Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Jul 1882, p. 2

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|Hc^|fnrw ^Iniudcaltr J. VAN SLYKE, Editor and Publisher. - >i,iF.NHV, •- ILLINOIS. v** r; v«4r ! i:z i •Vo n. • 'V- U> I vJlfiS# : . J - W E E K L Y I E W S R E V I E W . THE EAST* W«M», WEUBON MOCANDIJM, who «u ®tw many years Jodge of the United 8tet« Dis­ trict Court for the Western district of Pennsyl­ vania, died lately at his home m Pittsburgh, 1 t£ed72. J, THE mining town of Coalville, Pa., irtT miles north of Pittsburgh, wm ravaged by a cvclona Two persons were killed and six- , |»en injured. Bight houses were blown down, . act a board of the residence of William Barnes " remaining in sight, A large body of water was lifted oui of the dam and carried away A . ftvc-ntory building on Fourth street," near ifcestnut, Philadelphia, occupied as a furniture Motion house by M. Thomas A Sons, was com­ pletely destroyed by fire, the loss being $275,- IN the matter of the railroad accident «t Long Branch, the Coroner's jury foiled the 1 ^fttnpany guilty of gross and cnlpftble'negti- geuoe. Gen. Grant was a witness at the m- qneat, and was given two silver quarters, which K pocketed... .At a Fourth of July celebration, Bnllivftvi, the champion pugilirt, gave a picnic at New York. One of the events was a sparry match between the champion and James Elliott, in which the latter, if he should Succeed in knocking Sullivan " out," was to re­ vive $500. In the third round Elliott was knocked into insensibility, and was then taken home The crew from the University of Pennsylvania won the inter-collegiate race at Lake George, the We^leyans being second, flowed, stroke of the Princetons, fainted as fiey crossed the line. MOST oi the convicts in the Massa­ chusetts penitentiary struck for the holiday recreation of one hour which was denied them ^ the Fourth, and demolished their cell fur­ niture. .., A brother of ex-Gov. Cobura, of Maine, while demented from sickness, drowned Wpjself in the river at Showhegan, and his son also perished in attempting a rescue Four Children of Bryan Foley, of Burlington, Tt, •were fatally poisoned by eating green currants. ? TIME mmm® PBOTKDIX, a trotting mare with a rec­ ord of 2-.18X, died in Cincinnati. Her owner oncerefusel $30,000 for her At Cincinnati, Jacob Wagner, an intimate acquaintance of Henry Cole, who a short time since killed bis . wife, hi* daughter and himself, came home drunk the other day, and, after taking a short deep, utaot his wife through the head, killing brr instantly, and then put a bullet in his own ^ dimple, inflicting a fatal wound. AT Lincoln, Neb., Emma and Sallie -i* were fataMy burned, their clothes being &ed by a lamp, over which they were heating %? curling-tongs Edwin Cowlea, of Cleve­ land. has instituted- a libel suit for 25,000 •gainst Bishop Gilmoar, on account of a letter pnbh^hed reternng'to the invalid daughter of the editor. INFORMATION has reached Denver of •fi uprising among the Indiana at the Southern lite Agency, caused by the killing of one of . their number by Savaro, a policeman, also an Indian At San Carlos Agency Charlie Col- : "fig, Chief of Scouts, with three of his Indian police, were killed while counting the Indians preparatory to issuing rations. The killing was •one by White mountain renegade* The military eucampment at Indianapolis was " a thorough success. The troops paraded the streets of the city and were reviewed by Gov. Porter. The State artillery prize was won by the Porter Llglit Artillery, of Michigan City. *"Sffce Chickasaw Guards, of Memphis, were giv- ,,«n the mtantry prize of $-3,500, the Crescent City BiHes, of fiiew Orleans, getting the §1,000 'parse. The receipts of the encamp- . Went were $35,000 ; the expenses $25,000.... she winter-wheat yield of Kansas for 1882 is '* Officially estimated at 30,843.452 bfishels, and fliie epnag-wheat yield at l,75u,000, a total of 12,093,452 bushels, which is nearly 1,000,000 bushels greater than the great crop of 1878, ®fae acreage of corn has increased 6 per cent, «nd the probable yield is estimated at 175.000,- •00 busbels. Oats and rye are more than double the acreage of 1881, and of the former the heaviest crop ever harvested is expected. A great merest e is also shown in other crops Mud in the number of farm animals as com­ pared with last year. WS THE SOUTH. "f THE Confederate soldiers of Missouri ! j*re to hold a reunion at SedaUa Aug. 15, when Jt least 10,000 are expected, the Government IbaniBg tents. THBEB colored men, named Turner, H|ad been for several dajB visiting the village of sftrooksviile, Pla., and indulging in threat* • against some citiseua, causing much bad feel- '*fcg. This culminated a few days ago in a row lii the Court House, started by one of the Tur- „®era entering the building just as the afternoon Cession of the court was being called, with an ••pea knife in his hand. In the fight that fol- vljpwed the three Turners were killed and several #ther negroes participating wounded, but not '••'(tioitally. *' THE Texas Pacific freight depot, at Fort Worth, Texas, was destroyed by fire. The wareroom contained a large quantitv of goods. The Ipsa is estimated at §150,000. Insured. MARY BOOTH, a negro girl 14 years of age, has been convicted of murdering two per­ sons by poison, in Surrey county, Virginia, and Sentenced to be hanged in November. The Jury signed a petition for executive clemency. ^ A TERRIBLE fight occurred at a picnic •ear Louisville, Ky., in which a drunken rough fat four men. Of the four two were fatally •tabbed, and the other two seriously. THE style of snake they are killing in Arkansas this grimmer is five feet in length, of grayish shade, a five-inch horn in the tip of the {ail, and * long sting in the horn. POLITICAL. AT a delegate convention of the Green­ back party of Texas, held at Fort Worth, it was resolved to nominate no ticket, but to recom­ mend G. Wash Jones to all elements opposed • to the Demooracy. Gen. Weaver addressed the convention. THE Iowa Stale Register prints re- tarns on the election for the prohibition amend­ ment from all the counties in the State. In the ninety-nine counties the amendment has aggre­ gate majorities of 50,724, and the aggregate majorities against it are 21,817. giving it a net majority of 29,107. THE Democratic State Central Com­ mittee of Missouri hu called the State Con­ vention. to be held at Jefferson City, July 26, to nominate a Judge of the Supreme Court, a Su­ perintendent of Public Schools, a Register of Lands and a Railroad Commissioner. THE Greenback-Labor party of Gon- u®etierii nominated A. P. Tanner, of New Lon­ don, for Governor, and H. C. Baker, of Hart­ ford, for lieutenant Governor... .The North . ..Carolina Democrats held their State Conven­ tion at Raleigh, and nominated candidates far Congressman-at-Large and Supreme Oonrt Judge. The nominees were B. L Bemiuili mi Thomas Raffia THE Arkansas State Republican Con­ vention was held st little Bode. Ex-Benator Powell Cl&ytfOH was the permanent Chairman. Col. W. D. Slash was nominated for Governor ' »y acclamation J. L. Sheffield has been. nominated for Governor by the Republicans. Greenbackers and Independents of Alabama. . WAsiKiirarroii* ~ Foijjowuio is the regular monthly statement of the public debt, Issued on the 1st daring Jane Deorwuw«ia«» Jane SO, 1881......., Current MsMBMss totsmtdiMandmiMM^ .....9 1,485,188 Debt cm. whws tntsnl h-- oeaaed.... . 