, and ieeairect« >i presidenta, canap ipi 1 pueuabera sou others, arti] preb> ably bc lanucd lo morrow Tin: 8E8SK W UE lin rn. Alua ky, .Inly :io,-iicputy Attorne] »( '¦. n- erai I) - -at tbe " I...' ~- s 1 0 ." lal ¦ m ¦ . ..: -1 ii... i 11. Brodlay, au Aaa-.ob:.ni m. in - .' . lated 1. er-, v.: ii in proceed for trial et tee Beat et. and rennin*! ia tels city, provided tbel some «>ib. r thea Judge Westbrook pi " lie lo .1 lg Wi I 'ino*." *ai<i Mr. DeunMon. *. but be Bed almaty eipn o|.ii.iou upon tbo »ub)-c', ood 1 '. \t oraej Ucoerai end be m eeoversatl a upon Um anafeol Cote agreed . would tie 1.1 Mer ti b.v.- tba beering before some one -. reen bas nun Intention t<> daley thc trial. Hoih tea Attof r«i aa 1 me D Hi. o in'y li.iv ii i'll eal eauaoofdehtj amalita .1.11, ,,.r raised at UM Uiivrpii .. lon of ibo J , sa ed. We kopo tba Judge Csbora. judge logalli elllproatd. iitcuibi r .noe:, wo e rall up wei ¦. TEM ULAM/; FOB A CdBElAOB COLLISION. Loxa BbaVOH, Jul;. m ».-('<.roner Woolley held un IMpiesi to day lu lin IC me of Lewis ll iinpiou, nbc died from lcpiries reeelvi 1 in a colneten ta Peace ave. Tba Jarj madared a rcrdlci pining thc biaaic ea the .lea I nun. Willi un rt il onion, ..tenman or William li. Itowd, wu... .uni s .iiiii'in ewlllalon wiih mai ol I ha rtnnnacort wan, wai dlaifisrg d bj tai eon JOSEPH MILLS BECOFEMINO. Kn uni Bntiftos, Joly 80..Mr, Joseph Milt*, et Mew-York, wac badeatroha of poraiydc ia«t week, h is been steadily reeevertag Beet sines, ut* brothel In law, In UUebrlst, Obo of the cece.end Pt Mayra, wbobaa boon oallcdlu m eonanlie non, nolie in saying teal afr. MiUsic Uupruving every day, and I* »ure ,.f apoady recovery. .1 SON'IN-Lsn 'd DISCOVERY. . Ii dm (Inion, living in 11 ll.it ut Lfo. 407 Islington ave., rniurm-d to bl* lionir from I lie country yesterday and found hta wife's mather. Mri Ullin I'.lenui, who bad be'-ti loft alone lu the Hut when thc family wen! lo Hie country, dead In her bed. Mr. Union, his wife Bed two.-.il,.!!, n went io thu country ou July -I, and Mis Foloam waaIntrnilng M go the nexi daj to Hint' u [aland to flail some frteado. rbe lce«uion uled at Ike hooseon Tueedo] ol inst \wiiU and knocked at Mia. linn, i's il IM but c.nhl get un rcapoiise. ll ls Uiougbt tliet Mrs. Polcam Muct fiore Been aced c week when tomi 1. Mrs. lonou notified Coroner Kennedy, caiiy initie morning, but unto slate hour taxi Digbl be bud not beau M WC hnise. Mr*. Polenta wai about axtj yean eld end ba. beea bj neale baattb for acme yoom, INQVIBIES A liol I A MISSING WOMAN. Tin- Germ.in Emigration Soeiatjj aad Snpar- inn iident Joekeoo, or 1 ii^h.. fmrden, rseetnd talegrame Iroui Kno, I'rnu., ycrtlei.l.i), ir.(iic»'iu^ tiicin to seo If I ba/ BOBld diwaWff any tram of Annie Hulibold*. ho Imuilgnat. ebont twenty yean old, uko arrived in tiii" country lunn Imam about two vet ks ago. Hhc had a llehai fm l*ila and eec pal ac bean tim car* for that place in cemnany with ether laualgnate, what beaam of in r afiei thal I* uni kuoWu, lu. r li ne\cr Iciielied I.el decUneUon. mm ovoid mn spcek l-.miiisb and in-r fr;eim« In Bnfl un lum ii cnn.- -I ned abOUl her. A numil v,iii br ugerad fm into tu tuon aa to ber wher.-auodia. A .11.nl ha* lin 11 raped for that purpose lu l-l m. TELEOB it'll soils. A BOBBI! PAKDOMBO Bt TEBOOVMBM0E Ai.iia.sy, .luiv ;io. -1 be Uoveruorto dav pardoned IJt-iiii)<s ki iii.i-ily. Him w.s »eiitri.I liv tba < "ilrt afBl talons in w a-, .a^io.i loiuny ou De. niniii I I, itH'i, lo Imprison mont in loton dim torUri roars sad nve mouths tor robbery. 'isr uin.iuiit ni unve<i iu lim robbery os* se, JIAM.l il Wltll.K 1 UVI.MJ TO AHJI .-.'1 A BWZffO. KiMi.-iu.v, H. Y., July 30..Katie liable, hvn'g nen Wcodateek, Ulster County, wc toonda' sd banging to s aaass to aa ooiboooa on Matcraay alisraoun. it «aitiiouaht ai hrs! ibm sba a ooouuutad . m.. bit on InvasUgsilo lt wua found thai um ali' ''.ki baaoffls SOMBglcd in the lotie wbllo euue.vui Ina lo adj iii a as lng. IIMIUMH.II In ill. IIANUKI). Ai.itA.NY, Juiv SO^-Timappliootionol counsel for eoiiiM.uLki.n;. i.i .if,- iiniiM'.iiilonni ..I the daalh MiO-uor o. Wll.u* n linn v nslia.idai was io-.lav dnulnd by iluvetuSi' Llavel^ud. ualiuader will bshaniau al I. U.a ouAUsutl 10 OAJlCjiD VjAllfil IVIIjLiEjJ-/. THE INFORMER SHOT ON A STEAMSniP. WIIILK OM THE WAY FROM CAPH. TOWN* TO PORT KMZAnKTII.THE ASSASSIN ARIIKMKD. London, July no..Nows bas been received hero that .lamea Carey, tbe informer in tbe l'heenir Park murder cases, was shot dead yeaterday while land¬ ing from the steamship Melrose at I'ort Elizabeth, Cape Colony. South Africa. The mur¬ der waa committed hy a fellow-passenger of Carey's named O'Donnell, who was arrested. O'Donuell took pa.ss.igo hereby Donald, Currie St Co.'s nisi) steamship Kinfauns Castle, which left Rut mouth on July u for CojM Town, where sho trunslerred her puaseugers, who were bound for Port K lila hot li, about 400 miles to the cast, and other coast ports, to tim steamship Melrose. Tho (lovernnient had taken special and exhaustive uieasuna to protect Carey. ¦ The report of ttie shoot mg nf Cnrey caused intense exciieiiient n the West Bad nf London and in tho House dfJPartlamanl The news was neainj with ui.ui v exprossious of delight in the streets of Dub¬ lin. LATK DBTATU OB 1IIF. 8IIOOTINO. London, duly 81..ll appears thal O'Donnel dogged Cany from London. Both sailed in tho ¦tc lUMf Kinfauns Oatie, The I'nily IWeyrapg says : "Tho Government have littio doubt that Caicy was followed from Dublin. Ihcy believe that tho Fenians had hakea most el a bonito measures to prevent his escape. According to tho latest accounts, the murder occurred at sea. Carey was not killed outright, but died shortly after h. was shu!. O'Donnell gar* renderednimaelfquietly. Ile was placed mina. sud was handed nv. r to the (.(dice when tho .Mel¬ in-- arrived al Pori Elieabetb." Carev Waa travelling ander the DemeofPOwer, His family were with lum. Cany embarked al Dal I month. rrom Madeira he wrote a letter to the aathori'iee In which he described the voyage sud Bald be hal sh,ired in a niiveganti n in which thc [nviuoibln aud "the nu cteani Caiey " were especially donouiiced. Ho said he intended to forget (hat Irelandever existed. Itr-Jnit'lNU IN IHUI.IN. A l:irgo crowd gatbend lid Bight in frotit of James torey's boam in Dublin, cheering loudly be¬ the informer had been killed. The Dublin authorities hili, y. that O'Donn. ll ia a man who uus implicated three years BgJ in the attempt to blow np the Mansion Boan in Lindon, and who amaped with C.denian to New-York. i he Qovernmenl minted Afrit-i a* tba safest place for Cnrey. Itiadoabifal whether he knew bu deetjtaatton tofon celling. It was not revealed lo the police who took hun from Dnblm to Loudon. 'lill: M'SPII lui S MW |\ CANADA. M«iNTiir.Ai., July 30..Thc min who was .uapected bi i>e Carey, the informer, who arr.vcd by ataamahha to Montreal, proceeded wntwert last uigbt. Two men aup|M>*,«.i to bc dotooUvao wont to the come tralu. TIIK BTOBT DISCREDITED IN THIS CUT. au i in' i.Aiu.ii ro bb a DOOMMD man. auwavaa, Tin- an Utmum1 said to Im« pnvniling in beeden over the raperbad aheettagel Carey leael aband bj Ilanama la New fork. Tba iriehaera la tula city expeen no Imuag at au on the majapt, chiefly '. 'I. *. i bf vt".euc ls .o pooch a foregone adan with Hiern ibal UM aiiuoiincuieut Of lt* ac- c-.nipil-bi.il ti: 4. n d gm prim thom, " Mebbe lt's tlinir." auld our of tho Inn »fall (Patrick .love's) Aaso- " lor if it kmt| lt *ooa win Im." lui* remark ailina np MM cmahm he^d by the rarhrae member* of lbs af' 1:ti< rsi.! (Tun and tb»< la-iua-OaW eoctftlre whew-rs. are ti. Tho remark wu in cte wltb a laugh, »nd little Biers wa* aald about MM ¦ liter. P .i. 11 ii,i", til" alleged **Member (»ne,"who is atm uvmg in Meet luitic «t, Blankly a. said thal f>r ic* peri ta did not b '. Mgect "| ,|,i not wt*h to ls> Interviewed." neaid. "I have a-i o!.|.- .timi for various reasons to ctpnealag oplulooa al pneeal in the pnbbe | uirn.tia. If laver fad fr.- to ¦ ii. .. it ..¦.nt, I aimil do so, nm if yon coolac yoareel] to merely (neting me lotheeSeat Bm. BUT opinion .ts au Indi \ Mi.il ls lb.il the lepori ia ie, you tusy do * i." .¦hu nu bellen the oilier statement published thal 't iii " ached tu reporter. " 11timk ii doubtful rf thal a trna. Yoe will womb r, cf.res, mn. I em gtrmg yee an ludiriiiuai opinion." ..1 Mr. Ti i,.m. Mn Tynan w.i* Btaooel In the mem it the time. Mid the report, aim !i bera appi and from t bm lo Hum cee> ecrnlne ncr anxiety la h»r bueeend'i behalf h. u. .j bj thc rspnmtea al bar lace, which to amiens la Um cal aa hun* if arena I. i: ti, BO m. iq ii ippj ipi n I. ii bed th look of a man who bec mile ap kia Bind to expect the noni ami if in. ci rerc demanded to-morrow, bc wm.ld pr..!n!'!> .«. tM lc let SUTpHaod min lu Atm rl.:i. l-.itr.ck Peed, Editor of Thr tii*h World, who ira. alaooaki tor als opinion of wm r ip ii t, mid tba) in> tliougtit tbere was nothing Intrinsically Improbable in it "Carey la doomed," bc -i "Of thal tbere uno doobt, i c.mein ie tbere la no lnsnrancocompany ei¬ ther would take a risk on bl* Hf* Be arlu fall though whether tuls Mo nh Ifrlcao news ii true i. scan toll till confirmation arrivee, Whether be la la Canada »i Ifrioa I of course ii., not know. Br opinion was tbai tbe Bngllsb would moke bim a warden ol ..anson, the onl) position In whiob hi would ban m* nroia Hon Even there, bow- sver, he would fall rf onlj for ll blackness bc - owi In setting the Bagltsh on Mrs Frank Byron I esc not Millik he u In Montreal, tot tlmt ta mm of thc most Iii 'i cities ou thc eouilnenl and uojury tin ia wolli I con vic h.- lunn Tim .li..- nev ." (riionoviin Boms, ni titr VnilttlIriihman, whenebowa in. rspol '.-ai thai he disbelieved it eutirnly, "I bara itn.ii tnai I an inclined iii giri.tire credence to ibel . mer is i.i Oana tu," bc added. "Of course he nay ba mil.ase", hm < amy ls under our surveillance, audio) informant mri' positive, fer hero," aud ., i, ii, i. " Thal wi.I appear In ever) papei "> inorroe ." I ii<> letter, w olen wh« doted fro u \|.>ritr. ul, g.ive wini' ii ii poi led to lu- un aui.ieiiilr account .1 < nicy's rec nt lolngs, lt stain tau < nev bought his ticket on jni, u ii..ni enc Payee, au agent on July la iimi. r tao name uf O'Neil, as a al orege peesenger, by the ateamer Mon trenl, of the Domiulou Clue, and arrived lu <i lebeoJaly .j.,, ms nd,.il ti. in*:ou.v «'ioj io iii it imim. ile ii.ul die .'ul ..