Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Jun 1882, p. 2

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'*• r* f PSjgT • * ™»»?5 •• ** 1 viw^"«r! r"H: * l^wiFmteUr I. VAN SLYKE, Editor «* ftiMUMr. IjicHENRY, ILLINOIS. • E E I I T I E W S R E V I E W . THE KAST® T*m New York Stock Exchange, by a i of more than two-thirds of the governors ||gm«Ued William J. Hutchinson for frands id upon John Duff, Jr., in the Hannibal , Jot AMI, after he had paid btok 9760,- fe;; MART T. ROWLAND, President of the •" Darnell branch of the Ladies* Land League of iftevplancl, haa written an open letter to Bish­ op Gilmonr, stating that the leagne will not Colter in or deviate from the oonrge marked out, tnd that if this be un-Cathoiic theu they are glroud to be called heretic*. The Catholic lfcagners of Buffalo express groat indignation #rer the policy of Bishop Oilmour, and have passed denunciatory resolutions. '*.-V MB& JE88B JAMES, wife of the dead f ' .4ntifcw, made her appearance upon the stage in ^Kansas City, with her two children, while a Sanaa* man delivered a lecture upon the life of Her dead husband. Not more than fifty per­ sons were present, and the lectrro was a decided failure. Mrs. Jam«e in paid f200 per week to • Appear upon the stage while a man recites the Biwk ana train-robbing schemes of her late knsband. She appeared very ill at ease during •he remarkable soene. Mrs. Samuels, mother • #f U»e James boys, was present, bat created nc ^v^jxoiteEeut. ' " K ; A H K A B T B s m > m a a e c i d e n t o c c u r r e d Harris Station, on the Missouri, Kansas • tod Texas railroad, in Missouri. John Jack- and his wife went to church, leaving their >ur children, the eldest 14 aud the youngest 2 old, looked in the house. From some >wn cause the house caught fire, and when parents returned they found their dwell- in ruins and their children dead and burned a crisp. "• MASKXD highwaymen robbed the HfcwsfleMI CHo.) bank of ffS.000, in broad day- ;ht» There wore four desperadoee, all masked, marched into the bank with drawn re­ volvers, while one stood at a convenient corner tod held their horses. One of the three who entered the bank remained at the entrance to loud it, while the other two walked np to the Matter, John Ford, and his assistant, Miw Hettw Scott, and coolly requested the cashier to band over what mouey he had in the bank. . This the cashier declined to do, but was finally of; Compelled to comply, and the robbers were ® 4°on in possession of nearly 46,000 of the fmnk's funds. They lost no time in getting tK tot of the bank, remounting, and dashing oat ? tjW town, firing tbe;r revolvers iu the air as > ;2 J |hey departed! The Marshal gathered a posse {. „ " #nd started in pursuit in a very short time *; ' <atter the gang left the bank. ?..'1 ? • - ARRANGEMENTS are making for a great ^nter-State mihtary and civic Fourth of July *) ; Celebration, by Wisconsin and Illinois military " sfcrgaiiizfttions and others, at the Lake Bluff ^ mp grounds, on the Milwaukee division of e Chicago and Northwestern railway. Gen. >' a } (John A, Logan is to be the orator of the occa- i v V1 • * -Los.-es in stock speculations caused the * jnicide of Charles J. Glimmer, receiving teller the Bank of California. R THE Chicago wheat market, says the Times, is believed to have been oversold about 20,000,000 bushels, despite the rule making winter wheat regular. It is alleged that the •largest deal for many moDths is now in pros* fees, and there are predictions that July will t>e pnsbed up to $2. Agents of the combina- tioo have been chartering vessels to distribute the grain among New England dealer*. m%<; i THE sovrnb GKOP.GE ELLIS, one of the murderers ,#f the Gibbons family at Ashland, Ey., was fried a few days ago at Catlettsburg, and sen­ tenced to imprisonment for life. At the time u>f the terrible tragedy, last December, the peo- le were with great difficulty restrained from iwilfaiageanee on the batchen. The of Ellics from the gallows was too to be endured, and thirty masked impressed a train into service at land and proceeded to Catlettsburg. t the latter place they took Ellis from jail and irried him back with them to the scene of the inrder, and hanged him to a sycamore tree, 'illiam Craft and Ellis Neal, the others con­ ned in the tragedy, are in jail at Lexington, ider sentence of death Meager details are seived of the havoc wrought by a great storm North Carolina, which demolished houses, se«, fenoes and crops. In one instance two '{^bfldnn were billed by the wreck of a dwelling, ' -jfuid railway trains were delayed by fallen trees. V.1- f|.. .At Tree Notch, Ala., three children of Ales- f uder Adams were burned to death by the ex-losion of a kerosene can. A DESPERATE and bloody duel was ro- • :;i:4pently fought by two women, near Lnmberton, C. The parties were Jane McKeller and .̂ .'jlprtmces McNair, between whom there had long seen great bitterness of feeling, occasioned by • ; j^fhe centering of their separate affections upon young mail. By appointment the rivals ""M jnet in a secluded dell, where they went at each * ;V:,';;fi>ther like tigera. Frances was the lighter of 1 $tSpl>® and soon found that she was not • _ i>hygic&l match for her opponent, and so had - Jrecouree to the assistance of a bowie-knife. ; iiphe plunged the blade into Jane's heart, '* A jbaosing instant death. J he sight of the blood . fend the consciousness of her crime overpow- 'iV- ii'^red Frances, and she fell in a swoon upon the prostrate body of her late enemy. It was thai ^ they were found by & p»rty that had started after them with the intention of preventing . 7^ trouble In Orange county, Florida, a man iX: .4flamed Warburtoa and his wife and twin cbil- \, 'Jlren were drowned in a small lake through the % t, Wright of a horse... .At Butlerville, Ark., three B ".faexo&i who criminally assaulted a 13-year-old -••0. • ••_ Mrl were taken from jail by a mob and hanged a tree, ^ ^ THE river steamer Evansville exploded |,V» '(('l*ne of her larboard fines while unloading ( ^ . ^jjfreight at Calhoun, Ky. Eight men were badly <yaealded and four others blown overboard. The - * 4j*. qpaeeengers ©scaped unhurt....A dispatch from ;* ^ ' fit. Petersburg, va., says that a storm swept over I/- |8oBthampton county,in that State, demolishing ! < ijkanses and ruining crops. Borne hailstone* " ,f i ̂ "were a foot long, weighing a pound and a half. \ t • »One woman will probably die from fright.... VAnother of the men who attempted to rob the i'-'v-;f;-' :AJB»ourl Pacifio train near Denton, Texas, waa ~"l"^^^oreriakeB by ihe pnrsniag posse, kiiled and w buried about ten miles from Denton. The : , fourth robber is still at large. The town of Pocahontas. Ark., haa been Said in ashes, en­ tailing a lcto estimated at f 60,(HK). f. *" A dttkii was fought in St Bernard j-f pariah, La., between Maj. E. A Burke, of the Hie f1,000 plate handed over by Felker was proof that Brock way lied or forgot something, rat ha *Tplained that he thought it was de­ stroyed. He