AND PDBUSntK. ILLINOIS V"kv >$. ' , .a -Ji.'.^i^ \ «$* i0i4:-'c" W*'fe _,. .. ®eai.a-X Ifcf r.ia ;»K ' .«. ' ( r r *Vv p? • ' ' !rf , , ,. /i . * ' . % ' , II1:' «*&?»• § *"& t '"' w 4\; . , ipF** •> <••• ot j&hop Gilbert Haven, B*t l!pL:..'uj)Al iSrauMt, i» &n- f.t Iki r«.«'iUV-'".^ of hi* , Hut., after n tllncM of iini aoaaofoss totbelMt. iM % hfe Awmly (• bob and ciwrqiawp prouioeat io the • Bim wm 89 jmn old. W, &ft* agitator. addreawd aa f 8,060 people in M*d» n Square Ton. He appealed for oontribu- > be applied for two purpoeee, <o ewot aebetweeo tfce two-- •i&: !|m aamrlatttm of present diatrea* growing bat or iHdM In Ireiaod, and the promo tion of (h* poitttaa! aoramt baling for ita obj«* the DhUilrtnf of permanent relief at the luidaoftheSlShOoTernmeol On of the New York branch post- «flma me enteral by burglars, who stole *1,800 in money and several registered letters. The deed ia deaedbed m one of the boldest whieh haa taken place in that city of late gtepiMa Longfellow, nephew of the poet, has been bald tor trial at Boston for forging the name of the litter to a check for #1,000.... Tho pews of Plymouth Ornish, Brooklyn, have Woaold tor 1880 for t40,000... ,ihe Hew York Prodtttoe Exchange has voted on the caotai •yctes again, and voted it down by a iaqp majority. 1'hjk Treasurer of the New York Pro- #000 Es.i5haMge, Bonj*min C. Bogert, a da- fanlter to fie ex teat of $30,000, died saddenly ttt other day, mA it ia believed be ooznmitted A 9uax.T consisting of & mother and tturoe ohildret] were fatally poisoned by eating nnerkraat and pickled eels in New York city. u .« "pr ,k 1 -/r : \"v * \ 'At, ' ' 4'$ patchh from the West state that "'wteu Hatch, of the Ute oomnussion, left Lake City for Fort Garland on the 3d inst, haying aaperienoed no trouble since parting with the Indiana at (Mine's ranche except trom the enow. He believes that Ouray was sin cere in all his negotiations and that tiie murderers would, have been •anwidared on demani if they had not been oonvinoed that the people of Colorado in tended to lynch them before trial The Utes have all left Los Piooe and no farther devet- opntonts axe expected ufltil the chiefs now visiting Washington have returned. A Washington telegram of the 4th inst says; "Ex^Gov. Hunt, of Colorado, last night re ceived a dispatch confirmatory of the story al ready darkly hinted at--namely, that the fe males captored by the Utee were outrage!! by their IodUn eaptora. Th« Pueblo (OoL) Vh ief~ MaofNe* Year's day oooteineda card, dgned by Iba Meeker, in which the crime is charged apon the Utee. - Thk mortality among the negro etni- gi^tslrom^oirUiC«M*5ll!»who lately arrived in Indianapolis is very great Sixteen or eighteen of the 100 in that city died last week Ot dtpththeria and scarlet fever. Thk Cairo and Vincennes railroad WM sold at pnblio sale by the Master in Chan- ' «ny of the United States Court at Springfield, SI.SmI w*tk, to aatiafy a judgment raudered " " r trf the in favor .bondholders. The road was ssepoa tih 'wJ'1 ¥f.i wl * 4£St f' : !4": A ' s,'vr'W pnrahaacd b» Joseph Drexel axtd Charles E. Traeey, Irnateea of the English bondholders, for flw mun of &jmmi A SHOOXnia fire easualty ia reported from Sen FrMiciso®. The residence of Daniel 1 Hoaktea vaa boned, and Mrs. Hoskms and her danfthter. Ifid 19, a son, aged 4, and infant babepertehea in the liamea Chicago eleva tor* contain 7,994,287 bnahels of wheat, 4,069.- 74() bashela of corn, 1,134,902 buabela ef oate, 26«,ni boeibeleof rye, and 775185 bushels of barley, making a grand total of 14,233,225 bushels, against 9,884,339 bushels at this period last year. A tkhiublk railroad collision took Haee a few days ago, near Qalesbnrg, I1L, on jha Pnrljiiwtrm brumah of «h» Chicago, Bor- Bttrtea aaia Quincy railroad Three stock trains were following each other oloeely, when the last train ran into the one preceding it, causing a fearful crash. Tweatock men were killed and several injured. Thx boiidmgB used as the wood de partment of Mitchell, Lewis & Co.'s extensive wagon manufactory ftt Racine, Wis., were to tally destroyed by fire last week. Loss esti- WMatt^MO; insurance about #8(^000. VKOB SOUTH A YLW.MATST feature of Gen. Ghranfs -tear througn the South was bis cordial recep tion by the people of the little city of Fernan- dina, Fhk He was escorted by a committee Ifeaded by Oen. W. G. M. Davis, an officer in the Obofederate service, to the City Hill, which had been nicely decorated with bunting and semi-tropical plant*?. A large crowd of citi- aen*. prtixMpally colored, had assembled. Oen. Davis delivered a speech of welcome, express- tag tha hope that thk visit would result in further oniong the people of all sections, and stating that ail tae tiouth held the General in mod esteem as their friend. In reply Gtai. •want said: On. Davis akd Citizkvb or Flobida: It rIotas me great pleasure to \iait thl« State, which do now for tbe ar«t time. I am greatly pleased with the little I have Been of it thus far, and with the cordiality of ite citizen a. mho have welcomed 'me meat *armly. £ am very glad to see >ou all. Xa the tour ef the worid which I have m»ie I saw ealjrthai which atreugthened me in my love of erantry, and every section of it from Florida to Main-. The freedom asd liberty which you eajoy here esnnot be realized by the people of the Old World. Beferring to the report which he made in 1806, he said that he believed tnen that the South acted in good faith, but he said then and sees now they were misled aud driven into a coarae which produced results now so greatly regretted by alL It was not, however, their Uralt Concluding, he said: We arc now a united people, and no one more de- Sirea that we may continue bo. or will do more to aooompliah that result, than myselt. Three obeers were then given by the crowd fprGan. Grant, and three for Gen. Sheridan. Geh, Gsaht was cordially received and royally entertained by the people of Jack- MKiville. Fla. The festivities that fallowed embraced a reception, a banquet, a grand ball and drives through the onoge grovis that en viron the city. From Jacksonville Gen. Grant journeyed to Falatka, where he tarried two days, and, on Saturday, Jan. lOib, sailed tor Oaln. A terbiblk feud oeetUTed last week |B Hart county, Ky., between a father and son named Green. The old mau shot at the boo, bat missed, and the son rushed on his father, and a terrible tight eueuecL Both were nearly killed, and the eou bad one of his ears cut en tirely oft f OENKBAJU Elzvk* anrvivors of the fonndered Mimer BorMsi& reached Baltimore, the other 4lgr, on tbe Italian bark that picked them up 9B0»ilosoff the Az ree. The eteamer found ered See. Zi, and the rescued m^n rode out stoma very heavy weather in a life-boat, and "WON constantly menaced by sharks. . A »A*'8 casualties : An explosion in a aslluloid factory at Newark, N. J., killed four liisn and fatally injured two