i flaraiealri L ¥ANtLYKK,M RsrMiniMMwr. !, IfoHENRY, ILLINOI& sfHE NEWS RECORDt |l SUMMARY Or THJS J5TKXTHTI. SAP- ':f> ' PKMNGS or A WEEK, ' Xhm latMt New* m FIuhM Orer Wlm ftwn AU Parts ef the Wnrld--Re- fjltdbit Mitleat K«1I|1OB, CimlU^l, Qeaamerce, mJ Indaatry. . FAVOR CHEAP BOOKS. 'Wm Copyright Bill Defrnt^d In the Hnttfe. Ih tho Renatfc, on the 3d inst., the customs ad- mi nistraiivo bill was taken up and the bill was paMed--yeas 33, nays 18 (Mr. Payne being the only Democrat voting in the affirmative). The Mil is practically unchanged from that reported try the Finance Committee on the 19t h of March, the only change of any importance being th < insertion of a provision in the fourth section that the Secretary of the Treasury may make regulations by which bonks, magaziues, and other periodicals published and imported in part?, numbers, and volumes, and entered to De imported free of duty, shall require bat one declaiation for the entire series. A conference on the disagreeing votes was asked, and Messrs. Allison, Aldrich and Mc- Plierson were appointed colifereres. On motion of Mr. Jones, of Nevada, the bill authorizing the issue of treasury notes on deposit of silver bul lion was taken up and made the "unfinished business" from Wednesday next until disposed of. The conference report on the Oklahoma town sites bill was presented and agreed to. Alter an executive session the Senate adjourned. In the House Mr. Milliken, of Maine, presented and the House adopted the conference report •on the I/afayettu ilmi.) public building bill. The limit "of cost is SSO.OOO. On mo- , tion of Mr. O'Neill, of Pennsylvania, a resolution was adcrpted setting apart Satur day, June 14, for the delivery of eulogies upon the late Samuel J. liandall, of Pennsylvania. The House then resumed the consideration of the international copyright bill. Mr. Carlisle mode a short speech in favor of the bill and was answered by Mr. I'ayson, who said that this country is made the barnyard and cess pool of literature that ougbt. to be con demned. Mr. Lodge, of Massachusetts, said that when we give chili.r-m books at their impres sionable age we should give them American books, and not books tliit teem with dukes and duchesses. He hoped with his whole heart that tho bill would be passed. Mr. Covert, of New York, also spoke in favor of the bill. Mr. Far- quhar. of New Yurk, and Mr. Bntterworth then lollowed in favor of the bill. The yeas and nays were then called for, and the bill was defeated --yeaa 98, nays 126. The House held an evening session for the consideration of pension bills. THE BALL-PLAYERS. ttMdlor of the Yarlotu Clnbi la Ike Six Leading Organizations. f'c. National. W. Boston.. Chicago 6 Buffalo..... 5 Brooklyn... 5 Pittsburg.. 4 Philad'phia 3 Cleveland.. 3 New York. . 2 American. W. I*. ^ Rochester,. 9 I ) lvOuisTille . 8 Athletic 7 St. Louie... 8 Columba*.. 8 Syracuse... 4 Brooklyn... 3 Toledo ..... 3 9 Ill-Iowa. W. L. Monmouth. 3 0 Ottnmwa...' 2 Dubuque... 2 Aurora 1 C'dr Kap'ds 1 Sterling o Ottawa. 0 Joliet 0 L. »c. .800 Chicago 6 4 .600 .(Kit; Boston 8 4 .60 J .C'2> Cincinnati. 8 4 .000 ^55 Pittsburg .. 5 5 .500 •444 Brooklyn... 4 4 .50J •875! Philad'phia 4 4 .50J .8001 New York.. 4 6 .400 •250|Cleveland.. 3 ,7 .300 Western. W, L. -p c. 50 Minu'apolls 7 4 .636 Jill Denver 6 4 .600 .700 Sioux City. 6 4 .600 .<Kk> lies Moines. 7 5 .583 .881 K'nsaB City 4 5 .444 ^(>8 Milwaukee. 5 7 '.416 •£5) St. Paul.... 4 7 .3t53 •JS50 Omaha 4 7 .363 l*c 1 Interstate. W. L. 1.000 Peoria 3 0 J.OOOBurlington. 3 1 LOXi Eviinsville. 8 2 JS0') Terra Ha'te. 2 2 JOOQuiocy 1 & .000 (iitlesburg.. 0 S a 1.000 .7ao .303 .500 .250 .000 •IS;.. GEN. DUSTIN GETS THE P&ACE. Nominated United States Treasurer at Ckleieo. : THE President bog oe&t to ib« Senate * - • - the following nomination!! Daniel DastS.n, Assistant United Slates Tri»S« «*«* at Cbie*g<> f T, Pitt Cook, Collector of Cw at Sandusky. Ohio; Wm C. Braco, Ap- of Merchandise, District of Cu vahqga, Harrison lieed, Postmaster at Tallahaa- 1a., vice Win. F. Webster, withdrawn; Dustin's nomination was confirmed by the to the same afternoon. [Gen. Dustin hails from Aurora and was backed by Hon. A. J. Hopkins, who has been renominated for Congress at Elgin. Tbe ap pointee has a good army record. He nerved with President Harrison during the war, the •two men being companions and occupying the •same tent.] 1 and afaw "With the American Xiife Insur ance Company of tbat city. The capital stock oi toe bank wee $315,000. SOPHIA ARTRUD, a Swedish woman, was taken from the Cephalonia at quar antine fit Boston the other day, suffering, tlu* doctors think, from leprosy. The «aie will be investigated. JAMES PALMEK WRS banged at Con cord, N. H(, for the murder of Henry Whitehouse. o Thb Gloucester' City National Bank of Camden, N. J., has. closed its doors, the suspension being duo to the failure of Tth4 Bank of America in Philadelphia. Upon being arrested for bigamy at Sing Sing, N. Y„ Henry T. Raymond shot himself fatally. • HALF of the West Albany (N. Y.) Stock Yards, which cover fifteen acres, has been destroyed by fire. Two sheep pens which cost $18,000 were destroyed, with 650 tons of bay and a large amount of grain. Incendiarism is suspected. WESTERN HAPPENINGS. • V•fttiflmsT XOBNIG, a farm hand living on a ranch near Firbaugb, Cal., shot and killed anothetf h^nd named Henry Ber gen and fled. He was pursued by a posse and shot down. DURING the Ohio ballot-box .hearing Congressman Bntterworth became Very much excited at the testimony of Lewis A. Bode and finally called the witness a liar. No bloodshed resulted. JACK HAYMAN was killed and two Oth ers wounded in a fight between union and non-union fishermen on the Colum bia