-.i lum -.-lr ami ouiv ned a sa.I with bim loft Quebec immediately foi Montreal, bul hoe now left mm oliy, ku des loatlon ootna unknown. I'he writer adds ti.a; ll is the lute;ilion in Mouin ii to make Canada ion tint for ino foiiltU*. Boob md taut Un Inforuianl might in mlcm kee, but ba .lld not iiiiuk it likely. CAMMI AND Till PBOCNU PABK CRIME. iii- i.vim.mi. ta a PAMOOB i ami:--I in. PBBBOM1 Airrv Of 1MB mas-. Tue Btnrderof Loni I"roderick Cavandlah ami Mi. liurkc, t ndawBl BretOC] for Ireland, willi which (he miine of .dunes I arc) W.ll BlweyC BC iis.-oelnted. took pince mi tatardny, Ma) .'¦. 1882. fat bmbum Um de¬ tectives were lu thc dort n to tba peepotntom of the crime. Hu ill), un lincslliutlou which wits begun n.iriy in ii.-.-.miier gave thc oftolala mipcetan* lafmmallua vtiji.ii mnlted ta tbcermt bi Dublin,aa Janaarjr i- 1111,1 l:l hist, of I went) ol mote tuen supposed lo lie con- tic. le.I with thc inviuciiiifs. raaeng thanama wa* Jame* l arcy, ii builder omi COntnctot af Dublin, und the maaaamtaMn for Trinity Maid la thc Maaaoipal OonndL Carey aaa arnoted bl Midnight en Vrtdejr .luiiu.iiv lt, hi I'll house mi liie eolith ride or tho city. ii,. ¦ weil known to ttie poiicr, bevteg ben a BaUea- altai for some time ami having heirn BReeted ann hafen ¦adm tb. Oeentoneet. Bran taken befon e Magi.- tinto he naamaedaa aire! braVado and threatened aa m timi for (bum imprtamaaaiti A moiilli hiter the otlklnl* hint prepared the cttac agalnet the aefooneee, anal n Pahtnauty io fUteea oe more men nara arraigned ea aehergbef aoneptneyte Binjder lard rnimttk Oanadlahaad Mr. Barta fa this numiier were Carey niel his hrother, Peter Oarer| joseph Brady, Timothy Kelly, ntaherrla tbe carillon; Joeph und Jaiucs .Mullett, Ttiomas lutii. y, Daniel«uriey, Miciuiei Pagan and Daniel De» lally. 1'hc pii.miuia were ustoiilslicilw lou U.i\auagh, th.- eui-iiiiiii. taring ha ned mfa) mc, cut. rod th. attaam bax aad lead what taknewef taeFhamtxPart atlamj lde!itlf)liiK .Iiiiues (urey, Iii.ol), Dduiiy und other.t us having Ukeu purl In Um Iragedy. uk lt itNK IBPOBMBB, Tho cvideuoo of Kavuuugh waa regarded as atroug enoiiKh to convict the Behan) is; but tho ciiso ugalnst them waa made ntlll mole corni.Into wheo, n week lalee, at the allon read anana af the beethan tarey haaaMi tmuod luluimor and tcatillcd against lu* follow-oouaptr- been described as a most horribly vivid p'ece of descrip- tlon-llfe-llke and death-Uko, lt was said at the time. us no Invented story ev/sr was. Ho began hy saying that he Joined tho Temau ilrotberliood in ISO?, and became the treasurer of the organization. In 1881 he was sworn In aa a member of tho Irish Invincible*, the oath binding him to obey all inlers of the body under penalty of death. He and others were to organize In Dublin a branch of the Invlncibles whose headquarters were In London. Tho branch was to number fifty persons and ita object was to " remove all tyrants," among whom Mr. Forster Marl Cowper aad Mr. Burke were named. The members of the hand watched days and nlghtstn murder Mr. Fors¬ ter, lint ill their schemes failciL They took their orders from "Number 1," asTynau, now In Brooklyn, the bead of tbe organization, was called. Daaoaxanra tmb wjhi*.ti Carey then gave In detail the movement* of the priso¬ ners on the day of the PhomtX Park murders, told how be saw Joseph Brady, who had two knives, raise his hand amt strike one of tho two men, and repeated a con¬ versation which ho had subae'iueiitly with Brady,de¬ scribing how he and Kelly had killed the men. The par! which Carey himself played In tho tragedy was to give the signal with a white' handkerchief. While Oarey waa giving this evidence the prisoners interrupted hun iwtln and again, oiillltuc Mm a "perjured Uar," and heap¬ ing curse* nu mn, uk thc cause nf all their misfortunes. 'I he result of the trials that followed was that five men, Joseph Brady, Daniel Curley, Michael Kogan, Thomas Caflrey und Timothy Kelly, were found utility mid hanged. Othera were sentenced to penal servitude for from Ive yeera to Ufa, end thc faur informers, tho two Careys i.Iiiui.-s's lu-,ther bering also become a witness for the Crown). Joseph Hanlon and Panel! were released, having raeerral rewards from tho Government. Jessee Carey waa released on Saturday, May 20. So Intense was tbe feeling of hatred toward him in Dublin that hie bonn hud to be guarded utter be nave bia evl- lenoc airiilnst bl* fellow-conspirators ; and when he was released tho Government tra ve him his choice of the alternatives to remote in Dublin without police protec¬ tion or ta go to some British colony. Var some time it was not known where he had gone.bnt within a fe'V days icpo;ts, now provo l to be without foundation, have been current that he had been ann In Canada. CAHKY'm I.IFK AM> PKRsON'At. APPEARANCE. Carey waa shout forty years old. He was horn tn Dublin, his father. Francis Carey, a bricklayer, having Koli" thither from I'.-lbrldjre, County Kildare. Ho was married end tad seven children. One of lils two broth¬ ers. I'l.iiieU, la a mister inn!.lei-. Peter, lils other brother,-it the time of his arrest, waa a foreman brick¬ layer, fn kia bnalnoaa of builder aud c antractor carey was fairly succcasrul. Ile had BOOM big contracts, working chiefly on public building*. Winn arrested he owned eonalderable reel estate and loosed ninny build¬ ings whl'h he sub let. After bc I urned Informer, how¬ ever, his tenants uni hi* prosperity left bim. Indeed, on one or Ino ncsaulOII*. dip pl Ul tho goorda his boneo was attacked by mobs omi the winslow* were broken. Ht* position ns town Councillor gar. bin considerable Influence In Dublin. In bis personal appearance Caley was described as follows ai the tb.>f thc trial "Junie* Carey ls a tall, well-built man of forty Of forty-llvi. Ilia face and i.e.ning ii linnie eooioeao and determination. His high forehead and pteasant-lookieg light eyes are calculated to inspire conti.lenee ; willie his lintot demeanor, decent drem, and general air of respectability mark him oed as different from UM ordinary run of lila Icllow-artlaans, un BOggest tho anoceccflU tradesman. illa hair ia brown, his ey«a dark blue, and lils cheeks wear it tactic Inch He wears I. otb moustache nii'l lies rd, the feat¬ ure* of hts fHce being well chiselled, while a striking characteristic of it i* the prominence of the cheek-bones. Pori Elizabeth, ita place neer which Carey was shot, ec the southern eoeef of Africa, In Cape Colony, about 10X) milos cast of Capo Town. 1MB El HE RECORD. a planing mill destboyzd. A lar^'i' plaUUMg mill nt No. 70 Clarkson-st., owned nnd oe ui kai by laider A: Carpenter, was Imniod down yesterday morning. The cause of the Are waa not leann-.!. OwtngtO the I nflt iiitn.i I.- nature of Hie stuff lo lt the bull.Ung was rapidly Bootroyod, entailing a lo** of i?«j.0<a> in Inman and machinery. Tue livery stable of W. H. MeGlbuej a<J)oiiung was damaged B6O0 ead the furniture fectory or a L d C. a Wernar, nen door, auffcred a similar amount of injury. FLAMES IN LAST SIXTF.KNTH-ST. A fn«' Bl 0 o'clock List BTBMXBC did $7,000 damage tn tile four story hrto;v bull ling No. 504 Kast BtXXcenthei M. .Veglcr'a cabinet furniture on tho top floor angered to ute client of if 1.ooo. Thc fi cuni aad th fl floor*, bnafdad br lloury Krokchs carpenter, were damaged 92,000. Tuc huildlak', which ia owuc I by Mus Knelling, of Brooklyn, wa* dameged by Ure mid nw iH.ooO. lae enllre lona I* covered by lu*Uiauce. A HOTEL IV CANADA BUSHED. KmiwituN', Ont., July JO..The Holton Bpnnga HCBCt, netter known io thc travelling public aa theMcMeous flnose, wea destroyed by In reeterdey, with the mn bu.1.ling*. Nut liing was saved. Tho los* la not known. _ A DESPERATE FIGHT WITH OUTLAWS. an BBTOBI To caphrgB nu: IUMIIII Hil HUM TU KIF. MIN KU 1.1 li. LiTTi.r. BoCKi Ark., July 3d..A dispatch to Itadaaefil from MM r-priuns aays: " Au ofllcer und pcm.. lu pursuit of th. Montgomery, 7,«!1 and (iarland County outlaw* came up with tho Daniela brothara an theil ban.!* on thc moimi,mis in Perry County, on thc head waters of tb.- Kourehe !a Favc BlTCff, on Sun- .i. FbO I lg) 'ves nen bl a stronghold aud a desperate tUht followL'l, malting lu tao killing of two of the punutag par:y. Spelt on Caldwell, of (i u ,in.| '..univ, mid i 'harli's (.'arter, of Dardauc He. A tn li lilied Haines, of Dard.im Ile, iv as BUM killed. The outlaws cacaped witbuui injury, though lt la reported mat one of them. Real Ho ker, ol 0 ii lan I County, has a ii rendered io a m.-i itt' Nichols, of liaiUml County; THROWS FROM A TRAIN AND RILLED. Nr.wiuitn, N. Y., July SO..Tba first arn¬ dell! to it peaocagcr n lb. new Wi-tt M.tore and Hull.ilo Hallway occurred tod iv. OOOTge Waller, of Burcside. ou thc Ouiarioa.id Western bri icu of the West shore md, tonk it train ut West Point to go to his BOOM, When BbOet ono into north of West Petal bb left bis seat to gg imo UM lamhleg car, which was next to the coach lu wmoh h was nilli;. Aa hu stepped upon the plat¬ form tin-train, ni r rn; Hu: ii curve, gan a linell and throe h.m off, an I. ni* head lt ri king a ri-'*, he WM in¬ stantly killen. Hs ti "Iv rolled lu'o tue river, inn was r .on iel un* afternoon He was nb.mt twcntv-elx years of age, aud llio support of his ni KOOT, INJURED IN A RAILROAD ACCIDENT. BoCMMtTMft* X. Y., July 80..Another rail- roail accident happened this afternoon at Cuarlotte, ai veil lillies nor-li of lins city. A Borne, Witertown and Oadeneburg freight train ran into a New -York Central peesenger train. Upping over three co Mhca ned smaak- lug one. M's. joesph Darla, Oeorge tiarrla, Ooaductor rtml t ti .nil another n -i 'son, n.i.ne unknown, were seri- mill) cut and Unused. HELD OS A CHARGE OF FORGERY. BaXTiMOBBa July SO..Tua* charge Bgalaal Chark aU.Oogel.of tariegobninn $18,000 from the Ma- tloualI'nluii Beak of llaltlinoivon forged piper, was call¬ ed tins afleruo ni. (io.