Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Feb 1880, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ft BON, despite r stirs RlfitWi m- r- HART B, LINRRRMRIBB died at last week, of hydrophobia, after iDdwcnbabic agony. *B»T1H00eAXD shares of Central Pa- stoot wore sold at anotion on the one day lut week. Itam ml m tnueadooi scramble among bay- era tolnMM thUM, Mid they went off like hot eik«»**pfiee® ranging from 81# to 85. preoocious boys, aged respect- * nlf 18J 12 and 7 years, started Went from Worcester, Mass., for the avowed purpose of fighting Indiana, They were overtaken and arrested in New York. They were armed with revolvers, knives, a p.t fiooney songster, and gomA very much worn story paper* by way of ... .lAwte. .'mt *" : *•* wnt • XIAIKOX audiences were the rale at lfe¥ieker> Chicago Theater Iwt week, the at- being the Boston Theater company in "Drink," an intensely realistic and exciting drama. Hie oamp&nv giving this play could •caroely be improves upon, and the perform- anoe throughout it one of the moat powerful •ad irtiatic e«r »een in Chicago. The play • is put npen the stage in a utyie rarely equaled at any theater, and which, for completeness »nd painstaking detail, oar not be sarpMaed. j Drink" is retained all the present week. fr is reported that the Atchison and Msiraaka road has been leased to the Burling- tea and Miseosri River railroad in Nebraska, and has thereby became & branch of the Chi­ cago, Burlington and Qumcy railroad....The ImoroTMoent Committee, after a somewhat' protracted session at St Loota, adjourned until the 14th of February, when it will reassemble in Washington, presenting ita report to Congress about the 1st of March. This document will the oarrying oat of plans made by the oonuaittee, and ask tor an appropriation of between *3,000,000 and #4,000,000 tor that A SBKiCABff of the crimes committed in Obtoagp dtutog Beventy-eix days (says the i3Xmm of that eityi shows that there hare been eleven assaults which have resulted in death; eight Which have not yet terminated fatally, but which are likely to do so. and mteceUanecns stabbing*, punching*, and gouging* too nnmer- h«S to mention. ADVICES from New Mexico report that Xaj. Morrow has bem oompelled to temporar­ ily aba«km the jrarralt at Victoria's blood­ thirsty band of savagee, on aooount of a lack of tommwary supplies. Theoomraand had been in the moantauM without rations for ten days, and irate fighting daily. In the last two days of the light Mtj. Morrow captured 100 horses «wl sntaa. The Indians abandoiiMl largo quantities of property stolon in Mexico, bolts of caocq. oertton cloths, etc, Maj. Morrow is rsportM aa havhik pnntoiuil the Indians ee- yeraly. It is thoaght, judging from the num­ ber, that the band is composed of all the Indi- aaa who have been living in Mexico. • HORAC* THOMPSON, one o! the wealthiest andmoet prominent citizens of St. X*anl, Minn., disd of pneumonia, laft week, iu Sew York, where he had goa*. He with his wife and daughter and a party of Western friends were on a pleasure ex- , curaioo,. . .Nearly every day number* ofSouth- ' ern negroes pass through Kansas Gitv, bonnd for IsnsaK, Most of tnem are well-nigh pen- COL. NELSON TBUSLEK, United States , .2>gstcj|pt Attorney for the District of Indiana, dwdtvsrj suddenly of apoplexy at Indianap­ olis last week He bad just taken a seat in the final Opera House at the side of his wife, and was in the aet of reaching for a pro­ gramme, «ten his bend suddenly dropped S hu shoulders, and he fell over * Deceased was a native of Indiin*, and 1 was W yean old The 148d annfreraarv of i the birth of Thomas Paine was celebrated in f Cbic«#> bjr a Maandiono© in the Centra' Music Hall, Col. K O. lagenod being the apealur of the occasion. " ,/:ST»RAIN0 BCLL and his followers are iungty sod cold, and they are coming several thousand strong to United States territory pre­ pared to fight, if necessary, for victuals and MlntybreMQe. Iron Pipe, chief of the Gros •entree, who, with twelve lodges of Nez Forces , Ms arrived in Montana, evidently "**" expedition, reports that the Teton' • chief, "witk* 600 lodfei is now on Milk river, moving south. The savages said tohave saftenM dreadfully during the winter from &e severe weather sod the scaroi- teof ftooi... .ttemosi K Hayes, for many years of Chicago, prominenuv enn- meattft no the public affairs of the city, died jafewdaysego. He was a native of Nashville. Tenn., and 60 years old. mwm j I Iwapr and Joseph Frees wood, while ittMiar the influence of whiaky, quarreled aboat a girl a* Sweetwater, Monroe county, Tenn. Joseph, daring tiie difficulty, drtw his revolver and shot Ialey through the heart The nmr- ifiHrer then lied, and has not been found. • THUS is no abatement, but appar­ ently a steady increase, of the negro ssodtas from lbs South. Colored immigrants uriTing in St. Louis en route for Kansas report that great numbers are waiting on the banks of the ffi*ffal£MriTfT for passage on steamboats that will lake them to the North; and it is said that if they axe refused transportation by the boats they will form huge oaravans and make their way on foot to the land of promise. In Indiana the arrivals are on the inc e&ee, tod * pMi djil of riftknesi And lofferiog ig said to prevail among the new-oomers.. The steamer Cfaartner, with 2,100 b ̂of cottoa, was tofcOly destroyed by fire, in Bed river, near Bayou Sara, La. Eight lives were lost--two chambermaids, two eooks, two cabin boys, one firenian, and one deck Land. The boat and eaiteawera Valued at *130,000. fM oonseqnenee of Maj. E. A. Bufce, Mate Treasurer of Louisiana and editor of the Hew (Msaas Jhmoerot, asserting is lik paper that Ma}, HBany, formerly an editor of the name p^er, was a liar, and in consequence of Hie hitter rspty made bv He&ray, a duel was fomgMtr** two "Majahs" on the Metairie fiidge, a famous dueling ground ee&r the Cree- oart<aty. Afterfiringtwoshots each friends. ia*S«TOeedt and the difficulty was adjiwted. A WAX of races has broken oat in Shenandoah eouaty, Va., where the proprietors aP Several iron furnaoee are endeavoring to substitute black for white labor. Several riots have occurred, and the Governor has directed a local militia company to assist the Sheriff fai p--serving the peace. BISHOP SIMPSON, of the Methodist Cfcurch, is the last claimant of the honor of aaggestfog Aeratan's "March ty the Sea," edofliettng *riews as Co which have culminated in the lihsi suit of Oen. Boynton against Gen. Sherman. The Bishop narrates that just after the battle of Lookout Mountain he ex­ pressed to Gen. Grant wonderment that no effort had been made to out the Confederacy in tjata by sending a force across the mountains SC-Tennessas to the Atantic coast THE Chicago Times sajg * it is gen­ ially believed in New York that wheat must anjnedown. Although prices have