River, Oregon. t The Supreme Court of Nebraska has decided that railroads in that State must construct and keep in repair suitable cross ngs over public highways, notwith standing such highways were laid out after the railroads were built. THE worst fire for sixteen years swept through the timbers southeast of Man- dan, N. D., the other day. The high wind made <a tremendous fire. Hundreds of acres of timber are destroyed. WHAT appears to be the initial step in the formation of a crockery 'trust was taken at Columbus, Ohio, when repre sentatives of twenty-one of the landing crockery manufactories in the United States met and formed an association, to be known as the "National Association of Crockery and Glass Jobbers." A consti tution and by-laws were adopted. George W. Kinney, of Cleveland, was elected President; H. L. Jennings, of Detroit, nnd Louis Holloway, of Indianapolis, Vice Presidents; and Thomas Kite, of Cincinnati, Secretary and Treasurer. MINNEAPOLIS millers ground out last week 139,800 barrels of flour, against 12 l,i 170 the week pievious, and 102,930 the same time in 1880. The demand is light, and the market is 5 to 10 cents lower. BEFOBE adjournment the Ohio G. A. B. encampment passed a resolution de manding of Congress the passage of a per diem service pension bill. Two COLORED men, Jackson and Davis, hare arrived at Wichita, Kan., in an exhausted condition from the negro settlement in'Oklahoma, where they say exists a deplorable condition of affairs. These men appealed for aid, their ap-" peorance indicating that they needed it. They say their brethren have nothing to tide them over till crop time, neither clothes nor food, and that there is much sickness caused by the state of semi-star vation to which they baye been subjected lor the last two weellif. about #62,< UU0U1 , | U M l 1 favor of the Treasury T)00,U00. THE majority of the House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds has decided to offer Gen. Ben Butler §250,- 000 for his house opposite the Capitol. Ben wants $275,000. POLITICAL PORRIDGE. r-- 1 THB President has sent to the Senate the following nomination^: Willis H. Pettit, Surveyor Qeneral of Idahe; Samuel A. Swiggett, Register of the Land Ofllee at Helena, M. T. ltoceiwn of Public Mouevu- Oeorge C. Meet!, at Akton, Col.; Norman H. JJeldnini. at Bterling, OoL; Samuel B. Newell, Central City, Col. ; GeotgeM. Bourquin, Helena, 14. T. Ageucs for Indians--Wallace it. Lesser, Bac and Fox Agency, Iowa; James E. Helms, Sail tee Agency, Nebraska. THE Senate has confirmed Samnel B. Newell Receiver of Pnblic Moneys. at Central City, Col. . THE Republicans of the Fifth Illinois District renominated Congressman A. J. Hopkins, in their convention held in Elgin* • ^r'-vV ACROSS THE OCEAN. I 1 THE Prison Congress at St. Peters- burgh will open en June 16. The Prince of Oldenburg will preside. Three hun dred delegates will be present, represent ing twenty-five states. A municipal banquet, excursions, fetes, etc., are being arranged for the entertainment of the delegates. A tr.p to Finland is proposad, to take place after the olose of the con gress. » MANY fresh strikes in the textile facto ries are reported throughout Austria^ Some ©f the factories are guarded by trOops. At Frnnkstadt a rfot was com menced by incendiaries, when the strikers sacked the Bunibalacs linen factory and attacked the troops with stones and heavy clubs. A junior partner of the firm had a narrow escape from lynching. He was in the hands of the mob and would have' tfndoubtedly been hanged bad not his mother learned of his peril and sent a sum of money to buy his freedom from the enraged rioters. IT is stated at London that Prince Bismarck intends to make a visit to En gland and Scotland during the cominr summer, and that Count Herbert Bis marck is going over for a long stay. WH:i<b the Duke and DucheBS of Edin burgh were attending the ceremonies of opening the electrical exhibition in Edin burgh the jewels of the Duche«s were stolen from their apartments. There is no clew to the robber*. The jewels were of enormous value, and comprise some rare gems. A LONDON cable says: In the Com mons, the land purchase bill has passed its second reading by a vote of.34S|^^& . FRESH AND NEWSY. 4 ] KEM3HEH STILL LIVES A S * A 3 r E X E C U T I O N C R A N T K O ' " I n HIS CASE. Watlaee of the United Stat*« cir cuit Court Issues m Writ of Habeas _ Returnable June 18--Tli<> Ap paratus by M«an« of Which the Electric Shock Wan to Have Been Administered. (MjpUBN <N. Y.) COEBESPON0ENCE.] I L L I A M K E M M L E R . fbe Buffalo murderer, h a s r e c e i v e d a n e w l o A s a o f l i f e , a n d t h e r e will be no electrical ex e c u t i o n i n A u b u r n Slate Prison this week. Indeed, it ia altogether probable that the proof of the success or fail ure of a legal execution by eiectriclty in this State will be postponed for many months. The arrangements had been made to th« smallest d e t a i l . T h e h i d e o u s p a r a p h e r n a l i a o f t h e secret death chamber was in plaoe and ready for the last test. The witnesses of the cxocntlon had been chosen and many of them wore on hand. The day, almost the hour, WHS selected. The murderer had been told that his time had come to die, and had been baptized and said his jrood-by to the best friend he ever had in life. His coffin was in readiness for him. Then, at the eleventh hour, that stern and Inexorable voice of the people, m the shape of its time-honored agent, the habeas corpus act, steppol in. and there was u r.tav. Asrain the question was raised whether this penalty was or was not cruel and unusual, and the courts of the United States were called upon to decide tne issue. The mur- „ protracted litigation. When Kemmler Is rroduoed at Canandaigua on June 16 the first argument will be hud. That may last for several days. Mad it may be ••weeks be lore the dec'.a Ion of the court is handed down. If It is against llr. Sherman h« may take the case on anneal to the United States Supreme Court at "Washington. There are many cases before tbat beuch. and it may take months or years to iret the question fully befwe tbat ooarU When the final de- I 01 mtmA SIX BANKS CLOSE, V ' ' i I" .m, m Eft ifcs ITailare Dm to the Collapse of Mi Attert- ' can Insurance Company. • THB Port Morris Bank at Bridgeton (N. J.), the Pleaaantville branch of the Merchants' Bank of Atlantic City, the Merchants' Bank of Elmer (N. J.), and the bank at Mullict Hill, all of which were connected with tbe American Life Insurance and Finance Company of Phil* delphia. have failed. The depositors in these banks are confined almost en tirely to the poorer classes and small tradesmln. The suffering will be wide spread and very grea*. The Fidelity Surety Trust and Safe Deposit Company has suspended payment. Charles L. ork, the President of the Gloucester rJ National Bank, which suspended the previous day, was also its President. A Phir,delphia dispatch says another fail ure has occurred--that of the Merchants' Bank of Atlantic City, which is suppos ed to have, been connected with tho schemes of the American Life Insurance Company. It is reported that a syndi cate has been formed to rescue the American Insurance Company. BISHOP BORGESS IS DEAD •«f'V ____ •^Ite WeD-Known Divine Puses Away at Kala- uiatDo, Michigan. , A KALAMAZOO, Mich., special says: -Bishop Borgess, who was strieken \.iih paralysis while visiting the llev. Mr. O'Brien at Kalamazoo, is dead. He re mained conscious almost to the last. A Thieving Bank Porter. Augustus CAMPBELL, a colored por- '4«r in the German-American Bank at Buffalo, N. Y., has been arrested, charged with abstracting $2,000 from a money package. Arrested for Embezzling Bank Funds. GEOBGE L. FLIEDNEB, book-keeper of tho Hennepin County Savings Bank of ^Minneapolis, has been arrested for em- bezsling f 27®, and has made a full con cession. ' Bed Btver en • Bam pace. Bed RIVEE continues to rise and is now above the high-water mark of 1866. All trains north of Texarkana, La., on the Iron Mountain Railroad have been discontinued. Water is rvnning over the track at Clear Lake, and several washouts are reported between Texarkana and Fulton. A Mysterious Disappearance WILLABD WHITE, reported the wealth iest man, in .Concord, HUB,, has disap peered, leaving heavy liabilities. His farm-hands burned him in effigy. EASTERN OCCURRENCES. Homestead Bank, New York, has shut down. Its affairs are now in the hands of N. A. Chapman. Bad business Is the cause of the suspension. AT Philadelphia, Ps., the Bank of America Has announced its suspension "tjy a notice placed on its doors. The sns- pension is supposed to have been caused oy the fact of State Senator John J. McFarlaue's announced insolvency. He recently resigned from the vice presi dency of that institution. Mr. McFar- dasely tifii.ii.ct id with this bank SOUTHERN INCIDENTS. A jt>Ai<i.AS (Texae) dispatch says: There are four hundred home! in Dallas and the suburbs from which the inhabitants have been driven by the overflow in the Trinity Biver. 'ihe rivetf at this rise was a few inches higher than that of 1866, which was the highest recorded. The water ran through the windows of the first Boor of the Dallas Elevator and damaged a large amount of wheat, as well as the machinery and belting. The St. Louis Pressed-Brick Company are heavy losers. Two thousand bales of cotton were soaked at the compress, foot of Lamar street, and the Dallas Brewing Company will suffer considerably from inconvenience caused by water. The Eureka steam laundry "has suspended operations, as the water is several feet deep in their bnild:ngs. As the mail was being transferred from one train to the other on the Texas and Pacific a pouch of registered mail slipped off the hand-car and sunk in the swift current before it could be recovered. The city water-works are use jess. The damage done by the food in* Dallas will amount to several hundred thousand dollars. THE corner-stone of the Bayon Teche Central sugar factory was Aild at Frank lin, La., with imposing ceremonies in the presence of 3.000 people. It will be the most complete establishment ever constructed for'making sugar from cane juice. The juice will be conveyed by pipe lines dixect from plantations to the factory. BLOOMING GBOVE, Tex., was struck by a hurricane tbe other evening, doing great damage to property. The new Baptist Church and many residences were totally demolished. The posioffice, the Presby terian Church, and several business houses were partially wrecked. Xo loss of life has yet been reported. THE body of Edward D. Walker, editor of tbe Cosmopolitan Magazine, who dis appeared April 14 from a Weldon (N. C.) hotel, has been found near there, he hav ing been drowned while canoeing. THE sales of leaf tobacco at Danville, Va., during April were 1,580,240 pounds. The sales for the first seven months of the tobacco year were 18,274,000 pounds. B.n increase over the corresponding period of the previous year of 3,544,000 pounds, j THE NATIONAL"CAPITAL. News from Europe "states that the capital for the new Bank of Fomento, to be established in the City of Mexico, is practically secured. "This institution has $2-5,000,000 capital, one-fifth paid in. THE marriage of Miss Margaret Blaine to Mr. Walter Damroscb will be sol emnized May 17 at the residence of the Secretary of State. The Rev. Dr. Ham lin of the Church of the Covenant will officifta. THE