furnished evidenoe to ooaviot em{Moyes of the Engraving Bureau of actual oomplioity with counterfeiters, and it is under­ stood >i»t Doyle will be released for similar tes­ timony. Secretary Folger is Mid to have found five plates missing from the list, one of them representing the silver certificates." The court en banc having denied his notion to correct the record in the Guiteau oaae, Charles H. Reed appealed to Judge Wylie, who holds the Criminal Court, and who did not tit with the court en banc, to make the same correction. This Judge Wylie refused to do, adding that, beside, Mr. Heed asked him to make a new record rather than to correct the old one Representative Townsend's bill to establish a Board of Commissioners of Inter- State Commerce as a bureau of the Interior Department will have a favorable report to the House ..The Committee on Commeroe will report favorably a bill providing for a duty on immigrants of 50 cents per head. The bill also provides for the return of all foreign oonvicts, except such as have been oonvictea of political offenses. IN reply to the resolution recently in­ troduced in the Senate by Senator Plumb, ask­ ing for information with regard to the Govern­ ment Printing Office, S. P. Bounds, Publio Printer, has addressed a communication to Vice President Davis covering the ground of inquiry. Among the questions asked was the following : '• Whether the prosecution of the business of said office is in any wise dependent upon the action of any organization existing inside or outside of said office." To this Mr0 Bounds replies: The prosecution of the business of tbe Govern­ ment Printing Office, working now, as it has bees for many years past, in aeorant with the Typographi­ cal &nd Bookbinders' Unions, is dependent upqn the action o2 there organ nations, in so far that if, on the refusal of the Public Printer to abide by any or all of their rules and regulations, a general strike of workmen in the office WBB ordered it would make neoeseary the stoppage of the Government printing until the office could be supplied with non-union workmen, and in the opinion of the Government Printer to supply the Government Office wita so large a number of skilled workmen neces­ sary to do so great an amount and so high a grade of work from among the number of non-union work­ men would involve a serious loss of time, an4 for such time necessarily lower the standard of work done in the Government office. At any aud all times, should any serious difficulty or difference arise be­ tween the public service and these unions, the Publio Printer, holding the interest under his charge and the laws of Congress paramount to all other consid­ erations, would sustain them without regard to the laws and regu ittiona of any and all trade organiza­ tions. and as Congress might direct. In the International Typographical Union at St. Louis, a telegram from the Washington Union was read, stating that Senator Plumb had made war upon it because of its refusal to allow one of his political followers to work in the Government Printing Offioe as a proof­ reader. mrriojuu ROLAND WOBTHINGTON, the new Col­ lector of the port of Boston, answered an invi­ tation to the field banquet of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery company, to respond to the sentiment in honor of the President of the United States, by a declaration that the proper discharge of the duties of the Collector- ship ia the best service he can render the President and the country. A storm of groans greeted the epistle Ex-Secretary Blame, in a letter to prominent Maine Republicans, de­ clines to stand for Congressman-at-Large. THE Greenback State Convention of Ohio was held at Columbus. A long seriesof resolutions opposing monopolies were adopted, and a ticket nominated: Secretary'of State, George L. Hafer, Miami county; Supreme Judge, L. G. Tuttle, Lake county; member of the Board of Public Works, L. B. Stevens, Lucas oounty A Greenback and Anti-Monopoly convention met at Emporia, Kansas, axfiT nominated D. J. Cole for Congress from the Third district, and S. H. Wood, of the Kansas Stale Journal, for Congressman-at-Large. THB Ohio Republican Convention, at Columbus, nominated the Hon. Charles Town- send for Secretary of State, and John H. Doyle, of Toledo, for Judge of the Supreme Court. The platform adopted laments the untimely death of President Garfield, commends the administration of President Arthur, and in­ dorses the official acts of Gov. Foster. It con­ demns the persecutions of the Jews in Russia, and approves the action taken by the United States Government to ameliorate their unhappy condition. It asserts tirnt the State constitution, in so far as it prevents the repre­ sentatives of the people from controlling the liquor business, should be amended; and that all laws upon the statute hooks should be re­ spected and enforoed. THB Iowa Greenback State Conven­ tion at Dea Moines was largely attended. The following gentlemen were selected to represent the party in the State canvass this fall: For Sec­ retary of State, W. J, Gaston, of Keokuk coun­ ty; Treasurer of State, George Dorr, of Union county; Auditor of State, G. A. Wvant, off Ringgold county; Attorney General, J.'H. Race, of Mahaska county; Judge of the Supreme Court, M. H. Jones, of Mahaska; Clerk of the Supreme Court, E. M. Clark, of Allamakee; Reporter of the Supreme Court, J. H. Williamson, of Buchanan The Alabama Democratic State Convention nominated E. A. O'Neal for Governor by ac- "clamatiou. H. C. Tompkins was nominated for Attorney General, Elias Phelan for Secre­ tary of State, J. H. Vincent for State Treasurer, J. M. Carmichael for Auditor and II. C. Arm­ strong for Superintendent of Education.... The Illinois Democratic State Committee has selected Springfield aa the place, and Sept. 7 as the date, for holding the State Convention. v!"r V \ ' ¥ < • New Orleans Times - Democrat, and C. H. Park- er, editor of the Picayune. Pistols were used, j0: and five shots exchanged. At the fifth exchange Burke was shot through the thigh. The wound is not considered dangerous. THB postoffice at Columbus, Ky., was 4'^ » entered by means of skeleton keys, the safe /'was blown open, and $2,000 in Government checks and over 150 watches were carried off. Washington. ATTOBNEY GENERAL BBEWSTBB is of 8m opinion that new legislation is necessary to make the present Eight-Hour law effective....The friends of the Lowell Bankruptcy bill are act­ ively at work pushing that measure to the front SENATOR WINDOM'B investigating 00M- aaittee at Washington examined H. H. Shu- ./y'Js'f feldt, President of the National Association of *44 Distillers snd Liquor-Dealers. He testified that he raised f4,000 from distillers in Ken- tnckv to secure th« passage of a bill to reduce whisky tax to SO cents per gallon, none of which has been uud. He deemed the exten­ sion of the bonded period an absolute necessity for distillers, as otherwise 34,000,000 gallons would in 1884 be unloaded on the market CHAKUES H, HEED'S