others; the mail- hoat between Freeworf; und PeiiBacala, Fla, anlodod a boiler, lulling the Captain and one Oiner and mortally nc tlding the engineer; the Tumer Hall, in East Fourth street, New York, was destroyed bv firo, and four people suffo cated, several others who jumped from the windows sustaining serious mjariea; at La Otasss, Wis., August Talbot, a quarry man, brought a five-pound can of powder down- OtHIM and placed it on a table near a lamp for OSS early m the morning, whereupon an ex- MMiqu fook place, terribly barning eight per- OMW *bo were sitting around the table. adoption, of the cental aysteis |bean received with so much hostility by York Produce Exchange that the Board era has resolved to recommend a t of the experiment until the al and State legislation can and the principal commercial ex- upou a time %r iu aimuitaueoue Ammen, who had several Oen. Grant before the latter'sde- the Sooth, says that he entertains I that the General will, at the proper time, aooept the Presidency of the later- Oceanic Canal Company. He will not, how ever, aooept until the sttooess of the enterprise is tasovsC Tax Atlantic und Great Western rail road hat been sold under foreclosure proceed ings for t6,000,000 to a porohatlng committee representing the gagilan bondholdera Washington telegram: "Much inter est has been excited here among army men over the faot that Oen. Grant has at laat made kaown, through the authorised statements of John Bossell Young, that he was the originator of the' March to tho 8oa,' tsnd ttmt ho pobi- MaMiJdibi ttliwt to Gen, JJnlWfr. yni* 3u;u; l-fia ih al though those who have had access to the records of the War Department have known that the plan was Gen. Grants and not Gen. Sherman s; bat this ia the first time that Gen. Grant has himself in public declared the fact, though he privately communicated it to several when the controversy first arose. In the same way Gen. Grant has declared that the campaign np the Cumberland and the Tennessee rivers did not originate with Gen. Halleok." The troops of the United States and Mexico stationed near the boundary between Chihuahua and New Mexioo are co-operating in the hope of annihilating Yiotorta and his band of eighty-five savages, who have boon on the war-path since 1878. Chaelks Stewart Pabhsu. has la* sued an address to the people of America ask ing for contributions to alleviate tbe diatreee in Ireland, and stating that all subscriptions col lected for relief porpoees may be forwarded to tho treasurers, Drexel, Morgan & Co., of New York, who will forward the money to tho Treas urer* of the National Land-League Im Iraiand, WASHINGTON; Tsta aab-oommittee of the Hoove Military Committee, of which Gen. Joe Johns ton is Chairman, has matured a bill for the ire- organization of the army. It provides for a reduction of the ntaff ofiicep, and for an in crease of tbe enlisted men tb 25,000. Chief Justice "Watte, in the Su premo Court of the United Statee, last week, denied the motion of Senator Edmunds to take up the tegal-tender cae© eut of its regular order. He added that the court would refuse to grant motions to advance cases involving important constitutional questions po long as they could not be heard before a full bench. The "Dte Indians who received per- mission to visit Washington pas|pd through Pueblo, GoL, on the 7th inst, in charge of a Lieutenant A large crowd met the savages at the depot and indulged in numerous threats of hangidg and shooting, but nothing of the kind was attempted. The Cincinnati Price-VurrevVa regular January report of pork-packing in the West, showing reports from all points and estimates for the remainder of the season, is out. The information furnished indicates »n increase of 200,000 hogs in interior points, and a decrease of 700,000 at the six large packing cities, mak ing a total of about t>,yS0,00(< to March 1, against 7,480,000 last year. The average weight to date is about nine and a half pounds lighter than a year ago, and the^yiald of iard four to five pounds less per hog. The House Committee on Indian Affairs has agreed upon a bill providing for negotiations with the Utes, the Warm Spring, the Umatilla, and some other tribes for tne ex tinguishment of their titles to their re-erva- tions, and their removal and consolidation upon other reservations to be established. FOUTICAI* A Washington telegram says: "Prominent Democratic politicians who have reoentlv returned from New York say that the belief is growing there that tforatio Seymour would not only accept the Democratic Presi dential nomination, but that he really is a candidate tor it. The interview which was recently telegraphed' all over the coun try is regarded as an indication that Horatio Seymour would accept the Democratic nomination if tendered him with unanimity. The attitude of Senator Ker- nan, Seymour's intimate friend, is referred to as strengthening this belief."....Col. Tom Keogh, Secretary of the Republican 0am- paign Committee, expresses the opinion that Senaror Blaine will receive the Domiijpiion if Gen. Grant does not. A Cleveland paper has interviewed 100 of the most prominent Bepabiicaos of that city as to the choice for President. Of these seventy-two are emphatic' in their choice. Thirty-four of these latter are for Grant, nine teen ifor Sherman, and nineteen for Blaine. The rest are mostly Indifferent as to which of the three is nominated; while several are for Garfield, one for Bristow. and one for Conk- lin£. Several were outspoken against Grant under any circumstances. Negotiations between the Tilden and Kelly factions in New York have resulted in a compromise. By the terms of the agree ment between the rival chieftains, the delega tion from the Empire State to the next National Democratic Convention will not be committed to any candidate, but pledged, on tbe contrary, to vote as a unit in favor of the man seeming to have the most strength with the representatives of the other S ates.... Tne Governor of Alabama has appointed Luke Prvor to fill the unexpired term of Senator Houston, deceased. The apDoiutee was Mr. Houston's law partner, and has never held office Gen. Garfield was nominated for United States Senator by acclamation by the Republican members of tho Obio Legislature, at a caucus held on the 6th inst, all the other aspirants having withdrawn from the field. Tbe Democratic members of the Maryland Legislature, at a caucus held on the 8th inst, nominated A. P. Gorman for United States Senator, to saooeed William Pinckney Whyte. The Indiana Democratic State Con" ventton will Le held at Indianapol.s on tbe 9*»h of June....The Greenback Couferec.ce at Washington usued a ca'l for the Convention of the National Greenback-Labor party to be held in Chicago, commencing on Wednesday, Juue 9, one week 1 iter than tne Republican Conven- vobeigx. Reports from every county in En gland show that last year's crops