Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Nov 1882, p. 2

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1. VAN SLYKE. E«Ur en< fw»fl»her^ MCHENBT, ILLINOIS. •EEIIT *£IIS REVIEW. THE KAST. v ^CaE Henry Ward Beecher, be- by the Boston Traveller to re­ ply t^ie commen*;8 New England min- itftrs on his withdrawal from the Oonere- fitttonal body, writes a cnrt but incisive crin«'sm of the religious hobbies of many Jearned institutions, and hopes before his death to evoke a theology that shall be ac­ ceptable to all FIRE almost entirely destroyed the Flint mill at Fall River* Masi, valued at fJKXi.OOO. The fire causrbt from a belt in the pick< r-room. The mill employed 5CM hands. It ha 1 50,0(0 spindles and an annual produc­ tion of 1 3,000,000 yard-s of print, cloths. The property was insured for $<<00.000... Eighteen cars were burned and a fireman and brake- man lost their Mv»s by the wrockinsr of a freight train on the Delaware and Hudson River railroad, near Whitehall, N. Y. ABBKY'S Park Theater in NEW York, where Mm Lanjrtry was to have made her first appearance in America, was totally con-, earned by fire. Its origin is unknown, but the house was doomed before the fire de- Jmrtment arrived. Two employes were to­ured by jumping from the windows and one is missing. The total loss is 1250,000. The Grand Opera House was engaged by Manager Abbev for Mrs. Langtry's repre­ sentations Two little children of Curtis Lampman, living near Troupsburg, N. Y., were burned to death during the abw noe of their parents from home While alighting from his special car at Buffalo, N. Y,,.Jay Gould narrowly escaped being run over by a passing locomotive. , JUDGE WALDO COLBTJRN, of the Su­ perior Court of Boston, has been appoint­ ed to the Supreme bench of Massachusetts, to succeed Judge Wm. C. Endieott, resigned. Judge Colburn is the third Democrat whom 'Gov Long lias appointed to the Supremjj, Court during his term of office The ex­ penses of the New York citv Government for ISSo are estimated at $38,S27,8f>4. DURING last spring a Frenchman named Goodenough left Greenville for the woods at the head of Moosehead lake, in Maine Nothing was subsequently heard of Mm until a few days ago, when his skeleton was discovered with both hands in a bear- tran. Goodenough had in some way got his hands caught in the laws of the trap and was unable to remove them, and, with no assist­ ance near, died from starvation. THE WKST. THS first prize in the army rifle match at Fort Leavenworth was won by Sergt Barrett, of the engineer corps at Willett's point. New York harbor: the second by Sergt. Clark, of the First Cavalrv, and the third by Sergt JFames, of the Eighth Cav­ alry. THE tug Wetzel, of Bacine, Wis., ex­ ploded about sixteen miles from that port, while steaming north in company with the tug Sill in search of tows. The only persons on board were the Captain. Frank F Lovell, of Racine; the engineer. William Kelly, of Chicago, and the fireman. Pat White, of Racine. The three were blown to atoms, and the largest piece of the tug left was a board on which the name of the boat was painted A Chicago jury, after listening to evidence for nearly a week bear­ ing upon the mental condit on of Mrs. Sco- viilf. sister of President Garfi-ld's assassin, foun 1 tliar ehe was ins-ine. that her dis- ease^'ha* been of six month#duration, and hereditary. It found hat she does not manifest suicidal or homicidal tenden­ cies, and that phe is not a pauper.... Near'y 5,000,tV-o feet of lumber on the docks of Hamilton, JlcCl re A Co., near East Sag­ inaw, Mich , was burned, cawing a loss of #75,(00, partly covered by about $70,000 in­ surance. » GREAT indignation is expressed at Salt Lake m consequence of a decision by Ji dge --Hunter cieariy in the interest of the Mor­ is' ns ati'i : gainst the thorough eriforcs- ment of i he Edmunds law. Up >n what is denounced a am< re egal quibble Judge Hu"ter d- iiic j the applic .tion for a writ to comp l the Morm m (-heriff an ! Territorial A ;d tor to turn over the r books and < flices to the officers j aj point d under the new law. At Og.len | Ju'lsr - Emerson, in a similar c tse, ] upheld tf e law, and it is openly charged that j Ju<Ve Hunter is in sympathy with the Mor- i mons Hai stones of enormous MSM fell in i the ri-laity of Davenport and Hock Island, i causing great havoy among sky-litrht*. In other parts of the sectiou mentioned the Wind blew a hurricane, demolish­ ing res dences and barns, three per­ sons b'jine killed by fal 'ng timbers.... Philip B. Sw-.ng,. Judge' of the init d States Distr ct Court ior the Southern district of Ohio, died ath sresidence. Batavia, Ohio.... The Bev. Dr. C. O Beabtv, the ol- est Pres­ byterian clertryman of Ohio, died at Steu- benville. aged 81! years....The tlr>t general snow-sUirm of the t-easoifin Dakota and Hon: ana occurred Oct. B ant-he Gard­ ner wa< killed and lour other children terri­ bly crushed by a saw-log rowing upon taem at WajTiefielcC Ohio. «T. A. ARcrLETTa, of Farmington, Kew M xico a prominent banker, merchant and a Justice of the Peace, went to the neighboring town of Conejos on business, and bec.mi i'• intoxi ated, got int > ar.w with , Dej iitv Sher If lilanatt and killed liim. Ar- culetta w s arretted an i jailed, from whence h , W,.K -hrtly att *R taken by a mob oi Mex­ icans and hanged to a tree. IN a public school at Leavenworth, Kan»=a*, W. G. ltos--,years of age, acting as "monitor," reported a boy of 12 years, nam*Hl Winter, for whi.-p»»rinz. Before h'S fnientir n could be lathomed, ihe latter rushed upon the sinal.er bov and plunged a knife into h s side, inflicting a mortal $ wound... .Bishop Taibot, of the Episcopal Dioo se or Indiana, h»s decided, in view of his poor health, to resign his office... .Isaac Newsbaum, residing near Wabash, Ind., died, at the age of 107 yearn REPORTS have been received at Kan­ sas City from 125 counties in Missouri, Kan- • sas, Nebraska and Iowa in regard to the yield of com as compared with last year, of which number ninety-two report a larger yMd and the balance about the same an last yei.r Of hoir* to be marketed during No­ vember and December, thirty counties only report cha> t he number will exceed last vear.' In r tr:<r<t to young ho >s coming on, an com­ parer with last year, fortv-two counties re­ port the 'uppiy jurtrer. There are but seven counties w icti report disease among ho^s Judge Hayes, at Davenport, dccided that the lowa prohibition amendment has not yet br n legally made a part of the State con tiiution, mainly, on the ground that the t^pspul* at the Legislature are incomplete