declined of etiU *9° hi?h f°r export, and are so low that cargoes caunfit se «Htied «s.cept at a loss." ® oanw . JtAV" 5OUL1> ̂ elected Presi- Ant of the Misswin, Kansas and Texas Bail- ChSsteC7' bringing it into toe Wa- D* MILLE, author of f *n̂ oflwr well-known works, , ° mo8t P»Palw writers of the • m*at ¥9 ,home in Halifax, N i ' - ' W A G H J O I G T O K . tdSW, ex-nhiefolerk of the Indian Bn- r®aa, testified before the Senate committee ap- thess Indians... .Senator Johnston, of Vir­ ginia, and Sneaker Randall are confident that Oongrees will adjourn by the 15th of ApriL GXN. ADAMS left Washington for Col­ orado last week, with Jack and Soweriok, of the White Jlivor TTtes,- and Wash, an Uacom- pahgre. Jack and his comoanion are charged with the delicate duty of bringing in the twelve &uilty White W«sr Htsst dead or alive. Wash carriee the orders of Ouray to his tribe, who are to do all in their power to assist Jack in his undertaking. Adams will take no part in the actual work of capturing or killing these outlaws. That work is left wholly to the Indians themselves THE bill to organize a Territorial form of government for the Indian Territory will fail, the majority of the sub-oommittee having it under consideration being opposed to it In conversation, most of the Democratic Congressmen express themselves unre­ servedly as in favor of an early adjournment ....The Secretary of the latertor has notified Indian Oommienionar Hayt that hit services in that capacity were no longer re­ quired. This arbitrary removal is placed upon the ground of the good of the service," the developments in the recent investigation of charges against Mr. Hayt having been auch as to oor.vineo Secretary Schurz that the affaire of the Indian Bureau can be placed in better hands. G*N. H. V. BOYNTON, author of the criticism upan "Sheeman's Memoirs," which BO eataepwuted the General of the Artny a few years ago, has addressed a letter to the Hon. Alexander Et. Ramsey, Secretary nf War, con­ taining thargas and specifications against Gen. W. T. Sherman, for " conduct unbecoming an officer and % gentleman," in violating the crim­ inal laws of the District of Columbia, which define and punish the ortoa of*slander.... Among the patents issued last week was one to Edison for nis recent electrie lamp, described as a oombination of a carbon receiver made of glass, and conductors passing through the gla«s, and from which receiver the air is ext hausted for the purpose of giving light by in\ candesoenoe. MUSICAL THK Blaine boom is a-booming in Pennsylvania. It is said the press of Western Pennsylvania is solid for him....The Boston Tr<w&fr!pt, which is a sturdy opponent of Grant's re Domination, publishes interviews with a number of lesdung business men of Bos­ ton, all of whom declare a third term contrary to the genius of our institutions The delegates to the Pennsylvania Convention have been chosen in Philadelphia, and a poll shows that fourteen are for Blaine, thirteen have no choice, four are for Blaine or Grant, three are for Grant, three are for Conkling, one is for Hayes, one is for McManes, one is for Blaine or Washburne, and six are undetermined A New York dispatch says that some leading politicians profess to believe that Gen. Grant will havfi tha votes of fully four- fifths of New York's delegation to the Chicago Convention, and that the remainder of the vote will be cast for Sherman. They think that 'irant will be nominated by the votes of New York and Pennsylvania, and two or three smaller Northern States, added to those of the entire South....The Nebraska editors in convention have cast their Presi­ dential preferences as follows: Nine for Blaine, six for Grant, and one each for Sher­ man, Seymour, Washburn*, Bayard. Butler, Gen. Hancock, Tic Woodhull, Bessie Turner and Chief Ouray. OEN. GARFIELD has written a letter, in reply to an inquiry by Ohio Etate Senator Horr, uu ui6 subject of the FreSidtUCy, ill which he expresses the hope that Ohio will, as a unit, present and press the name of John Sherman to the Chicago Convention. THE vacancies in the New York Dem­ ocratic Committee have been filled by Tilden raen, thus securing to the ex-Governor abso­ lute control of the opening proceedings of the State Convention. It is earn the Kellyites will send a separate delegation to the National Con­ vention. .. .It is thought that Philadelphia the best chance for securing the National Dem­ ocratic Convention. SEVEN Fusion Senators and twenty- two members of the House presented them­ selves at the Maiue State House, on the 29th inet., and were given seats in the Legislature organized by the Republicans. Their reception was very cordial Word comes from North Carolina, South .Carolina and Florida to the effect that the delegations to the Chicago Convention from those States will be " pledged to Sherman." THE belief gains ground in New York that Tilden has resolved not to be a can­ didate before the Democratic National Conven­ tion. The aasertion is made by a newspaper correspondent at Albany that corroborative e idence to this effect hae been obtained within the last few days, and that, while a delegation friendly to him will undoubtedly be chosen, Tilden will thereupon make known aubliely hi* withdrawal from the coutoai f VORKIGM* CA.PT. BOOASDUB, who is NOW fa En­ gland, offers to wager £2,000 against £1,000 he can kill 1,000 pigeons quicker than any man in the world... .An insurgent Cuban General and forty-eight men, half of them armed, have surrendered unconditionally A Dublin dis­ patch says that at the Tri'bber-Curry Assizes thirtv-one persons were convicted of participation in the recent assaults upon process-servers. There was great excitement among the - poimtace in consequence.... The troubles between the Czar of ltussia and his wife have long been a matter of pnblio notoriety, and some time ago the Czarina went to Cannes, France, ostensibly for the benefit of her health, but really because she could no longer live with her husband. An effort is now being made to patch up the difficulty be­ tween the royal pair Fourlier, a high func­ tionary in tbe French War Department, committed suicide the other day. He was evidently short in his accounts, for, being asked for a showing of hi* affairs, he replied by promptly blowitig ont hw brains....Tbe Lord Mayor of Dublin lias issued an appeal through the London news­ papers, in which he f-ays he fears the people of England do cot realize the gravity of the pres­ ent crisis in Ireland, or that unless prompt as si stance be given thousands of human must die of starvation. -- j t ; . . hut fraia whfcfc .aw^ " of TO <jupant"n 1 A^fpnatoh rival at Havre tiila single South American %tea»er with l<JiO(w mutton carcasses, pre­ served in refrigerators. INFECTIOUS diseases are spreading to aa a&rming extent in St. Petersburg, tbe deaths resulting therefrom being 19 per cent of the entire mortality....The Pope Imv sent 10,GOO francs to Ireland for tte relief of the destitute. Three deaths have occurred from starvation in County Louth, Ire­ land.... A Rome dispatch says the Pope's health is causing anxiety. He suffers from tits of shivering and great prostration, hut persists in his usual occupations. \ " , H ' . 