HARRISON ACCEPTS. His Formal Letter to the Noti fication Committer The Eepublican Nominee lor the rresiaency drives ms views. The letter of General Benjamin Harrison, accepting the Republican nomination for President has been made public. He begins by saying: Indianapolis, Ind, Sept. 11, 1SSS. "If on. II. M. Kstee and others, Commitfee: "Gentlemen: When your committee visited me on the Fourth of July last and presented the oflicial announcement of my nomination for the 1 'residency of the United .States by the Reputdican Convention, I j romifed as toon as practicable to commu nicate to you a formal acceptance of the nomination. Since that time the wcrk of re ceiving and addressing almost daily large delegations of my fellow citizens has not only occupied all of my time, but has in some measure rendered it unnecessary for me to use this letter as a medium of com municating to the public my views upon the questions involved in the campaign. 1 ap preciate very highly the conliuenee and re spect manifested by the Convention and ac cept the nomination with a feeling of grati tude an I a full sense of the responsibilities which accompany it." Jn regard to the tariff question he says: "The issue cannot now be obscured. It is not a contest between schedules, but letvveen wide a-iart principles. Tho foreign com petitors of our market have, with quick instinct, seen how one issue of this contest may bring them advantage, and our own people are not so dull as to miss or neglect "the grave interests that are involved for them. The assault upon our protec tive system is open and defiant. Pro tection is assailed as unconstitutional in law, or as vicious in principle, and those who hold such views sincerely cannot stop short of an absolute elimination from our tarill" laws of the principle of protection. The Mills bill is only a step, but it is toward an object that the leaders of Democratic thought and legislation have clearly in mind. "'1 lie important question is not so much the length of the step as the direction of it Judged by the Executive message of December last, by the Mills bill, by the debates in Congress and by the St. Louis platform, the Democratic party will, if supported by the country, place the taritf laws upon a purely revenue basis. This is practical free trade free trade in the Eng lish sense. The legend upon the banner may not bo "free trade"' it may be the more obscure motto, "tariff reform'' but neither the banner nor the inscription is conclusive, or. indeed, very important. The assault itself, it is the im portant fact. '! hose who teach that the import duty upon foreign goods sold in our markets is-paid by the consumer, and that the price of the domestic competing article is enhanced to the amount of the duty on the imported article that every million of dollars collected for customs represents many millions more which do not reach the Treasury, but are paid by our citizens as the increased cost of domestic productions resulting from the tariff laws may not intend to discredit in the minds cf others our system of levying duties on eom-)eting foreign products, but it is clearly already discredited in their own.'' Continuing he observes: "The Republican party holds that a protective tariff is consti tutional, wholesome and necessary. We do not offer a fixed schedule but a principle. We will revise the schedule, modify rates, but always with an intelligent provision as to the effect upon domestic production and the wages oE our working people. "We believe it to be one of the worthy ob jects of tarifF legislation to preserve the American market for American producers, and to maintain the American scale of wages by adequate discriminating duties upon foreign competing products. The effect of lower rat..s and larger importations upon the public revenue is contingent and doubtful, but not so the effect upon Ameri can production and American wages. "Less work and lower wages must be ac cepted as the inevitable result of the in creased offering of foreign goods in our mar ket. By the way of recompense for this reduc tion in' his wages and the losso"' the American market it is suggested that the diminished wages of the workingman will have an un dimished purchasing power, and that he will be able to make up for the loss of the home market by an enlarged foreign market Our vrorkiiigmen have the settlement of the ques tion in their own hands. Ihey now obtain higher w ages and live more comfortably than those of any other country. 