malriage of Miss Mary Anderson to Mr. Navarro will take place in the Brompton (England) Oratory in the early part of May. y • A LARGE number of persons interested in cotton hosiery and underwear have ap peared before the Committee on Ways aad Means and protested against any change m existing rates of diuy on these .articles. • . A Buenos AYBES cable says: A revo lution has broken out in Paraguay. SeV- eral persons have been killed and many wounded. Telegraphic communication is interrupted, and tbe details that have been revived are meager. THE Interstate Commerce Committee of the Senate has reported favorably^ Mr. Gullom's bill amending the l'Jth sec tion Of tbe interstate commerce law BO 4hat the Commission may bold special •sessions in any part of the United States, and by one or more of the Com missioners, or by special agents, inquire into any matter pertaining to the business of any common carrier subject tothe pro visions of this act. AT the meeting of the World's Fair Directors at Chicago, Lyman J. Gage was elected President and Thomas B. Bryan and Potter Palmer First and Second Vice Presidents. The by-laws were adopted. JUDGE DITTFNHOEFEB, counsel for Mrs. Helen Dauvray Ward, says that his elient and her husband, John M. Ward, tbe great short- stop, have, in the presence of their counsel, signed articles of sepa ration on terms satisfxctory to ench, and in a spirit of friendliness to each other. Judge Dittenhoefer said that this was a final separation. A MAN in a Hamilton (Ont.) hospital, who was suffering from an affection of one kidney, was operated upon, and through a blunder the wrong organ was removed. Ho died. JUDGMENT has been rendered against six Chinese who were arrested at Nogales for violating the Exclusion act. They were ordered to be returned to Sonora. • / WtlUAU KEMMLJCB. , % .C. derer was snatched from a cfeath which might have proved so awful as to have shoekea the civilized world and might have been as peaceful as the sleep of child hood. The stay catne wiih the person of Roger M. Shef man. of the law firm of Sher man & Herling, of New York Cltv. and reads as follows: The President of tbe United States to Charles F. Durston, Warden and Agent of Auburn Prison, greeting: « The people cf the United States whom God defend, do command yon that ydju have the body of William Kemmler, by you im prisoned and detained, as it is said, together with the time and cause of such imprisonment and detention by -whatsoever name the said William Kemmler is called or charged, before the Circuit Court of the United States for the northern district of New York, to be held at Canandaigua on the third Monday of Jnne, at 10 o'clock in the morning. Witness the Hon. THK MURDERER IN HIS STEEIi CAGE. cision Is delivered Kemmler may be gray- headed. • * • ----_. . . . 'V > Th© Ch&Ir of Death* * The preparations for Kemmler*a execu tion had been iuily Completed, and the shock of the law's thunderbolt would have pierced his body within le*s than twelve hours except for the interference or Lawyer Shermr.n in his behalf. The fatal chair iff v^hlch the condemned man was to sit while he received the deadly electric current (an exact picturo of which is herewith pre sented) is thus described: ' It is a comfortable chiiir with an upright back and arms that are adjustable to those of the man who sits in it There is a leath er-covered pillow for the head to rest against. Fastened to the back is an adjustable fig ure 4, which can be ra sed or lowered so as to come down over the head of the con demned. The technique of the thlAtr is very simple. Through the lower outer angle of tho 4 (figure a) there is a hole, and through this will pass a rubber tube con taining a rod of steel or copper, to which a wet sponge is fastened. This sponge will touch the crown of the condemned man's head. Another pipe, with webbing inside and a sponge, will pass up through the seat so as to touch the base of the spine, when the man is straDped firmly in his seat. This will be accomplished by the use of several straps, one .passing around the chest, another around the abdomen, which will dr&w the webbins against the spine, while the arms will be firmly straoped to those o' the chair on which they w it rest. Th<- feet will rest on a Comfortable foot rest, after the fashion of those in use In a barber-shop. Indeed, the strong resemblance of this instrument of death to a barber's chair has al ready caused tho prison officials to speak of electrocution In their roughly humorous way as a bald- headed shave. The electricity will bo generated by a dynamo whlcli has been placed near to the power-room, a thou sand feet away from the plaoe or execution, and the insulated wires which will connect it with the rods «nd sponges have all been istruncr In readiness for their work. There is nothing uncomfortable about the chair save the deadly current which goes with it. an<d if death by the latter be HS sudden and painless as Its advocates affirm, it will certainly be the most merci ful means of capital punishment used any where. Keuimler'fi Steel Cairo.. • The situation of K^mmler's cell is one of the prison secrets. It lies in the south wing of the prison underneath the hospital and on the floor below the main offices and Visiting room. There are two of 'them, built by the Warden when tho new law went into effect, and completed, strange to say. ONjA VOLCANO'S BRINK. THK UBOR 8ITt7ATXd* OKOWX^CI MOBB SERIOUS. - •%; JlSK! mm MARKET REPORTS* CATTLE--Prime. CHICAGO. $ 4.75 REPRESENTATIVES of nine of the American Bepublics have signed the formal treaty of arbitration in Secretary Blaine's office at the Department of State --namely, the United