'JtM. , a . 5. .t,As& THE French Chamber of Deputies has rejected Louis Blanc's motion for the ab­ rogation of all laws restricting the right of pub­ lic meeting or the formation of associations. .. 1 .Italy is proud to call itself the owner of the largest and most powerful war vessel- in the world. It has two turrets, and, at a trial the other day, made fourteen miles an hour. GONZALES, the man who attempted the assassination of the King of Spain a few weeks ago, has been pronounced insane by a commission of medical experts, and so will es­ cape capital punishment THE earthquakes in Cuba are eras­ ing much alarm among the inhabitants of t e island .. .The Nationalists of the County Mayo Ireland, have decided to start Michael Davitt and Thomas Brenuan, under indictment for sedition, as the candidates of the county for Parliament, ou the understanding that if elect­ ed they shall not take their seats. The pros­ pects of their election are considered pood A basin of petroleum, said to be as large and rich as tbe one in Pennsylvania, has been discovered in Hanover, Germanv... .The death of Mohammed Jao, the Afghan 1< ader, is reported from India (>eu. Garibaldi, in a communication, has thanked King Humbert that Iralian law« enabled him to obtain a di­ vorce from a wife with whom he never lived, and to marry tbe woman who is the mother of his children. The King is said to have sent a cordial reply. THE lakes of Switzerland are frosen over for (the fourth time within a century Two Americans have been arrested at Naples on a charge of swindling a Russian out of 85,000 francs The marriage of the Crown Prince of Austria and Marv, the ni&ce of the King of Saxony, will shortly be solemnized.... It is rumored at Odessa that a Russian trans­ port ve.-sel, l.aving on board 2,000 tr ops, re­ cently em harked at Astrakhan, and bound for Subakislar, a port on the eastern side of »ne Caspian sea, has been caught in a heavy gfjn and completely wrecked... .The French Cham­ ber of Deputies has passed the Government bill providing for the suppression of political ekibs and for the prohibition of meetings where disturbances are appreheudei.... One of the fatuous architects of tbe world, Edward Middle ton Bariy, who designed the mm RATIONAL CONGRESS. A*. vip In tha Senate, on assembling Jan. 86, tha Vloe President presented a oommuatoation from the Secretary of the Navy in answer to a resolu­ tion. stating the interests of the country and the naval service require that th« Pensaoola navy yard be put In a state of effloiency, at the estimated cost of §67C.Wi;, §83.709 of the amount being neces­ sary for rebuilding marine barracks destrajvd during the war. Tbe bill to locate and pur­ chase a new site lor a United States naval observatory passed. A bill was preaented for an appropriation o( flOO.OOO for a headquarters building on the Fort Snelliuft reservation. Peti­ tions were presented against tlno Detioit bridge and for other obji-cts. 'ihtj Judiciary v;om)uittue re­ ported adversely upon the rapea! of estaling laws tor Khe removal of causes fiom State to Federal courW, ao aa to confine the jnri.-<iUcln>n of the Sat- ter to ea •*» ansing uader the constitution and laws of the Halted Htates. Tne President noininbted Faecal I\ ladder to be Collector of Customs of the District of Dunkirk, N. Y.; Rynde Lawder to lie Collector of Internal Beveuue of the Fourth District ol Missouri; John Cook, of Illinois, to be United Mates Indian Agent at Rosebud Agoncy, Dakota; Miio A. boynton, of Michigan, to be Uni­ ted States Indian Agent at Moquis Pueblos Agency, Arizona; Lutiier Harris, of Pennsyl­ vania, to be principal clerk on private land claims at the General Land Office.... In the Honse, the Clerk presented the credentials of J. F. Phillips, KepresentaUve-elect from ths Seventh Congressional District of Missouri, and Mr. Phillips took the iron clad oath. Among the bills introduced and referred were the following: By Mr. Manning, providing that ths number of Justices of the United States Supreme Court be in­ creased to twenty-one, divided into three divisions, and presided over by one Cnief Justice and two Assistant Cliief Justices, to be appointed by the President from Associate Justices; by Mr. Garner, to establish a United States Su­ perior Court, and to abolish the Court of Claims; by Mr. Boss, appointing George B. MctHellan Man- aeer of the National Soldiers' Home for Disabled Volunteers; by Mr.Sparks, for the appointment of Gen. Palmer as Manager of the National Home for Disabled Volunteers; by Mr. Bragg* for the ap­ pointment ol Maj. D. W. Fnlton as Man­ ager of the National Home for Disabled Volunteers ; by Mr. Garfield, to re­ organise ths Inspectors General Department; by Mr. Valentine, for the appointment of a com­ mission to ascertain and report the losses sus­ tained by the citizens on account of Indian depre- ! dations; by Mr. Umer. for » monument to F. S. Key, author of the " btar-8pangled Banner;" bjr Mr. Mason (by request), to incorporate the Coerao- Amertesn Colonization and Genera! Improvement Bureau in the United States. Mr. Eel ley's resolu­ tion was adopted which neclares tiie negotiation of commercial treaties by the President unconstitu­ tional. Mr. Springer introduced a hill amendatory of ths Bsetion laws, which pro­ vides that before the appointment of Supervisors of Elections is made ths Circuit Court shall cause notice of petition of citizens tor such Superiors to he served on the @ongressionsl candidates of ths two largest parties, and the court shsll appoint for each voting precinct ons Supervisor on recom­ mendation of each of such candidates. It also provides that all applications for the appointment of Special Deputy Marshals shall be submitted to the Circuit Cnnrt, -nd before the appointment of any Marshals notice shall be served on the candidates of the thr e political parties casting the greatest nnm- ber of votes at the election for Congress; and also that an eqnal number of sppointments for each voting precinct shall be mads on the recommenda­ tion of eacn candidate. It repeals all laws which suthorlze the arrest of any person 'violating any United States Election law without warrant, and provides that no law shall authorize any Super­ visor of Election or any United States Marshsl to interfere in any manner with judges or Inspectors of elections. Tbe Ml for the relief of Fits i John Porter was imported bMkto the 84«sto on t$*> fTtb*»f *av- uary by the Military Committee, with