18,260,805 Intoi w* thereon. , ^ 63MU 6eldand«Uv*eertMU*iw ' A,na,H30 United States note* Held for redemption of eemooatss of depowc. 18,330,000 Cash baianoeavaUaWsiuijf ^ 188 .̂.. fMsl... ..8 V4S,a»«,M» ..8 M3,M9,819 Available i Oadtin tressury.. Bonds iwnedto PaetfloraOwayeoniMa- lee, interest tn lawful money, ynndpal outxtanding .f 8<y<93,819 Interest socmpd and not yet paid 1,938,705 Interest paid by United States. 68,406,»fT Interest repaid Uy compainse-- Bt transnortatioD servioe 11,930,893 By easa payments of 5 per cemv. ot net cirninira. 688^196 Balanoe of interest paid by the UniMd States. 37,530,085 THE body of Guiteau was buried in the northeast corridor of the jail at Washing­ ton. Under the law, the disposition of the bodies of criminals who are executed rests within the discretion of the Warden. In the case of Guiteau, his sister, Mrs. Sooville, was without means, and conld not have under­ taken his burial expenses even if permitted to do so. The only other relative who has appeared on the scene, his brother, John W. Guiteau, was unwilling to assume the risk of taking charge of the remains, believing he would be powerless to prevent " body-snstcbera" from etealiog them. Therefore, Qeit. Crocker resolved to \bury the assassin's body within the walla of the iail, where it would be beyond reach alike of vengeance or speculation. The brick floor was removed, and a grave seven feet deep waB dug. The coffin was borne from the chapel upon the shoulder* of six jail prisoners, andp without any service or ceremony whatever, was lowered into this grave and" barred from sight. The cofrin was closcd and no one hap since been permitted to see the remains. Mrs. Sooville, aooompanied by Miss Chavalliere, arrived at the jail shortly before the burial took place, and importuned the Warden to be allowed to see the remains and witness the buriaL Gen. Crocker, however, remained firm in his deter­ mination not to accede to her request. Arriv­ ing at the grave, the little procession halted. Warden Crocker looked inquiringly, first toward Dr. Hicks and then, to John W. Guiteau. " All right," said the latter, with the same imper­ turbable composure he has exhibited all through the ordeal of -the three days, and the coffin, was at once lowered to its place. Af­ ter the earth had been replaced and the top of the grave leveled off, John W. Guiteau stepped forward and placed at its head a crown of white immortelles. Not a word was spoken, not a tour shed. An outcast from human sympa­ thy when living, Guiteau had found an unwept sepulture in an unmarked grave. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTHASTES GKN- ««»• HAZEX'S office issued to Postmasters dur­ ing the past year stamped envelopes, postage stamps and postal cards amounting in value to *40,977,953. Over 1,000,000,- 000 three-cent stamps and 850,000,000 postal cards were sold during that period.... The first anniversary of the assassination of President Garfield was observed at Washington liv the laying of the corner-stone of the Garfield Memorial Church, which will occupy the site of the little frame Christian Church in which Gen. Garfield was for so many years a worshiper and a communicant IK response to a resolution ERF inquiry, the Senate Military Committee has reported that 53 per cent, of the employes of the House and 15 per cent of those of the Senate are honorably discharged Union soldiers, while the average in the executive departments is 40 per cent. IT is said that Public Printer Bounds had 4,000 applications for positions. Though he has made comparatively few changes, com­ plaints are arising that too many have been dismissed without cause The corpse of Guiteau was secretly removed from the jail to the Army Medical Museum in Washington, where it will be prepared and placed on exhi­ bition. Rev. Dr. Hicks claims to have been offered all the way from $5,000 to 9100,000 for the skeleton, among the bidders being the Boyal College, of London. - SENERAL. CHICAGO Tribune: "Our dispatches report the rapid progress of wheat harvesting in many localities, and all give an encouraging forecast of the oats, rye and corn crops. The advices received by the Agricultural Bureau at Washington are favorable from all sections of the country. Wheat and oats are turning out better than was indicated by the flattering re­ ports of a month ago, and the eora prospects are cteadily improving." THE strike of the iron-workers at Bay View, near Milwaukee, was ended by a confer­ ence of two hours with the officers of the roll­ ing-mill company, and work in all departments has been resumed. Watson & Co.'s mill and theLeechburg mill, in the Pittsburgh district, signed the Amalgamated Association scale and alio resumed work. FOKEIOIT. EGYPT is evidently preparing to resist an attack by England. The war preparations continue at Alexandria with great activity. Work is progressing on the fortifications, some of the forts being equipped with heavy cannon, so trained upon the harbor as * to keep the British war vessels out of rang© and pre­ vent the landing of a military force.... Hie British House of Commons held a thirty- two-hour seasion, the excitement being over the discussion of the. Irish Impression bilL The Irish members fought the measure at every step, and sixteen of them were suspend­ ed for deliberately-planned obstruction of the- business of the House. Subsequently nine more were "named" and suspended. THE British House oi -Commons voted urgency for the Repression bill, by 259 to 31, whereupon all but four of the Irish members withdrew... .8ir Garnet Wolseley and others met at the British war offioe, the other day, to arrange for pay, clothing and subsistence for the army of reserve soon to be called out for Egypt. Harness equipments for the batteries are being prepared at Woolwich, and the men-of-war Ajax and Agamemnon are mak­ ing ready for immediate service.... Count De Lesseps looks with disfavor on the proposed English expedition to Egypt, and thinks there is no danger threatened to the Suez canal unless the people are exasperated by foreign intervention.....Special arrests of revolutionists have been made at 8t. Peters­ burg. Uhlan officers were found distributing Nihilistic documents, wbo had been charged with the protection of the Czar. THE Pope, in an allocution at the con­ sistory in Rome, said the position of the church in Italy was becoming worse than ever. The Government, he declared, was guilty of bad faith in refusing exequators to the twerity Bishops he had nominated. V THE Archbishops of Ireland have di­ rected the priasts to discountenance the Ladies' Land League, and to forbid women from at­ tending public meetings