States, Guatemala, Nicaragua. Salvador. Honduras, Bolivia, Ecuador, Hayti, and the United States or Brazil. It ig expected that' three more signatures and seals will be added soon, and it is hoped that the signatures of all the powers will be secured in tbe course of the summer and autumn. Several of the Ministers re mained ovf-r at great inconvenience to complete their adhesion to the treaty Great enthusiasm is felt at the State De partment over tbe rapid progress of so important a measure. The International Conference could only recommend, nnd it was the regularly accredited Ministers Plenipotentiary who signed the treatv Hoos for nfarenui tn tKai. i: * • Whf ments COU.BICHABD HINTON has been ap pointed Superintendent of Artesian Irri gation, Department of Agriculture, and has an appropriation of $20,000 to ex pend before July 1 in ascertaining wheth er the agriculture of the Dakotas and the adjacent States can be benefited by the artesian s stem. THE United States Treasury on the 1st inst. issued ^statement showing the as- , buffalo sets and liabilities of the Treasury. The > CATTLE--Good to Prime.....! •"Tv, ,0 1 Fair to Good.. Common Hoos--Shipping Grades SHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 lied Cobn--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 .V. RYE--No. * BUTTER--Choice Creamery...... CHEESE--Full Cream, flat* EGGS--Fresh POTATOES--Choice new, per bu.. POKK--Mess " MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 2 Spring CORN--No. 8 OATS--No. 2 White BTE--No. I BARLEY--No. 2 POKK--Meat DETROIT. CATTLE Hoos .....I SHEEP * WHEAT--No. 2Red......'. CORN--No. 2 Yellow. OATS--No. 2 White TOLEDO. WHEAT CORN--Cash OATS--No. 2 White.. NEW YORK. CATTLE. i Hoos i SHEEP.. i.. I WHKAT--No. 2'Red. I CORN--NO. 2 OATS--Mixed Westmrn PORK--New Mess -....*. ST. LOUIS. CATTLE 8.60 2.50 3.75 4.00 0 5.50 ® *:< .88;jj<8 .38 & .21 (g .49 & .1? & .Wi,® .45 <g! .75 & 3.50 4.50 & 0.50 .89 .25 .49% .19 .10^4 .11 % .55 12.50 @13.00 .88 9 .S8 « .51 & .44 1S.00 .85 .84 .28 .58 C9 .«i 013.50 8.00 8.00 3.50 .BO .36^(9 & 4.25 & 4.50 & 5.25 m .91 .37 .90)| .«> & .35*® .28 & 4.00 '4.25 5.00 .97 .42 .92 14.00 .91 .36'A <9 5.25 & 5.00 <!U 1.-15 r igt 1.00 & .45 & .35 @14.50 * j dikuvu me treatv for reference to their respective sovern. W^at-No. 2 Red. 8 CORN-- No. 2 OATS 4.25 4.00 .49 No. 2... RYE--No. 2. INDIANAPOLIS. CATTLE--Khipping Steer* 8,00 Hoos - Choii-u Light 8.00 SHEEP--Common to Prime 8.03 W HEAT--Noite lied ;.. .go CORN--No. 1 White. 84 OATS--No. 2 Whiter at CINCINNATI. <9 5.00 & 4.25 .88 W .86$ •.mm .31 .25$ & .51 THB CHAfit W mSATH Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justine of the .United States. Fail not at yohr peril, and have you then and there this writ. On the baek of tbe writ is this indorse ment: The within writ is granted this 28th day of April, 1800. WILLIAM J. WALLACE, Judge United States Circuit Court. It is only by chance that the present step, ostensibly in bebalf of Kemmler, counts for anything, for had not there been a little delay in setting the apparatus in final order and in completing other ar rangements, the criminal would have been shocked into the next world on Wiesday morning just after daybreak. It was the Warden's intention, it is declared by those who have seen tho first notification, to have the deed done In that hour. Had his orig inal plans been curried out the movement of Kemmler s mysterious friends would have been fruitless. Tbe Warden, for some reason best known to himself, kept putting off announcing to Kemmler the change in his fortunes. It was a little before 4 o'clock when the War den went to tell the unsuspecting murderer of the great meaning of the paper he had signed and the greater meaning of the writ of habeas eorpns. Mr. Durston. laying his the day that Kemmler' readied the prison. May, 22. litt<9. They a e made of steel from top to bottom--iron backs, iron sides, iron floors; iron ceilings and with crossbars of two-inch angle Iron In front riveted at the intersections and strong enough to defy the powers of dyna mite. to say nothing of a man. They are built in a large room, and there is space enough in front, where the death watch stays, to give Kemmler pacing room when he comes out for exercise one hour eadh morning and evening. The murderer's cell is most plainly furnished. There is ai iron bedstead In the corner toward the front of the prison, and Kemmler says be has never slept better in his life than he has done •inee he slept on it. . Wasn't Losing His Memory. [Scene -- Scotch railway station^ Ticket collector, in making his collec tion, finds an old gentleman fumbling in his pockets for his ticket.] Ticket collector--Tickets, please. Old gentleman -- I'm just lookin* for it. :p-,"' ' f'- : Pro*|»ecU that the Strikes W1U KxtenA Rattier thau Diminish la Namber«--The Outlook * .Grave One for Ha»tm and Men -- Non-Union Chicago Carpenters A»k Government Prot«otion. New York dispatch: Bradstreet says: "Th0L Industrial outlook has not im- proved at all during the last week. In fact, sljitns of restlessness among the wage-workers have become more conspic uous. the number of strikes reported be ing larger than during any previous week fer nearly two years. By far the most serious outlook Is that reported from Chicago. The-strike of 5,000 car penters at that city, swelled as It has been by the necessary idleness of nearly 20,800 Other workers in allied trades, has already been noted. The number of idle men has now been augmented by the itrike of 2,000 brickmakers and brick yard laborers for shdrter hours and more pay. Late advices would seem to point to the uneasiness of labor fn other lines in that city, and this is likely to culminate May 1 in one of the greatest strikes on