-el waived aa eiaminattou and was committed for the action of the Onad Jury. llealJsa ibo Ciitoti Bonk, tba Manufacturer*, and the Howard Hanks, Hint tba booking mmse of Nicholson & Bone hoid discounted notes, UM endorsements on winch nra alleged to bo taned, amounting to Bbd»C00, .1 MERCHANT DROWNED AT LONG BRANCH. Loma BbamcBi July 30..The body of Baat> ucl rollin, who wits drowned lore yoslerdai, was found to.lav near the West Knd Hoi.I bathing ground*. l\r> a s.i merchant of Montgomery, Ala, uud waa u\ mg ot Bo.0 I..ist Klghiy-thlril-st., Now York. CRIMES AND CASUAL TIMS -HY TRLBQRAPB MIN Kits K1LLK0 BY A F VI.I.I.ViI HOOF. CaBLIKVIIXB, ill., Jul.l 30..Two lilllie!?'. Ilenrv BtaauandUeorgs Kaiser, wereiuatuitiy kiiiedin Hie Loomis Cii.il Hillie rosMMay ky tkC failing Si mo »iale rout. A MUBDBBJBR'B UOIOIDK IN PBI80M, Mourn i Aioin., I'eun., Juiv SO..William Moee- Iry. uga thirty nlxlit. i'0:iiuil(to l Milclita lu bl* coll at tba bunbun J ju ia*l uignt. II wm asatsoi al io i wai io yeais' Imuntonmeni for tho mordsr ol David Powell at nu* place ¦ni i in istin i.st Mcaeley'a wu il ni during ula trial. Ilo haves rt.. Silftdwe. sr.uniiMi \\i< BILLINO his BROTHES. Macon. Ile., July 30..A dispatch to Iii, Zelexnpa anal .i/m..'.'1-i. aivs ili.il one -li.e.r. a^o aeveainen. li»iua* BSOI .'lill- vldo. aiab.i il Iii* iii -le.oioluSi' ia iii* loll al.le, kilima; hi ai. A corou.-r'aj irv hut foi.u.1 In.u guilty ot mai¬ llol. A VU TIM ul'TIIK WSaTKBM PL000 FOUND. CINCINNATI, J ll 1V 30. '.>ii,lie woiLlll.'ll il'lfiting Srave* In tbe vicinity ol tho riuciiuatl houthoru Kail mad p.t UiK nuniiiu ls iveieil UM buiiy ol a *IU| luau linnie W'oi.i. who .-..ill-Hi tua -'i*»t t'eluiury at tuu BOM thc iiiiml »weji awav a pottloa of tho depot a la nouna bulled in a kujut. Tbot. July 30..Patnok Moulton, agc fortv-fnur, wa* killed nv ftarnar.l BcCaa>ef. age thirty-two. trna nora. in. i in- mea oars slreei laoorora m. rsirror a»aeit* that M .litton iBaiiitsd bira aud oiiallsuged him to th'iu. »u<i ih« ciisileniii wa*a"..epie,l. McCain^ «truok Aloullou over the rigm ayn tstaleg hi* teeth DBOWMMO WMILB lUTiliN'n. Pittman Ukovb, N. J.. July 30.- \\inie paeaedy, .g. ufieeu. .on of Jame* M iassa.lv. of ^'^"l- w».dLuo0 e.* rn .;*, wiulo liailnug lu llsovaa a I'ouO, user una jilace. UM hud/ wa* lauiiarMi. A DELIBERATE MURDER AND 8UTCIDE. A YOUNO MAX SHOOT. lUMSBIaT AND A WOMAM WITH WHOM HE HAD HKEN LIVING. Occupants of tbe four-storv houae No. 211 West Twenty-aocond-st. were alarmed at 9 a. m. yeeter» day by two pistol shot* which were fired in a front room on thc third floor. Several furnished roora, in the houso wore let to persons who took their meals at neighboring restaurants. The room in which the shooting occurred wac occupied by Horace II. Shepard, a young clerk, and a woman much older than himself, who was believed to be his wifo. Mrs. Williamson, the landlady, waa in tho lower part of tbe house wi cu the shots were heaid. Other women, who wera in their rooina on tbe upper floors, went into thc halla and sain the/ believed some one had been killed in tbe house, Tbey wera too much frightened to make anfinreett» gation. Mrs, Williamson neut for her brother, O. C. Smith, a young artist who also lived in tho house, and waa employed at a place not far away. When Mr. Smith arrived he tried tho door of the room oc¬ cupied by tho Shepards and found it locked. There waa no reply when he knocked loudly and de¬ manded admittance. Policeman Clark, of the Six¬ teenth Precinct, wa* summoned and ho forced th. door open. Then it was seen that a murder and suicide had been committed in thc roora. FOUND DKAD IN THEIR Bf'D. On tho large bed, which was placed with its head against the middle of the east wall of the room, lay the lifeless bodies of Shepard and his wife. Tbot et the woman was on the side of the bed nearest thc door. She was a large and coarse-looking women with featuies of a Hebrew cast. Her age was almul forty-five. Death had lent a sodden, almost brutal, look to the face. Blood waa streaming from a shot wound near the ru ht ear. It waa evident that che had been killed in her sleep, as her eyes were closed and th" position of ber body was one of natural repose. She had been lying on her left side with one arm folded over her breast and the other stretched out straight under tho young man's shoulder. She p- ard's head was thrown backward over the edge of tho bed, bis eyes were wide open and wore * look of agony, and his body, lying on the back, wa. twisted in a manner that showed plainly a death- struggle. He bad shot himself in tbe right sido of the head also, and death must have followed tho shot qnickly. A new-model Smith & Wesson re¬ volver of 3S-cahbre, with two chambers discharged, lay between the bodies, close to Shepard's right hand, which had dropped to his side. Shepard wm of medium height and alender, with clear-cut, hand¬ some fo.itut'-s. light hair and complexion and brown mustache. The bodies were dressed only in night* i4dlung, but thc coverings of tbe bed were drawn up over them. Tbo couple had slept late in the morning. Shepard had waked first, but he bad not moved from his place in the bed, probably fearing to disturb his companion. His pillow wm displaced, showing that his revolver had been taken from under it before the shots were fired. The fun ifure in the room consisted of anordintrr Mai k walnut chamber set, with chairs to match. A plain carpet covered the floor and on tho waihi were a few cheaply irani d cbromos an'l wood cn- gr:Lving9,oneof themrepresentiiigtbe "LMt Supper.* There WM a trunk near the hud. lu a small closet at tho west end of the room was hung most of the clothing worn by tbe couple on thc previous day. Mr. Smith said that Shepard and tbo woman began to occupy thc room on M.iv 23. They had been extremely, iiuiot. The woman had been in tbe house most of tbe time, while ber supposed husband waa away at work, and thair evenings bad been spent in tho room as a rule. Nothing more was known about thom by any in¬ mate* of the house. IJTIXK KNOW* OF THK COII'I K. Police Captain McKlwain, when he heard of tbe tragedy, went to the house and made a thorough search in the room. In Shepard's pockets he found abmit *-'. a watch aud chain and several let tera wini h showed that the youngman had bc ii em¬ ployed hy Herring & Co., thc safe-makers, at Nu. 251 Broadway, The letters wore about busiuca matteis. Not a scrap of information concerning tho woman was found until a piece of paper, with smile wining in pencil on it, wa* fouud in an in¬ side packet of Shepard's waistcoat. On the back of the paper was the address, " Rev. P. L. Shepard. Say brook, Conn." Tbe following letter was written on the other aide : Ml DBM Moma and Fatheh: K tty and I were ¦eemtiy married. There will be nothing revealed of the c. rem my. We have naen very happy together lu lifo, but we will bo happier m death, whlcu seeiut so pleas¬ ant. Our list wish Hint requeat la that we tu ay reit to¬ gether. Wuh all our love ituil devotion, wc are your affectionate sou aud daughter, K.I1TV AM> IlOKACK SlIKPABD. Sin pani hal writteu tho letter ou July 20, M that date appeared cn tbe page, Imf he probably had not shown it to tho woman mentioned as bia wife. Captain .Mc Kl wain said he could not find any clew to tho woman's identity. Coroner Martin gave ii permit for the removal of thc two bodies tn an undertaking shop Ll West Tweiuy-tlurd-st. He said he would not proceed with au inquest until later in ibo week. The police were dir clod to take charge of tho property belonging to the couple whicu was found ni the room. THK WINIAM IliKS ril'IBD. One article, which tho police overlooked, fnr- nislied to reporters a moans of ascertaining who ike murdered woman wa*, it wa* a bindle nf hosiery. on tho wrapper of which had been writhM the address, "Mrs. A. C. Kelley. Marshall Plats, No. 117 West Fifteeuth-st." At tko barge ilit-hmso it was said that Mrs. K-'lIey wac away from home. The uame " Kelley " wac printed Ba tba lotter-box for the fourth-floor dat, and over that somebody had written tho nam? " Voullaire." Occupant! of other flats in thc big build" mg said they had not associated much with Mrs. Kelley or her children. Tba family tu ired in to the fl stina the fourth floor about a yeer ego, Mrs Kelley was said to be it widow. Abe hal two suns, youug nieu who were known as Al¬ phonse and llolruont Youllairc. and two daughtera who wore short dresses, although they were ae.ul/ BJ tall M their mother. Tao dat was furnished expensively, it waa said, and a piano in the parlor w a- used every night to accompany siugi ia. Several ronna men culled fi ci, ii'uiiy at nialia* Within three mouths, however, thero had beeen mai ked chung'', Mrs. Kelley WM awav much of toe nilli' ami the other member, ot the [emily were no. mtii often in tho halls. The Hat had been closed tor a day or two. A description of Mrs. Killy woe singularly like that of tho woman who had been killed in l'wciity neaetkfrOB One inmate of the flee bonn said tiiat a sou ol Mis. Kelley wasemployouia O'Neill's itrj gooda store in (sixth ave. At ONcili's store it was fouud that Alphoun Voullairo, a young tuan, wac employed to wrap up package-, lie Bead that he knew llorac* H. sher¬ ard, and Ins tone unpin-1 that his acquaintance waa not a pleasant one. When caked it he kuew where Ins mu'her waa roong Youllairc begin io tremble. He wished to kuow it anything had happened to her. A brief account of the tragedy in Twenty-second st. was givou le lum. aud he ex¬ hibited signs of great emotion. Hm wont to tbe undertaker's shop and looked at the face of tan murdered woman. "Good Omi!" he exclaimed. " it ia abe!" He nearly fainted, hut recovering bi»»- seli with unction he said ho miut go in search or bl. lu ot her. BOBUUBfMB AMOOI hek msTOit Y. At a late hour last evening the young man mw Coroner Mamu, and told him some, facts about hie mother and MM BBBjBBlBteBM bctwnu "«r "* Shepard. The woman hod bBBB BBMlBnl JMB1 before .he mot Shepard, and .he had «"**Wjj prev.ou. to her second marriage Ito ..*¦¦ Zm is twenty-nine years old. aud Ines M Jerome Park. There are two llBlblBI younger than Alpbons., and a na undywta& Sher m fin bUbali Kum mm . ^...itoiiber Where tlu>y lived before tana A7 house'would not say. Mrs? Kelley met TMMJ Shepaid about two y.ara ago, but they did ena
Transcript
Page 1: I..N0-13,407 TUESDAY, SI, SiEARTHQUAKE ISCHIA-voKKLII I..N0-13,407 NEW-YORK, TUESDAY, JULY SI, IMl PRICE FOUR CENTS. _A'«Tlrt Tt HI.1L1 rt I nntf triTTfn I atfiro Th*narran.nf fh-miinfrr