It is stated by the Freeman's Journal, of Dublin, that the Gov­ ernment intends to employ bloodhounds to track murderers... .Work on the fortifications of Alex­ andria was stopped under a threat by Admiral Seymour that he would open fire if it waa con­ tinued. A Government dispatch to Madrid states an attempt was made to cut the Sues • • great mflftaiy gento*. Nine thousand copies of a revolutionary procla­ mation, stated by a ooonnof the Caar, were discovered at toe Ministry of Marine, at St Petersburg. The director of the department, because of the discovery, committed suicide! FORTY Mexican soldiers, acting under orders of the customs officers, attacked a camp of smugglers near Piedras Negras. Half the troops were mounted, the others firing from a ravine. Gonzelos, the customs officer, was killed, and the smugglers lost two men. Nine of the contrabadistos were captured, as also forty bales of goods and forty horses. IN a remote section of Van Buren oounty, Ark., lived a woman and two children. A day oar two ago some persons chanced to pass her lonely habitation, and, seeing no signs of life, entered. The woman and one of the chil­ dren were found dead, and the living child had gnawed pieces of flesh from the dead child's arm. Jt is believed the woman fell siok and died from lack of food and care. THE Republicans of the Fourteenth Ohio district nominated for Congress State Sen­ ator Rollin A. Horr, of Wellington, a twin brother of the Michigan Congressman, and hii counter­ part in form and feature. A PITTSBURGH dispatoh says " it is now certain that the total loss of life "by the Ohio-river disaster will exceed 100. It becomes clearer and more conclusive every day that whisky WRS at the bottom of the collision, some of the officers of the Scioto and many of the passengers being helpless from intoxication at the time. There is a rumor to the effect that a party of girls were in the pilot-honse of the Scioto, ana one of them answered the signal of the Lomae and did it wrongly." CHE OHIO RIVER DISASTER. Particulars of the Staking of the Ex- camion steamer Scioto--Dlitrcsiiinf liOMOf X«lfe. From Pittsburgh papers we glean the follow­ ing particulars of the terrible disaster at Mingo Junction, on the Ohio river, on the 4th of July : The Scioto, a sidewheel steamer run­ ning between Wheeling and Matamoras, had been on an excursion to Monndsville, under the auspices of the Wellsville Cornet Band, and had left East Liverpool about 7 o'clock a. m.» taking 200 passengers aboard there. At Wellsville about 300 or 400 more got aboard, with a band* loading the boat to the guards with a mass of men, women and children. The steamer landed at Steubenville between 9 and 10 o'clock, and refused to take any passengers there, although several men and boys managed to clamber over the guards. She went on to Monndsville, and, returning in the evening, bad reached a point just above Cross creek, on the West Virginia side of toe river, when she met the John Loinas coming down in the middle of the stream. The latter is a small stern-wheel boat, which plies between Wheeling and Martin's Ferry, and had bee a to Steubenville with an excursion of about 200 people from the latter place. It was about 8:30 o'clock when she came in sight of the Sci­ oto. The clouds had mostly blown away and it was quite light on the river. The Loinas ap- Ejars to have signaled first, according to regu-tions, with one blast, to pass on the left. In a few minutes the Scioto responded with two, and made for the middle of the river. The Lomas then gave two whistles, bu,t the boats kept com­ ing clo.-er and closer together. Orders were given to back the engines, but it was too late to do any good. The boats came together with a tremendous crash, the Lomas (striking the Scioto on the larboard, or left-hand side, just about the ash-box, tearing into her guards and making a large hole in the hull, through which she began taking water at a rapid rate. As may be .imagined, the confusion on board was terrible. The number of women and chil­ dren on board was especially large, and as the boat began to settle at once the scene was heartrending--pareuts looking for their chil­ dren and vice versa, husbands for their wives and wives for their husbands, and prayers and cries filled the air. The officers, to their credit, tried to keep the people cool, with the usual result in such cases--nobody paid much attention to them. The boat began going down at once, and in three min­ utes there was five feet of water in the cabin. Those on the lower deck (not less than fifty in number) began jumping into the river, and the example was cuntagious. Many followed them like a flock of sheep, while others more cool made their way to the hurricane roof, where there was safety as long as it would hold up under the weight. There were a dozen or fif­ teen men lying drunk on the lower deck, and all were "doubtless hurried into eternity without warning. The river seemed black with human beings and debris of all kinds, and it will be days at least before the full extent of the disaster is known. There were three boats on the Scioto, and they were at once lowered. In the excitement the first was overcrowded and swamped, but it is believed that none of the inmateB were lost The other two boats were managed better, and did good work in rescuing passengers. The Lomas was not much damaged by the accident, and, after landing her crowd on the West Virginia shore, returned to the help of those on the hurricane deck of the Scioto. It required the greatest care in doing this work, first to avoid turning over the Scioto, and second, to avoid a rush from the Scioto to the Lomas, which might have been fatal. Four trips were made, and those on the boat were finally landed on the Ohio shore. The loss of life cannot yet be ascertained. There was no registry of the passengers, and the loss can only be determined by the failure of the missing to come home. Fourteen bod­ ies have been recovered up to this writing, and thirty-three are known to be missing. Hie total loss will exceed 100. The crowd in the boat was certainly not less than 500, and proba­ bly numbered 600 or 700. Extended <FB • Extended 6'B 7our aud one-bail per eeuC bosds Four per cents Eefundiae certificates Navy pension fund Total interest-bearing debt. Matured dew. ( Jjegsii tenders Certificate of depoait... Goid and silver oertifl- Total without HlMia. j-diiti ft-' 16,260,805 18,820,008 71,133.890 7,047,217 ADDITIONAL HEWS. ~ ADTAKCS sheets of Poor's Railway Manual show that in 1881 there were built ill the United States 9,358 miles of railroad, the greatest in any one year, making a total of 104,813 miles. The gross earnings were 4725,- j 825,119, against $615,401,931 in 1880. Divi­ dend's in 1881 were $93,344,200, against (>77,- : 115,411 in 1880. The editor says : "It is cer­ tain that for a long time to come a much greater extent of mileage will be constructed annually than was constructed in the [ past or than will be constructed in the present I year. The area of the United Btatex (exclud- ' nig