were tbe poorest gathered in that country in ten years. Out of the 429 returns as to wheat only four rep resent the yield as up to the average Pi*sh disturbances are reported in Ireland. In Gal- way county the peasant-! and police came into collision, and in Mayo couuty an agent who undertook the eviction of a tenant was set upon and severely beaten. The President of Bolivia haa been deposed, and is a fugitive... .Cabal dispatches report the city perfectly quiet. Supplies are plentiful. Amnesty ha-t been offered the in surgents. A few leaders only accepted... Advices from Mexico state that a formidable revolution has broken out in the State of Duranao. Gen. Tre> irio, who was ordered from Monterey to suppress the revolt, has been defeated, aud urgently atks assist ance. It is oelieved that the i evolution will be a general one, as it is ably led and has hosts of warm sympathizers in all parte of tbe republic, who are expected io pronounce at an early day. The agitation against high rents in Ireland, which has hitherto been confined to farming communities, has t>*en introduced in the cities, where it will doubtless become very popular The detailed reports of tne Russian military preparations which come from various points on tbe Austrian ana German frontiers are beginning to excite at tention throughout Europe Two thou sand British troops, under the com mand of Gen. Gougb, will be kept In the cita del at Cabul for the present....A. L Gordon, an American citizen, who has been held »s a prisoner at Iqu que, P*ru, since list June, on suspicion of beiug a Chilian spy, has been sur rendered by the commandant of that Htv to the Capiain of the steamer Alaska, of the Uni ted States navy. A battle was recently fought be- twenn 3,000 Montenegrins and 12,000 Albanians, and resulted in the vic'ory for the former... .A Berlin dispatch states that Bismarck is so un well he cannot come to Berlin...;The ill- treatment of tbe tervers of ejectment-writs in Ireland is becoming rapid. hiots have occurred in the Tubercurry district, County Sligo, in which the police repeatedly charged the mob before they conJd be quelled. ... .The health of the Qaeen of Spain nas re ceived a eevoie shock, owing to tbe attempted assassination of Alfonso she has been attacked with epileptic fits, to whiuh eh; was not previ ously subject A dispatch from Calcutta says the particulars of the procaodingB of the court- martial in Cabul, on the Afghans implicated in the attack on the British Residence in Septem- •m- ber last, show that all of the fifteen men who bad been executed ware either oonoerned in the msssscrs of Maj. Oavagnari and his staff, in the mordsr of wounded soldiers, or haa taken part ia treacherous attacks on ti e British. All the other prisoners will be re~ THE NATIONAL C0N6RCSS. Ooogress reassembled after the holiday re- esas on the 6tli inat., aad both honaaa held short aeaaiona. Secretary Schnra aent to the Senate the report mt fee Hot Spring* O>n»n»lee!oa. Bills ia. By Mr. Davlni >. r C:"Jr? of At l.'j Mr. flu* r«.t».je jit aside Sat no jssrasa on the retired list ot tfaa army, aavy or marine oorpa shall draw a pension; also, to admit, tree of duty, all articlae inten'ed for exhi bition at the Millers' International Exhibition at Cincinnati in June; by Mr. Pendleton, to transfer certain elalma fronf the Executive De- Sarunents to the.Oonrt ef OUlms tor adjudication; y Mr. Test, fixing the compensation of United States XMatrict Attorneys; limiting the compensa tion of Clerks of District and Circuit Courts then one person holds both offloea, sad Aston the com pensation ef United Statee Marahala and Deputies; by Mr. Coke, to provide tor completion the wSk of improriog the Missouri river at or near Kansas City. A number of private bills and peti tions were also Introduced and. referred. On mo tion of Mr. Morgan, aa a mark of re spect to the memory ot the late 8enator Houston, the Senate adjourned...'. A resolution was adopted in the House ordering an Investigation of the Ute maasacre at White River Agency. Two bills in re gard to the Panama canal were referred to the select committee. The House went Into commliteu of the whole on the report of tlie Committee on Rules, out no progress was tuade. owing to *he absence ofgtwo members of tho committee. Mr. Hawk introduced » bill directing the issvteing of patents for land on which bounty land-warranta have bsen located. Mr. Forney an- noitnred the death of Senator Houston, and the House, as a mark of reipoci, adjourned. In an oxecntive session of the Senate, on the 7th last., the following nominations were made: Marcus W. Acheson, District Judge of the Western dis(rlc|of Pennsylvania; James X. Kerne, United States Marshal for the Eaetsra district of Pennsyl vania; John K. Valentine, United States Attorney for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania; Jacob VTheeler, United States Marshal for the Southern district of Illinois; George W. Hazelton, United 8ta'e* Attorney for the Eastern district of absconsin; John M. Morton, Collector of In tAnal Revenue for the kirst district of California; Daniel B. Antrier, Postmaster at Washington; John B. Stic.kney, United ftates Attorney for the North ern district of Florida: Charles S. Tartan, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada; Henry E. I'nckftt. Associate Juxtice of the Supreme Court of Idnho: E. J. Conger, Justice of the Supreme Court of Montana; E. P. Pomeroy, Uiiiled UtaU-s Attorney for-Atizont; John J. Henry, Register if the Land Office at Lcadvllle; E lward C. David, United States Surveyor General of the District of Wyoming; Henry M. Atkinson, Surveyor General of the restrict of New Mexico; Alexander (i. Oar&e, Register of the Land Office at Des Moines, Iowa; Isaac W. Wing, Receiver of Public Moneys, Buy field. Wis.; Hlrum W. P»rker, Register of the Land Office, Beatrice, Neb.; James B. Bloss, Register of the Land Office at Detroit: "teph^n H. Alban, Register of the i and Office at Wausau, Wis.; George D. Bowman, Reg ister of the Land Office at Lit Mesilia, N. M. Mr. Pendleton submitted an amendment to the bayard legal-tcndor resolution as follows: "And salit notew Bhsll not be available for any of the re serves required to be kept by the national banks, »nd all B'tth reserves i«hall be kept in coin." Re ferred. The Senate diaenssed ttie bill which provides for the investment of Indian trust funds In United States bunds, but took no ac ion upon it A bill for the reclamation of the marches about Washington was referred. Mr- Lo- g*u introduced a bill to establish a United S ates Court In the Indian Territory. A short discussion in regard to a proposed new Department of Agriculture and Commerce was participated In by several Senator*, and a few private bills were noticed.... In the Honse, a bill passed providing that an owner of a mine who wished to sell could make atfetavit for the application