a favorable report; a minority report was also presented. Mr. Edmunds offered a resolution, which was agreed to, instructing tbe Committee on Judiciary to in­ quire whether, in the settlement of adjustment be­ tween the United States and certain railroads, any discrimination ha-i been made in favor of one or more such companies ss against others, and if so, whstfnrther legislation on the snbjrctis expedient. Mr. Pendleton introduced a bill to authorize the appointment of io<-uical inspectors in the navy to the office of the Chief of Bureau of Medicine and tiurgery, and to remove the disability of the present incumbent. A number of petitions were present­ ed in favor of the Weaver Bounty bill. Bills were introduced and referred ss follows: By Mr. Butler, to incorporate the Cosmo-American Colonization and Oeneral Improvement Bureau; by Mr. Coke, providing for the pay­ ment of . the swards made to the Creek Indians who enlisted in the Federsl army, loyal refugees and freed men; by Mr. Wallace, to increase the pensions of all wouuded soldiers of the War <if 1812 who now receive less than $15 per month; by Mr. Logan, to amend the statutes in relation to the immediate transportation of dutla- ble Mpods: a joint resolution to increase the off oars of tlie army allowed to be detailed m professors of military science at colleges and universities; by Mr. Teller, to regulate Indian affairs. Mr. Bayard tnen made a caretully-prepared speech upon financial matters,taking his enti-legal-tender resolution as tb* subject. It was a pronounced hard-money document... .In the House, a bill was passed appropriating §100,000 for a monument at York:own, and §20,WM toward the centenary cele­ bration. A bill passed setting apart for park pur­ poses certain lands in California on which are growing the " red wood " or " biu trees;" also, a bill for the relief of certain actual settlers on *ha Kansa§ trust and diminished reserved lands iu Kan­ sas. The Houss then went into oommittee of ths whole upon the roles, with the five-minute rule la force. As soon aa the journal was read in tbeSenate on the *8th of January, Mr. Ferry presented the following resolutions, which were nnsnimously adopted: Resolved, That the Senate has received with profound sorrow the announcement of tbe death of Zacharish Chandl r, late a Senator of the United States from the State of Michigan, and for nearly nineteen years a member of this body. He- tolvtd. That to express some estimate Leld of his eminent services in a long public ca­ reer, rerdered conspicuous by a fearless, patriotic devotion, the business of the 8enate be now suspended, that the associates of the de­ parted Senator may pay Btting tribute to bis pub­ lic and private v:rtuen. Rtoolred, That the loss the country sustained in the death of Mr. Chandler was manifest hy txprexciors of public surrow throughout the land. JUttotoed, I hat, aa a mark of respect fur tbe memory of the dead Sen­ ator, the members of the Senate will wear cra. e upon the left arm for thirty day . KeiolveH, Tliat the Secretary of the Senate com- miiMcati) the-e resolutions to the House of Repre­ sentatives. IttHolrect, That as an additional mark of respect for the memory of the deceased the Sen­ ate do now adjourn. Mr. ferry then delivered a eulogy upon the public and private life of the de­ ceased at considerable length. Ihe following Sen­ ators followed iu shorter addresses laudatory of the late Senator from Michigan, after wliich the bodj- sdjourned: Memrs. Anthony, Bavard, Hamlin. Blaine, Logan, Wallace, Conkling. Hoar, Morrill, Bansom, Blair. Cameron and Baldwin.... In the House, the Commit ee on jfostoffices and Post Itoaiis reported a bill declaring all public roads and highways post-routes. After some dis­ cussion the vote on seconding the demand for the previous question resulted Si to 44. No quorum. The House passed the following bills: Grant- inn a pension to the widow of Lieut. Hiram H. Benner, and appropriating $4,100 for the erection of a monument to Gi n. H<-rkimer. The Senate bill appropriating $75,Ou0 for the purchase of a new site for the United States Naval Observatory was taken from the Speaker's table and passed, with an amend­ ment providing' that, if practicable, the site shall be on an even degree of jongit&dc west of Green­ wich. Mr. Brewer offered a resolution calling ou the Supervising Architect of the Treasury for in­ formation as to the number of public buildings now in process of erection, or which may have been completed within the last tbm>. yesrs. and reasons why such buildings have cost, or will coat, more than the amount limited by law Mr. Davis introduced a bill imposing a tax on smoking opium, etc. The morning hour having ex­ pired, the House went into com mi tee of tKe whole on the revision of the rules, A message was received from the Senate, transmit­ ting the resolutions adop'ed by that body relative to the late Senator Ch ndler. Speeches were then made in eulogy of the late Senstir by Messrs. New­ berry. Williams. Hubbell. Brewer.Conger, Burrows, Haw ley. Dunnell. fctone. Keifer, ttriggs, Crapo, Bar­ ber. Wi;let«, and Osrfield. A number of petitions upon various subjects were presented to the Senate ou ths morning of Jan. 89, and a communication was received from the Secretary of War recommending that $t,<400,OttO be appropriated in annual installments for the improvement of Harlem river, New York. Bills were introduced: By Mr. Kernan, tor an ex­ position in New York in 1888; by Mr. Johnston, a resolution aaking in regard to Venezuela claims, * r/rs-v j&r i .> -n i... - - <T -5 \i , ^ ^ J* * ; ^ , ' , > • in toe bridge and oUterMfaaa Mr. tngalK to; and disposal flf :ikee rcrpt lands of XaafcSt; „.iUng railroads the MM Of ilic laiiii k of ths United States. 1 a reso! nt toil thk| a com- irs be appointed to take into ' bjeet of the c onstructton of a , >tlantic and Pacific oceans, The President nominated Jo- be United States District Attor- ;ern District of Illinois. Ad- .In the House, consideration the bill declar siyr all *»& fci«'hvSvS pO%t ~ question * was seconded, passed--yeas, 184; nays, W. o courts was passed, so as to a State contains more than ons every suit not of local na tire District Courts thereof against a imust be brought in the division hut if there are two or more tte- f in different districts, it may be division, and a duplicate writ may defendants directed to the Mar- injons. In all cases of removal of _ to United States courts such re- __ to United 8tates courts held in ths division bTwhleh said State courts are held. Ths House QM»H tvent into committee of the whole upon the isyMon of the rules, and consumed tbe day in disMMfmw Following the usual indolent habits of the 8enate, that body was not in session on Friday, Jan. SO....In the Honse. a resolution was intro­ duced by Mr. Orth, to ascertain the