THE SOUTH. ! A COWARDLY murder was perpetrated ifc Nicholas ville, Ky. The victim, Dr. E. E. Uvans, w as at the railroad depot tti take the train i>i response to a teleirram from his dy­ ing mother when h : was detained by a writ of attachment sued out by G-jorge B. Letch­ er, a lawyer wiiom he owed a bill of $^'J. Subsequently meeting Letcher in the street, toe latter opened fire on Evans, who waa and out of five shots trom his re­ viver one was fatal, Evans falling dead. s. •;A coi>ottED woman in Albemarle ' attempted to kill her 2-year-old bov by h-rtili ng him up and down a stream with a rope attached to his neck. j FivK children of different families living at Houston, Texas, picked and ate lo­ cust beany while rambling in the woods, were taken violently sick, and died in a SOUTH CAROLINA County Judge has decided that whereas the constitution of the State provides that no negro shall be dis­ franchised tor a crime committed while in •layery--ergo, a negro who, i-incn emanci- pa ion has i n convicte d of any fe onv has for eited his rights as a citizen Ex "Gov. Jam s F. Robinson, of Kentucky, died at his Woe in Scott county, aged 82l i 1 WASHINGTON. monds, laces, silks, etc., was purloined from the house of Gen. Sturges, at the Soldiers' Home, in Washington. In the trunks of the French governess, employed byH. L. Dous- man, the General's son-in-law, were found some of the missing property. A warrant was issued at Wash­ ington for the arrest of Willam Dickson, on the affidavit of Juror McNelly, for en­ deavoring to improperly influence the ver­ dict of the star-route Jury. Another war­ rant was sworn out. on the affidavit of Brewster Cameron, charging Dickson with conspiring to get moncv from the United States for the purpose of impeding justice. It will be remembered that Dickson was foreman of the star-route jury. THE report of the Assessor of the District of Columbia shows that' the as­ sessed value of taxable real estate in the District on June 30, 1882, was a little more than S92,500,(K>0. To this may l>e add< d the value of the property of the' United States, which was more tnau $85,000,000 on June 80c IT is expected that the new trial of Brady. Dorsey, Vail, Miner and Rerdell, the star-route defendants, will begin Dec. 1, and that no delay will occur on account of the prosecution of the jury-bribing oases The report of Chief Inspector Parker, of the Post- office Department, shows 4i#> arrests and 307 convictions, and 25 acquittals, 9 escaped, 45 dismissed. I forfeited bail, 219 cases awaiting trial, 3*17 postcffices robbed and llti burned --.Vi per cent, less than for the previous year. The total number of registered pack­ ages in the mails was nearly 10,000,000L TOM BI FORD, the murderer of Judge Elliott, in Frankfort, Ky., has escaped from the insane asylum to which he was commit­ ted :>t Jeffersonville, Ind , and it is Claimed that, be.ng mereiy a fugitive from a lunatic asylum, he is not amenable to the extradi­ tion laws. THE estimates bf the various depart­ ments for the next appropriations, says a Washington telegram, are very much later in being made up than usual. So far the only Cabinet officer who has sent to the treasury complete estimates is Secretary Teller. * of the Interior Department. The estimates for salaries for most of the depart­ ments will be larger than last year, owing to the increase in clerical force. ' The estimate for the pension roll is just the same as last year, being: a round $ loo,000,000. There will also be a deficiencv, but the amount is not yet determined. The increased apportion­ ment considerably swells the expenses of Congress, estimates for which are made up FOREMAN DICKSOX, of the star-route jury, was cited to appear before the Criminal Court of the District of Columbia for con­ tempt in writing an improper communica­ tion to the Grand Jury of that court, his professed desire being to secure the in­ dictment of certain attaches of the De­ partment of Justice who sought to corrupt him and his associates on the star- route lury, in order that he might be cleared of aspersions castunon him by newspapers and individuals. The letter incidentally re­ flected up n Judge Wyiie's course in* the matter. Dickson appeared and explained that he meant no disrespect to the court, and Judge Wylie discharged him. $ GENERAL. / A NEW YORE telegram says that the purchase of the New York, Chicago and St Louis road by a syndicate extremely favor­ able to Vanderbilt is the all-absorbing topic in Wail street The Hocking Valley road has acquired an outlet to Chicago for its vast stores ot coal, and what might have proved an atrgressive factor among the trunk lines has been divided up aihong several inter­ ests. The purchase money is to be paid in installments, and the stock will be delivered when 60 per cent shall have been handed over. THERE were on the 30th of June last 4",231 postofflces in. the United 8tates, an in­ crease of 1,719 during the preceding twelve months A dispatch frorti Texel,in the Ger- m;in ocean, says the ste mer Grief, of Pana­ ma, from Japan tor Bremen, stranded off Zuid-rhankK. Twenty-two persons were dr.iwnM ADELIXA PATTI, the famous canta- trice, arrived at New York in the steamship ... .Negro colonies in Liberia are given, not forty acres of land and a mule, but twenty-five acres of land and shelter ai provisions for six months... .Seven Anarc ists "have been arrested at Lyons uptfn charges of murder. Two are also char. with clandestine manutacture of dynami Special measures are being adopted the German Government to prevent the cialists from organizing anarchy, as was at­ tempted by their ilk in France Io is rumored that a Nihilist outbreak at St Petersburg is considered imminent Pre­ cautions for the security and safety of the Czar have been redoubled * EARL GRANVILLE presided at the first meeting of the Longfellow Memorial Com­ mittee at London, and eulogized America's poet as a writer of moral and healthy verses, who deserved representation among the tributes to many famous men in West­ minster Abbey. Resolutions were adopted looking to the speedy completion of the contemplated bust, and letters were re­ ceived from several prominent persons regretting their inability to be present.. .. Great activity is manifested by Russia in its warlike preparations. Formidable fortifica­ tions are bein«' constructed near Grodna, and a well-equipped camp has been estab­ lished on the rirht bank of the Bug. Great uneasiness prevails at the German and Aus­ trian capital a At Gois, Hungary, the houses of Hebrews were plundered by mobs, and one woman killed. MURDEROUS