for a United States patent by his agent. Bills a d resolutions intro duced: By Mr. Chalmers, to regulate coin certificates; by Mr. Townshend (111.), In structing the Committee on Foreign All-Irs to inquire into the expediency of abolishlrg all E-ivove Extraordinary and Mi maters Rexidvnt from the United States to foreign coin.tries; by Mr. Mills, to lequestthe Presideut to iuvite Mexico to enter into a treaty, al°o Uracil;- b; Mr. Page, to restrict the immigration of the Chinese; by Mr. E arn, to furnish additional facilities for the collection of custom dues; by Mr. Covert for the reduction of duties on Imported merchandise: by Mr. Coffroth, calling on the Postmaster GenWal for his reasons for not complying with the law re quiring him to furnish a duuble po»tal card: by Mr..Bo tzhoover, to pui.i«h the rale of tirearms to uncivilized Indians; by Mr. Acklen, for the regu lation of inter-State freights and passengers; by Mr. Barber, to prevent the use of the Uuifed States nag tor advertising purposes; by Mr. - Mills, to prohib't all ludiaus on reservations yoing into Texas; by Mr. Culbertson, authorizing the re- coinngcof the trade dollar; by Mr. Ryan, to ascer tain the locses sustained from Indian depredations; by Mr. Uelford, to pay to Mrs. N. C. Meeker and others certain sums of money out of the Ute In- dlau annuity funds; by Mr. brents, extending the Laud laws to the Territory of Alaska; by Mr. Ben nett, to establish the Territory of Pembina. The Bergeant-at-Arms brought to the bar of the Senate L. T. Smith, Levi Wilson and E. B. Pur- cell, on the 8th, to answer to a charge of contempt in not obeyiLg the summons to testify in the In- galls case. After considerable discussion the prisoners were discharged. A joint resolution g.vlng the Hot Springs Commission sixty days more time was passed. Bills and resolutions introduced: By Mr. Kern an, allowing Northern men who had their property seized by the Confederacy to sue the United States for the same; by Mr. Plumb, to create an additional land district in KinsaB; by Mr. Jones. . to repeal the twenty-second section of the act to incorporate the Texas Pacific Railroad Company, and to aid in the construction ot its road. In executive session. Worthy 8. *treator was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for ttie Eighteenth Ohio district... .In the House, Mr. Garfield was congratulated, on his appearance, on account of his elociiou to the Senate. After several committee reports, the bill on the revision of the lawn was parsed. After the morning hour tho whole day was passed in committee ot the whole on the revision of the rules. The Senate was not in session Jan. 9. The special Senate committee appointed to investigate the negro exodus consists of Messrs. Voorhees, Vance snd Pendl ton, Democrats, and Wlndom and Blair, Republicans In the House little gras dons,. the body being In committee of the whole on the private calendar most of the day. Among the bills Introduced and refer, ed was one by Mr. Ryan, ad mitting, free of duty, clo'hing and other articles destined for tiie relief of colored im migrants: by Mr. Ha\es (111.), granting a pen ion to each survivor of the Mexican War who was not engaged in the late rebel,u>n. or who di i not abet the same. \ number of private bills were ieport»d to tbe House and passed. Rep resentatives Blackburn, Blount. Cannon, Clymer aud H .w'ey were appointed a sub-comoiittee to investigate the Star Route serv c . SOUTHERN CLAIMS. C of ttM««Mig|ila w mm Claims OkXamtesfrni re have seat to Ctagwi* their ninth 1t«aeral report, a qmopali of which is herewith appandsd; Mmix-r of claims decided 4toe»their last Mf»rtit2,2$l. Ineaohof thesa oases a special repott is submitted, with the petitioii, svtdeaee and all papers relating thereto. The reasons for lbs allowance and di**l)owanae of the claims are therein mt forth. The Commissioners are unanimous in all their reports. Annexed fe & table s*tt*»i* forth tt»« esscr-sts allowed and disallowed in tho Htatag ^rhsreis the uommisetouers have lurisdietioa: Total amount ctainted. f 488 «34 l,05B,i«l 67.081- 785,855 3,881 *43 . 1,108,M8 188.098 174,018 . lot*.. States, ; Alabama,*. Arkansas Florida..... Georgia Louisiana..... Mlwisaipvl N(«h Carolina...... Honth Caroline.... TennettsM...., 880,48)1 Texas .V, M,S18 Virginia 1,087,868 West Virginia...... a«,757 Amftmt allowed. $ »1,«« 81.076 8,470 87,688 12,411 84,S«1 14.784 6.810 43.077 1,880 snaao 5,<577 Amount anal- lowed. $402 334 1.025,186 63,011 S,818,<41 1,134 737 113^41 1*8,70* 841,804 «t7,NJ8 81,07V Total $8,008,460 SMI,611 «8,4M,8« The whole ntimber of claims decided this year is ftJH* Number allowed 568 Number disallowed.... ..1,787 S.»0 The ameant of. claims disposed of in this report ts. .$8,696,480.50 Amount showed..... $ >41.611.32 Amount disallowed 8,456.64tt.84 T 8,888,460.66 or the woole number of 2,290 cfaimsnts, fifty-three $ere bankrupts, whose claime were disallowed pursuant to tbe decision of the Com- mipbiosjers tuat, as in bankruptcy the property of th« b«nkrapt paases to hiK assignee, the bankrupt was not the owner of the claim, and could not be allowed iberefor. Of the 558 claim* *11 'wed, fifty-five of the Claimants were in the Union army aud three fca ih» United States navy during the war. Of the 1,787 claims disallowed, 288 of the claimants were in the Confederate military ser vice, twenty-nine were in the Confederate civil service, seventy voted for tho Ordinance of Secession or for separation, nineteen took the oath of alkjKiance to the Confederacy, and one signed thsqflntnance of Secession--iu all 857. Whole number of claims presented... 82,298 Number heretofore preHeiited........14.300 Number now reported...,...;.,..... t^»0 ---- 1A.BB6 There cnaain. ..... 6,70S Of the SLJjjBB not yet reported, there are about 250 in the hinds .of the Commissioners, some of which aro in the hands of agents for investi gation, add dtbera so recently closed and sub mitted, or stilt open for rebutting evidence, that the Comtntateners have not been able to in clude thenfla this report. These 250 eaees will all bo deoidsd and reported to Congress by the time the tsrai of this commission ends, on the 10th of nntftarch. The rest of the 5,?