last effort in be­ half of the assassin Guiteau was an utter fail- the District Judges at Washington refusing reopen the case for argument It is said Guiteau continues to cherish hope. It is '--d that Beed will wait until the day set execution before applying for a writ of oorpus to the Supreme Court, and thus VOTOM dispatches state that , the counterfeiter, although still in granted full immunity iw ex- the material in his possession. THK Michigan State Greenback Con vention is called to meet at Grand Rapids on Wednesday, Aug. 23. The bask of represent­ ation will be two delegateg-at-large from each county, and one additional delegate for each 100 votes and portion over even hundreds cast for Weaver at the last general election... .The election in Oregon on Monday, the 5th inst., resulted in the success of the entire Republican State and Congressional tickets by a majority estimated at 1,500. The Legislature, upon which will devolve the election of & United States geimtpr, is claimed by both parties. ALL the iron manufacturers west of the Allegheny mountains, representing a capi­ tal of $35,000,000, gathered at Pittsburgh and resolved to stand firm against an advance in wages. The Superi >r rail mill, in Allegheny City, started up with a forse of green who ruined four tons of good material. THB Canadian Northwestern Land Company, under the Presidency of the Duke of Manchester, has purchased 5,009,000 acres from the Canadian Pacific syndicate, at $2.70 per acre, to be paid for in bonds of the railroad company. Half the $15,000,000 stock has been taken in Toronto; $2,500,000 will tie al­ lotted to Montreal, and the remainder will be raised in London. MBS. FRANCES M. ScoviLLa, sister of Guiteau, has drawn up another petition and calls upon the public for signatures to it She addresses it to the President of the United States, and asks that a stay of proceedings be granted in the Guiteau case A company of representative negroes from Mississippi is on its way to Chihuahua, to prospect in the agri­ cultural and mining region of Mexico, where a location is sought for a colonv of 200 families. rOKBISN. THE forte, on the 5th inst, informed the powers that Dervisch Pasha and Lebib Bey had started for Egypt with fall powers. The Sultan says even should the Commissioners en­ counter obstacles, he is confident of being able to surmount any difficulty, and therefore can­ not share the views of the powers as to the ne­ cessity for a conference The will of Gen. Garibaldi orders the cremation of his body and the preservation of the ashes in an urn near the tomb of his child at Caprera. Tne Munic­ ipal Council at Rome will send a depntation to the funeral. A subscription has been opened by workingmen's societies to erect a monument Bruce, an English horse ridden by Archer, the phenomenal jockey, won the Grand Prize at Paris. Keene's Romeo met with an accident and was unable to start A BOODY war has broken out between the tribes > of Central India. The blood and hair of murdered victims are being distributed asx incentives to take up arms... .The wheat crop in England is progressing slowly, and needs rain and warm weather. Trading in breadstuff s has been very limited the past week, and prices are quoted lower. THB International Conference on Egyptian affairs has been simply pushed aside by the action of the Porte. Arabi Pasha ex­ plains that tbe earthworks at Alexandria were repaired only for the purpose of calming the natives. The German representative at Con­ stantinople has learned from the Saltan that the Khedive will be energetically sustained. Your additional English iron-clads have sailed for Alexandria. French crops, aooording to the Finance Minister, will yield an abundant harvest, and prevent a large amount of capital from leaving the country. GARIBALDI'S family decided, on ao> eount of the difficulties in the way, to forego cremation, and the body was interred provision­ ally at Caprera. An attempt was made to em­ balm the remains, but decomposition was too far advanced. King Hnmberi, Gambetta aud the Swiss and Uruguay Govern­ ments sent special telegram*) - of sor­ row at the liberator's demise..... Intelligence from South America is to the effect that Ecuador is in the throes of revolution, Peru in anarchy and disorder and Chill smitten by epidemics and enrsed by brigandage. Spu­ rious bank notes to the amount of 450,000,000 have be<?n put in circulation in Peru. Many hitherto respectable people are involved. WALTER M. BOCRKB, a Gal way land­ lord, residing at Rahasanc, was shot dead while returning from Gort His escort, a soldier, was also killed. Bourke was riding m front of his dragoon escort when a volley from rifles was fired from behind a wall, and both fell dead. Bourke was a magistrate, and son of tbe late Crown Solicitor for Mayo. Ho was a barrister by profession, and bad amassed his fortune in India. He possessed two estates in Ireland, one at Coraleigb, the other at Rahasane. He had several disputes with his tenants, and re­ cently left London to carry out evictions.... Two hundred insurgents attacked an Austrian battalion near Morinie, and compelled it to re­ treat with a loss of ninety-five Killed, the in­ surgents having twenty-six men killed or wounded. The Austrian barracks at Bischina were destroyed, twenty-five soldiers being killed. Foxhall, the American racer, won the Ascot gold cup in England, taking 1,000 sovereigns. ADDITIONAL NEWS. Two FABMEKS in County Cork, Ireland, went shot and seriously wounded, and Castle Da vies was burned. Rewards amounting to 917,500 have been offered for information lead­ ing to the detection of the assassins of Mr. Bourke and the soldier accompanying him.... The holding of trials without juries is strongly opposed by the Irish Judges. Baron Fitzger­ ald will resign if this obnoxious clause of the Repression bill becomes a law. \ THK four men who robbed the bank at Brookfleld, Mo., were captured fourteen miles west of Kirksville. After one posse had traced them to their lair a company of forty armed men left Brookfleld by special train and reached the rendezvous before daylight Their names are Winfleld Allen, Frank Ward, Bert Ward, thd Ben Fox. They recently rented the farm on which they were captured. Their house was almost an armory, sixty revolvers being found, beside masks and explosives.... The Illinois Department of Agricolture reports the prospect favorable for more than an average yield of wheat per acre, although the army worm has stripped off the blades in some of the southern couut'es Reports from nearly all parts of Minnesota are to the effect that corn is making up for lost time, while wheat on high land begins to show the need of rain. THE pay of the Tariff Commissioners is to be 910 per day and expenses. Their route, as outlined inadvanoe of confirmation, will be Long Branch, Coney island and Now- port, spending the month of August at Sarato­ ga, then a trip to the vineyards of California, and an autumu visit to the sugar plantations of Louisiana. SEVERAL