practicability of constructing a ship canal from Toledo, Ohio, to the navigable waters of the Wabash river at or near Lafayette, lad. Mr. Shallcnberger introduced a bill directing the Commissioner of Agriculture to attend tbe fate national Sheep and Wool Show to be ht-14 in Philadelphia in Septembtrnext. Mr. Ackleii made a per-<onal explanation. Mr. Hirris, from the Committee fen tvav&l Affairs, repo ted a bill providing a pmhanent construction lund for the navy. Mr. Bnekner introduced a bill reducing the expenditures of the Government in lighting public buildings. The HOUHC then resumed consideration of the conference report on the bill providing for Circuit *nd Rietriet Courts at Columbus, Ohio, and, after a short ' ditcusstoti. the report WAS agreed to. e disabilities of William B. 7alliaferro. of Virginia, were re­ moved. On motion of Mr. Hunton, tho Senate amendments tn the H »«se bill making appropria­ tions for filling tip and draining the grounus uouih of the CajjJtol grounds were concurred in. Hie House then went into committee of the whole on the private calender. THK MAINE fbtf^uatlon at AuguBta, Me., as outlined in the dispatches of Jan. 24 and 25, was about as follows: Republican GOT. Davis had garri­ soned tbe State Capitol thoroughly, and had a Qatling gun commanding the entrance. The Republicans claimed that the Pusionists were organizing a force for capturiDg the State House, and were drilling in (se­ cret. The Republican Legislature adopted measures looking toward the repression of tho Fnsioniats, The Fusionists claimed that all these preparations were made wituout ground, and that the scare was caused by a lot of boys pasting up three-cornered pieces of paper AS a practical joke. Fusionist Gov. Smith issued a proclamation stating that his supporters con­ templated no violence, and stating that the placing of troops and ar­ tillery in the State House was but an­ other act in the military ursurpation under whidh tbe State was languishing. Ho claimed that he waa the legal Governor, and expressed the belief that his authority would soon be recognized by all good citizens. B ith houses of the Fusion Legislature voted to send a series of questions to the Supreme Court The Supreme Court of Maine rendered a de­ cision on Jan. 27 covering the questions sub­ mitted to them by tbe Fusion Legislature. As was anticipated, the decision affirmed *th* validity of the Republican Legislature, and was adverse to the Fusionists upon every point The opinion, which is signed by all the members of the court, concludes with these words: "A legally-organized Legislature being now in existence and exercising its con­ stitutional functions, it follows that no conven­ tion of members-elect of either house can exist which can be treated as a nucleus for another organization. Two Govern­ ments claiming to be in existence as valid and entitled to obedience of the people, both cannot rightfully exist at the same time; but one Government can be recognized and obeyed. The responsibility and solemn duty are im­ posed upon ue to determine which is entitled to judicial recognition. We, therefore, after due deUberatiqMUidconsideration of all mat­ ters mvoti|gjll;^^HiH)d declare our judgment SH.be .that'tllMnP^ose IreHiflnit: officer iff on, Joseph A. Locke, and the House of Rep­ resentatives. whose presiding officer is Hon. George ii. Weeks, constitute the legal and con­ stitutional Legislature of the Btata" The J^usion Legislature, after a prolonged secret session, adjourned on the 28th of Janu­ ary, to meet the first Wednesday in August next Many of the members go home not to return here before that date; others go back to the people of their districts to abide by Iheir decision as to joining or remaining out of the Stato House legislature, while still others have taken their seats among their Republican brethren. The Republicans at once removed the militia from tbe State House. The Fusion Gov. Smith has gone home, aad the " war " is considered at an end. aroltra, SENATE EXODUS INVESTIGATION. Synopsis of the Testimony Elicited by the Voorhees Committed J. P. Dukehart, Southern Passenger Agent of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, testified that he went to North Carolina to get the transportation of the emigrants for his line, and fot it He made a contract with a negro named:; Ivans to work up the exodus, the railroad pay­ ing Evans ftl for each full ticket, and 50 cents for each half ticket it sold ttrrough his agency. Reports were circulated among the colored people that work was abundant in Indiana at #1.50 a day. The railroad com­ pany sold in all 70H tickets, of which SJ35 were for children under 12, aud the total number of adult males transported was about 200. H. W. Mendenhall, of Indiana, & clerk in the Treasury Department, testified tliat he as­ sisted in organizing tbe Emigrant Aid So­ ciety about a year ago. He thought the movement should become quite extensive. He bad stated if Indiana could offer any induce­ ments to negro emigrants it would be well to have them go there, as they were generally Republicans, and would strengthen the Re­ publican party. Witness did not know of any Republican politicians in Indiana engaged in the movement as a political measure. Warren C. fearing, colored, employe of one of the executive departments at Washington, and Secretary of the Emigrant Aid Society, testified that he had received letters from his relatives in North Carolina reporting that the colored people of that State received very low wages, and were dissatisfied with their treat­ ment and wanted to emigrate. v Charles N. Otuy, colored, editof of the Wash­ ington Argm,*& weekly paper devoted to the interests of the colored race, and Principal of the Howard University school, testified that he is a native of North Carolina, graduate of Ober- lin College and of Howard University; that be has vieited his native State every year since he left it, and has made a careful study of her peo- 81e. He said he was one of tho founders of the [ational Emigrant Aid Society, but when he became satisfied that it was being used as a political machine he withdrew from it. The witness did not know but the exodus from other Southern States would be a blessing to the colored race, but from North Carolina, where he was well acquainted, he wag satisfied that "it was a fraud and a curse." Every intelligent colored man jra the State, and the six colored newspapers in North Carolina, were fighting it. There was an adequate motive, he said, for the colored people of that State to abandon their homes, and tho delusion under Which they now labor was attributed to deceitful agents from the North. of lite saf__ amortgtha wgPd tbcxM forth the ai . • THE DTE INVESTIGATION Resume of tThi» Testimony Taken l^r tttfc Hon** Committee oa YndSatt A flair*. Visa Josie Meeker's testimony