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THE NEWS IN BRIEF. The Waco, Tex., cotton mills have closed for the season. Sagamore Mill No. 1, at Fall River, Mass., burned, involving a loss of $600,000. The Temps, a Paris newspaper locates the recent Cincinnati riot in Chicage. The National Mechanics and Traders' bank, of New York, has returned to the state system. Heavy frostand ice in the region of Meridian, Miss., will compel farmers to replant. Mr. Reuben M. Norton, one of the pioneers of Wisconsin, died at the residence of his son-in-law. Nearly the entire business portion of West Salem, Ohio, burned, involving a loss estimated at $100,000. Rufus Hatch's cab collided with a truck on Broadway, New York, but "Uncle Rufus" was not hurt much. The West Shore railroad recorded a $25,000,000 trust mortgage at Kingston, N. Y., in favor of Ashbel Green. Gen. Sam Carey says: "I am for Payne for president if he will accept. If not, then let us run Gen. Hancock again. The brightest reporter on the Kansas City press is a lady, Mrs. Rees, of The Journal. She is 28, and speaks four languages. President White, of Cornell, will vote at Chicago for the man who will labor freely and faithfully in the interest of civil service reform. E. V. Smalley is going to move his monthly paper, The New Northwest, from New York to St. Paul, and will spend a good part of the year there. W. H. Vanderbilt drove his fancy team, Early Rose and Aldine, a half-mile in 1:10. This is the fastest half-mile to top road wagon made by any team this season. The district attorney of Kings county, New York, has given notice to the chief of police that all kinds of gaming on Coney Island must be stopped, and nothing of the kind will be allowed there this season. In the United States court at Detroit, in the assault and battery case of Capt. Comstock, of the barge Pomeroy, against W. B. Comstock, of Alpena, for $100,000 damages, the jury returned a verdict of $10,000, after being out nine hours. The vault of The Chicago Times was mysteriously burglarized at a late hour Sunday night or an early hour Monday morning, and money and checks estimated at from $600 to $6,000 abstracted, in addition to a number of valuable papers. The matter has been placed in the hands of the Pinkertons, but up to Thursday evening no clue had been discovered as to the perpetrators. The Protestant Episcopal bishops at their meeting in New York appointed the Rev. W. J. Boone missionary bishop to Shanghai, and the Rev. S. D. Ferguson (colored) missionary bishop to Cape Palmas, Africa. Bishop John Williams, of Connecticut will represent the body at the meeting of the Scottish church in September. The venerable Bishop Smith, of Kentucky, was present, but took no part in the proceedings.