petitions have been filed at Washington for the pardon of Thomas Ballard, the famous counterfeiter, Who is serving a term in the Penitentiary at Albany. THB Democratic Committee of Ohio hsjye issued a sail for a State Convention, to be held at tSoluognus on July 20. AT Powhatan, Va., Armistead Gray, colored, was hanged for the cruel murder of his little boy; at Talequah, in the Indian Terri­ tory, Daniel Lucky, colored, was executed for a murder committed last December; at Browns­ ville, Texas, Quirino Gaitan was strung UD for murder of a Mexican; and at Per bam, Minn., John Tribbetts, tho youthful desperado who murdered a surveyor and his assistant, was taken trom jail by a party of determined men and htuig«*l to a- telegraph pole near by.... A dispatch from El Paso, Tex., says that a par­ ty of American railroad hands attacked a num­ ber of Mexicans in camp at. Jago ranch. A desperate fight followed, during which three Americans and a number of Mexicans wer<i killed....The failures in the United States for the past week aggregate 130, the largest number since March 18.... The iron strikers in the vicinity of Pittsburgh are organizing fishing clubs, and propose tak­ ing matters easy during the summer. At Cleveland both employer* and employes ex­ hibit a stubbornness that bodes no near solu­ tion of tbe problem. President JarreU, of tho Amalgamated Association, decided at a meeting at Covington that the Cincinnati strike was un­ justifiable, A DISPATCH from Portland, Ore., says "the average Republican majority on the State ticket is 1,800. George will have no less than 8,000 in the State, the largest majority ever given a candidate. Moody, for Governor, will have about 100 less. The Republicans have the Legislature by a certain majority of tea, which may he increased to thirteen." usetts, rep--- >1, and is TBE TARIFF COMMISSION. The Tariff Commission nominated by the President comprises William A. Wheeler, of New York, Chairman ; Joha L. Hayes, of Mas­ sachusetts ; Henry W. Oliver, Jr., of Pennsyl­ vania ; Austin M. Garland, of Illinois; Jsoob Ambler, of Ohio; John S. Phelps, of Missouri; Robert P. Porter, of the District of Columbia; John W. H. Underwood, of Georgia; Duncan F. Kenner, of Louisiana. Nearly all the members of the commission are known to be favorable to protection. A Wash­ ington correspondent thus outlines the views of the members of the commission : Mr. Wm. A. Wheeler, of New York, tho Chairman, is a strong advocate of the " American " system, bnt is believed not to be opposed to & general revision of the tariff. Mr. John L. Hayes, of Mi sent* the manufacturers of wool, strong protection ̂ He is a man of very ex­ tended information on the wool and general tariff question, and he cannot fail to be of service on the commission. He assisted in drafting the existing tariff on wool, and has probably stated the side of tbe wool manufact­ urers to every Committee on Ways and Means for a quarter of a century. He has been, &a<| probably now is, Secretary of the Naingal Wool- Growers' Association, which unanimously nwuDMj«auad him ror the place. Mr. Austin M. Garland, of Illinois, who was onoe President of tho National Association of Wool-Growers, is appointed especially as repre­ senting the wool-growers. It is believed that Hayes and Garland, representing respectively the manufacturers and growers of wool, are agreed that some revision of the tariff is de­ sirable. Henry W. Oliver is identified with the iron and steel interests of Pennsylvania, which he represents on the commission, Jacob Ambler, of Ohio, is a native of Penn­ sylvania, and is a protectionist He served in the Forty-first and Forty-second Congresses as a Republican. John S. Phelps, of Missouri, a Democrat, is a native of Connecticut He served eighteen years in Congress. He is not a protectionist Robert P. 1 otter, appointed as from tho Dis­ trict of Columbia, is a native of England, and for a long time a resident ot Illinois, where he first attracted attention as a writer on statis­ tical aud economic questions. He was called by Gen. Francis A. Waiker to take cbarge of a portion of tbe census work, and acquitted him­ self with distinction. He is now editor of UM International Iievieu. Judge W. H. Underwood, of Georgia, rep­ resented that State in the United States Senate, but left his seat in 1861 to join the Confed­ eracy. Ho agrees with Senator Brown, of Georgia, and ex-Representative Felt«n, in ad­ vocating moderate protection for Georgia in­ terests. Duncan F. Kenner, of Louisiana, is a weatvU;' sugar-planter, and is expected to rep­ resent the wigar interest». He nt a Democrat, but is a protectionist as to sugar. He achieved some pro. liuence as a witness lief ore the Potter Committee aud in, connection with th* Electoral Commission:* DOUIGS OFCOlf GRESS. The Alabama MoteMed-eleetfon ease of i/owe vs. Wheeler Mat under ooqpideration in the House on the Sd last, Mr. Springer moved to recommit, with instructions, and placed that motion in the form of a resoiutten and pre­ amble. The preamble sets forth that a num­ ber of so-called depositions offered by the contestant were never certified, and did not show that any of the pretended witnesses w<*re sworn, and that some of tho depo­ sitions had been changed since tbe ex­ amination. At this point Mr. Reed ob­ jected to the further reading, claiming thit the preamble was merely a speech, and made the point of order that it was not proper to be incorporated in a motion to recommit Mr. Springer declared that he acted in perfect good faith, and that if the gentle:n»n from Maine (Reed) ms-sted to the contrary ho was acting without, the slightest foundation. The Speaker ruled the resolution was not in order, on the ground that pbrtious of the preamble were in the nature of debate. Mr. Bpringer was sncoessful, however, in getting the whole preamble in tho Record by appealing from the decision of the chair. Thq appeal was laid on the table. Mr. Springer then moved to recommit, with instructions to the committee to ascertain the number ot tis­ sue ballots cast for eit her Lowe or Wheeler, and to report a resolution giving the seat to the oae having tho highest number of legal votes, after rejecting all such tissue ballots. The motion was lost--yeas 91, navs 132--a party vote, except Hmith, of New York, who voted with the Republicans. A resolution de­ claring the contestant entitled to the seat was adopted--yeas 149, nays 3 '(Hardenbergh, Phelps, and Rice of Ohio)--and Lowe appeared at the bar of the House and took the oath of office. There wa« no session of the Senate. Acting Vice President Davis explained to the Senate, when it convened on the 5th inst. that his letter designating Mr. Ingalls to act as Chairman was in exact conformity with the selection of Mr. Eaton in a similar manner by Mr. 1 lmrmnn, and he asked a decision npon the question at issue. The Committee on Rules was instructed to report on the mat­ ter. Mr. Lapham mr-do a favorable report and Mr. George to adi VI one on a constitu­ tional