before the committes was to the effect that the Indians were incited, to the Outbreak by their intense nabveavcrsMato take on civilized modes of life They argued tha^J? they began to plosn Um l«d and .raise atook, they would be expected to continue to the new life Their young men would grow up with no taste for theohaseand the wild. savage life which has characterised them for centuries. Another hardship would be the stoppage of Ooveroiient annuities, which is new the sweetest toon to the Indians of Colorado. Thornburgh may have acted with too great precipitancy, and his campaign threw the Utes into great consterna­ tion. Miss Meeker said that a good * many of the Midlers were furiously drunk at tho time of tbe Thornburgh fight There were barrels of whisky in the vicinity to which the soldiers hod full access. At the time of the massacre of her father the Indians were in liquor. She denied that the exchange of the 18,000 acres for 7,000 acres by the Southern Utes could have furnished the pretext for the outrage, because the White River Utes lost nothing by the exchange. More than that, they professed to be glad tbat tbeir Southern breth^n had been outwitted. "If you had held on to your land ae we do, you would not now suffer," said they, in derision. She also disposed of the story of the Fort Rawlins fcffair, wherein it is alleged by Leeds and Gen. Fisk that tho Indians were deprived of food and clothing for a long time. She said that this never affected the white River Utes in the least, and that they never m&de it the basis of a complaint Gov. Pitkin, of Colorado, testified tbat, to the best of bis belief, the cause of the Ute outbreak was the antipathy of tbe savage** to work and tbe fear which they entertained »hat with the advance of c vilization they would be compelled, to abandon tbe chaee and work the soil for a living. Gov. Pitkin stated that the charges made against Meeker by the In­ dians were that, he was trying to educate their children, to induce them to cultivate the soil, and was plowing up their land for cultivation. They did not complain of his injustice or dis­ honesty, nor did they charge tbat the citizens of Colorado had trespassed on tbeir land or infringed upon their rights in any way, but simply that Meeker was carrying out the in­ structions of the Interior Department in asking them to adopt the customs of civilized life. The Indians, said the Governor, would neither stay on their reservation nor entertain the idea that they were bound to do so. They wanderedall over the Stale and set forests on fire for tne pur­ pose of driving game into the parks, where they slaughter them wautonly, not lor any benefit to themselves, but to iujure tho whites, who set great value on game. He also testi­ fied that the Indians wantonly destroyed timber off their reservation because they knew it waa valuable to the whites. The Audiphone* This new and remarkable invention la now attracting much attention. It is designed to help the deaf, and to en­ able them to hear sounds «that cannot reach them through their ears. The instrument appears, at first sight, to be nothing more than a blaek fan, and in use it is held in the hand with the upper edge resting on the front npper teeth. . It then becomes, not an ear trumpet, but an apparatus for conveying the Sounds to the teeth and the bones of the head, and thus, as it were, by the back door to the ear. A few words will explain its theory. Sound is caused by the vibrations of the air, and these vibrations pass through the ear to the drum of the ear. This in turn vibrates also, and by a cu- rigus piece of mechanism the vibratidbs are conveyed to the auditory nerve, and the sensation we then experience we call hearing. Deafness may come from a defect of the external ear, or some of its parts, while the drum of the1 ear is not serious­ ly defective. In such cases, if the deaf person holds a wooden rod in his teeth, and rests the other end on the sound­ ing-board of a piano, he can hear the sound of the strings, as the vibrations follow the rod, the teeth and the bones of the head to the ears. The audiphone in like manner takes up the sonorous vibrations of the air, and, vibrating in unison with them, im­ parts the motions to the teeth, and these in turn convey them to the ear, even though the outside ear be .closed and useless. In use the audiphone is bent into a curve and held in this position by cords. It has been thoroughly tried, and in many cases of deafness it works with entire success, enabling all whose auditory nerves are E till whole to hear. The Case of Fitz John Porter* The minority of the House Committee on ^Military Affairs, consisting of A. G. McCook, of New York*B. F. Harsh, of Illinois, aud Thomas M Browne, of Indiana, in their report to Congress on the Fitz John Porter oase, ep- pose the proposition of the majority of the oommittee that PerUr be restored to his rank and pay. They say: "His trial was held within a month of the battle of Manassas, and when witnesses who were present on the side of the national forces were easily obt lined. The movements of the armies were fresh in the minds of those interested. The court was composed of men eminent in their profession, six of Ihem graduates of West Point, some intimate personal friends of accused, and some have become equally emi­ nent in civil life, and nothing has been shown to convince us that they were not honestly Charles H. Ottfy was cross-examined by tbe Republican members of tbe committee, aad ac­ knowledged that Mendenhall waa the only Re­ publican in Washington who advised colonis­ ing Indiana with negroos from the South; said that Perry Williams and Evaus were the only colored men be knew to be engaged in inducing colored men to leave North Carolina,. Otuy also stated his belt.'f that the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company were furnishing money to pay the traveling expenses of these men. He believed the intelligent people of North Carolina, black and white, Democrats and Republicans, were opposed to #this exodus. F. A. Bointz, of Gdjdsboro, N. C., said it was difficult to .assign a rea'on for the exodus of the colored people from North Caro­ lina It certainly wa» apt on account of op­ pression. M. T. Ldwmaa, Sheriff of Putnam county, Ind., and a resident of Greencastlc, Ind., was sworn, Mid produced a printed circular which he obtained from one .. ' ; U ' anxious to do justice in accordance with their oaths, without partiality, favor, or affection. They conclude that Porter was without excuse for having remained ao long inactive in tho presence of the enemy with two fine divisions while a great battle was being fought in hia vicinity, and that had be acted as be should have done, by freeing the rest of the Union line, he would probably have prevented the re­ verse whieh the latter sustained at the