Alaska) equals 3,000,000 square miltw. The ! whole of this area presents an attractive field ! for the construction of railroads. In almost : every portion of it these works are rapi lly pro- t1 ressiug. The railroad mileage of tbe United tates rose from 52,914 miles m 1870 to 104,813 miles in 1881. At a similar rate the mileage in 1899 will exceed 200.000. SKOBELEFF, the brillisafrBussian Gen­ eral, died in Moscow of heart disease. Born of a race of soldiers, he was, at the age of 43, 438.311,788 regarded bv the people of his own country and -- by tbe world in general as the foreinont soldier ...fMiB,3li,9v« of Kussia. His dashing exploits in the Khiva 2*3,289,509 campaign, in tbe Busso-Turkihh war, and in tlie expedition agaii^t the Tekke Turcomans gamed for him worldwide 58,957,160 401,50.1,900 250,000.000 738.884,300 465,050 1'.,000,000 «l«46a,aL0,4M .tl ,868,814,4M THE GLORIOUS FOURTH. Independence day was celebrated almost uni­ versally this year. Throughout the country the people were unusually profuse in their demon­ strations of patriotic enthusiasm, and in the Old World, wherever a colony or knot of Ameri­ cans was found, there was some observance of the great day. At Chicago the principal ob­ jects of interest were the races, which drew out 16,000 people, the championship ball gamua, attended by 20,000, and the parade and picnic of the workingmen, in which about 12,U0o participated. At Indianapolis an infantry drill attracted spectators estimated at 30,000. The Bain Zouaves, of St Louis, were given the honors in the contest with the Lackey Zouaves, of Chicago. Veteran soldiers of Ver­ mont, to the number of 10,000, held a reunion at Burlington, and were reviewed by Gov. Farnham and ex-Gots. Proctor and Barstow. There was a notable celebration at Woodstock, Ct., under the auspices or Henry C. Bowen. Sena­ tor Miller, of Mew York, was the chief orator. The New York Seventh regiment participated in the celebration at Buffalo. George W. Childs gave a dinner in Fairmount Park to 8oO Philadelphia newsboys. Senator Logan ad­ dressed an assemblage of 3,500 people at Lake Biuff, I1L At Williams Coiiege, Dr. Mark Hop- ! kins delivered a memorial address upon Presi- 1 dent Garfield. The assemblage contributed §3,000 to the Garfield professorship lund, and the memorial window was formally presented, i At New York and Washington the day was a quiet one, both cities being almost deserted. A grand reception in commemoration of the day was given at Westminster Palace Hotel, Lon- ! don, under the auspices of the Amer­ ican Exchange. Over a thousand persons were present Mane Roze, Emma Tnursby, and Minnie Hauk sang national songs, and dancing was kept up all night. The Duke and. Ducneaa of Sutherland were among the guests, as also Edwin Booth, Consul Packard gave a banquet to American ship masters at Liverpool, and toasted President Arthur. There was a celebration at Carlsbad, in which thirty Ghiea- goans participated. The day was attended, as usual, by a num­ ber of accidents in different parts of tbe coun­ try, the most serious of which occurred on the Onto river. The steamer Scioto, loaded with excursionists from Wellsville, W. Va., collided with the towbo&t John Loinas, opposite Mingo Junction, swing to a misunderstanding as to signals Within three minuter the steamer sank in fitteen feet of water, only the pilot house be­ ing visible. At first the loss of life was estimated as high as 250, but the later reporu make it prob­ able that not over twenty persons were drowned. The officers of the Lomas went in­ stantly to the res<tue, and rescued many of tbe imperiled. The explosion of a caiinon at Kipon, Wis., killed George Pago and injured | Jack Kingsbury. A temporary stand for fire- i works at Pekin, III., was* crushed by the weight of some reckless men and boys, and several persons beneath it were badly injured. At Leadville, CoL, Louis Poznancks was killed by the bursting of a gun. One child was burned to death in Chicago by an explo­ sion of fireworks. Madame Adele made a a balloon ascension from Oswego, N. Y., and came down ia Lake Ontario, seven miles from tfiflcq, being rescued by a tog. Condltto^fK «*l(e»a% Beaala* ae I»«*;<!loee* If the Autopsy -- Dr. tpeptnl Report of the Case. Tbe MetHo0 ffars, of Philadelphia, prints tbe official rspflTt of the post-mortem examina­ tion of tbe body of Charles J. Guiteau. The report is signed by *< Dr. Lamb," and is dated Army Medical Museum, Washington, July 4 : THK OFFICIAL KXPOKT. By reason of the delay, for which neither I nor my assistant! were responsible, the exam­ ination was not begun until 2.30 o'clock p. m., one hour and a half after death, in consequence of which the photographing was less success- full and a cast was impracticable. The body, which was of a faint, yellowish tint, was that of a man about five feet seven inches in height and weighed 140 pounds. The eyes were examined by Dr. Loring, who report­ ed the pupils slightly and equally dilated. The vitreous was cloudy and the fundus undistin- quishable ; the conjunctiva of the left eye was congested. He repeated the examination two hours later, and noticed an appearance as of a transverse fraotwe of the lenses. A small whito scar, directed obliquely downward, for­ ward, and to the left, and confined to the scalp, was observed midway between the top of the left ear and the median line of the head. The right parietal bone was slightly flattened over a space of about two inches square, just« back of the flronto parietal suture, and to the right of the inter-parietal there was a slightly flattened elevation on the corresponding inter­ nal surface of the calvaria. The frontal suture was obliterated, ftut the others were quite dis­ tinct A numbar of pacchionian depressions were observed near the groove for the longitu­ dinal sinus. In thickness the skull presented nothing re­ markable. The dnra matter was firmly adherent to the anterior portion of the calvaria in the vicinity of the longitudinal sinus. There were adhe­ sions of the dttra also to the base of the skull; they were quite firm, and situated in the several faaeae, and most marked in the deeper parts of the faftsae, where also there were small patches, abruptly limited, of immovable arborescent congestions, with, however, no attendant thickening or pigmentation. This stagnation was again marked in the left, anterior and middle faasae. There was no congestion of the dura, except at the points Just noted. The dura and piamater were adherent to each other, and to the brain on both sides along a limited portion of the lon­ gitudinal fissure, in the vicinity of the pacchio­ nian granulations. The dura was slightly thickened alongMthe longitudinal sinus. It was also slightly thickened and ppaque along the portion of the lino of the middle meningeal artery on each side. The arachnoid of the upper convexity of the brain presented in many places, where it covered the sulci, small patches of thicken­ ing and opacity, elsewhere it was normal. The piameter was anromic anteriorly; posterior­ ly there was slight