MADNES! I rjJ ADDITIONAL NEWS. DR. COLLINS, of Minneapolis, Minn., brother of the scientist in the Jeannette expedition, states that Capt DeLong perse­ cuted his brother (Jerome) in every conceiv­ able way. He also makes the claim that jealousy existed between the officers. He charges Melville with drunkenness^ with playing checkers and chess, instead of Se.rt hing for DeLong and his party; holds Melville responsible for their deaths, and as­ sails the truth of his reports. All of which the Doctor will publish in a pamphlet, which will be laid before Congress. AN international challenge cup will be. oflfered by Turf, Field and Farm, to be rov^ed for next August The money to be added will, with the cup, prove an incentive for competition among the best sculiers of the world Mr. J. W. Simonton. well known from his recent connection with the Associated Press and with journalism in San Francisco, is dead. <, COMMISSIONER MCFARLAND, of the General Land Office, is in rec eipt of informa­ tion t at, in fifty-five cases of fraudulent pre-empt:on tried in Northern Minnesota, not one f the pre-em; tors apnear -d in the hearing, an 1 the cases declarea in favor of the Government by default This result s gratifying to the department, a id McFar- iand thinks shows beyond question the ex­ istence of a. conspiracy to defraud the Gov­ ernment BY a loaded coal car breaking loose and running with great speed down an in­ clined plane at a mine near Williamsport, Pa., three men who were on the car were killed and two seriously injured... .Patrick Carey, a New York longshoreman, who was _ crippled for life by the fall of a coal tub into the hold of the steamer Batarvia, Sued the Cuuard Steamship Company, claiming $30,- 000 damagea The jury awarded $15,000.... Richardson, Boynton '& Co., stove dealers, New York, made an assignment -Their la­ bilities to preferred creditor* wMount to $043,000 Leopold Gaif, mttipbettirer o? boots and shoes af New York ind Newark, N. J., has suspended. The liabilities are re­ ported to be $200,000... .Josiah Quincy, Sr., died at Wollaston, a Boston suburb, at the age of 80. IN the British Parliament the amend­ ment offered by Mr. Gibson, Conservative, providing that two-thirds majority should be required to close debate, was voted do«*n, thej,Irish party act ng wi h the Liberals, a course that liad i>eeudecided upon by a ma­ jority of on", the decidin r yote being cast bv Mr. C iarles Stewart l arnelL As it now stands, a majority of the House of Commons may ordu-the cloture, shutting off debate.... In the German Parliament there has been introduced the draft "of a law prohibiting the importation of American storine, pork and ^ sausage meat Louise Michel was pre- „ . . _ . ... vented from delivering one of her socialistic vi*. a tor &M*mp *ruAu* >*iy*g *- Ske» ajatribes at Ghent, in Belgium, luy a riotous com-s bnck in ^excellent health and voice, crowd that had taken possession of the hall prepared to make her app- urance in opera M short resr... .A construction train on the Ohi • Cential railway ran into a flat Car n ar Charle-ton, W. Va, killing William Cope and, Jam* s Smith, Andrew Snyder, and seriously inj uring James Brown A pro­ ject is afoot in Montreal for tile erection of a monument to Thomas D Arcy McGee. POLITICAL. 5 SENATOR WINDOM, in a speech at Spring Valley, Minn., said the luxuries of the nation should pay a large share of the pub­ lic burdens; that Congress has the power to break some monopolies, and the people will demand it, and slated that down to his hpots he is a civil-service reformer: FOREIGN. AN uneasy feeling pervades France, owing to the revelations concerning the An­ archist conspiracy. A Lyons dispatch says: "The Anarchist conspiracy has t.iken deeper root than was suspected, and this morning the situation is very critical. The citizens are p;uuc-r ricken at the revelations made yesterday of the local strength and far-reaching power of the desperate men who constitute the organization, and consider an outbreak almost inevitable. A mob was formedi n the street, and in ad­ dition to threats against the Repub ican new spapers now direct their venom against the banks and public buildings, which are being carefully guarded. The police have discovered a dynamite manufactory in the suburbs of the city."..... .The elec­ tions in Prussia lesuted in favor of the Conservatives....Among Arabi Pasha's correspondence was found a letter from the Sultan which urgres the rebel chief to resist the invasion of England and France, or any other foreign p >wers, and to defend the faith of hiR country against those who busy themselves to bting about a triumph for its adversaries. AT a meeting of socialists in Paris, Louise Micihel and others violently de­ nounced the Governments of France and Italy for expelling the turbulent and danger­ ous socialists at Lvons. Letters making threats ajrainst commercial firms were dailv received, and added to the general sense of insecurity. A person engaged in the clan­ destine manufacture of dynamite has been arrested at Lyons... .A'Cairo dispatch nays the preliminary exarnt ation in the case of Ar»bi Pa«ha has been concluded, and no more testimony will be taken by the com­ mission. Arubi's counsel 1ms been furnished with a copy of the documents which the Egyptinn Government propones to use on the trial, and it looks as though the captive leader w;ts to have sometho g like fair treatment. before the curi Egan, treasurer of the Irish I .and Lea 'ue cables James Money, President of the Ainerl ican Leatrue, that i he charges of misappro­ priation of the moneys are simply lilie.oua Three hundred people on Twrv island, off the northwest coast of Irelajid", are said tobe without foud, and other ""poruoas of the population of Western Ireland are threatened with starvation. THERE was rioting at Lille, in France, caused by the Gambettists breaking up a meeti'ig of Social sts. Plac irds were posted in Paris further exasperating the people agaim-t the "slave-dim gbourgeoise The Cabinet issued a decree governing the use of dynamite. < ambetta is in irreat disfavor with the Socialists Violent gales on the t-outheast coast of Spain cause I great dam age to shipping at Cad z and Alicort i wen- ty four fishermen were drowned.... Hoods in the Tyrol and Upper Italy caused terrib!e suffering and loss of life and ^enormous damage. At balseburg mimy houses were swept away and at/ Nieksdorf a railway station was de­ stroyed ... .Russia is annoyed at Servia's friiepdsliip lor Austria, and the Czar failed to congratulate King Milan upon his escape from assassination. The elections for members of the Italian Chamber of Depu­ ties resulted favorably to the Progressists. THE British Government has insisted on certain legal proceedings'in Arabi's trial but will not interfere with the composition of, the court or other details'of "the trial pro­ ceedings... .In the British House of Com- | mons Mr. Trevelvan, Chief Secretary for : Ireland, stated that '.