close of the day. The committee say they have "con­ cluded to recommend the passage of a joint resolution removing so much of Fitz John Por- *s sentence aa prohibits him from holding any offic^ of profit or trust under the Govecu- * , i Good Letter. The best of all letters is that which oonveys the most information in the fewest possible words. A laek of spon­ taneity destroys the charm of a letter. Ladies have two favorite epistolary manias in their ordinary correspond­ ence, namely, writing across lines and indulging in postscripts, to say nothing of their almost uiflversal practice of un­ derlining words--this is a confession of weakness. Among celebrated letters is a brief one which occurs to us, while we write, from the pen of the Italian poet, Politiun, to a l'riend: "I had a great grief, and I have ft great joy--because you were sick, and because you have recovered." How brief aud how signifi­ cant I This letter stands as a model to all letter-writers. Save the Rags, The price of paper has been advanoed from to 10 cents all over the country. If this price is maintained, the pablic will bs com­ pelled to pay more for their newspapers. Many daily papers have already increase! their prioe from 20 cents to 30 cents per week, and weekly papers from $ 1.50 to $2.00. The advance in paper can be stopped if the people will save and sell their old paper and rags. Three months' saving of rags and old paper by tbe entire population, aud selling them in the markets, would check the advance in paper. Rags we worth 8 to 3% cents per pound. Every newspaper in the land should appeal to tbe people hi ads mattaa, Aad they should also econoaiias in the consumption as much as possible. m/ »^* 'V. j: i 1 , a ,V i f i , JJY 1V-'.' . ' CURIOUS AND INTERESTTSTT* ' ' / . , ,» Cv ^ ^ •WHAT WB PAT PO» writer in Blachwoom^0im com­ putes tbe whole amoaaf of tobacco price paid for tobaooo by consumers, including all varieties, must exceed 25 cents a pound. A curious estimate makes tbe expenditures consequent on tobacco-using, direct and indirect, in a single oentnry, to eqnal all the property on the earth If 50 cents a day be spent by each devotee, the 300,000,000 in the world would waste $3,000,000,000,000 in a single generation. ALPHABET OF GEMS.---A diamond dealer gives the following alphabet of gems, by the guide of which any English word can be spelled ont on ring, bracelet or other article of jswrt- ry, with a setting of stones: < « ; A--Amethyst N--Natrolite. t- ; - ; R--Beryl. O--Opal or Onyx!*- 4 O--Cats-Eyifes:.-.- P--Porphyry. '*.•3, D--Diamoiijt . Quartz Agate." e j E--Emerald ' R^-iiuby. * F--Feld8pa£>;,. i , S--Sapphire. > • G--•Garnet. " ' T--Tinqnoise. ' ;• H---HvHcmiMi U--Ultramarine.. <: • V ^ V--"Verci-Aiitiquebv- 4 V J-Jasper. ; . W--Water Sappldfefc. K--Kyanite, „ X--Xanthite. • L--Ltpie-lftimjLt' Z--Zircon. • ' : M--Malachite. PITTING IN SMALL-POX.---Somebody has ascertained the carious facts, in small-pox, that poor people are pitted least, rich people are pitted most, and no class are pitted under their dress. Poor people have less light in their homes, the rich plenty of light, and under the dress there is, of course, less light than in either case. The explana­ tion, according to this observer, is a scientific one. The sunlight consists of three primary colors. The red, the blue and the yellow rays have distinct and characteristic properties, the yel­ low gives light, tlfe red heat, and the blue actinism. Now, the pus of variolar •pustules absorbs, by its yellow medium, the actinic rays, which results in corro­ sion of the tender flesh at the base, thus leaving "pits." YEAB.--The Egyptians, it is said, were the first who fixed the length of the year. The Roman year was introduced by Bomulus, 738 B. 0., and it was cor­ rected by Numa, 713 B. C., and again by Julius Ctesar, 45 B. O., who fixed the solar year as being 365 days and six hours. This was denominated the Julian style, and prevailed generally through­ out the Christian world till the time of Pope Gregory XIII. The calendar of Julius CR'SRT was defective in this par­ ticular, that the solar year consisted of 365 days, 5 hours and 419 minutes, and not of 365 days, 6 hours. This differ­ ence at the time of Gregory XIII. had amounted to ten entire days. To obvi­ ate this error Gregory ordained in 1582 that that year should consist of 355 days only; and • in 1751 it was ordered to be so used in England; and the next, year eleven days were left out, the 3d of September, 1752, being reckoned as the 14th, so as to make it agree with the Gregory calendar. DECLIVITY OF GIVERS.--A very slight declivity suffices to give the running motion to water. Three inchep per mile in a smooth, straight channel gives a velocity of about three miles an hour. The Ganges, which gathers the waters of the Himalaya mountains, the loftiest in the world, is, at 1,800 miles from its mouth, only about 800 feet above the level of the sea, and to fall these 800. feet in the long cDurse the water requires more than a month. The great river Magdalena, in South America, running for 1,000 miles between two ridges of the Andes, falls only 500 feet in all that distance; above the commencement of the 1,000 miles it is seen descending in rapids and cat­ aracts from the mountains. The gigan­ tic Rio de la Plata has so gentle a de­ scent to the ocean that, in Paraguay. 1,500 miles from its mouth, large ships are seen which have sailed against the current all the way by the force of the wind alone--that is to say, which, on the beautiful inclined plane of the scream, have been gradually liftedAy the soft w\nd,and even against the Mr- rent, to an elevation greater thas that of our loftiest spires. ORIGIN OP THE TEEM U UN^LE SAM."-- Immediately after the last declaration of war with England, Elbert Anderson, of New York, then a contractor, visited Troy, on the Hudson, where was con­ centrated and where he purchased a large quantity of provisions--beef, pork, etc. The inspectors of these ar­ ticles at that place were Messrs. Eben- ezer and Samuel Wilson. The latter gentleman (invariably known as Uncle Sam) generally superintended in person a large number of workmen, who, on this occasion, were employed in hunt­ ing over the provisions purchased by the contractor for the army. The casks were marked " E. A.