hypastasis. The cere­ bral vessels appeared to be normal in all respects. The orbital plates were well arched, and presented many conical eminenoes of large size. There was no roughening anywhere of the inner surface of the skull. The brain was firm. Its weight, including the cerebrum, cerebellum, pans and medulla, and a portion of the dura, was 49% ounces. It was slightly flattened m the region correspond­ ing to the flattening of the parietal bone above mentioned. Orf section of the cerebrum there was the appearance of a slight thinning of the gray cartox. The measurements taken, how­ ever, gave depths of 1-16 to % inch in close proximity to each other. The white substance was almost absolutely amemio. The cerebel­ lum and island of lleil were both covered on each side. The fissures generally presented considerable depth ; in many places, as in the right fissurb of Rolando, amounting to seven-eighths of an inch. The right fissure of Sylvius was typical; the left was separated from the first temporal fissure by a slisrht bridge deeply situated. ' The right fissure of Rolando did not connect with the fissure of Sylvius; the left was sep­ arated only by a small bridge deeply situated: both were separated from the longitudinal, fissure. The first frontal fissure on the right side was not connected with that of Rolando, but the posterior part was crossed by a secondary fissure. The same was the case on the left side, except that the fissure was crossed by a small bridge near its center. The second and third frontal fissures pre­ sented nothing remarkable. There wore nu­ merous secondarp fissures. The pvfficeteral &nd retrocentral fissures, on each side, were well defined, and were uncon­ nected with the other fissures. The inter-parietal fissure on each side ter­ minated in the transverse occipital, separated only by a slight bridge. The parietooccipital fissure was well marked on each side. Th»- transverse occipital fissure on the right side was ill-defined ; it began on the median sur­ face and extended well outward. The first temnoral fissure was weM developed on the right side; on the left it was not Of the usual length. Wernicke's fissure was well marked on the left side, but was not confluent The caHoso marginal fissure was double on each aide, the upper of the two being probably the true one. On the right, the upper on© ex­ tended back to the anterior margin of the par­ acentral lobule ; on left, not quite so far. The lower one extended on the right side to a line about half an inch in front of the parieto-oo- cipitai fissure, from which it was separated by a small bridge; on the left side, also, by a bridge of larger size. On the right side were seven fissures radiat­ ing from the circular fissure surrounding a small isolated convolution. On the le£t side were five fissures radiating from a small, shal­ low depression. The left collateral fissure was well defined, extending to the anterior extremi­ ty of the temporal lobe. The right was also well marked, but did not extend so far back as the other, and there was an attempt at conflu­ ence anteriorly with the temporo-occipital, a small bridge intervening. The left temporo- occipital fissure was well defined. The following alone call for remark: The as­ cending frontal convolution was well defined on each si»le. The ascending parietal on the right side was well developed in its lower three- fouri hs. but narrowed in the upper fourth. On the left side the narrowing was less marked. The island of* Reil presented on the right side five fissures, and six straight gyri; ou the left side seven fissures and eight straight gyri. The paracentral lobule was well marked on the right side, small en the left Tito usual median incision was made, and the abdomen opened. There was' an extrava­ sation of blood into the right pectoralis major muscle n.jar the second rib. The adipose layer of the abdominal section was one inch in tliicki ea*. The dome of the diaphragm ex­ tended up to the fourth rib on each side. There were old pleuritic adhesions at the apex of the right luug. The upper and middle lobes were congemtally united by a connective tissue. The lung was normal throughout There were also old pleuritic adhesions of the left lung to the diaphragm and between its lobes; three small, tubercle-like, pigmented patches were observed in the upper lobe. The heart weighed ten and three-quarters ounces. Its muscular substance was appar­ ently normal. There was an abundance of fat upon its anterior surface, and a villose patch of old pericarditis near the apex of the left ventricle. The right ventricle contained a little blood, just forming a clot. The valves were normal. The aorta was slightly athero­ matous for a short distance above the valves. All of the abdominal viscera presented large accumulations of fat They were normally sit­ uated. The liver was congested. The gall bladder contained a little bile. The spleen was lobu- lated and enlarged. It weighed eighteen ounces. The capsule was bluish ; substance brown. The malpighian bodies were hyper- tropbied. The pancreas was normal. The stomach contained food. The intestines ap­ peared normal, and were not opened. The kidneys were congested. There was a email superficial terous cyst on the riRht one. 1. A considerable quantity of dark blood ran out of the heart in the separation of tbe heart and lungs. 2. Dr. Young states that the man was sub­ ject to malarial attacks while in jail. 8. He had eaten dinner about an hoar and a half before execution. or three ounces of this salt to a bushel of wheat. The wheat is Boaked in the* brine for a short time before Bowing. There has been much energy expended in the endeavor to find some variety of wheat that is rnst proof. Prof. Brewer, who has charge of the grain statistics in the late census, finds many districts where a variety of wheat has sprung up that for a year or so is almost rust proof, but afterward it becomes infested the same as other sorts. As a precaution burn the stubble, thus destroying many spores that would otherwise germinate and continue the pest.