•s? persons were arrested under the Irish Coercion act, recently ex- ! pired Cocapieller, elected to .the Italian • Chnmber, was recently a circus ricTeir, and i has just been r.-leased from prison foff corn- 1 HHrw nrnrmtum ^NII.R„' „JL.nL _r T , mltling a deadly assault Tne-Iiouwtri press JTTVS THOUSAND dollars ..worth of dia- generall^looks with disgust, on his election. where she was to have spoken. SOUTHERN Texas railways issued a circular in St Louis announcing that they will no longer recoarnize through bills of lading issued by the Gould roads. AN ARKANSAS TRAGEDT. The Strange and Deadly Compact Between Father and Sun. A recent telegram from Little Rock, Ark., says: "Several weeks since an old man named Isador Cazat, for thirteen years stationary engineer at the St. Louis and Iron Mountain railroad machine shops in Argenta, opposite this city» was discharged Tor a frequent neglect of d tv. Sincej he repeatedly said he intended suicide, antl about 2 o'clock this aftern. he rose from the dinner table at ' on West Markham street, badeT"h:s family good-by, put the mju^Te of a pistol to his temple^ted^ttnd rell dead. An hour later his son, Deno Cazat, about 27 years old, but who was not at home at the time, crossed the river to Argenta, determined to avenge his lather's death. He entered one of the machine-shop offices and inquired for Master Mechanic Richardson, who had dis- cnarsred his father. R chardson was absent, but George F. Barnes, his clerk and time­ keeper, was there. Cazat began cursing him as the cause of his father's discharge, drew his pistol, and ordered Barnes to get on his knees and beg pardon. Barnes ex­ postulated. Then Cazat exclaimed he would k 11 him anyhow. He counted, "One two," and wuile pronouncing the word "three" thr st the pistol into Barnes' face. He then countei "one. two," and tired as the victim suddenly s ooped in aa effort to dodge; the b 1 et struck names .n the lorehe vt. c un inir out at the right, eye. Ba nes die I sho t- ly after ; eceiving the fat ii shot. Cazat fled and hid in aclumpof willows near the river's edge, where he was arre ted and brought over to this citv Barnes w t- a youn : mar­ ried man. There is no doubt that it w s <az.t's intention to kill both Richardson :ind Barnei A ctrange feature of the affair came out in the testi­ mony of Mr8. Cazat before the Coroner. She stated under oath that an agreement had been entered into in her presence between her husband and son that tne former should commit suicide and the latter kill Richaid- eon. She believed the compact was the re­ sult of a frenzy and idle, but it was strictly carried out Barnes' remains were shipped to his former home in Bunker Hill, Til The Insane Deed of the Wife of Calibrated Insanity , " ^ ; Expert. Kn. Dr. Edward G. Seguin Kills Herself and Her Three •. 'J'Ohildton. , An awful tragedy occurred in the faftrili, of Dr. Edward C. Seguin, the famous special5~ ist in insanity cases, at his residence in Nevf York city. The wife of Dr. Seguin, aged 36, took her three children to a room at the top of the house, blindfolded them, tied their hands behind their backs, and then shot each one in turn through the head. The insane woman immediately dealt herself the same death. The siokening details of the unnat­ ural crime are embraced in the following telegraphic report of the affair: The ch ldr jn w re Edward D., aged 6 ye ns; Joan Van Duyo, aged 5 years, and Jea Vnt t e 4 years. They were all shot through the head and ins antlv killed The mother's death was as sudden*as theirs The irig itful feature of the tragedy is the man­ ner of tue murder. Mr-', s guin iok the children t > an empty spare room at the top of a five-storv nou e in the ab ence of her husband, and while the servant-* were engaged in the basement, and locked herself in with them. The servants believed they had gone out for a walk. What happened in the room will never be known, but when Dr. Atnidon, Mrs. Seguin's {rrother, called, ot 5 o'clock, and, with his suspicions ar. msed by the long absence of the family, ma le a search of t e house, the mother and children were found dead, all shot through the head. The children's hands were tied behind their backs with whipcord. They were blindfolded with handkerchiefs, and, from all appearances, they must have been shot while playing at blindman's butt with their executioner. They had been dead for at least an hour and a half, and were quite cold when discovered. Three pistols were found in the room, all of heavy caliber, and all had been u-ed. Mrs. Seguin had been despondent from physical •auees for some time, but she has shown no evidence of insanity. 8he was a small, slim woman of nervous temperament Her do­ mestic life was very happy, and there was no family trouble. Dr. Seguin is a noted specialist in cases of insanity. His father •fras equally so. His wife was the daughter of a Massachusetts farmer. The couple moved in the best soci­ ety. The family lived in a five-story brown- stone front English basement house, ele­ gantly furnished The room in which the tragedy took place is on the fifth floor, and is scarcely ever used by the family. The three servants in the house noticed during the day that Mrs. Seguin was in the moody con- ditvon she had been in for several we^ks, and which her brother. Dr. Amidon, termed "the blues." About 11 o'clock he called upon her, and she said she did not feel well, and had written to Dr. Henry Diaper, who had been invited to dine with' the family, to defer his Visit Ttds note she asked her brother to send. He took it, jokmglv, and told her they would all enjoy themselves. Dr. Ami­ don called on hi s ster^t 3 o'clock, and was lold' she had gone oUt lor a waik. He returned at 5 o'clock/but Mrs. Sequin had ndt yet returned. Tflie hall-boy incident­ ally mentioned thjt the door of the spare room was locked and the key pone" A .