1 hey will make choice between the substantial advantages they have in hand and the deceptive prom ises and forecasts of those theorizing reform ers. They will decide for them-elves and for the country whether the protective system shall be continued or destroyed. "The fact of a Treasury surplus, the amount of which is variously stated, has di rected public attention to a consideration of tie methods by which the national in come may best "bo reduced to the level of a wise and necessar- expenditure. This condition has hem seized upon by those who are hostile to protective custom duties as an advantageous base of attack upon our tariif laws. Thev have magnifie 1 and nursed the surplus, which they affect to deprecate, seemingiv for the purpo-e of exaggerating the evil in order to renoncile the people to the extreme remo ly they propose."' IDs sentiments on the use of the surplus are "as follows: "We are not likely to be called upon, I think, to make a present choice between the surrender of our pro tective system and the entire repeal of the internal taxes. Such a contingen y, in view of the present relation of expenditures to revenues is re mote. The inspection and regulation of the manufacture and sale of oleomargarine is important and the revenue derived from it is not so great that the reped of the law need enter into any plan of revenue reduc tion. The surplus now in the Treasury should be used in the purchase of bonds. The law authorizes this use of it, and if it is not needed for current or deficiency appropriations the people an i not the banks in "which it has been deposited should have the advantage of its use by stopping interest upon the public debt.' 'Closely connected with the subject of the tiritiY" declares Mr. Harrison, "is that of the importation of foreign laborers under con tracts of service to be performed here. The law now in force prohibiting such contracts received my cordial support in the Senate, ami such amendments as may be found necessary effectively to deliver our working men and wom.m from this raot inequitable form of competition will have my sincere advocacy. Legislation prohibiting the importation of laborers under contracts to serve here will, however, afford very inadeouate relief to our working people if the system of protective duties is broken "down. If the product of American shops must compete in the Amer ie mi market without favoring duties with the products of cheap foreign labor, the ef fect will be different, if at alhonly in degree, whether the cheap laborer is across the street or over the sea. Such competition will soon re luce wages here to the level 3f those abroad, and when that condition is reached we will not ne?d any laws forbid ding the importation of laborers under con tract. They will have no inducement to come, and the employer no inducement to send for them." Continuing he says: "But the day of the immigration bureau has gone by. While our doors will continue open to proper immi gration, we do not need to issue special invi tations to the inhabitants of other coun tries to come to our shores or to share our citizenship. Indeed. the necessity of some inspection and limita tion is obvious. We should resolutely refuse to permit foreign governments to send their paupers and criminals to our ports. We are also clearly under a duty to defend our civili zation by excluding alien races wh ose ulti mate assimilation with our people is neither possible nor desirable." The objections to Chinese immigration are distinctive and couclusive and are now so generally accepted as such that the question has passed entirely beyond the stage of argu ment. The laws relating to this subject would, if I should be charged with their en forcement, be faithfully executed. Such amendments for further legislation as may be necessary and proper to prevent evasions of the laws and to stop further Chinese im migration would also meet my approval. The expression of the Convention upon this subject is in entire harmony with my views.'' After condemning the disfranchisement of electors by fraud or intimidation he dis cusses the admission of Territories: "The Territorial form of government is a temporary expedient, not a permanent civil condition. No question of the political preference of the people of a Territory should close against them the hospitable door which has opened to two-thirds of the existing States." From thi3 he turns to trusts and combina tions, discussing them as follows: "The dec laration of the Convention