)voKKLI I I..N0-13,407 NEW-YORK, TUESDAY, JULY SI, IMl PRICE FOUR CENTS.

_A '«Tlrt Tt HI.1L1 rt I nntf triTT fn I atfiro Th* narran. nf fh-miinfrr Whloh ho told hM Gr'nir T*V CTnT fVT TVf ATI!

I

SiEARTHQUAKE IK ISCHIA-

e ,NES IN THE TOWN OF CASAMICCIOLA.V»WO»OF THE BWI«WB EST.MATE9 OF

m DEAD AND WOtNPKD.

Tl.fi latest new. places the number of death.

.n«Hl on the inland of Iaehia. near K*****the earthquake on Satorday evening, at 4.0UU.

SL. in the theatre, where a burlesque jj--!«*, with a scene representing an earthquake,wa. plHved, were saved. Thirty-seven perons

.re said to have been entombed rn one room in

.,boU>l All the policenieu in the town were

wm, i The work of aenrch.ii r for the dead is

-oiDt' on slowly. Most of the corpses are un-

JJwnizable. lu Naples, where the dead and

, wounded are carried, heartrending scenes are

witnessed. The work ot relieving the destitute

h*s be^un. ,.

THE SEARCH AMID THE RUIN'S..UK BODUM I-NRFXOGXIZABIE-RK.UKF FROM

nairn tuan and incidents.

Napi-KS. July 30..Many women aud children are

among the victims of the earthquake on the Island

$i l.«chia on Saturday evening. It is stated this

aitenioou that the number of persons killed wan

'2.(K)0 and that the number of wounded was l.OOO.

Pitty wooden huts will be built immediately for the

gooqmmodation of tho survivors. The municipalautboiities of Naples are sending relief to ihe island

aud are doing all in their power to alleviate the dis¬

tress of the people. Most of the corpses winch

bare been recovered* are so discolored by dirt thatevott after they have been washed the features of

the victims are unrecognizable. All the members of

the police force at Casamicciola were killed. A

boat has arrived at Naples containing tho bodies of

tw.'jty-four infants. A few persons were taken

fron the ruins alive last evening. Eight bandiedmore troopa went to the scone of the disaster last

nigfct.IIKART-REND1NG 8CENX9 IX NAPLES.

Tho sceues here occasioned by the accident are

heart-rending. The hospitals are crowded with

wounded survivors aud the dead-houses are liliedwit1! bodies of the victims. The bodiea of several

Nsapo'itan ladies have been recovered from the

raine. Five houses remain standiugat Casamicciola.Cries for help can be heard coining lrom the rams.

Sappers are hard at work endeavoring to rescue the

peraons who are still alive. Boats from the islandfilled with dead bodies aio arriving here cou-

.tautly.Professor Palmieri, Directer of thc Meteorological

Observatory on Mount Vesuvius, states that thedisaster was not due to an earthquake, but to thesubsidence of the ground.

ONLY THOSE AT THE THEATRE SA.VFD.

London, July 30..Of the foreigners staying at

Casamicciola only those were 6avod who were at

tr»e theatre Saturday night. Survivors state that

they were obliged to paw Saturduy night m aWi-Jm darktifss.without daring to move even to assisia> sc calling for help beneath tho ruins. There is

uaw little hope that the latter are still alive. Ac-eor<ling to the latest estimate 3,000 personsperished on the island. Three soldiers searchingfor victims were fatally Injured to-day. Subscrip¬tions have been o]>ened throughout italy for the

reb>f of the distressed persons.iX EARTHQUAKE KEPRESKNTKD IN THE THEATRE.

Survivors say that thirty-seven persons wcro en¬

tomb d in a room in the Hotel 1'iccola Sentinella.Coon; S Tgardi, :tlt<T three hours'exhausting labor,rescued eleven per oas but failed to accomplish the

prt»oi:>:ii obj* t ol his efforts, the saving af his sin¬ter. The plav at the theatre ou Saturday night was

a bur!< :»q:ie, which opened with a scene repnseut-iagau earthquake.

na urn um placed at 4,ooo.London, July 31..It is now stated as certain

that 4.000 persons perished on the island of Ia hi

on Katunlay night. The stench jfrum 'lead bodia.of human beings and animals ia almost unbearable.Several men and women were rescued from theruiDi on Monday morning. Many more might havebeen saved il a huger loree of rescuers had beenavailable earlier. Many persons who were beardgroaning during the night were dead before th*yeonld be reached and earned to places of nafety.

©VE THOI'SAM) LIVES SAVED BV SOLDIKKS.

JIaples, July 30.M'ulnijht..Two thousand sol-iiert diKg'iiK ii' the ru>ns saved one thousand livesBp to midday ou Sunday and exhumed twenty-fouraaraons alive on Monday.Tie Roman newspapers appeared to-dav witta

mourning borders. Many of we people injured in¦Maa will be cripples for life. Tba dead at Kanoaa ai ber 300; at Laecoaineno 500. and at Fontanaberrara'_*ou. Tweuiy-.'our children perished in theMissncordia Asylum. The King anil Queen of ItalybaveMitisciib.-l 100.000 lir- and tho i'ope L'3,000lire for tho re:icf ol the suij«T«-rs.

CHOLERA ASD YELLOW I EVKR.

KEP'»KI8 OF DEATHS AND OTHER NEWS.

London. July 30..There were 330 deaths fromlawn in Cairo on Sunday, and 413 at twentyother places situated between Miuyeh and theMediterranean Sea.Cairo, July 30..Thc Government is considering

t Wojcct for the partial burning of other dangerooaquarters of the city like Bulalc.

Kstiu-r Patric* acting Catholic chap aln to tli<-onti,h forces stationed in Cairo, lias died ofei'Olera.Alexandra, July 30.-Four deaths treal cholera

occurred her« yesterday-. An analysis has beenniacle cf the waiT of the Nih- which shows that it* 'nfected with putrid matter to a point above theentente! s.

a

ESCAPING FROM QUARANTINE.New Orleans, La., July 30..Two men to¬

day escaped in a b >ai fi om a vessel undergoing o,naran-.liusattue Ship Island Quarantine Button,and madeluwr May t., fa,, t briaUan. Wbsn tbe Diet becameH.-'..',' l,y PfeaUtent lout*, of tu*- Louriana Bosi ofBsa*h. be ordered tbe urreM of tue rueu. Tbtj wereiMeii hilo custody, and turned o»er to th* Coiled'buts*salacities, churla witu Hte»iin« tue boat.

JTEI.I.ow VEYEK OH THE CITT OF MEBIDiWashington, July 30.-BurKeoii-Ucmral

Ma ..illoi'.of tue Marine Hospital Servlce.to-day recsKeoesbh- dispatch from Havana muting thal tuc City of-Ma.frora Vera <'ru* lo XewYork, left ,i.,.n caM,. of"fever al Ital port, Iheatuaiutr waa dunn reeled

i tturday.w*o«

1 HI Ql'AKANTlNE AT THE CAPES.Vt AsiiiMiioN, July 30..TheSargeon-Qaneral

Of U' Mann" Hospital Service to-day neut tbe followingtsisfTitui to Surgeon Henry Hmltb, at Norfolk, Va. :

" It li important for the public luiereats that a capablo.ftcsr take charge of the Naiioual nuarautltie About lobs leannjrut ril at tbe Capes. You must take cttarge ofttl* Work. Proceed to tbe steamer California, prescribe1st il, men, remain there until cbannel la buoyed out toelsatrmaii'a Inlet,theu remove with sick to barge Uelden..beiK-amer Woodworth will bo sent you for orders lo. fswdHTi). Then take up Tour quarters on ncr. OrdersWill be »ent by mail."tarcoon Smith replied ss fdlows:I.Mtgraui roeeived. win proceed at once to carry

«t{J""Oueiious tor a vigorous and effie.^ut qnaraaUas¦.mw i-apea. I go down to-day with needed udaitiooal«".*» aud medicines for Beldau to remain."*eunsoupurgeoi; Ulenuan tim alto been dlrccicdlto

.sssaiu un duty at Norfolk until furtuer order*. .^gaaB

ERASCE, CHINA AXD TOXQUM.DETAILS OP THe'fKEHOH SORTIE.

«» FKENCU 6QLAOROX-A TREATY PKOJ'OSEO DYCHINA.

iiOXDox, July 30.-Special dispatches to the Lon-.*PapersaUte that the sortie by the Fro. h ka«^"'u on the 10th inst., when a thounaud t theany were killed, waa made from Namdinn and

aw trorn H»rni, as stated in the report from Ton-.alfi to the French Minister of Marine.*M Awn<kra". correspondent at Hong Kong says

.»eces«oftne sortie was due to the fact that¦adtJS *arrt80Q was Perelly conveyed In JunksTfc^K *nemy iu th0 rcar^ '"prise."JJChinese still persist in maint*lning the pro-

~^«»« af tba exporuuiua 0j Catti* for tbe French

forces. The French squadron will shortly mako a

demonstration on tho Chinese coast.The Standar(Tt correspondent at Vienna learns

that Chins has proposed to M. Tricon, the FrenchMinister, that neamtiations ba opened for a formaltreaty and that Franco readily agreed to tho pro¬posal.

HR. GLADSIOSE SOS IALS ED.

THE COMMONS AND THE CANAL QUESTION.SIR STAFFORD NORTHCOTE'* MOTION' OF.Ki ATF.D.

TIIK CittVr.RNMKNT HAS A MAJORITY OK M.LOMBOK, July 30..In tho House of Commons to¬

night Sir Stafford Northcote (Conservative) movedan address to the Queen praying that in any nego¬

tiations relative to the. Suez Canal she will declineto recognize any claim of thc Suez Canal Como inv

to such a monopoly as would excludo other under¬takings designed for the parana. .! opening a waybetween tho Mediterranean and Red seas. Themotion was received by the Tory members with

loud cheers.Sir Stafford Northcote begped for a calm discus¬

sion of the motion, which, he said, was not of a

narty character. He wished to do nothing to dis¬credit the Government. Ile only asked the Houseto express such au opinion as would relieve themfrom tho eiiibarrasmient arising from a practicalrecognition of the monopoly of tho Suez CanalCompany bv some members of the Government.Mr. Norwood (Liberal) offered an amendment

declaring that it was undesirable to prejudge theaction of tim Government, a:id that tho Housedeclined to pass resolutions concerning furthernegotiations or pro"eedincs in connection with the

canal. Mr. Gladstone, amid great applause, cordiallysupported Mr. Norwood's amendment.

Sir Stationl Northcote'* motion was rejected, andMr. Norwood's motion in the nature of an amend¬ment to tb. former was adopted bf . vote nf '.."-'_' toUsu. Tba Parnell member, abstained from roting.Cnvious to Sir Stafford Northcote'* motion Mr.

Gladsome said that before any action waa takci. in

regard to the second Suez Canal, the House ehonldhave an opportunity ol' expressing Ita opinion onthe Mibject. The Govi rumen!, he said, desired mer¬

chants and shipper, to have ample time to o insiderthe matter. The Government do aol Intend) headded, an early renewal ol the negotiations, as

it is hopeless to consider the question fairly a*longas it is entangled in politics.Mr. Gladstone, in opposing Sir stafford Noith-

cote's motion, maintained that the late Govern¬ment was » waio in at when it boncbt the Sue. Canalshares M. de Lesseps claimed rmhts even moreexclusive than be doa. noa. Tba pamine, ol SirStafford Northcote*! motion, he saul, WOnldgreatly diminish the Government's sanguine hope.of coming to an agreement en tb. canal question.The House of Commons would aol be boned by tb.opinion of the Executive. He declared that itwould he useless to pronounce an eptnlon on a aub-j«ct which would probably have ta bs settled inthe courts of Egypt.Mr. Childers, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said

he was confident before many months or years thoGovernment weah) meeeed ia making a aetiefao-loiy agreement with regard to the canal.

NE W8 FROM IHE DOMISLOS.