(>2 cases not yet reported are claims m which no evidence whatever on the part of Jkfo claimant to sustain the claim was filed by tto 10th day of March, 1S70. The act of Cqsjotsss of June 15,1878, provides, in re gard to allsach claims, that "they shall be barred forever thereafter, and the Commissioners of Claims shall report all such claims so barred to Congress at ite next soHsion thereafter." In compliance with this act of Congress the Com missioners are preparing a list of all such claims, which they will report to Congress at the present session. MAINE. of the Leglilataie. There"was considerable excitement at Au gusta, Me., on the 7th inst., the day set apart for the convening of the Legislature. Dis patches state that the largest "crowd that ever made its way to tbe State House began to move thitherward ad early as 8 o'clock a. m. The police at the Capitol were without badges, and had oo appearance of bearing arms. There was a perfect jam in the corridors and halls and stairways, and it was with great difficulty that those allowed to en ter the legislative halls pushed their way thither. There were very many va cant Beats kL the House, as the Republicans carried oMMNI programme. a few w0 bamm§ about i balL Was no The prtneuMlfkiatereSt centerel^^^^^Hlar branch, fhxi ^proceedings »1V0HHmate hardly reaching a ripple of exotevJapt In the House, after tbe c(ll- ing of the roll, Eugene Hale, the llepubli leader, claimed that certain elected membl from cities were not on the ro'l, and mov^d that they be included He supported his mo tion in a long speech. Objections were made to the motion lrom the other tide, and Mr. Hale was ruled out of order by the Assistant Clerk, who refused to put the motion, on which the Republicans withdrew from par ticipating in the proceedings. A mes sage was then sent to the Governor and Council, stating that a quorum of the members of the House was pioeent, ready to be qmlificd. Great excitement prevailed dur ing Mr. Hale's remarks, and uproarious ap plause followed. After the notification to the Governor that a quorum was present, tho Gov ernor appeared and qualified ti e memoers. He then announced that seventy-six members,being a quorum, liad taken and subscribed to the lKicwsary oaths, and were regularly and duly constituted tho House of Representatives. This announcement was received with wild apptause from the outside. Gov. Garcelop said he now put into iheir hands the opinion of the t-s- preme Court, as well as the petition of gen tlemen from certain cities claiming seats, and invoked their careful comiileration of thu same. Three cheers were given for Gov. G&rcelon, followed by prolonged hisses. The quorum is made of seventy-five Fusion- ists and one Republican, Eugene Hale. Tho Fusionutts not participating are tiproul, of Veazie; Voter, of Farmington, and Snow, of Bkowhegan. The House proceeded to organise by the election of John C. Talbottss Speaker by a vote of 7i The protest of members from five cities was presented by Mr. Hale, who moved thit the House go into committee of the whole and con sider the case*. The Farmington and other oases were also referred. Mr. Dicltey remarked that the Supreme Court had nothing to do with the action of the Legislature, which drew forth a plea from Mr. Halo defanding the court, and asking that con stitutional barriers be not swept away. He said tbat the election of officers under laws The Czar and the Nihilists. passed by thiaWiy, now instituted, would not be legal. In the Senate, there was little of How pleasant must be the dreams of | interest to the enormous crowd which throne.ed One | thecapitoL the £mperor of all the Kusnias morning not long ago Alexander II., on bouncing ont of bed, fonnd the fol lowing letter lying on a table in his b droom: 1 o Alexander IT., Enoperor of all the Rusvlas: 8iek : Fur the fi th time fate ha* preserved yot> from the B'ri-ke o justice. Tbey were live decrees dictated by the law of humanity, a law which you no long r recognize. You know our power and <ie<ei uiifat on. L'evareol the sixth decree. Do you *i*hto » e a great mon arch? Do you wish all the Russian pe -pie to acclaim you and recognize you a-4 their father? Do you wiuh that those who strike tn-dav Khali bee line apostles instead of ex<-cwi »ntrsV If you do, then cease to be a tyrant and become a m a, and render to your »u* jeBtsswhat belongs t» man hy the law of nature --namely l.berty. It is no* yosr per-on that wt> attick, 'but your princ-ples. So lon« as you remain as yon are <mr judgment will |>o al tvavs the name. H ived to-day, you will lerish tu-morrow. Neither d ath nor peisecution will stay our aims You possess brute force; wo pout-ens moral force. But little of interest or importance trans pired at Augusta on the 8th. Both branches of the Legislature held brief sessions. In the House, the Republican members holding cer tificates, sixty in number, presented them- eclves and asked to ba sworn in, but the Clerk refused to administer tbe oath just at present, as he did not exactly know tUe extent of his powers in that direction, but should inform himself. "In statu quo" expresses the condition of affairs at the Maine capital on the 9th. The House was in session all day without a quorum at any time. Not a single Republican member appeared on the floor. Messrs. Swann and Harriman, tho members wt<o made affidavit that attempts were made by ilie Re publicans to bribe them, gave derails of their negotiations with the corrupt solicitor, from their Heat* in the Honse. The m«n who paid the money was stated to bo William R. White, of Wiuthrop. Gen. Chambeilain, of We have sworn to vanquish, and we must ! the lmlit a, issued "a proclamation, noiifying carry off the vic'oiy m ti e cud. The hist j the peopla that he had taken charge of all apos'les of Cnns^iani'y pcnslied at tho start: , public property, and would f-dthfully sutrd it ttteir martyrdom was the cause of the ruin or until a Governor aud other State officers had Rome. Beware and reflect (signed) Thk Goveknino Committee. Grant's Speech at Jacksonville, Fla. Ma. Pxesidekt, Tjpdm ajoj Giutlemen: It is with a good deal of difildence that I arise after the flattering words that I have heard. I know not what to say, exoept that I believe in the statements made as to our country-- that what is good for our land is equally good for every part of it I never wanted anv- thlnt for myself that I was not willing to accora to any other oitizen aa long aa he obeyed the laws and upheld tbe nation. I believe we are now on a basis of fraternal peace and concord, and wo shall move on to peace aud prosperity greater than over knomi iu this land, or possible in any other. We are in our infancy now, but we are stronger than any other in tne world, and will be so as long as we are ti me to otarselves, snd remain one and indivisible. Tbe wool clip of Texas this year ia estimated at 22,000,000 pottnds. b ea elected. V •' f * A Shocking Story. Alamosa, Col. Jan. 8. Iks excitement prevailing over the Ute trouble in Colorado has been somewhat in creased lately by a letter published from Mrs. N. C. Meeker, disclosing tbe fact that each and ali of the women who were held as captives after tbe massacre at White river suffered tbe violation of their per*, ns through fe-r of worse treatment at the hands of these red devils. The evidence was tiven to thecommisrion by the women iu their examination on their release from captivi'y, while in the Gunnison country. It wa« first distinctly understood bv them that this evidence «<f their mistreatment should be used only by the commission in their efforts to e*tab!ifh tbe guilt of the Indians who had per petrated the outrage. Each and all of ibe captivi k begged that toi* phase of their horri ble misfortune should not be given to the public. ,It seems to have been in their situation as cap- five* a choice between death or submitting to< the he.lish dcuire* of their captors. The exam ination further uitcloseb that thev were perniit-'.SViW * • r *.