amendment giving suffrage to women. A resolution was adopted that the President be requested to transmit all fresh correspond­ ence between the State Department and Envoy Trcscott and Walker Blaine. Mr. Pendleton asked that the Committee on Civil Service be instructed to report whether assessments for partisan purposes are being levied on Govern­ ment employes, bnt Mr. Plumb objected. Mr. McMilian introduoed a bill for a treaty with the Sioux Indians for the oession of part of their reservation. Mr. Sewell pre­ sented an act alk>~ing $10,000 to the widow of Minister KilPatrick. Mr. Plumb offered a resolution of inquiry as to the sway of the Typographical Union in the Government Printing Offioe, which was adopted. Mr. Beck presented a resolution that the General Appro­ priation bills be reported as soon as possible, which was laid over. The Army bill was taken tip. Tne amendment that after forty years of service any officer may apply for retirement was adopted, and also a olause fixing 64 years as tbe age for compulsory retirement In the House, Mr. White offered* a resolution to release the Committee on Ways and Means from further investigation as to the extension of the bonded period for spirits. This led to a war of words between Messrs. White and Kel- ley. Mr. Robertson introduced a bill to apply to the permanent improvement of the Missis­ sippi river an amount equal to the ootton tax collected in that region. Mr. White offered a res­ olution for an inquiry as to the connection of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue with the Bonded Spirits bilL Mr. Turner moved to abolish the duty on trace chains, which was lost. A motion by Mr. Henderson to make the Illinois and Michigan Canal bill the special or­ der for June 15 was urged by Messrs. Springer and Marsh, and opposed by Messrs. Bland and Singleton, and was voted down. For publio buildings at Concord, N. H., and Marquette, Mich., @100,000 each was appropriated. Mr. Lynch introduced a bill to guarantee the inter­ est on ®50,000,000 bonds of a projected railway on the levees from New Orleans to Cario. tarv of Legation at Paris, and E. G. Yan Rifer Consul at Moscow. In the House, a bill was reported to suspend the issue of silver cer­ tificates and limit the coinage of silver dollars. A report on the Northern Pacifio land grants stated that no legislation is required to hasten the completion of the road. A bill was reported to compel the Kansas Pacifio to defray the cost of surveying s^Coonveying certain lands. In the contested-Sotton case from the First district of FMHt . a. t^opmmendatioii was made that Mr, vavidson have leave to with­ draw. Mr. White indulged in some personal remarks in regard to the report erf the Com­ mittee- on Ways and Means on the Bonded Sprit-bilL The tteueral Deficiency Appropria­ tion bill was read by sections. Mr. MoCook called attention to the clause appropriating t32,- 828 for liabilities incurred by the fork town Cen­ tennial Commission, and asked an explana­ tion. Mr. Cobb caused the bill for liquors to be read, which covered $6,529, on which a lively debate arose. Mr. Hewitt presented a resolution of the New York Chamber of Coak- meroe in opposition to ih» sale ot Um Brook­ lyn navy-yard. Mr. Kasson secured the unani­ mous passage of resolutions in eulogy of uah- baldi. The petition of M. D. Ball to b© admit­ ted as delegate from Alaska was reported back without recommendation. Bills were passed by the Senate, at its ses­ sion on the 7th inst, to erect ptblie buildings at Ciarksburg, W. Ya.; Camden, N. J., and Lynchburg, Ya., involving @215,000. In re­ gard to the bill to give the administratrix of John C. Underwood $5,000 for contesting his claim to a seat, the statement was made that deceased was a Judge in the Federal Court, and ctustantly in reoeipt of a salary. The District of Columbia bill, which appropriates 12,367,767, occupied the remainder of the ses­ sion. The House went into com­ mittee of the whole on the General De­ ficiency Appropriation bill. Mr. Sparks made a fruitless attempt to strike out the clause setting aside $900,000 for army transportation for two years. Mr. Ilolman failed in an effort to cut out $125,000 for army transportation to land-grant roads. Mr. Blount, in moving to strike out an appropriation of $150,000 for the Bureau of Construction and Repair of the Navy, called out Mr. Robeson, who boasted that every ship bearing the American flag had been built by him, and that they are the beet of their kind. Mr. Sparkj apologized to Mr. Cos for having, in debate, called him " a little scamp." The District of Columbia Appropriation DQI was passed by the Senate, on the 8th inst, after refusing to remit $40,000 unpaid taxes on the property of the late Superintendent Patterson, of the Coast Surrey. Mr. Hawioy reported a Joint resolution, which was adopted, appropri­ ating $10,000 lo furnish food to destitute peo­ ple ia tbe overflowed portion of Mississippi. The House passed a bill increasing t© §4© per month the pension of any soldier who lotft a leg, hand or foot in the late war. The General De- Seiency Apwopriatio'i bill was taken up and passed, motions being defeated to strike out the clauses of $125,000 for land-grant railroads, of $362,000 for tho Naval Bureau of Construction, nuu of £11-,CO.: fvi' Spcciul Dcput" '"'•ir'hale, A joint resolution WAS passed to lend 1,000 army tents to shelter Russian refugees at Vino- land, N. J. Bills were reported to create the Oregon Short-Line Railroad Company and the National Railroad Company. Mr. Calkins reported in favor of limiting to #2,000 the ex­ pense of contesting seats. The Democrats of the Senate held a caucus to consider tho nomi­ nations on the Tariff Commission. Considerable opposition to the make-up was developed. Sen­ ator Vest received a dispatch from ex-Gov. Phelps, of Missouri, declining the appoint- A MAN. or Jne of the lower animals, compelled to breathe for half an hour an atmosphere c<mtainiiig 1-779 of carbonic acid, absorbs fliat gas in Btich quantities that one-half tke red blood corpuscles combice with it.Vnd become Incapable of absorbing oxi l'iielps, A Joint resolution to refund internal-revenue taxes illegally collected from the Detroit House of Correction wis passed by the Senate on the 9th inst Mr. Yan Wyck offered a resolution, which was laid over, that the nominations to the Tariff Com­ mission be considered in open session. A bill was passed authorizing the Postmaster General ,0 extend mail routes, at pro-rata, additional pay, for any distance, not exceeding twenty- five miles. Tho Japanese Indemnity bill was discussed and flung aside. The House spent the day in committee of the whole on the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Appropria­ tion bill. A proposition by Mr. Burrows to equalize the salaries of Senate and House employes was agreed to. Mr. White objected to the item of $2,300,000 for salaries in the In­ ternal Revenue Bureau, and it was passed until the bill is completed by the committee. Nearly half the items were considered, when a recess was taken. At the evening session twenty-five pension bills were passed. The Storm That Mr. Qnlllkopper Saw "Yes, gentlemen, that was rather a severe storm, but it wouldn't compare with some I'v»^M|^Why, a wind came along here^^^^kuors ago that lifted a street ct^^^^^Hnathe track and held it agaii^^^^^^^^^, house for four days, a barrel of asbes Depot, just as • • 11-4 • •> ' Sii l> ;. and I'll be hanged if that barrel wasn't carried every foot of the way out there, and then dropped in a back yard owued by a brother of the man who had it in St. Louis. And dust! Why, one day while I wan shingling my house, I nailed the shingles all over the roof, and thought it took a great many shingles to do it. Well, when I came to investi­ gate, I found 1 had been nailing them to the dust! Another time--" But a bystander considerately killed him, and the Recording Angel had time to shaken her pencil.