THC QUARREL OVER A BOUKDABY.WiNNirio, Man., July 30..Mr. Norqnnj,

Premier of Manitoba, rind o carload of apodal policemen.have arrived In Rat I'.iriage, where all nus quietat last accounts. Tho Maultoba men sent io BelP rt'ijje have determined to arrest all the Oatarloaeeel ilofficers, sod serious Seating M isttolpaied. rae Winni¬peg Fib id Battery aaa Cavalry ara ordered te balac «ta go io it.ii i' irten ie assisi tii*. Manltob > sp icial

offi-era. An Oit.ivea dispatch motived yesterday eon-tam* an order ror Kort Unborne barrack* t<i be gol r. ;olvf'r Sit/ mourned troopers, who have been ordered herefrom lt .iua.

A STEAMSHIP AH IfOS K.MovTitKAi., July 80..Tue sasamhip N'ode-s

rorth, which left Mon treal lu ballvt la»t M»udar,iaashore ST West Wolf Island, one of th- M Ifd ilea group,Toe I >iin nu io.i Wic iking I'o.npaiiy bas sent a steamer tober relict.

INVALIDS OS THE WAY TO A SIIKINC.Ottawa, July no..Nearly 1,000 pilgrima

blt trns city to-day on an exoaiaMH to Bt, Anne daBeaupre. They were aeeompeaiad bj tbe Boaaaa CatbellsBtafeepaf Ottawa and a auasker of eiaygyuaan, r:<ia

annual pUflliaga is niixio'is'y looked forwardfrench Ito, an ( StkoUoS, SWUM Ul Bliegl d m rat I CUT* 1

having been effi eted ou previous exeuraiooa Amorunie people who wan! to-day were scare, ot Invalid* oncrutches aud blind iumi and wom ML

SHIPS OF WAH EXPECTED AT QUEBEC.Ottawa* Ont., July no.. rim Marine ;ni<l

HabaitaaDeparteeaal ha< baan infurmM nm theaoelHer Majesty's ahlpi of war win arrive at Quebec abeaithc BsMdM of A'i.'iltt. Tiley are tb- ifOfthamp-ton, with Kcir-Adadral Slr John L. Goaon board; the Canada, with Prices Oeorgoof Wboard, and iBe bi to. Tbey will prooably romalo ia p ilseveral w oks.Tue (ioverain nt « earner La Cona Ileum- bat 11

ai tiaspe from a er use on tbs Laora lor coast. Bbs re>ports la. results of tbs Bsberm. Ibis aetaon dietlng.MISCELLASEOVb FOREIGN SEWS.

SOCIALISTS IN GENEVA ARRESTED.Cinkva. July 30..At a meeting af Socialist

workmen yesterday violent appeahen were made,summoning tho State io provide employment forworkmen. The assembly afterward proeecdod tothe Town Hall, bat the ofAdala refaced to receive a

delegation, whereupon tba leader of tim processionunfurled a red flag. He ami aeveral others weio ai-raatadt

_

' AMKRICAN BEEF AND POSS ABBOAD.Condon, July no..In the Hooae nf Common, this

afternoon Mr. Dodaoa said that the Governmentwould consider tba subject of appointing ii commit¬tee,en the cattle disease next aoaaloa. They wero

receiving, ho Bald, definite, ieport* in regari tollfrom tho American Qoveramenl and tromBriflahCouhuIs abroad.Bannan, July no..The Senate has leaned an or-

derte all captains of vehsels which arrive fromAmerica with pie li lo 1 jiork ai a part of their cai go,te inform tba customs antbontMeof the quantitythe* have on boar of snefa pork under pain of Hot)marks' line fee neglect, to do so.

THE TARIFF AND PATENT-LAW IN* TUBSET.CuNxiANTiNon.K, July 30..Mr. W.vimIIihiii,

tbe Umtali Obargd d'Affaires, incl Qeaaml Wall iee, thoAmerican Minta cr, maintain their opaoiltlon to the pro,pamipatent law. The latham Oiiiaiamanl baa offeredGeneral Wallace lo appoint an Ot loman delegate toratine tbe tariff, but has declined lo prolong the treatyof commerce with I af United -'ates.

POBEIOS NOT LS.Diiuian, July :iO.-It is denied that Dabgi-

munzi, the. brother of Colewayo, han baan killed.MAimil,, July 30..Tho newspaper* h>-r« den» tbut tbe

Hpanisli Minuter io Mexico la about lo be rsiallld.Vit.s.NA, July 30-Aiigu»t Vi bas been Axed aa tho

date for the opculug af ibo luternutlonal Electrical Ex-hlbulon.Hnaaamuaa.Jaiy 30.-ai ibo aaaaj congress hero

*££*:&? ** l"""'',('-'"'""">. ti- aiaand eadax.PRBaanoaa.iaty 3o.-Oue hundred and ciKluy

bo iseakave b.jou destroyed by tire lu the town of Berne-nor, ni the OefetneMat ot Tiann Berjung,¦Batta, July 30.-N0 Mtaietiri wm im> preeaai at the

Interview between tim Emperor of Germany und iboEmperor ot Austria at lachi on A ugu-i 7,

limi.i.s, July 30..Ihe Crowul'rluce of Auatrla willattcud the iiuu'imi mb of Hie ci mir. Army.

DAMACL Bl JttOk jj j v ?KNN&YLfAMA.yLancasteu, Penn., July HO.-RapottB from all

seciloiia o; thia county abow that thc Lal: and rain ai omi

of Saturday night was more destructive tuan was Indi¬cated by the earlier reports. Ovira thousand ncr.-s of

growing tobacco wore complexly iaetlCjed. unn-li ofwhich, howerer, is luaurcl. ibo ¦ixoama wein |awoUoU and aeveral budden carried away, a nnaiDM" utnarrow uacapea fioui Uiowuiuk being ict,ui .od.

HO liBLI; T ASH ASSAULT.

A number of young men, who were playingcards In allrjuor shop at No. 1 Hi Malden lane last nl«hl,became engaged In an ai leroi ion. The proprietor,Joseph Milli?, forcibly ejected them, whereupon tbey dragged bim from bis door¬way, struck bim on toe bead with some

o uni mil ri i mr ii I, icon,* no,. %¦»

Ibm robbed bim of a wallet containing BOO. Mllllgwho ls suffering from a contused wound of the bead, was

removed to ('bambers Btrect Hospital, where at a late

hour laat Bight h» waa lying unconscious. Hubee-

quent to the assault Detective. Oakes and Flsnnery,

of the Firs! Precinct, arrested on suspicion MichaelMatze],Charles Kooeft Waller Beutecb and O;to Petrcil.all of nrooiiivn Charles Wilson, ofSBO alonrooot;Q>r-barft / hTitanfcn. af Malden lane; winiam sidon, ol 10Hnbart-et.; Renry listens sod Henry Lamp, ofHobokCOi and Cori?- Sinn, of Ilutgers-st. The ten

prisoners will l»e urriiiKncd at the Tombs to-day.

TAMPERING nilli TUL WIRES.

TROPnLK uS Bli WBSTBBB OBUM UMBI LASTNH! HT.

It wns stated at lb. Western Union office earlythis maratag that there hail been a good Baal of

trouble with thc wires since 7 o'clock last evening.Tba trouble grew worse as the Bight went BU amitwenty wires were totally interrupted. Super¬intendent rTniaaton. said that there had been no

troubie with the cables between New-York andJersey City, but the wilBB had been interfered withbetwaen tba amie etta, and Jena* City. Thetroiiblo was not due to any storm dtotarbeaoa.Mr. Ilumatone left it to be inferred that thedifficulties were caused by tampering willi the lines."Th's may bo the prout move," he

said, "which thu strikers have beentelling about for som" days pist."The Superintendent of Construction, Mr. Poren,

left tho ollie, at o'clock- last night,but no ktiiiwlc.l.i- of his intent ons

was possessed by the Western I'nion

BaMala It wasfiaid, however, that between IftaBBaad twenty linemen bad bena emt owl tu hunt upth- ti on ides ou the wires OB M BB 'ia: ai Island.The disturbances in the wires wen tbecaomof

disturbances also in police circles. For bonn¦ earriage daabed from punt to pmit in the city,goiog from the Polio. Ueadquarten to Hm Twenty-seventh Precinct, thence to various

piers on tb. Nott ii and Fast Rivers. ATatauaa reporter who followed tba eahwl*learned thal at the foot ol Ma doa Lane a tnu hadbeaacbartered about midaight to be -.cady nt i a,m. to take a pat ty of six men to Sixtieth-st. It waasaid that I be pal pose of seeiii inc the lag was towatca the enblec under tho river lietween New-York City and Jeiwv City.

TUT. SUNDAY LAH VIOLA TED IS ST. Lolls.

BUtnSBM (dMU'.TIIi A - I'M'A!..WAItlUNT. rOBlill, ill I I Mil -

St. LouiSy .Tu'v lin. .Anion,' those reportedbj Ike pobce os hevtng rtoleesd thc Browning Bundeylaw yesierdiiv were the proprietors of livery Manie..

bfonortoo.rtgai stone, thannae, railway, andeseompanloo, barbara, k Mbaaen, new*r>ai>er ¦en from me

proprieiorsdown,thc Onion Depot Oaaapaay mrane>lng mil trains and all who «,-r< detected eeUll nun lawfullyand various ofier pr* »n*. Tko lager bc I I a m lb.central part ofthe elie, w'.lr'i opened In th* mornl-irf.closed belan aeon, nen evade, bal bUtM"Utions obsr>rvi«i br tin- police win bc reported to tbaprooeoaUog etiornar. who ..iii prorasal scalBSfatba rio.lalor*, In police stn ea li le sera tint neat Bundey thoMoa will be closely drawn sud arre'ts »;li poraapi bautaoe, if u soad ¦¦ eomb i Ina u.« b ian formed io reiUtUM low, oed prominent lawyers bara boan rotalM Mcarry rt»r«, If n-e,-«s iry. lo IBS United Matt . BoorwHMi .mn. Itlaeatioaai I thal t,000 barralo of boor woresold reaterda waieB el ss *rouid pav th* brew.erx e:i.',OiKI. 1*0 ttl* add lee nie. aud lhpior* sold,and tao outlay of eoosunx ll r 900,000Bleatarrgeaate from tbe liff r nt police elsi

j tbe oliy celled at UM Four < ourts this morning, and.acii <g iimbr Information eopptled nv Hie officer*, pith

ia ».. ir out «.i

eighty-ali gr eera, fifteen brewers, twslve stneoosaoolea, twelve Monufacturthg tetabltebraeata, etoo

a, earea barbara, Mveu baapew of urary.. live express 'our fruit..), .l> rs.

four ., Bve dally newspaper*, twoboasba! I parka, one theatre aad «.¦« ;unouns I , one of waleh waa tba bridge s

tbe btw wai (aaa t wasoars bod iii.l<'

their delimit dc. ..ira, -ti on friday at'erni>on. Al thatlag ibero wara 1 tot! 1 proosnt, ami lt

««. resolved to 1, , a dieeetitlac role.1.1 mi.iou ti,nu Um sssoelai m «a* tb* poaoity ferlu* ii*-. -. ter » - l . * iM.4ioHi.em of a

tj ol i.tram-shop keepera on ¦>¦' irt.y, midWere lt ia.I lli.i- tl.. . . forwardon Saturday afteraooa aa lu willingness t«.

beor tbe capt noaa of lbs dsfenae of anv liquor .¦ lier whowo,lin keop open and sell beer and wine, nirr* oooldaol .. bi over BOO liquor ahopa. oat of I.7A0. openTbe prooseuting atloroej tb* pi ¦-< cul ma

against tbe lhjnor.se lera will bold, and thai tba renal-Ilona 1,isi will ie- found g.ii.tv and depriTed of their

Warraota wera proi .. .100 oftb ll 11 r»eiir«,ead taoss aaaiiiat lac balance and

cbarged with selling gooda, and ieeairect« >i

presidenta, canap ipi 1 pueuabera sou others, arti] preb>ably bc lanucd lo morrow

Tin: 8E8SK W UE lin rn.