against 'all com binations of capital, organized in trusts or otherwise, to control arbitrarily the condition of trad-3 among our citizens,' is in harmony with the views enter tained and publicly expressed by me long before the assembling of the Con vention. Ordinarily capital shares the losses of idleness with labor, but under the opera tion of the trust, in some of it forms, the wage worker alone suffers loss, while idle capital receives its dividends from a trust fund." After declaring himself in hearty svmnathy with the declaration of the 1 Convention on the subject of pen sions, he says in regard to Civil Service reform: "The law regulating appointments to the classified civil service received my support in the Senate, in the belief that it opened the way to a much needed reform. I still think so, and therefore cordially approve the clear and forcible expression of the Convention upon this subject. The law should have the aid of a friendly interpretation and be faithfully and vigorously enforced. All appointments un der it should be absolutely free from par tisan considerations and influence. Some extensions of the classified list are practica ble and desirable, and further legislation ex tending the reform to other branches of the service, to which it is applicable, would re ceive my approval." The following paragraph is devoted to the Temperance ouestion: "I notice with pleas ure that the Convention did not omit to ex press its solicitude for the promotion of virtue and temperance among our people. The Republican party has always been friendly to everything that tended to make the home life of our people free, pure and prosperous, and will in the future be true to its history in this respect" After urging the extension and cultivation of our diplomatic and commercial relations he concludes by saying: "The resolutions relating to the coinage, to the rebuilding of the navy, to coast defences and to public lands, express conclusions to all of which I gave my support in the Senate. "Inviting a calm and thoughtful consider ation of these public questions, we submit them to fcthe people. Their intelligent pa triotism and the good Providence that made and has kept us a nation will lead them to wise and safe conclusions. "Very respectfully, your obedient servant, Benjamin Harrison." TIMELY TABLES. The Popular and Electoral Votes lor President in 1HH4. The popular vote in the United States, in 1884, according to the Tribune Almanac, was as follows: Votes. Cleveland, Democrat 4,874,9St! Blaine, Republican 4,V'5l,Sl Butler, Greenback and Labor 175,:J7G St. John, Prohibitionist 150,:Jf Blank, defective and scattering. . . . 14,90 Total 10,0!37,01C The Electoral vote was as follows: Cleveland. Alabama 10 Arkansas 7 Connecticut 0 Delaware o 4 1 15 13 s s Florida Georgia Indiana Kentucky Louisiana Maryland Mississippi Missouri 1G New Jersey U New York "0 North Carolina 11 South Carolina Tennessee Texas. Virginia. .12 .13 .12 West Virginia 0 Blaine. California S Colorado Illinois Iowa 15 Kansas U Maine 6 Massachusetts 14 Michigan 13 Minnesota 7 Nebraska 5 Nevada 3 New Hampshire... 4 Ohio til Oregon ' Pennsy 1 vani a UO Rho le Island 4 Vermont . 4 Wisconsin 11 Total 1SJ Total 21'.) I Cleveland's maj...37 NINE MEN KILLED. Frightful Explosion in a Montana Tunnel. Nine msn were killed and six others se riously injured by the explosion of a blast in the Montana central tunnel near Helena. The tuimel is leing driven from both ends, an I for the last ten days workmen on each side had heard each other's movements. The gang in one end is composed of Irishmen anil in the otuer end of Swedes. There has been great rivalry betw.cn Die two gangs to see v-'wioh would make the hole first. Orders were given by the contractors to be careful and put in small blasts. Just before f ie night shift of Swe les quit thy put l.i three big blasts Orders ha 1 ben previously given to drill only ten fet, but the Swedes drilled twenty feet. As thehoie was nearly th rough the Irishmen, not knowing the Swedes had drilled so far, explode 1 a single cap over one of th?S3 holes, which exploded it and set off the oth-r two blasts. Three hun Ire i pounis of giant powder stored in the vicinity was also exploded, and the result was awful. As soon as the srnolce cleared away rescuers entered the tunnel en i found thi remains of nine men scattered all over the place, one man being cut completely in two. The tunnel is six thousand feet long, through granite, and this is the first accident. The