--American Agri fiultnrist. , Rust oh Wheat. The yellow or orange-colored dust that forms on the leaves and stems of wheit shortly before reaping time is caused by a minute fungus. The fun­ gus plant attacks the wheat son e weeks before it makes its appearance, and nils the interior siibstanue of the leaves and stems with its fine threads. These threads act as roots, by means of which the fungus or rust plant obtains its nour­ ishment from the substance of the grow­ ing wheat plant. There ia no remedy for the rust after it has once appeared upon the surface of the wheat. The most effective preventive is blue vitriol or bine stone (sulphate of copper), two ' pomes OF CONGRESS, A fcftl to establish the Territory of retnbina was reported to the Senate on the 1st inst by Mr. Saunders, of Nebraska. A bill was passed to permit the investment of the Pacific railroad sinking-fund in first-mortgage thirty-year bonds of the Union and Central Pacific roads. The Legislative Appropriation bill was consid­ ered in committee of the whole. The President sent to the Senate the following nominations : Joseph It. West, of the District of Columbia, to be Commissioner off that Dis­ trict; Lewis W. Wallace, of Indiana, to be Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Turkey, a reappointment; Henry o. Hall, En­ voy Ustuaordiiiary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Central American States; John R, Hal- derman, of Missouri, to be Minister Resident and Consul General to Siam; John M. Francis, of New York, to be Minister Resident and Consul General to Portugal; J. P. Wicker- sham, of Pennsylvania, Minister Resident and Consul General to Denmark; Michael J. Cramer, of Kentucky, Minister Resi­ dent and Consul General to Switzerland; James Biley Weaver, of West Virginia, Secre­ tary of Legation and Consul General to Vi­ enna Lewis Richmond, of Rhode Island, Secretary of Legation at Rome; John T. Robe­ son, of Tennessee, United States Consul at Beirut; A. T. Sharp, of Kansas, United States Consul at Manila; Lorin A. Lathrop, of Nevada, United States Consul at Bristol; William W. Spaulding, of Minnesota, Re­ ceiver of Public Monevs at Duluth; John K. Carey, or Minnesota, Register of the Land Office at Duluth ; William A. Swan, of Pennsylvania, Indian Agent at Cheyenne River Agency, Dakota ; Francis Darby. Assistant Treasurer of the United States at Baltimore; Thomas A. Henry , Collector of Customs for the District of Pamlico, N. O.; Horace McKay, Col­ lector of Internal Revenue for the Sixth dis> trict of Indiana ; David Bennett, Collector of Internal Revenue for the Seventh district of Kentucky; John F. Humbler, Collector of Internal Revenue for the Tenth dis­ trict of Ohio, In tbe House, a joint resolution was passed authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to issue 2 per cent bondstothe amount of $200,000,000,in exchange for securities bearing a higher rate o'f interest. The Naval Appropriation bill was then taken up in committee of the whole, discussed, amended, and laid over. The Senate bill to authorize the construction of a bridge acrosi the Sault Ste. Marie was passed. The Speaker presented a message from the President veto­ ing the bill to regulate the carriage of passen­ gers by sea. The Senate passed a bill, at its session on the 3d hist, to authorize the sale of timber on the Menominee lands in Wisconsin. A charters as granted to Robert Garrett and others of Mary land to lay a cable to Europe within two years The general deficiency appropriation came up The amendment creating a board to audit the Garfield fiintral expenses, and limiting the amount for medical service to $52,500, was earnestly fought by Mr. Vest After a general exchange of sentiment, it was agreed to rtduce the entire ap­ propriation to $57,500, and to allow the surgeons f35,000. The bill was then passed. The President nominated Col. C. EL Crane to be Surgeon General, John Davis to be Assist­ ant Secretary of State, and Eugene Schuyler to be Minister Resident to Roumania, Bervia and Greece. In the House, Mr. Berry introduced a bill to abolish the State of Nevada and attach the tf rritorv to California. Mr. Robinson, of New York, after stating that the British Minister had called upon Secretary Frelinghuysen to raise questions about words spoken ia debate by the New York member, introduced a resolution in­ quiring of the Secretary of State whether tho appointment of a British censor had been sug­ gested in the interview. Bills were passed for public buildings at Ox­ ford, Miss.; Pougbkeepsie, *N. Y.; Terre Haute, Ind.; St Joseph, Mo., and Harrison-' burg and Abingdon, Va, The rules were BUS- Cled and a bill passed to correct the error in statutes concerning the doty on knit goods. A Ml to ratify the railway treaty with the Crow Indians was passed. Mr. Hiscock reported a substitute for the sundry civil appropriation. The aet to create the Territory ot Pembina came up In the Senate on the 5th inst, and provoked a hot debate, Mr. Vest insisting on the repeal of the Dakota law in relation to the repudiation of bonds of Yankton county. The River and Harbor bill was reported. It was voted to postpone for the session consideration of the National Bankrupt law. The bill for the relief of Ben HoUiday was briefly considered. The House went into oom- urttee of the whole on the naval appropriation. Mr. Atkins moved to re­ duce the itedl for the Bureau of Construction and Repair to #1,500,000. Mr. Robeson thought tbi* would be a declaration that we have no navy. Mr. Ellis pointed out the war-clouds on the horizon, and pronounced for a reconstruc­ tion of the navy. An amendment by Mr. Har­ ris was adopted, that any portion of the item of tl,750,000 not wanted for the purposes speci­ fied may be applied to the constructi on of two cruising vessels of war. The committee re­ ported the bill to the House, the previous ques­ tion was seconded, and an adjournment was effected. The River and Harbor Appropriation bill, oovering $19,463,975, was taken np in the Sen­ ate on the 6th inst Mr. McMillan briefly re­ viewed the amendments made by the Senate committee. The item of $100,000 for survey­ ing the Hennepin canal called out speeches from Messrs. Butler, Beck, Vest and Allison. The former gave notice of a pro­ posed modification of the amendment In the House a joint resolution was passed au­ thorizing the President to call an International Couferonce to fix a common prime meridian. In closing the debate on tbe Naval Appropri­ ation bill Mr. Robesou indulged in harsh re­ flections upon Mr. Whitthorne, the latter re­ sponding by branding Robeson as a falsifier and perjurer. The naval appropriation passed by 119 to 75. Objection was made to the bill for a pension to Mrs. Garfield, pn the ground that it would give rise to debate, and the House went into committee of the whole on the Sundry Civil Appropria­ tion bill. Mr. Hiscock explained the items in the act Mr. Blackburn criticised the majority lor not having already disposed of the general appropriation bills. Mr. liayne said President Arthur had violated his promise to stand by the civil-service plank of the Republican platform. The entire session of the Senate on the 7th inst was devoted to work on the River and Harbor bilL Mr. Logan urged the importance of constructing the Hennepin canal, stating that the cost would not exceed $4,000,000. Mr. Vest claimed that the'national Government had no right to assume jurisdiction over the enter­ prise, and stated that manufacturing towns along Hock river had entered protests against the canal. Mr. Hawley reviewed canal man* agement in the Middle States to show the difficulties encountered. Mr. Sherman thought the matter should bo considered as a separate measure. Mr. Morgan said the purpose of the scheme was to divert traffic from New Orleans to Chi­ cago. Mr. Hawley gave warning that $100,000 would be but a drop in the bucket. Messrs. Allison and Windom spoke in favor of the pro­ ject and Mr. Butier in opposition. The House, in committee of the whole, was considering the Sundry Civil