--St. Louis M&- " ' ; - TRAI5 BOBBERS. A Party ef Four Attack a IVIweari Pacific Train--One *f Then UIM and Another Captured. While a north-bound passenger train on the M'ssouri Pacific railroad was passing through a deep cut one mile north of Deuton, Texas, it was signaled by a lantern and stopped. A train robbery on this line had been anticipated for some time, and trains have heavily-armed guards in them. When the train stopped lour mt.-u wearing pasteboard masks sprang into tbe mail car with drawn putols. Tiitv evidently mistook the mail car for tbe express car. They were confronted by the puard and attaches of the mail service witli*drawn pistols and leveled shotguns, and the bat t1." immediately opened. The shots were without t freer, but the robbers turned tail and ran up tho embankment of the cut, pursued by the guards. One of the robbers was seen te fall, spring to bis feet again, aud make to tho hi ush in the darkness. The guards and train­ men returned lo tho cars, and the train was backed down to Denton, where the alarm was given, and a posse of officers and citizens im­ mediately organized and started in pursuit The train then proceeded to St Louis. The next day the dead Dody of one of the robbers was found a few hundred yards from the scene of the conil ct, with his head aud back riddled witti buckshot (He was identified as S. P. Shell on, son of a respeotable farmer, living fifty mites from Denton. Ho was about 22 years old, and had been recently working on a farm near Denton. Another member of the gang surrendered. His name is James Carter, son of a farmer near Denton. He days the robbery was planned by tbe two robbers who are at large. They are strangers who came to that section recently. Carter refuses to divulge their names. He says the four of them assembled at Denton about twenty minutes before the arrival of the train and determined to rob it. Carter had just been released from the Huntsvilie penitentiary, where he served two years for theft, The rob­ bers secured nothing from the train. They had piled up logs and other obstructions across the track a few miles in advance of where they signaled the train, so that if it did not stop n woold be wreaked. Consolation. Dear friend, do you ever stand in the doorway of memory, when the golden sun lights up the road over which you have traveled, through the dpst and heat of former years and while yo% look out over the fields of your great struggles, and victories, and defeats, do you ever wish yourself back agaiu beyond the hour when first ambition filled your heart and made your present seem dis­ tasteful and poor and mean in your eyes? Do you ever figure your gains and losses and look with weariness and unrest upon your achievements ? Does it not ^sometimes occur to you that you have dearly bought your position and wealth ? Ah, who can buy the joyous hope and bounding health of sore-toed boyhood ? What wfealth can procure the free and unalloyed satisfaction of those days when you could eat your fish-bait and stay in the water up-to your eyebrows all day ? Would not the President to­ day madlv fling away his sceptre of power and resign his lofty position if he could once more be placed back at the threshold of life, with his pantaloons hanging by one home-made suspender. How empty and how vain are the glories that crown the hero of a thous­ and battles. How worthless are the faded laurels that crown the bilious, pimply brow of greatness. We combat with all humanity for a proud position and just as we get our name in print, we find that our digestion has gone back on us and the overtaxed gastric department must be sent to the shop for repairs. \ Then oomes those retrospective long­ ings for the dreamy nights long since, when the Katydid sang in the August grass and the watermelon went to its long home. Then come golden mem­ ories of the bright days of mid-summer, when beneath the bending willow we bathed in the sunny depths of the silent pool and speared the warty toad with an old pitchfork. It is a proud day to the ambitious statesman, when in the flush of victory he stands before the applauding host of those who have carried him upward to this glorious moment, when he feels his own strength and calmly surveys the gory field over which he has fought. But when every man who voted for him, has asked and petitioned him for the $9 postoffice at his old home and threaten to bolt all nominations and disrupt the party if he cannot have it, there steals over the senses of the great statesman the fruitless wish that he may be taken back to the old home where he snared gophers with an old fish line or pasted blue mud all over his freckled skin and ran along the beach in the warm July air and scared the frisky horses of the young lovers who drove along the pebbly shore. Greatness is to be sought for and de­ sired because it stirs the stagnant am­ bition of man and helps him to kill time, but fresh laurels and bronze med­ als caunot minister to a pair of torpid kidneys. The praise of men and the smiles of beautiful women cannot bring joy to the heart of a hollow-eyed states­ man who cannot digest anything but oat meal mush and distilled Graham juioe. The world is full of great men, men whe, when they write their names on a hotel register, are sure that they will be interviewed by newspaper men and their words printed before breakfast; men who wear Prince Albert coats every day and talk grammatically even when they are mad; but the collection of happy men--men who laugh and have fun and never miss ,, a meal--is comparatively small. Wealth does not always do the business, either. Money can buy off the opinions of the public sometimes, and take the edge from popular censure, but it cannot clioke off the nightmare or still the vague unrest of a congested liver.