-uctden u picion se Z M the doctor tha* Mrs. Segu n had gone to tire Central Park and drowned herseli and^t.ie ch ldr n. He cou d not explain why he Mi ught tnia He immediately went up st irs and bur t the door of the r.oom ( pen. T ie horr ble sight met his eyes. Almost in t e middle of the floor lay the dead •<* dv of the eldest bov, Edward, m a pool of blood. Partly ;n a clos­ et lay Jlrs. Sfguin, grasp n-r in lier right hand a b:g p arl-handle t revolver. Inside the closet lay the boy John and the girl Jeannette. There could be no doubt the mother had taken the children into the room On the pretense of playing blindman's buff. She had led the two young 'Stinto the closet, and locked them in While sue murdered'the oldest boy. The pistol with which he was shot was a tar^et-pzMbce weapon, with a barrel'eleven inches ltw%. It lny beside him, and the bullet lay on ti e floor. It had passed through his head. The maniac moth- xr tircu piuCcuwu W ilW QT086t», tlUcl Wltfi ft heavy thirty-two-caliber revolver, wiih which she- afterward blew out her own brains, shot the other two children. Dr Amidon cut the strings that bound the children's hands and laid them on the bed. The police and Coroner weie notified at once. Nothing was found"t»>the rooinjo ex­ plain tlie motive for the tV;l"riW?; irime. The maniac had held the weapon close to her victim's heads, for the hauclke:. liiefs on their faces had been burned. The face of the liitle g rl wore a look of innocent surprise that cut more deeply than any other feature of the dreadful deed. On t he table lay a box. of cartridges and a third pistol. Sudden insanity is (he on y motive known for the deed. Mrs. Seguin was neatly dres- ed. The children wi re love.y little thing-, unci all the farm y she had. PUBLIC DEBT. Th«! Regular Monthly Statement. A Washington dispatch says: The public- debt statement for the last month shows that the Government is still able to reduce the debt at the rate of f500,000 per day. The influence of the new law as to gold certifi­ cates is observable in the increased number outstanding. There has been an increase in the month in the available cash balance of the treasury, and it is now a considerable sum in excess of the 40-per-cent reserve for redemption purposes, which it has been the custom of the treasury to maintain. Following is the October debt statement: Interest-bearing debt;-- Three and one-half per cents, ,$ 155,356,350 Four and one-half per cents. 260,tHm,(xio T8s.it29,6 >0 259,370,500 423,750 14,000,000 Ml 8,080.'200 lo,mo,2ii 11,588,945 382,H13 846,740,399 9,945,000 99,968,150 7,026,185 UNPREPARED FOR WAR. Chief Engineer Wriff lit'* Report on tlie Con­ dition of Our Fortifications. Gen. H. G. Wright, Chief of Engineers United States army, in his annual report, gives a detailed account of the condition and needs of all fortifications. On sea-coast defenses the report says: The defense of the United States against maritime attack for many years must depend upon the finishing of the barbet battteries designed lorur ago, but with such modifica­ tions as will adapt them to the reception of the twelve-inch rifled gun recently proposed, with its enlarged carriage, and at the same time give greater security to ihe magazines; also that' it will be necessary to make ready without delay to apply one system of tor­ pedoes to all harbors, preparing bomb-proof electrical operating-rooms and deep mason­ ry galleries, extending therefrom to the l«w water-line needed for the purpose. Our unprenaredness for war is shown, and it is stated tnat, however powerful in num­ bers and valor our army may be, without the aid of fortifications, and their acces­ sories they cannot prevent the destruction of our seaboard cities by the ships of the maritime foe; and that, "while reliance can be had in no other Wode of defense, a de­ fence by fortifications and torpedoes is most efficient and least expensive. Four per cents. Three per cents liefundinn certificates. Navy pension fund.... Principal .'. Interest Matured debt- Principal Interest Debt bearing no interest-- Old demand and legal-tender notes. Certificates of deposit Gold and silver certificates Fractional currency ' "C . ---- Total $ 463,679,731 Unclaimed Pacific railway interest.. 5,339 Total debt-- Principal 1,893,348,877 Interest ." 10,5'#,365 Cash in treasury 275,386,199 Debt, less cash in treasury-- NOV. 1, 1882 1,628,491,042 Oct. 1, 1882 1,6H,12IV223 Decrease ot debt durine month...... 15,S'29,180 Decrease of debt since June 80,1881. 60,128,418 Current liabilities- Interest due and unpaid 2,256,053 Debt on whieh interest has ceased... 11,588.945 Interest thereon 482.S13 Gold and silver certificates 09,9t°>8,l:j0 United States noten held for redemD- tion of certificates of deposit. ... ' 9,945,ooo Cash balance available Nov. 1, 1882.. 161,145,237 Available asnets-- Cash in treasury 275,386,199 Bonds issued to Pacific Railways-- Principal outstanding ).. " 64,52"',512 Interest accrued and not vet paid... l,'292,-T70 Interest paid by United States 55,344,682 Interest repaid by companies-- By transportation service 15,338,859 By cash payments, 5 percent, net earnings 655,198 Balance of Interest paid by United States 39,350,623 The receipts at the treasury, says a Wasn- ington correspondent continue so lartre that the surplus is growing. It wqs suppo ed that the. bond calls, in addit on to the heavy drafts on account, of appropriations, would reduce it; but, the rece pts hav • gained so much mote rapidly than the disburs-me'nts that the aval able surplus is $10,00 >,000 larger than it was last month. L<^ 1 "clergyman: "My dear fellow, you must renllv lot up on driving fast horses and frequenting variety shows. There's a lieaj) of scandal floating round about you." And the clergyman replied: "Is there? Oh joy! ThatXwliat I've been working for. _ I shall have some audi­ ences now."--Boston Pout. it destroyed tRe formality of the feast, put every one in a good'humor and the affair passed along to a most plea#tint conclusion. * £ ; LACERATED LTNCHEBfc. Dreadful Affair at Ashland, Ky„ Over Possession of Two Murderers. The Troops Open Fire on the Mob with ̂ Fatal Effect. [Telegram from Ashland, Ky.J , Wm. Neal and Ellis Craft were con"Hefced some months ago at the Catlettsburg (Boyd county, Ky.) Circuit Court of the murder of Robert and Fannie Gibbons and Emma Car­ rier. They were granted a new trial by the Supreme Court George Ellis, an accom­ plice, who confessed and was sentenced to imprisonment for life, was hanged by a mob at Ashland, last summer. On Monday last Neal and Craft, guarded by 230 State troops, with one section of ar­ tillery, arrived at Catlettsburg from Lexing­ ton, where they have been held for safe­ keeping, to stand trial. Yesterday Judge Brown granted a change'of venue to Carter county. Last night a mob at Ashland stopped a train on the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, and searched it for the prisoners. This