Coroner's jury rendered a verdict of "No one to blame." South and West. The Wisconsin Democratic State Conven tion assembled at Milwaukee and nominated James Morgan for Governor. Abe Mann, of San Francisco, cut his wife's throat in a fit of jealousy and then committed suicide. John Ford, a prominent citizen of Colum bus, Ind., while insane from typhoid fever, killed his wife and one child and severely wounded another child. Louis Larson, a factory operative in Chicago, went into an iron cylinder to clean it, taking a lighted candle and a bucket of benzine. He soon screamed. The cylinder was filled with flame. No help could reach him, and he was roasted to death. The State Convention of Colorado Repub licans was convoked in Denver, and on the fifth ballot J. A. Cooper received the nomi nation for Governor. The boiler of a thresher exploded at Ellen dale, Dakota, killing five farmers who were operating it, and scalding three bystanders. Three farmers were killed and five bruised and scalded by the explosion at Seymour, Ind., of an old worn-out steam thresher. General William Terry, the Comman der of the famous Stonewall Brigade during the Civil War, was drowned recently while fording Reed Creek, near Wytheville, Va. The three year-old child of Reuben Chap man while playing in a field of millet at Coitsville, Ohio, was caught by a mowing machine and had both feet cut off, causing death. Almost the entire business portion of the town of Jennings, La., has been destroyed by fire. The South Carolina Democracy met in State Convention at Columbia, and J. P. Richardson and W. L. Mauldin, the present incumbents, were re-nominated for Governor and Lieutenant Governor. The Minnesota Republican State Conven vention assembled at St. Paul and nominated William R. Merriam for Govornor. Ex-Coltntv Treasurer John C. Graves, of Corydon, Ind., has been found to be a defaulter to the amount of $14,000. An internal tribal war has broken out in Indian Territory over the recent election, in which Governor Gay of the Chickasaw na tion was elected by fifteen majority. A son of Albert Banta was killed at Brag town, Ind., by his head being bitten off by a vicious horse. A Chesapeake and Ohio railroad bridge over New River, Ohio, has been carried away by a flood. Loss $50,000. Prairie fires have inflicted great damage in Edmunds and McPherson counties, Da kota. The Congaree River, in South Carolina, rose twenty feet in twenty-four hours, broke its banks, and did ? 1,0 JO, 000 damage to cot ton and corn. Joseph Hoffman, Tax Assessor of Wash ington county, and James Holt, a prominent planter, were sitting on the Brenham (Texas) public square, engaged in conversation, when shot from a gun, heavily loaded with buckshot, instantly killed Mr. Hoffman and fatally wounded Mr. Holt. The shot came out of the darkness and nothing could be learned as to the identity of the assassin. Three acres of shops in the lumber district of San Francisco were swept away by fire, causing a loss of over $1,000,00 ). The train conveying John Robinson's cir cus collided with a freight at Waynesville, Ohio, and five circus attaches were killed. The engina of the freight train and five coaches of the circus train were badly wrecked. The Joss to property was estimated at .JoO.OOO. Washington. Secretary Fairchild has decided to award the contract for the construction of the Brooklyn postorhce building to Mr. Gal lagher of that city at his bid of 00,0 J0. The transfer of Lieutenant-Colonel Thos. M. Vincent from St. Paul to Washington under an order issued by the War Depart ment, means that he will be made Assistant Adjutant-General to the new commander of the army. General Sehofield. The President has approve! the act to remove the political disabilities of General Gustavus W. Smith. The State Department has received a dis patch from Captain Chester, of the Galena, who was ordered to Hayti for the protection of American interests said to be imperdel by the recent revolutions, saying that the troubles in that country were at an end President Cleveland has transmittei to Congress two dispatches from the United States Minister to China, declaring that no positive information of the rejection of the THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Eastern and Middle States. George C. Grady & Co.. of Eastport.the largest sardine packers of Maine, have as signed to Dr. James Grady. The Democrats of Massachusetts met in State Convention at Springfield, and placed in nomination for Governor, William