--Lannie Boomerang. Preachers as Eaters. The Evangelist Harrison is a mau of delicate frame, and of such almost effem­ inate expression and appearance as to make it easy for him to preserve the title of "Boy Preacher," under which lie first became famous. A lady at whose house he was some time ago en­ tertained notioed the fact that he ate no more than enough for a child. She spoke of this one day at dinner, and said she thought it was an evidence of great spirituality and heavenly minded- ness. Her husband, who is a very mus­ cular clergyman, and another equally muscular clergyman who happened to be present, both remarked that they saw no evidence of heavenly mindedness in a sparse diet. On the contrary, they claimed to be quite as well on in holiness m the young evangelist himself, but they were thankful that they were able to glorify the Lord by habitually eating Romance is BeaJ Life. The scene it laid atBuena Vista,alovely little village on the Upper Ohio, charm­ ingly situated midat the picturesque scenery of that romantic region. Buena Vista is much like the average country village, situated away from the hurry and bustle of the world, the inhabitants enjoying life in that contented manner so characteristic of rural simplicity. The village has attained a National rep­ utation from its celebrated and extensive freestone quaries that penetrate the rugged hilis round about, the produc­ tions of which being largely used in erecting the magnificent structures of architectural beauty that embellish the avenues of our great cities. To this rural retreat there wandered in the spring of 1873 a gentlemanly appearing stranger, his attire and speech plainly stamping him a native of England, He" was called Farney. He was of a quiet, retired disposition, seemingly not desirous of forming acquaintances. , He had been in the place but a short time when he became acqainted with another Englishman by the name of Tyndall, also a recent arrival, and the two entered into partnership and established a nursery for the cultivation of fruit trees and small fruits. They succeed finely in their undertaking, especially in peach growing which developed to perfection on those rugged hills. The villagers were not loug in finding out that Farney was a gentleman possessed of rare edu­ cational abilities, and in the fall of 1874, being in need of a principal for their high school, he was tendered the posi­ tion, which was accepted. Entering upon the duties he Boon proved himself a master of his profession, and the in­ habitants quietly congratulated them­ selves upon their apt selection. Among the pupils attending the high school was a bright, lovely and accomplished young lady of eighteen, Miss Wooltan. She was a blooming brunette, petite in stat­ ure, possessed of all the graces and virtues imaginable, and was a woman that would be called saintly among women. Under these circumstances it was not strange that the Principal became infatuated with his lovely pupil, and the infatuation was equally as deep upon her part. As they became more deeply involved in love's meshes, Farney pro­ posed and was accepted. It is an ancient saying, that there are always obstacles in the way of true love, an,d! it was exemplified in this instance. The parents of the young lady, who were of aristocratic descent, bitterly opposed the attention of Farney toward their daughter, and she being of a weak and vacillating disposition, they finally prevailed upon her to break the engage­ ment. She declared that she loved only Farney, and would never marry another. Farney lost all interest in his work from that moment, tendered his resignation and stated his resolution to leave. He asked the privilege of a last interview with his beloved, which was granted. What was said is too sacred to relate here, but as a last favor he requested her to sing that tender song of Burns. As her fingers rippled over the keys of the piano, the words came out as a heart- cry in low, passionate accents: " Had we never loved sae kindly, Had we never lttved sae bliniiiy, Never met or never parted, We had ne'er been broken-hearted. " Fare thee Wteel, thou first and fairest! Fare thee weel, thou best and dearest! Thine be ilka joy and treasure, Peace, enjoyment, love and pleasure! Ae fond kiss aud then we sever, Ae farewell, alas! forever." As the melody died away he clasped her in his arms, pressed a long, passion­ ate kiss upon her lips and left the house and a broken heart behind. Farney left the village on the first boat that came along, and in a few days the daily papers contained a brief notice of a drowned body having been picked up a few miles above Cincinnati, which, from the description, was identified by the residents of Buena Vista as their former High School Principal. The young lady, upon heariug of the suicide of her lover, was inconsolable, and to all out­ ward appearances was dead to the pleas­ ures of the world. Numerous suitors sought her hand, but her steadfast devo­ tion to her dead lover prevailed, and they retired from the field baffled In 1876, while on a visit to relatives in the famous Blue Grass region of Kentucky, Miss Wooltan attracted the attention of a wealthy fine stock raiser, who was also connected with the United States Rev­ enue service. After a brief acquaint­ ance he proposed and was rejected. He took his rejection so much to heart that he disposed of his farm and went South, but in the summer of 1881, he wandered back to the old home, and as it oppor­ tunely happened, Miss Wooltan was again there on a visit. Their acquain­ tance was renewed, and by persistent attentions, he finally won the consent of the young lady to marry him, although she frankly told him that it was impos­ sible for her to love him, as her heart was buried with her lover; but she would endeavor to be a true and faithful wife, and would use all means to make his life a happy one. The wedding trou&Beau was purchased regardless of expense, and the wedding was celebrated with great ceremony, being one of the most brilliant and noteworthy affairs that ever occurred in that region, famous for its wealth and culture. The wedded life so auspiciously begun was destined to be of short duration, scarcely six months passing by until the husband was killed by a railroad accident in the State. The bereaved widow withdrew from society and lived the life of a recluse. Three months after death of the husband, Farney, the supposed drowned man, unexpectedly turns up, to the astonishment of his Buena Vista friends, who had long mourned his decease. He hears of the marriage of his old love, of the husband's recent death and makes a trip to Kentucky. He seeks out the lady, and after a long and touching interview finds that their former attachment has strengthened with the passing years, and becomes the accepted husband cf his early love.