(r r ted, as the last alternative, with the exception of Mrs. Meeker, to etiooee from among'the chiats wbo should cohabit «itfa4baai during the, terrible suspense whieh their oapbvity most have bean, following the lyssta ore at the agency. lids evidence was ooaflued to the e^Mamb- sion. anurag whose rsoords it has lata d<nmant awaitinK tbe Urdy channels of jsstice from the DepsHaMBt of tho Interior natil tho horrible «u spick* was verified by the appearanoe in print of Mrs. Meeker's letter. Tbe Indians, in speaking of the ravUhlng of the women sub sequently, seemed to regard tho sot as in per fect keeping with the style of warfare in wnlch tbey are fond of indulging. I<; !•• th-.t rc:-c.;mnos toolt Joeouhioo Me«b»r4 --e vr-ry ;rf.r,r t-t-rfng «. encounter wi»h D<>uglass concerning his selec tion. An Uncompabgre U;e took Mrs. Price, who was afterward turned over to Johnson. Douglass cays th < t, no one took Mrs. Meekor, as she was too old, and he thought she ought not to bo running around loose, without being car«MfK, so he took hor. , ^ „ THE MaISE COUHT. v EDISiOS*S 'MttHT. Optalntt of tbe Supreme Court Justices Following is a synopsis of the answer of the Justices of the Maine Supreme Court to the series of interrogation* submitted to them by* Gov. Garoelon: 1. The Governor and Oonnoft have no author- i'y to order a new election when no proper re turn is made. The Horn may seat members who have in fact been elected, even if no re turn at ali is made to the Secretary of State. A Representative is not to be deprived of his seat becauso municipal officers have failed to do their duty. 2 The constitution calls for returns which shall be regular in all e«sbntial particulars, and which truly represent tho facts they purport to set forth. B:jr. much of th© constitutional re quirements is merely directory. 3. Wniie towns may tavs seven Selectmen, moat of them have but three, and the signature uf two of tnese is sufficient. In the case of Boards of Aldermen, a majority of aqaoram, though not a majority of the wnole, is compe tent to act. 4 It is immaterial whether the returns from a city show the voie by wards or not It ia not necessary that each candidate's name should be on the returns, provided that the votes re turned as t-catteruig, however added or sub tracted, do not affect the result Votes re turned as scattering may have had that word printed on them for all the Governor and Coun- oll know. Where a plurality elects, an election is i ot to be defeated because the whole num ber of ballots is. erroneously stated, or not stated at all. & Returns are not valid unless signed by tbe Town or City Ulerk, but a Deputy Clerk or Clerk pro tem. would answer the purpose. 0. The Governor and Council must act on the basis ot' the returns aa they are sent to the Secretary of State. If they purport to be made, signed and sealed in open mooting, the Gov ernor and Council have no right to ascertain whether they were so made or not 7. If returns are signed by two Selectmen, the Governor and Council are not to inquire whether the town had but two Selectmen or not The signatures would be enough in cer tain eases, and the presumption is in favor af the return. & A person not a citizen may be a Selectman defacto, ami bind the tjwn as completely as if he were a Selectman de jure. So far as the public are concerned tho acts of a de Jacto of ficer are as valid as those of a de jure officer. 9. In the case of mar ked ballots. Selectmen have the right to reject them when offered, but the statute forbids the rejection of a ballot after it has been received into the ballot-box. The Selectmen have no business to report the mat ter of marked ballots to the Governor and ' Council, ant)' the latter have no right to pay to such report or reference. be no ground for rejecting the r "do" or disregarding the that are in oomtuon use as their any attentii 10. Thei word "diti dote or m er.^tttutes. 11. The to reject ret ernor and Council have no right ns on the ground that they are not guuuinr*, unless objection in writing is pre sented to them declaring that any or all the signature* are not genuine, or that tbe return had been altered since it was made; then notice should be given to the parties interested, and in inves'iigaling the case the Governor und Council should be governed by the usual rules of evidence. 12. In caes of duplicated returns, both in proper form, the first received must be the nasii" of the action of the Governor and Council. If d efective, they can be corrected according to the statutes. Returns must have theii full effect if they are intelligible, in spite* of trivial Irregularities. / jj IT " dwindling by WHuwoto. , •' The vaviov<-~ £x^i^syy*rthe<l by tiie Postoffico Departmenti'pcently give new emphasis to the fact' .that if, as some claim, immortality is ^denied to ether people, the fools do not felie. The Texas Gift Concert Enterprise received $100,000 and distributed $3,00tiBr $4 - 000, the first prize of $50,000 goi^to a confederate who was paid $600 for per sonating the lucky man. One Henry P. Jones, in New York, sends autograph letters over the coun try to his "cousin," who left the army after the war, and whose name, the same as the correspondents to whom he is writing, "Jones" has seen in the di rectory. "Jones"says he is agent for a lottery, and will arrange it so that his "cousin" shall draw the prize on an inclosed ticket, because it will be a good advertisement if he goes around among his friends and neighbors proclaiming his good luck. In a few days "Bur nett" writes to "Jones'" "cousin;" that is to say, he sends a letter to the eaihe parties in different parts of the country whom "Jones" addressed, say ing that the correspondent thus ad dressed has drawn a watch worth $300, cm which, for packing, registeiing, etc., he is allowed a commissu n of $3. The dupe sends his $3, and "Burnett" sends another letter announcing that "Jones" had no authority to send him a lottery ticket free. He thereupon demands $5 more--tho price of the ticket--which the dupe sends him, and th ecorrespond- ence closes. Another letter flooding the country announces that the receiver of it, hav ing remitted the proper amount due, has secured title to certain shares in the '* Silver Mountain Mining Company." The dupe chuckjps at the mistake that has been made, orders the certificates forwarded and receives them. Then follow sundry assessments upon the atook as long as the innocent will stand it. The " American Book Company," Weymouth, Mass, requests Postmas ters to forward 17 cents and the names of the clergymen in his town, in return for which they will send him a handsome Bible. "I was silly enough to comply," writes one victim, "and ha^e not received either the Word of God fer a word from the swindlers." Wo se than this, one wretch in Mas sachusetts sent out 300,000 vile circu lars last winter and fall, to children of both sexes, and received 3,000 or 4,000 registered letters, containing mnnev.