Alua ky, .Inly :io,-iicputy Attorne] »( '¦. n-

erai I) - -at tbe " I...' ~- s

1 0 ." lal ¦ m ¦ . ..: -1 ii... i 11. Brodlay,au Aaa-.ob:.ni m. in - .' . lated1. er-, v.: ii in proceed for trial et tee Beatet.and rennin*! ia tels city, provided tbel some «>ib. r theaJudge Westbrook pi

" lie lo .1 lg Wi I 'ino*."*ai<i Mr. DeunMon. *. but be Bed almaty eipno|.ii.iou upon tbo »ub)-c', ood 1 '. \t oraej Ucoerai endbe m eeoversatl a upon Um anafeol Cote agreed .

would tie 1.1 Mer ti b.v.- tba beering before some one-. reen bas nun Intention t<> daley thc trial.

Hoih tea Attof r«i aa 1 me DHi. o in'y li.iv ii i'll ealeauaoofdehtj amalita .1.11, ,,.r raised at UMUiivrpii .. lon of ibo J , sa ed. Wekopo tba Judge Csbora. judge logalli elllproatd.

iitcuibi r .noe:, wo e rall up wei ¦.

TEM ULAM/; FOB A CdBElAOB COLLISION.

Loxa BbaVOH, Jul;. m ».-('<.roner Woolleyheld un IMpiesi to day lu lin IC me of Lewis ll iinpiou,nbc died from lcpiries reeelvi 1 in a colneten ta Peaceave. TbaJarj madared a rcrdlci pining thc biaaic eathe .lea I nun. Willi un rt il onion, ..tenman or Williamli. Itowd, wu... .uni s .iiiii'in ewlllalon wiih mai ol

Iha rtnnnacort wan, wai dlaifisrg d bj tai eon

JOSEPH MILLS BECOFEMINO.

Kn uni u» Bntiftos, Joly 80..Mr, JosephMilt*, et Mew-York, wac badeatroha of poraiydc ia«t

week, h is been steadily reeevertag Beet sines, ut*

brothel In law, In UUebrlst, Obo i« of thecece.end Pt Mayra, wbobaa boon oallcdlu m eonanlienon, nolie in saying teal afr. MiUsic Uupruving everyday, and I* »ure ,.f apoady recovery.

.1 SON'IN-Lsn 'd DISCOVERY.

. Ii dm (Inion, living in 11 ll.it ut Lfo. 407Islington ave., rniurm-d to bl* lionir from I lie country

yesterday and found hta wife's mather. Mri Ullin

I'.lenui, who bad be'-ti loft alone lu the Hut when thc

family wen! lo Hie country, dead In her bed. Mr. Union,his wife Bed two.-.il,.!!, n went io thu country ou July -I,

and Mis Foloam waaIntrnilng M go the nexi daj toHint' u [aland to flail some frteado. rbe lce«uion uledat Ike hooseon Tueedo] ol inst \wiiU and knocked at

Mia. linn, i's il IM but c.nhl get un rcapoiise. ll ls

Uiougbt tliet Mrs. Polcam Muct fiore Been aced c weekwhen tomi 1. Mrs. lonou notified Coroner Kennedy,caiiy initie morning, but unto slate hour taxi Digblbe bud not beau M WC hnise. Mr*. Polenta wai

about axtj yean eld end ba. beea bj neale baattb foracme yoom,

INQVIBIES A liol I A MISSING WOMAN.Tin- Germ.in Emigration Soeiatjj aad Snpar-

inn iident Joekeoo, or 1 ii^h.. fmrden, rseetnd talegrameIroui Kno, I'rnu., ycrtlei.l.i), ir.(iic»'iu^ tiicin to seo If

Iba/ BOBld diwaWff any tram of Annie Hulibold*. ho

Imuilgnat. ebont twenty yean old, uko arrived in tiii"

country lunn Imam about two vet ks ago. Hhc had a

llehai fm l*ila and eec pal ac bean tim car* for that

place in cemnany with ether laualgnate, what beaamof in r afiei thal I* uni kuoWu, lu. r li ne\cr Iciielied I.el

decUneUon. mm ovoid mn spcek l-.miiisb and in-r

fr;eim« In Bnfl un lum ii cnn.- -I ned abOUl her. A numilv,iii br ugerad fm into tu tuon aa to ber wher.-auodia. A.11.nl ha* lin 11 raped for that purpose lu l-l m.

TELEOB it'll soils.

A BOBBI! PAKDOMBO Bt TEBOOVMBM0EAi.iia.sy, .luiv ;io. -1 be Uoveruorto dav pardoned

IJt-iiii)<s ki iii.i-ily. Him w.s »eiitri.I liv tba < "ilrt afBl talonsin w a-, .a^io.i loiuny ou De. niniii I I, itH'i, lo Imprison montin loton dim torUri roars sad nve mouths tor robbery.'isr uin.iuiit ni unve<i iu lim robbery os* se,JIAM.l il Wltll.K 1 UVI.MJ TO AHJI .-.'1 A BWZffO.KiMi.-iu.v, H. Y., July 30..Katie liable, hvn'g

nen Wcodateek, Ulster County, wc toonda' sd banging to saaass to aa ooiboooa on Matcraay alisraoun. it «aitiiouahtai hrs! ibm sba a ooouuutad . m« m.. bit on InvasUgsilolt wua found thai um ali' ''.ki baaoffls SOMBglcd in the lotiewbllo euue.vui Ina lo adj iii a as lng.

IIMIUMH.II In ill. IIANUKI).Ai.itA.NY, Juiv SO^-Timappliootionol counsel for

eoiiiM.uLki.n;. i.i .if,- iiniiM'.iiilonni ..I the daalh MiO-uor o.

Wll.u* n linn v nslia.idai was io-.lav dnulnd by iluvetuSi'

Llavel^ud. ualiuader will bshaniau al I. U.a ouAUsutl 10

OAJlCjiD VjAllfil IVIIjLiEjJ-/.

THE INFORMER SHOT ON A STEAMSniP.WIIILK OM THE WAY FROM CAPH. TOWN* TO PORT

KMZAnKTII.THE ASSASSIN ARIIKMKD.

London, July no..Nows bas been received herothat .lamea Carey, tbe informer in tbe l'heenir Parkmurder cases, was shot dead yeaterday while land¬ing from the steamship Melrose at I'ort Elizabeth,Cape Colony. South Africa. The mur¬der waa committed hy a fellow-passenger ofCarey's named O'Donnell, who was arrested.O'Donuell took pa.ss.igo hereby Donald, Currie St

Co.'s nisi) steamship Kinfauns Castle, which leftRut mouth on July u for CojM Town, where shotrunslerred her puaseugers, who were bound forPort K lila hot li, about 400 miles to the cast, andother coast ports, to tim steamship Melrose. Tho(lovernnient had taken special and exhaustiveuieasuna to protect Carey.¦ The report of ttie shoot mg nf Cnrey caused intenseexciieiiient n the West Bad nf London and in thoHouse dfJPartlamanl The news was neainj withui.ui v exprossious of delight in the streets of Dub¬lin.

LATK DBTATU OB 1IIF. 8IIOOTINO.London, duly 81..ll appears thal O'Donnel

dogged Cany from London. Both sailed in tho¦tc lUMf Kinfauns Oatie,The I'nily IWeyrapg says : "Tho Government have

littio doubt that Caicy was followed from Dublin.Ihcy believe that tho Fenians had hakea mostel a bonito measures to prevent his escape.According to tho latest accounts, the murderoccurred at sea. Carey was not killed outright, butdied shortly after h. was shu!. O'Donnell gar*renderednimaelfquietly. Ile was placed mina.sud was handed nv. r to the (.(dice when tho .Mel¬in-- arrived al Pori Elieabetb."Carev Waa travelling ander the DemeofPOwer,

His family were with lum. Cany embarked alDal I month.rrom Madeira he wrote a letter to

the aathori'iee In which he described thevoyage sud Bald be hal sh,ired ina niiveganti n in which thc [nviuoibln aud "thenu cteani Caiey " were especially donouiiced. Hosaid he intended to forget (hat Irelandever existed.

Itr-Jnit'lNU IN IHUI.IN.A l:irgo crowd gatbend lid Bight in frotit of

James torey's boam in Dublin, cheering loudly be¬the informer had been killed. The Dublin

authorities hili,y. that O'Donn. ll ia a man whouus implicated three years BgJ in the attempt to

blow np the Mansion Boan in Lindon, and whoamaped with C.denian to New-York.i he Qovernmenl minted Afrit-i a* tba safest

place for Cnrey. Itiadoabifal whether he knewbu deetjtaatton tofon celling. It was not revealedlo the police who took hun from Dnblm to Loudon.

'lill: M'SPII lui S MW |\ CANADA.M«iNTiir.Ai., July 30..Thc min who was

.uapected bi i>e Carey, the informer, who arr.vcd byataamahha to Montreal, proceeded wntwert last uigbt.Two men aup|M>*,«.i to bc dotooUvao wont to the cometralu.

TIIK BTOBT DISCREDITED IN THIS CUT.au i in' i.Aiu.ii ro bb a DOOMMD man. auwavaa,Tin- anUtmum1 said to Im« pnvniling in

beeden over the raperbad aheettagel Carey leael abandbj Ilanama la New fork. Tba iriehaera la tula cityexpeen no Imuag at au on the majapt, chiefly

'. 'I. *. i bf vt".euc ls .o pooch a foregoneadan with Hiern ibal UM aiiuoiincuieut Of lt* ac-

c-.nipil-bi.il ti: 4. n d gmprim thom, " Mebbe lt'stlinir." auld our of tho Inn »fall (Patrick .love's) Aaso-

" lor if it kmt| lt *ooa

win Im." lui* remark ailina np MMcmahm he^d by the rarhrae member* oflbs af' 1:ti< rsi.! (Tun and tb»< la-iua-OaW eoctftlrewhew-rs. are ti. Tho remark wu in cte wltb a laugh,»nd little Biers wa* aald about MM ¦ liter.

P .i. 11 ii,i", til" alleged **Member (»ne,"who is atmuvmg in Meet luitic «t, Blankly a. saidthal f>r ic* peri ta did not b'. Mgect "| ,|,i not wt*h to ls> Interviewed."neaid. "I have a-i o!.|.- .timi for various reasons to

ctpnealag oplulooa al pneeal in the pnbbe | uirn.tia. Iflaver fad fr.- to ¦ ii. .. it ..¦.nt, I aimil do so, nm if

yon coolac yoareel] to merely (neting me lotheeSeatBm. BUT opinion .ts au Indi \ Mi.il ls lb.il the lepori ia

ie, you tusy do * i.".¦hu nu bellen the oilier statement published thal

't iii " ached tu reporter." 11timk ii doubtful rf thal a trna. Yoe will womb r,

cf.res, mn. I em gtrmg yee an ludiriiiuai opinion."..1 Mr. Ti i,.m.

Mn Tynan w.i* Btaooel In the mem it the time. Mid

the report, aim !i bera appi and from t bm lo Hum cee>

ecrnlne ncr anxiety la h»r bueeend'i behalfh. u. .j bj thc rspnmtea al bar lace, whichto amiens la Um cal aa hun* if arenaI. i: ti, BO m. iq ii ippj ipi n I. ii bed th look ofa man who bec mile ap kia Bind to expect the noniami if in. ci rerc demanded to-morrow, bcwm.ld pr..!n!'!> .«. tM lc let SUTpHaod min lu Atm rl.:i.

l-.itr.ck Peed, Editor of Thr tii*h World, who ira.

alaooaki tor als opinion of wm r ip ii t, mid tba) in>

tliougtit tbere was nothing Intrinsically Improbable in

it "Carey la doomed," bc -i "Of thal tbere unodoobt, i c.mein ie tbere la no lnsnrancocompany ei¬

ther would take a risk on bl* Hf* Be arlu fallthough whether tuls Mo nh

Ifrlcao news ii true i. scan toll till confirmationarrivee, Whether be la la Canada »i Ifrioa I of courseii., not know. Br opinion was tbai tbe Bngllsb wouldmoke bim a warden ol ..anson, the onl) position Inwhiob hi would ban m* nroia Hon Even there, bow-sver, he would fall rf onlj for ll blackness bc - owi

In setting the Bagltsh on Mrs Frank Byron I esc notMillik he u In Montreal, tot tlmt ta mm

of thc most Iii 'i cities ou thc eouilnenl and uojury tin iawolli I con vic h.- lunn Tim .li..- nev ."(riionoviin Boms, ni titr VnilttlIriihman, whenebowa

in. rspol '.-ai thai he disbelieved it eutirnly, "I baraitn.ii tnai I an inclined iii giri.tire credence to

ibel . mer is i.i Oana tu," bc added. "Of course he nayba mil.ase", hm < amy ls under our surveillance,audio) informant l» mri' positive, fer hero," aud

., i, ii, i. " Thal wi.I appearIn ever) papei "> inorroe ."