afternoon at 2:H0 Sheriff Kountz, with the State troops and prisoners, boarded the steamboat Granite State for Maye- ville, intending to go thence by rail to Lexington to the jail to confine the prison­ ers unt 1 trial The mob at Ashland, which is five miles down the river to Catlettsburg, seized a ferryboat and stood out to intercept them The Granite State, under full head­ way, steam-d around the ferryboat, when, seeing they w re about to lose their prey, the mob opened fire, which was returned by the troops with fat u effect. The ferryboat party, finding the troops were in earnest, with­ drew, with one killed and several wounded. The battle was tor several minutes pretty hot, but the steamboat rapidly got away and out of range of the shore in front of the Aldine Hotel. The fire of the troops was severe, the shots passing over the ferryboat and ki ling five spectators and wounding twenty-one others. Among those ki led was a woman and an infant in her arms, whose grains were dashed out by a stray shot In the m'dst of tlie excitement a runaway team and wagon dashed into the struggling mass of citizens as they tied from the mur­ derous bullets, altogether making a 1 right­ ful scene. The community is very much excited and threats are made to go to Lexington in force and execute vengeance upon the pris­ oners. None of the passengers were hurt by the fire of the mob. The following is a partial list of the killed and wounded: Killed--Col. Rippart, George Kener, a child of Henry Dunlap, James-McDonald, John Baugh. ^ Seriously wounded -- Charles Bolinger, Will Ch-i'rle-< Bolinger, Wi lies Serrey, •Will Springer, Moses Serrey, Gerham Ran­ dall and'Robert I'ritchard. Slightly wounded -- Mart Dunlap, Alex. Harris, John Gallagher, Julius Sommers, Thoma- B rd, Mrs. K. Butler, A. H. Dickson, Thomas Demerera. N. E. B 11. Dr. Gills, Mar­ tin Ge.ir, Robert Lowther and J. W. House. VCoL ltippari, nuuibeied mjtm : t ekil ed, Vas an old and li g ly respited citiz n o? 7*J-odd years, un verrally I vy d and a favor­ ite of b th old and y una? He was f-it ier- in-law of Col Douglass flfitnain, Ji .. Super­ intend n of the Ashland Coal and I>on Rail­ way Company, and weh-knowji in Marietta circes. Mrs. Butler, numbered among the woun-led, was attending a meeting held by the ladies of the town for the purpose of or­ gan zing a public reading-room m a room oonated for the purpose in the Union depot, which is situated on the river front at least a quarter of a mile below the scene of the shoot ing. Mrs. Butler is the wife of the Auditor of the Chattaroi railway. Other buliets striking the depiot and pene­ trating the walls caused its occupants to seek healthier quarters ; The list of wounded includes all ages and both sexes, and amputations in several cases will be necessary. ORDNANCE BUREAU. Chlef^JBenet's Report of Its Operations. Gen. V. Benet, Chief of Ordnance of the Unitefl States army, in a report for the year ending June 30,1882, gives the fiscal re­ sources of the year, $2;733,622; expenditures. $1,(5(59,'.'76. A chapter is devoted to the sub­ ject of the armament of fortifications, in which Gen. Benet says: "With a very press­ ing need for seaport armament constantly before us, it should seem expedient to tike £verv iidvantage of our own resources to help provide for our wants. It will doubtless be practicable for us to f roduce rifled guns of a mode­ rate power, even from cast-iron, provided the cast iron be suitably strengthened with steel hoops, or, better, with hoops on the ex- teiior and steel tubes on the interior." Gen. Benet also says it is believed that, with proper encouragement, field guns can lie made here without the necessity of going abroad for the steel. Recommendation is made that the immediate publication of the results of tests of iron and steel and other materials for industrial purposes be author­ ized by C ngress. In the chapter on the militia, the Chief of Ordnance says: " Otir outstanding army is a' small one. For the defense of tlie country our main de­ pendence is on our mditia The miiitia should, therefore, be kept in the best con­ dition p' ssible for actual service. Volunteer or^raniza ions in every State and Territory should IKS encouraged, and every effort ma< le to pr<.mote their efficiency in dTill and disci­ pline, and make them skillful in the use of their arms. It is the best way and the only way to i ender them a sure arid safe reliance on the breaking out of a war, and before a little campaigning has inured them to hard service and disciplined them into old sol­ diers." A Very Profane Blunder. An Irish peer, Lord Ilcliester, dined with a San Francisco swell. The good lady had ciarefullv drilled her darky butler in regard to giving his Lordship his title. " Yd9 must say, ' Will you have this, my Lord?' or, 'My Lord, can I assist yoyrto this ?'" The serv­ ant got it off/Co perfection; but alas, when the dinger came off, and he passed behind Lordjl llchester with the de­ canter he saifl, with proud impressive- ness, "My (lod., will you have some sherry ?" This had an excellent effect; V • Two Singular Men, ; .. A stranger with long hair, a white coat, a white liat with a crape band and other evidences of lunacy, entered a Qriswold street restaurant and said to the proprietor: "Sir, let me explain in advance that I am a singular man." . "All right, sir. A singular man's or­ der is as good as any one else's." U1 want six oysters on the half-shell --on tlie left-hand half, if you please." The oysters were opened and placed before him, and when he had devoured them lie said: ' - "Now' take six oysters, run them through a clothes-wringer to remove the dampness, and fry them for me in olive oil." This order was also filled,-when he called for a cup of * salt and water, add­ ed milk and sugar and drank it down and asked for his bill. "I also desire to explain in advance that I am a singular man," replied the proprietor. ' • "Your bill is $2." c "Impossible!" "Just $'2, sir." -. "But that is mogwtrons!" "Perhaps it seems high, but that's my singular way of charging, for singu­ lar lunches." "I'll never pay it!" . "Then I'll sadden your heart!" The sad proceedings xrete about to begin when the long-haired man forked over and walked out. The lesson seemed to sink deep into his heart, for he halted at a fruit store and, without any explanations in advance, paid the usual price for a banana and carried it off without a:-king-the seller to dip the ends in rose water.