rept into qn airway, ibe airway was waist *en there an boor ave been drowned t to the open air the ong for mm, and at dod to the list ofwere of the same ans are alive, and is was brought to . Most ot the men lilies, and the sor-ddition to the pri-ion, make the blow bereaved widows f the miners work-is SAved providen-le before the • fire lddcnly seized with Without any delay the tooth extracted, * dozen rods away 3ames. One of the rtin Crehan) could at, ahxions for the he ran to the east hem of the impend-turned too late toH THE SAVED, lie afternoon I re* e of Thomas Ed-ieorge, two of the rithin the gatra of them had suffered e able to converse ag is the converea-e:, I want yon to reran remember themg aeaa at my leet. we leit very thankfnl that we could not hear the screams of the women from the top. as that would have added to onr anguish.Murder and Lynching in Oconto.A fatal affray occured in Oconto at a Turners’ ball at Elans' Hall on Monday evening last. A butcher named Ludwig Neher seriously stabbed a man named Dennis White in the ball room. Neber then left the hall, went onto the sidewalk and deliberately fired into a few respectable citizens whowere quietly sitting there. They were: W. F. Elmer, W. High, another whose name, at writing, I did not learn, and Joseph RuelL The first shot proved useless, but the second strnck young Rueli, the ball passing through the head.The crowd then took Nier, and were going.to lyuch him, and had got as far as putting the rope on his neck, when the officers came to his rescue and took him to jaiL-- Ruell, who was shot, died at eight o’clock Tuesday morning.— There was great excitement in town all day over the affair, flDdseveral attempts were made to break down the wooden jail, which were prevented by the officers. The mob went for reinforcements, and, at half-past eight o’clock return-ed, overpowered the officers, and, with a.‘big beam, smashed the jail down, j took Nier and hung him to a tree some i eighty rods from the jail, right in the village. Nier was a desperate charac-, ter, and shot a man in Green Bay about j a year ago. The lynchers were all mill-1men, the citizens taking no part All. is now quiet.luwiiuuuiBb conspiracy is reported to have been discovered at Marseille*. Magnet, Gambetta’s Prefect of Corsica, has been arrested as the principal conspirator. His wifo tried to shoot the General who made the arrest.Specials report the slaughter of in-] surgents stiB going on. Many of Mac-| Mahon's soldiers hunt them down and j shoot them wherever found. The rage j of the Mldiero can not be suppressed, i and the streets of Paris still run with j blood.The insurgent lo-ses, previous to May 22, when the Versailles troops entered Pari*, are estimated at 12,000 killed and wounded and 25,000 prisoners, and since May 22, at 12,000 killed and wonnde4 ^d 20,000 prisoners. The prisoners have all been sent to Versailles.MahhaIi McMahon*, in a proclamation jnat issued, divides Paris into four commands, the east, north, center and Bontb. General Vinoy is appointed to command the east. General L’Admi-rault to the north, General Douai to the center^ and General Ciesey to the south. The civil power is transferred to the military, and no ingress to or egri-«# from the city will be permitted.MtxrsTEB WASHBrB.ve telegrapher that order has once more been restored in Paris. As far as ascertained. Am excan citizens and property escaped uninjured. He says it is difficult to tell who is the coming man or the form ofSrernment likely to be adopted, ere will, he says, be a desperate struggle among the different interests.