record1. "Nearly 20,000 packing house em ployes at Chicago are said to contemp late a strike for the eight-hour day. Harness-makers, clothing workers, (women), stair-builders, and other artis ans have either already announced their intention of going out or are said to con template such uction. This action on the part of so many trades is aljeged to be against the advice of leaders,who are on record as opposing strikes for the eight-hour day in any but the building trades. "The ^ effect pf such & widespread strike upon Chicago industries can not fail to be hurtful. That the wholesale strike is against the advice of tho American Federation of Labor is proved by the Issuance this week of a circular to the wage-workers by Samuel Gom- pers, president of that organization. In this circular he outlines the action to be pursued by the federation in its fight for an eight-hour day. 'Early advices,' Mr. Gompers says, 'had led the officers of this body to expect that the building trades' employers would meet the men half way In their efforts to adjust the hours of labor, but recent de velopments at Chicago and Indianapolis prove their expectations to have been unfounded.' He claims that the 'wealth, power and influence of the employing and corporate classes of the country are to be coneentratod«to defeat tho move ment,' and therefore recommends that action toward securing shorter hours in other trades be deferred until the build ing trades' fight is settled. Diffusing organized labor strength in various movements, ho thinks, means final de feat for all. '• "Money is said to be urgently need ed. While the situation in Chicago is sufficiently grave, that outside of that city Is only a little better, at least so far as the building trades,are concerned. Strikes of building or kindred trades for ar^ eight-hour day are reported from Sharon, Pa.; Portland, Ore.; Indianap olis, Ind.; New York city, and Joliet, 111. Nearly 1,500 coal miners are out in tho Coniiellsvllle region, owing to wage difficulties. This stoppage 'of production is said to threaten Jthe suspension of blast furnaces in Cleveland dependent upon this ^source for coke for fuel. The situation as regards a general strike on May 1 is not of the best. The carpenters and '-other building trades at Boston, Mil waukee, Birmingham, Ala, and Lan caster, Pa., are on record as proposing jito strike for shorter ho<u*s on that date. ^More cheerful advices are received from .Indianapolis and Wheeling, where the mfen have practically gained their point and gone back to work. At Louis ville, Philadelphia, and Portland, .Me., |it is said, no strike will occur, as the 'employers have agreed on an dmicable arrangement with their men. All in all, the situatiou in labor mat ters is more strained than for several years, au#l the outcome of the present >tencerted movement will be watched ,Jwith interest. Tho total number of "strikes in April was 120, involving 28,- |853 employes, whereas last year during •the same month there wore only 61 Strikes, involving 12,191 employes Since Jan. 1 this year there have bieen IJ03 strikes, involving H6,142 men, while ,jin the first four months of last year ithere were only 221 strikes, involving f4S,924 persons." Chicago disnatch: A number of the rtion-union men who claim to have been l-oughly handled by striking carpenters have appealed to the United States government for protection. A secret "«icoting, at which a largo number of non-union carpenters were present, was «held on the South side. They had been %old by a contractor that those 'who wdre from other States could appeal to the United States au thorities for protection If they .were not protected by Chicago or Illinois Authorities. Some of the men clalrneid ifchat they had been driven from buildings 'hy strikers and that they hav ing recently come here from other States were outrageously treated by the police. A committee was ap pointed to draft a suitable petition and forward it to Secretary of State IMaime immediately. The committee brought in the following*, which was adopted unanimously and sent oiuto Washing ton: "To tho Honorable the Secretary of State of tho United States, Washington, D. C.:Wo, your petitioners of the city of Chicago, being tradesmen and bona fide citizens of tho United States, now bv intimidation, threats, and actual violence, being prevented from following our avocatious to the ygreat injury of ourselves and families, humbly petition the government of the United States for protection in the ex ercise of our constitutional rights, now denied by a mob of riotous outlaws, who defy tho authorities and who main tain a reign of terror over those who differ with them on questions of trades- unions. •'We also state that tho above state of .affairs has ja.1 ready continued for several Weeks and that we have no protection pf city or State authorities here; hence 'We petition your honor that protection sufficient be attended us so that We may in peace and saTety continue our lawful avocations." THE NATIONAL S010H SL WORK OF OF AKD HOtSK V l 'ATIVES. " h I' ACBUKN STATE PH1SON. HOOB ; WHEAT--K.o. 2 K«d COBN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 Mixed «I„ • * g_ j EYE--NO. 2?....... *.76 .90 •S M 4.60 4.00 .» @ 4.75 & 4.50 Vt 6.00 & .9054 & .35 m .28 <9 4.50 .90X4 & .37* & .60 & 5.23 & 4.75 & • 4536 band on Kemmler's phoulder. explained to him that a writ of haoeas corpui had been servedoipon him, and that the paper he signed before Mr. HoNcil meant that he had a new lawyer who was going to try his case over again. The prisoner gazed with a look that showed he did not fully under stand the Warden's language. Then Mr. Dureton said: "It means that your execution is not com ing off now. and that you will have two months and perhaps longer to live." "Oh," said Kcrarr.ler. just as if the real facts were beginning to dawn upon him; "tbat makes me feel easier." The Warden stood there for a moment; Kemmler walked to his chair and sat down/ His fate was expressionless, and he said nothittg to indicate great astonishment or delight. Mr. Durston turned, locked the corridor door, and came away. Site future tf lfce eMe Krfflbe o»« oflfttMr. Ticket collector---Well, 111 look in again in a few minutes. See and have it ready then. Ticket collector rettirns shortly; but the old gentleman is still hnnting'for it. Ticket collector (suddenly)--Why, you have it in your„mouth, man! Old gentleman (giving him the ticket)--Oh, so I hae! Here yoji are I Another gentleman in the carriage, as tbe train moves on, to first gentle man--I'm afraid you're losing your memory, sir. * Old gentleman--Nae fear o' that; nae fear o' that!, The ticket was a fornicht ould, and I was jist sookin' the d a t e f t i f t l ' C T . From Far and New. Tine- Doran-WTrlglit Comparer bucket- shop at New York, one of the largest in the country, suspended payments. It Jiad branches in various cities. THE Mexican Central railroad state ment for February shows: Gross earn ings, $r>69.;)66; increase $111,660; net, ¥206,928; increase, 911,081; subsidy, $122,257; increase, $58,501. AT the Belle Meade stud sale Gen. Jackson secured Luke Blackburn for 820,000, Iroquois for $34,000, and Bram ble for $2,500. Ho also purchased most of the brood mares. A omr. 20 years of age registered at tho Boston houso at Tri^y, N. Y., as Lizzie Meyers, of Boston, and procured a room. She was found dead next morning, having taken poison. DR. S. R. MABSTTAT.t,. a prominent physician of Allegheny, Pa., was found dead in a field. lie had committed sui cide by shooting himself in the head. %llneas to given as th« „<*«»« • ^ Our National aad What Thegr •'% AroAotaff for th* Good of tbe Country-- V . Various Meunrei Proposed, DtecUscodK *?£ and Acted On. > ^ THB comparative merit* of the feme and otit- let systems for ths MiB8|„ippi wero dfseasisWl^ at lenfth In the Senate on the 28th, the debate* showing that there was a great diverconi-e ot views on the aabjeet. Jffo«t of S>b wan spent on the land flMmtfmMtnM Kits ----. Evarts called up the bill to iKl ciety of Sous of the AmcrletUHtranUoii whinfo elicited considerable disenssiott, daring 'whicb b€*ii8,t© at 5 ;15 p. artioiimiii tn tho House tbe cortfereac© report on tho Fremont (Nebrask® public^ntldinK bHl Wft<i submitted by Mr. MUliltth, «»f Maine, and was agreed to. The limit bf coat !«.V T,ie Speaker laid before the Houne tbe. mennage of the President, rttfrorntng, without, bis approval, the bill to allow Ocden, Utkh to- :• incr.iaRe its indebtedness. Bererrea to W Committee on Territories. ' tt» '• leciih. ttve, executive, and Judicial anpnwri*. Mon bill was paused without division. Tbe House thm went into committee of tbo 1 whole oii bills relating to the District of Colum bia. The bill for the establishment of Rock Creek J'ark was amended so ae to asses# a part, of the coat on the Adjoining property-l&oidtiffft ana after mtichdiecnsvion received a lavorsbto - vote, most of the Eepnblicans voting far it and the Democrat* against it. Ihe bill *au MA, aside with a favorable recommendation bwth» ? committee of the whole. ». THE Senate on the 23th passed the lard grants forfeiture bill. The bill provides for the forfeit ure to tlie United States of all unearned landT grants for railroad purp-ses where the railroads have not been completed within the time aperti- fled when tlie grants were made. The Sejuato then, on motion of Mr. Allison, proceeded to > fcM* <' consideration of the customs administratioa® ?u V.,, tl adoption of various amendment# ' the bill went over as uniinished business, and , Senate adjourned. The Houso re. solved, itself into committee of the vfhole. * ' ?,urlowf in {b8 chair, and proceeded to the dlKCUKBion of Mr. 3Dmgley'» ' Dill for the classification of all worsted ciotUi - Under the head of woolen cloths. Mr. BIngley took the floor, and was answered by Mr. Breck- inrtdge of Kentucky. Mr. Carlisle and Mir. Mills also spoke on the bill, as did aluo Mr. '. \ iJland and Mr. CurniningB. Mr. Diugley then ^ moved that the committee rise and the motion was carried. The Democrats generally opposed i the bill, though or course it was favored by Ite. publicans. After a considerable amount of filibustering and failing to get a ouoruin tils House adjourned. * 0 * IN the Senate on the 301h nit. Mr. Dolph, from S the Committee on Foreign Relations, reported a concurrent resolution requesting the Prest dent to negotiate with the Governments ! Great Britain and Mexico with a view of secut- ing treaty stipulations for the prevention of tho 4 entry into tbe United States of Chinese from Canala and Mexico, and he asked for its imme diate consideration. The resolution went over and the Senate resumed consideration of tbe customs administrative bill, which was dis cussed until adjournment, v, ithout action bein® taken. The House xiassed the Morrill servioo pension bill by a vote of 17a yeas to 70 nay*. Hie bill authorizes tbe Secretary of K?e *nterior to place on the pension roll the name or any officer o* enlisted man of 60 years of age or over, or who shall hereafter reach that age, who served ninety days or inofo in tho army, navy, or marine corps of the. United States during the war of the rebellion and shall have received an honorable discharge therefrom; the pension to commence fsoui tl^ date of the application therefor, and to contimi» . during tho term of life of tuch officer or enlisted man, at the rate of $8 a month. All pjrsonH who served ninety days or more in the miliiai v or naval service of the United States during the late war of the rebellion, and Who have been honor ably discharged therefrom, and who are now or may hereaiter be suffering from mental or phys- " ical disability equivalent to the grade now estaV lis Led in the pension office for the rating of jfr . per month, upon due proof of the fact, according ~'r to such rules and regulations a-t the Secretary 1 of the Interior may provide, shall be placed i , . upon the list of Invalid pensioners of the United States at $8 per month. It also provides tor a pension to tne widow of any Boldier when stilt shall arrive at the age of 60 years, or when KhO . shall be without other means of Bupport thait i htr daily labor. The House also passed the bijj. for t he classification of worsted cloths as wooltax* i cloths. The bill was passed--yeas 138, nays O-- the Speaker counting a quorum. The text ot the bill is as follows : " That the Secretary of -> the Treasury be, and he hereby is, authorized and directed to classify as woolen clothb all inl- , ports of worsted clotn, whether known undent the name of worsted cloth or under tho name#. . ; of worsteds, or diagonals, jor otherwise." 't lit the Senate, on the 1st inst., the Houag ' 'v amendment to the Senate bill for a public buildr 1 ing at Aurora, 111., was non-concurred in arid conference asked. The customs administrative ,; , bill was taken up--the pending question • being on Mr. Gray's amendment securing*, ^ to .an .aggrieved importer the right to brinff .t#>1 a Common law suit against the collector 0 s; After a long discussion, Mr, Allison move* to lay, Mr. Gray's amendment on the table. » Agreed to--yeas 31, nays 10 (a party vote). Mr, ' , Coke moved to amend the bill by inserting ' provision that no allowance for damage to im- ported goods shall be made unless they are sold at public auction. Kejected. The bili then went ? " • " over, and after an executive session the Ssuate '« adjourned. The House took up the Senate bill; to protect trade and commerce ogaintft ' " unlawful restraints and monopolies. After discussiqn covering, as Mr. Heard aaiil, every question other than the one undeff consideration, Mr. Bland, of Missouri, offered --'ij on amendment making unlawful any contract . or agreement to present competition in th» • sale or purchase of any commodity transported <~M from one Stata to another. The ameflUment 11 !' •was adopted on a viva voce vote, and the bill • was pttHsed in the same manner with a single, " " negative vote. Mr. Adams, of Illinois, next called up the international copyright bill ana explained its provisions. Without action upo]| " the bill, the House adjourned. Daring the de» ' , S bate Mr. Cannon announced that the tariff dis- • , \ cussion would begin next week. , - ^ }' Chat^Abunt Women. ; , 0l Perfumed ink i8 the proper kind for ' love letters. . • ^ Long sleeves are now seen on eveuing 1 dresses, but no extra amount of material is required, as the neck is cat much • •lower. Every woman nowadays wants to look • tall, and to attain this end very many.- carry white parasols and wear hat^witi* white aigrettes. | The delicate and showy colors so much ; *21 noticed in the windows and supposed by " ] many to be for evening woar are in-{ ..a tendod for the promenade. ; Capes have become a rage and now fori '|. evening wear we have one formed of ^ row upon row of white lace on a founda^ ? ,f! tion of white or tinted silk. Knots and . ., loops of ribbon fall from the throat over the lace in & very pretty manner. With v, a dainty toque such a cape would b# a;SS quite a stunning theater outfit. The new corsage front which Is cut oif the bias |s .totally without seams and + fastens under the arms and on the left ^ shoulder. It is altogether untrimmed and worn with a tight skirt devoid of ^ trimming, hence it is rather severe and. . should be worn by tho most perfect o£ - : figures, so say tho dress-makers. Gnglish belies w'ear sunshades mad* of cloth to match the gown And lin«|.-T-p< .! with silk of a contrasting shade. ,Thfe ^ 1 lone handles of last season are relegated " to the past, the present ones being about . four inches shorter, but are rendered * 1 more expensive by being mounted in < amber. Some have a small knob, but*' • -J the costliest ones-have a walking-sticks: handle of amber on which the owner'* v :*•: name Is run all around in silver letters*-^? Young ladies in Paris now array thoin«3"' ; solves in Greek gowns and preside ov^r . ;fv| tho booths at a rainbow reception, whieli* " -}' ] is a simple and pretty method to adop^...-*^ for a church or charitable benefit. Th<>*; 1 t. booths are draped in tjie rainbow's hues., V i Those of violet, orange, and white ar» n devoted to the sale of such articles as & V ? chiirch fair usually displays; the light-J/ f, blue to sweets, the red to Japanese and"'. !v oriental articles, the yellow to .lemonade and cake, the green to flowers, whil®> * the indigo will form a fitting retreat fof t h e g r a b - b a g a n d i t s p a t r o n s . T e a , c o f ^ i fee, and light refreshments are served- in a booth combined. in which all tho colon* " j > , ^11: Vt What Mrs. Grnndy Says. That some very strikin^effects ^re tdK-irA^ be noted in spring dress fashions. *;>; That fashionable society does not do . * ; great deal of disinterested entertaining. That professional base-ball playing by \ '4 no means interests as many neoplo as it" - * ' ":I; did. That the wiset women ate those who let the complexion lotions severely1* alone. That it looks as il there was to he {gr l#ll in the *k»r*si ol making fortanes to 4«Mk. •. "'••V'A ' ' Mi - • • . T ' J V ;> v> « '-Wtr- * %