--Detroit Free Press. A Wisconsin man says lie would as soon take quinine as sugar if it wasn't lot the bitter taste. THE GRANARY OF THE WORLD. The Great Incmue of Cereal Production In the (Jnieed States.. H. Edmonds, the grain expert, has published in the Baltimore Journal, of Commerce an elaborate statistic review of the cultivating and marketing of American cereals from the earliest times. He brings out strikingly the fact that the production and export of wheat on a great scale is comparatively new business. As late as 1839 a con­ siderable quantity was imported from Europe , and in five fiscal years ending June 30, 1840, the exports were only 1,- 842,Hi 1 bushels. This is Sri average of 3tiS,5(»8 bushels a year. Forty years later the aggregate has risen to 153,252,- 895 bushels. The exports of flour, how­ ever, amounted to 4,451,384 barrels for the five fiscal years ending in 1825. This was 99.61 per cent, of the total of wheat and flour exported. The per­ centage of flour pretty steadily decreased from that time till 1880, when it was on­ ly 15.2 of the whole. In the year end­ ing with last June, however, it rose to 31.6 per cent. It is the opinion of Mr. Eflmonds that the proportion of flour will steadily increase in the future, ow­ ing to the popularity of the American article, and the necessity for finding a foreign market for the growing output of the mills. The highest average val­ ue for any five years from 1821 to 1875 was for the five years ending in 1870, when the export value of wheat aver­ aged $1.42 a bushel, and of flour $8.03 a barrel; the lowest figures being 89 cents a bushel for wheat; in 1830, and $4.94 a barrel of flour, in 1845. The total production of wheat in bushels for 1871 and 1880, with the quantity in each section of the country, is given, in the following table: 1871. New England States 943,400 Middle States 31,716,000 Southern States 31,371,0<X) Western States .145.306,000 Pacific States 19,336,000 Territories 1,070,080 1880. 1,062,232 88 693,929 55,301,686 333,799,625 59,692,397 10,000,000 Total 230,722,400 498,549,868 The liistoryof corn in this country covers the perioaCfrom 1611, when thirty acres were planted by the James river settlers to the present, time, when our fields amount to 62,000,000 acres, yielding 1,- 500,000.000 bushels and upward anual- ly. The exports of corn, compared to the whole crop, are small, but a great deal goes out-in the form of meat. The exports fo/ the seven years, 1876 tb 1882, botlranclusive, were 624,680,520 bushels of corn, which was 168,000,000 bushels more thau the combined ex­ ports of the preceding fifty-five years; but tlie value for the last seven years was not proportionately so great, as the average price was only 56 cents, against 74 cents in the longer period. The total of the six principal grains raised in 1880 was 2^718,193,501 bushels on 120,926,286 acr^ In 1881, though the acreage rose to 123,387,470, the yield was 650, 000,000 bushels less. Mr. Edmonds em­ phasizes the need of cheaper facilities for getting our grain to Europe, point­ ing to Chili, the East Indies and Aus­ tralia as growing competitors. An Anecdote of Lamb. Haydon, in his autobiography and* journals, relates a droll storV of a din­ ner which he gave in his painting-room to Wordsworth, Lamb, Keats and Richie, the traveler. Wordsworth was in firie^ cue. Lamb got» exceedingly mirtliful and exquisitely wittv; and his fun. in the midst of Wordsworth's solemn intonations of oratory, was like the sarcasm and wit of the fool in the infovvola a| Tjoar'a. noocifvn.^ Tm,»ik soon got delightfully merry. "Now," said Lamb, "you old Lake poet, you rascally poet, why do you call Voltaire dull?" The party all defended Words- wortlt^and affirmed there was a state of mind when Voltaire could be dull. "Well," said Lamb, "here's Voltaire, the Messiah of the French nation, and a very proper one, too!" It was delight­ ful to see the good humor of Words­ worth in giving in to all these frolics. In the morning of this most delight­ ful day, a gentleman, a perfect stranger, had called on Haydon. He said he knew his friends had an enthusiasm for Wordsworth, and begged an introduc­ tion. He added he was a Comptroller of Stamps, and often had correspond­ ence with Wordsworth. Haydon thought it a liberty, but at last consent­ ed ; and whep the party retired to tea they found the Comptroller. In intro­ ducing him to Wordsworth, Haydon for­ got to say who he was. After a little time the man of stamps looked down, looked up, and said to Wordsworth, "Don't you think, sir, Mil­ ton was a great genius?" Keats looked at Haydon, Wordsworth looked at the Comptroller. Lamb who was dozing by the fire, turned round and said, "Pray, sir, did you say Milton was a great genius?" "No, sir, I asked Mr. Wordsworth if he were not." "Oh," said Lamb, "then you are a silly fellow." "Charles, my dear Charles!" said Wordsworth, but Lahib, perfectly inno­ cent of the confusion he had created, was off again by the fire. After an awful pause the Comptroller asked, "Don't you think Newton was a great genius?" Haydon could not stand it any longer. Keats put his head into books. Wordsworth seemed asking himself, "Who is this?" Lamb got up, and taking the candle said, "Sir, will you allow me to look at your phreno­ logical developement?" He then turned his back upon the poor Comptroller and at every question chanted, "Diddle, diddle, dumpling, my son John /'Went to his bed with his breeches on." The man in office, finding Words­ worth did not know who he was, said, "I have had the honor of some corres­ pondence with you, Mr. Wordsworth." "With me, sir? I don't remember." "Don't von. sir ? I am Comptroller of Stamps." While they were waiting for Wordsworth's reply, Lamb sang out: " 'Hey, diddle, diddle, '-The cat and the fiddle." Do let us have another look at the gen­ tleman's organs." Keats and Haydon hurried Lamb into the painting-room. They went back. The Comptroller was at first irreconcileable; they soothed him, they asked «him to supper. He staved, though his dignity was sorely affected. However, being a good-na- turod mau, they parted in good linmor, and no ill effects followed. - < Th,e Oldest Town In Texas. Ysleta, on the Rio Grande, twelve miles below El Paso, is the county seat of El Paso county, has a population of j about 2,500, and is one of the most in- ! teresting places in the world. It is in- ! teresting from its great antiquity and ! the peculiarities of its people, its agri- | culture and its products. It is far tlie j oldest town in Texas, and there can be j little doubt that it is also the oldest in | the United States. It is said to be a | well-established historical fact that a Spanish explorer or military adventu j rer, named Coronado visited tlie place ; i i 1540, and found it then a populous j and prosperous civilized Indian eom- 1 munity. He was immediately followed by the Franciscan friars,s^phrf erected a church and established ̂ chools the same year. These facts are said to be just as easily proved as any other facts in history. Now, if Ysleta was a popu­ lous town in 1540, it follows without a doubt that it was a town before that time, and it may have been a town even hundreds of years before. The same race of people exists there to-day just as pure-blooded, for the most part, as wln?n Coronado found them-342 years ago, engaged in the same agricultural and mechanical pursuits as their fore­ fathers in ages back. V Why he Does Hot Cortb "Will he bite?" > The humming of thei, bees as thfljr sped from flower to flower and sipped the honeyed treasures of petal and calyx, and the low murmur of the sum­ mer breeze, sighing among the locust trees were the only sounds that broke the St. Louis silence of a beautiful afternoon in September. The amber haze of the Indian summer had fallen upon the land, and from the vivid hue£ of the sumac bush to the pale gray of the abandoned lioopskirt every object that lay so silently upon the brown bo­ som of the sun-kissed earth w€s touched with the withering hand of Autumn. Away to the westward stretched a vista of grain fields that were laughing in the golden glory of an abundant har­ vest, while the eastern landscape was flecked here and there by a sad-eyed but brindle cow. "Let us think only of the future, Rupert," said Beryl Gilhooly to the strong-limbed, all-on-account of-Eliza young man who stood by her side, look­ ing down into the hazel depths of her beautiful eyes in a wistful, will-the-old- man-ever-go-to-bed expression that sat so strangely upon the Chicago outlines of his pure young face. And even while speaking these words she turned her light foot slightly, so as to shield him from the ardent rays of the sun, and smiled a joyous, happy, you-are-first- choice-in-every-pool smile that told of the deathless passion that enslaved her soul. "Let us think of the future," she continued: "of the bright and happy future, full of matinee tickets and ice cream." "No, no, not that, some other future," cried Rupert Mcintosh, a look of haunt­ ing horror coming into his face. "I can­ not free my mind from this dread sus­ picion." At that moment a book-agent was seen ascending the brow of a hill. He entered the portals of Coasteliff Castle and went up the front steps. In a little while he came back hurriedly, and •soon a dog was seen at play with some gents' furnishing goods. Rupert kissed Beryl and started over town. "When are you coming back, sweet­ heart ?" the girl asks. "Next August," are the words that the zephyrs bring back to her. "Why do you wait so long, darling?" "Because," he answers in tear-stained tones,x"4ggs are muzzled in August.-- ChicaaoTribune. ' Dynamite.. Dynamite, or" giant powder, as it is frequently termed in the United States, like all explosives, goes through a pro­ cess of combustion when exploding. A large part of the effective force is due to the heat generated by this com- bustion, or burning, which may or may not be attended by flame. One of the peculiar merits of dynamite (which consist.* of twenty to parts of nitro-glycerine, with seventy-five to* eighty parts of finely pulverized infu­ sorial earth or burnt clay from glass works) is its slower or more complete combustion. Nitro-glycerine alone ex­ plodes so rapidly that it is apt to scat­ ter unexploded drops, involving waste and danger. The slower combustion of dynamite gives time for communica­ tion of the forces to the mass to be moved, resulting in a considerable saving of pressure. The total poten­ tial energy of dynamite is 1,139 tons per square foot. But the percentage of this which can be realized in actual practice depends upon circumstances. For example, the total theoretic work of- a pound of gunpowder, assuming complete combustion and the utilization of its entire expansive force, is estima­ ted at 480 to 486 tons pressure to the square foot. Butf the percentage of this realized in actual practice varies from only about half (or 50.5 per cent.) in a seven-pounder mountain gun to ninety-three per cent, or 450-452 tons per square foot in a thirty-eight ton gun. It is not too much to estimate that the effective force of giant powder under favorable circumstances rises to 1,000 foot tons per pound of the mix­ ture. . BISMARCK'S parents intended him for the church. "Don't you think I would have been a better man ?" he said once to his wife, who was present at the time he told-liis story. "Well," she replied, "I think you would have been a happier man." THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. $9.00 @12.80 120 @ 7.00 .10*$ .11 8.25 <® 4.00« 1.10 & 1.1* 1.08 1.09 BKKVBS......... HOGS. COTTON. FIXJUB--Superfine. WHEAT--No. l White.;;.. No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2.... OATS--No. 2 j.. PORK--Mees LARD CHICAGO. BKEVBS--Oood to Fancy 8teera.. Cows and Heifers...... Medium to Fair FXXJUR--Fancy White Winter Ex. 6.00 & FI.78 Good to Choice Sp'g Ex. 5.00 & 5.60 WHEAT--No. 2 Sprinur No. 2 Red Winter....... CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2. RYE--No. BARI.ET^-NO. 2 BUTTER--Choice Creamery. EOGS--Fresh .83 & .84 ... .41 & .43 . . . 22 .75 @23.00 ."5. .12 & .12* 5.90 @ 6.85 2.75 @ 3.90 5.25 7.90 4.75 5.00 .92 <3 .94 @ .67 @ .93 .95 .68 .83 & .34 .56 @ .57 .82 .85 .25 PORX--Mess.. LARD 21.00 @22.00 .11KO .11* .94 MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--NO. 2 CORN--NO. 2 J8 OATS--NO. 2 « RYE--NO. 2. .65 BARI.ET--No. >..... PORK--Mess LARD "" " " ST. "i'dina*" WHEAT--No. 2 Red.... CORN--Mixed OATS--No. 2...: RYE PORK--Mess LARD ; CINCINNATI. WHEAT--No. 2 Red....... CORN OATS RYE PORK--Mess ....... LARD IT... „ TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2. Red.; CORN ^ O ATS--NO. 2 '.'.'.!.".'. * * * DETROIT. FLOUR WHEAT--No. L WhiteILL*.'" CORN--NO. 2. .. . . OATS--Mixed I * PORK--Mess _ INDIANAPOLIS." JJrHT!AT--*°- 2 Red .94 ® .95 CORN--No. 2 68 @ .69 OATS--Mixed .32 & .33 _ EAST LIBERTY, PA. CATTLE--Best .-. 6.50 @7.00 Fair 5.50 ($ 6;0© Common.' 4.00 (ai 4.50 3.T5 & 4.00 .74 (« .75 . 19.00 19.25 .11K@ .11* .92 & .93 .62 & .63 .31 <§> .32 .55 (3> .56 22.00 <3122.25 .1114(31 .11* .95 & .96 .«7 @ .08 .87 @ .38 .*• @ .63 23.25 @2 '.50 . .N;2<® .IN* .97 @ .98 .TO & .71 .34 & .35 6.50 & 6.60 .98 (£ .99 .74 (3 .75 .86 & .37 22.50 @23.00 | HOGS 1 p"";? 1!."".".*.!!!"."."."."**"*

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