--U. S." This work fell to the lot of a facetious fellow in the employ of the Messrs. Wilson, who, on being asked by some of his fellow workmen the meaning of the mark (for the letters U. S. for United States wqre then almost entirely new to them) said he did not know, unless it meant Elbert Anderson and "Uncle Sam" Wilson. The joke took upon the workmen, and passed currently, and " Uncle Sam" himself being present was occasionally rallied by them on the increasing extent of his possessions. Many of thete work­ men being of a character denominated "food for powder," were found shortly after following the recruiting drum and pushing toward the frontier lines, for the double purpose of meeting the ene­ my and of eating the provisions they had lately labored to put in good order. TJ'ieir old jokes accompanied them, and, before the first campaign ended, this identical one first appeared in print; it gained favor rapidly till it penetrated and was recognized in every part of tbe country, and will, no doubt, continue eo while, the United States remain * nation. The Reporter. '• A man falls from the scaffold. The reporter hastens to the spot and pushes his way to the man's side. M My life voyage is nearly ended," whispered the dying man, as he held the reporter's hand. M My soul, like an unfinished craft, is being swept from its earthly mooring and carried out into the great, pathless ooean of eternity. Oh, how unprepared I am for this journey 1 How my spirit shrinks from embarking on that silent, solemn seal I have a wife and beautiful child who will mourn my absence; and now that I see no fu­ ture, nothing but the dark, impenetra­ ble shadow of death, which will sc ou hide me from earthly eyes, the world looks more beautiful, and I long--oh, how I long to stay. Good-by. Good --farewell. Pre--prepare for this--" "CourageI courage 1" whispered the reporter, while tears as big as hickory- nuts ehased each other down his nose; t- "but--business is business." *Ootfc^ age!" he whirred; "how-how do. jflfu spell your nam • • r- "Proposing" fa Texan. They manage these things differently in Texas. This is bow a fond couple come- to an Ttmlerstandiug, according to one \ who pretendsto know. He sirs on one side ^ of the room in a big whifce rocking chair;, § she on the other side, in a little white ! oak rocking chair. A long-eared deer | hound is by his side, a basket of sewing \ by hers. Both the young people rock -i incessantly. _ He sighs heavily and looks * out of the west window at a myrtle tree she sighs lightly and gazes out of the east window at the turnip patch. At- ' last he remarks: ^ ,, * • ton^piebiDg?*^1^ foron^ "'Tie that," the lady responds, "if only had any to pick." The rocking continues. ghat's your dog's name?" asks sh4.. Goony! Another sigh-broken still- CI ness. , "What's he good for?" > « "What'she good fort* says Im • s t r a c t e d l y . . , V w « * . . . « * ' "Your dog, Coony* t *>**•* "For ketching 'possuiUft.* '; v< Silence for half an hottr. ^\ \ "He looks like a deer hmitif , v ^v f- "Who?" _ « "Coony." ' ' "*£• "He is, but he's sort o' bellowsed,an'" ^ gettin old an' slow, an'her ain't no' count- ^ on a cold trail.55 i In the quiet ten minutes that ensues a*% she takes two stitches in her quilt, a f gorgeous affair made after the pattern called "Rose of Sharon." f§[ "Your ma raiding many chickens?" - "Forty-odd." > Then more rocking, and somehow the big rocking chair and the little rocking chair are jammed side by side,, and rocking is impossible. "Makin'quilts?" he observes. "Yes," she replies, brightening up, for she is great on quilts. "I've just fin­ ished a gorgeous 'Eagle of Brazil,' a- 'Setting Sun,' and a 'Nation's Pride.' Have you ever saw, the 'Yellow Rose «£ the Prairie?** <• More silence. Then lie'siy^r"! "Do you love cabbage?" "I do that.* j ;•1 ̂ Presently hiB hand is accidentally r placed on hers, of which she does not Id' seem to be at all aware. Then he sud- . denlysays: • "I'se a great miad to bite yon." 'Jri- "What have yon a great i me for?" ' . + <• "Kase you won't have me." , "Ease you ain't axed toe." I /. \~'J h?* \ "Well' now, I ax you." ' "Then now I has you* J: Coony dreams he hears a sbunS or kissing, and next day the young man goes after a marriage license.--Cham­ ber*'Journal. sigp; A College Wag. Vf M In a certain college, under Presbyte­ rian auspices, not a hundred miles, from New York, it is a rule that the students shall attend church at least once each Sunday, either in the college chapel or some other church in town which they shall designate, and for non-attendance satisfactory reasons must be given. Of course, on Monday mornings, when these reasons are called for, much in­ genuity and some fun are brought out. In one of these interviews, Prof. L--* asked a student, '*Mr. C , where did you attend church yesterday ?" ,1^ Mr. C replied, "The First Church, ̂ sir." The professor, looking .a little sur­ prised, said, "Are you not aware, Mr. C , that there was no service at the First Church yesterday?" This was a poser, but was coolly met J by, "I mean, professor, the first Church f * I came to." j# A general laugh followed, and some- how the young gentleman got resetted* j!;" --Harper's Magazine. & tHsadvantages of Being a Oeatlemtn. An American strolled into an En­ glish commercial inn, such ss is re­ served for commercial travelers, or "drummers," only. The parlors of such inns are patented to this nomadic class. Our American friend found the parlor empty, and sat down in it and ordered a glass. In a few minutes a man entered, tipped his head( and.said . curtly, "What lino?" "Line ?" inquired the American. " I don't understand you." The man stared at onr friend*an in­ stant, and exclaimed, with a counten­ ance between resentment and awe, "I beg pardon, but you are a gentleman?" "I hope I am," replied the American. "Here, here! Landlord--landlord, I say, turn this person out! He^e Jfc gentleman!" > ® THE MARKETS, %F > tp. K,,» 591 NEW YORK. ft Oil @11 00 4 70 @ 5 00 12*4# 1» 4 4 0 © 5 I S «4 1 44 & 61 & 4T & #r ©13 75. BEETXI Hoos COTTOK Fr.oua--8upertoe. WHKAT-- NO. a CORN--Western Mixed.... .... OATS- Mixed RYE-- Western.... PORK--MM*.... LARD CHICAGO. BEKVKS--CholceOrtded Steers..... 4 90 Cowaaud Heifers • HO (§1 Medium to Fair < Sa @ HOGS .A.. 8 40 @ Fiona--Fancy White Winter ES... ti 5il ^ Oood to Choice Spring Kx. 5 75 tiii WH*AT--No. 3 Spring 117 <gj No. 8 Spring. 1 03 (cfl CORN--No. 2 86 @ .OATS- HO. 8.. . . 82 @ Rite--Nd. 8 - 74 @ BAULKY--No. 2 77 @ BUTTKB--Choioe OrettMxjr St) & Eoos--Fresh 14 @ PORK--MM..... IS 25 @1 LARU TURN MILWAUKEE. W HEAT--No. 1 . . j 39 <A »•>.» 117 # CORW--No. 2 87 (ft OATS--NO. 2................ 82 tQ ER-NO.I 79 BAMX,»Y-»O.S....... TO % 81. LOTXnt, WHEAT--No. 2 Bed Fall 1*1 A CORN--Mixed...: ..... 88 A OATS--No. 2 87 <a HYE 72 @ PORK--Mew if 75 LAUD..*....,.... 7 A, CINCINNATI. ^ WHKA*. f M CORK..... 49 SAT> » «** 65 PORK--M«M H 75 Urn. 7 TOLEDO. WHKAT--Amber Michigan j SC No. 2 Bed 1 >7 CORK --No. 2 [ 40 OAM-NO.S 87 _ _ DBfBorr. FLOOR--Choice WHEATS--No. L Wbite J. Jf1 . No. 1 Amber 1 n CORN--No. 1 44 OAT&--Mixed ....II 40 PAULEY (per (-dotal) * 1 j(J PORK--Me«« i.«. ....18 #0 _ • INDIANAPOLIS. WHKAT--No. T Bad 1 M CORK V* « OAT*.. "... 95 PORK--Clear 14 00 EAST LIBERTY, PA. CATTUE--Beat * 4 an £* s» Oraunoa 8 00 4 70 • 4 UU I '<* 514 6ft

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy