ILLINOia fCEKLY IEVS REVIEW, Ttt Capitol at Albany, K Y., bas dm r̂ aiworbed |1S,000,000, sad aa uddittcoel of fl,800,000 hu bean and* It Is ehaned th»t amy Senior and Asaaublp- BMD of & State &M political Mauds at work on tbe lob An eiptoAonof Kdphnr occurred in fee Book fikige eolliery, new nbaTnokin. P*., ««% the inatant death of Janes Lawrence, Fnuik Otmao and David Oreea, and fatally wottnding Frederick Hoffman. A POSTAL card was addressed to Pres ident Arthur and deposited in the New York poetoffioe, in which tbe President WM notified that if he did not teeall Minister Lowell from England and aak for the onoondition&l enrraia- der of all American dUaens held in Britush without trial, he would be fiST8 HOSES TATTX>R, the will-known New fork capitalist, is dead. He leaves a widow, two aooa and three daughter*, and an estate estimated at between #40,000,000 andf50,000,- OQOi H* was 76 years of age. AN explosion in Koliinoor oolliery, at Shenandoah. Pa., tilled Martin and James Kali (father and Hon), Own Gallagher, Jamee McDonald, -Tota P. Stratt, Samuel Hugo, and fatfcOy injured John Lee and a Polander named Matty Lataotjraowics. Thebodieaof the vio- ttma were rtwcMngly manglwl. Choi. Otratns, of Hew York, late Agent «t the United Mates Treasury, who was recent ly indicted for having levied and oollected po- tttoel eeeegemnnti from employee of the Qov- at in that ieity, m violator of & law of «i, was tried and convicted, Sentence erred in order to give his counsel an unity to argue for a new triaL able sicoandrel who " bankoed " the Hon. Charles Francis Adams out of some $17,000, and second (mm hi* venerable victim a check for that amount, expecting the check would be paid in order to prevent 4 public exposure of the old gentleman's extraordinary sosoeptibilitT to smposition, has bean con victed of swindling after a •. jnnr trial Tbe Mew York Senate pasted the bill for a rail road commission, with an amendment that th« next Governor make tbe appmidimntB.... Lewis T. Frye, champion btardist of the United States, was thrown from his wheel at Marlboro, Mass., and fatally injured Ttje new tunnel off the Hew York, Ontario and Western rail way, at Union Hill, N. J., fell in, killing three : has been utteodttee&aloBg Missouri and Yellowstone by immigrants. 1 an six cases at Miles City, ten at Glen- dive and several at Bismarck The crop re ports printed by the daily press are, with scaroely any exceptions, of a favorable tenor. In Minnesota and Dakota the spring-wheat prospects are of the verv best, the cold weather having retarded the growth of the stalk, bat at the same tune adding to the stock of vitality in the root, which Is considered of decided ad vantage to the crop. From other wheat-grow ing districts the reports are favorable, and the cam outlook in also good, THE Supreme Court of Missouri pro nounced constitutional the law gambling a felony, and issued a peremptory writ of mandamus on the Judge of the Criminal Court of St. Louis to toy the indicted players... .The Mormons held an election last week to adopt the constitution framed for the State of Utah, the QentHea remaining away from the polls. ABKBONA advices report that the hos tile Apaches are fldaing back to American aoiL having been driven north by tbe Mexicans, who • eadb scalp. receive <300 bounty for • NTTMBKB of Mexicans with their fam- «SS encamped near Igo's ranch in Southern m camped to f one iii« to «fcevt» their woman. This waa andsaaSray fbilo>ii«d te whist seven kiiM and omal wemdML A saw iimiiXl, and it is of them will die. fears ago ninety-six Moravian "larooaly botcberad eudodthe Mthof̂ y Î SfotSd n was thronged by thoasands of an fiats of the country, attending the annivarsaty of this event which makee one of the daifeset and Moodiest * pages in the annuls of the whole coonar- There was a procession and gpseeh-m&k- BG, GOT. Boater being ONE of the OHM Among the interesting guests were three Indiana--vis., Stone Fish and wife and fcaoh, of the Delaware tribe. Ihef are lineal maramaata of one of the mnidsred families, and cam* from New Fairfield, Canada... .The County Oommiaskmeni at Denver have arras«ed to ship eastward 100 slovenly and rebellions bronght there to work on St. Lovu papers report that GOT. Gfitfmdaii lias about concluded negot iations fbrtheaamnderof fnuik James and possibly <*h«r wsmheis of the Jamas gang, and thus put an end to tee oigaMxatunofbnmnds now m WMOnri... .The widow of Jesse James has mgnsda contract to accoaapany a tecfenrer and sit upcm the «*««*, together wife her two chil dren, white the toctorer tells ahont the life and tte late hkhwaynan.... An ex plosion find the Grant emriltmfc works al Leadville, udaloss of $400,000 was speedily wornd ̂ HeariyiOO men were employed.... CatQe at* Mm higher than ever, contrary to ttejw ĵHntoo that they would decline $"•*** ,*"* °t May- A good quality hwogh|j« iento per pound live weightattlS Union Stock Yards, in Chicago, last week At *5** wwnises to beoome a luxury to f»W»ttpgade of millionafae....A large aodaleothe Western Union offioe and the offices «two^daily papers. The toss is placed at kMI MBt ft lattar to the Bonsa of Bmassautatliw casndbig that poiitafatta aasondoliae Matter and magasinwi)be ahoMshat., He h&m ifai fonxth-oaaa matter (msrahan(t»e) te eirfted at a toes to tfaa Governm«t. and if the Gkmrament is to be taxed for the trans portation of either class it should be for Hue TH*- official oomapondenoe relating to Americnn " suspects" imprisoned in Ireland was sent to the Honse of Beprosentatiyea. Minis ter Lowell soya £40 was offered each prisoner to induce him to leave the jail and the country at the same time. ROBKBTR. Hirr, ex-Assistant Secretary of State, appeared before the Honse Committee on Foreign Affaira, and was examined touching matters connected with the Chilian-Peruvian investigation. Witness arranged an interview between Count Do Montfenand, the represent ative of the Credit Industriel, and Secretary Blaine, at which Vitneea waa present The Oount unfolded the {dans of his oompany, which embraced a protectorate by the United States. Mr. Blaine said he could do nothing and pronwte nothing. . THE $900,000 left by Mr. Lewis, 'of New York, to rednoe the public debt, has been placed at the disposal of the Government.... A Mil is in the Senate and House Committees on Potttoffices and Posi-roads providuig fat a pri- vate message-c&rd that mil replace the open postal now in use, THB Senate Committee on Finanoe otlled ComptroUer Knox before it to give his Tiews on the necessity for extending national- bank darters. He said that twenty-three in- ntitutions whose charters expired during May had already gone info liquidation, and ^most of them were reorganizing with tbe same stockholders and titles. Jncige Field had de cided that the prolongation or a national bank wonld require special legislation. The banks hold $361,000,000 in United 8tates bonds, These, the Comptroller said, could remain on deposit as security for circulation should the Hon TO bill .become a law; if new banks are to be organized, a large portion most be with drawn. Of $195,000 surplus which now strengthens tbe system, 1M said the greater amount must be divided among shareholders should the banks be forced into liquidation. THE Secretary of War has been ad vised that troops sent ont from Fort Reno oaptored Payne and twenty-nine colonists in In dian Territory and escorted them back to Kan sas. .. .A Washington dispatch says that some complaint is making because the Judiciary Committee, in reporting on Cobb's bill relating to the forfeiture of railroad land grants, is mak ing a report on each railroad. The fact is, however, that the grants were sd different in detail that it is impossible to act oil them in talk, fnd this is the only way to do justice. ronxicAi. IT is denied emphatically "that there was any truth or color of probability in the story that Mr. Blaine intended to take the stump in Pennsylvania against the Cameron ticket, or that the ex-Secretary has any idea of going to Cengress again. "THE National Committee of the Green- back-LaJwr party met at St Lopis. Jesse Har per, of Illinois, was elected Chairman. West Virginia was the only State without a represen tative. An address to the people was prepared and promulgated. THB convention of the Independent Bepnblicans of Pennsylvania convened at Phil adelphia. and Senator Mitchell was called to the chair. When the name of Charles S. Wolfe was read as a delegate, the convention rose to its feet and forced him to exhibit him self. Maj. Merftck refused to be a candidate for Governor, and nominated Judge Daniel Agnew. Dr. Doane named State Senator John Stewart who received 139 votes to £2 for Ag- new. Levi B. Duff, of Allegheny, was nom inated for Lieutenant Governor; George Junkin, of Philadelphia, for Supreme Court Judge and William McMicbael for Gongress- man-atrlarge. THE Delaware Greenbaeken met in convention at Wilmington and nominated John Jackson for Govwnoe. 1 ' ̂M. JDK A oontraot has teen signed by a Ssa Fr&aeisoo firm to ex cavate the Atlantic and wt tne Panama eanaig fwic! hopes to finish the enterprise by 188& Hie snip Western BeU% from Greenock for Quebec, collided with an iceberg in thevtiantie ocean, and was sank. The Gaptiira and thir teen of the ship's crew perished. LATKB KotfontB of the burning of the lake propeller Manitoulin, in Georgian bay, prove the disaster to have been a dreadful It is said that twenty to twedty-flve perished in AM flam* or were Wtrm men who attempted the destruc tion erf a bridge on the Mexican National raft- road were shot as soon as caught SKOW and ioeoo the morning of the 23d of May were the meteorologioal phenomena over a very wide extent of country in the temperate tone, ral throughout I« llinoia. In mani fruits 1 Frost and snow were Iowa, Wisconsin and North- many places garden vegetables fend severely, but serious injury aovra.. HbakiT 15,000 persons gatheted at Charlotte, N. G, on ths Mth of May. to cele- taato the 107th anniversary of tbe declaration «f indspcodenoe by residents of Mecklenburg «Hmty. Senators Tance, Bayard, Baasom, Batter and Hampton were on the platform A Dallas (Texas) dispatoh ssars that Frank James and several of hia most devoted confed- erates are now in Tsxas, with beadquartera at Dallas and a paint of reodesvoas not many miles from the oity. Eigbt members c€ Pinker- ton's detective farm we now toasted in North xaus for the espeeial, purpose of capturing Rank and Us friebdsT AiJj fte fine monmnenfe in tlse Jewish Qnaetray at Columbia, a C., have \mn toppled ow and broken by unknown vandals.,. .The •op repents Ann Missouri Ajkansas and Texas am very encouraging, in Texas and Ark&nssg, where tbe wheat harvest u in progress. &e jrield is excellent C A PABnr of about 100 ""Vfd took two desperadoes from the fail at ®«*as, and hanged than to a Iv&oak twsT^ '• GEN. MANGTJM, State IIGENT for the .̂ atribotion of supplies on the ride of the MissisBppi river during the late overflow, to the Governor of Aricanms wat the second overflow was nearly as dteaatrptts as the first He says more «*»«« 23mSS£^«S p̂orSS?1 of ̂*«»«• MMt̂ ltUndencountiea. The suffering among yPties will be greater ••u ever Known. They are neariv mil rmrmrm J G V O B U I ^ ^ a®aowtsiieoe(mties of lif̂ No merohsnt or (iilltsr will adyaiwe for them, as all IMIPM at M4feag a crop are gone. Gen. HIMUKI gmie. Gen. Mu^m (ears new bill for the refunding of the State 4sK of Tennesseo on the basis of 60 per «*Dt is now a law, and thus has that wipedouttheHimataieddisgrace appears to have been the exception rather than the rola, while wheat, com and other grains taped damage altogether. THK figures furnished by the Censns Bureau show Chicago to be the third manu facturing ctty in America. Its annual product is doable that of Boston; more than doable that of St Louis; two and a half times *•*»»*• of Cincinnati; three times that of Baltimore: and nuty equal that of St Louis, Cincinnati and Pittsburgh combined. , Mtanain* Ixa ̂ eeeh toameetingot Irishmen st Manchester, England, Mkhael Davitt dis- cMmed all sympathy with the recent mnrdsn ̂ ami declared that there could be no allianoe be* twe» Xngliah Whigs and Irishmen until land lordism in Inland was abolished. Davitl'e plan fear restoring peace and good order and suppressing crime in Ireland is for Gladstone away Dublin Castle, and show toward the same confidence in its capacity for self- government that is shown toward Canada.... The Mansion-House Jewish relief fund now amounts to £72,000. The fund dis patch 600 refugees to America weekly at a oost of £5,600. ' THE present Onrof Busaia haa been in office over a year, bet has not ye* been formally crowned, the event of his coronation having been deferred from to time, owing to fears of Nihilistic interference, it is an- Bottaofcd -that the coronation, which was ap- pointed to take plaoe in Aflgntt, hai igarn been postponed for one year longer, a deep eon- spiracy having been discovered against the lives of the Czar his guests.... The insurrection in Dalmatia is at an end, the CrivosciMM having crossed tbe frontier of Monten r̂o and surrendered their arms to the troops....Cardinal MoCabe. of Ireland, who has oppaed the Land League, continues to re ceive threatening letters, and his bouse in the city of Dublin is guarded by the police.., .Ger many and the Vatican an rapidly neariag a satisfactory settlement \ ATFAIBS in Egypt are still in a critical condition, and the prospect is that tbe com plications will incnase rather than diminish. Autria and Bussia an reported to have npona oonoertof action, And it is that both will strenuously object to the Fi plan of Allowing the Ottoman Qwarhtnent to throw an anay into Egypt to support of the Khedi ve Arabi Bey soil maintains his defiant attitude toward the English and French Con suls, and seems to be prepared to fight it out on that line The British Parliament, for thai first time in several years, did not adjourn on aoconni of the Derby. It will not be considered a precedent, however. , RETOIATIOITS agreed upon by the Russian authorities provide that1 Jews hence forth will be prohibited from settling outside of te thaeom- Btdtoaftaier, in HI, said the Irish lanfeft the a&aimstratlve af» •wen jjaadthralleJfroaa icaad Jury has returned new lyeeentm--ti against Gen. Thomas a &ady, John Dorsey, ^ephen W. DorsOy, Montfort C. Henry M. Turner, J. & Miner, J. K. ' • . - ' i t iKtfce ĵrptb* aflhir «» haa 1MM| pNMBMk hy England and Prance r»- qnliiiif̂ tot ̂ a Ministry iw%n, and that Arabi Bay riiaS fee honorably exiled from the country witt fuft nakuTpay. If this demahd U o0inpUsdwttt(tlw two nowem will undertake to maintain the statu qoa and to use their good ofltoes with the Khedive to obtain general amnesty for the offending parties; if- the de- refuaed by Arab Bey. aa it probaWv ottve totervention and warlike dera- n will be the consequence, Four hnndred Jewiah residences wen recently nod by the populace at Taailahki, Russia, flames swept away a vast amount of intheouyef Kief, the old capital of wm^acttve EXTENDING THE VAHK CHARTERS Prevlsisiii sf MM Sill Passed by tbe NaUeaal M««HM> of Bspnssaiadves n* Washlaj(toi«. Tbe " bill to enable national-fesnking associ ations to extend their oorporate existenoe," as it passed the lower honse of Congress, provides that any national-banking association may, at any time within two years next previous to the date of expiration of its oorporate existence under the present law, and with the approval of the Comptroller of the Currency, extend its pe riod of succession, by amending its articles of association, for not mora than twenty years from thfc expiration of the period of succession named in said articles of -association, and shall have succession for such extended period nnlees sooner dissolved by act of the shareholders owning two-thirds of its stock, or nnless its franchise becomes forfeited by some violation of law. Such amendment of articles tif asso ciation must be authorized by the consent in writing of shareholders owning not teas than two-thirds of the capital stock. Section 3 refers to the duty of the Comp troller of the Currency in the premises, provid ing for special examination into the affairs of each association should he deem it necessary. Section 4 has reference to jurisdiction of suits by or against national-banking associations, placing such suits on the same footing in re- speot to jurisdiction as suits by or against private banks. Section 5 provides that when any national- banking association has amended its articles of association as provided in this act, and the Comptroller has granted his certificate of ap proval, any shareholder not assenting to such amendment may give notice in writing to the Directors, within thirty days from the date of tbe certificate of approval, of his desire to withdraw from said association, in which case be shall be entitled to withdhiw the value of the shares ao held by him. Section6is as follows; "That circulating notes of any association so extending the period of its succession which shall be issued to it to such extension shall be redeemed at tbe ury of tbe United States, as provided in sections of the act of June 30, 1874, entitled ' An act fixing the amount of national-bank currency, and for other purposes,' and snob notes, when redeemed, nliall be forwarded to the Comptroller of the Currency and destroyed, as now provided by law. And when the amount of such notes shall be reduced to 5 percent, of the capital stock of the bank issuing the same, the association extended shail deposit lawful money with the Treasurer of the United States sufficient, to redetm all its outstanding circu lation; as provided in section^ 6,222, 5,224 find 5,3^5 of tbe Revised Statutes; and any gain that may arise from failure to present such circulating notes for redemption shall inure to tbe benefit of the United States, and from time to time as such notes are re deemed or lawful money deposited therefor, as provided by law, new circulating notes shall be ufaed, bearing anoh devices, to be approved by the Comptroller of the Currency, as shall make tbm. readily distinguishable from circulating notes heretofore issued; provided, however, that each hankiilg association which ob tain the benefit of this act shall pay the coat of preparing the plate or plates for such new cir culating notes as shall be issued by it, and all othftr oost* incident to the substitution of such new circulating notes for old, In addition to the tax now imposed era banking associations by law." Section 7 has reference to such banks as do net desin to extend their charters, and extends l#nwthllk of auk iAK* tbefr affairs until such Section 8 is in the following words: " That & national bank now organized or hereafter or ganised, having a capital of 9160,000 or less, •shall not be required to been on deposit with: the Treasurer of the United States United States bonds in excess of f10,000 as security fdt their circulating nttes; and such of those banks having on deposit bonds in excess of that amount an authorised to reduce their circtf- lation by deposit of lawful money aa provided by law. 'action 10 provides that any national-bank- association nojr organized or hereafter or- " desiring to withdraw its circulating m deposit of lawful money with the Tnasnrer of tbe United Stat section 4 of the aet of Jane An act fixing the amount Btes, providing for redistribution of national- bank currency, and other purposes," shall be required to gm> ninety days' notiee to the Secretary of the fteasury of its intention to depoat lawful money knd withdraw nk cfconlatiifr notes: Provided, That not more than f5,000,000 lawful money shall be deposited daring any ealendar month ea as provided in 20,1S74, entitled of United States for that tbe not apply to this purpose; and provided further. provisions of tU* section i&all nc bonds called for Ademption by the of tbe Treasury, but when bonds an called for redemption banks bedding such called bonds •hall surrender them thirty days after maturity qf their oalL Section 11 provides that, on deposit of the bonds, the association making tbe same shall be entitled to receive from the Comptroller of the Currensy circulating notes equal in amonnt to 90 per cent of the current market value, not exceeding par, of United States bonds so trans ferred and delivered, and repeals Mections 5,171 and 5,176 of the Revised Statutes. The concluding section reserves the right of Congress at any time to repeal this act and acts Of which it is amendatory. ADDITIONAL HEWg. ' Ministry' tesigniif'al- s of Engbu Leirnotetott tooepUnoe 1 that the In the British House of Commons,Mr. gave a pledge that no violence wouMre mtts were erected to save from going towns and villages, exoept when Jewiah settle ments already exist The Jews an prohibited from trading on Sundays and Christian holi days.. All contracts of purchase or tenancy with Jews an provisionally suspended--A lively tilt occurred • in the , British House of Commons between Gladstone and Dillon. The Premier spoke With gnat warmth, and acoosed Dillon of indorsing outrages in Ireland by refusing to aid tbe Government the Repression bilL in pawing Dillon retorted that he ter referring the demands of England and France to the Sultan. In their note to the Khfc dive they intimate that his aooeptanoe of the am is an admission that the foreign powen have a right to intervene, which, they oiaim, in an infringement of th@.Saltan's rights. The Khedive accepted tbe res- ' [nations. In the English Commons, Sr. Gladstone, in reply to a speech by Sir Wilfrid Lawson, stated that it was impossible to his Government to give a pledge that force shall not be> employed in Egypt; and, after fdjtng that then was nothing at present in the »itoation rendering' it probable that a resort to foros wonld be neoessuv, the Premier deprecated furtherdisoosaion of the matter at present.... "" ~ "" Dillon result if going to the workhouse 315 families evicted from the estate of Lord Cloucurry. Secretary Trevelyan said tbe shanties might be built, but intimidation would be sternly repreped... .Albert Younir, for threatening the life of Queen Victoria, was sentenced at London to penal servitude for ten years. IN the Presbyterian General Assam- bly, at Springfield, 111.,* the majority report of the Committee on Correspondence instructed the modeaator to telegraph the Southern body at Atlanta that, " while receding from 110 prin ciple," the Presbyterian General Assembly withdrew all expressions rcflooUng upon the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, and renewed the ex pression of its warmest fraternal regard. The minority report declared null and void all offensive acts, of former General Assemblies, and expressed the hope that delegates from the Southern body would make their appearance on the floor of the General Assembly. By a vote approaching unanimity the majority report wai adopted, with a resolution disclaiming any reference to the action of previous assemblies regarding loyalty and nbellion, but only to thofe regarding schurn and heresy and blas phemy. HuKDBBBsof families in the Old Town region of Arkansas are menaoed by starvation from the recent overflow. SENATOR CAMEBON, of Pennsylvania, has declared there should be no compromise with the independents in that Staie. ' ADVICES from forty leading points in the Northwestern grain region represent the jwareageof wheat as 80 per cent leas than last year. The plant 4s healthy and promises a good yield. 214 eloaed, and thi to bring abeam vote on the in lit How* Mr. whioh was of triHad States OaOkttts called 99 eonstdarattrwyand on Hfttsod to vote, *7eC aqno- was ordered, and The doors wen -at-Arms was ordered . to tbe bar. A second consideration resulted Mr. Hboook reported bill, appropriating fruitlessoallof the an adjournment, Senate was not in ses- In the Senate, May 2S, Mr. Piatt opposed the House bill incnaaing the pension of Col. D. C. Thomas 190 per month in excess of his grade, and it was postponed. Mr. Miller introduced a Joint resolution to authorize the President to deolati martial law in Alaska. The Geneva Awards bill was taken up, on which Mr. Boar adAmsed tbe Senate. Mr. Garland moved a substitute for the payment of ' the: insurance people. A communication froite the Secretary of War asked a special appropriation of $25,000 to dis- pateb a relief vessel tt> Lady Faanldin bay. The President sent the fo^owuig nominations to the Senate : Louis Dopant Lyme, of Pennsylvania, Consul at Funohaf; John W. Stone, of Michi gan, Attorney of the United States for the Western dJMriot of Michigan; Fred Ro- sencr&UB, PoetaMster at Teeurosefa, Mich. In the House Mfc Calkins called up tbe South Carolina contested-election case, Mr. Randall moved an adjournment, which waa lost by 82 to 312. He then raised^ question of considera- tioiLthe vote showtog no quorum. A call of the House diactosoafaQ presence of 224 mem- ton. The doors wm *b»ed, and the Ser- feant-at- Arms was ocdareo|o arrest absentees, [e soon oaptured one offender, who made % speech. After anethSr uselesii> vote on consid eration and a secondttdlof the House, .an ad journment was effected. \ By a vote of 38 to $Hhe Geneva Award bill was passed by the Senate without amendment, on May 23. Mr. Logan reported a provision A CEXOULMB HOBS. to be inserted in the Army Appropriation bill, to establish an armypnd navy hospital at Hot Springs, Ark. Mr. Pugh moved to reconsider the final vote on the Kve-Per-Ceot Land bill, which prevailed. Mr. Groome objected to the consideration of the bill for the admission of Dakota, and it was laid aside. The House re sumed its struggle onthe South Carolina con tested election. The first vote on considera tion showed seventeen less than a quorum in at endance, and the second revealed two more absentees, ,.«* The bill for the relief of tbe officers and crew of the Monitor, which destroyed tbe rebel ironclad Merrimao, involving about f200,000, was passed by the Senate, at its session on May 24. Mr. Logan put through the House joint resolution appropriating $16,000,000 to supply the deficiency in amy pensions. In the House, Mr. Calkins caused to be read extracts trom a letter written by Mr. Hewitt, alleging that the Elections Committee refused to inves tigate the charges of forgery in the South Cai olina contented-election case. Mr. Callnns said the committee had never failed to inquire into the truth of any charge made before it and Mr. Atlurton denied the latter statement Nearly every member was on his feet, many speaking at once. Mr. Hewitt asked an in vestigation of the oharge of forgery, after which he promised not to participate in filibustering. A motion by Mr. Randall that the House adjourn to. Friday showed that there was no quorum. A call of the Houso disclosed a quorum. Mr. Walker, of Pennsyl vania, fell to the floor in a fainting fit. After filibnstaring had gone on for three hours, Mr. Calkins advised members to bring five days' rations with them, knd moyed to adjourn, whioh was carried. The session of the Benito on May 25 was dull and uneventful. A WH passed appropriating $15,000 for & light-house at Little Traverse harbor, Lake Michigan. The Japanese Indem nity act was taken up, Mr. Morgan warmly advocating repayment and Mr. Jones arguing against any return 0 money. In the House, Mr. Calkins called np the South Carolina contested-eleotion M},. Mr. Randall raised a question fit ooasliMr'gyjjr. Keona moved to adlOinSkiOM tflMflyNinMll. UA jawa and 'a request by Ml Mr. Rao-Mr. Ourtin for leave of-absence, and dall demanded a yea and nay vote, leave being refused by 18 to 184, Motions were then made to adjourn to 8atwiay and to Monday, both m Woof bei ing lost, Ben Wood voting with the Re- iblioans. On a motion for & 'reoess, the vote showed no quorum and a call of the Honse was ordered. At 5 o'clock a recess was taken until & At the evening session the galleries were well filled, and the attendance of mem bers was larger than usual. The call of the House was several times interrupted bf votes on motions to excuse mem bers for the evening. A proposition for en adjournment to Monday received only 118 votes, less than a quorum. Mr. Bayard reported in the Senate, M§y 96^ a modification of the measure reoently intro duced by him as a 'substitute for the Bonded- Spirits bill, tbe ohange referring mainly to brandies and warehousing bonds. A bill was asscd to provide for the removal of obstruo- ions to free navigation, anil requiring bridge companies to erect sheer booms. When the Japanese Indemnity bill was ' taken up, Mr. Saunders moved an amend ment to pay George S. Fisher, Con sul at Kanagawa, $15,000 for the destruction of his property. Mrl Jones proposed that the President communicate with Great Britain. France and the Netherlands and secure their co-operation in making full restitu tion to Japan. The House took up the South Carolina contested-election; case, aud^Mr. Black burn raised a question of consideration. Dila tory motions were made by Messrs. Converse, Carlisle and Randall, and the roll was several times called. Mr. Black burn, in order to break the dead lock, submitted a resolution that a special com mittee investigate the dbarges of irregularity in handling the testimony in the Mackey-Dibble case. The confusion then became very great. of members talking simultaneously, and Mr. Calkins secured an adjournment Tbe resolution offered by Mr. Blackburn was tbe fruit of a secret session of the Democratic cau cus committee. Immediately after the ad journment tlfe Republicans held a caucus, with Mr. Robeson in the chair. Mr. Camins explained that he had intended to offer £ counter proposition to that of Mr. Blackburn, but debate was cut off. A resolution was then adopted, to submit to the Democrats a proposi tion to open the case far discussion for six hOuTBs the time to be equally divided, when a motion gwiE be entertained to recommit the report to the oommlttee. The Flre-Per-Cent. Bill. The Mil which reoently passed the Senate of the United States, known as the " Five-per-oent. Land Act," provides that lands entered by mili tary scrip or bounty land warrants in the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Ne braska, Kansas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Oregon, Nevada and Colo rado, including Virginia military and United States military land warrants located in Ohio, ilullbe construed to come within .the pro vision of the law for payment to States of 6 per oent of the proceeds of public lands disposed of within their borders; lands to be estimated at the rate of tL25 per acre, and payments to be made in cadi. It is also provided that money remaining on the books of toe treasury to the credit of any public-land States under the act of 1836, which distributed tbe treasury surplus, shall not be charged as an offset against any part of tbe amount coming to the State under wis bilL The bill prohibits States from paying any part of the money received by them to agents or attorneys for services in procuring the passage of the sot or in connec tion with the claims of a State, unless such payments an authorized by State laws passed after the date of this act u- > leticlert Theater, CMcftffe : 1 Monday, June 5, will be arfetiiet' first night" in the theatrical annals of Chicago. On that d%te there will be produced at McVioker's Theater, under the management of Mr. J. M. Hill, a new play, called " The House of Mau- ?rat." The authors are Mr. William 'onng, wh© wrote the successful trage dy, " Pendragon," and Mr. John G. Wilson, of Chicago. The suggestion for the plot was derived from one of George Sand's novels. The work is a romantic melodrama, in prose, full of stirring cidents and strong, intense situntio: Geo. B. Rdekwell, E. K Tittoai, Miss Mrs. OhasJPtfSRs. During the months of Jane, Jahr and August there will be produced at this theater the new {day cnlled "A Square Man," a drama of Weetera lite. The Hanlan Brothers will appear in their marvelous pantomimic Parisian absurdity, •' lib Voyage En Suesse," and the cew En glish drama, the latest London success, "Taken Prom Life," will receive its in itial representation in this country. The new tragic star, Miss Margaret Mather, will also make her first appearance at this theater. Visitors to Chicago may always be sure of finding It MoVicker's ment of the very highest order, HE MUST HAm amt The in ns. company engaged includes Joseph Tfc« Sapreme Court of the taaes Cuiteau a New TriaL In the District Supreme Court at Washing ton, May 22, Justice James announced the de cision of the court in banc upon the exceptions in the Guiteau case, denying a new trial and affirming the judgment below. Justice Hag- ner, in a separate opinion, discussed the bear ings of the old Maryland law, and held that even under the Maryland act of 1785 the in dictment would have been good in this Dis trict and Justice Cartter stated that the opinions given were the unanimous opinions of tbe court. The court holds that jurisdiction is complete where a fatal blow is strode, without regard to the locality of actual demise; that tbe bullet fired at the President by Guiteau on the 2d aav of Julv, in this city, was ths cause of his death, and that the trial could only have been held in Washington; that tile death of tb* President in New Jersey, except as affected by local statutes, «ouid not, change jurisdiction. The assassin had not been in New Jersey, had committed no offense against New Jersey laws, and the mere fact of the victim being removed to Elberon to prolong his life or save it, if pos sible, could not be made to affect the character of the crime. The intelligence of the decision of the court was conveyed to Guiteau a few minutes after its announcement in court, and was received by him with stolid indifference. He said to the guard who gave him the intelligence that he had not anticipated anything else. " My de pendence is now placed in President Arthur," he said. " I made him what he is, and he can not afford to go back on me." The assassin has permitted his beard to grow and his face is covered with stubble, which causes him to present & very unattractive ap pearance. He was asked by a visitor why he did not shave, and quickly replied that his bar ber, a fellow prisoner, had been dischaiged a few weeks ago, and ho did not know any one as yet capable of filling the vacancy. Gen. Crocker says that Guiteau is afraid to trust himself with a strange barber for fear that an other attempt will be made on his life. His sole anxiety, said the General, seems to be that he shall be properly protected from would-be avengers. The rule in regard to visitors will be strictly enforced hereafter; no one but his guards and counsel will be permitted to see him. Speak ing of the arrangements for his execution, Warden Crocker said that the preliminaries could be arranged at short notice, the only articles to be prepared being a rope and the adjustment of a spring attachment to the scaffold. This gloomy instrument of death is in a direct line with the cell occupied by the condemned, being in the upper end of the north corridor, while his cell is in the first-ear* rid or. . Those Siberian Wolf Stories. , Now* as to Siberian wolves, or, rather, I should say those of Southern Siberia and Orenburg, I am compelled reluct antly to admit that they are not in the habit of attacking travelers on the road. Arrant cowards, they may bark at and follow solitary wanderers, but as a rule they confine their attacks to the farm yards of -the villages, or watch their op portunity through the day to get a young and juicy horse that has strayed away from the drove, or a sheep that has strayed from the flock and the care of theirs nomadic shepherds. -During aU- our long journeys we have seen only thirteen wolves, besides the in, aginary ones in the Urals. One evening, three days after the above adventure, about seven, while we were watching the moon-lit snowscape, my companion shouted, "Here they are!" I looked out and there saw seven of the' brutes, as big again as good-sized foxes, passing leisurely across the road immediately in front of our sledge. After we had passed they stopped and looked after m in the most leisurely manner. We ordered our yemschik to stop the team, and getting out of the sledge, had time to take out weapons, load them and fire before they ever attempted to move from the spot; and then they went away quite leisurely, as if they were not qmte.sure what waa best to be done--whether to remain in the line of fire, where they were comparatively safe, or by running away to put themselves in the way of an accidental death. Another time two wolves crossed the road and waited for 11s to have a shot at them before fchey thought of loping off to safer (?) quar ters. To show you how little danger there is from the attack of the ! Siberian wolf, I may add that drivers scaroely notice their presence, and that when peasants of the districts through which they have passed want to chastise the brutes for robbing their farm yards and devouring a fat Iamb or so, they mount their fleet little horses and, armed with a heavy club, they start out to hunt the marauders down on the steppes. This they can do easily enough when the snow is soft and only a foot or so deep, for the wolf soon becomes exhausted, until finally, panting for breath, he sits down on Ms haunches and quietly waits for the hunter to knock him over the head with his club. As for wolves fol lowing the sledge, I am inclined to doubt that they ever do this on the great post »routes. It is the one absorbing risk of a traveler in Siberia to tell about the wild race before the hounding wolves; to describe how he shoots tbe one which approached nearest the sledge, and how the brute's companions stop to devour their former leader and coinpah- panion, while the yemschik whips up the horses at a terrific speed until the dan ger is passed and the traveler is depoa- ited in safety at the next post station. I know that a narrative of a Siberian sledge journey will be incomplete without such a wolf-hunted adventure, but Siberian wolves on Siberian post routes are not plentiful, and if plentiful are arrant cowards, and scarcely more dangerous than foxes to travelers.--Correspondence Nino York Herald. Hf re*c Treatment of a Snake Bfte. An idiot confined in the County Man ual Labor Poor House was bitten by a rattlesnake on the forefinger of the left hand, the fangs penetrating both sides of the finger. About three minutes after the bite was Inflicted Mrs. Symington, wife of the Superintendent, split the fin ger on both sides with a razor, poured a small quantity of powder,into the wound and set fire to it. She then applied am monia, and also gave ammonia and whisky inwardly until the man became drunk. This was a very brave act for a lady to do, and it saved the poor man's life. The next day the arm and hand were swollen to twice their natural size, but in a few days the man was all right again. The snake was killed and four rattles were taken oft--San Antonio (Texas) Express. How will many things that ara familiar look when we come to aee them from that new and distant point of view which we must all take up, one day or other. ~~IHcken». -V>* , ,^1 A Koarnoratreetdeatiat, wfco is any thing but old jia yc*H or hia profession, haa performed the difficult artiatto job of supplying a horribly disfigured human woe with aa artificial noeeand upper lip. A reporter who had heard that the op eration was to b«* ^erfortaed called upon the skillful practitioner and requested permission to witness the achievement of science. The dentist consented to gratifv his visitor's curiosity, and stated that the patient waa a Chinese woman, whose nose and upper lip had been de stroyed by cancer. " She will be here in a few moments," said the dentist, and almost immediately the woman entered, accompanied by a man in Chinese attire whose face offered incontrovertible evi dence of an admixture of Caucasian blood. The woman held a handkerchief to her face until she had taken her seat in the operating chair, when she re moved the cloth and displayed a*counte nance inexpressibly horrible. She had been once good-looking beyond the de gree of comeliness usually displayed by the Chinese women one sees in Califor nia, for her cheeks were round and her eyes rather shapely. The disease had, however, not ooly deprived her of a nose, but had destroyed her upper teeth ana left the bones bar® and surrounded by frightful cicatrices that ran through the corners of her mouth and np the bridge of the nose toward the eyebrows. To make snch & face presentable seemed an impossibility, but the tusk was per formed speedily and successfully. The nose and lip had already been molded in eelluloid from a plaster cast of the face, and, having been carefully colored, pre sented a most life-like appearance. The dentist in molding the nose had to de pend entirely on hia imagination, and had modeled a thoroughly Asiatic one. Tbe artificial lineaments having been prepared, there remained only the inter esting but difficult feat of attaching them. In supplying artificial noses it is customary to attach them by spectacles, but in the Chinese woman's case such an arrangement would have been impos sible, owing to the great size of the dis figurement caused by the loss of the lip and teeth. The difficulty was overcome by attaching a gold spring to the upper jaw in the manner in which single teeth are affixed. The Bpring ran up to where the bridge of the nose should have been, and to this spring the artificial nose and lip were attached by an India-rubber loop. The combined pressure of the spring and the Indiar-rubber drew the celluloid mask so close to the face that, being molded to fit the cheeks, it would have looked quite natural but for the lack of that transparency which living tissue possesses. While the woman's countenance was in repose, the effect of the work was remarkably good, and the transformation which it effected in her looks was so great that she eagerly seized the mirror offered by the dentist, and, looking at her reflection, she uttered an exclamation of surprise and delight. She give the practitioner a handful of ten- dollar pieces, and trotted off with her half-caste escort, filled with a satisfaction at parting with wealth seldom shown by Mongolians.--San Francisco Bulletin. . Marrying Titles. It was not long since that a French eouut in Paris, who had married a wealthy and accomplished American lady was detected, secretly pawning her diamonds and jewels to raise money to gamble with, while she lay on her death bed. He had sjient immense .sums of her money in fatting and ^unbling, and in living a life of profligacy, and had treated her so cruelly during their short married life that she died broken hearted. An accident recently happened in the Kingdom of Wurtemburg which caused quite a ripple in the upper class of society there at the time. A. German baron, who had started with his wife to visit her home in America, had got as far as the railway station when he waa arrested by his creditors, who supposed he was fleeing the country never to re turn, for heavy debts which he had incurred through gambling and a disso lute life. He had 110 means with him to pay the demands, neither had his wife, ana as their trunks bed been sent on in advance, and the arrangement® all made for the journey, he told his wife to keep on and he would meet her in Liverpool before the sailing of their steamer alter having made some arrangement with his creditors, This wife went on to Liver* pool and this baron stayed behind, but' it was four or five days before he waa able to satisfy hia creditors, either by promises or the interposition of some kind friend so as to be able to depart. While thus detained, the pocket money his wife had given him to pay his ex penses to Liverpool had disappeared, but another compassionate friend was induced to loan him $500, by giving se curity on Ms wife's furniture and silver- plate so that he was enabled to start on hia journey. Passing through London he fell among gamblers at on© of the clubs who could handle the cards better than he could, and his $500 quickly dis appeared, with the exception of a small amount, just sufficient to take b-im to Liverpool, where he at length arrived to find that his wife had left in a steamer three days previous, and hfinself without a dollar in his pocket Representing to one of the steamer agents who he was, and showing papers that identified him as being a Veritable baron, he was per mitted to take paasage on the next steamer, with the understanding that his passage would be paid at the other ©nd of the route, where his wife or his wife's relations would come to Ms aid--and which it is to be presumed they did. An American lady who married a title in Saxony, after enduring several years of cruel treatment, neglect and misery, re cently took sudden flight to her friends across the Atlantic, forsaking the bed and board of her titled husband) never to return to it. Such incidents as these of unhappy marriages contracted by Americas girls abroad are constantly taking place, and a record of their histories and the wretched lives which many of them have led would fill volumes. Marriages with foreigners which have proved happy and unalloyed with more or less misery are exceptional and far between. To those ambitious mothers who would sell their daughters for a title, and to those dmu^h- ters who would run the risk of sacrificing future happiness by uniting themselves to worthless scions of nobility, I would give Punch's advioe to the unmarried-- "Bon't,"--Springfield Republican. m A Supply Beadv. There is now a brand of tobacco known as Thistle Dew. "When a man asks for a certain kind of weed and can't get it, he purchases a package of the new variety and murmurs as he takes it, "Thistle Dew." This.is an example of a new hand-made joke that we are turn ing out now at this office. We have, in addition to the above highly classical style of mirth, a good, fair, average stoga joke, at a much smaller price. Estimates made for almanacs... minstrel shows and funerals* We have a n and attractive mourning joke on ha: now, that death almost a welcome :: VA' • The! 80 IMT biafc ^h authmities begin ibe use of the telephone in small piaots; and there are now 1,280 nub telephone ofieee hi the oountry. The pnbl*} was dmr to idoptthe telephone for local traffic tat large towns. Muhlhaasen was the fir* to aet, and a few months later, in April last year, telephone traffic was begun ia Berlin with eighty-seven rfubseribex*. The number of conversations, by tele phone in Berlin is now increasing by about 6,000 a month. Telephone ~sys» terns are now at work in Hamburg; Frankfort, Breslan, Cologne, and Mann heim ; and in Aitona, Barmen, Elber- field, Hanover, Leipsio, Marasbtar£ Stettin, Strasburg, Bremen an^Curesden they are contemplated. In the firs! seven towns the telephone wires have reached a total length of 8,147 kilometef* (sav 1,966 miles). Berlin comes firgfc with 1,554 kilometers, then come Ham burg with 911 kilometers; Breslau, witfe 200 kilometers; Frankfort and heim each with 163 kilometers: Muhi» hsusen, with 87 kilometers and Gok with 69 kilometers. The total numt„ of applicants in these seven towns in tbe end of December was 1,694, and the number increases ©very week. 1,418 had been put in communication ; Berlin had 668 and Hamburg 628 applicants. There are three central stations ia Berlin, in Franzosisohe, Mauer, and Oranienburger streets respectively* From data in the first three weeks fe* December, it appears that, on an aver age, 1,650 connections were made daily (on the Sunday 720, 540, and 333), From 12 to 1 is the busiest time; during tha| hour 150 connections on an average were made in the office in Franzosisohe strasse, or five every two minuteC From 3 to 8 there is a little rest, and from 5 to 7 fresh activity. The tele* Shone chambers in the Exchange have ouble walls, with ashes, clay or saw* dust between; the inner walls have ia*; tervening a layer of thick paste-t then cotton-covered felt on frames, on this the paper. These chambers , answer very well and are much fre quented. There are again public tel«? phone rooms (at present twe in Berliir and one in Hamburg,) into which one f may enter and on payment erf 50 pfennig (say 5d), have five minutes talk by telephone with any one whose home or office is in the system. Turning to *'-> France, we learn that the number of Hnes supplied by tbe Societe Generate des Telephone on the 31st of January was 1,411, instead of 626 at the end of the corresponding week in 1J381; and""-' the communications in the last week of January this year amounted to 80,534. $ In Lyons the number of lines has iiS- creased from 37 in January, 1881, to , ' • 285 in January, 1882: in Marseille^- •. from 32 to 153 ; in Nantes, from 14 70; Bordeaux has contiuued with 132> jf Havre with 100 ; Lille with 5.--London Time*. . . Mistaken Kindness. Mormon wagons took sunflowers along i with them on their way to Utah, and i Iowa farmers have had a hard time fight ing the pest A single Sftotch thistle planted in Victoria -- the Scotchmen there had a congratulatory dinner over, it twenty years ago--has covered tens ef thousands of acres and been the destrue- : tion of farms. The scattered grain ' • « emptied from the bags of Ger- maa (troop-ships, in the Be^utkfeatafc-: knocked millions off the value of our grain crop for all time to come by bring- • lug the Hessian fly. A careless man set ; out a French grape-cutting a few yearn ago with phylloxera on it, and the pert, is now sprinkled along the Pacific Coas^ creeping inland. Its ravages in Franoe have cost- $400,000,000. A man with ft taste for peppery greens planted water- n-' cress in New Zealand, and the littlft plant has spnead so that the Local Leg- . mature has to appropriate a round sun yearly to improve the water-cress out of existenoe and the water courses. A kindly, misguided man brought over tQ New York a basketful of sparrows, not twenty years ago, and-the little wretches have already driven half our song birds into the woods. In South Amcrica same thing was done, and the birds cleaning out the fruit erop. t Human Bodies Floating. is paper publishes these statements of a Parisian river spiresnum concerning human bodies floating in thft river : " I always know beforehand if is a man or woman. If the body li the face upward it is a woman ; if floats on its belly, with its nose in thft;t,« water, it is a man. I have remarked that a man who has been thrown into: i" *'f" the water otter being assassinated reapk • . pears on the surface much earlier ths,% one who has fallen in by accident or ha# drowned himself. The time the bodj.̂ remains beneath the waters show#, whether it is a case of suicide or murf̂ der. This curious information is i fM able in proportion to its truth. " : J-'v vl - t - ' ' t - TBE MAIIKHS NEW ¥OBIi=. ....I# Tp 7 80 ia Baxvxs Hoes COTTON FIXHJK--Snperflne.. WHEAT--NO. 2 Spiring. 1 No. 2 Bed 1 48 COBN--Ungraded 78 OATS--Mixed Weeta*?..... 62 POBK--Mew 19 » 930 LABS 11UA CHICAGO. BBCVBS--Choice Graded Steers 7 SB Cows and Heifers 8 SO Medium to Fair... 7 95 Hooa..... 886 Fl«OU»--Fancy White Winter Ex... 6 75 Good to Choice Spring Ex. A SO WHEAT--No. a Spring 1 25 No. 3 Spring * }£ CORK--No, 2...... 73 OATBVNO,_2. .....Iv- 61 RVE--NaT. ' J* BARS.K*--No. a. I JJ BUTTKR--Choioe Creamery JJ Eoos--Fraab „ J® POBK-- MOM... *• I4A&D lOtWAUKJEE. WHEAT--Not 1... * J2 COBN--No. 79 OATS--NO. R*k--No. 1 W BlBLH-KOk % * POBK--Meat ............19 68 LAID ST. LOUIS. VIUT-HO.1 BAD 1 89 COBN--Miad 7* OATS--No. 9. 69 76 POBK--Mam. .....M 76 a s 10 C# I 89 <® 1 4? @8 26* 319 76 9 1 81 0 78 & 62 r75 j* WKXAT......... Comm.. POBK--ME»-- « 1 33 @20 00 CINCINNATI. 77 « 78 64 @ 66 „ 5 « 83 M 00 @30 35 UVA 11 „ TOLEDO. 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