-- Cincinnati Commercial. A Curious Fact. Professor W. D. Gunning, the noted scientist and geologist, made the follow­ ing statement in a recent lecture : A codfish in one year lays 3,000,000 eggs. Suppose that every egg became a cod ; suppose that in all the universe there is only one codfish ; that all germs lived, and that space furnished matter, as the fishes furnished eggs. On the morning of your twentieth birthday you hold this fish on the palm of your hand, walk out on a pier, and drop the coil into the sea. Then fly. Under your feet iu one year will be an ocean of cod, invest­ ing the globe and overtopping the loft­ iest peaks of Colorado. With the speed of light fly. Through the depths of space fly. The swelling, bounding globe of cod is after you, and on the morning of your fortieth birthday it will overtake you and engulf you in Onon's rebula ! The speaker couldn't tell a bigger fish •tory than that. ^ Growth of Railroads. The first railroad in the United States was completed in .1827, at Quincy, Mass., by Gridley frrvatit PtrkiwL it ation of granite tor the building of the Bunker Hill monument, and was oper­ ated by horse power. Tho rai a were wooden, plated with iron. The to al length i f line in the United States, aft* cording to the statistic* (riven in 1881 ill " Poor's Manual," is 93,671 miles. The Cave Hen. Aooording to Prof. Boyd DawkfiM, the numerous discoveries made in Franoe, Belgium and Switzerland have enabled scientists to form a tolerably definite idea as to the cave man's habits and mode of life. He dwelt for the most part in caves, and he accumulated enor­ mous masses of refuse, bones of the animalB on which he lived. In these refuse heaps were numerous implements of stone, bone and antler, spear-heads, arrow-heads, scrapers, elaborately-cut harpoon-heads, elaborate needles of bone and antier, and along with these occurred curions carvings representing the surroundings of the cave man, and for the most part reproducing the forms of the animals on which he lived. From tbe numerous implements for scraping skins, it might be inferred that the cave man dressed in skins, sewn together by needles. They also wore gloves, as was known from the representations of gloves, with two, three or four fingers, and run­ ning most np to the elbows, like the twenty-six-button gloves of the present time. Perforated stones and shells, and the teeth of bears, lions and wolves were used as necklaces and amulets. They adorned themselves with red raddle, which might be looked npon as the iin - eal ancestor of rouge. In their hunting they used speanrand arrows. On one bit of antler found in France they saw the hunter carefully creeping up to the gigantic ox--the great urus ; in others,, they saw figures of bisons, reindeer, horses, ibexes; and in others the great woolly mammoth was represented so faithfully that were it not for the discovery of the creature in the frozen morasses of Siberia it would be said that the drawing was quite wrong. On other slabs of stone might be seen the birds and fishes on which the cave men lived. All those outlines had been made with a splinter of flint, and were engraved in a great many cases upon the bones and teeth of the animals which were represented. The oave men also were sculptors, and the handles of some of their daggers made of reindeer antler or ivory represented the form sometimes of a kneeling rein­ deer and at other times of elephants. The cave men were hunters pure and simple, without knowledge of the metals, without domestic animals, and were even ignorant of the potter's art. Nor had they left behind them any evidence that they were in the habit of burying their dead. Could the cave men be identified with any living race ? The answer was to be found in their habits, implements and art. On the shores of the great Arctic sea, on both sides of Behring's straits, and along the north of the American continent and Greenland, lived the Esquimaux, a people cut off from all others, and whose origin was a puzzle to the ethnologists. These people had ex­ actly the same habit of accumulating refuse, their implements were exactly of the same kind, and their art was identi­ cal with that of the cave man in Europe. They live also to a great extent on the same animals, and they were careless as to what happened to their dead. From all these lines of argument it might be inferred that the Esquimaux was in all probability the living representative of the cave man, just as the musk sheep now living in Esquimaux-land was un­ doubtedly the representative of tbe musk sheep then living in Franoe. Trying to Cure or Prevent Hydropho­ bia. Experiments are being made in Franoe to discover some method by which hy­ drophobia may be averted. Mr. Pas­ teur has found that by inoculating a rabbit with cultivated germs from the saliva of a boy who had died of hydro­ phobia, a fatal disease was produced, which, however, was not hydrophobia. M. Galtier has taken up the inquiry and carried it a step further. Acting on the principle that a virus has a different effect when injected directly into the veins from that produced by merely in­ serting it under the skin, he injected some hydrophobic poison into the veins of a number of sheep and goats. No disease was produced in these animals, but it was found they were proof against hydrophobia when received into the body in the usual way, while other ani­ mals not. thus protected died. Thwfe experiments are not yet decisive, but they offer some hope that a remedy may yet be discovered against the terrible malady. . TOTE man who lives chiefly on flesh, eggs and bread obtains in two or three pounds of such food nutriment equiva­ lent to an Irishman's ten pounds of po­ tatoes and extras. THE oells of the human lungs are from one two-hundredth to one-seven­ tieth of an inch in diameter, and are in number about six hundred million. "THE" St ABUTS. NEW YORK. $0 TO M HOOS TH A8as COTTO* 13 ^ nv FLOUB--Snperflne. (90 @ $ 00 WHEAT--NO. 2 8p«ing 180 @131 No. % iied 1 46 @ 1 4T CORN--Ungraded 68 @ CT OATS--Mixed Western. M A 57 PORK--Mess. II 35 ott 95 11^® 11\ CHICAGO. BBVM--Choice Graded Steers 8 00 ® 9 40 Cowa and HefTera. 8 'Mi @ 8 5 0 Medium to Fair 7 CO 7 75 Hoo*. « 00 @ 8 50 FLOCK--Fancy White Winter Ex.... • W (A 7 36 Good to Choice Spring Ex. • 58 @ 7 00 WHIAT--No. 2 SpriDg 1 2 7 @ 1 3 8 Mo. 3 Spring 1 18 (<* 1 13 Cobk--No. 2 7« & 71 OATS No. 2 49 § 51 RYE--NO. 2 73 74 Bum--No. X 99 (4 1 00 BUTTEII--Choice Creamery 23 ^ 35 KGGH--Freeh 18 (A 17 POBK--Meaa .19 50 @19 75 -- • w,- --V" • • "KG MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 3 ) 30 $ 1 31 Oons--No. 2 70 ^ 71 OATB--No. 2 49 0 50 1UE--No.2. 74 @ 75 Baiilbt--NO. 3 ,65 88 POBK--Meas M 50 @19 75 LARD u a IJV ST. LOtUb. * WHFAT-- NO. 2 Bed ...;.. 1 Si (A 1 38 CORN--Mixed 73 q 75 OATS--No. 2 b8 @ 08 KVB 74 « 75 Poafc--Mesa 30 00 £20 25 La*d 11)4 CINCINNATI. W"*™** 81 A 1 84 Cobn 76 <4 77 Oats 84 @ 55 **»• •••• 79 <4 80 PORK--Meat 19 75 @20 00 Law> 11 » 11* TOLEDO. WHEAT--Na 3 Bed I 86 A 1 37 £ow 75 9 98 °AT« ..., 53 £ 54 DETBOIT. FLOUR--Choice 8 35 A 9 00 WHEAT--No. 1 White 1 28 a 1 M COBS--Mixed 70 A 73 OATS--Mixed SO A 58 BABLET (per cental) 300 a 3 30 POBK--Haa 30 00 @30 50 INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--Na 3 Bed. 188 0 1 81 CORK--No. 3 78 A 74 ', 64 4# 8fc EAST UBEBTT, PA. \ CATraa--Beat 7 a 8 00 • 36 ' ® 7 00 Ooamm 4 M @ s 50 8 T O 9 8 1 1 • - i Z B T i U ' . 4 « ̂ 8 m 0!

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