Appropriation bill, when Mr. But- terworth, of Ohio, made a savage attack upon the Democratic party. Having "been interrupted by Mr. Cox, Mr. Butterworth indulged in an al­ lusion unfit for publication, and it was omitted from the records. Mr. Cox retorted by calling Mr. Butterworth a blackguard. Mr. Deuster introduced a bill to regulate the car­ riage of passengers by sea, drawn in accordance with the President's sugges­ tions. The Republican Senators held a caucus after adjournment, and the following agreements were reached with substantial una­ nimity. That the House bill for the reduction of internal-revenue taxation be taken up, and that all its provisions aa amended by the Finance Committee shall receive Republican support; that the Finance Committee prepare additional amendments providing for a restora­ tion of the tariff duties on sugar to the rates in force before tbe last tariff changes in regard to this article were made, for a reduc­ tion of #8 per ton from present duty on Bess­ emer steel rails and for a reduction of duties <);:•. hoop iron, in aooordanoe with the provis­ ions of the McKinley bill now pending ia the Ground I so preekws In London, or its owners aM so grasping, that the most interesting relics of antiquity are not permitted to cumber it. One of the last remaining fragments of the old Roman wall has been removed. Though ex­ posed to the wear and tear of elements for considerably more than a thousand years, the mortar was found to be BO tough and strong that the workmen were actually compelled to cut out the stone as if they had been in the original quarry. Mortar makers and stone­ masons nowadajps might take lessons from their remote! predecessors, whose ideas of durability seem to have been quite different from those prevailing at present. It is said that the stones of the Pyramids--compared with which the London wall is a thing of yesterday --are laid in mortar no thicker than a sheet of paper, and yet remain so firmly fixed after the lapse of thirty or forty centuries that the thinnest knife-blade cannot be inserted between them. These ancient Egyptiaas, then, could learn nothing from us in that line of business; but we might learn a vast deal from them. Even the ruins of their buildings make modern architects ashamed. What must those buildings have been in the pride of their youth and strength ? The stateliest structures of London, Paris and New York are mere card-houses in com­ parison with the temples and palaces which once lined the banks of the Nile. Abraham and Moses saw grander speci­ mens of architecture in Egypt than can be seen in our own time anywhere on the face of the earth. The Rothschilds with all their money, cannot buy such mechanical skill as their ancestors in Egyptian bondage witnessed, and prob­ ably assisted, ft the art of building is not lost, it has at least woefully degen­ erated, and might be rediscovered to the profit of all concerned. Yet in the face of these facts, which every school­ boy is supposed to know, a gentleman whose profession is usually accompanied by a reasonable amount of learning re­ cently said in a public address in our city, that no valuable inventions had ever been given to the world outside of Christianity. What could he have been thinking of ? Certainly not of what he was saying. The arch, for instance, was invented nobody knows when or by whom; but, at the very lowest cal­ culation, thousands of years before the Christian era. The immense masses of stone of which the Pyramids are com­ posed were lifted to their places by machinery of which we know nothing. Who invented it? We cannot even get out such stones as can be seen to-day in abandoned Egyptian quart ies. Who invented the art of quarrying ? A small lens, ISuch as might have been used in a rude telescope, has been found among the rubbish of Nineveh. Who invented that? The bricks of which Nineveh and Babylon were built are in fair preser- vstion to-day, and most of our knowl­ edge of the Chaldeans and their institu­ tions is derived from inscriptions on clay tablets. Who invented the art of brick-making, and the stamping of let­ ters and figures in clay ? The Greeks had the art of manipulating marble in such supreme perfection that the best of our sculpture is but a miserable imita­ tion of theirs. Yet the Greeks were not Christians. The Pompeian frescoes are m<->saics--are far more beautiful, as well as more lasting, than ours. Yet they were not done by Christians. It is now believed that gunpowder and the mariner's compass, and other important inventions, including the germ of the f>rinting-press were known in China ong before Europe obtained them. Yet the Chinese were not and are not Chris­ tians. There is too much of this "zeal without knowledge." It does no good, and indirectly, not a little harm. "Let {'ustice be be done," even to the ancient teathen, "though the heavens fall."-- St. Louis Hepublican. What a Menagerie Costs. An nntrained elephant at the age of 28 to 80 is worth. $10,000, and a performing elephant $45,000. The value of a male lion is about $2,- 000, and of a female $1,000. A fine specimen of the royal Bengal tiger is worth $2,500. The female ia much less valuable. The striped hyena is rated at $500, the spotted at $200. A South American panther costs from $100 to $200. A male is worth about twice as much as a female. The prices of sea-lions range from $100 to $200. Seals cost from $300 to $400. A polar bear is worth $1,000. Black bears can be bought in any number for $100 each. A poonah bear, from Hindoostan, is worth $500. The South American tapir costs from $600 to $800. The cost of a rhinoceros is from $6,000 to $10,000. The value of the hippopotamus is from $8,000 to $5,000. A giraffe eighteen feet high is worth $25,000. i Camels cost $300 to $400.1 The sacred cow can be purchased for $700 or $800. The zebra is worth $700 or $800. A gazelle costs $1,000; a nylghau, $1,500 ; an eland, $3,000; and a hart- bees t, $3,500. The ordinary oryx oosts $1,000. The llama is valued at $500. The yak, from Siberia and Tartary, ranges from $1,000 to $1,500. The one blesbok in this oountry oost $3,000. The oudode, a strange-looking beast from the North of Africa, cost* from $600 to $800. Kangaroos are rated at from $500 to $1,000. The price fixed for ostriches is from $2,000 to $2,500. The prices of the differents kinds of birds range from $5 to $100. The big snakes are worth $200 to $500. Monkeys are valued at $50 to $200. - Some of the large menageries are worth $1,000,000. A small one would oost at the lowest estimate $50,000. Vow to liaise Strawberries. One very important principle is oft$n overl oked by the cultivator. It is that the > roduction of the seed or fruit is a VP y exhausting process. When a man • uys a tree from the nursery and it bears a half dozen samples of fruit the first year, it stops its growth just about one year. Hence, until a tree gets a good growth it should not be allowed to bear. Trees that are growing rapidly do not bear, and if a tree is bearing at allt it is to the detriment of the growth. A