-- Detroit Free Press. A National Urange Memorial. The National Grange of Patrons of Hus bandry have memorialised Congress on the subject of grievanoea from which they pray for relief: 4 1. That transportation companies engaged in in'er-State commerce of the United Statee have so far exceeded their chartered rights and fran chises that to-day their management ia without o\c p»ioit illegal and arbitrary. 2. That frequent and unreasonable fluctua tions in their rates of transportation, both of freiKht and passengers, are whimsical and un necessary. 3. lUilroads are common carrier*, built by the people for the common weal, and should not be tolerated as arbitrary and crushing mo nopolies. 4. Organized combination among these trans portation companies destroys the possibility of legitimate competition and oppresses the indus trial clause* of our country. 5. These monopolies, anuually growing more powerful and defiant, have not been and are not restrained by effective Congressional legis lation. The memorialists therefore urge the enact ment of such laws art. will relieve a burdened at<d oppressed people from these unlawful ex actions. Ia Ita Sncoaaa ? [Wb th* Chicago Daily Hcwa.) fkmbt contiimes to be expressed! as respects ttie success of the Edison light. Scientific men who have seen it say that the inventor has achieved noth ing not heretofore known, and that he is merely going over old gxonnd which has been worked by others, and unsuc cessfully. Some of the objpflHnn? to the cloctrifl imlit. for dwellings may bo summarized as follows: Unlike gas,it cannot be stored up for future use. If apythingfiappeneA the steam engine,the lights would immediately go out. If the engine power falls off in strength even, the lights flicker. It will cost nearly aa much* for two or three lights as for twenty. But the main difficulty of the electric light, it is claimed, yet remains unsolved; that is, its divisibility. As long ago as 1825, Dr. Ohm discovered the unit of electric resistance. The so- called magnet in telegraphy and tele phony is measured by the force of re sistance in ohms it offers to the electric current in its parage. Consequently, it is the storehouse of tbe electric force for local use at the points where it is employed. But If there is a long line of wire the battery which supplies the electric force must be powerful enough to overcome the resistance of all the magnets in the circuit, or else there must be relays of batteries to do so. in the instance of the electric light, the first lamp on the circuit must be al lowed a certain resistance before it will afford the necessary light. But the second lamp will have ite light sub tracted from it ia the ratio of the square of its distance to tiie resistance ohms in the first lamp of the circuit; while as the lamps increase the resistance Increases like compound interest; so that the last lamp in the circuit receives no electric current whatever, because that has been consumed by the resist ance experienced between it and the first. Mr. Edison may have overcome this resistance, but the question is: At what cost of steam power? He may be running only a fe^ lamps with an eighty-horse power engine, and that is said to be the size of his machine; if so, his light is as yet an immensely-ex pensive one, and the question of il luminating residences with electricity still remains unsolved. Tbat large spaces are already successfully illumi nated with it is, of course, well known. If, however, Mr. Edison has succeeded in dividing the electric current, eco nomically, then indeed is his invention a success. But here is exactly where the doubt still exists. Cape and Sword. Bonaparte never forgot anything; least of nil the days of his poverty, and the slights he then received. Grace Greenwood sends to the New York Tribune the following reminiscence of the corporal and Emperor, which is quite charucl eristic: When Bonaparte first paid court to Madame de Beauharnais, neither was rich enough to keep a carriage, and the young hero, who was deeply in love, often gave the charming widow his arm when she went to vie it her man of business, a notary named Baguitiean. Mad ame,who had a great confidence in l3gal adviser, who was a friend as well, went to see him immediately after her engagement to Bonaparte, who, as usual, accompanied her, but, from mo tives of delicacy, did not enter the no- were writing. The door being imperfeotly closed, he here heard nearly all that was said during the interview, and especially the arguments used by Baguideau to deter Madame de Beauharnais frop the mar riage she acknowledged herself about to contract. "Mark my words, modame," said the notary, "you are about to commit a great* folly, of which jou wiil bitterly repent. Why, this man you are about to espouse has nothing in the world but a cape and a sword." 8aid Josephine: "Bonaparte never spoke to me of this, and I had not the faintest suspicion that he had overheard Raguideau's contemptuous words. Can you, Bourrienne, figure to yourself my astonishment when, eight years after, on the da; of his coronation, as soon as he was invested with his imperial robes, he said,'Let them goandaeek Baguideau; have him come instantly. I have somfe- thing to say to him." The notary was promptly brought, and stood much astonished before the Emperor, who with his peculiar sar donic .simile said to him, "Monsieur 1 have 1 nothing in the world bat a cape and a sword?" Edison's Inventions* There is considerable curiosity M to how Edison's inventions are to be con trolled. From the New York Exchange we gather, as follows: The Edison Electric-Light Com pany is organized with a capital of $300,000, divided into $100 shares. It is clainjed that it owns all the rights which accrue to Prof. Edison's discov eries and inventions in the way of pro ducing light ty means of electricity. It is said that three shares were.sold lately at $3,800 per share, and the report was that $5,000 we s bid. The Edison Ore Milling Company is organized with 3,500 shares, the par value beiDg $100 a share. This com pany h to operate Prof. Ed^bn's sys tem of extracting gold and silver from ore. The results of this system are said to be wonderful, a much higher percentage of the precious metals be ing saved than has been practicable under any of the old methods of re duction. The Edison Polyform Company is organized to manufacture and sell a medical preparation for ihe curb of neuralgia. Prof. Edison has been a great sufferer from thus disease, and it is said that he obtained complete re lief through the application of this rem edy devised by himself. It is soon to be oflered through the trade, an order for 1,000,000 bottles having been given to a Pittsburgh glass factory lecently. The Polyform Company has a capital of $350,000, divided into $100 shares. Did the Chinese Invent Bank Notes f Sir John Lubbook, in (he Nineteenth Century, credits the Chinese with the invention of bank notes. It is related that about 119 B. C., the court being iu want of money, the Halifax of the duy hit upon the following device: When any Prince or courtier entered the im perial presence it was customary to cover the face with a piece of skin. It was first decreed tbat for this purpose the skin of a certain white deer, kept in one of the loyal parks should alone be employed, and then these skins, * b,Te J"!