I ii<> letter, w olen wh« doted fro u \|.>ritr. ul, g.ive wini'ii ii poi led to lu- un aui.ieiiilr account .1 < nicy's rec nt

lolngs, lt stain tau < nev bought his ticket onjni, u ii..ni enc Payee, au agent n«

on July la iimi. r tao nameuf O'Neil, as a al orege peesenger, by the ateamer Montrenl, of the Domiulou Clue, and arrived lu <i lebeoJaly.j.,, ms nd,.il ti. in*:ou.v «'ioj io iii it imim. ile ii.ul die.'ul ..-.i lum -.-lr ami ouiv ned a sa.I with bim n»

loft Quebec immediately foi Montreal, bul hoe now leftmm oliy, ku des loatlon ootna unknown. I'he writer addsti.a; ll is the lute;ilion in Mouin ii to make Canada ion tintfor ino foiiltU*.Boobmd taut Un Inforuianl might in mlcmkee, but

ba .lld not iiiiuk it likely.

CAMMI AND Till PBOCNU PABK CRIME.iii- i.vim.mi. ta a PAMOOB i ami:--I in. PBBBOM1

Airrv Of 1MB mas-.

Tue Btnrderof Loni I"roderick Cavandlahami Mi. liurkc, t ndawBl BretOC] for Ireland, willi which

(he miine of .dunes I arc) W.ll BlweyC BC iis.-oelnted. took

pince mi tatardny, Ma) .'¦. 1882. fat bmbum Um de¬tectives were lu thc dort n to tba peepotntom of thecrime. Hu ill), un lincslliutlou which wits begun n.iriyin ii.-.-.miier gave thc oftolala mipcetan* lafmmalluavtiji.ii mnlted ta tbcermt bi Dublin,aa Janaarjr i-

1111,1 l:l hist, of I went) ol mote tuen supposed lo lie con-

tic. le.I with thc inviuciiiifs. raaeng thanama wa*

Jame* l arcy, ii builder omi COntnctot af Dublin, undthe maaaamtaMn for Trinity Maid la thc MaaaoipalOonndL Carey aaa arnoted bl Midnight en Vrtdejr.luiiu.iiv lt, hi I'll house mi liie eolith ride or tho city.ii,. ¦ weil known to ttie poiicr, bevteg ben a BaUea-altai for some time ami having heirn BReeted ann hafen¦adm tb. Oeentoneet. Bran taken befon e Magi.-tinto he naamaedaa aire! braVado and threatened aam timi for (bum imprtamaaaitiA moiilli hiter the otlklnl* hint prepared the cttac

agalnet the aefooneee, anal n Pahtnauty io fUteea oe

more men nara arraigned ea aehergbef aoneptneyteBinjder lard rnimttk Oanadlahaad Mr. Barta fathis numiier were Carey niel his hrother, Peter

Oarer| joseph Brady, Timothy Kelly, ntaherrlatbe carillon; Joeph und Jaiucs .Mullett, Ttiomas

lutii. y, Daniel«uriey, Miciuiei Pagan and Daniel De»lally. 1'hc pii.miuia were ustoiilslicilw lou U.i\auagh,th.- eui-iiiiiii. taring ha ned mfa) mc, cut. rod th. attaambax aad lead what taknewef taeFhamtxPart atlamjlde!itlf)liiK .Iiiiues (urey, Iii.ol), Dduiiy und other.t us

having Ukeu purl In Um Iragedy.uk lt itNK IBPOBMBB,

Tho cvideuoo of Kavuuugh waa regarded as atroug

enoiiKh to convict the Behan) is; but tho ciiso ugalnstthem waa made ntlll mole corni.Into wheo, n week lalee,at the allonread anana af the beethan tarey haaaMitmuod luluimor and tcatillcd against lu* follow-oouaptr-

been described as a most horribly vivid p'ece of descrip-tlon-llfe-llke and death-Uko, lt was said at the time.us no Invented story ev/sr was. Ho began hy saying thathe Joined tho Temau ilrotberliood in ISO?, and becamethe treasurer of the organization. In 1881 he was sworn

In aa a member of tho Irish Invincible*, the oath bindinghim to obey all inlers of the body under penalty ofdeath. He and others were to organize In Dublin a branchof the Invlncibles whose headquarters were In London.Tho branch was to number fifty persons and ita objectwas to " remove all tyrants," among whom Mr. ForsterMarl Cowper aad Mr. Burke were named. The membersof the hand watched days and nlghtstn murder Mr. Fors¬ter, lint ill their schemes failciL They took their ordersfrom "Number 1," asTynau, now In Brooklyn, the bead oftbe organization, was called.

Daaoaxanra tmb wjhi*.tiCarey then gave In detail the movement* of the priso¬

ners on the day of the PhomtX Park murders, told howbe saw Joseph Brady, who had two knives, raise hishand amt strike one of tho two men, and repeated a con¬versation which ho had subae'iueiitly with Brady,de¬scribing how he and Kelly had killed the men. Thepar! which Carey himself played In tho tragedy was togive the signal with a white' handkerchief. While Oareywaa giving this evidence the prisoners interrupted huniwtln and again, oiillltuc Mm a "perjured Uar," and heap¬ing curse* nu mn, uk thc cause nf all their misfortunes.'I he result of the trials that followed was that five men,Joseph Brady, Daniel Curley, Michael Kogan, ThomasCaflrey und Timothy Kelly, were found utility midhanged. Othera were sentenced to penal servitude for fromIve yeera to Ufa, end thc faur informers, tho two Careysi.Iiiui.-s's lu-,ther bering also become a witness for theCrown). Joseph Hanlon and Panel! were released, havingraeerral rewards from tho Government.Jessee Carey waa released on Saturday, May 20. So

Intense was tbe feeling of hatred toward him in Dublinthat hie bonn hud to be guarded utter be nave bia evl-lenoc airiilnst bl* fellow-conspirators ; and when he wasreleased tho Government tra ve him his choice of thealternatives to remote in Dublin without police protec¬tion or ta go to some British colony. Var some time itwas not known where he had gone.bnt within a fe'V daysicpo;ts, now provo l to be without foundation, have beencurrent that he had been ann In Canada.

CAHKY'm I.IFK AM> PKRsON'At. APPEARANCE.Carey waa shout forty years old. He was horn tn

Dublin, his father. Francis Carey, a bricklayer, havingKoli" thither from I'.-lbrldjre, County Kildare. Ho was

married end tad seven children. One of lils two broth¬ers. I'l.iiieU, la a mister inn!.lei-. Peter, lils otherbrother,-it the time of his arrest, waa a foreman brick¬layer, fn kia bnalnoaa of builder aud cantractor careywas fairly succcasrul. Ile had BOOM big contracts,working chiefly on public building*. Winn arrested heowned eonalderable reel estate and loosed ninny build¬ings whl'h he sub let. After bc I urned Informer, how¬ever, his tenants uni hi* prosperity left bim. Indeed,on one or Ino ncsaulOII*. dippl Ul tho goorda his boneowas attacked by mobs omi the winslow* were broken.Ht* position ns town Councillor gar. bin considerableInfluence In Dublin.

In bis personal appearance Caley was described asfollows ai the tb.>f thc trial "Junie* Carey ls a tall,well-built man of forty Of forty-llvi. Ilia face andi.e.ning ii linnie eooioeao and determination. His highforehead and pteasant-lookieg light eyes are calculatedto inspire conti.lenee ; willie his lintot demeanor, decentdrem, and general air of respectability mark him oed as

different from UM ordinary run of lila Icllow-artlaans,un BOggest tho anoceccflU tradesman. illa hair iabrown, his ey«a dark blue, and lils cheeks wear it tacticInch He wears I.otb moustache nii'l lies rd, the feat¬ure* of hts fHce being well chiselled, while a strikingcharacteristic of it i* the prominence of the cheek-bones.Pori Elizabeth, ita place neer which Carey was shot,

'» ec the southern eoeef of Africa, In Cape Colony, about10X) milos cast of Capo Town.

1MB ElHE RECORD.

a planing mill destboyzd.A lar^'i' plaUUMg mill nt No. 70 Clarkson-st.,

owned nnd oe ui kai by laider A: Carpenter, was Imnioddown yesterday morning. The cause of the Are waa notleann-.!. OwtngtO the Inflt iiitn.i I.- nature of Hie stuff lolt the bull.Ung was rapidly Bootroyod, entailing a lo** ofi?«j.0<a> in Inman and machinery. Tue livery stable ofW. H. MeGlbuej a<J)oiiung was damaged B6O0 ead thefurniture fectory or a L d C. a Wernar, nen door,auffcred a similar amount of injury.

FLAMES IN LAST SIXTF.KNTH-ST.A fn«' Bl 0 o'clock List BTBMXBC did $7,000

damage tn tile four story hrto;v bull ling No. 504 Kast

BtXXcenthei M. .Veglcr'a cabinet furniture on tho topfloor angered to ute client of if 1.ooo. Thc fi cuni aadth fl floor*, bnafdad br lloury Krokchs carpenter, weredamaged 92,000. Tuc huildlak', which ia owuc I by MusKnelling, of Brooklyn, wa* dameged by Ure mid nwiH.ooO. lae enllre lona I* covered by lu*Uiauce.

A HOTEL IV CANADA BUSHED.KmiwituN', Ont., July JO..The Holton

Bpnnga HCBCt, netter known io thc travelling public aa

theMcMeous flnose, wea destroyed by In reeterdey,with the mn bu.1.ling*. Nut liing was saved. Tho los* lanot known.

_

A DESPERATE FIGHT WITH OUTLAWS.

an BBTOBI To caphrgB nu: IUMIIII HilHUMTU KIF. MIN KU 1.1 li.

LiTTi.r. BoCKi Ark., July 3d..A dispatch toItadaaefil from MM r-priuns aays: " Au ofllcer und

pcm.. lu pursuit of th. Montgomery, 7,«!1 and (iarlandCounty outlaw* came up with tho Daniela brotharaan theil ban.!* on thc moimi,mis in Perry County, on

thc head waters of tb.- Kourehe !a Favc BlTCff, on Sun-.i. FbO I lg) 'ves nen bl a stronghold aud a desperate

tUht followL'l, malting lu tao killing oftwo of the punutag par:y. Spelt on Caldwell, of(i u ,in.| '..univ, mid i 'harli's (.'arter, of Dardauc He. Atn li lilied Haines, of Dard.im Ile, iv as BUM killed. Theoutlaws cacaped witbuui injury, though lt la reportedmat one of them. Real Ho ker, ol 0 ii lan I County, hasa ii rendered io a m.-i itt' Nichols, of liaiUml County;

THROWS FROM A TRAIN AND RILLED.Nr.wiuitn, N. Y., July SO..Tba first arn¬

dell! to it peaocagcr n lb. new Wi-tt M.tore and Hull.iloHallway occurred tod iv. OOOTge Waller, of Burcside.ou thc Ouiarioa.id Western bri icu of the West shore

md, tonk it train ut West Point to go to his BOOM,When BbOet ono into north of West Petal bb left bis seat

to gg imo UM lamhleg car, which was next to the coachlu wmoh h was nilli;. Aa hu stepped upon the plat¬form tin-train, ni r rn; Hu: ii curve, gan a linell andthroe h.m off, an I. ni* head lt riking a ri-'*, he WM in¬

stantly killen. Hs ti "Iv rolled lu'o tue river, inn was

r .on iel un* afternoon He was nb.mt twcntv-elx yearsof age, aud llio support of his ni KOOT,

INJURED IN A RAILROAD ACCIDENT.