strawberry plant usually bean a crop of fruit and also produces new vines. Now if the blossoms of those plants from which we want to raise new plants are cut off in season, the whole strength goes into the new plants, and 1,000 runners grown from plants that are not allowed to fruit are worth more than 5,000 grown from plants that bore fruit at the same time. Old plants are worth nothing--new plants from an old bed are worth noth­ ing. The only plants worth using are 'young plants grown from audi as are not allowed to fruit. Hie true way to* raise strawberries is tovget young plsnta of this description and. not allow them to fruit the first year. They will throw out • plenty of strong, vigorous runners, and the next season before bearing take a part of these to make a new bed. A n?w bed should be made every year. When we plant in the spring we should get no- fruit the same year. The next year we get the largest crop we ever get. The vines can stand and bear s partial crop • the next season, or be plowed under as • soon as the crop is gathered. I like best to raise one full crop and. only one. It is less labor to a. new bed than to clean up an old one. It is very little labor to plant an acre of strawberries if ,, properly done, and no other crop pays so well. The only dif­ ficulty is J»-gSrti jfche right kind of plants, but every mft& oan raise the plants him­ self in this way. Strawberries will do well on any land that will raise good corn.--tji. M. W., in Prairie Fat mer. Several South American States. . Transvaal was, until 1877, a republic,, and was British territory, but had its in­ dependence restored in 1881, Great Brit­ ain retaining the suzerainty. The area is about 114,500 square miles, and the population includes about 40,000 per­ sons of European descent, while the na­ tive Africans are estimated at all the way from 260,000 to 650,000. The chief ex­ ports are ostrich feathers, ivory, cattle, cereals, tobacco, etc. The heavy game in what is now Transvaal was only a few years ago found in numbers that are de­ scribed as enormous, and the large mam­ malia are still numerous. The discovery of diamonds was made in 1866, north of the Vital River, and since then diamond mining has been very successful in that district. The country also contains gold, copper, lead, iron, tin, and coaL There are several considerable towns. Mooiriverdorp, or Potscliefstroom, Pre­ toria, Leydenburg, Rnstenburg, and Zoutpausberg. The European inhabit­ ants are chiefly emigrant farmers. Natal is on the southeast coast of Africa, 800' miles from the Cape of Good Hope. The colony, formerly a part of the Cape of Good Hope settlement, was in 1856 erected into a separate colony under the British crown, and until 1879 repre­ sented by a Lieutenant Governor, and since then by a Governor, who is as­ sisted in the administration by an ex­ ecutive and legislative council. Its area is 21,000 square miles, with a seaboard of 150 miles; in 1880 the population was 406,625, about one in every sixteen be­ ing of European descent, and the re­ mainder native Africans. The climate is salubrious, there being no extremes either of heat or cold ; the coast region for about twenty-five miles inland is very fertile; sugar, coffee, indigo, arrow­ root, ginger, tobacco, and cotton thrive;, the midland district is better adapted to cereals and the usuals crops known among our people; on the higher plat- teau along the mountains, are immense tracts of pasturage, where cattle and sheep do well. There is one harbor on the coast, D'Unban or Port Natal. Among the natural resources are copper, coal, and iron; large forests of timber in the neighborhood of the mountains. Wool, sugar, ivory, and hides are ex­ ported. British Caffraria, or Kaffraria. as it is sometimes written, was wrested by the settlers of Cape Colony from the natives in the war af 1846-7, and is now a part or district of Cape Colony; its area is about 6,500 square miles. It is well watered, has many fertile valleys in the spurs of the mountains in the north, and is in some respects an attract­ ive district. The European population is chiefly of British and'German desoent. In the year 1859 it was divided into- farms of 1,000 to 3,090 acres, granted free on certain terms of settlement and defense. The last census reports place the population at about 125,000, of whom some 10 per cent, are of European descent. Zululand lies north of Natal, and receives its name from the tribes whose home it has been. A good deal of the country along the coast is very flat, marshy, and unhealthy. Up from the coast, where the level is higher, lies a generally fertile region, . which is- healthy, and where sugar, cotton, and other tropical products may be grown, as in the other colonies. There is quite a trade carried on by the traders from Natal in ivory, rhinoceros' horns, hides,, etc. The Orange Free "State has an area of 45,000 square miles and a popu­ lation of 65,000. It is a republic, and the ruling people are the Boers. The climate is dry, temperate, and salubri­ ous ; the settlers are dhiefly engaged in stock-raising; coal and iron have been found, also gold and the diamond-fields have attracted many to them in recent years. These several colonies and re­ publics have generally an elevated sur­ face, baok from the coast, are more or less mountainous, have in the main a climate like that of Southern Europe, are well watered, but have few streams that are navigable. "A word spoken is an arrow let fly.* No, it isn't; you can go and get the ar­ row, but you can't go and get the word, especially if it's lodged on the tongue of a woman. THE MARKETS. nv YOBK. Bnvas 9»« Hons T SO a 8 78 COTTOH : lajfQ ia* Fiioun--Superfine..... S 60 @ 4 00 WHZAT--No. 2 Spring 180 0 1 31 No. 2 Bed........ 134 @ 1 SO COKK--Ungraded 76 @ 83 OATS--Mixed Wastern. 68 & <8 PORK--Meeg. 38 60 (£23 00 I«ABI>.. 12.J»® 13X , CHICAGO. <Jhoie* Graded Steers T 95 9 8 IS * Cow» and Heifers. 3 60j & 6 85 Medium to Fair.... 8 40 9 7 30 HOG*. .... 8 60 @8 75 rLOUft--Fuiey White Winter 8x.... « 75 & 7 25 Good to Choice Spring Xx. 8 80 (§ 7 00 WHEAT--Na 2 Spring 1 34 @ 1 36 No. 3 Spring..' 1 18 A 1 28 CORN--No. 3 74 & 76 OATS NO. 2 63 @ 56 RT*-NO. 2 73 @ 14 BAR let--No. 3. 94 @ 86 HOTTER--Choice Crwnwy 23 A 14 Boos--Fresh..... 17 ® 18 POBK--Ueaa 26 @21 60 ^ -iftiWAUkEK.- WHKAT--No. a, 1 82 £ 1 33 Conw -No. 3 74 A 75 OATS--Na 3 65 M RTE--NO. 2....... W A 70 BARLEY--No. 3..... 81 A 83 POBK--Mew.. .31 00 ^21 60 I*4*0 12 <a 12V S T. LOUlb. WHEAT-No. 3 Bed 1 83 a 1 88 OOBK--Mixed 76 a 77 OATH--NO, 63 « 88 POBK--Meia.... .17. .* "isi 50 !§22 00 ̂ "'mtssiiTL'" "* 129 ($188 - 74 76 S"B 6« I « (a 70 POBK--Mess 22 00 @23 25 luJiD ll#@ 11* _ „ TOLEDO. WHEATS-NO. 3 Bed 1 37 @ 1 28 76 ® 77 °AT* 66 @ 64 _ _ DETROIT; Flotte--Choice < w a s 80 WHEAT--No. 1 White 1 38 aiN Coas--Hfeei M ^ m OATS--Mixed "I!" 65 @ 57 Bablei, (per je&tsl) % 00 @ 2 38 1 5 S 1 5 OATS M S 8T _ _ EAST LIBKBTT, PA. <UTTL»--Best T 60 @898 !"*•" 60 @ 7 a» 8 50 @ 6 80 I 70 # • 88 $ V A S M L ' * ;

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