E. Russell, the young Mayor of Cambridge. The platform commends President Cleve land's financial, foreign and civil service pol icy, and adopts the St. Louis declaration of Democratic principles. James P. BN.vETT,an extensive New York dealer in coffee and tea has failed for $1L0, 'JWJ. Prominent New York bankers are en gaged in a great banking scheme to secure the control of the world's silver market and transfer it to the metropolis. Over two thousand swine have died within a few days in Cumberland county, Penn., of a mysterious disease supposed" to be hog cholera. Lester Wallack, the famous actor has died of apoplexy at his heme near Stamford, Conn, lie was bom in New York city in isjo. The Democracy of New Hampshire as- I semuiea in state uonvencion at Loncom, and nominated Charles EL Amsden for Governor. Twenty thousand people assembled in Madison Square Gardeu, New York, to hear Judge Thurman, the Democratic candidate for Vice-President, who, however, was too much indisposed by a sudden attack of cholera morbus to speak longer than three minutes. Governor Hill, 01 New York; Governor Green, of New Jersey, and Senator Blackburn, of Kentucky, delivered addresses to the audience. William Hopkins, fifty years old, and his five-year-old daughter were burned to death in a fire which destroyed his house near Mil ford, Del. The little hamlet of Ingham's Mills, N. Y., was the scene of a terrible boiler explosion resulting in the death of Adam Keiser, Jr., aged seventeen, and Arthur Leavitt, the en gineer, aged seventeen. The injured were Adam Keiser, Sr., both legs broken, and Ja cob Keiser, one leg broken and injured inter nally. Two horses were instantly killed. The explosion was caused by carelessness, a bf ick having been left on the safety valve. Frederic E. Beardslee, an electrical ex pert, killed himself in New York City by swallowing cyanide of potassium. Despond ency owing to sickness and poverty was the cause. The loss by the recent frost in Maine has been estimated at 1,000,000. treaty had teen receive X. an! that the treaty had been postponed by the Emperor for further deliberation. The United States War Department has direct! that in contracts for suiplies prefer ence shall be given to domestic productions. Foreign. Havana, Cuba, was swept by a disastrous cyclone. Several vessels foundered in the harbor, and two sailors were drowneL Many persons were injured. Many street lamjK, walls, trees and fences were blown down, and much damage was done to wharves. The East of London, England, is panic! stricken by the fourth brutal munier of women by an unknown and mysterious crim inal, 'all the tragedies occurring under the same sensational circumstances. M. Bihourd, French resident in Tonquin, has been appointed Governor of Indo-China. LATER NEWS. Charles Frederick Herreshof, the builder of boats, has died at his residence at Bristol, R. I., of pneumonia. He was in his eightieth year. J. Colby Drew, of Lynn, Mass, who con fesses to forgeries aggregating $JO,000, has surrendered to Marshal King. He had charge of the financial affairs of W. F. Mon roe, a grocer, to whose notes he forged in dorsements. Drew had plenty of time to es cape, but he preferred to surrender himself. Wit. P. Emory, age seventy-eight, a wealthy bank President of Flemington, N. J., drowned himself in a drainage pool near his barn, prompted by despondency caused by the recent death of his wife. The Maine State election resulted in a Re publican victory, unofficial figures giving Burleigh a majority of about 20,000 for Gov ernor. All four Congressmen elected are Re publicans. The State Senate was reported solidly Republican, and the lower branch of the Legislature is four-fifths Republican. The Navajo Indian trouble in Arizona hat been settled by the surrender of the six meD charged with selling whis ky. William Mahoney, aged fifty years, and William H. Horstman, age I twenty-three, fought a duel with pistols at Cumberland, Md. Mahoney was killed, and Horstman wounded . Rain fell in torrents for seven days through out North Carolina inflicting incalculable damage to crops and great disaster to rail roads, mills and factories along the water courses. The cotton crop is cut short one third and tobacco is materially affected. The loss to railways aggregates ?10),0J0. Mr. Curry, the United States Minister to Spain, has resigned, giving as a reason that the climate does not agree with him. The Army bill, as finally agreed upon by the conference and approved by the two houses of Congress, carries an appropriation of $-34,471,300. The Fortification bill, also disposed of by Congress, appropriates $0, 972,000. Two earthquake shocks have occurred at Vostizza, Greece, on the Corinthian Gulf, doing great damage. Troops have been de spatched with a supply of tents for the home less and provisions for the destitute. Floods in the South of Spain have caused the loss of many lives and enormous dam age to property. The Spanish mail steamer Espanola. while on the way from Havana to Matanzas, shifted her cargo and lost the mate and two seamen, who were washed overboard. Rear Admiral Luce, commanding the United States North American squadron, has sailed from New York for Norfolk, Va., on the eighteen foot steam barge Vixen, that boat being his temporary flagship. The amount of the defalcation of Cashier Breed, of Hartford, Conn., who committed suicide, is $10S,0J0. Captain Andrews, the daring seaman who attempted to cross the Atlantic in a small open sail boat, was picked up in mid ocean by a passing vessel in an exhausted condition and brought back to Boston, whence he sailed. Augusta, Ga., has just had the highest and most disastrous flood ever known there. The Savannah river was thirty-eight feet above low water level, and nearly the who'e city was inundated. Crops in the low lands were destroyed, aud the loss is estimated at $1,000,000. A great parade at the Grand Army En campment, during the Columbus, Ohio, Cen tennial, was reviewed by General Sherman and other distinguished persons. The President has sent the following nom inations to the Senate: Lambert Tree of Illinois, now Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Belgium, to le Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni potentiary of the United States to Russia, vice George V. N. Lothrop resigned. Edwin R. Connell. a citizen of the United States, to be Consul of the United States at Batavia. To be Secretary of the Legation of the United States: Howard Martin of New York to China: Charles K. Holliday of Kansas to Venezuela; Henry L. Vilas of New Yorkto the Argentine Republic: Henry R. White bouse of New York to Mexico. Eight persons have been killed and five in jured by the explosion of a threshing ma chine at Ciron, France. Floods in Austria, Spain an I Mexico have cause I great damage anl loss of life. The marriage of the Duke d'Aosta aud the Princess Letltia Bonaparte Las been cele brated ir. Turin with great pomp. They are unc'.e and niece. An expedition consisting o? ." H m-n will be s-nt aain-t King John of Abyssinii by Italv. Tne Italian authorities are arm ing friendly triles at M issowah. Torvin Green, Calvin Price and John H. Inman, of New York,, have formed a com bine with Governor Gonlon, Henry U . Grady and others of Atlanta, with larjre capital, to work the slate beds of Georgia, situated in Polk county. The New. York city tax rate for th present year is fixed at -J. 22, the total amo""" tr raise! beinrr il3. "JOO.CVJ. VETERANS KILLED. A Grand Army Excursion Train Smashed to Pieces. A Freight Dashes Into It With Fatal Results. A special train on the New York, Pennsyl vania and Oh o railroad, consisting of nine coaclt, and carrying Grand Army of the Republic members to the Co'urnbin, Ohio, reunion, was run into by a freight train nar Rittmann, Ohio. Svm vr.ons were killM and twenty-five wounded, a numler of them fatally. The excursion train, which was a sptvial, had the right of way, and wa running at a fair rate of spe-.l. J ut outside Rittmann is a steep grad which the tram was descending when a connecting rod on the engine broke and the tram was brought to a sUm ltili in a narrow cut. Following closely after the excursion train was freight train No. rumung at a high rate of speed. A flagman was snt back to warn th freight, but it had already started down th grade and the engineer had only time to re verse his engine and jump when Ids train crashed into the re.ar -o a.-li of the passenger train, never stopping tdl it hid plough! ti way through three on. lies, throwing them 6cjuarely on top of the engine and ending their fragments in every direction. The passengers in the last two ooaidiss saw the approaching freight and most of th-ni had time to jump. The engineer junie 1. ix-i did his fireman. Th latter escjed with but slight injuries, but the engineer struck the embankment alongside the tra -k,boundl back under the wheels and was crushed into a shapeless mass, l'rakeman W. E. Coch ran, of the freight. ju:npl likewise, and he, too, was l,url-d hack and ground under th wheels, his lifeless body being soon after taken out from the debris. In the third coach from the. rear of the passenger train two Grand Army men. S unuel Hryce and John tShook, were instantly killed, their blood spattering over their comrades seate 1 near them, while the latter were thrown in a heap, many of them with broken limbs and gashed heads. The passengers in the other coaches had nearly all succeeded in getting out of the cars before the crash cam hut as they hurried down the embankment tin wrecked coaches rollel down uon them, in juring twenty-live others, more or lesi seriously. The engineer of the freight train remained at his post and was kilie.L The freight train, with its locomotive, was also thrown from the track, aad the cars were piled up in a frightful wreck. The ollicers of the road were at once noti fied and a wrecking train was immediately dispatched with a railroad crew an i physi cians, and other surgeons were hurried to help the wounded from Wn Is worth, four miles east of the wreck, and from Seville aud Rittmann. Some of the wounded were taken to Wadsworth and others were care 1 for on the ground, cots being improvised from blankets which the veterans had brought along, the majority of them having prepared to go into camp at Columbus. To lady passengers, Miss fna Tucker, of Austintown, a suburb of Voungstown, Ohio, had a leg cut oif and died a few minutes after being taken out of the wreck. Mr. Given, of Canfield, another suburb, also died on the ground at o'clock. Nearly all the injured live in Mahoning county, Ohio. The wounds are mostly Diinful. but not serious. CYCLONE IN CUBA. Life and Property Destroyed hy 1 "West Indian Tornado. The recent cyclone in Cuba was terribl; destructive of both life and property. Th gunboat Lealtad, lying at Ratibano, four dered in the storm and nine of her crew, in eluding the commander, were drowned. Advices from Sagua are that fifty jersoni lost their lives there, while the damage don to dwellings and warehouses in the city, t vesse's in the harbor and to the wharves i very great. The village of Pueblo Nuevo, in th nigb borhood of Sagua was literally wiped out. Telegraph wires were badly broken, and n news from other parts of the island ha 1 beei PROMINENT PEOPLE. Senator Edmonds is a "mighty fisher-' man." Miss Braddov is fifty years old and has written fifty stories. The fortune left by the late Charles Crocker is estimated at j:i.",(xK),'Ko. The Empress of Japan is a hard student of German, Russian, French and Italian. Prince Bismarck is seriously out of health and suffers severely in mind and body. A PORTRAIT has been painted of the baby King of Spain mounted on a rockingdiorse. Skxator Cl i.i.om. of Iliino s, was a school teacher ten years before the outbreak of th war. Marie, the exiled Queen of Naples, live the year round in Paris in hired apartment on a third floor. Lord Com.v Camprkt.l profosos to go to Bombay and practice law to retrieve his for tune and good name. The Crown Prinze of Italy is credited with hieing the best amateur photographer in h.;s part of the Continent. It is asserted t' at the enthueiam of the present Emjror of Germ my regarding Wagner's music is wholly political. Qlke.v Victoria is Ucoming decidedly f portly. It is said that she has gained 'greatly in l'.esh since lhi opening of the. season. St. Louis's richest ctizen i Samuel C. Davis, who has grown from a i"or New England lad to be a millionaire twenty tmieJ over. Senator John Sherman is is Raid to le about to become th-? h'-ad of a new national banking house in Chicago with a capital of ?, nJ,0 f ). Prince Alhev.t Victor is ns fond of th turf as his father, the Prirr-e of Wales is exf-eded to make a sensation on the tracic before long. The theatre at Bu"ns Ay res hasten adorned v. ith the ins.-npti'Ti that Addini 1 atti. the greatest lyric artist, in the world. Las sjug witiiin its walls. C;ia::;.es F. A. IIimuciw, of New York, wh.s foit ine is rated at anywhere from '1,o.mx) to .,11 was a porter in a china store not many years ago. Mr. Moodv m-iks his home at NorthficM, Ma--s,, where his mother, now eighty-thre still lives, an 1 where he l as hi co-worker, Ira D. Sankey, for a near neigidr. Senator Ingalls, while i residing ovr the Senate, makes use of the old-fashion i time gla-ss to measure the five-minute spee ;'- s es of the national orators. A Senator begin ning his speech with the glass full of saui. baslo stoo when the bulb is empty.