*4. gg Thm to b&e comA 800 A. IX, an< flying money. were sold for a tary's cabinet* Imt mmmmmI im. 'aa adg writh her. joining room, where several* clerks tier parents were from home, and Bhe 8«me Fables by «. ffash. • . ,i» •A crow which wax so infernally <W tint it had begin to spit bales of oot- I ton, seed a pitcher, an', wMi the oWfirvsr- lion that it was a loiw railroad thai*'! had no turntable, fitow to quench ha* whistle. On reaohin' the pitcher, lu»* wm appalled by the discovery that it 1 contained so little water that he couldn't-! reach it with a ten-toot pole. He triecL ] every^ way he^ could think of, even, stand 1m' on his head and wuz about-1 givin'upin despair, when he seed a | fnendly mill-pond a few rods distance. Seizin' the pitoher in his tallons, an*, fijin' with great difficulty to the pond, < he filled it to tke top., Then, after l takin' several hearty pulls' from it, he | wiped his hps on his tail-feathers and L remarked: 'Necessity ia the mother ot! invention, and don't yon forget it.'" u. ."A yaflar dog lay in a manger, an' 1 his disagreeable barkin' an's ho win' prevented the oxen from eatin* the hay which had been placed for them. 'What a ridiculous dog!' saic one of them to his companion;' he < not eat the hay hisselx, an' yet refuseaJ to allow them to eit it as can.' ' We J will see about that,' observed the com- [ panion, a 7-year-old roan steer of bad<) disposition; 4 wo will see about an', waikii>.' up to the manger with the remark,' Come out of that, you mangy I son of a gftn!' he took the dog on his J horns, tossed him up to the roof a few I times, mopped the sthble floor with] him, an' wound up the circus by shoot-1 in' him through the door into an adja cent corn-field. The dog dragged his- sjslf off to a sequestered spot an' said with his last breath; ' If thar's a here-1 after for lost aeronauts, I'll bet $7 I gotl thar I'"--Cincinnati Enquirer, Similarity of Names of Generals. The similarity between the late Gen.) Jeff C. Davis and that of the Confede* [ rate ex-President recalls the fact that I there was in the two armies another I similarity of names not quite so well- [ known, but fully as striding--that of Gen. George B. McClellan, of the Union, army, and Gen. George B. McLellan, of: the Conf ederates. The last-named gen tleman hails from Oktibbeha county J Miss., and was a member the Yale Col lege class of 1858. A little confusion, was also produced in the Union ] army during the war by the similarity of the two Shermans---W„ T. and T. W.--especially during the siege of Cor inth, when both commanded divisions. ] By the way, speaking i|>f Sherman re minds us of a joke that is going the*! rounds of the press. A gentleman, in ' company with a United States Senator,, called on the General of the army, and,.| upon being introduced, remarked: "Ah,.| Gen. Sherman; you served in the army ̂ I presume."--Columbus Dispatch. Pussy. A bashful young peasant was greatly captivated by the charms of a pretty girl in his own station in life; he was-] exceedingly anxious to ask her to marry I him, and had often resolved to do so,. I but so far his courage had always-1 failed him when the opportunity ar-f rived. However, one night he resolved.) to hear his fate in spite of his modesty, I >«o he «*wted off to spend the evening;! ler. When he arrived, to his joy,. was seated knitting at the kitchen fire,, with a big gray oat lying at her feet. Jamie sat down beside her, but not a- word could he say, till, at the end of half an hour, he inwardly resolved to "finish this business;" so, acting on a< " happy thought," he placed the cat' upon his knee and stammered forth: "Pussy, ask Lizzy will she marry me?" Lizzy blushed and smiled, but managed to say: "Pussy, tell Jamie I'll takehim."* --Chambers'Journal. A Bare Faculty. : A warning addressed to his son by a-' manufacturer of the old school--a men whose commercial type is probably as extinct as the patriarchal race who lived,, like him, in live English reigns--was by chance or choice cast in an epigram matic form still remembered after fifty 3 ears. "Tom," he said, " I have known, men who made mopey, and did not spend it, and I havo known men who- spent money and did not make it; but £ never knew a man who oould both make money and spend it." The father himself wns a prosperous example of the first group, and he believed his son to be aspiring to similar bucoess in the last.--The Spectator. A 8 mile on the face is worth two in ft. tumbler. THE MARKETS. Bkkvkb Hoog CorxoH. Flour---Superflno. Whcat--No. 2. YORK. ..$6 35 ..4 00 .. iaj .. B 35 1 45 Conn--Westt-n. Mixed 5S Oats-Mixed 48 Kye--Western !(5 Pork--Meaa ....It 75 Ubo CHICAGO. Beeves--Cbolee Grul^t .steera 41 TO Cowaand Helfera........ 8 -30 Medium to f air 4 0'i Hoos 4 HO Flocb--Fancy White Winter Ex... B 50 Oood to Ch.'ico Spring Ex. (5 75 @10 « t3> 5 0 (t« 5 TO (& 1 65 & «K @ B0> & s? 1 28 . 1 14 . 89 . 84 . . «7 . 38 . 19 .18 85 8 @ 5 85 ©i 8 80 4 85? @4 10' tg) 7 00 <3 ti«w (Si 1 8ft' @ 1 15 & 40 & 80 013 40 @ 1 *T i S4 TO & TO ' V. ' Wkeax--No. a Spring.... No. 8 Spring Corn--No. 2 Oats- No. 2 Rye-->*o. 8 .' IIaruct--No. 8..... HUTTRIT--Choice Creamery Bros-- Fresh Pomk--Meaa Labd _ MILWAUKEE. Wh*ax--No. 1 X >. 8 Cobw--No. 2 Oats- Jio. 2 Rnt--No. 1 Bah ley--No. 3 81. LOUIS. Wheat--No. 8 Bed FaU...., 1 S5 Corn--Mixed 87 Oats--No. 2 87 My* M Pobk--Meaa 18 85 La Hu tua CINCINNATI. t 83 41 88 »1 MOO @18 7*0 TOLEDO. Wheat--Amber Michigan 1 86 No. 8 Bed... ....148 Coxn --No. 8 41 Oat»--No. 2 1.... 88 DErporr. Floob--Choice f 95 Wheat-^No. 1 WT.lta 1 84 PO. 1 Amber 1 83 Corn--No. 1 46 Oat»-- Mixed Kavlby (per cental) J10 Pobk--Mem » - INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat--No. 8 Bad 1 88 Cosx 88 Oats 87 Foai-Owr ..14 60 KAST LIBEBTT, PA. Cattlb--Beat 4 90 Fair 4 00 (kmaoa 8 80 Rooa 4 00 Saw.. 8 60 -1 f ;• *!*• f . 4. «,*§' 'it * a aw... . ...if- WHEAT Conir...; Oats BTE Pork--Me«a Laud. >m one <§18 60