BoCMMtTMft* X. Y., July 80..Another rail-roail accident happened this afternoon at Cuarlotte,ai veil lillies nor-li of lins city. A Borne, Witertown andOadeneburg freight train ran into a New-York Central

peesenger train. Upping over three co Mhca ned smaak-lug one. M's. joesph Darla, Oeorge tiarrla, Ooaductorrtml t ti .nil another n -i'son, n.i.ne unknown, were seri-mill) cut and Unused.

HELD OS A CHARGE OF FORGERY.

BaXTiMOBBa July SO..Tua* charge BgalaalChark aU.Oogel.of tariegobninn $18,000 from the Ma-tloualI'nluii Beak of llaltlinoivon forged piper, was call¬ed tins afleruo ni. (io.-el waived aa eiaminattou and was

committed for the action of the Onad Jury. llealJsaibo Ciitoti Bonk, tba Manufacturer*, and the HowardHanks, Hint tba booking mmse of Nicholson & Bone hoiddiscounted notes, UM endorsements on winch nraallegedto bo taned, amounting to Bbd»C00,

.1 MERCHANTDROWNED ATLONG BRANCH.

Loma BbamcBi July 30..The body of Baat>ucl rollin, who wits drowned lore yoslerdai, was foundto.lav near the West Knd Hoi.I bathing ground*. l\r>a s.i merchant of Montgomery, Ala, uud waa u\ mg otBo.0 I..ist Klghiy-thlril-st., Now York.

CRIMES AND CASUAL TIMS -HY TRLBQRAPB

MIN Kits K1LLK0 BY A F VI.I.I.ViI HOOF.CaBLIKVIIXB, ill., Jul.l 30..Two lilllie!?'. Ilenrv

BtaauandUeorgs Kaiser, wereiuatuitiy kiiiedin Hie LoomisCii.il Hillie rosMMay ky tkC failing Si mo »iale rout.

A MUBDBBJBR'B UOIOIDK IN PBI80M,Mourn i Aioin., I'eun., Juiv SO..William Moee-

Iry. uga thirty nlxlit. i'0:iiuil(to l Milclita lu bl* coll at tbabunbun J ju ia*l uignt. II wm asatsoi al io i wai io yeais'Imuntonmeni for tho mordsr ol David Powell at nu* place¦ni i in istin i» i.st Mcaeley'a wu il ni during ula trial. Ilohaves rt.. Silftdwe.

sr.uniiMi \\i< BILLINO his BROTHES.Macon. Ile., July 30..A dispatch to Iii, Zelexnpa

anal .i/m..'.'1-i. aivs ili.il one -li.e.r. a^o aeveainen. li»iua*BSOI .'lill- vldo. aiab.i il Iii* iii -le.oioluSi' ia iii* loll al.le,kilima; hi ai. A corou.-r'aj irv hut foi.u.1 In.u guilty ot mai¬

llol.A VU TIM ul'TIIK WSaTKBM PL000 FOUND.

CINCINNATI, J ll 1V 30. '.>ii,lie woiLlll.'ll il'lfiting

Srave* In tbe vicinity ol tho riuciiuatl houthoru Kail madp.t UiK nuniiiu ls iveieil UM buiiy ol a *IU| luau

linnie W'oi.i. who .-..ill-Hi tua -'i*»t t'eluiury at tuu BOMthc iiiiml »weji awav a pottloa of tho depot

a lanouna bulled in a kujut.Tbot. July 30..Patnok Moulton, agc fortv-fnur,

wa* killed nv ftarnar.l BcCaa>ef. age thirty-two. trna nora.in. i in- mea oars slreei laoorora m. rsirror a»aeit* that

M .litton iBaiiitsd bira aud oiiallsuged him to th'iu. »u<i ih«

ciisileniii wa*a"..epie,l. McCain^ «truok Aloullou over the

rigm ayn tstaleg hi* teethDBOWMMO WMILB lUTiliN'n.

Pittman Ukovb, N. J.. July 30.- \\inie paeaedy,.g. ufieeu. .on of Jame* M iassa.lv. of ^'^"l- w».dLuo0e.* rn .;*, wiulo liailnug lu llsovaa a I'ouO, user una jilace.UM hud/ wa* lauiiarMi.

A DELIBERATE MURDER AND 8UTCIDE.A YOUNO MAX SHOOT. lUMSBIaT AND A WOMAM

WITH WHOM HE HAD HKEN LIVING.Occupants of tbe four-storv houae No. 211 West

Twenty-aocond-st. were alarmed at 9 a. m. yeeter»day by two pistol shot* which were fired in a frontroom on thc third floor. Several furnished roora,in the houso wore let to persons who tooktheir meals at neighboring restaurants. Theroom in which the shooting occurred wac occupiedby Horace II. Shepard, a young clerk, and a womanmuch older than himself, who was believedto be his wifo. Mrs. Williamson, the landlady, waain tho lower part of tbe house wi cu the shots were

heaid. Other women, who wera in their rooina ontbe upper floors, went into thc halla and sain the/believed some one had been killed in tbe house,Tbey wera too much frightened to make anfinreett»gation. Mrs, Williamson neut for her brother, O. C.Smith, a young artist who also lived in tho house,and waa employed at a place not far away. WhenMr. Smith arrived he tried tho door of the room oc¬

cupied by tho Shepards and found it locked. Therewaa no reply when he knocked loudly and de¬manded admittance. Policeman Clark, of the Six¬teenth Precinct, wa* summoned and ho forced th.door open. Then it was seen that a murder andsuicide had been committed in thc roora.

FOUND DKAD IN THEIR Bf'D.On tho large bed, which was placed with its head

against the middle of the east wall of the room, laythe lifeless bodies of Shepard and his wife. Tbot etthe woman was on the side of the bed nearest thcdoor. She was a large and coarse-looking women

with featuies of a Hebrew cast. Her age was almulforty-five. Death had lent a sodden,almost brutal, look to the face. Bloodwaa streaming from a shot woundnear the ru ht ear. It waa evident that che hadbeen killed in her sleep, as her eyes were closed andth" position of ber body was one of natural repose.She had been lying on her left side with one arm

folded over her breast and the other stretched outstraight under tho young man's shoulder. She p-ard's head was thrown backward over the edge oftho bed, bis eyes were wide open and wore *

look of agony, and his body, lying on the back, wa.twisted in a manner that showed plainly a death-struggle. He bad shot himself in tbe right sido ofthe head also, and death must have followed thoshot qnickly. A new-model Smith & Wesson re¬

volver of 3S-cahbre, with two chambers discharged,lay between the bodies, close to Shepard's righthand, which had dropped to his side. Shepard wmof medium height and alender, with clear-cut, hand¬some fo.itut'-s. light hair and complexion and brownmustache. The bodies were dressed only in night*i4dlung, but thc coverings of tbe bed were drawnup over them. Tbo couple had slept late in themorning. Shepard had waked first, but he bad notmoved from his place in the bed, probablyfearing to disturb his companion. His pillow wmdisplaced, showing that his revolver had been takenfrom under it before the shots were fired.The fun ifure in the room consisted of anordintrr

Mai k walnut chamber set, with chairs to match.A plain carpet covered the floor and on tho waihiwere a few cheaply irani d cbromos an'l wood cn-

gr:Lving9,oneof themrepresentiiigtbe "LMt Supper.*There WM a trunk near the hud. lu a small closetat tho west end of the room was hung most of theclothing worn by tbe couple on thc previous day.Mr. Smith said that Shepard and tbo woman beganto occupy thc room on M.iv 23. They had beenextremely, iiuiot. The woman had been in tbehouse most of tbe time, while ber supposedhusband waa away at work, and thairevenings bad been spent in tho room as a rule.Nothing more was known about thom by any in¬

mate* of the house.IJTIXK KNOW* OF THK COII'I K.

Police Captain McKlwain, when he heard of tbetragedy, went to the house and made a thoroughsearch in the room. In Shepard's pockets he foundabmit *-'. a watch aud chain and several let tera

wini h showed that the youngman had bc ii em¬

ployed hy Herring & Co., thc safe-makers, at Nu.251 Broadway, The letters wore about busiucamatteis. Not a scrap of information concerningtho woman was found until a piece of paper, withsmile wining in pencil on it, wa* fouud in an in¬side packet of Shepard's waistcoat. On the backof the paper was the address, " Rev. P. L. Shepard.Say brook, Conn." Tbe following letter was writtenon the other aide :

Ml DBM Moma and Fatheh: K tty and I were¦eemtiy married. There will be nothing revealed of thec. rem my. We have naen very happy together lu lifo,but we will bo happier m death, whlcu seeiut so pleas¬ant. Our list wish Hint requeat la that we tu ay reit to¬gether. Wuh all our love ituil devotion, wc are youraffectionate sou aud daughter,

K.I1TV AM> IlOKACK SlIKPABD.Sin pani hal writteu tho letter ou July 20, M

that date appeared cn tbe page, Imf he probablyhad not shown it to tho woman mentioned as biawife. Captain .McKlwain said he could not findany clew to tho woman's identity. Coroner Martingave ii permit for the removal of thc two bodies tnan undertaking shop Ll West Tweiuy-tlurd-st. Hesaid he would not proceed with au inquest untillater in ibo week. The police were dir clod to takecharge of tho property belonging to the couplewhicu was found ni the room.

THK WINIAM IliKS ril'IBD.

One article, which tho police overlooked, fnr-nislied to reporters a moans of ascertaining who ikemurdered woman wa*, it wa* a bindlenf hosiery. on tho wrapper of whichhad been writhM the address, "Mrs. A. C. Kelley.Marshall Plats, No. 117 West Fifteeuth-st." At tkobarge ilit-hmso it was said that Mrs. K-'lIey wac

away from home. The uame " Kelley " wac printedBa tba lotter-box for the fourth-floor dat, and over

that somebody had written tho nam? " Voullaire."Occupant! of other flats in thc big build"mg said they had not associated muchwith Mrs. Kelley or her children. Tbafamily tu ired in to the flstina the fourth floor aboutayeer ego, Mrs Kelley was said to be it widow. Abehal two suns, youug nieu who were known as Al¬phonse and llolruont Youllairc. and two daughterawho wore short dresses, although they were ae.ul/BJ tall M their mother. Tao dat was furnishedexpensively, it waa said, and a piano in the parlorw a- used every night to accompany siugi ia. Severalronna men culled fi ci, ii'uiiy at nialia*Within three mouths, however, thero had beeenmai ked chung'', Mrs. Kelley WM awav much of toenilli' ami the other member, ot the [emily were no.mtii often in tho halls. The Hat had been closedtor a day or two. A description of Mrs. Killy woe

singularly like that of tho woman who had beenkilled in l'wciity neaetkfrOB One inmate of the fleebonn said tiiat a sou ol Mis. Kelley wasemployouiaO'Neill's itrj gooda store in (sixth ave.At ONcili's store it was fouud that Alphoun

Voullairo, a young tuan, wac employed to wrap uppackage-, lie Bead that he knew llorac* H. sher¬ard, and Ins tone unpin-1 that his acquaintance waa

not a pleasant one. When caked it he kuew whereIns mu'her waa roong Youllairc begin io tremble.He wished to kuow it anything had happened to

her. A brief account of the tragedy in

Twenty-second st. was givou le lum. aud he ex¬

hibited signs of great emotion. Hm wont to tbeundertaker's shop and looked at the face of tan

murdered woman. "Good Omi!" he exclaimed." it ia abe!" He nearly fainted, hut recovering bi»»-seli with unction he said ho miut go in search or

bl. lu ot her.BOBUUBfMB AMOOI hek msTOit Y.

At a late hour last evening the young man mw

Coroner Mamu, and told him some, facts about hie

mother and MM BBBjBBlBteBM bctwnu "«r "*

Shepard. The woman hod bBBB BBMlBnl JMB1before .he mot Shepard, and .he had «"**Wjjprev.ou. to her second marriage Ito ..*¦¦

Zm is twenty-nine years old. aud Ines M

Jerome Park. There are two llBlblBIyounger than Alpbons., and a na

undywta& Sher m fin bUbali Kummm. ^...itoiiber Where tlu>y lived before tana

A7 house'would not say. Mrs? Kelley met TMMJShepaid about two y.ara ago, but they did ena

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